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Caleb and Kit

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From award-winning author Beth Vrabel comes a powerfully moving story about a magical friendship, coping with disability, and the pains of growing up and growing apart.
Twelve-year-old Caleb is shorter, frailer, and more protected than most kids his age. That's because he has cystic fibrosis, a diagnosis meaning lungs that fill with mucus and a shortened lifespan. Caleb tries not to let his disorder define him, but it can be hard with an overprotective mom and a perfect big brother.
Then Caleb meets Kit — a vibrant, independent, and free girl — and his world changes instantly. Kit reads Caleb's palm and tells him they are destined to become friends. She calls birds down from the sky and turns every day into an adventure. Her magic is contagious, making Caleb question the rules and order in his life. But being Kit's friend means embracing deception and danger, and soon Caleb will have to decide if his friendship with Kit is really what's best for him — or her.
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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Adam McArthur's youthful intonation and energetic cadence animate 12-year-old Caleb, whose desire to embrace a more independent lifestyle is stymied by cystic fibrosis. To avoid spending his summer in day camp, Caleb escapes to the woods to spend time with a new, seemingly magical, friend, Kit, who encourages him to abandon his well-regulated life with his protective mother, perfect older brother, and mostly absentee father. When Kit's escapades become illegal and dangerous, Caleb begins to wonder how much of her story is true. McArthur does a credible job switching up his inflection and pacing to denote the other characters in Beth Vrabel's nuanced and unflinching portrait of children dealing with issues beyond their control. S.G. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
    • School Library Journal

      June 1, 2017

      Gr 4-7-Constrained by his family's concern and his cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder that primarily affects the lungs, 12-year-old Caleb longs to enact the bold declaration, "I do what I want." He skips out of his summer camp (all the better to avoid his cranky classmate, Shelly) to meet fae-like Kit in the woods. The magical world Kit draws him into at first feels like just the adventurous release from obligations and boredom that Caleb needs. However, he soon finds that he must face questions about how healthy their friendship is. Caleb is an exquisitely imperfect protagonist whose problematic decisions make him likable, particularly as he attempts to resolve his predicaments. The supporting characters are finely crafted as well, from Caleb's caring mom, who reawakens with the advent of a new boyfriend, and his highly talented, dutiful older brother to his absent dad and finicky stepmother. A beautiful metaphor of two trees delicately bending away from each other as they grow, in order to thrive, illuminates the future of Caleb and Kit's passionate friendship. Vrabel weaves all these elements into a story reminiscent of Katherine Paterson's classic Bridge to Terabithia that highlights day-to-day life with a common but devastating disease. VERDICT Hand to readers looking for a novel about both the magic and the pain of friendship. A solid purchase for most collections.-Erin Reilly-Sanders, University of Wisconsin-Madison

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2017
      A 12-year-old boy attempts to take charge of his own life. Caleb, a white boy born with cystic fibrosis, hates being one of only two kids his age in summer day camp. His mom refuses to let him stay home alone while she works, his irresponsible dad is off gallivanting with his new fiancee, and his perfect older brother has a summer internship--with, of all things, the local CF foundation. Caleb's longtime best friend is busy with football and baseball--sports Caleb can no longer play. When he meets a mystical girl (also white, as all the main characters seem to be) in the woods behind his home, he's intrigued; when she encourages him to escape the ordinary and to do whatever he wants, he goes along, skipping camp and spending days with her. But Kit is burdened with her own problems and secrets, and what Kit wants them to do is sometimes illegal or dangerous. Caleb's first-person narration allows readers to sympathize with the frustration and fear that cause him to act out, and it propels the plot to a credible, nuanced conclusion. The cystic fibrosis is well-handled--it affects every part of Caleb's life but never defines who he is. A realistic story with strong, recognizable characters that doesn't reduce cystic fibrosis to a tragedy. (Fiction. 8-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2017
      Grades 3-6 When Caleb first sees Kit in a clearing in the woods behind his house, she seems to have come straight out of a fairy tale. Caleb has cystic fibrosis, an illness that makes him feel different from friends; a perfect brother doing things he will never be able to do; and a dad who is never there. So Caleb begins to treasure the time spent with Kit, who has invited him into her own imagined world full of fairies and magic. As summer wears on, Caleb spends most of his days with Kit, who, in reality, lives with her mother in her grandmother's old house. But lies soon begin to surface in their world, as Caleb's mother finds out he hasn't been spending his days at camp, and Caleb discovers that Kit isn't really homeschooled and that she's hiding a secret of her own. Filled with smart, witty, and magical writing, Kit and Caleb, and those around them, come to vibrant life in this heartbreaking story about the ties that bring people together and the difficulties of facing the truth.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2018
      Twelve-year-old Caleb, who has cystic fibrosis, struggles to cope with his overprotective mother and preoccupied remarried father. Caleb's life changes when he ditches summer camp to hang out with exuberant new friend Kit, who Caleb eventually learns has a mentally unstable and abusive mother. Accurate information about cystic fibrosis throughout overshadows the children's genuine friendship in this well-intentioned but issues-centric story.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:700
  • Text Difficulty:3

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