The Snowman Code by Simon Stephenson
Snow falls, soft and slow, A girl speaks six times—he wakes, Friendship melts the cold. There are stories that arrive precisely when you need them, like the first warm breeze after an endless winter. The Snowman Code by Simon Stephenson is such a story—one that understands the particular loneliness of being ten-and-a-half, the weight of worrying about a parent, and the miraculous possibility that magic might be hiding in plain sight, waiting for someone brave enough to speak to it six times. A Tale of Frost and Friendship Simon Stephenson, the acclaimed screenwriter behind Pixar’s Luca and Paddington 2, makes his children’s fiction debut with a novel that feels both wonderfully old-fashioned and startlingly fresh. Set in London during an impossibly long winter—the longest in three hundred years—the story introduces us to Blessing, a resourceful girl who has stopped attending school to avoid three particularly unpleasant bullies. Her mother Margaret suffers from seasonal depression so severe that Blessing fears being sent away again if she adds to her mother’s worries. Everything changes when Blessing encounters …

