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Book Cover for: Grounded, Kate Klise

Grounded

Kate Klise

A middle grade novel about a 12-year-old girl dealing with loss, who uncovers a rather grisly scam involving a crematorium.

After her brother, sister, and father die in a plane crash, Daralynn Oakland receives 237 dolls from well-wishers, resulting in her nickname: Dolly. But dolls are little comfort to a twelve-year-old girl whose world is rocked by the dramatic changes in her life, including her angry, grieving mother's new job as a hairstylist at the local funeral home.

Dolly gets a job, too, where she accidentally invents a fashionable new haircut. But in Grounded by Kate Klise, her real work begins when a crematorium comes to town, and someone has to save a dying business, solve a burning mystery, and resuscitate the broken hearts in Digginsville, Missouri, population 402.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Square Fish
  • Publish Date: Aug 20th, 2013
  • Pages: 224
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.63in - 5.22in - 0.61in - 0.38lb
  • EAN: 9780312555917
  • Recommended age: 09-13
  • Categories: Mysteries & Detective StoriesSocial Themes - Death, Grief, BereavementHistorical - General

About the Author

Klise, Kate: - Kate Klise is the author of several picture books and novels, including Grounded and Homesick. She frequently collaborates with her sister, the illustrator M. Sarah Klise. Kate travels all over the country speaking to classrooms about her work. She lives in Norwood, Missouri.

Praise for this book

"This improbably lighthearted mystery, told from Daralynn's entertainingly candid perspective, deals with death and its aftermath in a straightforward style that puts the 'fun back in funeral.'" --Horn Book Magazine

"Klise (the 43 Old Cemetery Road series) spins an insightful story about loss and family, set in the tiny town of Digginsville, Mo., told from the plainspoken perspective of 12-year-old Daralynn Oakland. ...Balancing Daralynn's family tragedy with gentle humor and an evocative late-1960s setting, Klise's writing is refreshingly matter-of-fact and studded with simple, powerful images and memorable, entertaining characters." --Publishers Weekly

"In the sentimental end, this salty-sweet, nut-sprinkled novel underscores the 'grounding' that comes with caring for people, whether it's flashy-trashy Aunt Josie and her boardinghouse gentlemen, senile Mamaw poignantly nurturing her dolls or, most powerfully of all, Daralynn and her mother finding their way back to each other." --Kirkus Reviews

"This quiet story illuminates and celebrates the human need for connection beyond the grave." --Booklist

"While her subject matter is serious, author Kate Klise brings humor and warmth to this heartfelt story of healing and hope." --BookPage