In Whistwick, the weather is chosen by whoever wins the race. The sun is up. The light is correct. The shadows fall at exactly the right angle. But by mid-morning, something is missing. Whistwick does not feel cold. Nobody shivers. Nobody complains. The town simply stops staying. The bakery queue moves too quickly. The fountain bench sits empty in direct sunlight. The flower seller moves her table inside. People cross the square with somewhere to be and do not stop, not because they are unfriendly, but because the warmth that made stopping feel like a good idea is no longer there. Nobody notices this except Milo. Milo has always paid attention to what makes people comfortable. He has been doing it quietly, in every room, at every gathering, for as long as anyone can remember. He notices the forty seconds someone lingers at a flower stand. He notices when Greta stops coming to her bakery doorway. He notices what a town feels like when it is working and what it feels like when it isn't, and for four days he has been mapping the difference. Under the market square fountain, older than the fountain itself and older than Whistwick as it now exists, a stone disc has been regulating the town's warmth for centuries. It has drifted. Fixing it requires someone who knows what April sun is supposed to feel like. Not on a thermometer. In actual experience, from a lifetime of standing outside in April and paying attention. It requires Milo. A warm, funny adventure about the person who always notices what everyone needs — and the week Whistwick finally needed him specifically. Perfect for readers aged 6–10 who love adventure, friendship, and characters who make every room quietly better. The Whistwick Series: Book Five
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Vendeur : California Books, Miami, FL, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur I-9798182289542
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