Calling Me Home by Laurin Becker Macios
Published May 2026 via Holiday House
★★★★
Jenny is fresh out of high school and off to Europe for the summer. It's not her first time in Europe, but it is her first time traveling alone, on her own terms, on her own schedule. It's not quite what she expected...and then she changes the parameters, and the parameters change themselves, and suddenly her expectations of her future change.
I had nowhere else to go, just a goal / of communing with the caryatids, of letting / my eyes wander among the milk-white stones / that dotted the wild grass—lime-green, overgrown, / sun-yellow blooms holding their own against / the Mediterranean breeze. (53*)
Verse made this a very quick read—I probably should have spread it out over two days, but I was invested enough to read straight through. Jenny is a compelling character, and seeing her grow is great. Initially she thinks her summer story is going to be defined by going off plan and doing her backpacking with a little more spontaneity than she'd expected, but eventually she has much bigger decisions to make and bigger shifts in her understanding of herself.
Perhaps my favorite thing: There's quite a lot of backstory (Jenny's nomadic childhood, previous relationships), but it's slipped in quietly; although any of those things could be a story in themselves, here they're used to flesh out the story and make more sense of Jenny's actions and reactions.
I hope this one makes it into a lot of high school libraries.
*Quotes are from an ARC and may not be final.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.









