This is a sweet and magical little story of a town. It's about friendship and wishes. What if we knew others' wishes and could help them come to pass? Can we be a friend or remind someone that they're pretty? We can't do everything, but we (each of us, even children) can do something and that something might just start a ripple of hope throughout the community. :)
Here are some favorite quotes:
"Nothing ever seemed to bother Ernest. And that was what bothered Ryan (p. 9)."
"Like with Grandpa Eddie's illness, they didn't talk about serious things around Ernest, and it bothered him. It was like riding in the back seat in the car, but worse. It was like he was riding in the back seat of his own family (p. 10)."
"Try as she might, Lizzy couldn't stop replaying the horrible encounter over in her mind, the attention to detail that served her so well in school now providing achingly perfect recall of every agonizing moment (p. 17)."
"If only. It was fast becoming the town's nickname. Because there was always another factory closing down, another business moving away, more people out of work, making the town a bit emptier than it was before (p. 21)."
"Parents always tell their kids to stand up for themselves, but they never mean for their kids to do it with them (p. 25)."
"Maybe it, too, was a piece of something, and... it just needed to be matched with other pieces. New pieces. And then things would start working again (p. 27)."
"Some days he said he was Irish Dominican, other days Polish Colombian or Welsh Kenyan or Creole Hawaiian. Ryan suspected these different ancestries were 'teachable moments' meant to subtly suggest that they were all Americans, and it shouldn't matter, anyway. Though maybe he was able trying to trick his students into looking at a map or a globe once in a while (p. 30)."
"Council Days were designed for kids to get the chance to air out their opinions on various issues. Teachers were encouraged to give each week a special topic--bullying, peer pressure, stress--but Mr. Earle went for a less direct approach. He knew that if you got kids talking, the rest would take care of itself, but that if you tried to manipulate the conversation, the kids would invariably clam up (p. 31)."
"Ryan loved playing football. Because when Ryan played football, he forgot about everything else. School, chores, a baby brother who hated him, and Mrs. Haemmerle's piece-of-junk lawn mower (p. 38)."
"Adults always say to stand up to bullies. They implication being that if you stand up to a bully, the bully will back down (p. 40)."
"Her mom always did the right thing. But her mom was alone. Her mom cried in her bedroom. If that's what doing the right thing got you, Lizzy couldn't help but wonder, then what was the point (p. 44)?"
"Here they were. Cliffs Donnelly, Ohio. Winston's father called it the heartland. His mother called it the middle of nowhere (p. 49)."
"Ryan, a kid who was only slightly less surly and disagreeable than Tommy, had come out of nowhere to stick up for Ernest (p. 59)."
"Ernest couldn't simply forget about what Winston had said at the well. Maybe you couldn't become somebody's friend just because they needed one. But what if you could?... Maybe he could show [the art set] to Winston at lunch to break the ice. Ernest was awful at art. He could ask Winston for pointers or something. It wasn't a terrible idea (p. 68)."
"Tommy didn't enjoy people being afraid of him. It wasn't fun, and it didn't make him feel good. But it felt better than having people look down on him. Or feel sorry for him. Nothing was worse than that... At first he'd thought Wilmette was looking down on him, but it wasn't that. It was more complicated, like he had looked inside Tommy, had seen who he really was (p. 71)."
"'You can't fix other people's problems. It just makes things worse (p. 83).'"
"At first the pairing was viewed with skepticism. But it was soon clear to everyone that these kids were, inexplicably but genuinely, becoming friends (p. 86)."
"Aaron and Jamie naturally assumed that Winston had wished for Tommy to stop bullying him. So the fact that the very next day Tommy had not only stopped but had become his new best friend? That got kids talking. Maybe Thompkins Well was more than a legend. Maybe it really was magic (p. 87)."
"Lizzy MacComber did not believe in wishing wells. But you don't have to believe in wishes to make one (p. 87)."
"When a person considers what they would wish for, it can teach them a little something about themselves. Something a person may not want to learn (p. 88)."
"'I wish I knew how to be pretty (p. 95).'"
"'I wish I knew how to help (p. 97).'"
"'We can help. We have a responsibility to help (p. 98).'"
"'Well, I'm pretty smart. Maybe not Lizzy MacComber smart, but I get good grades and all that. So, I'm thinking I can give some of my smarts to my little brother, to help him. To even things out a bit. That sounds fair, doesn't it?'... She'd do anything to help her little brother (p. 98)."
"'He had what they called an oversized heart. It's the kind of condition that's very treatable today, but back then... his heart just got too big. He went to sleep and never woke up (p. 107).'"
"'Shocking, I know... Me and complications.'... 'So, did you find something in the attic (p. 109)?'"
"'I said, you are pretty. And I don't get why you think you're not (p. 113).'"
"Ryan had told her everything as quickly and succinctly as he could. It had felt good to get it all out, but the more he talked, the more ridiculous the whole thing sounded. When he mentioned how Ernest thought his late grandfather's attic was magically telling him to give things to people, he'd been sure she was going to pop him in the nose again (p. 115)."
"She found out about this condition where your eyes don't work together when you try to read. So we had Seth's vision tested and now we know what the problem is. And the best part is that it's completely fixable. Seth has to wear funny glasses to read now... but he's reading. He's really reading (p. 128)."
"Ernest had a strange knack for asserting his will. May of the wishes were just ridiculous, outrageous requests... a pet lion... Bigfoot... But some of the wishes were really serious. One boy was worried about his older sister... Another kid... came to Thompkins Well to make a wish for her cousin, a soldier who had served in Afghanistan... He'd been home about a month now and he was having trouble readjusting (p. 134)."
"This was the usual routine; the three of them would go into the well during the week, and then Ernest would search the attic for 'inspiration (p. 136).'"
"Something strange was going on in Cliffs Donnelly. Things around town were getting better, or at least feeling better. People seemed happier, upbeat (p. 136)."
"If he just took all the toys out of the attic, then things would eventually sort themselves out like they were meant to (p. 138)."
"'When in doubt, the harder choice is usually the right one (p. 139).'"
"Ernest, Jack here was Rollo's best friend. If you really want to hear stories about Rollo, he's your man (p. 144).'"
"'Wait, you're saying this poor guy died because he hid the diamond in the wrong stuffed animal (p. 167)?'"
"'He sacrificed himself to protect his family (p. 168).'"
"'In our day people used to throw coins in the old Thompkins Well and make wishes.'... 'You don't say (p. 169).'"
"It bothered him that the adults were making this decision for him and not with him, especially since he was the one who had found the sock monkey in the first place and hand delivered it, along with the Holyoke Red Diamond, right to them (p. 170)."
"It had been a great day, a magical day. what else could you call it? A diamond hidden inside a sock monkey, an amazing story with thieves and killers and a father who gave up his own life to save his family--this day had everything (p. 173)."
"The forgotten old landmark was now the talk of the town (p. 177)."
"Living alone at the age of six is not a good thing for a kid. Tommy was lonely in a way that most people could never begin to grasp. He kept the TV on a lot, even when he wasn't watching it. The voices filled some of the empty space in the house (p. 179)."
"'He wants you to pick him up... He likes you (p. 185).'"
"'Have any of you kids ever made any wishes at Thompkins Well?' She may as well have just said, Simon says everybody raise your hand and start talking all at once (p. 189)."
"'We make our own happy endings, right (p. 191)?'"
"'Mrs. Haemmerle wasn't alone. She had you. She always had you... The sound of you taking care of her. She did not die alone, Ryan. You were with her (p. 199).'"
"Andrea was an investigative reporter. Her specialties were takedown stories, attack pieces that fed on the audience's suspicions and fears (p. 205)."
"'All that really matters is what the whole town is going to think (p. 215).'"
"For now, he could only do two things: Promise himself never to let fear control him like that again, and figure out how to protect his friends, even if they didn't want to be his friends anymore. Otherwise, all those wishes would be undone. Every good thing that had happened these last couple of months would unravel... And this town would be worse off than before... The only way to stop Andrea Chase from controlling this story... was to control it himself (p. 218)."
"When everyone expects the worst form you, sooner or later you're going to give it to them (p. 227)."
"It didn't matter. Nothing did anymore. Tommy was done hiding, done trying, done caring. Just done. He'd walk home in the cold and rain and if he got sick, if he got hit by a car, if his father was still home and beat him when he stepped through the door, so be it (p. 227)."
"'Talk to her. Let her hear your voice. Just... be with her (p. 239).'"
"The problem with dramatic exits is that they happen so quickly a person rarely stops to consider the weather (p. 254)."
"'It's not what they call you; its what you answer to (p. 256).'"
"Rollo. This whole thing had started sixty years ago because a sweet kid with a big heart died. What if that's how this story ends, too (p. 262)?"
"It didn't matter if he was afraid. What mattered was putting the fear in its place (p. 263)."
"Ryan gave Lizzy a quick rundown on the last few hours--Andrea Chase arrested, Ernest upstairs with a broken arm, secrets safe, cave completely covered in landslide, and Thompkins Well destroyed--and promised a fuller account in good time (p. 272)."
"The Wilmette family was putting up their own money, their own house, even, to save the factory and, to no small degree, the town, people responded... lots of other people Ernest didn't even know. People who had wishes. Or people who just had hope (p. 286)."
"'I've already told you once I thought you were pretty... I mean it. You are pretty. Really pretty. And not just because of all this... Lizzy, you are pretty all the way through (p. 289).'"
"The strongest friendships are often based on the little things (p. 292)."
"It wasn't something anyone expected, but sometimes things just take on a life of their own (p. 296)."
"'Stories bind us together; they connect us. Our stories are a shared history, a way to relate to each other. Even if they are make-believe (p. 298).'"
"For every wish he knew about, there must have been dozens that he didn't... You can't fix the world. But you do your best in your own little corner of it. And you hope (p. 300)."
"Welcome to Cliffs Donnelly, Ohio
Population: Us (p. 305)."