A hot air balloon race over a small Southern town helps a boy cope with grief.
Eleven-year-old Walter Tipple is celebrating his birthday, but with a sad heart. Tank, the older brother that he hero worships and who is fighting in a war overseas, has died. Then a series of events enlivens his quiet life in the sleepy town of Harmony, Georgia. Posey moves next door with her single mother and three-legged dog. Walter, who is meek and has amblyopia, is targeted by school bullies. Posey has a birthmark on her left cheek, loves to read nonfiction and quote advice on making friends—and she stands up for herself fiercely. Together, they find Jubilation T. Fairweather, a man who literally falls into their lives from his damaged hot air balloon. Nicknamed Banjo, he is determined to find his balloon and win a race, an endeavor that becomes the focus of the story’s action. Walter thinks constantly about his brother but is unable to read Tank’s last letter. The two children balance fear with bravery, and in the concluding balloon ride over Harmony, Walter finds the strength to reconcile his feelings about Tank. Posey owns up to her own fears, and Banjo remains the quirky catalyst. Readers follow Walter’s inner feelings through a narrative that is centered on his thoughts and actions, but the resolution of family grief ultimately feels facile. All characters present as White.
Heartfelt and accessible.
(Fiction. 9-12)