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THE SUMMER OF JUNE by Jamie Sumner

THE SUMMER OF JUNE

by Jamie Sumner

Pub Date: May 31st, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-5344-8602-7
Publisher: Atheneum

Eleven-year-old June Delancey is determined to be more lion than mouse.

June and her mom, Corinne, live in tiny Franklin, Tennessee. June’s father has never been in the picture, and her mom, who effortlessly attracts male attention, has had some unfortunate boyfriends. The little family barely scrapes by on Corinne’s salary as a librarian for teens; talented Corinne never finished culinary school but sometimes sells her delicious creations for extra income. June, who takes medication and is in therapy, struggles with anxiety, and her compulsive hair-pulling has made her a target for bullies. The summer before middle school, she impulsively shaves her head, hoping to silence the “whatifs” constantly swirling in her mind. It doesn’t work. However, she meets new friends: Homer Juarez, a friendly, poetry-quoting boy, wants June to teach him chess, and lonely widower Luis Silva, a keen gardener, sparks in June a love for flowers. June makes assumptions about Homer based on his soccer playing and private school attendance, while he—unaware of her outcast social status—perceives June differently than she’s used to. When a little garden on library property that Luis helps June create is threatened by the misanthropic head librarian, June must speak up despite her fears. The novel offers a compassionate portrayal of anxiety’s toll and a sweetly supportive mother-daughter relationship. Secondary characters are less well developed. June and her mom are assumed White; some of the supporting cast is cued Latine and Black.

An encouraging portrait of living with anxiety.

(author’s note) (Fiction. 9-13)