In the Country of Queens
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- R$ 67,90
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- R$ 67,90
Descrição da editora
An Amazon Best Book of the Month
Eleven-year-old Shirley Alice Burns lives with her domineering mother, Hurricane Anna, and loving Grandmother. One day she unexpectedly discovers that her beloved father isn’t in Absentia as her family would have her believe, but dead. And she understands all too well why they haven’t told her; she’s always been shy and quiet, and Anna has always been protective of her. But if Shirley doesn’t start speaking up, she isn’t going to be able to do the things she wants to do: go on vacation to Lake Winnipesaukee with her cousins, stop taking ballet lessons, and talk about her father. Through the help of a mouse, her hero Pippi Longstocking, and her cousin Phillie, Shirley finds the strength to give her dreams a voice and convince everyone, even Hurricane Anna, that she doesn’t need to be sheltered, especially from the truth. In the Country of Queens is the debut novel from acclaimed picture-book author Cari Best.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Picture book author Best (If I Could Drive, Mama) sets her first novel in Queens, N.Y., in 1961, where Shirley Burns is finishing sixth grade and struggling to speak up for herself. Shirley desperately wants to join her cousins on their family's annual summer trip to Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire, but she can't find the courage to ask her mother. But things begin to shift when Shirley learns that the father she had been told was simply absent is actually dead, something her mother has lied to her about. After Shirley finds a dead mouse, she keeps it in the freezer and uses it to start to process her loss ("Maybe being dead isn't so terrible, Shirley thought, studying the mouse. He looked as calm as if he were listening to music"). Talking to the mouse helps Shirley stand up to both her mother and a teacher who believes she plagiarized an essay. The Benson & Hedges cigarettes Shirley's mother smokes, the Frank Sinatra they listen to, and other period details bring Shirley's world to life. Shirley is an honest and relatable narrator in this languid slice-of-life story. Ages 10 12.