Gr 4-6–As if starting middle school weren’t challenging enough, Grayson and Roxie, both 12, are afraid they’ve lost the people they love most. Grayson doesn’t plan to settle in with her new foster family or befriend her new classmates because she knows her older sister Beanie is going to become her guardian. Roxie is usually sunny and open-hearted, but when a mean girl’s body-shaming taunts ruin the first school gathering, Roxie takes comfort in the promise of escaping middle school and going on tour with her musician grandmother. However, when Beanie doesn’t appear or reply to any of Grayson’s texts, and Granny Ruth, who has been forgetful lately, goes missing in the hills around their Tennessee town, Grayson and Roxie are determined to find them. Grayson’s voice is sharp and spiky, while Roxie’s thoughts have a folksy tone. Lloyd adds a layer of magic and mystery to the novel in the form of the “witching wind,” a powerful phenomenon that howls over the county carrying away anything that’s not clipped down and instilling fear in some residents. Grayson, Roxie, and the other members of the school newcomers club, a diverse and resourceful crew, search for the truth behind the legends in a somewhat jumbled series of outdoor adventures involving, among other things, an all-terrain vehicle, a nighttime cave exploration, and communicating with crows.
VERDICT Although the plot sometimes gets tangled in metaphor, this is a warm and lyrical story about the ways that connections between loved ones can stretch across distance and time.
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