THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2022 A3 Best ‘coming of age’ middle grade novels still on the journey of finding their place and discovering their true self: BY ERICKA BRUNSON- ROCHETTE Community librarian Middle grade novels often in- clude stories or les- sons that speak to Brunson- how challenging it Rochette can be to find your place in the world during a time of significant change. Coming of age stories are some of my favorite, because while we all may navigate adolescence and life differ- ently, it’s a journey we all have to take. Some of these stories can be inspiring while others can be a little messy, but there is no right or perfect path for self-discovery. These are some of my favorite re- cently published coming of age mid- dle grade novels, for anyone who is ”Northwind” by Gary Paulsen In this last book written by this beloved author, Paulsen crafts an- other captivating story of wilder- ness, adventure and survival. Set centuries ago, a young waif named Leif is forced to abandon his small fishing camp when a deadly plague starts taking the lives of all the elders around him. And soon the youth, as well. Setting off on the sea in a small ca- noe, Leif carries with him only a few memories and an elder’s dying mes- sage to never return. Having never truly been on his own, Leif must learn quickly how to not only sur- vive on the sea, but to establish a new life by way of water and hope. With a unique and almost melodic writing style, Northwind perfectly weaves to- gether the story of a young person’s journey to find harmony and place in the midst of literal sea of grief, fear and endless danger. ”Jennifer Chan is Not Alone” by Tae Keller Do you believe in aliens? Do you believe that there is something else out there, something that can’t be ex- plained? Jennifer Chan does, and to her neighbor and schoolmate Mal- lory Moss, that is a problem. Mallory always tries to follow the rules of middle school, which thanks to her best friend Rachel, she knows means that who you are is deter- mined by what everyone else thinks of you. So when Jennifer Chan moved to town and started to talk about aliens, Mallory knew that wasn’t go- ing to make a great impression. But what Mallory didn’t know was the lengths she would go to make sure that everyone else’s perception of her didn’t change, even if it was at the expense of her new neighbor. Keller, Newbery Medal winning author of “When You Trap a Tiger,” delivers an- other heartfelt and honest coming of age story of an imperfect young girl trying to find her place in the world, and room in her heart for others and for herself. ”Anybody Here Seen Frenchie?” by Leslie Connor Frenchie Livernois does not talk, but for his best friend Aurora that is not a problem. In fact, talkative and expressive Aurora, who often has a hard time controlling her outbursts, seemingly talks enough for the both of them. These friends have estab- lished their own, unique way of com- municating, and it has worked per- fectly for the two of them since they met in third grade. At the start of the new school year, Aurora and Frenchie are placed in different classrooms, and everything begins to change. Elev- en-year-old Aurora is focused on expanding her social circle and giv- ing her attention to her new friends, which means that she has less time for Frenchie. When Frenchie doesn’t show up to his class one morning, Aurora feels like it’s her fault since she can’t remember walking him to class like she does every morning. Told through multiple perspectives and intersecting storylines, this endear- ing tale of friendship, neurodiver- sity and growing-up, skillfully fits together pieces of the puzzle of what happened to Frenchie. FLASHBACK Alfalfa moonshiners busted during Prohibition The Spokesman 100 YEARS AGO June 15, 1922 — Big haul made at Alfalfa of moonshin- ers Four stills confiscated, ap- proximately 10 gallons of moonshine seized, two arrests made and more likely to fol- low — these were the results of a series of raids conducted in the Alfalfa section Tuesday afternoon by sheriff S.E. Rob- erts, Deputy George Stokoe and Special Officer L.A. W. Nixon. All this is to say noth- ing of barrels of mash, and bottles and jugs by the gross which were destroyed. By the time officers arrived at the second plant, near the old Beebe ranch farther on in the irrigated district, they fol- lowed Vail Taylor and Frank Lowell busily engaged and moving the equipment. Taylor and Lowell reached their car with a load from the plant to find sheriff Rob- erts standing near the ma- chine quietly watching them. They admitted they had been warned by telephone. 75 YEARS AGO June 19, 1947 — Mayor El- liot goes to hospital Mayor Jack Elliot, suffering a leg infection, is in St. Charles hospital in Bend under the care of Dr. Raymond F. Jones. Although his condition is not critical, he may be in the hos- pital several weeks. He left Archived Photo Former Spokesman publisher Mary E. Brown accepts a Distinguished Service Award from Central Oregon Community College president Frederick H. Boyle at the colleges Friday evening commencement. Tuesday afternoon and under- went an operation Wednesday morning. City affairs have been turned over to Fred Rodecker, president of the council, who will be acting there in Elliot’s absence. 50 YEARS AGO June 14, 1972 — Sisters names superintendent Sisters — Dr. Homer N. Kearns Jr. has been named su- perintendent of Sisters school. Kearns, 29, was associate director of the Northwest Community Education De- velopment Center and assis- tant professor of education, department of curriculum and instruction, U of O. He was the speaker at a commu- nity school presentation and spaghetti dinner earlier this year at the Sisters school. Former positions include principal of Pinedale Elemen- tary School, Clovis, Calif.; principal of Nelson Elemen- tary School, Clovis, Calif.; lec- turer in race relations in Flint, Mich., jail programs; coordi- nator and consultant, Migrant Teachers Institution, Fresno State College, Calif., and head teacher, Dry Creek Elemen- tary School, Clovis. Also in the Kearns family are his wife, Patricia, Mark, 8, and Christopher, 3. Golf, hunting and fishing are favorite free-time activ- ities. 25 YEARS AGO June 18, 1997 — School board cuts personal finance requirement The Redmond School board eliminated personal finance as a high school graduation requirement Monday, even though the state reached an all-time high in personal bankrupt- cies in 1996. Board members voted unanimously to follow a state decision to cut the class from a list of required courses. The high school site council recommended Red- mond follow the state’s lead, mainly because of the re- tirement of business teacher Karen Wood. “We’ve lost one-third of our business department and we are unable to replace her,” high school principal Dan Purple said. If personal finance were left in the curriculum, teach- ers from other departments would teach it, limiting the choice of electives. Board members were leery of cutting a class they believe teaches students im- portant life skills, such as balancing a checkbook and filing tax returns. “How do we replace the learning those students won’t get? “Asked board member Ted Thonstad. “I think there is some valuable information offered in that class.“ However, Oregon Schools Superintendent Norma Pau- lus said last week a failure to teach math adequately was how personal finance classes got started. “Personal finance has been masquerading as math,” she said. “If we get rid of it we can use the re- sources to teach math.“ LOCAL BRIEFING members, at the Redmond Redmond Kiwanis of Commerce and Vintner’s Tickets Available Chamber Eqwine Wine Bar. until July 1 The silent auction will be Redmond Kiwanis Club is bringing back its Vintner’s Dinner after a two-year hia- tus because of the pandemic. The 16th annual event will be on Friday, July 8, again at Redmond Commu- nity Church. Deadline for purchasing tickets is July 1. Attendance is limited to 180. The dinner is the service club’s largest fundraising event for its youth projects. Every Child Central Oregon, a partner with the state’s fos- ter children’s program, will be the major beneficiary this year. The 2019 dinner raised about $18,000. Club presi- dent Josh Werner has set a goal of $25,000 for the 2022 dinner. Kiwanis members are seeking items for the oral and silent auction Canoe Ridge Winery of Walla Walla will be the pre- senting winery, and Bad- ger’s Kitchen of Powell Butte will prepare the five-course, wine-paired meal. Tickets are $95 for indi- viduals and $1,000 for cor- porate tables of eight. They are available from Kiwanis open to everyone as it will go on-line this year follow- ing the success of the Ki- wanis’ R’Oktoberfest in Sep- tember. Event-only raffles will be staged exclusively for attend- ees. An oral auction will also be offered. In addition to funding such youth projects as the Redmond Learning and Childcare Center and more than $15,000 in scholar- ships annually, Redmond Kiwanis also renovated the playground at Sam Johnson Park with the city of Red- mond, expending more than $1 million. Edward Jones Invest- ments, Josh Werner and Chris Richie are sponsoring the event. Cascades East Transit resumes Saturday route through Redmond Starting June 18, Cascades East Transit will resume Sat- urday service for routes that connect Warm Springs, Ma- dras, Redmond, Prineville and Bend. CET will also relaunch its popular Ride the River and Lava Butte summer shuttles starting June 18 through La- bor Day, weather permitting. “We are excited to part- ner with CET and Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe again this summer to oper- ate the Ride the River shut- tle,” mentioned Julie Brown, Bend Park and Recreation District’s Communications and Community Relations Manager. Ride the River shuttles cost riders $4 for an all- day wristband and the Lava Butte shuttle charges $3 per passenger for a round trip. Fares are collected through the UMO Pass Mobile App. Cash payments are also accepted; however, drivers cannot provide change. Schedule information for Ride the River, Lava Butte, and Saturday Community Connector Routes 20, 22, 24, and 26 can be accessed at www.CascadesEastTran- sit.com. Redmond DMV to close for summer, due to lack of employees The Oregon DMV said it is temporarily closing 10% of its field offices for the next three months because it doesn’t have enough em- ployees to keep them open. The agency is grappling with a staffing shortage, OPB reports. To ensure more predict- able service, the DMV plans to transfer workers to high- er-demand locations, even if that means shutting some less frequented offices en- tirely in the short term. The six offices that will close this summer are lo- cated in Lebanon, Redmond, Stayton, Sandy, Ashland and Cave Junction. Another 10 field offices will have reduced hours: As- toria, Canyonville, Down- town Portland, Heppner, Hermiston, Junction City, Klamath Falls, Lake Os- wego, Lincoln City and Mil- ton-Freewater. Windermere to collect donations for food banks Friday In honor of Windermere’s 38th Annual Community Service Day, local real es- tate brokers from Redmond continued their monthly food drive to benefit the Redmond Food Project and St. Vincent De Paul Food Bank. On Friday, June 10, Windermere brokers and volunteers from the Red- mond Food Project spent the day filling a freight trailer with recently col- lected donations at Winder- mere Central Oregon’s Red- mond office, 821 SW 6th St., from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. They achieve their goal to have filled the trailer with food by the end of the day. Established in 1984, Windermere’s Community Service Day is a summer tradition in which the com- pany’s nearly 300 offices across the Western United States close their doors to allow brokers, managers, owners, and staff to devote their workday to projects that positively impact the neighborhoods where they live and work. The event has been recognized nation- ally as a model hands-on volunteer program and has been adopted by other real estate companies and busi- nesses around the country. Redmond Walmart upgrades, donates to local nonprofits Redmond residents will soon get a look at the newly remodeled Walmart Super- center. The store, at 300 NW Oaktree Ln., held a commu- nity celebration and ribbon cutting where the Redmond community heard from em- ployees who have been with the store since it opened in 2017. In addition, Walmart provided grants to local community organizations. The Redmond Police De- partment received $4,500, Central Oregon Autism Movement received $2,000, Terrebonne Assembly of God received $1,000, while Deschutes Veterans Services and Redmond Family Bicy- cle Park received $500. The remodel includes ex- panded parking for online grocery pickup, new signage and wider aisles for eas- ier navigation, new service counters for paint and auto- motive departments, and a new mural welcoming cus- tomers to the store. The upgrades also com- plement the measures the company has taken in its U.S. stores to help protect as- sociates and customers from the ongoing COVID-19 pan- demic. “Redmond customers will love our store updates as we’ve made it easier, faster and more enjoyable to find the items they need,” store manager Charles Edwards said. “We can’t wait for cus- tomers to see our updated interior and expanded store offerings.”