Cover Image: Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe

Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

LOVED IT. Part mystery, part adventure and part coming of age, "Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe" by Jo Hackl was a page-turner that I could not put down! The main character, Cricket, captured my heart in the first chapter. The desire for a stable home is universal and she is on a mission to figure out life.

Was this review helpful?

I appreciate that the author crafts Cricket’s character as a strong, young woman despite her having to deal with the loss of her father and family instability. This story was intriguing and well written, including the descriptions of the scenery especially being a Mississippian myself. The author’s vibrant descriptions and eccentric characters reminded me of Walter Anderson, a local artist.

Was this review helpful?

Often I am unimpressed with books written for middle school readers. This book was refreshingly unique. From the first paragraphs I was drawn into the dialects and culture of the south. For my students in the Midwest, this is important cultural exposure. I learned lessons about nature that paired well with my childhood obsession with "My Side of the Mountain". I wrote down the advice that Daddy shared when explaining the importance of "Woods Time". He said, "I think I needed to learn what the woods had to teach me. When you're around other people, it's easy to get caught up in everything and everybody around you. Out in the woods, it's just you. And if you're going to last any time out in the woods, you'd better get comfortable with whoever it is you are." In an age when middle school students are developing addictions to their phones and technology, hearing the importance of taking a break and spending time in nature is timely. I purchased this book for my library and will promote it in book talks. Thank you so much for allowing me to preview this title.

Was this review helpful?

Just finished Cricket's story. I enjoyed the treatment of mental health and the effort to destigmatize it. Cricket saw her mother as a person of many facets and learned that she, too, is more than what others think of her.

Was this review helpful?

Sometimes when I really delight in a book, when I’m basking in the afterglow of a well written novel, I have a harder time reviewing said tome. I seem to run out of descriptive things to say, instead I just gush, “Oh my gosh, you guys, I loved it!” Today I read Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe and, Oh my gosh, you guys, I loved it!

Jo Hackl’s descriptions made me feel I was walking along with Cricket on her adventures, and her casual, measured storytelling fit the plot line perfectly.

Was this review helpful?

Love these characters! Small town mystery story fueled by hope in the possible! The mystery will keep students reading but by the end the characters feel like friends. Didn’t want this one to end!

Was this review helpful?

After two deaths and the disappearance of her mentally ill mom, Cricket's life is upended, and she pines for the day when her mother returns from her ongoing search for The Bird Room. Her father had introduced Cricket to an abandoned town in the Mississippi piney woods, and he had taught her how to live off the land, so when the opportunity presents itself, she hikes into the woods and takes up residence in a tree house i the ghost town. Unusual characters like flighty Aunt Belinda, a cricket named Charlene, and Miss V, the story's pillar of strength, along with clues, riddles, and the Mississippi artist Walter Anderson all add to the local flavor of this coming of age story.

Was this review helpful?

I enjoy stories with strong female characters. Cricket is one resourceful young woman. She's from a wildly dysfunctional family, yet manages to create her own path and survive. I think grades 5th grade and up will enjoy this tale. It's a fascinating well-told story and has a nice air of mystery running through it that I enjoyed. Loved the setting and plot.

Was this review helpful?

THe plot of this one is sort of all over the place. It starts out with survival, the protagonist learning to take care of herself. THen it turns into a treasure hunt. It's an exploration of mental illness, art, and family all at once

Was this review helpful?

This is the story of how life can be so unstable and yet, kids will be more resilient than expected. Cricket’s lost her dad, her mom clearly suffers from bipolar disorder which leaves Cricket’s world rocking each and every time she goes from one extreme to the other and yet Cricket’s love for her family is evident and she wants nothing more than what all kids want – someone to love her and take care of her.

I found the setting of this story to be extremely unique and yet realistic at the same time – the ghost town with cement sidewalks through weeds and trees, the woods where spending any amount of extended time takes preparation and skill and a friendly, yet mysterious home which might just hold the answers Cricket needs.

While Cricket collects the clues to better understand her mama’s secret room obsession, Cricket learns more about what it means to be family and how to best take care of herself, even when the answer still hurts. I really enjoyed the ending in this book and how Cricket became a self-advocate even though the decisions she made were difficult.

Was this review helpful?

Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe is the charmingly told story of a young girl, named Cricket, who is struggling with some major life changes. The death of her father, and her absence of her mentally ill mother, leads her on a journey to bring her mother back, and connect with her father at the same time. Despite the heaviness of the story's themes, the writing is light and refreshing, reminding the reader that in the midst of great emotional turmoil, one can remain true to oneself. Bringing about change in others, however, is often a fruitless task. This novel can be enjoyed by middle grade students to adults. I believe my fourth graders would enjoy it, but many of the larger themes may pass them by, due to lack of life experience.

Was this review helpful?

The setting for Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe by Jo Hackl is a ghost town smack dab in the middle of Mississippi with bodock* tours and a personal library collection featuring Mississippi writer Willie Morris’s book North Toward Home. Even before I read the author’s notes, one of the unusual characters called up a familiar image of famed Mississippi native artist Walter Anderson.

The first line promises a good read. “Turns out, it’s easier than you might think to sneak out of town smuggling a live cricket, three pocketfuls of jerky, and two bags of half-paid-for merchandise from Thelma’s Cash ‘n’ Carry grocery store.”

Three events in rapid succession – the death of Cricket’s grandmother, the disappearance of her mother, and the death of her father – send her on the trail of a mysterious bird room her mother described. She believes that finding it is the secret to having her mother return to stay. Survival in nature, unexplained clues, and an inscrutable riddle keep her looking, sustained by the hope that her mother will keep two promises she made before she disappeared. Cricket has eleven days before her mother’s promised return while her only help in the wild comes from her cricket, a strange hermit woman she calls Miss V., and a poetry loving dog. I liked Cricket’s perception when she sees Miss V.’s progress as they dig together. “It’s downright embarrassing to get outworked by somebody six times your age. I guess you can’t always tell strong from the outside.”

I read this delightful middle grade novel that has its book birthday tomorrow on July 10 in an advance reading copy from Net Galley. Not to give too much away, I can tell you the promise of a good read in its first line is more trustworthy than the ones Cricket’s mama made. Mississippians will find themselves right at home in this story, and if you’re not from here, you will get a delightful and accurate depiction.

*Also if you’re not from here, the bodock is also known as the osage orange and is sometimes characterized as a tree and sometimes as a shrub.

Was this review helpful?

Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe took quite awhile for me to get into. It had a nice mix of mystery and adventure. While I loved Cricket, the main character, I felt that the book was just okay.

Was this review helpful?

I know this book will draw comparisons to Three Times Lucky, but for me the story didn't gel the way TTL did. The mystery aspects were a little too random and the events a little too unrealistic (stumbling across a relative of her father who can cure a snake bite) for me to enjoy it fully. I did enjoy the survival elements and would give this to kids who aren't afraid of some sad aspects of a story, since the reunion with Cricket's mother was a real gutpunch.

Was this review helpful?

When Cricket finds herself alone in a supermarket she knows exactly where to go.. The woods. This adventure takes her on many fact finding adventures. Ultimately Cricket finds her place in the world and learns to trust herself and love who she is. This was a great book. I know my 6th graders will love it next year! I recommend this for everyone!

Was this review helpful?

Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe
by Jo Watson Hackl
Random House Children's
Random House Books for Young Readers
Children's Fiction
Pub Date 10 Jul 2018
I am reviewing a copy of Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe through Random House Publishers and Netgalley:
Cricket’s Mom has told her all her life about a secret room that was painted by a mysterious artist. Her Mother has run off and her Daddy died but Cricket thinks that secret room might be the answer to getting her to come back home. The problem is she's not even sure if it exists and if it does exist if she can even find it.
The only clue Cricket has is a coin from a ghost town that has been grown over in the woods. She heads off with her Daddy's guidebook and a coat full of snacks she stole from the Cash And Carry. Cricket runs away to the woods to find the room but surviving the woods is not easy. Cricket camps out in an old tree house in the woods where she meets the last residence of the ghost town, encounters a poetry loving dog and discovers that sometimes getting a little lost is the only way to find your way.
I give Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe five out of five stars!
Happy Reading!

Was this review helpful?

Cricket is a little girl her dad has died and her mother abandoned her. She lives with her aunt not by blood, Cricket finds out her aunt is going to ship her off to another relative. But her mother is going to be in town in 11 days so she can’t leave until she sees her.
This book was compared to “Three Times Lucky”. I can see the comparison, however there is so much sad in Cricket’s story and not enough humor. I did enjoy the ending and would read any more books about Cricket, but this felt like a long prologue to Cricket’s story.

Was this review helpful?

This funny little book is about Cricket, who lives with her aunt and her cousins. Cricket's dad died suddenly and her mother, who struggles with mental health issues left. Cricket's aunt doesn't love having Cricket around, so when she accidentally leaves Cricket at the grocery store one day, Cricket seizes the opportunity to search for a place her mother saw once and talked about her whole life. Cricket believes if she finds this room, that her mother will come back to her. Cricket ends up going on her adventure with a cricket that she names Charlene. Charlene is surprisingly good company and is very helpful. The characters in this one are interesting and flawed and funny at times, which helps with heaviness of some of the issues like the death of a parent, mental illness, and having a family that loves and supports you . This would be a great one to connect to "Three times Lucky" by Sheila Turnage.

Was this review helpful?

This is such an adorable novel. I say that because immediately you will fall in love with the main character; a young girl named Cricket with a pet cricket on her shoulder (Charlene). Cricket faces some difficult times and decides to take her future into her own hands which takes her on an adventure into the woods where she learns about who she is, who her mother is and she solves a decades long mystery that is truly charming. I rooted for her all through the story because this little girl is so relatable- you will see yourself in her! The author wrote this book with a real life setting/town/artist that inspired her when she was a young girl which gives the story so much depth! You will truly enjoy this book!

Was this review helpful?

Smack Dab in the Middle of Maybe but Jo Watson Hackl was an amazing read about a girl named Cricket who has been abandoned on more than one occasion. She has grown up with a mother who has mental health issues, her father who’s job requires him to travel for extended periods of time for work, a grandmother who has recently passed away, and an aunt who has her own problems. Cricket’s father taught her how to survive in the outdoors and introduced her to an abandoned town where they explore. When Cricket’s aunt “accidentally” leaves Cricket behind in the grocery store Cricket takes the opportunity to run away to this town. While she is there she becomes more self-aware and she comes to understand her situation better. She uncovers a mystery and solves it. She makes new friends. Overall, the time she spends in the abandoned town helps her to grow into a young woman. And while the story is realistic enough that it doesn’t wrap everything up in a nice pretty package at the end you can see that Cricket will be ok. She is a strong, young woman. This story was intriguing and well written, including the descriptions of the scenery. I couldn’t put it down.

Was this review helpful?