Lucky for Good
By Susan Patron and Erin McGuire
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
For eleven-year old Lucky, the universe is full of questions. Is that mysterious woman at the café Miles’s mom? Does her father not talk to her because he hates her? Will the Health Department ruin everything? Is she really going to go to hell? The answers are, in no particular order, nearly, no, yes, and a big fat “who knows?” But answers—like every little thing in the whole universe—are constantly evolving and, sometimes, the biggest questions have no answer at all. The best Lucky can do is never give up on maybe, just maybe, understanding things a little better before she turns twelve.
The Hard Pan trilogy that began with the Newbery-winning The Higher Power of Lucky concludes with Lucky and all of Hard Pan a little wiser—and a lot closer to our hearts.
Susan Patron
Susan Patron specialized in Children's Services for 35 years at the Los Angeles Public Library before retiring in 2007, the same year her novel The Higher Power of Lucky was awarded the John Newbery Medal. As the library's Juvenile Materials Collection Development Manager, she trained and mentored children's librarians in 72 branches. Patron has served on many book award committees, including the Caldecott and Laura Ingalls Wilder Committees of the American Library Association. She is currently a member of the Advisory Board of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. Patron's previous books for children include the Billy Que trilogy of picture books; Dark Cloud Strong Breeze; and a chapter book, Maybe Yes, Maybe No, Maybe Maybe. All earned starred reviews, and the latter was named an ALA Notable book. The Higher Power of Luck will be translated into twelve foreign languages and has been optioned for a motion picture. Married to a rare book restorer from the Champagne region of France, Susan is working on the final book in the "Lucky" trilogy.
Read more from Susan Patron
The Higher Power of Lucky Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lucky Breaks Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Maybe Yes, Maybe No, Maybe Maybe Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Reviews for Lucky for Good
18 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The third and supposedly final book about Lucky Trimble of Hard Pan, California (population 43) isn't quite as good as the first two, but it's still mighty good. It doesn't quite qualify as a coming-of-age story. At the end of the book there is a little brief hinting that Lucky is growing up, but the real coming of age will have to be imagined, unless Patron decides to go one more round.
This book focuses more on the community of Hard Pan coming together to save the restaurant run by Lucky's adoptive mother Brigitte, when the state health department discovers that the restaurant is not in line with one of their codes. There is less substance to this book, but it's a nice revisit to the town and characters I grew to love in the first two books, and Lucky is back to her largely lovable self*. What meat there is deals with Lucky's desire to learn something about the totally absent father she never knew.
(*In the second book, Lucky Breaks, her "meanness gland" was bit overactive, making her a less appealing protagonist than in the first book.)
Book preview
Lucky for Good - Susan Patron
Lucky for Good
ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales
are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the
author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or
dead, is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2011 by Susan Patron
Illustrations copyright © 2011 by Erin McGuire
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more
information or to book an event, contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at
1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.
Book design by Sonia Chaghatzbanian
The text for this book is set in Berkeley.
The illustrations for this book are rendered in pencil.
Manufactured in the United States of America
0711 FFG
First Edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Patron, Susan, 1948–
Lucky for good / Susan Patron; illustrated by Erin McGuire. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: The residents of Hard Pan, California, come together to help Brigitte and Lucky
when the County Health Department threatens to close down the Café, and in the meantime
Miles’s life is complicated by his mother’s return.
ISBN 978-1-4169-9058-1
[1. Restaurants—Fiction. 2. Interpersonal relations—Fiction. 3. Community life—
California—Fiction. 4. Mothers and sons—Fiction. 5. Christian life—Fiction. 6. California—
Fiction.] I. McGuire, Erin, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.P27565Lvf 2011
[Fic]—dc22 2010022040
ISBN 978-1-4424-0944-6 (eBook)
encore pour René de mon coeur
contents
1. enemies
2. a clipboard
3. a cross
4. a boy named miles
5. triple T
6. courage
7. just say oui
8. depending on your point of view
9. ollie martin
10. the principal’s office
11. a prickly tree
12. elder futhark
13. evidence of your credentials
14. a lonely little boy
15. murdock and tyson and all the others
16. a french ado
17. a glitch
18. an unexpected outcome
19. a very old story
20. when god was six
21. how lucky would cope if she had to
22. safety first
23. mucus
24. getting into heaven
25. saving on kleenex
26. small talk
27. a heart problem
28. no matter what it is, it won’t be right
29. something discovered about triple T
30. a masterful communication
31. two problems
32. climbing upstairs to heaven
33. serenity
34. lucky for good
Lucky for Good
1. enemies
The enemies invaded the trailers. Many crept in alone; others arrived in organized platoons. They concealed themselves and built secret tiny nests and lairs. Some of them bit, stung, and pinched; others clogged, soiled, smudged, and polluted.
Lucky’s mom, Brigitte, faced these foes like a general in World War III. She mopped, swept, vacuumed, scoured, scrubbed, washed, polished, and sterilized. She was okay with the work. It was just part of living in the little desert town of Hard Pan, Pop. 43, which Brigitte had adopted as her home when she adopted Lucky as her daughter.
Lucky herself had a live-and-let-live attitude toward Brigitte’s enemies, those mice, ants, flying ants, tarantula hawk wasps, scorpions, beetles, crickets, spiders, flies, and moths, plus sand, dust, dirt, grit, and dog hair. The creatures were all just doing their jobs, trying to eat and not get eaten, make a home, have children, live their urgent tiny lives. Lucky tried to help Brigitte see things from their point of view, but it was no use. Brigitte did not care one bit about the point of view of a bug.
So Lucky was pretty conscientious about keeping the screen door closed and not tracking in dirt. She wiped down the tables on weekends, when Brigitte’s Hard Pan Café was open for lunch, and she bused and washed dirty dishes. But the problem with bugs is that they don’t care if a certain area belongs
to you, like a shelf in your bedroom or a corner under the sink; all they know is, it seems like a good place to settle down. So Lucky had to be vigilant and keep up her guard, hunting and capturing the larger insects and releasing them outside.
She did her best. But sometimes all that cleaning and enemy-fighting wore Lucky out. It made her wish she were back at her old job at the Found Object Wind Chime Museum and Visitor Center, which she’d given up because of having too much else to do. For that job, she just kept the patio clean and raked; she didn’t have to worry about dust or insects.
And then a certain realization bonked Lucky over the head: Nothing stays clean. Sooner or later the thing will have to be cleaned again. The floor, the stove, tables, pots, forks, napkins, feet, paws—the never-endingness of cleaning made a quick little what-if thought spring into her mind. The what-if was like an online pop-up, which you’re forced to look at even if you don’t want to. It wasn’t a wish that she hoped would come true, but still, there it was, blinking at her from the corner of the screen in her mind.
It was this: What if, for some reason, Brigitte’s Hard Pan Café just—poof—disappeared? Well, life would be way different. There would be so much less work! Brigitte could get a regular job. And they would have weekends just for themselves, to do fun things instead of working.
But then Lucky reminded herself of the good parts. Like that Brigitte wasn’t homesick for France, because here in California she had a strict boss—but it was herself. And every day when Lucky got back from school, she was greeted twice: first with a dog-kiss from HMS Beagle, who was waiting at the bus drop-off, and then with a hug and a mom-kiss from Brigitte. Plus, Lucky was proud that Brigitte’s cooking was famous for miles around, and all on their own, they were making the Café a success. Tourists who found them told their friends, and local people from Sierra City and other towns started coming every single weekend. It was a kind of miracle, and Brigitte said it could never have happened without Lucky. So Lucky felt ashamed about what-iffing the Café’s disappearance, even for a second. She put on her yellow rubber gloves and got to work.
But then a new enemy appeared, and started a different kind of battle.
2. a clipboard
At first Lucky thought it was just another hungry person, the man who pulled up in a truck with INYO CO. HEALTH DEPT. STATE OF CA stenciled on its door.
Early customer,
Lucky joked, it being Friday afternoon and the Café not open until tomorrow noon. She watched from inside the kitchen trailer as the man stood by his truck, looking at the tables and at the A-frame sign:
Brigitte’s Hard Pan Café
Open for
Lunch/Dejeuner
Sat—Sun & Holidays
Non,
said Brigitte, also peering out the high window. This man has a clipboard, and that is never good.
Bending down to use the toaster as a mirror, Brigitte applied lipstick and checked her hair before stepping into the open doorway.
Afternoon, ma’am,
the man said, reaching down flat-fingered to let HMS Beagle scent his hand. He eyed Brigitte from under the bill of his cap, looking suddenly less official and more like a big clumsy friendly bear, but not sure as to the correct etiquette and wanting to make a good impression. Lucky, unnoticed, smiled to herself. Brigitte often made that impression on people, even in her thrift store hospital scrubs, her hair in a hasty ponytail: They wanted her to like them. The man held his clipboard partially behind his leg, like when Lucky’s friend Miles tried to hide a stolen cookie.
Brigitte smiled brilliantly at him and then looked apologetic. We are not open today,
she said, glancing meaningfully at the sign, but maybe you return tomorrow for lunch?
The man removed his cap, then didn’t seem to know what to do with it. He put it back on his head, the bill a little lower, as if to look more serious. When he raised the clipboard, Lucky knew he was only pretending to read it. She crossed her arms and brought one bare foot up to rest on the opposite calf of her jeans. She wanted to show the man that he couldn’t just drive up any time of the day or night and expect the Café to be open. And he couldn’t come around and try to scare them by acting so official. Maybe Brigitte was afraid of burros and snakes, but she was totally fearless about people. This made Lucky herself feel brave. She frowned at Mr. Inyo County Health Department mightily.
He cleared his throat. Brigitte Trimble?
he asked, his voice deep. He planted his feet apart like a cop about to make an arrest, the clipboard now in both hands like a shield.
Lucky, please look in the drawer to the left of the stove and bring to me the red folder,
Brigitte said, not taking her clear, defiant gaze off the man. I show you my business and fictitious name permit,
she said to him, if that is what you have come to check.
Well, okay,
he agreed, as Lucky darted up the steps to the kitchen trailer. But this is about Regulation Number 1849. I’m Stu Burping from County Health. Mind if I have a look at the kitchen?
Brigitte did not react, but as Lucky dashed back out with the folder, she thought, Stu Burping, who works for the county health department? Stu Burping? She imagined telling this tidbit of information to her best friend Paloma, and the two of them actually dying from laughter overdose.
The clerk in Independence has assured me that my papers are in order,
Brigitte said, lifting her chin, but of course you may see the kitchen. We have no vermin or bug if that is what you wonder.
Lucky hoped strongly that this man hadn’t found out about the time she’d accidentally left a jar of tomato worms under a café table.
Brigitte went on, The freezer and fridge are kept always at the correct temperature.
Lucky glared at the man. He would never find a cleaner kitchen, that’s for sure, and Brigitte was extremely strict about following the guidelines of the online Certified Course in Restaurant Management and Administration with Diploma from the Culinary Institute of France in Paris.
Stu Burping was a little hunched, Lucky noticed, and she realized he was older than she first thought, maybe as old as fifty-five or sixty-five—anyway, in that extreme age zone where the backs of their hands and their necks are wrinkled and they get ear-hair. Grandfather age. Lucky loved the idea of grandfathers and sometimes imagined how she would have enjoyed one or two of her own. But Stu Burping wasn’t here as a grandfather. She could tell from the way Brigitte had shifted to a mood where she was one-third angry, one-third insulted, and one-third just too busy. Stu Burping would not realize this about Brigitte, who seemed polite and cooperative on the surface, but Lucky read it easily in Brigitte’s posture, voice, and attitude. She was not pleased.
Pardon?
Stu Burping asked. Kept always at what?
It was because temperature
is written the same in French and in English, one of those words that Brigitte pronounced the French way, so with her accent it sounded like tahmp-air-a-TURE instead of TEM-pra-chure.
"The correct temperature," Lucky supplied.
Oh!
Stu Burping said. Right. TEM-pra-chure.
He smiled at Lucky, then at Brigitte, who waited with a neutral expression on her face. She had been about to make a baba au rhum dessert for tomorrow, and this man was wasting her time.
Um,
he said, and used the edge of the clipboard to rub the back of his neck, papers fluttering. Hmmm. It’s more about Regulation Number 1849. No commercial cooking from a residence.
He extracted two sheets of paper from the clipboard and offered them to Brigitte, who did not reach for them.
Is your, ah, Café, operated out of your residence?
Stu Burping asked in an apologetic, only-doing-my-job voice. He smelled like V8 juice, and his brown leather shoes looked tired, as if they would rather be resting in a closet.
Lucky began to worry that this was a very bad situation, especially because of Brigitte’s silence. It was obvious that Lucky needed to intervene. No!
she said, trying to look as grown-up and serious and knowledgeable as possible. Of course not! That would be a violation of Regulation Number 1849! This
—she gestured toward the kitchen trailer behind her—"is our kitchen trailer. Naturally we don’t live there! Lucky rolled her eyes exaggeratedly at Stu Burping to show him such an idea was ridiculous.
We prep and cook in the kitchen trailer, and we live