One of an innovative new series of linked stories designed to build reader
confidence. Nobody wants to play with Lucy on her first day in school, so her
teacher gives her some chalks and Lucy begins to draw animals on the
playground. She doesn't notice Zack and Ibrahim sitting at opposite ends of a
nearby bench, watching her.
A first children's title from a prize-winning poet and author of adult books.
A novel exploring a young boy's grief, set against a colourful background of
surfing. schovat popis
Set in the insular town of Eudora, the story unfolds as a novel written by a former resident stirs unexpected interest in contemporary literature, challenging the town's aversion to change. As new ideas infiltrate the community, longstanding relationships are tested, rivalries emerge, and romance blossoms. The impact of the Iraq war also reaches this seemingly quiet town, forever altering its dynamics. Amidst the gossip and secrets, the truth surfaces in the local diner, highlighting the complexities of small-town life.
Jules is an expelled, exiled, failure. Sent away by her mother from a life of
luxury in London to live on her aunt's farm halfway across the world, she
feels like everyone has given up on her. Until, under the baking Kansas sun, a
wild coyote helps her begin to find out who she really is.
Chapter One Everything is quiet. I can hear my raspy breath getting rougher
with every step of these stupid snowshoes. Then I hear something else-a bird,
maybe. But I can't see where it is. All I see is pine trees in every
direction. And snow, of course. I wonder when I can go back. How long has it
been? But I don't want to peel down my warm, padded mitten to look at my
watch. The cold air attacks any little weakness, like a bare wrist. It seems
like it's trying to get at you. As if it's personal. And anyway, it's only
been about five minutes since the last time I looked. I'm supposed to be out
here for two to four hours every day, to build up my lungs. The doctor said
cold won't do me any harm, if I'm dressed for it. He said I should take care
not to get wet. There's a hill I haven't been up. I've always taken the ways
that go around it. Today I am so bored, I'll try to go uphill and see if
there's anything interesting up there. I know I shouldn't go uphill, but I do
it anyway. If my muscles really start hurting, I'll stop, right? My dad spends
all day out in the cold, and even some nights. When he talks about his
fieldwork, I don't listen. Evidently, finding out about deer populations with
natural predators is so important that we had to move to the middle of a giant
wilderness. Nothing is that important. It wasn't worth it. If I was home, I
could walk to the library. I could wander through our little town's high
street, looking in all the junk shops. I could go swimming- No, I couldn't,
because I'm not supposed to get wet. But if I was home, I could get wet,
because I wouldn't have gotten pneumonia in the first place. I wouldn't have
been in the hospital for three weeks. I wouldn't be all skinny and run-down
and weak. I'd be at a real school, with people who actually like me. I'd be
with my friends. I wouldn't be with gung-ho lunatics like Susan Hackmeyer, who
thinks she knows everything. She doesn't. She only knows stuff about being
here. She couldn't find her way across London by Tube, like I had to do last
year. She couldn't spot the next big hit song. Just because I can't tell the
difference between deer poo and elk poo, she tried to make me look stupid in
front of Tony Infante. As if I needed any help to look stupid in front of Tony
Infante. I get so upset thinking about all this that I am halfway up the hill,
which was a lot steeper than it looked, before my lungs hurt and I notice my
breath has gone all noisy and harsh. I really need to stop walking uphill. My
legs are burning. But then I see where I am. I can't stop. If I stop, I'll
fall about thirty feet, straight down. You shoe up steep hills sideways, kind
of like making stairs for yourself in the snow. It's hard. Stopping means
balancing, and that's tricky. I have poles to help, but I haven't been taking
them lately. They seem heavy. My poles are still on the porch of the cabin.
I've just been cutting into this hill, letting my anger carry me up. And now,
when I need one of the millions and trillions of pine trees in this stupid
wilderness, there's not a single one I can actually reach and hold on to so
that I can rest. I have to keep moving or I'll fall. All the time I'm thinking
about this, my feet keep on cutting little steps and I keep huffing up the
hill. It hurts so bad that my lungs start to ache, too. All my big muscles are
burning now-not just my legs, but my bottom and my arms and back too. The
doctor explained why this happens. Muscles need oxygen to flush out the lactic
acid that builds up when I exercise. Since my lungs are still crinkly and wet,
I'm not making enough oxygen to flush them. Which is why I'm not supposed to
go uphill. It doesn't help that my lungs a