Nowhere better than here

Sarah Guillory

Book - 2022

Thirteen-year-old Jillian Robichaux's coastal Louisiana town of Boutin suffers a catastrophic flood that might be too much for her community to overcome, but she is determined to keep both Boutin and its indomitable spirit alive.

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Subjects
Genres
Bildungsromans
Nature fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Roaring Brook Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Sarah Guillory (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
242 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
Grades 7-9.
680L
ISBN
9781250824264
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

For 13-year-old Jillian Robichaux, home is Boutin, the small, tight-knit town in coastal Louisiana where she lives with her divorced mother and Nonnie, her grandmother. For decades, Boutin has suffered from rising waters and a dwindling population. But after new storms flood the area and damage her school, Jillian realizes that her mother is considering moving away. For a girl who can't count on her absent father to keep his promises, the thought of leaving the support system of her friends and neighbors as well as the beauty of nature around her is overwhelming. While leading a movement to reopen her school, she finds comfort in preserving Boutin's stories through an oral history project and replanting marsh grasses to stop coastal erosion. From Nonnie's storytelling to the sight of sunset over the marsh, the vivid first-person narrative helps readers understand why Jillian is determined to stay in Boutin and how she finds hope for a future when the town may be gone. While the importance of taking action to limit the effects of climate change is an element of the book, more central is the power of families, communities, and stories to bring people together and provide support. An involving, heartening novel of growth and change.

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

Necessity and nostalgia clash in a small Louisiana town, where 13-year-old Jillian Robichaux fears the loss of her enclave and her Cajun identity in this timely story. Even when stormwaters repeatedly flood Boutin and damage its only school, Jillian urges her mother and grandmother to stay put: without familiar pastimes such as shrimping the bayous, "I was afraid I had no idea who I was." A photo of a long-gone diner, paired with sights of empty stilts that once supported houses and for-sale signs on waterlogged property, leaves Jillian desperate to save her community, where even the graves are submerged ("Boutin would become just like Eternal Rest Cemetery: full of ghosts, then full of water"). To drum up support for historic preservation, Jillian documents longtime residents' memories and starts a petition to rebuild the school. Guillory's determined heroine faces a rising tide on all sides, coping with an estranged father, his neglected puppy (who adores Jillian), and a best friend as eager to leave Boutin as Jillian is to remain. Guillory (Reclaimed) develops Jillian sympathetically via a colloquial first-person voice, showing how she redefines her relationship with home without compromising her love. Protagonists read as Cajun; secondary characters include Black representation. Ages 8--12. Agent: Alice Sutherland-Hawes, ASH Literary. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--7--Tiny Boutin, LA, has always been home for 13-year-old Jillian Robichaux, her mother, and grandmother Nonnie. But the latest storm causes irreparable damage, threatening everything familiar. Flooding shuts down the local school, forcing students to the next city 40 minutes away. Boutin is continuously shrinking: "And the fact that my state was rapidly sinking didn't even make the national news," Jillian laments. She's ready to fight for her home: "If we aren't part of the solution, we're part of the problem." With her husky, deeper voice, Louisiana native Amoss endows Jillian with curiosity, determination, anger, and loyalty. She also bestows distinct personalities on Jillian's friends and allies. Amoss's impressive range gives Nonnie gruff solemnity, even as laughter and love flow freely between generations. VERDICT "Stories were the way we saved what was temporary--they made the mortal immortal," Jillian muses. Amoss ensures Guillory's cast long life.

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

Less extreme than the dramatic hurricanes, floods, and other natural disasters occurring around the globe, the weather crisis affecting this book's fictional place reveals a slower dismantling of land and its inhabitants. Jillian Robichaux lives in the Cajun community of Boutin in the wetlands of Louisiana. Gradually, coastal erosion is destroying the town: the bridge that connects Boutin to the mainland is unsafe; the school cannot be repaired; and businesses, homes, and even a cemetery are now underwater. The future is clear: families must leave. For Jillian, the inevitable exodus feels like an abandonment of her entire culture and her definition of who she is. Guillory's well-crafted setting includes a cuisine of jambalaya, gumbo, and turtle sauce piquant; a sprinkling of French phrases; and Cajun names. The biggest loss, and the one developed most artfully, is the sense of community created in Boutin over generations. The townspeople nurture that history through their stories, which Jillian and her friends capture in an ambitious oral history project that preserves those memories. Jillian's grief, and her trepidation about facing a now unmoored future, ring true and give the novel its heart, while the issues of preserving one's environment and heritage, although strong, never overtake the narrative but offer readers much to ponder. Betty CarterJanuary/February 2023 p.82 (c) Copyright 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

Jillian Robichaux is determined to fight back when her beloved home's threatened by coastal erosion. Tiny Boutin, Louisiana--with houses built on tall stilts--has survived devastating hurricanes, but it's unusually heavy rain that causes a massive flood and blows her estranged father back into her life. After rescuing an elderly woman's old photographs from her flooding house, 13-year-old Jillian doesn't recognize some places in the pictures, despite her hometown's being a keystone of her identity. Investigating further, she learns how much of her town has ended up underwater over the past half-century. Worse, the state doesn't want to repair the damaged bridges or schools (instead shuttling kids to a larger town's schools), devastating Boutin's chances for recovery. Stubborn Jillian teams up with her brainy cousin and an artistic activist friend from her new school for a three-pronged approach to the disaster: a video and photographic oral history project to preserve locals' memories, a petition to save the school, and service helping ecological groups plant marsh grass to combat coastal erosion. The projects' trajectories manage to balance optimism, empowerment, and realistic ideas of what success looks like--the last causing emotional struggles for Jillian. Most characters are Cajun; there are two prominent Black characters, and southern Louisiana's Vietnamese community is acknowledged. Fictional Boutin's dilemmas are inspired by real climate change events. Come for gumbo and jambalaya; stay for the phenomenal hero with a powerful growth story. (author's note) (Fiction. 8-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.