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Children's Fiction Mysteries & Detective Stories

The Rehearsal Club

by (author) Kate Fodor & Laurie Petrou

Publisher
Groundwood Books Ltd
Initial publish date
Feb 2025
Category
Mysteries & Detective Stories, Theater, Girls & Women
Recommended Age
9 to 12
Recommended Grade
4 to 7
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781773069913
    Publish Date
    Feb 2025
    List Price
    $17.99
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781773069920
    Publish Date
    Feb 2025
    List Price
    $9.99

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

A mystery spans decades at the Rehearsal Club in this story of sisterhood, friendship and following your dreams under marquee lights.

Twelve-year-old Pal Gallagher is a newly minted New Yorker who loves to make people laugh and is hoping to find kindred spirits in her new city. Her older sister, Naomi, lives at the Rehearsal Club, a historic boarding house for aspiring actresses. Pal quickly gets swept up in the glamor and high-stakes of the theater world, and is drawn into a decades-old mystery about Posy, a boarder who was kicked out of the Club for reasons unknown.

In 1954, Olive feels like she is working harder than anyone to make it to Broadway — along with the forty-four other young women who live at the Rehearsal Club. In comparison, her carefree friend Posy is making it look easy. Tensions rise when the two audition for the same part, kicking off a series of events that lead to Posy’s departure.

What really happened all those years ago? The truth involves a Broadway play called The Weekend House, a necklace and a secret that Olive has kept all these years — until Pal and her new friends start digging into the past. What they learn could change the very fate of the Rehearsal Club itself.

 

Key Text Features

chapters

dialogue

author’s note

 

Correlates to the Common Core States Standards in English Language Arts:

CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.5.3

Compare and contrast two or more characters, settings, or events in a story or drama, drawing on specific details in the text (e.g., how characters interact).

CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.6.3

Describe how a particular story's or drama's plot unfolds in a series of episodes as well as how the characters respond or change as the plot moves toward a resolution.

CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.6.6

Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or speaker in a text.

About the authors

KATE FODOR is a writer and producer who has worked on the Emmy- and Golden Globe Award–winning series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. She has also written for Netflix’s Living with Yourself and HBO’s Julia. As a playwright, she has been a Guggenheim fellow and has received the Kennedy Center's Roger L. Stevens Award, the National Theater Conference's Stavis Award, and a Joseph Jefferson Citation. Her play RX was a New York Times Critic’s Pick. Kate lives in New York City.

Kate Fodor's profile page

LAURIE PETROU is an award-winning and internationally published author of young-adult fiction, short stories and commercial literary novels. Her books have twice been on the Globe and Mail Top 100 Books of the Year, among other top book lists. Her novel Stargazer was praised by The Push author Ashley Audrain, who called it "A delicious read!” Laurie is an associate professor at Toronto Metropolitan University where she is a Dean's Teaching Award winner. She lives in Niagara, Ontario.

Laurie Petrou's profile page

Excerpt: The Rehearsal Club (by (author) Kate Fodor & Laurie Petrou)

As soon as Pal took the lid off the next box, she could see that it was different. It held someone’s personal, even private, belongings. There were handwritten cards and letters in envelopes with three-cent stamps, pressed flowers and old costume jewelry. There was even a silver lipstick tube that still had a little nub of red lipstick inside.

Pal looked more closely at one of the envelopes. It was postmarked September 3, 1954, and addressed to Posy Anders at the Rehearsal Club. …

Pal opened the flap of the envelope and unfolded a love letter from a guy Posy had left behind in Minnesota. He had a lot of boring, mushy stuff to say about how wonderful Posy was, but he seemed to think the best thing about her was how funny it was when she pretended to have long, serious conversations with the chickens on his family’s farm. Conversing with chickens? This was Pal’s kind of girl.

Next she found a note scrawled on a paper napkin from a restaurant called Sardi’s. “Posy, I haven’t laughed so hard in years!” it said. It was signed “Laura Delaney” with big flourishes, like an autograph. Had Posy met a movie star? And made her laugh?

“Posy Anders, you are my queen,” Pal whispered.

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