Louisiana's Way Home is a sequel to Kate DiCamillo's last book, Raymie Nightingale, the first time DiCamillo has returned to a previous novel. We begin with Louisiana Elefante's grandmother and guardian whisking her away in the middle of the night, leaving home and friends behind. Louisiana resents the separation from friends and pets, all because of a purported reckoning of the family curse.
Louisiana is a character that is spunky and still pulls at your heart strings. She has a vivid personality with big feelings and heartfelt observations: "In some ways, this is a story of woe and confusion, but it is also a story of joy and kindness and free peanuts."
We follow along as Louisiana and her grandmother drive away from Florida and how they adapt when adjustments must be made to their travel plans. When they have a forced stop for some rehabilitation, Louisiana connects to the locals, making friends and foes. Louisiana, already a child who has had to shoulder more than most, learns more details about her origins and wrestles with those revelations.
Kate DiCamillo is a wordsmith and captures reality so accurately. She creates worlds where there is hurt and pain, and in spite of it all, beauty emerges. I found myself blinking away tears at the close of the book. And being reminded that people like Grandfather Burke exist in the world is everything.
(I received a digital ARC from NetGalley and Candlewick Press in exchange for my honest review. I've used Amazon Affiliate links here; should you purchase through these links, I receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you.)
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