Sought
4/5
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About this ebook
Thirteen-year-old Daniella McCarthy begins receiving a series of unusual phone calls right before her family moves from Michigan to Ohio. How is it that total strangers seem to know more about her background than she does? And could it be possible that these strangers also know something about her future?
Margaret Peterson Haddix
Margaret Peterson Haddix grew up on a farm in Ohio. She worked as a newspaper reporter and copy editor in Indiana before her first book, Running Out of Time, was published. She has since written more than fifty books for kids and teens, including the Greystone Secrets series, the Shadow Children series, the Missing series, the Children of Exile series, and many stand-alones. Margaret and her husband, Doug, now live in Columbus, Ohio, where they raised their two kids. You can learn more about her at haddixbooks.com.
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Sent Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Found Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sabotaged Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Redeemed Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sought Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Torn Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Risked Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Rescued Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Caught Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Revealed Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Sought
10 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great addition to the rest of the series and gives a little bit more background on Daniela.
Book preview
Sought - Margaret Peterson Haddix
So this kid calls me, totally out of the blue. It’s early morning, before school, and my mom would tell you that I should have been busy figuring out which pile of clothes my purple Converse were under and whatever happened to the math homework I did last night. (Well, I did half of it. Maybe a fourth. I never was good with fractions.)
Technically I guess I’m kind of exaggerating about the kid calling me. It’s the house phone that rings—the old-fashioned landline that my old-fashioned parents think they still have to have hooked up or, I don’t know, the world as we know it might end. But who can resist a ringing phone? I pick it up in the upstairs hallway as I walk past after brushing my teeth. I’m thinking it’s going to be someone selling windows or siding or something boring like that, and I always feel like it’s my duty to give people like that a wacky conversation so they have something interesting to tell their families when they get home from work.
One time I convinced a magazine salesman that I had a pet squirrel named Lulubelle whose life was so endangered by living in the same cage as my giant guinea pig, Nebuchadnezzar, that the guy called the SPCA.
My mom was not happy when the county animal control officer showed up at our front door.
But anyhow, answering the phone, all I’m thinking about is making up a good prank, one I haven’t used before.
If I can convince the window/siding/whatever salesman I’m my mom—if he calls me Mrs. McCarthy
and everything—then . . .
Hello?
I say. It comes out sounding odd, because I’m still trying to decide whether I want to use a fake accent. British? French? Of course, Australian is always fun. . . .
Uh, hello,
the voice on the other end of the line says. Uh, Daniella?
Okay, this is weird. Nobody ever calls me on the landline—that’s what my cell phone is for. And it’s a kid, not some friend of Mom’s who might know me. If I had to guess, I’d say it’s a kid about my age (thirteen), because, you know that weird thing a boy’s voice starts doing in middle school? Where it’s low, then high, then low, then high, and you can tell the boy’s just dying of embarrassment if he has to say more than two syllables? (If I were a boy, I would so totally use that to make everyone laugh all day long. I wouldn’t be embarrassed at all. It’d be fun.)
That’s what this boy’s voice is doing—the roller coaster of pitches—but somehow it doesn’t seem funny right now.
Maybe this is crazy, but what this boy’s voice makes me picture is someone with a gun to his head. Like—he’s that worried and stressed.
And right