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The root of magic  Cover Image Book Book

The root of magic

Record details

  • ISBN: 0525578528
  • ISBN: 9780525578529
  • ISBN: 0525578501 (hardback)
  • ISBN: 9780525578505 (hardback)
  • Physical Description: 214 pages ; 22 cm
    print
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Delacorte Books for Young Readers, [2019]

Content descriptions

Summary, etc.: In Kismet, Maine, where a blizzard stranded twelve-year-old Willow's family, she seeks to understand the magic the townspeople have, to cure her little brother's mysterious illness and return her life to normal.
Subject: Brothers and sisters Fiction
Sick Fiction
Magic Fiction
Family problems Fiction
City and town life Fiction
Blizzards Fiction

Available copies

  • 2 of 3 copies available at Bibliomation.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 3 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Derby Public Library JJ DUB (Text) 34047141766551 Chapter Book Fiction Available -
Douglas Library of Hebron J FIC DUB (Text) 33400145564137 Juvenile Fiction Available -
Edith Wheeler Memorial Library - Monroe J FIC DUB (Text) 34026141877592 Juvenile Fiction In process -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780525578505
The Root of Magic
The Root of Magic
by Duble, Kathleen Benner
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Excerpt

The Root of Magic

"Are we going to die?" Wisp asks from the depths of his blankets in the backseat. Mom's hands whiten on the wheel of the car, and her mouth tightens.   In the front seat beside their mother, Willow tugs nervously on her long hair.   DuChard Unspoken Family Rule #1: You are never, ever to say the words "death" or "die" when Wisp is within earshot.   But because Wisp himself is asking the question, Mom has no option but to pretend she hasn't heard him.   "Of course not," Willow tells her brother, when their mom says nothing. "It's just snow, Wisp." Yet even as she tries to convince her brother, Willow realizes she is lying. They have been driving in the dark for over two hours in what the weathermen on the radio are calling "the blizzard of the century."   It is four days after Christmas, and the first storm of the year. Usually, a December snowfall in the Northeast tumbles in like a light blanket, one you pull up just as the temperature begins to dip--fluffy but not too heavy.   But this storm is monstrous. Willow imagines it as a great roaring beast--irritated by the release of aerosols in Russia, the exhaust of cars in China, the heat of nuclear reactors in the United States, and other global warming factors.   Her science teacher has said that hurricanes, fires, and tsunamis have been increasing in number and intensity. Why, Willow wonders, should snow sit on the sidelines?   When they left that afternoon, the flakes were light. Then the weather changed--faster than they could change their plans. Now Willow wishes they had stayed the night in some safe, warm hotel in Canada. But it's too late. They are committed to driving home.   Usually on car trips, Willow listens to music or writes in her journal, but tonight she simply stares into the dark night and icy roads, preparing to point out any danger that might suddenly throw them off course.   "Do you think we're going to be swallowed up by this storm and suffocate in this car?" her brother asks. His weary voice floats softly up to the front seat. "Are they going to find us months from now, when everything melts, just skeletons, since we have no food and only a few bottles of water?"   In the front seat, Willow rolls her eyes at her brother's bizarre questions.   "Don't be silly, Wisp," their mom finally snaps.   But a minute later, she sighs and rubs her eyes. "Sorry, I didn't mean to yell. I'm just tense from driving."   Willow says nothing. She knows she is to blame for their being on this road at this hour, just below the Canadian border in the wilderness of Maine, where even their car's headlights seem unable to penetrate the wall of white in front of them.   "Dad can drive in anything," Wisp says. Willow goes still.   DuChard Unspoken Family Rule #2: Never mention Dad in front of Mom, especially when she is already under so much stress that the lines on her face look like cracked dry clay.   "Do you see your father here?" Mom asks.   Her brother goes mute, seeming to recognize his mistake, leaving Willow to answer her mom. Willow should call out her brother for this cowardliness, but she won't. Instead, as usual these days, she swallows her annoyance with him, forcing the heat of it back inside.   She shakes her head as a response. It's safer that way. And she realizes in that moment that she, like her brother, is a bit of a coward these days, too.   "It was your father's last-minute cancellation that left us having to drive all the way to New Brunswick for this hockey tournament in the first place," their mother goes on, in the tone that Willow has come to know as worse than the taste of sour milk. "He could have made that decision earlier, and then you could have ridden with one of your teammates. But no, once again, he waits until the last minute. And now, as usual, he's nowhere to be found, leaving me on my own, driving through a horrific storm while he's holed up in some basketball court, all warm and toasty. And it was his idea that you play hockey in the first place, so I really don't understand why it's me doing the hauling around, especially with a . . ."   Their mother goes suddenly silent.   In her mind, Willow finishes the sentence for her mother. ". . . with a sick child."   "Whatever," Mom finally says softly. "Your dad should be here, not me."   DuChard Unspoken Family Rule #3: When their mom starts going on about their dad, it's best to act like you're facing an angry bear and, as Willow's Girl Scout leader once told them, "Hold perfectly still and play dead."   So Willow turns statue-like, and she thinks about the game.   The game they won--the big save she made. Willow can still feel the puck hitting hard against her glove as she raised it a few inches above her shoulder. And she remembers the complete and utter amazement when she realized the puck was there--safe, stopped, just as the buzzer sounded and the game ended. Incredibly, they had won by that one, single stopping of a goal.   Willow can still hear the crowd screaming her name and feel her best friend, Elise, jumping on top of her before the rest of the team piled on, all smelling of sweat from their hard-won battle. It had been a sweet save, a sweet win.   And Willow wishes her dad had been there. Because, unlike her mom, he would have known that feeling, understood that victory, cheered her on as a winner. He'd played hockey in college. He knew.   But he couldn't find a substitute to coach his high school basketball team this weekend. Instead, it was her mom waiting for her at the end of the game, tapping her foot during the winning-team pictures, shooing Willow off the ice, urging her to change quickly, barely able to wait half an hour before packing them up and starting the drive home, worrying and fussing about the snow.   Now, with this scary drive, the joy of that miracle win in Willow's otherwise miracleless life has deflated quickly, like bubble gum that has gone flat and tasteless.   "Are we going to be lost forever?" Wisp asks.   He must feel that even though the blizzard is still raging outside their car, the "Mom storm" has passed, but Willow isn't so sure.   "Maybe we'll be like Rip Van Winkle and get lost in these hills and sleep for centuries," Wisp says.   "Rip Van Winkle left his poor wife alone to handle everything herself while he was out having a good time and a long nap," Mom snaps again.   As Willow thought: her brother was wrong. Neither storm is backing off. Excerpted from The Root of Magic by Kathleen Benner Duble All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
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