Telephone of the Tree
By Alison McGhee
By Alison McGhee
By Alison McGhee
By Alison McGhee
By Alison McGhee
Read by Sara Matsui-Colby
By Alison McGhee
Read by Sara Matsui-Colby
Category: Children's Middle Grade Books
Category: Children's Middle Grade Books
Category: Audiobooks | Children's Middle Grade Books
-
$17.99
May 07, 2024 | ISBN 9780593698457 | Middle Grade (8-12)
-
May 07, 2024 | ISBN 9780593698464 | Middle Grade (8-12)
-
May 07, 2024 | ISBN 9780593868256 | Middle Grade (8-12)
159 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Jupiter Nettle and the Seven Schools of Magic
The Beast of Skull Rock (Monsterious, Book 4)
Sing It Like Celia
Penny Draws a Class Trip
Lucky Scramble
The Adventures of Invisible Boy
The Sky King
We Built This City
More Tales to Keep You Up at Night
Praise
“Inspired by Itaru Sasaki’s phone booth in Japan, where people can symbolically call deceased loved ones, McGhee lays bare the powerful emotions entangled with loss while demonstrating the strength found in community.” —Booklist
“McGhee injects a speculative twist to this tender tale about death and grief. Employing spare, sensory language, McGhee explores the painful negative space created by loss and the devastation of a friendship cutshort, as well as the healing found in moving forward while remembering that ‘there’s more… so much more.'” —Publishers Weekly
★ “Rather than trot in a therapist or some other mouthpiece for wise counseling, the author gives her protagonist subtler (and more believably effective) help reaching that insight—most notably parents who give her space rather than unwanted advice, and her grandfather’s old telephone. Readers feeling Ayla’s profound sense of loss will be relieved when she finds a way to live with it. Raw and sad but lit with occasional glints of humor and ending, as it should, on a rising note.” —Kirkus, starred review
★ “The reveal that the phone was placed by Ayla’s grandpa who used it to “call” his wife after she passed is just one beautiful details in a story that focuses on generational healing rather than generational trauma. While more mature readers may quickly realize that Kiri has died, the novel’s hybrid of lyrically written plot fragments and stream of consciousness serve to poetically reveal the facts as Ayla becomes ready to process them.” —The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, starred review
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In