TeachingBooks
Marcelo in the Real World

Book Resume

for Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork

Professional book information and credentials for Marcelo in the Real World.

Seventeen-year-old Marcelo Sandoval is looking forward to a summer tending the ponies ...read more

  • Booklist:
  • Grades 9 - 12
  • School Library Journal:
  • Grades 8 and up
  • Publisher's Weekly:
  • Ages 14 and up
  • TeachingBooks:*
  • Grades 9-12
  • Word Count:
  • 83,116
  • Lexile Level:
  • 700L
  • ATOS Reading Level:
  • 4.6
  • Cultural Experience:
  • Disability
  • Latino (US / Canada)
  • Genre:
  • Realistic Fiction
  • Year Published:
  • 2009

The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.

Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).

From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)

Seventeen-year-old Marcelo Sandoval is looking forward to a summer tending the ponies in his private school’s stables. But Marcelo’s dad wants him to spend the summer working at his law firm, and to attend public school in the fall. For autistic Marcelo, the idea of moving beyond the safety and security of familiarity and routine is scary, but he and his dad work out a compromise: Marcelo will work at the law firm and then decide for himself where he’ll go to school in the fall. “Marcelo is afraid,” he tells his mother. “I know,” she tells him. “That’s the point.” Francisco X. Stork’s debut novel is an astonishing look inside the mind of a teen with autism. Marcelo is a blend of acute awareness and naïveté, stating truths with frankness even as he struggles to understand the motivations behind much of what he sees. As he navigates new relationships and routines, Marcelo discovers that good and bad, right and wrong, can get muddied and complicated. Nothing illustrates this more than when he discovers his father’s firm is defending a company that was negligent, leading to the serious injury of a young girl. Marcelo’s growth is marked by his ability to move more assuredly through a world that is complicated for everyone, all the while remaining true to the voice inside himself. (Age 14 and older)

CCBC Choices 2010 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2010. Used with permission.

From Horn Book

July 1, 2009
Seventeen-year-old Marcelo is at the high-functioning end of the autism spectrum. A summer job in the mailroom at his father's law firm tests Marcelo's coping and social skills, moral compass, and loyalty. His brave journey into "the real world" will engender a protective instinct in readers, ratcheting up the tension as the plot winds to its satisfying denouement.

(Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

From Library Journal

June 22, 2009
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time meets John Grisham-on page and screen. Seventeen-year-old Marcelo experiences the world differently from most people. His father, a high-powered lawyer, makes a deal with him. Marcelo can finish his senior year in a school for children with cognitive disorders if he will work a summer in the "real world" of his legal firm. There, Marcelo finds a picture of a girl with half a face that compels him to look more closely at a liability litigation involving the firm's biggest client. Why It Is for Us: Marcelo's first-person narrative affords unique insight into the fascinating thought patterns of a likable character who's not quite like us. For Marcelo, crossing the street takes concentrated effort, but religious philosophy and music interpretation come as natural as breathing. The legal drama is a vehicle for larger questions of friendship, loyalty, and trust. As most readers know, navigating the complexities of the real world is not for the weak of heart.-Angelina Benedetti, King Cty. Lib. Syst., WA

Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

From Booklist

Starred review from April 1, 2009
Grades 9-12 *Starred Review* Seventeen-year-old Marcelo is on the very high-functioning end of the autism spectrum. He prefers an ordered existence, which includes taking care of the ponies at Paterson, his special school; reading religious books; and listening to the music in his head. Then his father, a high-powered attorney, insists that Marcelo spend the summer working in his law firm. If he does his best, Marcelo will be given the choice of returning to Paterson or being mainstreamed. After finding a photo of a disfigured girl injured by the negligence of his fathers biggest client, Marcelo must decide whether to follow his conscience and try to right the wrong, even as he realizes that decision will bring irrevocable changes to his life and to his relationship with his father. Thatstory alone would be thought-provoking, but Stork offers much, much more. Readers are invited inside Marcelos head, where thoughts are so differently processed, one can almost feel them stretch and twist as the summer progresses and Marcelo changes. Much of the impetus for change comes from his relationship with his mailroom boss, Jasmine. In a chapter near the end, Jasmine takes Marcelo to the family farm in Vermont, where he meets her raunchy father. Its a scene many writers wouldnt have bothered with, but the layers it adds mark Stork as a true storyteller. Shot with spirtualism, laced with love, and fraught withconundrums, this book, like Marcelo himself, surprises.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

From School Library Journal

Starred review from March 1, 2009
Gr 8 Up-Like Christopher Boone, the protagonist in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (Doubleday, 2003), Marcelo Sandoval is a high-functioning, extremely self-aware teenager with Asperger's syndrome. He has an empathetic mother and a father, Arturo, who appears to be less empathetic as he pushes Marcelo to live in the "real world." The form the real world takes is a summer job in the mailroom at Arturo's law office. The teen is forced to think on his feet, multitask, and deal with duplicitous people who try to take advantage of him. Over the course of a summer, Marcelo learns that he can function in society; he is especially surprised to find that he can learn to read people's expressions, even to the point of knowing whom he can and cannot trust. Writing in a first-person narrative, Stork does an amazing job of entering Marcelo's consciousness and presenting him as a dynamic, sympathetic, and wholly believable character. At a little over 300 pages, the story drags at some points, bogging down in the middle. However, the dilemmas that Marcelo faces are told in a compelling fashion, which helps to keep readers engaged.Wendy Smith-D'Arezzo, Loyola College, Baltimore, MD

Copyright 2009 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

From Horn Book

Starred review from March 1, 2009
Seventeen-year-old Marcelo Sandoval marches to the beat of a different drummer -- literally. He perceives internal music in his head; he is obsessed with religion; he has difficulty interacting with others -- behaviors that place him at the high-functioning end of the autism spectrum. He is happy at Paterson, the special-education school he's attended since first grade, and life is comfortable. Then his father proposes an unwelcome deal: if Marcelo proves successful in "the real world" by working in the mailroom at his law firm over the summer, he will be allowed to choose between returning to his beloved Paterson or attending -- as his father prefers -- a regular high school. But as Marcelo begins his summer job, he finds his moral compass tested just as much as his coping and social skills. His loyalty is divided on multiple levels: between his father and the law firm, between a plaintiff and the law firm, between the privileged son of his father's law partner who befriends him with dubious motives and the beautiful co-worker who gradually comes to care deeply for him. While the voice is reminiscent of the narrator of Haddon's Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time -- both have an appealing blend of naivete and wisdom -- Marcelo has the superior character development. His inspiring, brave journey into the real world will likely engender a fierce protective instinct in readers, ratcheting up the tension as the plot winds to its sweet, satisfying denouement. It is the rare novel that reaffirms a belief in goodness; rarer still is one that does so this emphatically.

(Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

From Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from January 5, 2009
Artfully crafted characters form the heart of Stork’s (The Way of the Jaguar
) judicious novel. Marcelo Sandoval, a 17-year-old with an Asperger’s-like condition, has arranged a job caring for ponies at his special school’s therapeutic-riding stables. But he is forced to exit his comfort zone when his high-powered father steers Marcelo to work in his law firm’s mailroom (in return, Marcelo can decide whether to stay in special ed, as he prefers, or be mainstreamed for his senior year). Narrating with characteristically flat inflections and frequently forgetting to use the first person, Marcelo manifests his anomalies: he harbors an obsession with religion (he regularly meets with a plainspoken female rabbi, though he’s not Jewish); hears “internal” music; and sleeps in a tree house. Readers enter his private world as he navigates the unfamiliar realm of menial tasks and office politics with the ingenuity of a child, his voice never straying from authenticity even as the summer strips away some of his differences. Stork introduces ethical dilemmas, the possibility of love, and other “real world” conflicts, all the while preserving the integrity of his characterizations and intensifying the novel’s psychological and emotional stakes. Not to be missed. Ages 14–up.

From Kirkus

What a marvelous story! Narrator Lincoln Hoppe finds his way into this teen's struggle with Asperger's syndrome with a soft hesitancy that's at once appealing and believable. Seventeen-year-old Marcelo must work in his father's law office for the summer in order to return to the special needs school where he feels so comfortable. Dad is about to get more than he bargained for. Hoppe breezes through the myriad situations encountered by this unusual young man in the intense environment of a Boston legal firm while capturing Marcelo's innocence with a delicate subtlety that remains pitch perfect throughout. Part love story, part legal drama, the story of Marcelo features an old-fashioned search for justice that will make listeners stand up and cheer. D.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine

Marcelo in the Real World was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.

United States Lists (24)

Arizona

  • 2013 Grand Canyon Reader Award -- Teen category

Arkansas

  • 2010-11 Arkansas Teen Book Award

District of Columbia

  • Capitol Choices 2010

Illinois

  • Abraham Lincoln High School Award, 2014, for Grades 9-12

Indiana

  • 2011-2012 Eliot Rosewater Indiana High School Book Award

Maryland

  • 2011-2012 Black-Eyed Susan Book Award

Michigan

  • 2010 Thumbs Up! Award
  • 2010-2011 Great Lakes Great Books Award

Nevada

  • Nevada Reading Week 2023 Book List, Grades 9-12

New Hampshire

  • 2012 The Flume: NH Teen Reader's Choice Award, Grades 9-12

New Jersey

  • 2012 Garden State Teen Book Awards, High School Fiction

Oregon

  • 2011-2012 Oregon Reader's Choice Award—Senior Division
  • 2013 Oregon Battle of the Books, Grades 9-12

Pennsylvania

  • 2010 KSRA Young Adult Book Award – High School List

South Carolina

  • 2010-11 SCASL Young Adult Book Awards

Tennessee

  • 2011-2012 Volunteer State Book Awards—Young Adult Division

Texas

  • 2010-11 Tayshas Reading List

Vermont

  • 2011-2012 Green Mountain Book Award

Virginia

  • 2011-2012 Virginia Readers' Choice, High School

Wisconsin

  • 2010-11 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades 9-12
  • 2010-11 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades PK-12
  • 2010-2011 Battle of the Books — Senior Division
  • 2014-2015 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades 9-12
  • 2014-2015 Read On Wisconsin Book Club, Grades PK-12

Francisco X. Stork on creating Marcelo in the Real World:

This primary source recording with Francisco X. Stork was created to provide readers insights directly from the book's creator into the backstory and making of this book.

Listen to this recording on TeachingBooks

Citation: Stork, Francisco X.. "Meet-the-Author Recording | Marcelo in the Real World." TeachingBooks, https://school.teachingbooks.net/bookResume/t/14616. Accessed 03 April, 2026.

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This Book Resume for Marcelo in the Real World is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.

*Grade levels are determined by certified librarians utilizing editorial reviews and additional materials. Relevant age ranges vary depending on the learner, the setting, and the intended purpose of a book.

Retrieved from TeachingBooks on April 03, 2026. © 2001-2026 TeachingBooks.net, LLC. All rights reserved by rights holders.