The Summer of May
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Twelve-year-old May lives with her grandmother, who is depressed about the absence of May’s mother, and her father, who works long hours and is almost never around. Due to her circumstance and her resentment over having to live in a low-income neighborhood, May often finds herself picking fights and getting into trouble.
But when May is caught defacing her least favorite teacher’s classroom, she has a choice: expulsion or one-on-one summer school with the teacher she most detests. Begrudgingly, May chooses summer school and ultimately learns that her teacher has a secret past—and might just hold the key to answers no one else will give May about her mother.
Cecilia Galante
Cecilia Galante, who received an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Goddard College, Vermont, is the author of eightyoung adult novels and a children’s chapter-book series. She has been the recipient of many awards, including an NAIBA Best Book of the Year, and an Oprah’s Teen Read Selection for her first novel, The Patron Saint of Butterflies. She lives in Kingston, Pennsylvania with her three children.
Read more from Cecilia Galante
The Patron Saint of Butterflies Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Sweetness of Salt Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Willowood Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Reviews for The Summer of May
3 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Unlike any of the other middle grade novels that I have ever read, The Summer of May is not a "sunshine and rainbows" kind of book. Quite the opposite really. This is a tough read, filled with real life emotion that cuts down into your heart as you read. I'll be honest when I say that I literally cried while I read this.May is a 13-year-old girl who wants nothing more than to feel whole again. Navigating the trials of middle school, she tends to use anger as her defense mechanism against anything (or anyone) who she doesn't agree with. She doesn't enjoy the feelings that bubble up inside her and burst to the surface, but it is the one way that she knows how to deal. Angry words help to mask the hurt that she feels inside. This story is a look at how these feelings affect a person, as well as the people around them.May isn't the only character in this book who is learning something either. Amidst her tumultuous inner battle, Galante sets up other characters who are fighting the same sort of battle. Although they are much older than her, these characters show May that she isn't the only one who doesn't know quite how to deal with how she feels. Each character chooses their own defense mechanism, but they all have the anger and hurt beneath their surface. It isn't until May starts to spend more time with Mrs. Movado that she starts to make progress towards understanding what is inside her.At the heart of this book is really a message of forgiveness, and of making amends. This is a topic that is so rarely dealt with in tween/teen books, but I wish it was out there more often. As summer wanes on, May learns to look into herself through the use of writing and poetry. She learns to find the things that are buried deep inside her and come to terms with them. Most importantly of all she learns to forgive, and to ask for forgiveness, in an effort to heal herself from the inside out. If you're thinking that this sounds like a topic from a much older story, I would have agreed at one point. However now that I've finished reading this book I'm not sure I can look at middle grade literature the same again.Excellently written and brimming with honest emotions, The Summer of May is one of the most surprising and heartfelt books that I have read this year. I applaud Cecilia Galante for so carefully and sincerely dealing with such a tough topic. This is a book that I will recommend to tweens, teens and even adults a hundred times over. Dealing with the importance of family, the power of words, and the idea of forgiveness, I don't think it matters who is reading this book. Everyone can benefit from the messages between these pages.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Unfortunately for this day and age, it wasn't very realistic. No teacher could possibly have all that one-on-one time with an 8th grade student without serious repercussions. And taking her on "field trips" without parental consent? Shouldn't happen. I also didn't understand all the issues about her mother, I didn't feel like that was explained very well. But it was a sweet story.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Great story!! May gets in trouble and has to spend the summer with her teacher "Movado the Avocado." The story starts out with May hating this arrangement, but then things begin to change. A great coming-of-age story. The ending is quite sad so be aware, but all in all a wonderful book. Reminiscent of The Wednesday Wars.
Book preview
The Summer of May - Cecilia Galante
1
I thought it was funny.
So did a lot of other kids.
Miss Movado, however, did not.
Neither did Principal Mola, the middle school principal. Principal Mola used to be a drill sergeant in the army. With his shaved head and starched shirts, he still looks like one. He glared at me now above his steepled fingers, waiting, I guess, for me to burst into tears and admit that I was responsible. Instead I stared at the mounted fish that hung on the wall behind his head. Its silvery scales had been painted a dark blue on the bottom and a nose, sharp as a needle, stuck out of the front of it. I wondered if deep down, Principal Mola wished he could do the same thing to some of his students that he’d done to that fish.
Maeve,
Principal Mola said sternly. Look at me.
I bristled. "It’s May. Not Maeve."
May.
Principal Mola stood up, leaning his whole weight on just the tips of his fingers until they turned white. Look at me.
I glanced over at him. A tiny bead of sweat was balanced on his upper lip. "We know it was you. Pete saw you in her room with the spray-paint can."
Pete was the school janitor. I’d seen the top of his bald head go by through the little square hole in Miss Movado’s door just as I was finishing up, and jumped so fast into the coat closet that I almost fell over. It was a tiny, airless space. One of Miss Movado’s hideous cardigan sweaters was hanging behind me. I waited, inhaling the scent of butterscotch and her too-sweet perfume, until I thought I might get sick. Ten minutes went by, but Pete did not return. Finally I slipped back out, grabbed the can of spray paint, and ran. It hadn’t even occurred to me that he might have seen me.
I shifted in my chair. The back of my legs made a peeling sound against the red leather. Pete couldn’t have seen me,
I said. "Because I wasn’t there."
Principal Mola studied me for a moment, as if examining a new specimen of fish. How long had that poor fish struggled? I wondered, glancing up at it once more. How hard had Principal Mola pulled and reeled his line until, exhausted, the poor thing had given up? Probably pretty long. Well, he wasn’t going to reel me in, no matter how hard he pulled or how long he tried.
"We have video of you in the hallway too, Maeve. Right outside Miss Movado’s classroom. Just you. No one else."
My cheeks flushed hot. I’d forgotten about the school cameras. It must’ve been someone else. Someone who looks like me.
Principal Mola shook his head as he came around to the front of his desk. Leaning back against the smooth wood, he crossed his arms over his red tie. A gold wedding ring peeked out from the finger on his left hand. You’re thirteen years old now, May, correct?
I didn’t answer. He knew how old I was. Where along the line do you think you picked up such a blatant disrespect for authority?
This was the eighth time this year that I’d been in Principal Mola’s office. The last time was because I was involved in a food fight in the cafeteria. It hadn’t been a big one—just a few Tater Tots hurled across the room at Jeremy Finkster, who’d thrown one at me first. Maybe a chocolate pudding, too. But Principal Mola had gone off on the whole disrespect for authority spiel during that visit too. It was his army thing. His Give me five minutes, and I’ll crush you like a bug
routine. I stared at the blue swirl pattern in the rug and jiggled my leg up and down.
Do you have any idea where this attitude of yours is going to take you?
Principal Mola decided to try a different tactic. "Any idea at all? I’ll tell you. Nowhere, young lady. Actually, I stand corrected. It is going to take you somewhere. It’s going to take you to one big dead end. Period."
The swirls in the rug were actually a whole bunch of large and small paisley shapes, all crammed together. If I turned my head just a little to the right, they almost looked like they were moving. A great big sea of blue paisleys. Kind of cool.
Principal Mola pulled the cuff of his right shirt sleeve down over his wrist, and then the other. He picked a piece of lint off the front of his creased pants and tossed it in the trash can next to him. Listen, I know you’ve had a tough year, Maeve. With everything that happened to your—
"It’s May! It came out louder than I expected, more to drown out the rest of Principal Mola’s sentence than to correct my name. Something tightened in the back of my throat, a pinpoint of pain, and I swallowed over it.
Could you pleasepleaseplease just call me May? Please. I hate the name Maeve."
Principal Mola rolled his bottom lip over his teeth. Let’s get to the real point of this meeting, shall we? I’m here to inform you that Miss Movado has agreed not to press charges.
Wait, what?
My foot stopped jiggling. A flash of heat spread out along my arms, all the way up to the back of my neck. "Charges? What kind of charges?"
Defacing school property. Using foul and derogatory language in regard to a teacher.
"But I didn’t do it!" I got up out of my chair, fists clenched at my side.
"You did do it. Principal Mola’s voice was so sharp and so final that for a moment, I almost wavered. Almost.
I know you did it, and you know you did it. And we are not going to waste any more time going back and forth about it. You have two options. You can either be expelled—"
Expelled?
I repeated. I thought you just said Miss Movado wasn’t going to press charges.
She’s isn’t,
Principal Mola answered coolly. But I still can.
I sat back down again.
Principal Mola nodded. I’m assuming you don’t want to go that route.
I stared stoically at the rug. Shook my head the merest bit.
"All right, then. These are your options: You can agree to expulsion from this school, or you can retake eighth-grade English with Miss Movado in summer school."
"Retake English? I gripped the sides of the chair.
But I don’t need to retake English! I didn’t fail it!"
That’s not what Miss Movado seems to think.
Principal Mola turned slightly to the right, pressed a button on his phone, and then spoke into it. All right, Lucille. Send Miss Movado in, please.
I swiveled around in my chair as the door opened. With her tiny head, wide hips, and stubby legs, it was not hard to imagine where the nickname Movado the Avocado had come from. It didn’t help that her favorite color was green, either. The shirt she had on now was the same shade as celery, and her pants—a polyester blend that made a swiffing sound when she walked—were the color of limes. But Miss Movado’s sad appearance belied her personality. She was the most feared—and hated—teacher in the whole school. She came down on students with a hurricane force. In her classroom, Movado the Avocado made Principal Mola look like Bo Peep. I couldn’t imagine having to spend another period with her—let alone an entire summer. It would be the equivalent of torture.
Miss Movado gave Principal Mola a curt nod and sat down in the chair next to me.
You failed me?
I stared at Movado the Avocado. That is not fair! Is this, like, some kind of revenge?
Movado the Avocado did not answer me. She stared straight ahead at the wall and blinked once.
What would she need to get revenge for?
Principal Mola asked carefully.
For …
I stumbled, trying to get my thoughts in order. For not liking English or something, I guess!
Even I knew it sounded stupid, but it was all I could think of.
This has nothing to do with not liking English.
Movado the Avocado was still staring at the wall. "My job is not to get you to like English." Her voice was tight, but strangely soft. I leaned back in my chair a little. It was the first time I’d heard her talk in a normal tone of voice. Usually she was pacing around the classroom, roaring and yelling like some kind of deranged dinosaur.
Then what’d you fail me for?
Movado the Avocado turned her head so that she was looking directly at me. Her wide face was damp with perspiration. Small black hairs quivered along her upper lip, and a single curl clung like seaweed against her forehead. To try again,
she said. The right way.
"To try what again?" I asked.
All of it,
Movado the Avocado said. Technically, you did pass my class, May. By one point. The effort you put into the work I gave you all year was minimal at best, nonexistent at worst. I want you to do it again—with effort this time—the way you should have done it in the first place.
Her voice was unnervingly quiet. It creeped me out.
"You can’t force people to do things, you know. I sat back and crossed my arms.
This is America. Land of the free, in case you haven’t noticed."
Oh, I’ve noticed,
Movado the Avocado answered. And you’re perfectly free to choose whatever option Principal Mola just presented to you. Me or expulsion.
She shrugged. You’ll just have to find another school to go to next year.
I glared at her. Narrowed my eyes at Principal Mola.
But no matter how hard I looked at both of them, the only thing I could see was the wide white sail of my eighth-grade summer slipping away.
2
What’d he say?
Olive asked as I walked back into the cafeteria. She tapped the empty space where she’d saved a seat for me at the end of the table. Around us, the rest of the student body hummed with excitement. It was the last day of school. In less than an hour, we were going to be dismissed for the last time. Everyone would run for the front doors, screaming with anticipation of the summer that loomed ahead.
Everyone but me.
I sat down, glancing at the table across the room where Brittany Martinson and her crew were huddled over a Victoria’s Secret catalog. For some reason, whenever they turned a page, the sounds of shrieking and laughing burst out from the middle of the group. Ugh. Sometimes I still couldn’t believe that Olive and I used to hang out with them. It was probably just because we’d all shared the same homeroom for two years. Now, though, at the end of our eighth-grade year, I barely recognized them anymore. Especially Brittany. She’d practically turned into an alien with all the makeup she wore, and the weird way she did her hair. I mean, she barely even looked human anymore.
Of course, they probably all thought the same thing about me, which is why none of us talked anymore. I didn’t used to have the temper I had now. And I guess all my outbursts over the last year kind of scared them off. A few months ago, there’d been one final incident between us that ended things for good. It had started out just between Brittany and me, and ended up with all four of them screaming in my face. (Olive had stood off to one side, just watching.) They all hated me now. And my temper. Olive was the only one who’d stuck around.
I crossed my arms and put my head down.
Was it that bad?
Olive asked.
I held up a finger, which was my I need a minute
sign.
Okay.
I could hear Olive’s feet sliding across the floor. Just tell me when you’re ready.
Olive wore very sensible clothes and no makeup. She pinned her long brown hair back on either side with tortoiseshell barrettes, and wore the same pair of red ladybug earrings every day. Some people classified her as a nerd because she was smart and kept mostly to herself, but I didn’t think of her that way. I just thought she was different—which I liked. She had what Momma used to call a duck temperament.
Everything rolled off her back. It was an attitude I was pretty sure she got from her own mother, who was employed as something called a life coach. People came and talked to Olive’s mom about their lives falling apart, and she helped them get back on track. Sometimes Olive could be full of good advice too.
May?
Olive’s soft voice drifted over the table. You okay?
I lifted my head. She’s making me go to summer school.
Who is?
Movado the Avocado.
Why? You didn’t fail English.
That’s what I said.
Then why?
Olive asked.
Revenge, I guess. For what I did to her room.
"Did you tell them it was you?" Olive’s gray eyes went wide.
I shook my head. I didn’t have to. They have me on video in the hallway. Plus Pete saw me.
Olive pursed her lips. She arched her left eyebrow and gave me one of her I told you so
looks. She’d been the one who had tried to talk me down after I had gotten the idea in my head and told her what I was going to do. Revenge is stupid,
she’d said. Seriously, May. The best revenge is forgiveness.
Every so often, Olive liked to use her mother’s life coach quotes on me. I didn’t mind the advice she gave me sometimes, but the quotes drove me nuts.
Forgiveness?
I sputtered. Are you kidding me? I wouldn’t forgive that woman if you paid me a million bucks! She embarrassed me in front of the whole class! She made me feel like a total idiot!
Olive stared at me with the sad little expression she sometimes used when she knew she hadn’t gotten through to me, but I didn’t care. All I knew was that I’d wanted to humiliate Miss Movado the way she had humiliated me.
So even though you didn’t technically fail her class, Movado’s making you take it over?
Olive asked. "Like, just for