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Finding Fortune

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When Ren sees her mom heading out to dinner with that creep Rick Littleton, she's furious. How could her mom do that to her dad, a soldier stuck over in Afghanistan? Ren decides to run away to the school-turned-boardinghouse in the next town over. Once there, she makes friends with a boy named Hugh, who tells her that the boardinghouse is the site of a mystery. Every night, the owner, Ms. Baxter, searches for a treasure left in the building years ago. If Ms. Baxter can't find it, then the boarding house might shut down for good, and her dream of preserving the town's history by opening a pearl button museum will never come true. By the time Ren, Hugh, and other visitors help find the treasure-a bag of pearls-Ren and her mom also have found a way to forgive each other.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 24, 2015
      After Ren catches her mother flirting with another man (Ren’s father is a
      soldier stationed in Afghanistan), the 12-year-old runs away to a dilapidated school turned boardinghouse in Fortune, a virtual ghost town on the Mississippi River. There, she finds strange characters and an irresistible mystery. Former beauty queen Hildy Baxter, the establishment’s elderly owner, is eager to chronicle Fortune’s history by opening a pearl button museum, if only she can find the treasure box her brother hid years ago. Assisting Hildy is Mayor Joy, his donkey, and jack-of-all-trades Garrett, who is building a labyrinth of shells in the backyard. Together with friends Hugh and Tucker, Ren helps with the museum and searches for Hildy’s lost treasure, despite threats of closure. Ren’s confusion over her parents’ troubled relationship is lovingly handled through Ray’s whimsical characters and heartfelt moments between Ren and her mother. Ray (Here Lies Linc) expertly incorporates the forgotten history of shell harvesting towns along the Mississippi in an absorbing
      and well-written story that recalls Kate DiCamillo’s Because of Winn-Dixie. Ages 10–12. Agent: Laura Langlie, Laura Langlie Agency.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2015
      Ren (short for Renata) spends her summer after sixth grade in a long-abandoned town near her Midwest home not far from the Mississippi River. Though the sign for Fortune shows the population as 12, down from 128, Ren has never seen anyone in the dusty streets of the old town. It's only when a temporary falling out with her mother leads Ren to try to rent a room at the old Fortune Consolidated School, recently turned boardinghouse, that she discovers both the lively past and present of the town. The boardinghouse's owner, spry but elderly Hildy, plans to create a museum in what was once the school gymnasium. The museum will be filled with memorabilia from the town's heyday making buttons from clam and mussel shells pulled from the Mississippi. There's a fortune hidden somewhere in the school-left for Hildy by a brother who never returned from the Korean War. The discovery of its hiding place is left to Ren's sleuthing with the help of newfound friends. Ren as narrator is appealing: pragmatic, smart, and candid. Ray's narrative is rich and diverting, full of real history and a complex story for each character, and she adroitly gathers all the threads together. An author's note explains the novel's back story in the true history of the Mississippi's button towns, now faded away. Like its protagonist, full of heart. (Fiction. 9-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      July 1, 2015

      Gr 4-6-Like the small town of Fortune, Mississippi, once the "Pearl Capital of the World," Ren feels that her little family it slowly breaking apart. With her father fighting in Afghanistan, Ren's mother is moving on with her life and is dating a "creep" named Rick Littleton. Ren has had enough and decides to run away. The 12-year-old makes her way to the neighboring town, where she discovers an old school that's been turned into a boardinghouse-and a mystery. The owner, Ms. Baxter is convinced that a treasure-a bag of pearls-is hidden somewhere in the house. With her new friend Hugh, Ren sets out to help Ms. Baxter find the long lost treasure. Ren is a good kid with a kind heart. Ray's characters are realistic and relatable. VERDICT A heartwarming story about forgiveness, acceptance, and friendship.-H. Islam, Brooklyn Public Library

      Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2015
      Grades 5-8 When 12-year-old Ren runs away, she lands just one town over in Fortune, Iowa, a ghost town along the Mississippi Riveror more specifically, in an abandoned school now used as a boarding house. There she meets proprietor Hildy Baxter, old Mayor Joy and donkey Wayne, and eight-year-old Hugh, who just loves a good mystery. Subsequently balancing the boarding house's secrets and treasures and a homelife troubled by a deployed dad and a mom uncertain about her marital future, Ren proves herself to be a resourceful, thoughtful, sensitive child who desperately wants her family back the way she remembers it. Hildy, meanwhile, plans to open a museum celebrating the pearl button industry that once was the lifeblood of many riverside Iowa towns. Ray gives her characters strong ties to Fortune's past and a compassionate kinship that reinforces the idea that friends are the family you choose. A delightful choice for a classroom read-aloud or for young readers who prefer their history with a mysterious twist. Back matter includes pearl button industry history and photographs.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2016
      Seventh grader Ren runs away to nearby "ghost town" Fortune. She finds refuge in an abandoned school being renovated by quirky octogenarian Hildy who is in search of treasure--a stash of pearls from Fortune's button-making heyday. The mystery is satisfying, filled with dead ends, scary moments, and surprising twists, but it's the relationships between the characters that make this story memorable.

      (Copyright 2016 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2015
      Seventh grader Ren's world is a mess. Her father moved out shortly before being deployed to Afghanistan, and her mother seems to be running around with another guy. So Ren escapes, if only as far as the nearby ghost town of Fortune. She finds refuge in a dilapidated, abandoned school being renovated into a boarding house by quirky octogenarian Hildy Baxter. Ren enjoys poking around the mysterious old building and soon meets Hugh, a younger boy with a penchant for spying. It turns out that Hildy is in search of treasurea stash of pearls collected during Fortune's button-making heyday (before the supply of mussel- and clam shells dried up and the button factories closed). It was intended to be Hildy's nest egg, hidden by her brother before he died in battle in the Korean War. The mystery is a satisfying one, filled with dead ends, scary moments, and surprising plot twists. However, it's the relationships between the characters that make this story memorable. Hildy holds her dwindling town together, even when things seem to be falling apart; on the brink of young adulthood, Ren learns to face her own fortune with reflection and grace. And one thing is for sure: buttons will never look quite so insignificant again. The author's historical note rounds out this story in a satisfying way. robin smith

      (Copyright 2015 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.1
  • Lexile® Measure:800
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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