Review by Booklist Review
When Red is placed with foster parents the Grooves, she knows it's just another temporary home until her mom is released from jail. The more time she spends with the Grooves, however, the more hope Red feels. Torn between wanting to reunite with her mom and the growing love for her foster parents, she also struggles to control her magical power over the wind a power that is tied to her emotional state. And when Red finally begins to reconnect with her mother, her wish to be reunited is shattered by the realization that her mother may not yet have overcome her own struggles. Written in brief chapters intercut by letters, lists, and flashbacks, Lackey's debut beautifully depicts a young girl who, through hardship and beyond hope, finds a family in the most unexpected of places and learns that all things are possible with love. An emotional tale filled with unique characters, heartbreaking realities, and a touch of magical realism.--Selenia Paz Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Eleven-year-old Ruby "Red" Byrd is skeptical when her kindly social worker takes her to live with new foster parents in tiny Bramble, Colo. Jackson and Celine Groove, an older interracial couple, immediately open their hearts to Red, though, and she is drawn to their petting zoo of rescue animals, especially their 400-pound tortoise, Tuck. And gregarious Marvin, who is Hawaiian and the son of Red's respite caregivers, determines to befriend her. But she longs for her mother, who has been in prison for three years following an episode with pill addiction that left Red to fend for herself. Then her mother is released early, creating a literal storm for Red, whose roiling emotions can affect the wind. She longs to control this chaotic power, which infuses magic realism into Lackey's charming, bittersweet debut. Included throughout are heartbreaking glimpses of Red's life before her mother's arrest, as well as Red's letters to her mom, and readers will ache for her as she struggles to reconcile her affection for the Grooves with her fierce love for her troubled mother. Lackey's compassionately drawn story ponders hope, grief, and found family, warming the heart while avoiding an overly neat conclusion. Ages 8--12. (Sept.)
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Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 4--6--Red has a secret she wants to keep--she has the ability to affect the wind with her emotions, a trait she inherited from her mother. Red has become a pawn inside the foster care system, and anger and fear create unpredictable storms that she cannot control. Her mother attempts to pull her life together and become a fit parent as she struggles with drug addiction. As a rotating cast of adults move through Red's life and she is shuttled from one family to the next, her sole constant seems to be her social worker, Ms. Anders. That is, until Red is placed with the Grooves, her fifth foster stop in under three years. The couple own a petting zoo and seem to genuinely care for Red, who is conflicted by the growing love she feels for her foster mom and her desire to reunite with her birth mother. Determined to help her mother regain custody at an upcoming hearing, Red works on a special project with her new friend Marvin to prove that just because something is hard, it doesn't mean it is impossible. Excerpts from the notebook Red keeps for the project are peppered throughout the novel. VERDICT This middle grade tale reads like realistic fiction with a supernatural twist as Red's wind spirals and brews literal storms. Lackey tackles difficult topics including addiction and loss with infinite gentleness. Recommended for fiction collections.--Lauren Younger, University of Dallas Library
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A preteen tries to balance desperately missing her mother and slowly falling in love with her foster family.Ruby "Red" Byrd, a white girl, isn't expecting much when her social worker leaves her with Jackson and Celine Groove, an interracial older couple who own a petting zoo. But the Grooves are gentle and kind; they barely flinch whenever Red lashes out or misses her mom, who is in prison after a pill addiction left Red effectively on her own. Red learns to love the animals, and her neighbor and classmate Marvin, who is Hawaiian and knows what it's like to feel like an outsider, takes it upon himself to become her best friend whether she likes it or not. (And as far as Red is concerned, that's not.) But whenever Red gets angry or distressed, the wind picks up and wreaks havoc wherever she is, and this magic makes her feel even guiltier than she already does for being what she views as an imposition to her foster parents. With heart-wrenching, distressing flashbacks to life with her mother and grandmother before entering the foster system and heartwarming bittersweet moments with her new extended family (Marvin's parents are the assigned respite family), Lackey balances Red's navigation of her new reality. Red's occasional, interspersed letters to her mother add further poignancy.Painful to readin a good way. (Fiction. 8-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.