
I first heard about Rebecca Stead’s When You Reach Me (Random House 2009) from a book editor who said, “There is so much buzz about this book, I think it might win the Newbery.”
Set in the 70′s in New York City, the story centers on sixth grade Miranda and her best friend Sal. Miranda (a girl) and Sal (a boy) live in the same apartment complex, both are from single-mom families, and they’ve been best friends forever. Then one day Sal gets punched in the face by a random kid on the street, and suddenly Sal wants nothing to do with Miranda. Miranda’s on her own and has to learn how to make new friends and fit in.
There is so much going on in this novel I hardly know where to start. It’s a coming of age story, it’s a story about mother/daughter relationships, it’s a story about friendship. But it’s also a mystery with unexplainable, unsigned letters, a missing apartment key, and a crazy homeless guy on the corner, all wrapped up with a sci-fi twist a la Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time.
When You Reach Me has a bit of a retro feel, kind of like the 70′s style t-shirts I see popping up in stores right now (although it may feel this way to me since I’m a child of the 70′s myself). The novel is also proof that you don’t need international killers, vampires, or evil plots by fiendish ne’er do-wells to create a sense of suspense and mystery.
The novel quotes Albert Einstein who said, “The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious.” For children, life is full of mystery. Author Rebecca Stead beautifully captures the biggest mystery of childhood, the mystery that is known as growing up.
