FICTION

No Parking at the End of Times

272p. ebook available. HarperCollins/Greenwillow. Feb. 2015. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780062275417.
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Gr 8 Up—This haunting and elegiac tale opens with Abigail and her family living in a van parked on the San Francisco streets. Months earlier, Abby's unemployed father took the family from their North Carolina home to follow "Brother John" across the country to a place where they would all meet the end of days together. The world was due to end at midnight on New Year's Eve. Now it's January, the world did not end, and Abby, her twin brother Aaron, and her parents still have no home. With no school to attend, Abby and Aaron's only escape from the close confines of the van is the predatory self-anointed preacher's "church" (an empty store). The family is often hungry, cold, and dirty—yet do not consider themselves "homeless." Aaron has hooked up with a group of homeless teens who hang out in the park and has begun a secret relationship with Jess, a street-smart girl who left home at 14 when her mother's boyfriend sexually abused her. Abby wants to continue to be the good girl her parents expect and to protect her brother from getting mixed up in dangerous street drama, but most of all, she wants to go home. The protagonist's desperation is palpable. Readers will wait anxiously for something terrible to happen, only to come to the dawning realization that it already has. Bliss offers a stark portrayal of a family lost and a searing perspective on homelessness. An interesting choice for book discussion and recommended for readers of realistic fiction.—Tara Kehoe, New Jersey State Library Talking Book and Braille Center, Trenton
Abigail's family, newly arrived in San Francisco from North Carolina, prays for ascension in the Rapture. When the world doesn't end, her parents choose to live in their van while awaiting divine guidance, testing Abigail's faith in God and family. This debut novel's depiction of a middle-class, suburban family's transition to life on the streets sensitively explores family, sacrifice, and everyday faith.
On the night of the Rapture, Abigail and her family, newly arrived in San Francisco from North Carolina, pray for ascension, for the quick deliverance Brother John promised. When the world doesn't end, Abigail instead prays for her parents to "start the van and take us home. To save us in the way God was supposed to." But her prayers go unanswered, and her parents' choice to live in their van while awaiting divine guidance puts Abigail's faith in God and family to the test. Cautious and thoughtful, Abigail is a dutiful daughter who can't imagine life without her parents, however flawed. Her twin brother Aaron is less compliant -- he begins sneaking out at night, socializing with other homeless teens, and pressuring Abigail to join him in an escape. Bliss's depiction of a middle-class, suburban family's transition to life on the inhospitable San Francisco streets is nuanced and character-driven; the tightly focused first-person narration centers the story squarely on Abigail as she gathers the courage to choose between her family and her future. Bliss's debut explores family, sacrifice, and the power of everyday faith with a deft and sensitive hand. jessica tackett macdonald

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