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Summer Solstice by Kelly Williams

Thoughtful, compassionate, and quietly profound…

A lonely boy and a broken bird find their way forward in Williams’s graceful, moving middle-grade novel. After a car crash kills his father, twelve-year-old Elliot Blake retreats into silence, burdened by guilt he can’t share. When his climatologist mother takes a research post in Antarctica, Elliot is dragged into a frozen wilderness for what she calls a “healing journey.” There, he meets Olivia Alvarez: lively, talkative, and impossible to ignore. As the unlikely pair explore their icy surroundings, Elliot discovers an injured albatross he names Solstice. As he helps the bird heal, he begins to heal too. But letting her go may be the hardest part.

Williams writes with restraint and tenderness as she captures both the grandeur of Antarctica and the rawness of a boy’s inner storm. The pacing is slow in the best way; unrushed, careful, attuned to emotional truth. Antarctica’s cold isolation is tempered by scenes of domestic warmth and cultural texture. Olivia is a spark in Elliot’s quiet world, and Marina’s grief, though muted, grounds the story in something deeply human. What makes the story land is its refusal to rush emotional repair. Elliot’s healing doesn’t happen all at once. It occurs slowly: through quiet companionship and the act of caring for something more fragile than himself. When hope does appear, it feels soft, earned, and deeply honest. This is a story about guilt, yes, but also resilience, friendship, and how healing often comes from the most unlikely companions. 

A novel of quiet courage, emotional honesty, and deep empathy.


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Pub date July 12, 2025

ASIN  B0FDYV3HLQ

Price $9.99 (USD) Kindle edition

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