Invisible to humans exists a parallel world of mice, where young Jenny
misses her cherished grandfather so much that she begins to see him
everywhere.
Jenny is as close to her grandfather as a small mouse can be.
Grandfather shows Jenny how to button her buttons and how to write her
name. He passes along to her the secrets of making the best lasagna in
all of Boston. And during long, shared days at Revere Beach, Grandfather
teaches Jenny the names of the seashells they find washed up on shore.
When Grandfather is all of a sudden gone one day, the hole he leaves
behind is too great for Jenny to fathom. Isn't that him turning a
corner, sitting on a bench, heading for the pier, walking along their
beloved beach? Jenny runs after the familiar silver whiskers, hoping. .
. . Rosemary Wells peels back the layers of grief to reveal, at its
core, something as exquisite and achingly beautiful as the rare and
storied queen's teacup seashell. Christopher Denise illustrates
mid-century Boston with affection, and a mouse and her grandfather with
gentle humor and unabashed sympathy.