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ldquoFans of Kate DiCamillo Jennifer Holm and Polly Horvath will find this an enjoyable and engrossing readrdquo mdashSchool Library Journal Bee is an orphan who lives with a carnival and sleeps in the back of a truck Every day she endures taunts for the birthmark on her face though she prefers to think of it as a precious diamond Then one day a scruffy dog shows up as unwanted as she and Bee realizes she must find a home for them both She discovers a cozy house with gingerbread trim that reminds her of frosting where two mysterious women Mrs Swift and Mrs Potter take her in Whoever these women are they matter They matter to Bee And they are helping Bee realize that she too matters to the worldmdashif only she will let herself be a part of it



About the Author

Kimberly Newton Fusco

Like Cornelia in TENDING TO GRACE, I have always been "a bookworm, a bibliophile, a passionate lover of books." As a child my favorite reading spot was my tree house, and I spent hours there with piles of books. I walked the mile to our town library every few days for a new supply. My favorite books were Harriet the Spy, Island of the Blue Dolphins and Where the Red Fern Grows.

I knew I wanted to be a writer in the sixth grade. I never wanted to be anything else. I was a young person who stuttered, and writing gave me a voice. When teachers started telling me I was talented, I never looked back. I wrote for the literary magazine my church youth group started, "The Worm's Eye View," and then walked door-to-door selling it for twenty-five cents an issue.

I studied writing in college and graduated from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. In 2002, I submitted ten pages of a novel to Alfred A. Knopf executive editor Michelle Frey. Michelle told me what I had written was good, but not good enough. She thought I could write the kind of literary novel that Knopf publishes, and she said if I tried again, she would take another look. I threw out that fledgling novel and started over, writing for almost a year, and when I finished TENDING TO GRACE, I had written a novel about Cornelia, a young girl who stutters. That novel received the American Library Association's Schneider Family Book Award.

Since then I have published THE WONDER OF CHARLIE ANNE, a Parent's Choice Silver Medal winner, and soon, BEHOLDING BEE, which began in my reporting days when I interviewed a girl who worked with her parents at a traveling carnival.

I am drawn to characters like Cornelia, Charlie Anne, and Bee, who "put on bigger boots and keep going," no matter what the difficulty. They help me remember to never give up....and to write every day!



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