Trowbridge Road

Trowbridge Road has just been long listed for the National Book Award for Children’s Literature. We are so excited for this honor.

In a stunning novel set in the 1980s, a girl with heavy secrets awakens her sleepy street to the complexities of love and courage.It’s the summer of ’83 on Trowbridge Road, and June Bug Jordan is hungry. Months after her father’s death from complications from AIDS, her mother has stopped cooking and refuses to leave the house, instead locking herself away to scour at the germs she believes are everywhere. June Bug threatens this precarious existence by going out into the neighborhood, gradually befriending Ziggy, an imaginative boy who is living with his Nana Jean after experiencing troubles of his own. But as June Bug’s connection to the world grows stronger, her mother’s grows more distant — even dangerous — pushing June Bug to choose between truth and healing and the only home she has ever known. Trowbridge Road paints an unwavering portrait of a girl and her family touched by mental illness and grief. Set in the Boston suburbs during the first years of the AIDS epidemic, the novel explores how a seemingly perfect neighborhood can contain restless ghosts and unspoken secrets. Written with deep insight and subtle lyricism by acclaimed author Marcella Pixley, Trowbridge Road demonstrates our power to rescue one another even when our hearts are broken.

Trowbridge Road is a luminous, heart-wrenching story that reminds us that love–maybe flawed, maybe messy–is what sustains us. Burbling over with lush details, Marcella Pixley’s novel takes the ordinary stuff of life–steam from a bowl of warm pasta, summer sunlight, the bond between two kids burdened by family secrets–and makes it extraordinary.”
–Esther Ehrlich, author of Nest