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THE BIG DREAMS OF SMALL CREATURES by Gail Lerner

THE BIG DREAMS OF SMALL CREATURES

by Gail Lerner

Pub Date: Oct. 4th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-40785-1
Publisher: Nancy Paulsen Books

Can Eden find a way to stop insect-hating August from killing all the bugs?

In this debut by the writer and director of Black-ish and other hit TV shows, 9-year-old August, a White boy who is the victim of bullying, hates insects: A cockroach climbs up his arm during a school play, a fly lands in his mouth and he vomits on his favorite teacher, and a spiderweb causes him to drop a box of his mother’s homemade jelly. August schemes to get his hands on a pesticide that is rumored to be exceptionally toxic—only its inventor is missing. On her 10th birthday, Eden, who has a White Jewish mother and Black father and comes from a musical family, learns she can talk to wasps using her kazoo. She saves a paper wasps’ nest from a group of destructive children, and, taken by her kindness, the wasp queen informs her of a mysterious school dedicated to teaching communication between insects and humans. Eden finds a card in a library book for the Institute for Lower Learning: Could it be the right school? Eden’s and August’s quests intersect at the institute. Though the prose is beautiful, the novel creeps along, with extensive passages of narration that are not broken up with dialogue. Despite the protagonists’ young ages, older middle-grade readers may be drawn to the strong messages about environmentalism, friendship, and self-discovery.

A slowly unfolding read for bug lovers and environmentalists.

(Morse code and semaphore charts) (Fiction. 10-14)