From School Library Journal:
Grade 4-7-- Skye is used to her mother's secrecy, for Reanna has kept things from her for years. When they end up at her grandfather's farm, Skye is intrigued, but years of being told that questions are "sass" keep her mouth shut, and she is the last to find out that they are there for a wedding--her mother's. Until her mother and her new stepfather drive away, she doesn't see that the nomadic life she has always known has come to an end. Skye is left with a grandfather who is cautious with his love and a hoard of mostly well-intentioned relatives. The irresponsible parent theme is becoming common, and, as usual, a more dependable adult steps in to take the place of the flighty one. Grandpa is an effective character; both his coolness and his warmth are fitting. The background characters are interesting and plausible as well. But Reanna's dishonesty is harder to swallow. Although references to her past shed some light, readers know too little about her life with Skye, and her new husband is but a shadow. Most disconcerting is Skye. Maturity and new understanding are to be expected as she is exposed to new people and new experiences, and security for the first time. But changes do not grow on Skye. Instead, they occur suddenly, jarringly, and are less than convincing. The story is full of emotion but suffers from gaps of both plausibility and momentum. Tallahassee Higgins (Clarion, 1987) by Mary Downing Hahn is a similar, but smoother, more memorable tale. --Susan Oliver, Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews:
Still another book that hinges on a child's abandonment by a flighty mother. Like Mama in MacLachlan's Journey (p. 1013), Reanna indulges her wanderlust, leaving Skye, 11, with Grandpa on the Idaho farm where Reanna grew up. Skye has always traveled with her single mother as she moved from one pickup job to another, but now Reanna has married Bill and the two of them have gone off on motorcycles, ostensibly to research a book about odd place names, without admitting to Skye how long their absence will be. Skye plots to follow them in Reanna's old car, but the battery is dead; while she's contriving to replace it, she adopts a family of kittens, gets to know some great aunts, cousins, and a little boy next door--whose history is rougher than hers, but who now lives with a pleasant, earth-motherly friend--and begins to make an accommodation with her gruff but good-hearted grandfather. When she finally gets the car started, she runs over one of the kittens by mistake; the way everyone rallies round to comfort her helps her decide to stay with Grandpa when Reanna turns up and, ungraciously, agrees to take Skye with her. Skye's story doesn't have Journey's power or its elegant craft (few books do), but it's an accessible, warm-hearted tale about finding a home in an extended family of well-individualized characters. Thoughtful and solidly entertaining. (Fiction. 9-12) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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