Bridge to bat city A mostly true tall tale ..

Ernest Cline

Book - 2024

After her mother's death, thirteen-year-old Opal moves to her uncle's farm where she befriends a group of orphaned, music-loving bats, and summons the courage to protect them from a mining company as she attempts to find them a new home.

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Subjects
Genres
Animal fiction
Domestic fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Ernest Cline (author)
Other Authors
Mishka Westell (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
314 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Audience
Ages 8 and up.
ISBN
9780316460583
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A 13-year-old girl and a colony of bats overcome losses in this middle-grade debut from Ready Player One author Cline. After Opal B. Flats' mother dies, she goes to live with Uncle Roscoe on the family farm in the Texas Hill Country. Her first night there, she has an alien encounter and subsequently discovers that she can communicate with the Mexican free-tailed bats living in a nearby cave. Their connection becomes essential when Opal, Uncle Roscoe, and the bats, through differing circumstances, are forced to find new homes. Opal and Uncle Roscoe, who read white, convince the bats to accompany them to Austin, "the only place in this whole stone-hearted state where weirdos are welcome!" If Opal and Uncle Roscoe have a slow start with fitting in, it's even more difficult for a colony of over a million bats, especially when prejudice against them is being systematically reinforced by a greedy councilman whose pesticide business suffers when the bats start eating insects. The third-person narration unfolds in a homey style that's colored with references to music and famous names that contribute to the sense of place, including Ann Richards, Selena, and Willie Nelson. Entries from Opal's scrapbook are interspersed throughout. Readers will be relieved that, despite the hardships Opal and the bats must overcome, they ultimately prevail, succeeding in making friends and new homes for themselves in this celebratory primer on bats and belonging. Westell's delicate, atmospheric illustrations greatly enhance the text. Delightfully weird and whimsical. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.