A girl navigates her family’s shifting dynamics through cartooning.
It’s nearly the end of the school year, and 10-year-old Maple has a lot to be anxious about. She’s one of only two fifth graders who has yet to ace the weekly timed math quiz—and her teacher’s promised an ice cream party once everyone’s done so. Maple and her two best friends are making summer plans, and she hopes this will be the summer when her dad fulfills his promise of helping her build a tree fort. But her mercurial dad often forgets his promises and disappears for hours, saying he needs space. Maple finds solace and relief from her parents’ arguments by sitting under her namesake backyard maple tree and drawing in her private sketchbook, where she creates comics that help her process the changes around her. This character-driven narrative is a slow-paced read that idly circles the central narrative conflict. Maple and her older brother and sister robustly demonstrate the complexity of flip-flopping emotions in response to their parents’ marital strife, including a healthy amount of sibling conflict. The supporting characters subtly demonstrate coping methods for difficult emotions. Maple’s peers’ varying maturity levels, combined with a focus on friendship and Maple’s indifference toward potential crushes, make this work well suited for younger middle-grade readers. Fawkes’ winsome illustrations provide humor and add depth; they also cue some racial diversity surrounding the white-presenting lead.
A portrait of a family unit in flux for patient, thoughtful readers.
(Fiction. 9-12)