Touch Blue
Written by Cynthia Lord
Narrated by Erin Moon
4/5
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About this audiobook
Cynthia Lord
Cynthia Lord is the Newbery Honor author of Rules and other middle-grade novels. Her first picture book, Hot Rod Hamster, inspired a bestselling series about a speed-loving hamster that also includes early reader books. Her chapter-book series, Shelter Pet Squad, appeared on the American Booksellers Association’s ABC Best Books for Children list. Cindy lives in Maine with her husband, John Bald, their children, and a collection of beloved animals, including three rabbits (so far!).
More audiobooks from Cynthia Lord
Rules Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Handful of Stars Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Half a Chance Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Because of the Rabbit (Scholastic Gold) Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Home Away From Home Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for Touch Blue
133 ratings17 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I loved Rules by Cynthia Lord and am trying to compare the two books but really can't. They are both sweet, sweet stories.
This one is about a 13 year old foster boy named Aaron who moves to an island to live with a family. Tess the older daughter in the family takes him "under her wing" but in doing so gets really hurt by him but then as they spend time and secrets together, they begin to become close kind of like a brother and sister. The book is bitter sweet as all Aaron wants is his mama and that is the one thing he cannot have. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I was impressed with this book. An issue that's often left unheard in children's literature: both sides of the story. I love how the author brings about to the conclusion of the story by allowing people to be human. The characters were allowed to be a little bit selfish, allowed to be fragile, and allowed to be giving. Her ending was actually a new beginning. It was a great story of adoption fostering the whole welfare system from a different point of view. In most young adult literature today the welfare system is portrayed as evil or just plain inept and uncaring. The author was able to bring about closure for some subjects and left an opening for others that's the way life truly is and that's the way children see things as never finished.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tess is a young girl who loves to fish for lobster with her dad. Her family lives on an island in Maine that Tess adores. The problem in the story is that the only school on the island is going to close if enrollment does not increase. So the townspeople decide to take in foster kids to make up the shortfall of students. Tess' family takes in a teenage boy who misses his mom and doesn't understand why he just can't go back and live with her. The story is very heart-warming and cute. I can see having discussions with students about social issues such as whether they think how the townspeople chose to solve their problem was good or bad or somewhere in between.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It is the best book!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great for using to teach children about different kinds of families, including foster families. Interesting because it takes place on an island, making the setting as engaging as the plot.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tess and her family live on an island whose community is so small that all the kids attend a one-room school. When the state of Maine threatens to close the school down because the number of children has dropped below a certain point, Reverend Beal suggests that some of the families consider becoming foster families. If all goes according to plan, everybody will benefit: several foster children will be welcomed into strong families, and the island families won't have to move back to the mainland to attend school. But of course, life is messier than the "planned" version-- Aaron resists any emotional closeness to Tess's family, not all of the islanders see the new kids as positive additions, and even Tess's myriad good luck charms don't seem to be turning things around. Lord has once again written a beautiful story with well-rounded characters and unexpected twists and turns that will keep readers engaged to the end.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5There is always so much debate about Newbery contenders being "too literary" and not appealling enough to kids. I think Touch Blue is a great book that is well written and deals with some major issues - but it is also accessible, fun and enjoyable. The island setting is really interesting; it would be a great read for some landlocked Colorado kids (or adults)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A quick, sweet read about Tess Brooks and her family who live in an island community off the coast of Maine. In order to keep their school open, the island needs more children and the decision is made to have several families take in foster children. Aaron comes to stay with the Brooks family. The adjustment is rough. Aaron is a talented musician. Tess and Aaron come up with a scheme to invite his long-absent mother to see him in the community talent show. A touching story that deals with themes of belonging, family, luck, and change.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tess and her family live on a small island in Maine. After a few of the islanders move to the mainland, the state considers closing down the one and only school on the island. This would really affect Tess' family because her mom is the only teacher at the school and the family really depends on her income and health insurance. The Reverend on the island comes up with an idea for a few families to serve as foster parents to children to increase the population and keep the school open. Tess' family agrees to it and gets a red head boy named, Aaron. The family goes through battles with him, but in the end they have a happy ending and they are all happy to be family. This book is so uplifting and inspirational. This is a book that I'd read to my class to show them that not everyone is as lucky as most to have loving, caring, steady families. It also has a good plot line with many characters, conflict, and climax. This is an all around fabulous book!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Eleven year-old Tess faces the possibility of having to move from the small island that has always been her family's home. In an effort to populate the island with enough school age children to keep the school open, several families become foster families. Tess is excited about having a brother who is close in age, but she is disappointed when she realizes that her foster brother Aaron resents his relocation to the island. The relationship that forms between Tess, Aaron, and the rest of the family is heartwarming and encouraging.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I like this new book by Cynthia Lord. In this book a small island town faces loosing its school due to dropping enrollment numbers. There solution is to take in foster kids. The book centers on one family who takes in a boy who has been shuffled from family to family while his mom deals with addiction problems. It is a good story of acceptance and learning to function as a family when the family gains a new member. And how to adapt when you've lost everything you've known - family, home, friends and school.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a wonderful story about a small island off the coast of Maine that is in danger of losing their only school due to not enough children on the island. The islanders came up with a plan to have willing families take in foster children to make up the difference. The main character, 11 year old Tess, will have one of the new foster kids living with her family. Aaron is a 13 year old, redheaded, trumpet playing boy, with a lot of issues to deal with: being removed form his mother's care at 5, living the next 6 years with his grandmother until she dies, and two more foster homes after that. Aaron doesn't really want to bond with his now family, but Tess is desperate for this plan to work, because she doesn't want to lose her home on the island. She tries so hard to get Aaron to open up, that she drives him into running away. The book is great for kids learning about challenging family dynamics and how different people handle life-issues differently. The book is filled with little quips of superstition and old sayings, like “Touch blue and your wish will come true,” and “A rainbow mean change is coming.” Each chapter begins with the saying as the title, then the narrative is built around the saying. I loved how the author used this strategy to tell Tess's story and make the book interesting and enjoyable. I think this would be a great book for a Tween that is either a foster child, or has/will have a foster child living their family. Grade 4 – 7.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5When the state of Maine threatens to shut down their island's one-room schoolhouse because of dwindling enrollment, eleven-year-old Tess, a strong believer in luck, and her family take in a trumpet-playing foster child, to increase the school's population.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A very sweet, touching story. It's age-appropriate (9 to 12, I should think), but it truly shows the anguish and loss foster children go through as a regular part of their lives. Tess sounds like a very recognizable, real eleven-year-old girl, and the author integrated the rural island setting very well into the story. The ending was great, too -- it was conclusive and hopeful, not all neatly-wrapped-up-live-happily-ever-after, but more like how real life would be. I think 9-to-12s, particularly foster children or children from families who take in foster children, will really enjoy this book and benefit from it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tess lives on an island off the coast of Maine where the State is threatening to close their school if they don’t get more children on the island for the school year. That means that Tess’ family would have to move since they rely on her mother’s salary as the school teacher. So the island community decides to welcome some foster children to bring up the numbers, and Tess’ family gets an older boy named Aaron. Tess had certain ideas about how their relationship would be, and of course most of those ideas are wrong. Tess is superstitious, and always wants things to work out. She has to learn how to work with things that are not just as they should be, including Aaron and his feelings and life off the island. This is a pretty simple story with an interesting background – the island community is entertaining and fully developed. Tess and her family are understandable too, and the story doesn’t promise more than it delivers. Pretty good story on friendship and island life.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tess lives on an island off the coast of Maine, and she can't imagine any other life than hers, going to the one room schoolhouse where her mother teacher and fishing lobster with her father. But year-round islanders have been moving to the mainland, leaving fewer and fewer kids on the island. To keep their school from closing, a few families decide to take in foster kids, keeping the numbers up enough to satisfy the state. Aaron comes to live with Tess, her sister Libby, and their parents. Tess and Libby imagine what it might be like to have Aaron live with him, but neither of them expect what actually happens that summer.I read Newbery Honor-winning Rules by the same author a few years ago, so I was really excited to see a new book out by Cynthia Lord. This is the sort of story that I enjoyed reading as a child when, much like Tess, I was reading The Great Gilly Hopkins and Anne of Green Gables. Tess narrates the story, sharing her fears about moving to the mainland, her nervousness about friends, and her attempts at finding good luck. When she misunderstood some of Aaron's actions, I cringed with sympathy for both, understanding (as an adult, especially) where they were coming from. A sweet story I would recommend to readers who enjoy character-driven realistic fiction.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Tess believes in luck. By the good-luck items she carries in her pockets and the little rituals she observes every day, she lets the universe know what she wants. All of Tess's luck, however, may not be enough to keep her life from changing for the worse. The state of Maine has declared that the little island community where Tess lives is not large enough to support a school. Tess's family depends on the school, not only for Tess and her little sister Libby's education, but because teaching there is her mother's job, as well. The islanders have come up with a plan to keep the school open: several families, including Tess's, will take in foster children. Tess is excited to meet her new foster-brother Aaron, but she's not prepared for the sullen, lonely boy who arrives in her family, convinced that he will be there for only a short time before moving on again. In reaching out to Aaron, Tess comes up with a plan to help him settle in to his new life on the island -- but will all of her luck be enough to help Aaron finally feel at home? This middle-grade novel is sweet, funny, and touching. Like several other recent books, it references well-known children's literature titles, including Anne of Green Gables, Bud, Not Buddy, and The Great Gilly Hopkins. The homage to these other titles may spark ideas for further reading in some children, but others may find the allusions to other works irritating. Despite its short length and relatively easy vocabulary, this is a book for young readers who are enthusiastic about books and reading. For those readers, it is an excellent choice.