Libby Lochewood is twelve years old in 1967 when her grampa dies of a heart attack. She is devastated at losing her best friend. Now that Grampa’s passed on, it’s just her and her father, and he is so overcome by grief that he can barely get out of bed in the morning.
The night of the funeral, though, Grampa’s spirit appears in Libby’s bedroom and tells her three important things: first, that she isn’t alone or forgotten–“The dead ain’t never that far from the living,” he says; second, that she has “the Sight”–the ability to see family members who have died; and three, that there is something special just for her in the lake. Something that could help her and her father–if she can find it. He kisses Libby on the cheek and vanishes in a soft glow of light and color.
Libby begins her search along with her friends Bobby and Martha, but it’s hard to know if they’ve found what Grampa wanted her to find since they don’t really know what it is. As Libby’s father falls deeper and deeper into depression, Libby and Grampa work together on a plan to help her father believe that their loved ones who have died are much closer than he thinks. But it will take all of Libby’s courage and her gift of Sight to convince her father and help him believe that the dead are never truly gone.
Never That Far is set in the lush, rural landscape of southern Florida and is a middle-grade novel about friendship, hope, and the power of family love.
My Review:
I want to start off by saying, I cried with this book. I feel very lucky that I had an ARC provided by Shadow Mountain.
Uniquely written, this story unfolds as you listen to the main character talk. (She has a style that takes you to another time and place.) She has the gift of seeing those who have died, and during her journey after the loss of her grandfather she will heal her remaining family. This book is full of hope.
This book is about an amazing treasure called family.
This book releases March 6, 2018.
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