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Summer of the Gypsy Moths

by Sara Pennypacker

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2612791,855 (3.94)11
A foster child named Angel and twelve-year-old Stella, who are living with Stella's great-aunt Louise at the Linger Longer Cottage Colony on Cape Cod, secretly assume responsibility for the vacation rentals when Louise unexpectedly dies and the girls are afraid of being returned to the foster care system.… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 27 (next | show all)
children's fiction; middle-grade. If a charming story can be concocted from a book that begins with the clandestine disposal of a dead body, Sara Pennypacker (of the award-winning Clementine series) is the woman to write it. Stella's "restless" mother reminds me of Jeanette Wall's mom in The Glass Castle--poor eleven year old Stella is left in the care of her great aunt Louise, along with 12-y.o. disgruntled foster child Angel. The two spend most of the summer taking care of themselves amidst a web of lies, unanticipated responsibilities, and budding friendship. ( )
  reader1009 | Jul 3, 2021 |
Stella just moved in with her great-aunt Louise and Louise's foster child, a difficult girl named Angel who's about Stella's age. They live in a cottage on Cape Cod, and Louise tends to four other cottages as vacationers come and go. But shortly after Stella arrives, Louise kicks the bucket, leaving the two girls with a dilemma. Neither of them has another place to go - can they keep Louise's death a secret and manage the cottages by themselves all summer...without anyone knowing they're alone?

I wouldn't be surprised to see this one snag a Newbery honor this year. It deals insightfully with difficult topics like broken families, foster care, death, hard friendships; but somehow it's not depressing. In fact, it's even funny.

This is not only a great choice for fans of Clementine. It's also perfect for anybody who likes a good story. ( )
  rhowens | Nov 26, 2019 |
Eleven-year-old Stella misses her (unreliable) mom, but she loves it at great-aunt Louise’s house. Louise lives on Cape Cod, where Stella hopes her mom will someday come and settle down. The only problem? Angel, the foster kid Louise has taken in. The two girls live together but there’s no way they’ll ever be friends.Then Louise suddenly passes away one morning—and Stella and Angel decide not to tell anyone. Now they have to depend on each other for survival. Now they are forced to trust each other with the biggest secret ever.With great empathy and humor, Sara Pennypacker tells the story of two very different girls who unexpectedly become each other’s true family.
  jhennessy627 | Jan 29, 2019 |
After her "flighty" mother walks out on her again, Stella is sent to live on Cape Cod with her great aunt Louise. Just as she is starting to settle into her life with her great aunt, Louise unexpectedly dies. Stella and Angel, the other foster child taken in by Louise, decide their best bet is to tell no one. They bury Louise's body in the backyard garden and go about living on their own, hoping they can hide Louise's death long enough for Stella's mother or Angel's aunt can become an eligible safe guardian.

I cannot stress enough how disturbing and dangerous I found this book to be. To suggest that two pre-teens are capable of independence for weeks on end is unsettling. While many children might read this book and think nothing of it or simply thank their lucky stars for their own good luck in parents, I cannot help but think of that small percent of children who will read it and think they can cope on their own. Given that the main characters are foster children, I could easily see a scenario where children in foster homes pick this book up and take away the thought that survival on their own is a better option than yet another home. Indeed, Stella and Angel do fairly well for themselves and the book has a very "all's well that ends well" feel to it.

Perhaps I am overly worried for nothing, but I cannot write a review of this book without including these fears. Pennypacker is a talented writer and the book is lovely to read in terms of prose, pacing, imagery, metaphors, characterizations, setting, etc. If the intended audience were adults, I'd be a-okay with it. As it is, I have too much concern to wholeheartedly recommend it to the target group of tweens. ( )
  sweetiegherkin | Aug 24, 2017 |
I read this in 2 days, getting up during the night to read a few chapters. The setting is Cape Cod in the summer. Reading the book made me want to be on the beach in a little cottage eating clams. The main characters are Stella and Angel who are described as oil and water concerning how they get along and their personalities. Even though this book has funny moments, the plot centers around a tragedy greatly affecting both girls who are about 12 years old. ( )
  jothebookgirl | Jan 3, 2017 |
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A foster child named Angel and twelve-year-old Stella, who are living with Stella's great-aunt Louise at the Linger Longer Cottage Colony on Cape Cod, secretly assume responsibility for the vacation rentals when Louise unexpectedly dies and the girls are afraid of being returned to the foster care system.

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Stella loves living with Great-aunt Louise in her big old house near the water on Cape Cod for many reasons, but mostly because Louise likes routine as much as she does, something Stella appreciates since her mom is, well, kind of unreliable. So while Mom "finds herself," Stella fantasizes that someday she'll come back to the Cape and settle down. The only obstacle to her plan? Angel, the foster kid Louise has taken in. Angel couldn't be less like her name—she's tough and prickly, and the girls hardly speak to each other.

But when tragedy unexpectedly strikes, Stella and Angel are forced to rely on each other to survive, and they learn that they are stronger together than they could have imagined. And over the course of the summer they discover the one thing they do have in common: dreams of finally belonging to a real family.
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