Grace Needs Space!

by Benjamin A Wilgus (Author)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

To the moon and back! A sci-fi middle-grade graphic novel about a young girl's long-awaited summer trip across space with one of her moms. But when her relationship with her mom goes sideways, so does her trip. Will Grace be able to save her summer vacation before it ends?

Grace is so excited to fly a freighter from her home space station (and away from her boring mother Evelyn) to a faraway moon! Plus, she'll get some quality time with her fun mom Kendra--something Grace definitely needs. Finally, a real adventure that Grace can get excited about while the rest of her space station friends go away for their summer vacations. But when Kendra is too focused on work, Grace's first big trip suddenly becomes kind of lonely. Grace had so many plans for fun. But all it takes is one quick decision to explore the moon by herself before Grace's adventure suddenly becomes not so out of this world at all. With her mom mad at her, Grace wants nothing more than to return home. Then their ship breaks down. Will Grace be able to get through to her mom and save their trip in the end?

Select format:
Paperback
$13.99

Booklist

Starred Review
A genuine thrill. Perfect for kids who loved Jennifer L. Holm's Lion of Mars.

Kirkus Reviews

A tender story that explores the complexity of familial bonds as deftly as it does the outer regions of space.

School Library Journal

Gr 4-7--Twelve-year-old Grace lives on a space station with her mom Evelyn (Mom), who is the chief engineer; her other mom, Kendra (Ba), is a freighter captain whom Grace hasn't seen for nearly a year. Grace is wildly excited to travel with Ba, but their trip doesn't go as planned. At home, Mom expects Grace to be responsible for chores, but on the ship, Kendra doesn't trust Grace to help with anything and spends most of her time working. On Titan, Grace is awed by gravity, tall trees, and local kids, but while Ba deals with a work problem, Grace grows frustrated and takes an unauthorized field trip, leading to a fight. On the way back to the station, there is a problem with Ba's ship, and Grace calls Mom for help. The flow of the panels makes the action easy to follow, and the characters' expressions and body language are crystal clear; for example, when Ba says "plenty's changed" since the last time Grace was on the ship, oblivious to Grace's feelings, Grace's skeptical eyebrows and half-lidded eyes speak volumes. Grace and Mom have brown skin and dark hair; Ba has light skin, green eyes, and red hair. VERDICT The sci-fi setting creates high stakes for this realistic story of a tween ready for adventure, navigating her relationships with separated parents. Highly recommended; give to fans of Molly Brooks's "Sanity & Tallulah."--Jenny Arch

Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Publishers Weekly

A 12-year-old discovers that even navigating the vastness of space is not as complicated as maneuvering conflicts surrounding family and friendship in this lushly illustrated adventure graphic novel. Grace, a child of divorced parents, is excited to spend time away from her mother, the chief engineer on Genova Station, with her other mother, Ba, a freighter captain who frequently travels to Titan, one of Saturn's moons. While Grace was expecting to embark on epic adventures with Ba, she finds, instead, that Ba is too busy working to pay her any mind, much like Mom back on Genova. Grace soon befriends a group of students while exploring Titan and accompanies them on educational field trips, but when an incident results in her being left behind during an excursion, she feels as if she's drifting even further from her parents. Through touching and natural-feeling dialogue, portrayed via saturated, full-color illustrations, Wilgus (Chronin) and Abrego (Sprite and the Gardener) skillfully highlight the enormity of the interstellar setting alongside Grace's intimate personal realizations. Though the story takes place among the cosmos, the earthly truths surrounding love and connection proves artfully rendered. Grace and Mom are depicted with brown skin; Ba has pale skin. Ages 8-12. Agent: Eddie Schneider, JABberwocky Literary. (Apr.)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

"A relatable and amusing story for all ages." —Shelf Awareness

Benjamin A Wilgus
Benjamin A. Wilgus is a cartoonist and writer of comics and prose, including Chronin, a graphic novel duology from Tor Books. He has also written two works of graphic nonfiction for First Second Books: Flying Machines: How the Wright Brothers Soared, illustrated by Molly Brooks, and The Mars Challenge, illustrated by Wyeth Yates.

Rii Abrego is a Latina illustrator and comic artist who resides in the very humid southern United States. Rii has provided work for Random House, Oni Press, BOOM! Studios, Lion Forge, OMOCAT, Harmonix, Kazoo magazine, Ascend Comics, and Power & Magic Press, among others. She is the illustrator of the graphic novel The Sprite and the Gardener, co-written with Joe Whitt and published by Oni Press.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780593182390
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Random House Graphic
Publication date
April 20, 2023
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV053000 - Juvenile Fiction | Science Fiction
JUV008140 - Juvenile Fiction | Comics & Graphic Novels | Science Fiction
Library of Congress categories
Graphic novels
Mothers and daughters
Cartoons and comics
Outer space
Manned space flight

Subscribe to our delicious e-newsletter!