
Reach for this book if your child is a natural worrier who views the world through a lens of 'what-ifs' and potential danger. It is a vital resource for children processing the aftermath of a traumatic loss or struggling to trust new figures in a blended family. The story follows Maddy, a girl living with high-functioning anxiety, who becomes convinced that a new neighbor is actually a kidnapped boy from the news. While it functions as a page-turning mystery, it is primarily a sensitive exploration of how grief and hyper-vigilance can color a child's reality. Parents will appreciate the secular, realistic portrayal of therapy and the nuanced way it validates a child's intuition while gently correcting their distorted perceptions. It is best suited for middle-grade readers aged 9 to 12 who are ready for deeper conversations about mental health and family secrets.
Deals with the sudden death of a father and the resulting grief and trauma.
Themes of kidnapping and missing children are central to the plot.
The book deals directly with the death of a parent and childhood anxiety. The approach is realistic and secular, featuring a supportive therapist and a step-parent relationship that is evolving. The resolution is hopeful and grounded, focusing on healing rather than a magical fix.
A 10-year-old who feels 'too much' or 'too intensely.' This child likely checks the locks or worries about the health of their parents and needs to see a protagonist who shares their internal monologue.
Parents should be aware of a scene involving a potential abduction threat and the emotional weight of Maddy's flashbacks to her father's death. No specific preview is required, but be ready to discuss anxiety coping mechanisms. A parent might notice their child creating elaborate 'safety plans' or becoming obsessively interested in true crime or missing person cases as a way to control their own fears.
Younger readers will focus on the 'detective' aspect and the 'stranger danger' mystery. Older readers will recognize the metaphor of the 'missing piece' as Maddy's own lost sense of security.
Unlike many mysteries that treat anxiety as a quirk, this book treats it as a legitimate psychological response to trauma, providing a rare and accurate representation of the 'anxious brain' in middle-grade fiction.
Eleven-year-old Maddy Gaines lives in a world of potential catastrophes. Since her father's accidental death, she has become hyper-vigilant, documenting every suspicious detail in her small town. When Eric, a secretive new boy, moves in nearby, Maddy is certain he is Billy Holcomb, a child who vanished six months prior. Alongside her best friend Cress, Maddy embarks on an investigation that forced her to confront the difference between real danger and the ghosts of her past.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.
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