FINISHED:
Cuevas, Michelle. (2017). The Care and Feeding of a Pet Black Hole. New York: Dial/Penguin Random House.
[After being turned away at NASA, when she asks to see Carl
Sagan so that she can give him a recording of her deceased father’s laughter
for inclusion on the Voyager launch, 11-year-old Stella Rodriguez unwittingly has
a black hole follow her home. While Larry
(as Stella names the black hole) begins to devour whatever it can, Stella
discovers that as she throws items with memories of her dad attached to them
into the black hole, it begins to appear as though the objects, and all of the
feelings associated with them, never existed in the first place. Cuevas has a gift for dry humor, fully
evident in the 100 page, surreal journey (reminiscent of Roald Dahl and Norton
Juster) that Stella and her brother take in a clawfoot tub while inside Larry;
a journey that helps Stella work through her grief and regain an appreciation
for “home” (“Sometimes what you think is a black hole in your life turns out to
actually be a wormhole. A portal. A way home.”). Cuevas’s own spot illustrations are sprinkled
throughout the text, which is laugh out loud hilarious, touching, and a bit
bizarre.]
STARTED:
Moore, David Barclay. (2017). The Stars Beneath Our Feet. New York: Knopf.
[.]
*
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
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