Code red

Joy McCullough

Book - 2023

Thirteen-year-old former elite gymnast Eden is feeling lost after a career-ending injury, but when she meets new friends who open her eyes to period poverty, the struggle that low-income people have trying to afford menstrual products, she becomes an advocate for fair treatment and rediscovers her passion and drive.

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jFICTION/Mccullou Joy
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jFICTION/Mccullou Joy Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Children's stories
Fiction
Published
New York : Atheneum Books for Young Readers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Joy McCullough (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
233 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8 and up.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 232-233).
ISBN
9781534496262
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Thirteen-year-old, white-cued Eden feels listless after a shoulder injury and sudden growth spurt force her to quit gymnastics. Now, instead of attending practice, she's enrolled in IRL school for the first time in two years and spends long hours alone since her divorced mother--the CEO of a menstrual products company--is rarely home. Eden struggles to make friends, until she and Guatemalan American classmate Maribel bond during suspension following their physical retaliation against a bully who taunted Eden about her mother's occupation. The tweens become fast friends, and Eden finds herself looking forward to volunteering at the food pantry run by Maribel's mother. It's there that Eden meets Raven and her transgender son Will, both white-cued, who have begun a community project in which they make reusable menstrual pads for people around the globe. Eden--accompanied by Maribel--wholeheartedly joins Raven and Will's altruistic efforts, putting her at odds with her corporate-minded mother. McCullough (Enter the Body) sheds light on issues of injustice, misogyny, and period poverty, as well as varying other challenges surrounding financial precarity, via Eden's warmly rendered personal journey from laser-focused athlete to stalwart activist. Eden's evolving relationship with her mother, and their opposing ideals, provide additional narrative heft. Ages 8--up. Agent: Jim McCarthy, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (June)

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

Gr 4--7--Thirteen-year-old Eden comes from a wealthy family and has divorced parents. When her mom speaks in front of the entire school on Career Day about the menstruation products her company sells, Eden is mortified. Her classmates won't stop with the period jokes! Eden also struggles with gymnastics as her body changes after an injury; the only encouragement she gets to continue comes from her grandma. After the Career Day disaster, Eden's troubles with her mom lead her to a new friend and family; they stick up for her, and make her feel more loved and understood. During the course of the story, Eden gets her first period (after which she learns about sewing reusable pads), and gets involved with a play. These activities help fill the time when she would normally be doing gymnastics. She has to learn who she is again, if not a gymnast. As Eden's interests grow, her life becomes more rewarding and fulfilling. She tackles confrontations with her mom about conflicting goals with bravery and honesty, which result in a healthier relationship between mother and daughter. McCullough's latest middle grade novel introduces readers to period poverty, volunteerism, activism, and a trans boy who needs period products. Back material includes a personal note from the author, statistics about menstruation, tips for getting menstrual products in schools, a glossary of terms, a bibliography of movies and books, and contacts for menstrual movement organizations. VERDICT Readers who feel ignored by busy family members or need information about puberty might enjoy this realistic book.--Tanya Boudreau

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

Heather Sorensen rose from poverty to lead a major menstrual products company, but she's MIA when her daughter gets her first period. Eden, 13, was fulfilling Heather's lofty dream for her future--Olympic medal--winning gymnast--until a growth spurt and injury cut it short. Though less invested in her divorced mother's ambitions, Eden feels lost: Gymnastics always came first, leaving little time for friends. She rarely sees her pilot dad and is often alone in the enormous Seattle-area mansion she shares with Heather, whose high-profile career trumps parenting. Heather's appearance at a career day assembly to extol her company, MySecret, leaves Eden feeling humiliated and a target for teasing. After she defends herself against a harassing boy with help from classmate Maribel, both girls are suspended. With Heather unreachable, Maribel's mom brings them to the food pantry she manages, where Eden starts her period. Maribel's Guatemalan immigrant family take to Eden, as do their friends Will, a trans boy, and his mom, Raven (who are White, like Eden). Raven's small nonprofit makes and distributes free, reusable cloth menstrual pads. Learning about period poverty (and poverty, period), Eden ponders ways to fund period products and gets a crash course in income inequality, but her commitment to social justice strains her relationship with Heather. Readers learn about these subjects alongside Eden in a well-integrated way and will root for the quirky, well-rounded characters who challenge outdated cultural taboos. Character-driven, thought-provoking, often funny, and, above all, timely. (author's note, glossary, resources) (Fiction. 8-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Chapter One This cannot be happening. I must have zoned out during Mr. Trent's ramble about the Battle of Gettysburg, and I can't even blame it on an intense training session or a red-eye back from a gymnastics meet the night before. Last night all I did was stare at YouTube and try to ignore the fact that my friends were all on the way to Classics. But when I catch up to the rest of the class, everyone is staring out the window at the school parking lot, probably alerted by Tyler, who is extremely excited about the "sweet ride" that just pulled in. My mom's sweet ride. Sure enough, those are my mom's red-soled high heels stepping out of the Porsche, my mom's impeccable suit, perfectly coiffed hair, pristinely made-up face. "Isn't that your mom?" Kaia asks. Of course it is. No one else's mom looks like that here in the Seattle suburbs, where the moms go without makeup and let their hair go gray and wear their nice yoga pants to school functions. School functions. Even Mr. Trent is distracted by the car, and also maybe by the appearance of my instantly recognizable mother. "Go ahead, Eden," he says. He probably thinks someone died. I'm starting to hope that's why she's here, even if I know it's not. The principal cornered me on the very first day of school to ask me to invite my mom to speak at Career Day. And of course she'd ask--my mom is a high-powered executive, a philanthropist, and one of the most recognizable faces in Seattle. I said she'd be out of town. It seemed plausible. Most people assume my mom travels all the time. But flying on airplanes is the one thing she can't do. So she has people who travel for her, and she reigns supreme here in Seattle. Kind of ironic that she married a pilot. But then maybe it makes sense why she divorced him. Anyway, the principal didn't know that about the airplane phobia, so I figured I was in the clear. Until a minute ago. I hurry through the hallway toward the main office, trying to convince myself someone did die. Not Dad, obviously, and not Gran. No one in our family. Maybe, like, a distant cousin. She'd totally interrupt her workday to come pull me out of school and tell me a distant cousin had died. That actually seems more plausible than interrupting her workday to come talk to a bunch of middle schoolers. "Well, there she is," Principal Grady says as I burst into the front office. I can't read her face and honestly don't even care if she knows I lied to her. I have much bigger problems right now. "Mom? What are you doing here?" It's every bit as mortifying as I expected. It's complete justification for my lie. I knew what it would mean for my mom to speak at Career Day. If anything, I underestimated the horror. "So remember, girls," she says, when her speech is finally over and I'm nothing but a puddle of embarrassment melding with the other mysterious stickiness on the auditorium floor, "when it's your time of the month, you'll never be caught by surprise if you keep a stash of MySecret period products in your locker!" Over the past two years of doing online school to accommodate my training schedule, sometimes I'd think wistfully about regular-kid school things, like talent shows or field days. But clearly I left off in elementary school and couldn't conceive of the horrors middle school would bring. I couldn't conceive of my mother telling an auditorium full of my peers to fill their lockers with her company's period products. Last I saw them, none of my friends at the gym had even gotten their period yet. My days of online school and rigid training schedules ended for good a couple of months ago when I overshot a handstand on the bars and tore my labrum--a part of my shoulder that was already dicey from years of repetitive stress. If I'm honest, my gymnastics career had been on shaky ground for a while. I woke up one morning around Christmas and swore I was an inch taller than I'd been the day before. Leotards and warm-up pants are stretchy, but soon my shoes were too small. Gran took me shopping, cheering that I was finally out of kid-sized shoes. But I wasn't cheering. I knew what this meant. I just hoped no one else would notice. They did. My coaches had to notice, because they had to teach me how to make adjustments for my growing body. When you suddenly shoot up three inches in a couple of months, it throws off your balance, your form, basically everything about your life as a gymnast. I tried to shut out the chatter about how my growth would factor into my chances at the Hopes Classic. Control this moment, Coach Amy always said. Classics weren't until the spring. I tried not to think about how I was suddenly the tallest girl on the team. Most gymnasts are small, but there've been some taller girls in the elites. Svetlana Khorkina. Nastia Liukin. Sure, they're absolute prodigies and once-in-a-generation gymnasts, but why couldn't that be me? Kyla Ross grew almost five inches and still managed to dominate college gymnastics after the Rio Olympics. "You'll never make it to the Olympics now," my mom said. At my birthday dinner a few weeks after the injury. "There's no point in continuing with gymnastics." "Heather!" Gran said. "Why would you say such a thing?" "I'm only being realistic, Mom. I'm not saying she did anything wrong, but she doesn't have the natural talent to overcome the height issue." I blinked back tears, which Gran noticed. Mom didn't. "Eden, honey," Gran said. "Maybe she's right. I don't know. But you don't have to be the best at something to enjoy doing it. You could keep doing gymnastics." "Don't be ridiculous, Mother," Mom said. Because to her, there's absolutely no point in doing something if you aren't the best there ever was. "Maybe it's not too late to pivot to ballet. Or modeling. Though you might not be tall enough for that." I do my best to ignore the snickers on my way to lunch after the rest of the parents talk about their normal jobs. Most of the girls avoid looking at me. Some of the boys do too. But Graham Townsend knocks my shoulder walking past, half coughing, half speaking into his hand, "Bloody Mary." His minions explode with laughter. It doesn't make any sense, but that doesn't matter to guys like Graham. I roll my eyes and keep walking. In the cafeteria I sit at the edge of a table of girls I was kind of friends with in elementary school, even though my real friends were at the gym even then. Two tables over, Graham shouts, "Oh, man! I got a paper cut. Hey, Eden, do you have anything to absorb the blood?" Summer giggles, but her twin, Kaia, rolls her eyes. "Ignore him," she says. Maybe to support me, or more likely so he won't make a target of the whole table. "I can't believe you asked your mom to come." Miranda flips her bangs out of her eyes. "Bold." Which might be a compliment, except it isn't. "I wouldn't let our dad come, and he's only a dentist," Summer says. I don't say anything. Normally, I'd make small talk about their activities--Summer plays soccer, Miranda does theater, and Kaia's in student government. But I don't want anyone to ask me about gymnastics, so instead, I sit there and dream of transferring to a school where no one knows me (and more important, no one knows my mom). Excerpted from Code Red by Joy McCullough 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.