Lost in the sun

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Where to find it

Information & Library Science Library — Juvenile

Call Number
J Graff
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

From the author of A Tangle of Knots and Absolutely Almost , a touching story about a boy who won't let one tragic accident define him.

Everyone says that middle school is awful, but Trent knows nothing could be worse than the year he had in fifth grade, when a freak accident on Cedar Lake left one kid dead, and Trent with a brain full of terrible thoughts he can't get rid of. Trent's pretty positive the entire disaster was his fault, so for him middle school feels like a fresh start, a chance to prove to everyone that he's not the horrible screw-up they seem to think he is.

If only Trent could make that fresh start happen.

It isn't until Trent gets caught up in the whirlwind that is Fallon Little--the girl with the mysterious scar across her face--that things begin to change. Because fresh starts aren't always easy. Even in baseball, when a fly ball gets lost in the sun, you have to remember to shift your position to find it.

Praise for Lost in the Sun :

A Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year!

* "Graff writes with stunning insight [and] consistently demonstrates why character-driven novels can live from generation to generation."-- Kirkus Reviews *STARRED*

* "Graff creates layered, vulnerable characters that are worth getting to know."-- Booklist *STARRED*

* "[A]n ambitious and gracefully executed story."-- Publishers Weekly *STARRED*

* "Weighty matters deftly handled with humor and grace will give this book wide appeal."-- School Library Journal *STARRED*

* "Characterization is thoughtful."-- BCCB *STARRED*

"In Lost in the Sun , Trent decides that he will speak the truth: that pain and anger and loss are not the final words, that goodness can find us after all--even when we hide from it. This is a novel that speaks powerfully, honestly, almost shockingly about our human pain and our human redemption. This book will change you."--Gary Schmidt, two-time Newbery Honor-winning author of The Wednesday Wars and Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy

"Lisa Graff crafts a compelling story about a boy touched with tragedy and the world of people he cares about. And like all the best stories, it ends at a new beginning."--Richard Peck, Newbery Award-winning author of A Year Down Yonder and A Long Way From Chicago


Lisa Graff's Awards and Reviews:

Lisa Graff's books have been named to 30 state award lists, and A Tangle of Knots was long-listed for the National Book Award.

Sample chapter

Prologue When we were real little kids, Mom used to take Aaron and Doug and me to Sal's Pizzeria for dinner almost every Tuesday, which is when they had their Family Night Special. I think she liked it because she didn't have to worry about dinner for three growing boys for one night, but we liked it because there was a claw machine there--one of those giant contraptions with toys inside, all sorts, and a metal claw that you moved around with a joystick to try to grab at the toys. As soon as we got into the restaurant, Mom would hand us two dollars, which is how much it cost for three tries, and we'd huddle around the machine and plan our attack. We didn't want to waste that two dollars, so we usually took the whole amount of time until our pizza came up, trying to get one of those toys (back then, I had my eye on a fuzzy blue monster, and Doug was desperate for one of the teddy bears, but after a while we would've settled for anything). Aaron, as the oldest, was the designated joystick manipulator, and Doug, the youngest, would stand at the side and holler when he thought Aaron had the best angle on the chosen toy. I was in charge of strategy. Mom would sit at the table, waiting for our pizza, and read her book. I think she enjoyed the claw machine even more than we did. We spent six months trying for a toy in that claw machine. Forty-eight dollars. Never got a single thing. No one else had gotten one either, we could tell. None of the stuffed animals ever shifted position. But we were determined to be the first. Finally the owner, Sal Jr., made us stop. He said he couldn't in good conscience let us waste any more money. Then he got a key from the back room, and unlocked the side window panel of the claw machine, and showed us. "See how flimsy this thing is?" he said, poking at the claw. "Here, Trent, have a look." He boosted me up, till I was practically inside the machine, and let me fiddle with the claw, too. After that it was Doug's turn, then Aaron's. "A cheap piece of metal like that," Sal Jr. told us, "it could never grab hold of one of these toys. Not if you had the best aim in the world. Not in a thousand years. And you know why?" "Why?" I asked. I was mesmerized. I remember. "I'll tell you, Trent. Because, look." That's when Sal Jr. grabbed hold of the teddy bear's arm. Yanked it hard. It wouldn't budge. You could hear the seams in the bear's stitching rip, just a little. "They're all packed in together super tight," I said when I figured it out. "There's no room for any of them to go." "Exactly," Sal Jr. told me. He locked the side window panel back up. "Consider that a lesson in economics, boys." We got two pizzas on the house that night, with extra everything. Aaron was so mad about the claw machine, he hardly ate. He said Sal Jr. had been stealing our money from the start, so it didn't matter if he gave us pizza after, he was still a crook. Doug disagreed. He gobbled up his pizza so fast, you'd never even have known he wanted a teddy bear. Me, though, I was more fascinated than anything. I felt like I'd learned a real lesson, a grown-up one, and it stuck with me. That's the day I figured out that no matter how hard you tug at something, no matter how bad you want it, sometimes it just can't be pried free. I thought about that claw machine a lot after Jared died. Because there were days--who am I kidding, every day was one of those days--when I wished I could lift that moment out of my life, just scoop it up with an industrial-sized claw, and toss it into a metal bin. Remove it from existence, so that it never happened at all. But I knew that wasn't something I could ever do--and not just because I didn't have a magic claw machine with the power to erase events from history. No, I knew I could never disappear that moment, because just like with the claw machine, there were so many events pushed up around it that there'd be no way to get it to budge. Everything that had happened before, and everything that happened after, those moments were all linked. Smushed together. Still, I couldn't help thinking that if I had it to do over, I never would've hit that hockey puck. Excerpted from Lost in the Sun by Lisa Graff All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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