A seventh grade gun violence survivor reckons with PTSD in this carefully rendered story about the fragility and power of human connection.
Questions of “what if” cascade into a burden that feels too heavy for 13-year-old Stevie Jane Cohen-Kaplan, whose brain feels “broken” in the aftermath of a tragedy. A shooting at a summer festival in her New Jersey town has left her mom hospitalized. Given the large local Jewish population, was this a hate crime? Trapped in her grandparents’ Manhattan apartment and unprepared to visit her mother, who’s unconscious, Stevie Jane struggles to find coping mechanisms and relies on distractions to keep herself going. Seeking respite, she relies on Raisin, her emotional-support-dog-in-training, and her best friend, Avi. The friends begin piecing together the stories of those around Stevie Jane, from a neighbor’s life after surviving the Holocaust, to episodes in her grandfather’s life and her own mother’s activist history. Each revelation leads them around the city, contributing to Stevie Jane’s budding confidence; over time, she finds more and more pieces of her mother’s past. Centering on a Jewish family, the story hints at Manhattan’s diversity through some descriptions of minor characters. The realistic portrayal of trauma is handled with deft sensitivity, from physical symptoms to therapeutic intervention. Interspersed poems add texture and vibrancy, weaving the delicate threads of the characters’ lives into a buoyant tale of hope.
A poignant and powerful tale of resilience.
(content warning, author’s note) (Fiction. 8-12)