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Sam Saves the Night

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
What would you do if you could stay out all night and not get in trouble ? Twelve-year-old Sam has no friends, but you can't really blame her. She lives her life in a state of chronic exhaustion thanks to her nightly sleepwalking jaunts, which include trips to the store, treehouse building projects, and breaking-and-entering escapades—none of which she remembers in the morning. Her condition is taking its toll on her family (and her life), so when her mom takes her to see a wacky strip mall sleep specialist, Sam is wary, but 100 percent in. The night after the doc works his mojo, Sam wakes up outside her body, watching herself sleep. FREAKY! But once she gets over the panic attack, she realizes there's a whole world of detached-sleepers out there—cliques of kids like the Achieves,who use their sleep time to learn new things; the Numbs, who eat junk food and play video games all night long, and the OCDeeds who search for missing things and organize other people's stuff. And then there are the Mean Dreams, led by Madalynn Sucret, the nicest girl in school, who shows Sam that she can use her power to get back at her bully. Sam is intrigued—until it becomes clear that Madalynn is the real bully and the "bully" is just, well, sad. Now Sam is faced with uniting the various tribes of Sleepers to fight back against Madalynn and the Mean Dreams in the most epic battle the night has ever seen.
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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2019
      A girl discovers a spectral world of jovial abandon when all she wanted was a cure for somnambulism. Sam is a sleepwalker--has been for most of her 13 years. The bully at her middle school constantly makes fun of her sleep-deprived state. Lately, her nightly escapades are getting more and more dangerous (think: waking-up-in-a-tree-with-a-running-power-tool level of danger), so her anxiety-ridden mother takes her to an unorthodox specialist. His treatment works, and Sam can finally get a good night's sleep--but she's shocked to discover that now her soul separates from her body as she slumbers! Guided by another "detached" person, the oh-so-cute Byron, she learns about the many other young SleepWakers, who are divided into like-minded subgroups, with one that threatens to ruin the nighttime freedom for the rest. The rosy moral lesson: Bullies have stories, too, and, once seen and forgiven, they will turn into unlikely friends. While this can be true, the book's bullies--one at school, one at nighttime, and several others--come across as so mean that something more than apologetic words are really needed as an apology. Aside from Byron's light brown skin and an Indian tertiary character, the remaining cast is presumed white. The fantastical plot tries to keep one foot planted in realism, but hokey dialogue and the flippant treatment of the fundamentally unsettling premise throw it off balance. Just too bizarre. (Fiction. 8-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 16, 2019
      Sam, 12, is a lifelong sleepwalker who has sleep-sorted recycling and even sleep-built a tree house. Her behavior has prompted her family to move six times in 10 years, and family history—Sam’s father died while sleepwalking off a bridge—makes her mother even more desperate for a solution. Then they find an unconventional specialist, Dr. Fletcher, who detaches Sam’s consciousness from her body, a procedure that allows Sam’s body to slumber at night while her soul “accomplishes its purpose.” Sam becomes a SleepWaker, part of a large community of others who “show who they really are in the dark,” each joining a group of like-minded Wakers. But the community is under attack by “soul-napping” MeanDreams, led by school golden girl Madalynn, who shows her true malicious colors at night. Though Simpson’s debut can feel aggressively off-the-wall—the characters skew wacky and the plot is packed with over-the-top moments (it opens on its protagonist sleep-wielding a power saw)—Sam is realistically flawed as she deals with bullying and finding her place in the world. Filled with surprising twists, this series kick-off underscores essential truths about finding one’s unique spirit. Ages 8–12.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2019
      Grades 4-6 Thirteen-year-old Samantha (Sam) faces bullies on both corporeal and noncorporeal planes after a quack scientist turns her (and other classmates) from a lifelong sleepwalker into a SleepWaker, able to separate her consciousness from her chronically exhausted physical body and leave the latter behind to rest. The separation brings out hidden or frustrated character traits in Wakers: those fearful by day become wildly reckless Extremes, while repressed performers band together as Broadways who belt out show tunes. More cogently, Sam's dazzling, charismatic, seemingly angelic schoolmate Madalynn is, by night, a terrifying bully who can not only somehow bespell Wakers but actually possess their unconscious physical bodies to further her cruel schemes. Simpson needs to work a little more on her premise (or at least her language) as she classifies all of the Wakers into simplistic tribes, but her quick-paced tale is lightened by snarky dialogue, driven by young people surrounded by caricatured adults, and features a fiendishly clever, truly scary mean girl. In the end, clues open the door to sequels. Nighty night!(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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