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Dutton Books for Young Readers Hardback English

This Way to Happy

By Alison Green Myers

Regular price £15.99 £13.59 Save 15%
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15% off

Dutton Books for Young Readers Hardback English

This Way to Happy

By Alison Green Myers

Regular price £15.99 £13.59 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
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Delivery expected between Wednesday, 26th November and Thursday, 27th November
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  • From Schneider Family Book Award Winner Alison Green Myers, a contemporary middle grade about a girl seeking her own joy amidst the enforced happiness of the amusement park where she lives with her family. Reilly Rhoades lives on the grounds of the amusement park her grandparents founded. It’s called Rhoades Family Amusements, and its motto is “The H is for Happy!” Shortly before the beginning of the book, Reilly’s extremely charismatic grandfather died suddenly, leaving Reilly’s grandmother, mother, and aunt to run the park and maintain the façade of family happiness. Prretending to be happy, it turns out, is deeply unhappy work, especially in a town full of billboards featuring her dead grandfather's face. No wonder Reilly and her family start to come apart at the seams as soon as the park opens for the summer. When Reilly is at her lowest, she meets Alex, a boy her age who’s a guest at the park with his family for “forced family fun” shortly after his mother remarries. Together, they discover what actually makes them feel content and how following the big signs that promise happiness doesn’t always lead where you want to be.
From Schneider Family Book Award Winner Alison Green Myers, a contemporary middle grade about a girl seeking her own joy amidst the enforced happiness of the amusement park where she lives with her family. Reilly Rhoades lives on the grounds of the amusement park her grandparents founded. It’s called Rhoades Family Amusements, and its motto is “The H is for Happy!” Shortly before the beginning of the book, Reilly’s extremely charismatic grandfather died suddenly, leaving Reilly’s grandmother, mother, and aunt to run the park and maintain the façade of family happiness. Prretending to be happy, it turns out, is deeply unhappy work, especially in a town full of billboards featuring her dead grandfather's face. No wonder Reilly and her family start to come apart at the seams as soon as the park opens for the summer. When Reilly is at her lowest, she meets Alex, a boy her age who’s a guest at the park with his family for “forced family fun” shortly after his mother remarries. Together, they discover what actually makes them feel content and how following the big signs that promise happiness doesn’t always lead where you want to be.