
Moving and evocative, Disappearing Act is a YA true-story-in-verse following author Jiordan Castle's coming of age as her family reckons with the aftershocks of her father's imprisonment.
It was the summer before high school,Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection
"Compelling and accessible verse . . . In an author's note, Castle describes her motivation for writing the book being in part about offering representation and reflection for the many children of incarcerated parents. In this, she's a success, offering enough detail to be true to her story while still presenting the view of a child who does not know or understand the specifics of her parent's crimes . . . Fans of Jennette McCurdy's I'm Glad My Mom Died (2022) will also appreciate this candid memoir of a parent-child relationship." --Booklist, starred review "[A] striking verse memoir . . . Carefully worded poems depict Castle's everyday insecurities--such as high school conflicts and difficulty navigating her first romantic relationship--alongside concerns about her father's safety in prison ('In movies they say don't drop the soap./ They say sleep with one eye open') . . . This moving account is an intense meditation on mental health and the prison system, as observed by Castle, who, according to an author's note, crafted this story 'for the other children of prisoners.'" --Publishers Weekly "The occasional use of blank lines in place of words asks readers to guess what [Castle] is trying to say, bringing them into the narrative in an interesting way. All in all, verse is an unusual and rewarding format for telling this story. Thoughtfully recounts the challenges of growing up with an incarcerated parent." --Kirkus Reviews