A young boy sets off on his own, without permission, across Europe, in this German import.
Carlo has felt unsettled for five months, two weeks, and eight days—ever since Mama kicked Papa out of the house. Papa was flaky and sometimes disappeared for days, but he was affectionate and robust, and Carlo misses him terribly. Surely if Carlo can reach him, he can bring him back. So, lying to Mama that he’ll be at a friend’s house, this 11-year-old begins at his local train station and heads from Bochum, Germany, to Palermo, Sicily. His trip is a succulent travelogue, flavored with foods and scenic views and feelings. Challenges include lack of funds, suspicious adults everywhere, the need to lie to Mama via text message, and a taxi driver who robs him between Rome and Palermo. Highlights include a dog conveniently chewing a train ticket (who says it wasn’t Carlo’s?), hiding in a lifeboat to stow away on a ferry, a boisterous and kind Italian family ladling up pasta with ham sauce, and the reunion with Papa. Papa and Carlo are both fat; Carlo’s been hassled for it and twice refers to his “mozzarella-belly,” but the narrative viewpoint casts fatness as refreshingly neutral and even makes Carlo’s and Papa’s similar bodies a point of warm connection. Carlo is white, half Sicilian and probably half German.
A snug, contemporary adventure—romantic realism, innocent yet hearty.
(Fiction. 8-12)