Skip to main content

Review: Once for Yes

Once for Yes
By Allie Millington
New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2025. Fiction. 264 pages.

Nearly a year after the death of her older sister Lina, Prue Laroe is dreading turning 12. Turning 12 means that she will be the same age as Lina when she died, and Prue doesn't want that to happen. But even more changes are coming for Prue -- her family's apartment building, the Odenburgh, has been sold and is set for demolition -- meaning Prue will have to leave the places she feels closest to Lina. When the Odenburgh flashes its lights at her, Prue takes it as a sign from Lina that she needs to rally the other residents to save the Odenburgh. In her quest to save her home, Prue befriends Lewis, the lanky boy from the building across the street, not quite understanding why Lewis is drawn to the same goal as her. Demolition day nears and Prue's whole family needs to come to terms with their grief before it is too late.

There have been a string of middle grade novels dealing with gentrification lately, and this new book adds an interesting perspective in tying grief, memory, and moving on to the power of a specific place. This book is about loneliness and disconnection and the strength of a community healing together. Told from multiple perspectives, including from the sentient apartment building itself, this poignant novel explores the inner lives of people living in close proximity. Wholesome and heart wrenching, this story is an important exploration of loss.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Review: Fowl Play

  Fowl Play By Kristin O'Donnell Tubb New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2024. Fiction 277 pages. Still reeling from her beloved uncle's death, Chloe Alvarez is comforted and confused when at his last will and testament reading, Uncle Will gifts her his African Grey parrot, Charlie. Charlie has a robust vocabulary and loves to make Alexa requests for her favorite songs, but when she starts saying things like, "homicide," and "cyanide," Chloe becomes convinced that Uncle Will may have met his demise by murder instead of a genetic disease, as was previously thought. Ultimately, bringing in her brother, Grammy, and Uncle Frank (and of course Charlie,) Chloe's ragtag and adoring family support her search for answers ---going on stakeouts, engaging in fast pursuits, and searching for clues. But as the suspects stack up and the mystery grows, Chole will learn that the process of death and grieving is complicated, and in the end her Uncle Will's words that, ...

Five Faves: Picture Books About Wolves

There are a lot of great picture books that have wolves in them. Wolves are beautiful, strong creatures that can also represent scary things (like in the fairy tale of Little Red Riding Hood). Here are five great new-ish picture books that feature wolves, for those kids who love to howl at the moon.  Full Moon Pups  Written by Liz Garton Scanlon  Illustrated by Chuck Groenink  New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 2023. Picture Book. This is a beautifully illustrated story about a pack of new wolf pups and how they grow over the course of one moon’s cycle, from full moon to new moon and back again. Readers will see how the new pups don’t open their eyes for days, how they start to explore the world around them, and how the older members of the pack take care of them. The book also includes information about the phases of the moon at the end.  Little Good Wolf  By Janet Stevens and Susan Stevens Crummel  Boston: Clarion Books, An Imprint of HarperCollins Publi...

Review: The Factory

The Factory By Catherine Egan New York, NY : Scholastic Inc., 2025. Fiction. 306 pages.  Thirteen-year-old Asher Doyle has been invited to join the Factory, a secretive research facility in the desert which ostensibly extracts renewable energy from the electromagnetic fields of its young recruits. But Asher soon realizes something sinister is going on. Kids are getting sick. The adults who run the Factory seem to be keeping secrets. And the extraction process is not only painful and exhausting, but existentially troubling. Asher makes a handful of new friends who help him with an investigation that turns into a resistance, which turns into...a cliffhanger! The Factory is a page-turning sci-fi with multidimensional characters, an intriguing plot, and refreshingly straight-forward writing. Egan weaves in detail about climate crises and social unrest, making the story's dystopian setting feel rich and plausible. With its sophisticated themes and accessible storytelling, I would recomm...