Floating Boy and the Girl Who Couldn't Fly

·
· ChiZine
Ebook
273
Pages

About this ebook

The author of Mongrels and the author of The Cabin at the End of the World team up to tell a quirky and uplifting fantasy “that will enthrall young teens” (School Library Journal).
 
Things Mary doesn’t want to fall into: the river, high school, her mother’s life.
 
Things Mary does kind of want to fall into: love, the sky.
 
This is the story of a girl who sees a boy float away one fine day. This is the story of the girl who reaches up for that boy with her hand and with her heart. This is the story of a girl who takes on the army to save a town, who goes toe-to-toe with a mad scientist, who has to fight a plague to save her family. This is the story of a girl who would give anything to get to babysit her baby brother one more time. If she could just find him.
 
It’s all up in the air for now, though, and falling fast . . .
 
Fun, breathlessly exciting, and full of heart, Floating Boy and the Girl Who Couldn’t Fly is an unforgettable ride.
 
“Straddles the border between magic realism and weird science . . . an entertaining, thoughtful piece.” —Publishers Weekly
 
“Absolutely adorable . . . The plot was fast paced and driven and it kept me intrigued until the very end. It was [a] really light, easy read.” —Read Rant Review

About the author

P. T. Jones is the pseudonym for Stephen Graham Jones and Paul Tremblay.

Stephen Graham Jones is the author of Flushboy, about a teen working at his father's revolutionary bathroom establishment, and he's also got seventeen other books, lots of them with "Zombie" in the title. Stephen's stories have been in Year's Best anthologies, in textbooks, and online. Though he lives in Colorado now, Stephen grew up in Texas. If you squint just right, some parts of this Massachusetts story will probably have a tumbleweed or two.

Paul Tremblay is the author of The Little Sleep, No Sleep Till Wonderland, In the Mean Time, Swallowing a Donkey's Eye, and the forthcoming A Head Full of Ghosts. His short fiction and essays have appeared in The Los Angeles Times and numerous Year's Best anthologies. He lives just outside of Boston, and when he's not writing about narcoleptic private detectives, girls with two heads, or teens who float, he helps administrate the Shirley Jackson Awards.

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