The Moon Without Stars
The Moon Without Stars
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Author(s): Miller, Chanel
ISBN No.: 9780593624555
Pages: 256
Year: 202601
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 24.83
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

PROLOGUE Most people assume a life-changing event requires summiting a snowcapped mountain, saving someone from a burning building, or winning a bajillion dollars. The reality is you can change your life with a single word. Up until seventh grade, I''d been an introvert with exactly one friend, content with the uneventful. But everything would start to shift, to slip slowly into unexpected joy and catastrophe, all because of the afternoon I chose to say, "Okay." It was an overcast day. Bag of grapes, block of cheddar cheese, lukewarm lemonade, and two lawn chairs on a faded yellow blanket. Ten days left of summer. Scott tossed his head back, his mouth agape, trying to catch a Goldfish cracker up in the air.


It bounced off his chin and landed near my feet. I brushed my bangs aside, dog-eared a page. A creaking sound, the wheels of a metal wagon. Our heads turned in unison. Poppy''s mom, long face, unruly hair, purple windbreaker, was pulling her wagon with the black karaoke machine up the sidewalk. I knew it wasn''t polite to stare and glued my eyes back to my book. Poppy Lee had been in the grade above me, but died, after a long illness. Passed away , that''s the polite term, but it comes out to the same thing.


I guess death is a scary word, the thhh at the end sounds like a tire leaking air and the hard d of death sounds like done , like door . It''s final, shut. After Poppy died, her mom started showing up in the park with this karaoke machine and microphone attached to a long wire. Singing and swaying all day long, eyes closed. Some people complained she sounded like a mosquito. Said, She''s gone off her rocker. Cuckoo bananas. It''s haunting.


Like a wailing cat! Poor woman. So melancholy. But nobody intervened, they just let her be. I heard the wheels come to a stop and glanced up. "Poppy loved to read," she said. I looked behind me, made sure I was the one she was addressing. "So many books at home, and nothing to do with them," she said. "Would you like them?" Her eyes burrowed straight into mine.


Without moving my head, I slid my pupils to my left toward Scott. I saw the barely perceptible tilt of his head forward, an affirmation. "Will you take them?" Mrs. Lee said. "Okay," I said to her, and that was it, my whole rest of the year hinged on that moment. "Okay! Smart girl. Poppy will be happy. I''ll have Palmer drop them off later.


" She seemed relieved and began humming as she dragged her wagon away. *** That evening, a cream-colored minivan pulled up out front. I could hear the engine click off, the crickets chirping outside. The doorbell rang, my dad called out, "Who is it?" And I yelled back, "Just a delivery, I got it!" Poppy''s older brother, Palmer, sixteen, stood in the doorframe, swoopy haired, tall and narrow as a palm tree. I''d put on my best sweater. Not to impress him or anything, it was just the first time a boy, other than Scott, had come over. But Scott didn''t count; I''ve known him since I had a consciousness, feel neutral toward him like I would toward a penguin. "Come in," I said.


Palmer''s lanky arms were wrapped around a cardboard box, the hard edges pressing red lines into his forearms. So began the quiet rhythm of Palmer setting boxes down, one by one, with a subtle exhale. The shushing sound of boxes sliding over the carpet and into my room, heat generated from the friction. Palmer''s forehead began to shimmer. I rushed to the fridge to see if I could get him a cold drink, but we only had soy milk. "I think that''s it," he said. I held out a handful of White Rabbit candies from the kitchen drawer. He hesitated, then reached out and took one.


"Thank you," I said. "The inside wrapper is just sticky rice paper--you don''t have to peel it off. You can eat it." He nodded. "Noted." He perched himself on the arm of the couch, signifying he had no intention of staying, just needed to rest. "So you think you''re going to read all of them?" he said. I nodded, so firmly my chin touched my chest.


"Okay, good. She loved those things, read them while she was sick, called them her ''little companions.'' So don''t--don''t waste them." *** Late at night, I sat alone in my room, the cardboard boxes staring at me like a herd of sheep that''d gotten lost and wandered into the wrong meadow. I worried it was bad luck to have accepted them, thinking about how the last hours of Poppy''s life had been spent turning these pages. I vowed to make good use of them. So I said, "Thank you, Poppy!" out loud into the air, in case she could hear me. And then I said it one more time, a little louder.


I don''t believe in ghosts, but I do believe in not being a bumhole. I tore the first box open. *** Over the next ten days I downed them, one after the other, like potato chips. I read every genre, but what broke my mind open was nonfiction--memoirs, which I''d always assumed were just old people going through sad things. Poppy had highlighted entire passages until they glowed yellow, drew tiny hearts and exclamation points and scribbled, Do this . It turns out people were also conducting big lives in places that were not here. Destructive, adventurous, willy-nilly lives. And no one was asking petty questions like, What grade did you get? How do you think you did on that test? Characters in books were feeling everything; angst, heartbreak, elation, rejection, awe.


I was realizing I hadn''t felt nearly as much. In fact, of all the things to feel in a lifetime, I''d collected maybe two and a half important feelings. It was slightly embarrassing, how little my life had been. How I''d never stirred the pot, wouldn''t even have the spoon to do it. Truth is, I''d always assumed life would begin later, when I was older, my real life. That middle school was just the part I had to get through. Poppy''s books were nudging me to pay attention, because life was already happening and I should be ready to feel everything. CHAPTER ONE: OKUBO COMETS MIDDLE SCHOOL On the first day of seventh grade, our mascot, a comet, stood at the entrance waving to kids, looking like a happy meatball on fire.


I watched cars line up, classmates hopping out, crisp collared, hair brushed, teeth brushed, wearing smooth-nosed sneakers. This was a fresh start, a clean slate. The purity of a beginning, when all of us were perfect and guilty of nothing. I watched girls flock over to June; I swear she swallowed a magnet when she was a baby, the way people were pulled toward her. Everyone found their herds while I rocked on my heels waiting for Scott Mango. Scott, with his wire-rimmed glasses like bent paper clips. Scott, who always wears a rust-colored hoodie, sleeves dangling past his hands. Scott, who peels oranges when he''s anxious, gunky citrus permanently wedged beneath his fingernails.


Scott, who is naturally smart like he took all these classes in a past life. He jogged over, thumped a thick paperback on top of my head. "Hey, Luna . Luna balloona, Luna bafoona, Luny tuny," he said. "Hey, Scott . Scotty potty, Scotty bugatti, Scotty with a body," I said. I flicked him in the ear as hard as I could, which was like a hug, since we don''t hug. He kneeled on the pavement and picked up my limp shoelaces.


"Get it together, lady," he said, turning the lines into two loops. "You still do bunny ears?" I said, peeking down. He gave my laces a strong tug and I wiggled my foot to test his knot. He popped back up, shook out his hair, and said, "Double-knotted bunny. It''s the only way. Good to see you, it''s been forever," he said. But I''d seen him yesterday, every day, his presence as obvious as the sun. Then I heard the sound of the clattering bell, like an angry bee in a metal can, and the school year began.


*** What I''ll say up front is that I''m not very good at school. Other kids, though--smart. The Bay Area is tech land; most people''s parents are engineers and cybersecurity cloud machine data learning whatever. (June''s dad invented some button feature that we use on our phones, so her family''s loaded off their rockers, live up in the hills.) Which means all these kids, even as embryos, were marinating in genius juice. In this STEM-obsessed environment, I think I''m the flower atop the stem, the expressive and colorful thing bursting off that sturdy, conventional stalk. I do pay attention, not in class necessarily, but to my surroundings; I''m a sharp observer with an internal antenna that can pick up on people''s emotions. For example, in sixth grade I''d noticed Ms.


Crane seemed slightly somber. Then I spotted the picture on her desk; the photo of her in a white dress with her short husband had been replaced with a photo of the Grand Canyon, just a dry orange rock in a five-by-seven-inch frame. Oh , I thought, She got a divorce . The word itself sounded like divide with force . Anyway, one day Ms. Crane was eating rigatoni with a plastic fork and Bonnie said, You know the ocean is dying because of the plastic you''re using? Bonnie doesn''t have the antenna. Ms. Crane''s voice got real low and she said, Well, it''s hard to find REUSABLE FORKS when your whole life is packed up in BOXES.


Then she apologized, stepped into her closet, and burst into tears--we could all hear her. She came back out with a jellyfish of mucus sliding out of her nose, and you know what she said? Allergies. Eyes dripping, still bre.


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