This posthumously published final novel from the Newbery-winning author follows a young girl determined to master throwing a knuckleball.
A knuckleball—11-year-old Lucy Chance’s father’s signature pitch—can dip and weave like magic. “You let it fly,” says Lucy’s dad, a pitcher for the minor league Salem Red Sox. Writing in her signature spare, impressionistic prose, MacLachlan conjures up a similar magic, surrounding Lucy with a tightknit cast of loving, supportive characters. Lucy’s father hopes to move up to the major leagues and encourages her passion for the sport. Her perceptive mother, a painter, draws parallels between Lucy’s father’s love of baseball and her own artistic talents (“Think of him trying to paint the game. Like me painting a picture”), while Edgar Vazquez, her father’s best friend and a catcher for the Sox, is a steady, calming presence. Lucy’s best friends and baseball teammates, cousins Robin and Tex, help her secretly practice her knuckleball. Though the novel is light on plot, it nevertheless immerses readers in Lucy’s world, capturing characters’ seemingly small but deeply meaningful victories: a successful game for Lucy, a beautiful sketch drawn by her mother, words of praise from a major league scout who’s observed her father. Everyone wins in this gentle, low-key sports story. Physical descriptions of characters are minimal; Edgar mentions growing up in Puerto Rico.
Quietly joyful and triumphant.
(Fiction. 8-13)