She asks questions to her best friend Andrew and to her mum, but she’s not sure how to ask or what she’s really asking in the first place, so the answers she receives are unhelpful. Stevie tries to figure this out by herself. What she doesn’t know is what the fizzy feeling she feels when she looks at Chloe is. Stevie also knows that she likes Chloe, a girl in her class at school who can do magic tricks. She knows that sea angels are actually called cliones, she knows that octopuses have three hearts, and she knows how to tap out messages in Morse code to her mum at night. Stevie wants to know everything (because by doing so hopes she will be able to stop bad things from happening), and she has a large notebook where she writes down all the things she knows. She is afraid of zombies and clowns, and also many of the strange and scary things that live in the oceans. The Deepest Breath by Meg Grehan is an unusual middle-grade book that is written entirely in verse and will appeal to fans of Matilda and Lumberjanes.Įleven-year-old Stevie lives with her mother and suffers from anxiety. Please note: This post contains affiliate links. Today’s book review is The Deepest Breath by Meg Grehan. Follow the Pride Month tag to find all the content in one space (including LGBTQ content from previous years), and keep checking back for more throughout the month. Throughout June, GeekMom celebrates Pride Month with lots of LGBTQ content.
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