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The Remarkable Journey of Charlie Price
The Remarkable Journey of Charlie Price | Jennifer Maschari
1 post | 2 read | 2 to read
A heartfelt, beautifully written novel of love, loss, and math—perfect for fans of Rebecca Stead and Sharon M. Draper. Ever since twelve-year-old Charlie Price's mom died, he feels like his world has been split into two parts. Before included stargazing and Mathletes and Saturday scavenger hunts with his family. After means a dad who's completely checked out, comically bad dinners, and grief group that's anything but helpful. It seems like losing Mom meant losing everything else he loved, too. Just when Charlie thinks things can't get any worse, his sister, Imogen, starts acting erratically—missing school and making up lies about their mother. But everything changes when one day he follows her down a secret passageway in the middle of her bedroom and sees for himself. Imogen has found a parallel world where Mom is alive! There's hot cocoa and Scrabble and scavenger hunts again and everything is perfect . . . at first. But something doesn't feel right. Whenever Charlie returns to the real world, things are different, and not in a good way. And Imogen wants to spend more and more time on the other side. It's almost as if she wants to leave the real world for good. If Charlie doesn't uncover the truth, he could lose himself, the true memory of their mother, and Imogen . . . forever.
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A nicely written story about loss, coping with grief; about memories, & hope. Reminds me of Gaiman‘s Coraline & Rebecca Stead‘s When You Reach Me. I didn‘t entirely like it because some points of the plot were left unexplained; & as it‘s the author‘s debut, some aspects of the writing would probably be improved over time, but I liked how the delicate themes of death, familial love, & friendship are tackled in this middle grade read.
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