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Stacy McAnulty - Miscalculations of Lightning Girl

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Lucy Callahan was struck by lightning. She doesnt remember it, but it changed her life forever. The zap gave her genius-level math skills, and ever since, Lucy has been homeschooled. Now, at 12 years old, shes technically ready for college. She just has to pass 1 more test middle school!
Lucys grandma insists: Go to middle school for 1 year. Make 1 friend. Join 1 activity. And read 1 book (thats not a math textbook!). Lucys not sure what a girl who does calculus homework for fun can possibly learn in 7th grade. She has everything she needs at home, where nobody can make fun of her rigid routines or her superpowered brain. The equation of Lucys life has already been solved. Unless theres been a miscalculation?
A celebration of friendship, Stacy McAnultys smart and thoughtful middle-grade debut reminds us all to get out of our comfort zones and embrace what makes us different.

Stacy McAnulty: author's other books


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This is a work of fiction Names characters places and incidents either are - photo 1
This is a work of fiction Names characters places and incidents either are - photo 2

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright 2018 by Stacy McAnulty

Cover art copyright 2018 by Jim Tierney

Math problem on .

Photo on iStock.com/joingate

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Random House Childrens Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

Random House and the colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

Visit us on the Web! rhcbooks.com

Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: McAnulty, Stacy, author.

Title: The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl / Stacy McAnulty.

Description: First edition. | New York: Random House, [2018] | Summary: A lightning strike made Lucy, twelve, a math genius, but after years of homeschooling, her grandmother enrolls her in middle school and she learns that life is more than numbers.

Identifiers: LCCN 2017021152 | ISBN 978-1-5247-6757-0 (hardcover) | ISBN 978-1-5247-6758-7 (hardcover library binding) | ISBN 978-0-525-64457-6 (intl) | ISBN 978-1-5247-6759-4 (ebook)

Subjects: | CYAC: Savants (Savant syndrome)Fiction. | Obsessive-compulsive disorderFiction. | Middle schoolsFiction. | SchoolsFiction. | Interpersonal relationsFiction.

Classification: LCC PZ7.M47825255 Mis 2018 | DDC [Fic]dc23

Ebook ISBN9781524767594

Random House Childrens Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

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Contents

For Cora,

finally!

I dont remember the moment that changed my life 4 years ago Call it a side - photo 3

I dont remember the moment that changed my life 4 years ago. Call it a side effect of being struck by lightning. That bolt of electricity burned a small hole in my memory. It also rewired my brain, transforming me into Lucille Fanny Callahan, math genius.

Ive been told the lightning-strike story 42 times, so its almost like my own memory. I see it perfectly: Im at the Crystal Creek Apartments, where Nana and I lived then. (Theres not really a creek, just a big dirty fountain in front.) Im playing outside with a girl named Cecelia when the thunderstorm starts. We live in North Carolina, and storms happen all the time in the spring and summer. We watch from behind a toolshed. For some reason, I climb on the chain link fence. Maybe 8-year-old me was a daredevil; 12-year-old me definitely is not.

Lightning strikes the fence, and the electricity runs through the metal links and then through me. Some of the current even jumps from me to Cecelia. Im knocked out. Cecelia is just knocked over. She runs and gets help. Joe, the maintenance man, uses a defibrillator on me because the electricity from the lightning stopped my heart. The electricity from the defibrillator starts it back up.

I do remember the hospital and the black burns on my pale hands. I remember pretending to be asleep while Nana prayed next to my bed. I only stayed in the hospital 1 night. The doctors did all their tests. They said my heart took a 2- to 5-minute nap. (I hate that no one knows the exact number.) They said I was lucky and Id be fine. Back to normal in a few days. But doctors are wrong sometimes.

A week later, Nana and I were watching TV, and a commercial came on for a used-car dealership. The man was screaming, so I had to pay attention.

Thats $359 a month for 48 months, folks. He was really loud. Nobody beats Frank Fontana. Nobody.

I yelled back, 17,232.

What? Nana asked.

Thats how much the car costs, I said.

Did you read it on the TV?

I just know. 359 times 48 is 17,232.

Nana frowned and shook her head. But then she got up and went to find a calculator.

What were those numbers again? she asked.

I told her, and she punched them in. And the answer?

17,232.

Youre right. She sounded surprised. I wasnt surprised, but I guess I should have been. I mean, I was only in 2nd grade, and we were still learning addition and subtraction.

Nana turned off the television.

Whats 99 times 88? she asked.

8,712. Can we have McDonalds for dinner? I asked.

Nana ignored me and asked another math problem and then another. She kept using bigger numbers, more digits. But it never got harder.

The doctors call my condition acquired savant syndrome. Savant means that my math skills are far beyond normal, and acquired means I wasnt born with this wacky ability. I got it because I was holding a metal fence during a lightning storm. Cecelia didnt get any special powers. We stopped being friends soon after that. I was busy trying to understand my new brain, and in the fall Nana and I moved.

Acquired savant syndrome is caused by brain damage. I cant say that in front of Nana. She thinks its a miracle. My uncle Paul likes to think of it as a superpower, something from a comic book or a movie. But really, Im brain damaged. Part of my left lobe has been turned off, and now my right lobe works overtime.

My condition is really rare. Ive never met anyone with it. Its even rarer in females, and superrare in kids. 1 of my doctors, Dr. Emily Bahri, specializes in savant syndrome. Shes worked with a lady who can make a drawing so realistic it looks like a photo, and with a guy who can speak any language after hearing it only a few times. Im her only acquired savant patient. Years ago, Dr. Bahri did have a guy who, after hitting his head on the bottom of a swimming pool, could suddenly play the piano. Hed never taken a single lesson. But that guy is dead now from old age.

My supercomputer brain can do more than add, subtract, multiply, and divide (which is no more impressive than a $3 calculator). I can also do calendar math. January 14, 1901, was a Monday. July 2, 1975, was a Wednesday. September 30, 2055, will be a Thursday. (Google can do this, too, and almost as fast.)

I also see math. Every number has its own color and shape. Take the number 5its a jelly bean shape, red-brown, like the color of Carolina mud. The number 12 is a set of cream-colored squares. The number 47 is a fluorescent-orange oval. Prime numbers have curves. Non-primes have hard edges.

These colors and shapes make it fun and easy to play with numbers, and I can find patterns in anything from the stock market to baseball games to the price of cereal. Nana likes to bargain shop.

And then theres my number memory ability. I remember every set of numbers I hear or see, like license plates or phone numbers or the digits of pi ().

Pi is my favorite mathematical constant. But because the digits of pi after the point go on forever, I only let myself recite the numbers to the 314th decimal place.

=3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097494459230781640628620899862803482534211706798214808651328230664709384460955058223172535940812848111745028410270193852110555964462294895493038196442881097566593344612847564823378678316527120190914564856692346034861045432664821339360726024914127372458700660631

These digits repeat in my brain even when I dont want them to. Its like getting a song stuck in your head. Only for me, its always the same song. Incredibly annoying, but still beautiful.

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