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Everything Else in the Universe

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In the midst of the Vietnam War, a young girl struggles to embrace change in this tender family story for fans of Cynthia Lord and Wendy Maas
Lucy is a practical, orderly person—just like her dad. He taught her to appreciate reason and good sense, instilling in her the same values he learned at medical school. But when he's sent to Vietnam to serve as an Army doctor, Lucy and her mother are forced to move to San Jose, California, to be near their relatives—the Rossis—people known for their superstitions and all around quirky ways.
     Lucy can't wait for life to go back to normal, so she's over the moon when she learns her father is coming home early. It doesn't even matter that he's coming back "different." That she can't ask too many questions or use the word "amputation." It just matters that he'll be home. But Lucy quickly realizes there's something very wrong when her mother sends her to spend the summer with the Rossis to give her father some space. Lucy's beside herself, but what's a twelve-year-old to do?
     It's a curious boy named Milo, a mysterious packet of photographs and an eye-opening mission that makes Lucy see there's more to life than schedules and plans, and helps to heal her broken family. The latest from critically-acclaimed author Tracy Holczer is a pitch-perfect middle grade tale of family and friendship that's sure to delight fans of One for the Murphys and Rules.
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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2018
      It's 1971, and the Vietnam War has upended Lucy Rossi's life; when her Army doctor dad returns an amputee, the unsettling changes intensify.After her dad shipped out, Lucy, 12, and her mom moved from Chicago to San Jose, California, close to his eccentric, loving Italian-American family. Lucy still hasn't made friends. She treasures the small rocks her dad encloses in his letters and longs for his return. But he arrives home changed: He won't use his prosthesis and rebuffs her attempts to help; he talks to her mom in private but shuts Lucy out. She finds solace in her friendship with another newcomer, Milo, whose dad's still in Vietnam. Finding an unknown soldier's discarded helmet, photos, and Purple Heart, they decide to identify and locate him and deliver the items to his family. Along the way, they're welcomed at an informal refuge for veterans but turned away from the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion, where Vietnam veterans are despised. As her dad's condition worsens and the hunt stalls, friends and family teach Lucy to value human connections she's dismissed. Lyrically written, the novel portrays the war's corrosive, divisive impacts with compassion but skirts the harder issue of those within and outside the military who resisted a war they saw as wrong. Major characters are white; two memorable secondary characters are African-American.A touching, memorable read that explores the costs, large and small, of an unpopular war. (Historical fiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 16, 2018
      Holczer’s perceptive novel, set in 1971, opens as 12-year-old Lucy Rossi’s father returns home from Vietnam missing his right arm. Lucy and her parents have always been a mutually supportive team. Expecting this dynamic to continue, careful Lucy (who relies on her “behavioral comfort routines”) studies up on amputees and prosthetics, only to find her father resistant to her efforts. Bewildered by the change in her family, Lucy feels left out and unloved, particularly after she’s sent to stay with her uncle’s boisterous family. A new friendship with Milo, whose dad is fighting in Vietnam, helps; his interest in dragonflies mirrors Lucy’s in rocks, and after they discover a soldier’s personal effects, they work together to find the owner. Affectingly tracing Lucy’s struggles with her altered family, Holczer also credibly portrays the conflicting views on the war, from protestors to former vets. Well-grounded in its era and peopled by fully realized characters, the book is a resonant historical novel and a thoughtful exploration of how war and injury affect family, friendships, and individual growth. Ages 10–up.

    • School Library Journal

      June 1, 2018

      Gr 4-6-Twelve-year-old Lucy should be having the best summer of her life-her beloved father has just returned from Vietnam, and she is looking forward to spending time with him. But her father is struggling- both with the loss of his arm and what that loss means for his career as a surgeon. Lucy is an autodidact and a fixer, so she goes into research overdrive and wants to spend her summer helping her father recalibrate-but her father needs space and sends Lucy to stay with her extended family instead. There, Lucy embarks on a mission with a new neighbor to return a Purple Heart to a mysterious Vietnam veteran. The novel introduces a nuanced view of the Vietnam War to readers via conversations Lucy has with her peacenik cousin, veterans at the VFW, and her grandfather. Lucy's profound anxiety over her father's mental and physical state is treated gently by Holczer, as Lucy works towards healing and opening herself up to help and love. This is a quiet, tender work of historical fiction about grief, love, and learning to let go. VERDICT A worthy addition to any middle grade collection, especially for readers who loved Jennifer Holm's Penny from Heaven.-Susannah Goldstein, Bronx School for Law, Government, and Justice, NY

      Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2018
      Grades 5-8 Twelve-year-old Lucy's surgeon father is coming home from Vietnam?minus his arm. Steady, solemn Lucy has held things together in the year he's been gone by studying the rocks he's sent her, trying to fit in with his boisterous Italian family, and being a team with her patrician mother. But the move to California has left her friendless until she meets Milo, whose father is still in Vietnam. When they find military artifacts, including photos and a Purple Heart, buried nearby, the duo decide to locate the rightful owner. Lucy's adjustments are thoughtfully examined, and her evolving efforts to stabilize her family in general, and her father in particular, are well crafted. The backdrop of Vietnam fits more easily at some times than others, but its long reach is explained and acknowledged. There's a lot of sadness and uncertainty that blankets Lucy's story, but Holczer does a fine job of piercing the weight with bits of family levity, and with the ethereal beauty of the dragonflies?Milo's obsession?that flit in and out of the story.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2018
      As the only child in a close-knit family, twelve-year-old Lucia Mercedes Evangeline Rossi (Lucy for short)--focused, serious, and levelheaded--prides herself on being a team player working toward helping her dad finish his surgical residency. When her father is drafted to serve in Vietnam (it's 1971), Lucy copes with her fears for him by performing repetitive tasks each day. She maintains her behavioral comfort routine even as she and her mother move to be near her paternal relatives, an (embarrassingly) exuberant and affectionate Italian American family. When her father returns home with his right arm amputated and his plans to work as a heart surgeon dashed, Lucy believes the family teamwork that got him through medical school will help with his adjustment. It doesn't. An uncle suggests that perhaps her single-minded devotion to her father doesn't allow for serendipity in her own life, for finding something truly wonderful, maybe even necessary while looking for something else. Gradually, she does find something truly wonderful in a friendship with a neighbor boy, Milo, whose father was also sent to Vietnam and who is keeping a tragic secret. The historical setting and the national arguments about Vietnam swirl around Lucy and Milo as they try to find their places in a world they cannot control, but one in which they can find purpose. Their experience is sometimes heartbreakingly poignant, and the portrait of two children maturing with grace and tolerance is triumphant. betty carter

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2018
      After her father returns from serving in Vietnam with his right arm amputated, twelve-year-old Lucy finds solace in a friendship with neighbor Milo, whose father was also sent to Vietnam and who is keeping a tragic secret. The historical setting and the national arguments about Vietnam swirl around Lucy and Milo as they try to find their places in the world. Their experience is heartbreakingly poignant but ultimately triumphant.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Lexile® Measure:860
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4-5

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