The 9:09 Project
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4.7 • 3 Ratings
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
A grieving boy's photography project changes his life in this moving and uplifting novel about the power of seeing the world and the people around us in a new way, praised by PW as “a character-driven work that celebrates the healing power of connection and creativity.”
"Wryly funny, extremely intelligent, and sweetly romantic." —Kirkus Reviews, starred review
“An engaging, thought-provoking title that is easy to read, hard to put down, and will have readers wondering about the characters long after they’ve finished it. . . . highly recommended.” —SLJ, starred review
Winner of the 2026 Nutmeg Book Award (Grades 9-12)
Two years after losing his mother, Jamison is afraid he's starting to forget her. His dad and younger sister seem to be coping , each in their own way. But when Jamison nearly misses his mother's birthday, he worries that the memories he has left are slowly fading.
Determined to hold on to her, Jamison dusts off the Nikon camera she gave him and begins a simple project: every night at 9:09, he photographs whoever happens to pass by at the same time and place.
What starts as a way to make sense of time soon becomes something much bigger. Through his camera lens, Jamison begins to see the world in a deeper way. He begins to notice the stories hidden in ordinary moments and discovers unexpected friendships and surprising connections with the people around him.
As his project grows, Jamison starts to understand that remembering someone isn't about holding on to the past. It's about finding ways to carry them with you as you move forward.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Two years after losing his mother to cancer, a Californian teenager channels his grief and loneliness into creative pursuits in this affecting literary offering from Parsons (Road Rash). When 17-year-old Jamison Deaver almost forgets his late mother's birthday, he worries that he's losing his memory of her, and embarks on a memorializing photography project. Using a Nikon she gave him, he takes pictures every evening at 9:09 p.m.—the time of her death—of the street corner he could see from her hospital room window. Some days, he photographs an empty intersection, but most days, there are people, and Jamison, who has felt extreme loneliness since her death, comforts himself by imagining these strangers' lives. His newfound hobby also helps him reconnect with his younger fashionista sister, Ollie, and their withdrawn father. Despite the welcome kinship, though, Jamison struggles to navigate his personal project's unexpected popularity after his best friend builds him a photography website. Utilizing intimately rendered characters and introspective dialogue, Bell crafts a character-driven work that celebrates the healing power of connection and creativity, encouraging readers to take a closer look at the world around them. Characters cue as white. Ages 12–up.