Tag: Back to Bainbridge

  • BACK To BAINBRIDGE by Norah Lally – Middle Grade, Contemporary Fiction, Friendships & Family

     

    Norah Lally’s upper middle grade novel Back to Bainbridge sees unstable family life through the eyes of thirteen-year-old Vicki Hanlon. The story opens as her single mother has just lost another boyfriend, and the family is being evicted from their house in upstate New York.

    Vicki’s memories, recalled as the family travels on the interstate down to grandmother’s apartment in the Bronx, shows the tumultuousness of her young life so far. It has left her with a world view based on disappointments, leaving friends, and the absence of a secure home.

    To say Vicki’s family is dysfunctional would be an understatement. She can predict her life circumstances based on her mother’s relationships with men: happy, bereft, flirty, angry. As the eldest child, she cares for her siblings when her mother can’t despite how young Vicki herself is. Judith, her younger sister, wears her scars in the form of mistrust and cynicism, while her ten-year-old brother Dylan still clings to his stuffed bear as a small piece of reliable comfort.

    Vicki’s mother deems their stay at grandmother’s home temporary, but also realizes she needs to change her life for her children’s sake. She promises this new beginning will be good for them all. Vicki can’t believe her, but one minute after meeting her grandmother she realizes this no-nonsense woman means business, and they need her for their very survival.

    Vicki wants a stable home life, but she wants friends and a sense of belonging even more.

    That first night in her grandmother’s home, she hears the voice of an angel. She opens the window and meets Rosa, the daughter of the building’s superintendent. They form an instant bond, and Vicki has her first friend inher new neighborhood. Then she meets James, the skater-dude whose problematic parents abandoned him to live with his aunt in the same apartment building. His parents’ past unruly behavior has left a bad impression on the other tenants, an unfortunate reputation that sticks to James like stale perfume. No one trusts him, not even Rosa, but Vicki won’t let anyone tell her who she can and cannot be friends with. She immediately sees something she likes in James and gives him the benefit of the doubt.

    Vicki even refuses to judge her cranky downstairs neighbor, Mrs. Kirby, based on other people’s opinions. Word on the block is that she’s an old witch, but Vicki embraces everyone—a trait that proves invaluable as her friendships begin to blossom and change her view on the world.

    When the talented Rosa leaves for a cultural-artistic summer camp, she entrusts the keys to her secret hideout with Vicki so that she can feed the rescued cats living in the basement against building rules. Vicki agrees but she has an ulterior motive for wantingthe keys; the ability to gain access to the basement storage units, especially the one holding her mother’s magenta bag. She suspects her mother has been keeping secrets about her father, whom she dreams of reuniting with in California.

    What Vicki discovers in her exploration of the storage units surprises her. She uncovers forgotten treasures that tell the stories of her neighbors’ hidden lives, and as Vicki learns more about the multi-dimensional humans whom she sees each day, she realizes that there is truly more to everyone than what meets the eye, and she has empathy for them all.

    Through her experiences, Vicki comes to respect the people of Bainbridge Avenue, and she becomes a builder of bridges, not walls, until even her own mother opens up to her and they grow closer.

    The changes that occur over the course of this novel in Vicki, her family, and her new friends on Bainbridge Avenue show us the power of respect and understanding to heal and create lasting bonds. Vicki embraces acceptance and forgiveness, even after she learns about family secrets that her mother and grandmother have tried to keep shrouded due to shame and fear of being judged. In the end, the family is able to support one another and look ahead to better days.

    Lally writes lovingly with great respect for kids and their real-life challenges, and the diverse urban setting of the Bedford Park neighborhood in the Bronx (where Lally’s own grandmother lived) is brought to life in intimate and vibrant detail. But the greatest gift you will receive by going Back to Bainbridge with Vicki in this book is the simple but profound recognition that everyone is deserving of being seen for who they are, afforded the grace to stumble and get back up again, and having  a place to call home where they can feel a sense of safety and belonging. This charming debut novel is must-read for kids and adults alike.

    Back to Bainbridge by Norah Lally won Grand Prize in the 2024 CIBA Getrude Warner Awards for Middle Grade Fiction.

     

  • Chanticleerians in the News: Award Winners Take Center Stage at LA Kids Book Festival

    When your mission is to Discover Today’s Best Books, you come across good news regarding authors!

    Five Chanticleer International Book Award winners are headed to the LA Kids Book Festival, showcasing the caliber of children’s literature our awards recognize.

    LA Children’s Book Fest is coming up!

    Find Chanticleer Award winning authors Norah Lally, Ruth Amanda, M.C. Dingman, Julie Lomax, and our 2024 Overall Grand Prize Winner Reenita Malhotra Hora!

    LA’s first and largest event celebrating early education, bilingualism, and multiculturalism will feature an impressive lineup of Chanticleer talent.

    Back to Bainbridge cover by Norah Lally

    Norah Lally, Gertrude Warner Grand Prize Winner for middle grade fiction, will be representing #1 Amazon bestselling novel Back to Bainbridge about fourteen-year-old Vicki navigating life on Bainbridge Avenue as she searches for her place in the world while discovering that her imperfect family and friends might just be the treasures she’s been looking for all along.

    M.C. Dingman, First Place Gertrude Warner Winner, Samantha Smee: A Pirate’s Life, tells the story of Mr. Smee’s daughter who grows up disguised on Captain Hook’s pirate ship, embarking on hilarious adventures that celebrate inclusivity and girl power as she discovers her true self in Neverland.

    Julie Lomax, First Place Little Peeps Winner, will showcase Melissa Moo Moo’s Special Lesson from The JuJu Series. When little cow Melissa Moo Moo overhears other cows gossiping about her lack of milk, she learns an important lesson about self-confidence and being herself after a magical encounter with some fallen berries.

    Reenita Malhotra Hora, our 2024 Overall Grand Prize Winner for the incredible literary romance Vermilion Harvest, will be there with the much different tale of Sundri and Mundri’s Lohri Adventure. When Badi Ma wraps the sisters in her magical Lohri shawl, they’re whisked away to a bustling village from the past where they invent gadgets, dodge a grumpy king, and call on the famous bandit hero Dulla Bhatti for help—all while celebrating the joyous festival of Lohri.

    While Ruth Amanda won’t be attending the festival herself, her award-winning books Geckos in the Garden and Little Peeps Grand Prize Winner Island Moon will be represented. Geckos in the Garden takes young readers on a delightful counting adventure through hidden geckos in a garden, while Island Moon captures the magical tranquility of nighttime on the island of Barbados, following a narrator who witnesses fairies dancing in the moonlight and a sea turtle coming ashore to lay eggs.


    We are honored to have so many Award-Winning Authors and Books that we have had the chance to promote and recognize at the LA Children’s Book Fest! If you’re in the area, be sure to stop by and say hello to them!

    Two little chicks, fresh from their egg

    Our Little Peeps Awards celebrate the artistry and educational value of picture books

    The Boxcar Children from the famed series by Gertrude Warner

    The Gertrude Warner Awards honor outstanding middle grade fiction that engages young readers during crucial developmental years

    Ready to join the ranks of these celebrated authors?

    Whether you’re crafting picture books for our Little Peeps Awards or middle grade fiction for the Gertrude Warner Awards, Chanticleer recognition opens doors to major festivals, bookstore partnerships, and reader communities nationwide. We are proud to be a part of the extraordinary literary careers of these five wonderful authors!

    You know you want it…

    Discover which division is right for your children’s book today!