The Umbrella Maker's Son
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- $179.00
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- $179.00
Descripción editorial
In this funny and fantastical middle grade novel, one boy must uncover the secret behind his rainy town in order to save himself from a future in his father’s footsteps.
Oscar Buckle lives in a city where it’s always raining. And when it isn’t raining, it’s about to rain, so the townspeople have learned to embrace it. Oscar’s father is an umbrella maker—appropriate for a place where you can’t leave home without one!—but while Buckle Umbrellas are strong, reliable, and high quality, they’re expensive. Because of this, people are buying from the competitor instead, which is threatening Oscar’s family’s business.
To make ends meet, Oscar is forced to quit school and work in his father's shop as an apprentice. But when extraordinary events start to occur in their rainy town, Oscar becomes suspicious of their competitor. Desperate to save his town, Oscar must enlist the help of his best friend, Saige, to discover if there's more than nature involved in their city's weather.
This charming story is packed with adventure, lively illustrations, and unforgettable characters determined to survive in a world where the weather is a mysterious, magical force.
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Eleven-year-old Oscar Buckle lives in Alley, an impoverished area of Roan on the rain-plagued planet Erde. Forty-seven types of rain befall the world, ranging from Flinner, described as "hesitant, reluctant, a mediocre drizzle," to Blanderwheel, a dangerous rain of "epic, monsoon-like proportions." Oscar's life—which was already "gray, smoky, cloudy, and generally miserable"—grows more complicated when his father, an umbrella maker, takes him out of school to help the failing family business. Though his father specializes in making sturdy umbrellas, each suited for a different rain type, their competitors' cheap alternatives keep snatching up would-be customers. Worse, his best friend Saige, who uses a wheelchair that she upgrades with her engineering prowess, is moving away. But when a seer suddenly appears in a previously unknown section of the local Night Market with a task for Oscar, he and Saige begin unraveling a terrible truth about Roan's perpetual rain. This amiable fantasy by Leno (Sometime in Summer) is at its strongest when focusing on Oscar and Saige's unshakable friendship and Saige's inventiveness. Footnotes feature throughout, and a rain glossary concludes. Oscar is white; Saige reads as Black. Ages 8–12.