About this item
Highlights
- I'm from the future.
- 288 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Social Themes
Description
About the Book
An anxious, asthmatic boy gets recruited by a girl from the future to launch a climate strike big enough to rewrite history.Book Synopsis
I'm from the future. We need you.
Ever since he learned about climate change, twelve-year-old Jonah has dreaded a weather-beaten future where not even his asthma medication can save him. Luckily, a girl from that future arrives just in time to throw Jonah a lifeline.
Sunny traveled back to the 2020s with a mission: help Jonah launch a climate strike big enough to rewrite history. To do it, he'll have to recruit his entire school before Halloween. Why so soon? Sunny won't say. But how can Jonah win over 600 classmates when the only thing he dreads more than the end of the world is talking to other kids?
Review Quotes
"Poignant and timely, this is a book that will resonate with readers of all ages, and it may inspire action in the important challenge of combating climate change. This is a fantastic addition to library collections for middle grade readers." --Children's Literature
"The message about environmental care and justice is an important one and Sunny shows us just what the world will look like if we don't act immediately. With talking of greenwashing, slacktivism, and performative changes, Sunny, Jonah, and crew get deep into what it means to actually seek out environmental changes. Their superpower is collective action and together they can change the world." --Teen Librarian Toolbox (SLJ Blog Network)
"Environmental justice themes buoyed by friendship and community care infuse Lewis's impassioned, lightly speculative debut. . . . [T]he protagonists' tenacity, paired with Lewis's dynamic text, delivers a thought-provoking read." --Publishers Weekly
"Directs kids to ignore small distractions, like eliminating plastic straws, and instead become part of the worldwide climate activism movement pushing for significant changes. The relevant message shines." --Kirkus Reviews