Greetings from Nowhere is an EBOB book. It is realistic fiction.
Greetings from Nowhere (Frances Foster Books)
By Barbara O'Connor
Interest Level | Reading Level | Reading A-Z | ATOS | Word Count |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grades 4 - 8 | Grades 3 - 5 | n/a | 4.2 | 30606 |
Aggie isn't expecting visitors at the Sleepy Time Motel in the Great Smoky Mountains. Since her husband died, she is all alone with her cat, Ugly, and keeping up with the bills and repairs has become next to impossible. The pool is empty, the garden is overgrown, and not a soul has come to stay in nearly three months. When she reluctantly places a For Sale ad in the newspaper, Aggie doesn't know that Kirby and his mom will need a room when their car breaks down on the way to Kirby's new reform school. Or that Loretta and her parents will arrive in her dad's plumbing company van on a trip meant to honor the memory of Loretta's birth mother. Or that Clyde Dover will answer the For Sale ad in such a hurry and move in with his daughter, Willow, looking for a brand-new life to replace the one that was fractured when Willow's mom left. Perhaps the biggest surprise of all is that Aggie and her guests find just the friends they need at the shabby motel in the middle of nowhere.
From an author long recognized for her true Southern voice and heartfelt characters, Greetings from Nowhere, with its four intertwining stories, brings Barbara O'Connor's work to a new level of sophistication.
This title has Common Core connections.
Book Reviews (2)
I love Greetings From Nowhere! I'm not finished yet but it's great so far. Each chapter switches off from Aggie, Willow, Kirby, and Loretta. It's interesting to read because the characters are so different. My favorite character is Loretta because she's so outgoing and tries to make everyone friends with everyone. Kirby is complicated, his mom and step dad treat him like dirt. His mom yells and smokes. And he's depressed and mad. Willow is sad because she has to move. Also, her mother, Dorothy left her. She writes pretend letters from her mother. And Aggie is old and runs Sleepy Time Motel by her self. Her husband, Harold just died. She might have to sell her motel where all her memories with Harold. This mix of characters makes for a entertaining and hard to stop reading book.