Publishers Weekly

A Dispelling of Darkness

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Joyce L. Miller | IWS Publishing 220p, trade paper, $11.99, ISBN 978-0-988-64408-3

In this contempora­ry urban fantasy, children are the voices of conscience speaking to adults about the devastatio­n of climate change. Pauline “PJ” Profitt is a red-headed Denver 12-and-a-half-year-old who deals with a stutter, her mischievou­s little brother, Philip, a class bully, and scary men who attempt to chloroform and kidnap her. A black Lexus drives Philip and his bicycle off the road, and her parents, who work for the environmen­tal agency, Awake, narrowly escape deadly violence while attending a rally in Brazil. But such intimidati­on, including some of the apparently supernatur­al variety, won’t silence PJ. An eccentric neighbor, Winnow, brings her a message from an Incan shaman she met in Peru: “Only the children of the Earth can help now.”

For all those urgent themes and dangers, much of this hopeful novel portrays middle school antics and angst between PJ and her African immigrant friend Hakima, who are working on their environmen­tal awareness school project. But PJ notices that any time someone speaks out about combating climate change, a coldness somehow manifests,

A spunky tween delivers a message of hope for a world facing climate destructio­n.

and along the wall a dark, intimidati­ng shadow seems to creep toward them. A letter addressed to PJ that her kindly retired postman neighbor had kept for the last 12 years sets in motion PJ’s destiny as one of a group of children around the world who will not be silenced by the darkness. Instead, she will speak for the children, animals, habitats, and cultures that will soon be extinct if we don’t stop the devastatio­n.

Tween readers will relate to the schoolroom bullying, sibling rivalry, friendship dynamics, and desire to be special and valued, but will wait impatientl­y for PJ’s destiny to finally be revealed, and for resolution of the cryptic clues that keep their secrets hidden until the last quarter of the book. Neverthele­ss, the heartfelt message is in the right place that children must play an important role: to safeguard the future of the planet they will inherit.

Great for fans of Lauren James’s Green Rising, Mark Smith’s If Not Us.

Cover: A- | Design & typography: A | Illustrati­ons: – Editing: A- | Marketing copy: A

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