Sneak thief

Faith Harkey

Book - 2018

Gifted thief Hush finds that she needs to change her ways to stay out of trouble, so when she is assigned to a job at Miz Tromp's Nursery, she learns that she is capable of taking away the pain of others, and teams up with her new friend Desiree to heal her town.

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jFICTION/Harkey, Faith
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jFICTION/Harkey, Faith Checked In
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Faith Harkey (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book published by Alfred A. Knopf."
Physical Description
264 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
620L
ISBN
9781524717476
9781524717483
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When Hush Cantrell is in the grip of her loco, there's no stopping her sneak-thieving hands. Batteries, measuring spoons, candles it doesn't matter what it is, so long as it ends up in her pocket. A loner and child of neglect, Hush is completely unprepared when a girl her age, Desiree, decides to befriend her. On a reckless visit to a boutique, Hush is arrested for stealing, and it's Desiree's family that comes to her rescue, staving off juvie with a live-in summer internship. But being placed in a supportive home isn't the only magic Hush experiences. While there, she begins to see pain imps physical or emotional pains on people and develops the ability to remove them. From page one, Hush is an interesting and earnest protagonist, whose struggles to reform, forgive, and understand the responsibilities of her healing magic will captivate readers. Harkey's small Georgia town bursts with colorful characters and twangy colloquialisms, adding to the novel's eclectic vibe. Hand this to fans of Ingrid Law's Savvy books, or those seeking character-driven stories brushed with magic.--Smith, Julia Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-6-Hush lives with her mother in a trailer park on the edge of town. Food is scarce and her mother's endless stream of bad boyfriends makes Hush's world dangerous. She doesn't regularly attend school and she spends her days fending for herself and sneak-thieving. The compulsion to steal objects is something Hush is ashamed of and tries unsuccessfully to ignore, especially because she's often tempted to steal things like dental floss and candlesticks and not practical items such as food and toiletries. When Hush and her mother have an altercation, the girl's urge to steal is so strong that she is more careless than usual, gets caught, and the secrets of her home life are revealed to local law enforcement. Hush is placed with a foster mother and begins to thrive in her new home. She also discovers a magical gift: the ability to see pain. The pain appears to her as wiggling flashes of light that she plucks away and stores in a mason jar. At first, she is happy to help relieve the pain of the people around her, but then the protagonist starts to fear her gift when she realizes that pain can be a teacher and that the absence of it can be harmful. Readers spend much of the story in Hush's head as she struggles to survive her home life, control her compulsion to steal, and hold on to a new best friend. The setting and the dialogue is infused with Southern flavor, making this book a solid read-alike for Natalie Lloyd's A Snicker of Magic and Sheila Turnage's Three Times Lucky. VERDICT This character-centered story offers readers a unique perspective on a tough life with a hopeful conclusion; recommended for most collections.-Samantha Lumetta, Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

After her stealing compulsion lands twelve-year-old Hush in the Sass, Georgia, sheriff's office, she's offered a second chance working at a plant nursery. Bolstered by a good friend, a compassionate community of quirky characters, and the discovery of her own ability to help others, Hush flourishes. Harkey softens a story of neglect and poverty with a resilient protagonist, distinct voices, and a touch of magical realism. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A 12-year-old delinquent discovers healing powers in Harkey's second book set in a magical, quaint Southern town.Belle Cantrell, better known as Hush, lives in 'Bagoville, a derelict RV park outside the seemingly mostly white community of Sass, Georgia. She makes a habit of stealing small items from stores but declines to help her abusive mother's angry boyfriend take part in real crime. When she's caught, local folks send her to live with a pregnant gardener, Mabel, instead of juvie. It's then that Hush discovers that she can see people's pain, manifest as small red worms she dubs "pain imps," and by removing them, heal people. Only sometimes pain is a warning signal, and so Hush's good intentions backfire. The magical realism falls short here not because of the magic, but because the rest of the story feels false from the very beginning, when a girl Hush has never met before becomes her instant friend, all the way to the contrived resolution between Hush and her shockingly terrible mother. Hush's problems are portrayed as simultaneously truly awful and easily cured; child readers with difficult backgrounds will recognize the inherent falsehood. Furthermore, Hush's first-person Southern-isms are overdone to the point of stereotype, and her voice seldom feels authentic.Lacking on several levels. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 WANTED My name is Belle Cantrell, but you can call me Hush. I'm what you'd call a sneak thief. You say you don't know what that is? Look here. One morning, there was me, going into Sass Foods. I walked right up to the counter and asked the cashier where I might find the AA batteries. While she was busy spinning out her reply, telling me up this aisle, right at the end, look underneath the flashlight display, I reached out my hand and snuck a packet of playing cards off the shelf in front of me. Cool as you please, I slid the cards into my pocket, thanked the lady kindly, and wished her a fine day. Then I left the store, strolling all casual-­like. Simple, see? Though it turns out I am more than just a filch and a delinquent. How, you want to know? All right, but the story's kind of knotty. We'll start on that same day, just a short time later, when I took myself to the laundrymat. Nina, my ma, had sent me with a fistful of change, a pillowcase of stank clothes, and orders not to be home before six. She was having guests, she'd told me, and she wouldn't have me mooning around, staring after her with my dumb cow eyes. I didn't think I had cow eyes, dumb or otherwise. But I obliged her, pleased for any excuse to get gone from broken-­down old 'Bagoville, the trailer park where I lived. Nina didn't much like it when I went to town. She didn't want me anywhere near the nibs, her name for the goody-­goodies in town. But she couldn't have it both ways. Either I stayed or I went, and if I went, I went where I wanted. And what I wanted was out, past the chain-­link limits of my life, away from the field where my people kept company with rusted-­out cars, cast-­off refrigerators, and the tractor on its side. It was a real relief to get away, too, because even though there was some thieving a person could do from one's kin, too much too often would get you caught--­like the time I got busted for five-­fingering my grown cousin Sheena's pink lipstick. After that--­plus the time they found another ­cousin's Sashay perfume in my stash--­the family watched too close for me to do any real borrowing. I reckon what I'm shaping up to tell you is that, by age nine, I had discovered a certain truth about myself: I had to thieve. I called it my loco because it came over me like a crazy fit, and I couldn't think straight until it was done. But it was also like a train, rolling along so fast, so heavy and wild, a Hercules couldn't stop it if he tried. Once or twice, I did try to halt that train. There was me, standing on that track, all shakin' and trying to stand my ground, feeling like I was gonna die, the train coming, the train coming--­and in the end, it only mashed me down flat, and I ended up stealing the hairbrush or whatnot, anyway. And so these trips into town were more dire than pink lipstick, more mesmerizing than Sashay perfume. After only my first hour, in the pockets of my first daddy's jacket, I had my pack of cards, a set of measuring spoons, and a tube of butt-­cheek ointment. I didn't know what I'd do with those last two things--­truth to tell, it didn't much matter--­but I thought I might use the cards to teach myself, what's it called, sleight of hand. And with that, I might step up my sneak-­thieving game. The laundrymat was a yellow building next to a lady hairdresser's. It had seven washers, six dryers, and a big sink for hand washing. Just now, there was a girl leaning over that sink, watching--­as far as I could tell--­the slow dripping of a leak from the faucet. "If you take a picture, it'll last longer," I said to her. The girl turned around. She had big blue eyes, glasses, and a pimple right in the middle of her forehead. Her crayon-­yellow hair was tied in a tail held together by a strand of twine. "What's that mean?" she asked me. I started to reply but realized, "I don't know. Nina says it." "Who's Nina?" "My mama." "Oh." She waited for a few seconds, as if she wanted me to say something else. When I didn't, she left to go check on her laundry. Me, I headed for my favorite washing machine. It was an old one--­easier to scam--­and sat in the back, harder for the attendant to see. I snuck a broken fork out of my pocket. All but one of the prongs was snapped off. Slipping it into the sweet spot which only I knew, I jiggled the fork until the machine clicked inside itself. The faceplate now read wash. I opened the door and started shoving in my clothes. "I think that's stealing," said a voice. I turned around to find the yellow-­haired girl blinking at me. "I'm sure it is," I told her. "But it ain't hurting nothin'." Her eyebrows crinkled. "It's hurting Miz Buchanan. She's the owner." "Huh." Thinking I'd better cover my tracks, I lied. "I didn't know." "Yeah. Sometimes it's hard to know." The girl gave me an understanding smile. I waited for her to go away so I could get back to my filching. Instead, she told me, "I'm Desiree." "Okay," I said. "What's your name?" "Uh. Hush." Would she ever get gone? Desiree reached into her pocket and brought out a wrapped candy. She broke off half and handed it to me. I took the candy. Only a fool would turn away free food. As she chewed on her half, she mused, "I used to know somebody called Hush. How'd you come by a name like that?" I shrugged as if I didn't know. But I did. It was one of Nina's jokes. She said I'd chattered so much as a young'un that "Hush!" was all she'd ever seemed to say to me. She told me I was lucky she didn't decide to call me Slap Upside the Head. I never thought it was a very funny joke. "How'd you come by a name like Desiree?" I flung back at the girl. "It means wanted," she replied. "My ma picked it." For some reason, that made my throat go tight. After a second, she added, "I've seen you around. I think you might be my age. Are you? I'm twelve." "Uh-­huh. Twelve," I agreed. "That was you, then!" What was me? I wondered. Desiree glanced at the tumbling laundry in a nearby machine. "Mine's still got ten minutes. Want to take a walk?" "Um. No." "Oh, come on." She tugged at my arm. "Stop pulling on me, girl!" I yanked my arm back. "I don't want no walk. It's hot out there." She slow-­slid her foot forward and tapped the toe of my shoe. "I do remember you from school. I'm sure of it. You were in Miss ­Bonnet's class for a while." It could be. I never troubled to remember the faces of the goody-­goodies. I moved my foot away from her fancy red shoe. "So?" "They had to take the class picture three times because you kept ducking down." "I don't like my picture taken." She slid her foot forward again. Tapped me again. After a second, she added, "You're always alone." Tap-­tap. "Every time I see you." I only barely kept myself from kicking her. "SO?" "Nobody likes to be alone." "I do." She looked at me so long and so hard it gave me the fidgets. Finally, she said, "I think you need a friend." Friend. My breath caught at the peril and magic in the word. As far as I knew, there were two kinds of friends in the world. The kind that used you while they could and disappeared when they were done, and the sort from ­movies, where two people were nice and helped each other, which looked all great and good, but never happened in real life. "And you aim to be my friend." I said it singsong, like a taunt. "I think I do," Desiree replied. "And I think maybe you aim to be my friend, too. You did talk to me first." "Only because I meant to poke at you!" She clearly didn't believe it. "Throw off the harness, Hush!" She gave a little jump. "Aren't you curious what might happen if you did?" I was all ready to say No, and even, Harness this, you crazy goody-­good, when something settled over me. It came with a word, in a Voice that wasn't my own. Try, it said. I'd heard the Voice before. More than once, its advice had kept me out of trouble. Meanwhile, the times I ignored it usually turned out poorly. I tried to think of a good reason to refuse it now. Desiree took my silence for agreement. She'd dragged me halfway out the door before I thought to complain. "Hold up! I ain't even started my laundry yet!" I raced back, regretfully dropped in Nina's quarters, and-- ­surprising even myself--­joined up with Desiree for that walk. Excerpted from Sneak Thief by Faith Harkey All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.