Fly Back, Agnes
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
A heartfelt story that sensitively tackles the everyday inner turmoil of growing up and staying true to oneself.
Twelve-year-old Agnes hates everything about her life: her name, her parents' divorce, her best friend's abandonment, her changing body . . . . So while staying with her dad over the summer, she decides to become someone else. She tells people she meets that her name is Chloe, she's fourteen, her parents are married, and she's a dancer and actor—just the life she wants.
But Agnes's fibs quickly stack up and start to complicate her new friendships, especially with Fin, whose mysterious relative runs a local raptor rehab center that fascinates Agnes. The birds, given time and care, heal and fly back home. Agnes, too, wants to get back to wherever she truly belongs. But first she must come to see the good in her real life, however flawed and messy it is, and be honest with her friends, her family, and herself.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a story about deep change, 12-year-old Agnes Moon, who inherited her part-Korean father's skin tone and her red-headed mother's freckles, has lately felt out of control. She's dealing with microaggressions and her best friend's betrayal at school, her parents' divorce and older sister's estrangement at home, and her developing preteen body. When her mother announces that they are moving from Vermont to Kansas for the summer, despite Agnes's having already made plans, she tells a lie to spend the break with her father in the Vermont house that he's watching for a friend. But her dad's responsibilities leave him often busy, giving her ample time alone. Free to pass herself off as anyone she chooses, Agnes invents a new persona: Chloe, an actor and dancer from Topeka. As she makes friends and absorbs their confidences, as with intersex Fin, who is frequently gossiped about, her initially freeing lies leave Agnes feeling more alone than ever. Atkinson (The Sugar Mountain Snow Ball) focuses on Agnes's turbulent inner life, but the other characters are more thinly drawn, limiting the novel's emotional depth. Ages 9 10.