The Thing with Feathers, McCall Hoyle
The Thing with Feathers, McCall Hoyle
1 Rating(s)
List: $21.99 | Sale: $15.39
Club: $10.99

The Thing with Feathers

Author: McCall Hoyle

Narrator: Nora Hunter

Unabridged: 7 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Blink

Published: 09/05/2017


Synopsis

Emilie Day believes in playing it safe: she’s homeschooled, her best friend is her seizure dog, and she’s probably the only girl on the Outer Banks of North Carolina who can’t swim.Then Emilie’s mom enrolls her in public school, and Emilie goes from studying at home in her pj’s to halls full of strangers. To make matters worse, Emilie is paired with starting point guard Chatham York for a major research project on Emily Dickinson. She should be ecstatic when Chatham shows interest, but she has a problem. She hasn’t told anyone about her epilepsy.Emilie lives in fear her recently adjusted meds will fail and she’ll seize at school. Eventually, the worst happens, and she must decide whether to withdraw to safety or follow a dead poet’s advice and “dwell in possibility.”From Golden Heart award-winning author McCall Hoyle comes The Thing with Feathers, a story of overcoming fears, forging new friendships, and finding a first love, perfect for fans of Jennifer Niven, Robyn Schneider, and Sharon M. Draper.

About McCall Hoyle

McCall Hoyle writes honest YA novels about friendship, first love, and girls finding the strength to overcome great challenges. She is a high school English teacher. Her own less-than-perfect teenage experiences and those of the girls she teaches inspire many of the struggles in her books. When she’s not reading or writing, she’s spending time with her family and their odd assortment of pets—a food-obsessed beagle, a grumpy rescue cat, and a three-and-a-half-legged kitten. She has an English degree from Columbia College and a master’s degree from Georgia State University. She lives in a cottage in the woods in North Georgia where she reads and writes every day. Learn more at mcallhoyle.com.  


Reviews

Goodreads review by Amy on July 05, 2016

I was privileged to read an early version of this book, and it is AMAZING. The writing is soooo good, the characters are so real and so relatable, and the story is sweet and swoony and basically everything you want in a YA romance.......more

I’m in LOOOOOVEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE. I have a new BBF and I want to shout it from the rooftops. And his name is… Hitch. Her golden retriever. Her best friend. And my favorite character. But anyway… I just…I don’t know why the MC felt the need to lie. Like…I mean I guess I get why she wanted to fit in-I do......more

Goodreads review by S.F. on November 28, 2016

This book was exceptional. Beautiful writing and well-written characters, Hoyle handled some tough topics with grace. While I don't have epilepsy, this book gave me a window into some of the daily struggles someone with epilepsy might experience--especially a teenager. I have, however, lost a parent......more

Goodreads review by Rosalyn on December 21, 2016

I had the opportunity to read an early review copy of McCall Hoyle's lovely THE THING WITH FEATHERS (title taken from one of my favorite Emily Dickinson poems!). Emilie Day has always played it safe, a tendency started by her diagnosis with epilepsy as a child and enhanced by her father's death a fe......more

Goodreads review by ambsreads on September 11, 2017

DNF @ 15% This book wasn't what I wanted. What I wanted was epilepsy representation so I could understand my mum's struggles on another level. In the 15% I read, I didn't get that. I got a childish story of a girl who does not seem to care too much about her health and is "not like other girls". Obvi......more


Quotes

“[Readers] will swoon over the dreamy Chatham and root for Emilie to come out of her shell.” Kirkus

A refreshing, quality debut--meaningfully woven and beautifully engaging, from the first page to the last. Told in a remarkably unobtrusive first-person present-tense format, THE THING WITH FEATHERS is a coming-of-age story centered around new beginnings, old grief, and coming to terms with an 'invisible' disability. I liked the subject matter and voice in the blurb enough to give this a go, but it was the first line that truly snared me: 'My mother lost her mind today, and I'm going to prison.' A terrific introduction to the main character, Emilie, in a single (and perplexingly snarky) sentence. From there the author doesn't just grab initial attention, she holds onto it with crisp writing, insightful emotional depth, and a relatably smart, sarcastic heroine. Kudos to the author on such solid characterization of a service animal. Hitch (Emilie's seizure-sensing golden retriever) feels immediately believable, and his functionality is explained and expanded on at natural intervals. What's more, the additional significance and personality Emilie ascribes to his actions and facial expressions often tells readers as much (if not more) about her own mindset as it does about the dog himself. I'd never before heard the theory that Emily Dickinson may have been Epileptic--but it would certainly explain both her reclusive nature (especially during an era in which the condition was misunderstood and stigmatized) and her broodingly hopeful compositions. That tie-in was a welcome organic thread, offering opportunity for both educational points and outside literary input; without beating readers over the head with it. There isn't anything surprising about the plot itself--no twists or anything you won't see coming from early on. The primary antagonist (outside of Epilepsy itself) struck this reader as almost disappointingly toothless. But the story's execution is charming and the ending pulls everything together with a satisfying and ultimately hopeful symmetry. YA Book Central