
When they lose their apartment in Vancouver, they move into a camper van, just for August, till Astrid finds a job. His mom Astrid is loving but unreliable she can’t hold onto a job, or a home. As one of my young readers said, “She’s a let-down mom.” Third, I don’t know why, but I’ve always wanted to have a game show in one of my books! This was finally my chance to do it.English | Septem| ASIN: B07GXZ9N8Z | kbps | 5h 34m | 149.48 MBįrom beloved Governor General Literary Award-winning author Susin Nielsen comes a touching and funny middle-grade story about family, friendship and growing up when you’re one step away from homelessness.įelix Knuttson, 12, is an endearing kid with an incredible brain for trivia. But she has been damaged by her past, and doesn’t always make the best choices. Astrid is a strong woman who loves her son deeply. We were far from wealthy, but we never worried about eviction, or about where our next meal would come from. But unlike Astrid, my mom was a stable, steadying force. I, too, grew up with a single parent mom. Second, I wanted to write a deeply flawed parent.

First is that gradual awakening kids have, that their parents are far from perfect. There were elements of this story that I only realized I’d been hungry to delve into once I’d begun writing. But a small (judgmental) part of me thought, “Was it really a great adventure for your kid? Like, in the dead of winter? When she’s older, will she talk about it to her kids like it was a great adventure, or will she talk about it to her therapist? Or both?”

They talked about it like it was a great adventure. The lack of political action at every level is disheartening.Ģ) I briefly met a couple many years ago who told me that while he was in university, they and their school-aged daughter had lived out of a van. More and more citizens are being pushed out of the city, or pushed to the brink of poverty and despair. Rental units in Vancouver are scarce and costly, and renters are constantly being evicted as older homes are torn down at a rapid rate, replaced by large homes that – to add insult to injury – often stand empty. Homes and land are increasingly treated as commodities and investments. I suspect that initial idea had sprung from a couple of things:ġ) Anyone who lives in Vancouver – or in any other large, internationally-renowned city – can’t help but be aware of the growing housing crisis. It was four a.m., and I was in between wake and sleep when the thought came, “I should write about a boy who lives in a van with his mom.” I had the wherewithal to write the line down when I got up a couple hours later, then set it aside for at least another year.

I first had the idea for this book when I was lying in a hotel room in Kelowna, BC, in February 2015.
