From School Library Journal
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Gr 4–7—When her five-year-old brother Val begins a
clinical trial for cancer at New York's Sloane
Kettering Hospital, 11-year-old Thyme and her family leave their
beloved San Diego home to move to the Upper East Side of
Manhattan. Thyme embraces her role as the helpful middle sister,
secretly saving slips of "time"—good behavior chits—so she can go
home, all the while trying to avoid adjusting to New York or
letting anyone at school know about Val's illness. With just the
right pace of character development and a believable voice for
the shy, awkward Thyme, Conklin takes her protagonist through a
journey of connecting to others and learning to articulate her
own needs. A constant but quiet tension runs throughout, both
concerning Val's and Thyme's emotional growth; readers
continuously watch Thyme's reactions as other
characters—including a cute boy who seems to understand about
secrets—reach out to her. Sadness and hope are well balanced, and
the family characters and interactions are tense but full of
love. Most experienced readers will recognize several overused
plot points (e.g., young girl befriends lonely, grumpy, elderly
neighbor; immigrant housekeeper lends strength through her
cooking) and wonder at this upper middle class white girl's lack
of awareness or curiosity about her cultural and socioeconomic
place in her new home. VERDICT A slow and sweet book that will
strum the heartstrings of readers in much the same ways as Jo
Knowles's See You at Harry's (Candlewick, 2012), Wendy Mass's A
Mango-Shaped Space (Little, Brown, 2003), or Katherine Hannigan's
Ida B: … And Her Plans to Maximize Fun, Avoid Disaster, and
(Possibly) Save the World (Scholastic, 2004).—Rhona Campbell,
Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC
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Review
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Praise for Counting Thyme:
A 2016 Nerdy Book Club Award Winner
“Debut author Conklin writes with a pitch-perfect middle-grade
voice… A nice choice for middle-grade readers who enjoy heartfelt
and emotional novels.”—Booklist
“Thyme’s remarkable perseverance and resilience will inspire
readers of Conklin’s compassionate tale.”—Kirkus Reviews
“[A] sweet book that will strum the heartstrings of
readers.”—School Library Journal
“Conklin successfully weaves together the shifting dynamics of a
loving family under crisis with the less dramatic but equally
heartfelt turmoil of coming of age in a new
environment.”—Publishers Weekly
“Counting Thyme shows how a serious illness can tear the fabric
of a family apart, and love can stitch it back together again.
This deeply moving story of family, friendship, and belonging
will settle deep in your heart and stay there long after the
final page is read.”—Donna Gephart, award-winning author of Death
by Toilet Paper and Lily and Dunkin
“Melanie Conklin brings New York vividly to life in Counting
Thyme, a gentle story fueled by heart, hope, and beautifully
developed characters.”—Pat Schmatz, award-winning author of
Bluefish
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