What are the essential ingredients that make a family? Eleven-year-old Mo is making up her own recipe in this unforgettable story that's a little sweet, a little sour, and totally delicious.Nan was all the family Mo ever needed. But suddenly she’s gone, and Mo finds herself in foster care after her uncle decides she’s not worth sticking around for.
Nan left her a notebook and advised her to get a hobby, like ferret racing or palm reading.
But how could a
hobby fix anything in her newly topsy-turvy life?
Then Mo finds a handmade cookbook filled with someone else’s family recipes. Even though Nan never cooked, Mo can’t tear her eyes away. Not so much from the recipes, but the stories attached to them. Though, when she makes herself a pot of soup, it is every bit as comforting as the recipe notes said.
Soon Mo finds herself asking everyone she meets for
their family recipes. Teaching herself to make them. Collecting the stories behind them. Building a
website to share them. And, okay, secretly hoping that a long-lost relative will find her and give her a family recipe all her own.
But when everything starts to unravel
again, Mo realizes that if she wants a family recipe—or a real family—she’s going to have to make it up herself.
This audiobook includes a downloadable PDF that contains recipes and photos from the book.
KATE O’SHAUGHNESSY is a book nerd, animal lover, former chef, and an outdoor enthusiast. When she’s not writing, you can find Kate pottering in her garden, eating good food, hiking with her dog, and chronically mispronouncing words she’s read but never heard said aloud. She lives in California with her family.
Kate’s first book was
The Lonely Heart of Maybelle Lane.
★ "Readers will laugh, cry, and embrace Mo completely....
Deeply moving and tender." —
Kirkus Reviews, starred review
★ "[An] 11-year-old in mourning navigates foster care and seeks connection by collecting families’ recipes and stories in this tenderly rendered, character-driven novel....
Extremely satisfying." —
Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Mo, imperfections and all, is
a winning heroine. To be read with snacks at hand, and perhaps also some tissues." —
The Horn Book
"Will
pull at the heart strings of all readers." —
School Library Journal