Jeremy and Evan, 12-year-old boys, find each other during a summer vacation in a tourist town in Oregon.
Irish American Jeremy is gearing up to come out to his parents, but he just can’t do it. With his parents separating, he now has to spend two weeks in a rental house with his dad while his mom moves out. His dad was always the easygoing parent, but he suddenly has picky new rules and a short temper and is drinking more than usual. Luckily Jeremy finds an escape in his new friendship with Evan, a beautiful boy cued as White who runs on the beach. Together they explore the beach and make up their own secret code using the names of seabirds as they develop feelings for each other. Taylor beautifully evokes the strange, liminal feelings of an early summer vacation that lasts forever and is over too quickly, parents in the process of going from marriage to divorce, and the confusing time between childhood and adolescence, when boys might want to play with toy dinosaurs one moment and hold hands the next. Jeremy and Evan’s developing relationship is heartwarming and innocently romantic. The author also captures the difficulty and fear of dealing with a parent whose high-functioning alcoholism is deteriorating. Jeremy’s entry into adolescence is warm and triumphant without offering pat solutions or platitudes.
A wonderful, tender story about changing relationships.
(glossary, note about birds, author's note) (Fiction. 8-13)