An 11-year-old girl suffers a devastating loss when her best friend suddenly dies.
April and best friend Zee, both African American, live across the hall from each other in their Boston apartment building. Their tight unit is disrupted when gifted violinist Zee, who comes from a musical family, is admitted to a new STEAM charter school. April is happy for him but knows her school experience will change. Sure enough, she is paired with socially awkward Asa, who’s shunned by the two other White girls in class. April asks Zee’s dad, Papa Zee, to give her drumming lessons, fulfilling her own dreams. But there are difficult things too: Zee has some alarming health symptoms and swears April to secrecy, April’s single mom is seeing a new woman, and Asa is behaving unusually. When Zee’s next medical episode proves fatal, April’s grief is compounded by her guilt over keeping quiet. Before long she’s hiding something else, as she observes the extent of Papa Zee’s depression. When she learns the truth about what Asa’s family is going through, however, April realizes she has to share all she has been keeping inside. This well-crafted novel in verse is rich in detail and successfully conveys the depth of April’s emotions. The characters are fully realized, and the themes of family, change, and grief are handled with sensitivity and care.
A heart-rending narrative of friendship, family, and the path to healing.
(author’s note) (Verse fiction. 10-14)