FICTION

A Dog Called Homeless

198p. HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen. 2012. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-0-06-212220-9; ebook $9.99. ISBN 978-0-06-212222-3. LC 2011044628.
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Gr 4–7—Cally Fisher hasn't spoken for 31 days. As she explains in the prologue, "Talking doesn't always make things happen, however much you want it to." She knows that talking won't bring her mother back to life or keep her dad from selling their home in exchange for a small apartment so what's the point in saying anything. But when her mother appears one day wearing a bright red raincoat and the only other soul that sees her is a big scraggly dog, the girl knows she must find a way to convince her father that the dog is the only thing connecting them to her mother. But her father's growing depression continues to separate the family and Cally struggles to keep her mother from becoming a distant memory. When she meets Sam, who lives downstairs, the friendship that forms between the blind boy and silent girl manages to reunite a family, and each character benefits from the bond. Truly a lesson in the power of love and loss, this story shows that learning how to listen is more important than what's being said. This is a thought-provoking story that will speak to readers of all ages.—Cheryl Ashton, Amherst Public Library, OH
No one will talk about Cally’s dead mother, but Cally is the sort of person who likes to discuss what she’s feeling. When she sees her mother’s ghost and tries to share the happiness that encounter gives her, it only makes her father upset. When her fifth grade classroom enrolls in a "sponsored silence" to benefit a hospice, she volunteers to be silent for a day. The silence, surprisingly, suits her, and she keeps it for days that turn into weeks, even as her family moves to a new apartment. There she makes a friend in her downstairs neighbor Sam, who is blind and mostly deaf, and together they start to watch over a dog who appears with Cally’s mother’s ghost, and whom they name Homeless. Between them, Sam and Homeless help Cally say what she needs to, with or without words, so that she and her family can finally share memories of her mother. Lean’s first novel stands out for its clean and evocative prose. Despite the often heavy-handed messages, her characters and narrative are genuine and engaging. Readers drawn to stories of adversity will find this one rewarding, and all readers should look forward to Lean’s next novel. nina lindsay

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