A Day at the Beach
-
- $22.99
Publisher Description
Look Both Ways meets Seedfolks in this masterful novel from two titans of kid lit that follows a diverse cast of young people whose lives intersect in surprising and hilarious ways over the course of a summer day.
Here’s what’s so cool about the beach. Kids are everywhere! Kids you know, kids you want to know. Wandering from one blanket to another, from one family to another. Somebody’s mom reads a fat summer novel. Somebody’s dad snores with an iPad on his chest. Babies cry. Girls laugh. Frisbee players whoop! Kites in the perfect blue sky.
Some kids bodysurf. Some don’t even like the water. They build sand cities for their friends and sand jails for the grown-ups, and when the tide comes in everything gets washed away.
There’s the other world, where all kids hear is tomorrow, next week, next year. And then there’s the beach, where everything is right now!
Why can’t every day be a day at the beach?
From two-time Newbery honoree Gary D. Schmidt and two-time PEN Award winner Ron Koertge comes a moving and often laugh-out-loud funny middle grade novel about family, friendship, and belonging, told by a group of kids spending a day at the beach. Thoughtful vignettes brilliantly weave together an irresistible tale of tween conflict and connections.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Collaborators Schmidt (Jupiter Rising) and Koertge (Maya's Story) team up with illustrator Ma Van As (the Kudo Kids series) to explore a single day at Rockcastle Beach, N.J., through the perspectives of more two dozen kids in this winsome work. Beginning at dawn as siblings Jackie and Simon race across the beach before it formally opens to the public, chronological chapters—each containing a standalone narrative—progress throughout the day, occasionally intersecting to build one cohesive tale. Stories follow Tobias Jackson, whose eagerness to show off his newly trim physique is derailed upon losing his phone; Hassani Ahmadi, who, on his weekly beach walk with his father, navigates a confrontation that brings up memories of immigrating from Iran; and Leslie Perl Brown, who, resentful of the pressures placed upon her by her reverend parents, converts to a new perspective. Weighty topics surrounding racism, grief over a pet's death, and contending with cancer's effects on a parent are addressed with tender nuance. Animated full-page illustrations depict the day's progression and show the racial diversity of the cast in immersive, realistic scenes. Ages 8–12.