Lila and Hadley

Kody Keplinger

Book - 2020

Hadley is an angry girl: angry at her mother for embezzling money, angry at her estranged older sister, Beth, whom she has to live with while her mother is in jail, angry at having to move to Kentucky away from her friends, and angry at the world because she has retinitis pigmentosa and is slowly going blind; but then she meets Lila, a rescued pit bull who has not responded to anyone else--so if Hadley can train Lila, maybe the dog can get adopted into her forever home, and just maybe Lila can help Hadley deal with her own problems.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Scholastic Press 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Kody Keplinger (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
245 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 9-11.
Grades 4-6.
ISBN
9781338306095
9781338649321
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When her mother lands in prison, 12- year-old Hadley moves from Tennessee to stay with her estranged sister, Beth, in a Kentucky suburb. She's also navigating worsening eyesight due to retinitis pigmentosa, and the frustrations layer into sadness and anger--Hadley avoids speaking to her mom, lashes out at Beth, and refuses to take mobility classes as her condition advances. When Lila, a depressed pit bull at the rescue where Beth works as a trainer, takes to Hadley, the sisters are tasked with fostering Lila--socializing her so she can be adopted. Spending time with Lila pushes Hadley to make some changes in her own life, accepting the hard things she faces and the love being offered. Like Hadley, Keplinger (That's Not What Happened) is legally blind, and details, such as a passage about using a cane, lend the story authenticity. Hadley's anger at her situation and changing ability is sensitively wrought, and her growth is organic and true in this touching story of acceptance, forgiveness, and interspecies friendship. Ages 8--12. Agent: Brianne Johnson, Writers House. (Apr.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 3--7--Growing up is difficult for most kids, but when you add in a single parent who is suddenly put in jail, having to move in with an older sister who you haven't seen in years and a degenerative eye disease that is slowly making you blind, things can seem even more impossible. Keplinger's novel handles all of these subjects without becoming overwhelming to the reader. Hadley's life seems like it's going as well as it possibly can when everything is turned upside down: Her mom is taken to jail for stealing money from her job, Hadley's degenerative eye disease is progressing faster than the doctors expected, and now she has to move hours away from her best friends to live with her sister. Through first-person narrative, Hadley reveals why she feels so angry and alone even when she is surrounded by others. After walking around the dog rescue where her sister works, she ends up befriending a dog named Lila, who will not respond to anyone but Hadley. The girl reluctantly ends up teaching Lila different commands while making a deal with the dog that if she responds to training, Hadley will attend mobility classes to learn how to navigate her gradually failing eyesight. Keplinger creates a story about growth focusing on the experiences of Lila and Hadley where each of them starts to come out of their shells and accept their surroundings. VERDICT A unique title that touches on experiences not covered in many middle grade books (going blind, mobility training, and dog training), with relatable and engaging characters. For fans of Wendy Mass's A Mango-Shaped Space and Andy Behrens's The Fast and the Furriest.--Lenore Catalano, Hammarskjold Middle School, East Brunswick, NJ

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Hadley, 12, legally blind, angry, and not a lover of dogs unexpectedly bonds with Lila, a depressed pit bull waif.Hadley feels as if she's lost everything, and now she's losing her sight. With her mom in prison, she must move to Kentucky to live with her estranged older sister, Beth, last seen when Hadley was 7. Accompanying Beth, a dog trainer, to Right Choice Rescue and wandering among the penned trainees, Hadley spots Lila, considered unadoptable, looking equally miserable. Observing them connect, Vanessa, the owner, talks Beth into taking Lila home for Hadley to train. Still furious with Beth and their mom, whose letters and phone calls she ignores, Hadley works with Lila and grudgingly allows Beth to guide the training. Her vision worsening (she has retinitis pigmentosa), Hadley eventually agrees to mobility classes. Learning to use a cane is challenging, especially while holding Lila's leash in one hand. Her persistenceHadley's strong suitis a plus. New skills breed independence and self-esteem. Hadley becomes less defensive and judgmental, and the sisters haltingly reconnectthen Vanessa, now Beth's girlfriend, says it's time to find Lila a home. (Vanessa is black; Hadley and family are presumed white.) It's a pleasure to watch smart, wryly self-aware Hadley turn obstinacy into strength. From glum to stubborn and affectionate, Lila radiates doggy authenticity. A former Kentuckian and legally blind, Keplinger knows this territory, literal and figurative, inside out.A funny, moving tale, at once unsparingly realistic and upbeat. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

I don't know what makes me do it -- I sure didn't plan to -- but I find myself crouching down in front of the kennel. And then I'm talking to the dog."Hey," I say.It doesn't move, but I think its eyes are looking my way."Bad day?" I ask, as if the dog can answer. And I don't know, maybe it kinda does. Its face certainly looks like it's saying, "Yes. Terrible day." I nod at it. "Me, too. A whole lot of them lately."Slowly, I reach my hand through the bars. I know Beth would probably tell me this ain't safe, -- I don't know this dog or what its temper is like, -- but I do it anyway. I move my fingers in a beckoning gesture. For a minute, I don't think the dog's gonna come to me. Not like I blame it. I didn't wanna move from my bed today, either.But then, it's like it takes a second to make up its mind, before but it starts to stand. It moves towards me real slow, as if second-guessing every step. I ain't sure what comes over me, but I hear myself cooing to it, softly saying, "Good dog. There we go. Come on." And silly as it might be, it works.The dog reaches me at last. It stares at my face for a minute. Its eyes are real big and brown and... sad. That's the only way I know how to describe them. Sad and maybe... lonely? Then it lowers its huge head to sniff my palm. Once it's done checking me out, I reach up and scratch behind one of its ears.And then we both let out this sigh. Right at the same time. Like whatever has just happened has lifted a weight. Like we're both relieved.That's how I meet Lila. Excerpted from Lila and Hadley by Kody Keplinger 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.