Review by Booklist Review
Shortly after Callie's single-parent father drops her off at Aunt Isabelle's house in Minnesota, the 11-year-old is passed along to Aunt Monica in Michigan instead. Grieving since her husband's death, Aunt Monica attempts to rise to the occasion, enlisting the girl's help in researching the life of her husband's great-great-great-aunt Eleanor, an etiquette-guide writer. The book's title refers to its two semitransparent ghost characters: Eleanor and her dog. Only Callie sees and interacts with them, and eventually they depart. In the meantime, Aunt Monica has come to a decision. Pulling herself out of her period of mourning, she steps up to become the stable, loving guardian that Callie has needed all along. Urban depicts her main character, motherless since she was seven, as a forthright girl with low expectations and a high degree of resilience. As the story's narrator, Callie is open with readers about her actions and conversations with those around her, but her backstory (including her father's alcoholism) emerges more slowly. This original middle-grade novel is sometimes amusing and, in the end, moving.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
After her mother's death four years ago, California Poppy, now 11, is left with a father unable to handle "girl things" such as buying bras. Seeking jobs in Alaska, California's dad deposits her at his sister-in-law Isabelle's house; Isabelle, in turn, promptly dumps California with Great-Aunt Monica. On California's first day at Aunt Monica's, a mysterious dog shows up in the yard and delivers an old letter; soon after, California's great-great-great aunt Eleanor appears. Turns out both are ghosts, and Dog continues to bring California letters written by Aunt Eleanor. Mourning the loss of her husband, Aunt Monica is finishing his pet project: a biography of his great aunt Eleanor, with which California is conscripted to help. Details about California's struggles--the early maturity of her body, the neglect she suffered living with her father, and challenges at school--unfurl in poignant matter-of-fact reveals, including repeated references to being "dumb," and the fact she learned about her period solely through a puberty class video. Letters to Aunt Isabelle, the Playtex Company, and her father intersperse California's personable narrative, which celebrates quiet moments of kindness and the eventual discovery of love in her life. Ages 10--up. Agent: Jennifer Laughran, Andrea Brown Literary. (Apr.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Introspective California learns about herself and her family with the help of two unlikely ghosts. It isn't easy for 11-year-old California, being shifted from one aunt to another after her father leaves her to go work in Alaska. When she finally arrives at Aunt Monica's house in West Bloomfield, Michigan, she encounters a ghost dog and the ghost of her great-great-great-aunt Eleanor. As friendly spirits, not evil ghouls, these two ghosts become a regular presence, teaching California about love, friendship, and, in the case of Eleanor, even how to write letters like a proper lady. Urban deftly tackles loss, longing, loneliness, and neglect through California's first-person narrative peppered with her many letters. Some of Urban's descriptions of life with ghosts are stellar, evoking vivid images. However, aside from a mention of a garden in June, there isn't much of a sense of physical atmosphere or setting. Similarly, the text lacks physical descriptions of characters, pointing to a White default, although California's fifth-grade teacher has a Tibetan given name for her surname. That said, Urban explores California's growth so delicately, unraveling each truth: the pain of losing her mother four years earlier, her father's drinking and instability, and the realization that she is worthy of being loved and has people in her life who cherish her. Skillfully written with well-drawn characters. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.