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Every Story Ever Told
Contributors
By Ami Polonsky
Read by Cassie Holloway
Formats and Prices
Price
$18.99Format
Format:
- Audiobook Download (Unabridged) $18.99
- ebook $9.99 $12.99 CAD
- Hardcover $16.99 $22.99 CAD
This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around October 29, 2024. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.
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Stevie Jane Cohen-Kaplan’s sheltered suburban life is shattered by a mass shooting at a festival in her town. In the aftermath, her brain feels broken. She can’t bear to visit her mom, recovering in the hospital under Stevie’s dad’s watchful eye, or to be pent up in her grandparents’ nearby Manhattan apartment.
To escape the apartment and her own thoughts, Stevie starts adventuring around New York City with her best friend, Avi, and a new therapy dog (in training). The trio starts chasing stories—about a neighbor’s life after the Holocaust, Stevie’s grandfathers who died of AIDS long before she was born, and even about her own mom’s activist upbringing. These stories may not bring Stevie all the way back to “normal,” but can they help her find a new version of herself?
Written with compassion and care, Every Story Ever Told places readers at the center of their own story and within a larger human tapestry, as one girl tries to make sense of the unthinkable.
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Praise for World Made of GlassKirkus, starred review
A Kirkus Best Children's Book of the Year
A School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
A CCBC Best Book of the Year
A Chicago Public Library Best of the Year
A Horn Book Fanfare Pick
* “The book shows a girl focusing her rage and pain into love…. Simultaneously sad and life affirming; a poetry-filled, inspiring call to activism.” -
* "Foregrounding believable, dynamic characters [this novel shows] both the cost of inaction and fear around the HIV/AIDS crisis, and the power of activism to bring change and build community."Publishers Weekly, starred review
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* “This is the best kind of family story, filled with love and, yes, loss, but most importantly with caring. The narrative is lyrical and heartfelt, and young people will be inspired to see Iris transcend her grief, use her voice, and find a way to make a difference.” –The Horn Book, starred review
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* “Ami Polonsky has crafted a beautiful story which speaks of courage, family, love, anger, discrimination, ignorance, and hope.… Polonsky has delivered a powerful message to us all that should not be passed up.”School Library Connection, starred review
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* “Beautifully written…with its sensitive portrayal of loss, and its carefully researched depiction of a devastating time in American history, this lyrical novel is highly recommended.”School Library Journal, starred review
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“Impeccably written and emotionally powerful.”BCCB
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“A valuable education in AIDS history and emotional wellness.”Booklist
- On Sale
- Oct 29, 2024
- Publisher
- Hachette Audio
- ISBN-13
- 9781668644027
Book Club Guide
- Every Story Ever Told opens with a countdown clock. What are other instances of time being significant in this story? Why do you think time is used as a motif in the novel?
- After her mom is shot by a random mass shooter, Stevie thinks, “Mom was in the hospital because of me,” (p. 42). What does Stevie do in response to this feeling of guilt? Are there other characters who also feel guilty? Does their guilt make sense?
- How does the shooting affect Stevie’s dad? And how does his behavior make Stevie feel?
- Stevie’s neighbor, Evelyn, suggests that Stevie and Avi wander around New York City while Stevie’s mom is in the hospital. How does experiencing “the sounds” and “the sights,” (p. 54) of New York help Stevie?
- Evelyn tells Stevie about her Star of David necklace that was saved by a brave friend, Dora, when Evelyn’s family was taken to a concentration camp during the Holocaust. What does Evelyn mean when she says Dora did it “for the story” (p. 163)?
- Both Stevie and Evelyn give a lot of thought to their names as they cope with trauma. What is noteworthy about both of their names? In what other ways are their two stories similar?
- Why does Stevie’s mom’s mural depict her and her friends aiming slingshots? And later, why does Stevie feel that everyone she loves, inside her “crowded heart” (p. 229), is holding loaded slingshots? What do you think they are aiming at?
- Avi is the person Stevie tells everything to. So why is it so hard for her to talk to him after the shooting?
- At The Center, Jonas tells Stevie, “The feeling of surviving with AIDS could, at times, feel just as overwhelming as the diagnosis” (p. 129). What do you think Jonas means by that? Can the same truth be applied to other survivors in this story?
- What do you think the “fluorescent-yellow haze” (p. 83) that follows Stevie around represents? What tool does Stevie use to inevitably confront the haze?
- The book ends with a poem by Stevie. How does poetry bring Stevie closer to her mom and deceased grandfather? How does the final poem relate to the title of the book?
- At the beginning of the novel, Stevie’s dad is adamantly against adopting a dog, so how does he react when he learns about Stevie’s emotional support dog, Raisin?
- If you’ve read World Made of Glass—which is about Stevie’s mom—what is similar about the two stories? How are they different?
- In what ways do the characters in this book persevere despite senseless violence? What lessons can you take from this book into your own life?
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