Review by Booklist Review
Despite its premise as a "divorce book," there are subtle observations about perception versus reality to be found both in and between the lines of this Australian import. Shocked by his parents' split, 11-year-old James looks back on six moments when they seemed particularly close, ping-pongs between his introverted white dad and outgoing Chinese mom, and sees them, too, struggling to cope with new living arrangements. Meanwhile, he connects with a similarly solitary classmate and a time machine that can send him back to those precious moments. Revisiting each, he discovers repressed details that reveal those situations to have been less safe and happy than he recalled. In a subplot that takes on similar nuance, James sees events that suddenly cast a classmate and his mother in a very different light. The tale's unhappy scenario is lightened by an ongoing cake-baking competition that climaxes in a massive, tension-releasing food fight while ably guiding James, and readers, toward the worthy closing insight: it's better to live in, and enjoy, the moment than to fixate on the past.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Channeling personal experiences of emigrating from China to Australia, Marr (All Four Quarters of the Moon) examines one 11-year-old's desire to turn back time in this thoughtful read. James Greenaway is sent adrift when his parents announce that they're getting a divorce. Within days, he's splitting time between his white-cued father's familiar house and his Chinese Australian mother's dilapidated new apartment. Worse, his parents are having him decide which parent he wants to spend his weekends with. At school, James befriends Yan Chen, a Chinese immigrant classmate who reads obsolete 40-year-old computer programming manuals for fun. When Yan says she invented a time machine, James scoffs. As he increasingly takes solace in memories of perfect days with his parents, however, he starts to believe that living in the past would be preferable to the present. But to do that, he'll need Yan's help. A subplot surrounding a school baking competition that relies on classic Australian cake constructions leads to laugh-out-loud antics and touching insights. Discussions of time travel lean more toward wistful fantasy than hard science, and the tweens' desire to bend time provides a framework through which James gains new perspectives on his own memories. Ages 8--12. Agent: Gemma Cooper, Bent Agency. (June)
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Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 3--7--When his parents separate, 11-year-old James's entire life turns upside down. He now has to swap between two homes and navigate shifting relationships with his parents, each of whom are trying to find themselves again after this major change. As his mother embraces mismatched color schemes and his father begins to rebuild a motorbike, James, now lonely at home as well as at school, meets Yan. The two budding scientists develop a friendship, and Yan agrees to use her time machine to send James back to one of his favorite memories. But James starts learning that memories aren't always trustworthy, and that it may be best to leave them in the past. Centered around the Summerlake Primary School Cake Competition, a significant fundraiser for James's school, this work explores different types of belonging, each linked by ideas of time and space. Six chapters interspaced between the main plot detail, the memories most important to James, offer readers a closer look at his complex family dynamic. The depths of emotion within the main characters, combined with a strong nostalgic feel, create a work that will stay with readers. VERDICT A moving story with a pleasing twist ending.--Maggie Mason Smith
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Review by Horn Book Review
After his parents unexpectedly announce their divorce, eleven-year-old James decides his new friend Yan's time machine might give him a chance to go back to a happier past. When James's mother moves out, he must adapt to frequent switches between two homes and to parents redefining themselves at midlife. Some of the changes are, in his opinion, improvements, such as his mother's first-ever entry into his school's annual cake-making fundraiser; others, such as meeting Yan on his route to school with Mom, take some time to appreciate. When Yan's time machine doesn't have the intended effect (it's a proxy server that lets her access the 1990s-era internet), she goes to work adapting it to help James. Chapter headings count down the time remaining until their launch, and James reflects on experiences that will never happen again now that his parents have split up. When Yan's machine takes him back to those perfect moments, though, he sees them from a different perspective and discovers that the divorce was not such a surprise after all. Marr effectively blends elements of an adventure story with a quieter, character-driven plot. Subjects such as racial identity (James and Yan, like Marr, are both Chinese Australian, but Yan is a recent immigrant) and bullying are seamlessly integrated into the story, and James's realization that the adults around him are more complex than he'd realized is well handled. An enjoyable read with an innovative twist on the time-travel narrative. Sarah RettgerSeptember/October 2024 p.81 (c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
An Australian boy embarks on a time-traveling mission in an attempt to return to simpler times. Eleven-year-old James Greenaway's Chinese Australian mom and white dad are separating, and the news makes him feel like an untethered astronaut in space. He can't help but fixate on happy memories from his past as he grapples with having two homes. One day, a change in James' routine leads him to meet Yan, a Chinese girl whose love of retro computers and unique way of thinking open up the possibility of time travel. All he must do is decide on which of his six favorite memories he'd like to return to. But did things really happen the way he remembers? Could he have reasons to stay in the present? Marr's captivating prose imbues the story with heart, humor, and hope for the present and the future. The author deftly weaves multiple themes of family, friendship, nostalgia, and growth into a richly layered and thought-provoking tale that will linger in readers' minds long after it's over. Cultural references (such as to an iconic Australian birthday cake cookbook), an original take on time travel, and perfectly imperfect characters just doing their best all create a vivid sense of place and will make this title resonate with children and adults alike. An exceptionally lovely and uplifting exploration of change, memories, and relationships. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.