Dream

Barbara O'Connor

Large print - 2026

"Idalee Lovett is content with her life in small-town Colby, North Carolina, living in her family's huge house with rooms for rent. But she has big dreams, just like her mama. While Mama is on tour for the summer with her cover band, Lovey Lovett and the Junkyard Dogs, Idalee decides to hone her craft as a songwriter -- since her truest wish is to hear her country songs on the radio one day. When the local radio station announces a songwriting contest with the winning song being recorded by an up-and-coming singer, Idalee is determined to win. It would definitely be possible if only she could buy the shiny blue guitar in nearby Asheville's music shop. Idalee doesn't have much money, but she knows exactly how to get it --... the long-lost treasure her late granddaddy hid somewhere in their house. With the help of her friends Odell, Howard, Charlie, and an adorable little dog named Wishbone, Idalee is going to search every nook and cranny until she finds it. But little does she know, the biggest treasure of all is only discovered when you believe in yourself with your whole heart" -- Cover p. [4].

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Subjects
Genres
large type books
Large type books
Livres en gros caractères
Published
[Waterville, Maine] : Thorndike Press, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
Barbara O'Connor (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Item Description
Originally published (standard print format): New York : Farrar Straus Giroux, 2025.
Physical Description
275 pages (large print) ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12
Grades 4-6
ISBN
9781420531084
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Readers who enjoyed Charlie's story in Barbara O'Connor's Wish (2016) will enjoy this return to her small town in North Carolina, narrated by Charlie's classmate Idalee, whose mother hopes for stardom as a country singer. Mama departs with her band for a road trip that might make her famous. Meanwhile, Idalee is staying with neighbors and hoping to stay out of trouble. Like her grandfather, Idalee writes songs. When a radio station sponsors a songwriting contest, her friends urge her to submit some of her songs. Idalee longs to win the cash prize, which will buy her a new guitar, but after she uses a ruse to gain an advantage, her moral compass responds with realistic guilt and makes her dreams seem far beyond her reach. In this stand-alone book that features several returning characters and a familiar setting, the strongest asset is O'Connor's ability to let Idalee tell her story in her own, distinctive voice, while creating secondary characters who are interesting and equally true to life. An involving chapter book, set in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--6--The sound of guitar-picking music sets the tone for O'Connor's companion to Wish, with the delightful Jackson returning as narrator. Idalee (a friend of Charlie, protagonist of the previous book) dreams that one day she will become a famous songwriter for her mother's band, Lovey Lovett and the Junkyard Dogs. Jackson fully captures the character's roller coaster of emotions as she shares the young girl's story, flavoring it with a Southern twang. Idalee is disappointed when she learns she must stay in Colby, but her spirit lifts when she spots a blue guitar in an Asheville music shop and starts to soar when she enters a local songwriting contest. The pace picks up as Idalee, Charlie, and other friends stealthily search through every room in the boarding house looking for a long-lost treasure Idalee's Granddaddy mentioned on his deathbed. With it, Idalee plans to buy the guitar and win the contest. Jackson gives each of the characters a well-developed personality that feels just right for a North Carolina mountain town. VERDICT Dreams do come true for this spunky, upbeat girl in a charming follow-up to Wish.--Stephanie Bange

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

O'Connor takes readers back to Colby, North Carolina, in this standalone companion to Wish (rev. 11/16). Eleven-year-old Idalee Lovett, descended from a long line of musicians, stars here. An aspiring country songwriter, Idalee lives with her mother in their family home, now converted into a boardinghouse whose lodgers include several distinct and well-developed secondary characters. When Joey's All-American BBQ Shack announces a song-writing contest, with the winning song to be performed on the radio by a rising country singer, Idalee is all in. She figures her chances of winning would be better if she could purchase a guitar. Without the funds to do so, Idalee enlists Charlie and Howard (who will be familiar to readers of Wish) as well as temporary boarder Odell to find her grandfather's bounty, rumored to be hidden somewhere in her home. The treasure turns out to be a collection of never-published, and terrific, country songs, which fill Idalee with self-doubt about her own skills and present her with a moral dilemma: perhaps she could just enter one of these gems. But such a move would belie her song, "Dream," in which Idalee eschews gold and riches for life's everyday pleasures. In a leisurely narrative that reflects the small-town atmosphere of Colby, O'Connor gives readers much to ponder. Betty CarterSeptember/October 2025 p.71 (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

Idalee Lovett's summer is full of friendship and a dream of country music fame. O'Connor revisits the Blue Ridge Mountains town of Colby, North Carolina (the setting of 2016'sWish), where 11-year-old first-person narrator Idalee aspires to become her mother's songwriter. Lovey Lovett and the Junkyard Dogs sing covers of popular songs, but Idalee, who comes from generations of country musicians, believes her original compositions can help her mother rise to stardom. She longs to win an upcoming songwriting contest for young people, but she doesn't believe that any of the many songs she's already written and strummed on her old, broken guitar have what it takes. Sheneeds the blue guitar she saw in an Asheville music store. Idalee enlists friends Odell, Charlie, and Howard to help her find a treasure rumored to be hidden by her grandfather somewhere in her big, dilapidated family home, which has been turned into a rooming house. The pleasures of summertime independence and relaxed parenting and the absence of electronic screens and distractions give this work a timeless feel. Idalee's songs focus on the funny and familiar. The lyrics of her new composition, "Dream," are sweetly evocative: "Some folks dream of castles and dresses made of silk. / I dream of a cabin in the pines, cornbread, and buttermilk." O'Connor's affection for small towns, slightly eccentric people, and low-key humor shines through, her surehanded narrative and appealing characters reliably engaging, as always. Most characters read white. Warm-hearted and wonderfully likable.(Fiction. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.