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Just Fly Away

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A debut novel about one girl's discovery of family secrets, first love, the limits of forgiveness, and finding one's way in the world, written with wisdom and sympathy by the bestselling memoirist, actor, and director. When fifteen-year-old Lucy Willows discovers that her father has a child from a brief affair, a eight-year-old boy named Thomas who lives in her own suburban New Jersey town, she begins to question everything she thinks she knows about her family and her life. Lucy can't believe her father betrayed the whole family, or that her mother forgave him, or that her sister isn't rocked by the news the way Lucy is. Worse, Lucy's father's secret is now her own, one that isolates her from her friends, family, and even her boyfriend, Simon, the one person she expected would truly understand. When Lucy escapes to Maine, the home of her mysteriously estranged grandfather, she finally begins to get to the bottom of her family's secrets and lies. Fans of the rebels and antiheroes in the novels of Rainbow Rowell, A. S. King, and Meg Wolitzer will welcome this sharp, observant new voice in young adult fiction
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2017
      Fifteen-year-old Lucy Willows is blindsided when she learns that she has an eight-year-old half brother, Thomas, a product of her father’s infidelity. Overwhelmed by her father’s past actions and her mother’s calm acceptance of them, Lucy goes into a tailspin and begins thinking that every young boy she sees could be Thomas. When she tracks him down and her father finds out, she takes off, seeking refuge with her estranged grandfather. Welcomed by him, Lucy finds comfort and begins to accept the hard truth that parents are fallible. In his first book for teens, actor and author McCarthy (The Longest Way Home) sensitively explores the difficult process of learning to accept loved ones despite their shortcomings, although Lucy’s inner thoughts can feel restrained and overly mature at times. Through discussions with her grandfather, Lucy begins to see her father as a complicated individual with a history that includes joy, sadness, successes, and mistakes. Readers will appreciate the honest conversations between Lucy and her family, which underscore the importance of communication to foster connection and understanding. Ages 14–up. Agent: David Patterson, Stuart Krichevsky Agency.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Suzy Jackson's accurate teen voicing captures 15-year-old Lucy's confused feelings when she learns of her father's brief affair, which resulted in the birth of her half-brother, who is now eight years old. Outraged at her father's betrayal, dismayed at her mother's acceptance of the affair, and not understanding why her younger sister seems unconcerned, Lucy distances herself from her immediate family. Her budding relationship with Simon, with its realistic exploration of sex, is not enough to assuage her anger, so with little money and no real plan, Lucy sets off alone to visit her grandfather, whom she's met only once. Jackson handles the kitchen sink of heavy emotions in Andrew McCarthy's debut novel through expert inflection, tone, and pacing. S.G. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:750
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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