Review of Candle Island, by Lauren Wolk
by Lauren Wolk
Dutton Children’s Books (Penguin Random House), 2025. 340 pages.
Review written June 12, 2025, from an Advance Reader Copy sent by the publisher.
Starred Review
Wow. Lauren Wolk has done it again – a powerful middle grade novel that gives you all the feels. It turned out it was the perfect length to read on a flight from Virginia to Portland, Oregon – and it left me in awe. (I’m going to leave it behind with one of my nieces in Oregon – they’re in for a treat!)
This is a novel about secrets. We get a list in the Prologue:
Six mysteries waited for me on Candle Island.
One involved a bird.
The second, a hidden room.
A song the third.
A poet the fourth.
A cat fifth.
A fire sixth.
Each of them exciting in its own way.
But none more interesting than the mystery I took with me.
The book opens as Lucretia Sanderson and her mother arrive on Candle Island in Maine. They’re coming in summertime, but they’re not summer people – they’ve bought a furnished house, and they’re planning to stay.
They’d left their home in Vermont after Lucretia’s father died in a car accident, hoping to get some distance from painful memories. But they also left to get away from journalists who have been hounding her artist mother after a New York gallery sold a Sanderson painting to the First Lady, and it’s hanging in the White House.
The first mystery – finding an abandoned baby bird not in a nest and figuring out what kind it is – is the simplest, and gets Lucretia exploring the island. They find lots of tension between the summer people and the island kids – and the island kids are pretty skeptical of Lucretia and her Mom. It doesn’t help that they’ve moved into the house of a girl who lived there three years ago and whose parents died after she moved out.
We do find out about Lucretia’s secret about halfway through the book, and it’s indeed the most interesting, and the most momentous one. Can she keep her secret? Can she make new friends if she does? And what about the secrets other people are keeping?
So this is a book about mysteries and secrets and knowing whom to trust – and feeling safe enough to share your secrets with people who have earned that trust.
And bottom line, this is a beautiful book set on a beautiful island off the coast of Maine. It will linger in your heart.
Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Childrens_Fiction/candle_island.html
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Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.
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