The adventures of a girl called Bicycle

Christina Uss

Book - 2018

Left at the Mostly Silent Monastery as a toddler and home-schooled by a retired nun, twelve-year-old Bicycle rides cross-country to meet a famous cyclist who she hopes will be her first friend.

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Subjects
Genres
Action and adventure fiction
Published
New York : Margaret Ferguson Books, Holiday House [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Christina Uss (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
307 pages : map ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780823440078
  • The Mostly Silent Monastery
  • Clunk
  • The Friendship Factory
  • Mr. Spim's Splendid Sponges
  • Unfinished business in Virginia
  • Nine hundred cows and counting
  • The wayward dogs of kentucky
  • The cannibal takes off
  • Slowing down for a bite in Illinois
  • Pigs on parade in Missouri
  • Paradise pies
  • A bicycle without wheels
  • Midway to nowhere
  • The wheels of fortune spin in Kansas
  • On top of the world in Colorado
  • To catch a thief in Utah
  • No override for the missile launch
  • The loneliest road
  • The best of luck in Nevada
  • Calamity
  • Say something nice in California
  • The blessing of the bicycles
  • No zebras, no noses.
Review by Booklist Review

Uss uses her cross-country cycling experience as an inspiration for her pleasantly peculiar debut novel. Bicycle is perfectly content with her quiet, often solitary life at the Mostly Silent Monastery, where the monks only say eight words. But when her guardian Sister Wanda worries that Bicycle's life is too solitary, and sends her to the Friendship Factory summer camp, Bicycle escapes on her beloved bike, traveling from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco. Along the way, Bicycle befriends many colorful characters, including a Civil War ghost, a fried-pie entrepreneur, and the inventor of a sentient bike. Uss fills Bicycle's journey west with authentic descriptions of American landmarks, deserts, sunflower fields, and mountains, which makes even the most fantastical elements of the story feel real. The humor and warmth of the strangers Bicycle meets along the way makes the long journey coast along at a quick pace. Readers who enjoy action and adventure with a dose of magic will happily go along for the ride.--Turk, Mariko Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When a three-year-old girl in a faded pink t-shirt with the word bicycle on it shows up at the Mostly Silent Monastery in Washington, D.C., Sister Wanda takes her in. The girl's fondness for the word leads Sister Wanda to give her the unusual moniker for a name, and Bicycle eventually acquires a bike of her own, a hefty orange number named Clunk. When Bicycle is 12, Sister Wanda worries about her lack of friends and arranges to send her to sleepaway camp at the Friendship Factory ("Three Guaranteed Friendships or Your Money Back"). Bicycle refuses and takes to the road with Clunk instead, mapping a route to San Francisco to meet her hero, Polish cycling racer Zbig, at the Blessing of the Bicycles. Along the way, she picks up a talkative ghost, procures a bike that can launch missiles and write, and flees from a woman in black. She also cultivates friend after friend, one mile at a time, as the story elegantly blends elements of mystery, adventure, and fantasy. Debut author Uss, a long-distance cyclist herself, effectively portrays the call-and toll-of self-reliance and the open road, and fashions a resolute heroine to root for. Ages 8-12. Agent: Ammi-Joan Paquette, Erin Murphy Literary. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-6-When she was just a young girl, Bicycle was found by Sister Wanda, a retired "Nearly Silent Nun," at the doors of the Mostly Silent Monastery in Washington, D.C. Oddly, the only word the nuns and monks may use to communicate is sandwich. Now 12, Bicycle is a magnificent rider, hence her name. Unfortunately, she doesn't seem to connect with other children and has no interest in making friends. Sister Wanda signs her up for a sleepaway camp called the Friendship Factory. Bicycle, however, has other plans. Deceiving Sister Wanda, she sets out on a cross-country ride to San Francisco, imagining she will meet and befriend bicycle-riding sensation, Zbig. Drawing on the author's own bicycle trip in 1996, Uss's debut novel uses a simple narrative that mixes realistic fiction with supernatural and farfetched fantastical elements. The well-organized chapters use a comfortable-sized font and a fluent storyline that moves the plot ahead. VERDICT Middle grade fans of realistic coming-of-age tales, especially those interested in cycling, will appreciate this unusual work of sports fiction.-Kathia Ibacache, Simi Valley Public Library, CA © 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

This unusual road-trip novel features a twelve-year-old girl, called Bicycle, who cycles solo from Washington, DC, to San Francisco. Bicycle is a foundling, raised in a monastery by a retired nun; shes a loner and a cycling prodigy. Appalled by the prospect of summer camp (too many noisy children), she runs away (on her bike, named Clunk), heading to the Blessing of the Bicycles in California. The odyssey is a bit of a travelogue, but mainly the storys tone is cartoonish, with absurd adults, silly villains, broad satire, coincidences galore, and an embedded shaggy-dog story (the punch line is in Polish). A couple of magic characters, a Civil War ghost, and a bicycle with A.I. capabilities join Bicycle for part of her journey and provide background information and practical assistance, keeping the journey plausible. Just. The story is overcrowded, but beneath the hullaballoo is a heartfelt celebration of the zen of cycling and a sympathetic portrait of an atypical kid who struggles to learn the art of friendship. sarah ellis (c) Copyright 2018. 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

Twelve-year-old Bicycle secretly takes off from Washington, D.C., on her steadfast bike, Clunk, and heads to San Francisco by herself to find her bike-racing hero, Zbigand, hopefully, her first real friend.Brought up at the Mostly Silent Monastery since she was 3 and home-schooled there, Bicycle understands that loving (and indomitable) Sister Wanda has signed her up for the Friendship Factory Spring Break Special for her own good. But it sounds like a "guaranteed nightmare"; introverted and reflective, with a penchant for wordplay, she needs to seek friends in her own way. In this impressive debut, Uss deftly mixes in elements of fantasy, magic, and mysterya chatty ghost that haunts Clunk's handlebars, a second bike that can write and launch missiles, a creepy lady in black with "eyes that freeze your heart"while always remaining true to the reality of Bicycle's journey. The author, a cross-country bicyclist herself, perfectly captures the rhythms of day-to-day life on the road: the joy, the hardships ("But everything is just sobig. Crazy-hilly and big!"), the growing sense of freedom and accomplishment, the stick-to-itiveness, the great hunger and the delicious food that relieves it, the kind people, and the bonding with one's bike. Though it has a substantial cast of quirky supporting characters, the book's default is white.Readers will eagerly join Bicycle and "pedal headfirst" into this terrific adventure, which is chock-full of heart and humor. (map) (Fabulism. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.