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All the Ways Home

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"In All the Ways Home, Elsie Chapman gracefully explores the complexities of family and loss. The specificity in which Chapman narrates Kaede's journey in Japan is particularly satisfying. An insightful, compassionate, and honest look at a young boy's search for identity and home after the death of his mother."—Veera Hiranandani, author of Newbery Honor novel The Night Diary
Sometimes, home isn't where you expect to find it.
After losing his mom in a fatal car crash, Kaede Hirano—now living with a grandfather who is more stranger than family—developed anger issues and spent his last year of middle school acting out.
Best-friendless and critically in danger repeating the seventh grade, Kaede is given a summer assignment: write an essay about what home means to him, which will be even tougher now that he's on his way to Japan to reconnect with his estranged father and older half-brother. Still, if there's a chance Kaede can finally build a new family from an old one, he's willing to try. But building new relationships isn't as easy as destroying his old ones, and one last desperate act will change the way Kaede sees everyone—including himself.
This is a book about what home means to us—and that there are many different correct answers.

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    • School Library Journal

      May 17, 2019

      Gr 4-7-When Kaede's world is thrown upside down by a car crash that killed his mother, he has no idea how to cope with the loss. After making several bad choices that could have gotten him into serious trouble, he is faced with a summer assignment to define what home means to him in order to avoid repeating seventh grade. He isn't sure if he fits with his friends in Vancouver, B.C., any longer, and living with his grandfather doesn't feel right either. Kaede ventures to Tokyo, a city that was his home until his parents split when he was three, in hopes of reconnecting with his estranged father. To his disappointment, Kaede's much older half-brother is the one waiting for him. As the summer progresses without any word from their father, Kaede isn't sure he will ever understand the meaning of home. Chapman weaves a tale of a boy who is broken and lost, trying to redefine who he is in what is left of his family. Scenic descriptions are vivid and unique, and blend with frequent Japanese terms throughout to take the reader on a virtual experience of Tokyo's sights, sounds, and culture. Kaede's brother Shoma is a star of the story as a calm and stable force for the protagonist, whether he trusts him or not. VERDICT A heartbreaking yet vibrant journey through Japan that would make a great summer read. Offer to strong and adventurous readers.-Erica Deb, Matawan Aberdeen Public Library, NJ

      Copyright 2019 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2019
      Grades 4-7 Grief stricken following the death of his mother, 12-year-old Vancouverite Kaede Hirano makes some poor decisions (setting fire to a house and bashing his best friend's face) that result in his being sent to Japan to reconnect with his estranged father. Dad is a no-show, however, leaving Kaede's older half brother, Shoma, to shoulder the family responsibility. Kaede is drawn to this cool older sibling, even as he fears rejection if he dares to trust him. Additionally, Kaede has a school assignment, "What Home Means," which drives his keen observations of his geographic and cultural experiences. Journal entries addressed to his mother, father, and former best friend reveal much of the back story and help Kaede to eventually accept that his father is incapable of a relationship. Chinese Canadian Chapman writes convincingly about both Vancouver and Japan (where she now resides), and her lyrical text successfully addresses loss, family, and cultural identity. Although there's more navel-gazing here than in typical middle-grade fare, the homage to Japan and Japanese culture makes up for it.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2019
      Twelve-year-old Japanese Canadian Kaede's mother died recently in a car accident. Chapman effectively alternates Kaede's first-person narrative with letters he writes in a journal he begins keeping for school; it's his constant companion during a summer spent in Tokyo with his father and half-brother--neither of whom he's seen since his parents' divorce nine years ago. Rich with the sensory details of life in Tokyo and the complexities of a boy finding his way.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      September 1, 2019
      Traveling often realigns a person's worldview, and such is the case with twelve-year-old Kaede Hirano, a Japanese Canadian boy from Vancouver. His parents divorced nine years ago, and his father moved to Tokyo, taking Shoma, Kaede's half-brother, with him. Kaede hasn't seen them for so long they have become only as real as the characters I saw on TV. Kaede's mother was killed recently in a car accident, and now Kaede feels like a stuck gear, just spinning and going nowhere. For a school assignment, Kaede begins keeping a journal on the topic of home; it becomes his constant companion when he travels to Tokyo to spend the summer with his father and Shoma. Chapman effectively alternates Kaede's first-person narrative with letters he writes in his journal to his deceased mother, his father, his friend Jory, and his school counselor. By summer's end, Kaede's journal has become thick with tickets and photos and writing, with everything else that felt right ?and his world has, indeed, been realigned to include a new understanding of home. A novel rich with the sensory details of life in Tokyo and the complexities of a young boy finding his way. dean Schneider

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Lexile® Measure:860
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4-5

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