A resourceful girl confronts a greedy foe with courage and an open heart.
A debilitating injury prevents 11-year-old Perpetua’s father from working, forcing her waitress mother to take double shifts. The cost of yet another surgery is prohibitive, so Pet and her younger brother, Simon (who since their father’s accident says only one word: cheese), set off in search of a priceless coin said to have been held by Christ. The coin is rumored to be located somewhere on the 200 acres belonging to a nearby community of nuns, and the only clue to its whereabouts is a rhyme remembered by a neighbor, a woman with an irredeemably wicked and menacing adult son. Pet’s undertaking involves “borrowing” another neighbor’s pony and setting out onto the prairie. Everything becomes more challenging than Pet anticipates. But three individuals, perhaps divine beings, provide her and Simon with food, shelter, healing, and stories. The success of their quest, not expressly religious but with a sense of the divine, turns out to be practical as much as redemptive, and the satisfactory, if not entirely convincing, outcome is welcome. The dark cloud hanging over Pet’s house is offset by her clear-voiced ebullience; she is a funny, determined, and charming narrator. Most characters read White. Final art not seen.
A diverting, warmhearted, unusual fantasy.
(Fantasy. 8-12)