Can a worrier really become a warrior? Nine-year-old Erik SheepflattenerтАЩs life motto is Avoid Stuff,┬аdespite his familyтАЩs attempts to bring out his inner Viking. In this outrageously quirky, ""funny and perceptive""* novel . . .┬аwhy not be both? (*Booklist, starred review)
Meet Erik Sheepflattener.┬аEach member of his modern-day Viking-heritage family has a motto to live by. His parents have Family┬аand Pride. His sisters have Conquer┬аand┬аWin. His grandfather has Turnip. But Erik is developing a motto he can truly believe in: Avoid Stuff.
Mostly, ErikтАЩs fierce family ignores or discounts him, especially when he tries to say no.┬аBut while spending the summer with his rough-and-tumble cousins and older sister Brunhilde in Minnesota, axe-wielding Bru gets the┬аidea to name and Conquer┬аall of ErikтАЩs fears. Will anyone hear him say no┬аbefore itтАЩs too late? And will Erik end up defined by his fears, or by his fearless family?┬а
Erik vs. Everything┬аis an adventurous, humorous, and heartfelt┬аromp about┬аfinding your place, speaking up for yourself, and pursuing what you love . . . even when it scares you.
Christina Uss is scared of a lot of things, but still believes the world is full of nice surprises. Her first novel, The Adventures of a Girl Called Bicycle, was a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year and received starred reviews from Shelf Awareness, Booklist, Kirkus Reviews, and Publisher's Weekly. Christina lives with her family, her cats, and a scurry of backyard squirrels in Massachusetts.