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THE MANY MEANINGS OF MEILAN

Underscores the importance of personal stories.

Twelve-year-old Meilan is a gifted storyteller, but she’s unprepared for the chain of unfortunate events unleashed by a bedtime story she invents.

After her cousin asks how the Golden Phoenix, their Taiwanese American family’s bakery, got its name, Meilan spins an imaginative tale. Before long, there are squabbles over money, the business is sold, and Meilan, her parents, and her recently widowed grandfather are leaving Boston. Moving to mostly White Redbud, Ohio, exposes Meilan to microaggressions that begin when the school principal dubs her “Melanie” after mentioning Disney’s Mulan in reference to her name. Meilan’s alienation and dislocation compel her to reframe her familial narrative using various interpretations of her original name, inspiring the overlay of a Chinese fairy-tale world in which a fox demon, a snake sprite, and a household ghost co-exist with a phoenix, a tree spirit, superstitions, and adages spelled out in tone-marked Hanyu Pinyin. Meanwhile, Meilan’s red Doc Martens and newfound friends, with whom she weathers a tornado, evoke a quintessential American tale associated with homecoming. The dizzying array of imagery and references reflect this work’s ambitious scope and its not entirely successful attempt to weave together multiple conceits amid explicit efforts to tackle racism as the protagonist makes a new home and finds her chosen family. Unfortunately, the story’s important messages are weakened by haphazard pacing, and readers may struggle to follow the logic of Meilan’s internal monologues.

Underscores the importance of personal stories. (author’s note, glossary, further reading) (Fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 17, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-593-11128-4

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Kokila

Review Posted Online: May 31, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2021

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THE HOUSE WITH NO KEYS

From the Delta Games series , Vol. 2

Breathless action and engaging puzzles make this a page-turner.

In this follow-up to The Mystery of Locked Rooms (2024), young escape artists rashly accept a mysterious game designer’s offer to get a sneak peek at a challenging new set of escape rooms.

Worried by announcements of a new, high-tech fun house that might drive their employer, the Delta Game, out of business, middle schooler Sarah and her friends Hannah and West jump at the chance to give Mystery Mansion a try before it opens to the public. More’s at stake than they suspect, but Currie dispenses with the backstory in a perfunctory way at the end. Her real focus—and the chief appeal here—lies in the set of fiendishly clever escape rooms that she’s devised for the trio and the team dynamics that carry them through: Hannah is the reckless thrill seeker, West is the observant brainiac, and anxiety-prone Sarah has a knack for making correct choices. The story cranks up the suspense, and the Deltas call on all the courage and smarts they can muster, sweeping readers along as they work urgently against the clock to complete the course. Hannah is cued white, West is described as dark-haired, and narrator Sarah isn’t physically described.

Breathless action and engaging puzzles make this a page-turner. (Mystery. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 2025

ISBN: 9781464234941

Page Count: 248

Publisher: Sourcebooks Young Readers

Review Posted Online: Aug. 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2025

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NURA AND THE IMMORTAL PALACE

An enthralling fantasy debut exploring exploitation by those in power.

Will 12-year-old Nura be able to outsmart the trickster jinn and save herself and her friends?

Nura lives in the fictional Pakistani town of Meerabagh, where she has worked mining mica to help support her family of five—her mother, herself, and her three younger siblings—since her father’s death. In the mines she has the company of her best friend, Faisal, who is teased by other kids for his stutter, and she enjoys small pleasures like splurging on gulab jamun. Although Maa wants Nura to stop working and attend school, she has no interest in classroom learning and hopes to save up to send her younger siblings to school instead so they can break the family’s cycle of poverty. Following a mining accident in which Faisal and others are lost in the rubble, Nura goes to the rescue. In her quest, she is plunged into the magical, glittering jinn realm, where nothing is as it seems. The author seamlessly weaves into the worldbuilding of the story commentary on real-life problems such as the ravages of child labor and systems that perpetuate inequities. An informative author’s note further explores present-day global cycles of oppression as well as the life-changing power of education. This action-packed story set in a Muslim community moves at a fast pace, with evocative writing that brings the fantasy world to life and lyrical imagery to describe emotions.

An enthralling fantasy debut exploring exploitation by those in power. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: July 5, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-7595-5795-6

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Jimmy Patterson/Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: April 26, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2022

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