From the Publisher
"Packed full of middle school drama-best friends, arch enemies, cliques, crushes, and sports-this novel will surely please... Fast-paced and tech savvy, Allie's adventures may inspire readers to explore coding."
-School Library Journal
Praise for Every Last Word
"Clueless meets Dead Poets Society with a whopping final twist."
-Kirkus Reviews
"This book is highly recommended-readers will connect with Sam, relating to her anxiety about her peers, and root for her throughout the book."
-VOYA
"Tamara Ireland Stone has delivered a brilliant and moving story about finding your voice, the power of words, and true friendship. I couldn't put it down until every last word was devoured."
-Elizabeth Eulberg, author of The Lonely Hearts Club and We Can Work It Out
Praise for Time Between Us
"Romantic and passionate, Stone's debut novel is swoon-worthy...will resonate with readers who enjoy their romance mixed with adventure."
-School Library Journal
"The story will hold readers with its twists and turns, present and future; its love, sadness, and anger; and especially, its surprising secrets."
-Booklist
"A warm, time-bending romance [that] will have readers rooting for the couple that keeps daring fate."
Publishers Weekly
Kirkus Reviews
2017-07-17
At a Girls Who Code-type camp, seventh-grader Allie Navarro develops a new social-connections game she calls "Click'd."After she releases the mostly untested game at school in the fall, it's an instant hit. Students all over campus are playing. Then Allie discovers that the game can accidentally release confidential information to other players. Entered in a teen coding competition at week's end, she's desperate to fix the bug, losing sight of the fact that the game has other unintended consequences as well. Classmate Nathan is also planning to compete. Less outgoing than Allie, he's made coding the focus of his life. He could use a friend, but Allie has always regarded him as competition, not a soul mate. Even after he helps her with her programming issues, she remains suspicious of him. She has to (believably) stumble and fall before she finally begins to gain some needed wisdom and maturity. Though Latinx heritage is hinted at in her name, it doesn't emerge beyond that. One of her coding friends is black; Nathan is white. Often the computer nerds in children's literature are male; depicting a competent female (who is also not a social pariah) is a welcome twist, joining a little boomlet of similar books. Genial Allie's disappointments are fully credible. Entertaining and engaging, this effort may especially appeal to computer-savvy young teens. (Fiction. 10-14)