A Possibility of Whales

by Karen Rivers

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Twelve-year-old Natalia Rose Baleine Gallagher dreams of seeing whales on the beach near her new home, and is consumed with the prospect that her mother who abandoned her as a child loves and misses her, and wants Nat to find her.

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4 reviews
I love the beautiful cover of a humpback whale! Natalia Rose Baleine Gallagher and her famous actor Dad, XAN GALLAGHER (always in caps!) have moved for the umpteenth time to escape the paparazzi. Their newest home is Sooke, Vancouver Island, British Columbia. They live in a motor home for ease of travel, and so they must be minimalists as they don't have room for too much "stuff." Also, XAN is very eco-minded. I loved Nat and XAN's loving relationship, full of humor and fun. There are many references to "girl stuff" (periods, getting boobs) that may deter boys from reading this, but it's reality, and good to have out in the open. Nat's good friend, Harry (born female Harriet) is transgender. Nat and XAN are more accepting of him than show more his parents. A vacation in Mexico helps Harry's parents see his point of view. Nat also likes learning new languages (her goal is to learn every language in the world!), so Rivers inserts words in different languages. (In her afterword, she explains that she'd been collecting words for some time, knowing she'd use them in a story one day.) One of my favorites is Komorebi, the Japanese word for sunlight filtering through trees. Reading this book makes me want to read other books by this author. show less
A teen girl is forced to move annually since her dad (a famous movie star) is found out by paparazzi each place they go. In their newest community she becomes friends with a recently out trans boy in her school & the friendship with slightly romantic undertones is very, very sweet. I love that the her concern is really just whether she's ready to have an actual boyfriend & not at all about the fact that this particular boy is trans.
The most defining element of Natalia Rose Gallagher’s life is that she’s never met her mother: “You can come out of someone’s body, she thought, and not have that count as meeting them.” Nat knows she could probably find her mother’s name online, since her father is a movie star with a hulking physique and an even bigger personality (think Dwayne Johnson), but she’s afraid of what she’ll learn. As she approaches puberty, though, Nat desperately needs somebody. After moving from California to Canada and feeling betrayed by the best friend she left behind, Nat fixates on Harry, a transgender classmate with a disapproving father. Rivers (Love, Ish) packs a lot into this story (including Nat’s love of whales), perhaps too show more much. Although Harry gets chapters of his own, his character is never fully developed, so it’s unclear why Nat is so determined to be friends with him when he sometimes treats her shabbily. Even less satisfying is the mystery surrounding Nat’s mother, whose identity—known to everyone but Nat—is eventually revealed, but not the reason she abandoned her daughter. Ages 8–12. Agent: Jennifer Laughran, Andrea Brown Literary. (Mar.)
Publishers Weekly
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Same author as Girl in the Well is me. Brings up topic of transgender friend...

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6th Grade
68 works; 4 members

Author Information

25 Works 1,187 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

People/Characters
Natalia 'Nat' Rose Baleine Gallagher; XAN GALLAGHER; Harry
Important places
Sooke, B.C.
Dedication
For Linden and Lola. Os quiero mucho.
First words
On her fourth day at the new place, Natalia Rose Baleine Gallagher walked down the long, lumpy trail to the beach that lay at the bottom of the slope.
Quotations
A wave of myotahapea, which is a Finnish word for sympathetic embarrassment ... She liked to roll myotahapea around in her head. It was a perfect marble of a word, red and swirly in the middle and definitely made of glass. (p... (show all). 65)
Sometimes she wished she could just erase her brain and not have to think about anything that had already happened. A break from thinking would be nice. (p. 113)
Nat didn't think she had the energy to be always "on." Maybe she preferred to be "off." (p. 145)
Komorebi was a Japanese word for exactly what they could see: the sunlight streaming through the trees. (p. 198)
It [the humpback whale] felt holy, the slow rise of it and then the disappearing. Spiritual. (p. 234)
Nat didn't want to be someone who was in a bubble. She didn't like complications, but she wanted to understand them. Once you understood the, they weren't complications anymore. They were just life. (p. 277)
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Because it's the end!" she called, even though she knew he couldn't hear her; her words, instead, were blown back toward the palatial glass house and up into the windy brown hills beyond.

Classifications

Genres
Kids, Tween, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7 .R5224 .PLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

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61
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506,722
Reviews
4
Rating
(4.20)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
1