Richie’s Picks: FEW BLUE SKIES

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Richie Partington

unread,
Dec 12, 2025, 11:00:10 AM (5 days ago) Dec 12
to richie...@googlegroups.com

Richie’s Picks: FEW BLUE SKIES by Carolina Ixta, HarperCollins/Quill Tree, February 2026, 384p., ISBN: 978-0-06-328791-4


“Just go out for a breath of air

And you’ll be ready for Medicare

The city streets are really quite a thrill

If the hoods don’t get you, the monoxide will.”

– Tom Lehrer, “Pollution” (1965)


“[W]hat I have grown to learn through my own time in academia, in reading, and in research is that the racism in urban planning, the process of developing a city’s infrastructure, is never coincidental. The location of city dumps, the location of highways, and the location of warehouses are always strategically planned.”

— Author’s Note 


(This book was inspired by the author’s learning that an Inland Empire community approved construction of a warehouse next to the local high school.)


Issues of social, economic, and environmental justice permeate FEW BLUE SKIES, a contemporary tale for tweens and teens that is set in southern California’s Inland Empire. Two teens who have known each other forever–and share a sweet, innocent past together–team up on a research project tied to a lucrative scholarship contest. The topic of their research is personal for both of them. It relates to their dads’ respective respiratory illnesses that certainly seem to stem from working in the community’s pollution-belching warehouse operations. It’s a story that illustrates injustices stemming from the siting of health-threatening industries in low income communities. It also shows how a prosperous corporation can readily work the system to the detriment of the people and community involved.


“Where most people had family photos pinned to the fridge, my ma had newspaper clippings of homes for rent back in her hometown. They all looked the same: jaws of gates, stucco walls, terra-cotta tiles, an hour from here, away from all the warehouses, away from all the smog. 

I could imagine her at work, sitting in a corner booth, poring over them in her break–a pair of scissors in her hand as she cut fantasy from paper.

How can we stay here?’ my ma asks, watching as my papa crosses into the kitchen. I hand him his water and he ushers us to all sit at the kitchen table. My ma sets her elbows against the surface, presses her fingers tight against her temples. ‘She’s putting them everywhere.’

She tilts her head toward the living room, where the news is still on, where the mayor is still smiling. The volume is low, and I want so badly to get up and turn it off. To not know.

But not knowing feels worse than knowing.

I glimpse at the mayor who has divided the city, the community, my family, in half. She began her term twelve years ago and has yet to be voted out, funneling her quiet Selva donations to bolster her reelection campaigns every cycle.

But what my ma is saying isn’t true. The mayor wasn’t putting them everywhere.

On the north side, where Mayor Warner lived, there were no warehouses. There were parks, there were gardens, there were trees.

But on the south side, where most of the Latino and Black residents lived, we have warehouses.”


In FEW BLUE SKIES, the smog that is connected to the logistics industry and all those warehouses has created a life-and-death situation for Paloma’s and Julio’s dads, along with others living and working on the south side of town. Together, the two teens employ disciplined science research techniques in order to develop empirical proof of the harm being done, as they seek to win the scholarship contest that could provide the funds Julio needs in order to attend UC Davis. 


The story also does a stellar job of delving into the web of relationships between the two teens, their friends, parents, and community members. 


Filled with first love, political corruption, heartbreaking tragedy, a look at how online shopping is causing big changes in our world, some jaw-dropping surprises, and some heartbreaking choices, FEW BLUE SKIES is a powerful, relevant, and thoroughly-engaging read that will leave readers pondering how they might act and react in similar circumstances.


Richie Partington, MLIS

Richie's Picks  http://richiespicks.pbworks.com

https://www.facebook.com/richiespicks/    

richiepa...@gmail.com  


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages