Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Me and Sam-Sam Handle the Apocalypse
Me and Sam-Sam Handle the Apocalypse | Susan Vaught
2 posts | 2 read
"Edgar-winning Vaught, a neuropsychologist, has both personal and professional experience to draw on in crafting a narrator who is admirably smart and resilient despite an 'itchy' brain and a compulsion to count things." --Booklist (starred review) "Deeply smart and considerate." --BCCB "An absorbing mystery about friendship, growth, and heroics." --Kirkus Reviews "Highly recommended for school libraries as a strong addition to help diversify realistic fiction collections to include neuroatypical characters and heroines." --School Library Journal Jesse is on the case when money goes missing from the library and her dad is looking like the #1 suspect in Edgar Award--winning author Susan Vaught's latest middle grade mystery. I could see the big inside of my Sam-Sam. I had been training him for 252 days with mini tennis balls and pieces of bacon, just to prove to Dad and Mom and Aunt Gus and the whole world that a tiny, fluffy dog could do big things if he wanted to. I think my little dog always knew he could be a hero. I just wonder if he knew about me. When the cops show up at Jesse's house and arrest her dad, she figures out in a hurry that he's the #1 suspect in the missing library fund money case. With the help of her (first and only) friend Springer, she rounds up suspects (leading to a nasty confrontation with three notorious school bullies) and asks a lot of questions. But she can't shake the feeling that she isn't exactly cut out for being a crime-solving hero. Jesse has a neuro-processing disorder, which means that she's "on the spectrum or whatever." As she explains it, "I get stuck on lots of stuff, like words and phrases and numbers and smells and pictures and song lines and what time stuff is supposed to happen." But when a tornado strikes her small town, Jesse is given the opportunity to show what she's really made of--and help her dad. Told with the true-as-life voice Susan Vaught is known for, this mystery will have you rooting for Jesse and her trusty Pomeranian, Sam-Sam.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Revenge4bess
Pickpick

Has anyone read this yet? I‘m curious about it.

review
kateteaching7and8
post image
Pickpick

I loved the protagonist in this book. Jesse is neurodiverse and on the Autism spectrum. While the book is about solving who stole the money from her father's desk and the apocalypse that hits, it's also about Jesse better understanding who she is and realizing she is capable of so much more than she thinks. I liked the alternating timelines the story was told through, except when it switched on a cliffhanger. #24in48