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KRISTA KIM-BAP

A sympathetic portrayal of a typical 11-year-old trying to fit in, with a bit of Korean flair.

Exploring her Korean heritage for a school project leads Canadian fifth-grader Krista Kim into new territory with family, friends, and food.

Being the sole Korean girl in her class seems to have kept Krista out of the popular-girl group. Luckily, her best friend, Jason, who is white, has been by her side since preschool. He even likes to eat kimchi! When one of the cool girls surprisingly extends a birthday-party invitation, everyone encourages Krista to attend. Even her snobby older sister, Tori, reconstructs and adapts a traditional Korean dress, called a hanbok, so Krista will look K-pop fashionable. Encouraged by her sister and grandmother, Krista begins changing to fit into the popular crowd. As the story progresses in first person, Krista realizes she has been given conflicting advice from her loved ones. Tori helps her dress for success, but that attracts unwanted attention. Her blunt and opinionated grandmother, who favors Tori, pushes Krista to step out of character by wearing makeup and more-feminine clothing. Meanwhile, the person who knows her best, Jason, keeps floating farther and farther away. Author Ahn writes authentically about the struggle of assimilation while maintaining cultural tradition in a mostly white elementary school. Krista is not a vibrant heroine, but her struggles with identity and friendship will nonetheless resonate.

A sympathetic portrayal of a typical 11-year-old trying to fit in, with a bit of Korean flair. (Fiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: April 3, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-77260-063-6

Page Count: 176

Publisher: Second Story Press

Review Posted Online: Jan. 21, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2018

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STAY

Entrancing and uplifting.

A small dog, the elderly woman who owns him, and a homeless girl come together to create a tale of serendipity.

Piper, almost 12, her parents, and her younger brother are at the bottom of a long slide toward homelessness. Finally in a family shelter, Piper finds that her newfound safety gives her the opportunity to reach out to someone who needs help even more. Jewel, mentally ill, lives in the park with her dog, Baby. Unwilling to leave her pet, and forbidden to enter the shelter with him, she struggles with the winter weather. Ree, also homeless and with a large dog, helps when she can, but after Jewel gets sick and is hospitalized, Baby’s taken to the animal shelter, and Ree can’t manage the complex issues alone. It’s Piper, using her best investigative skills, who figures out Jewel’s backstory. Still, she needs all the help of the shelter Firefly Girls troop that she joins to achieve her accomplishment: to raise enough money to provide Jewel and Baby with a secure, hopeful future and, maybe, with their kindness, to inspire a happier story for Ree. Told in the authentic alternating voices of loving child and loyal dog, this tale could easily slump into a syrupy melodrama, but Pyron lets her well-drawn characters earn their believable happy ending, step by challenging step, by reaching out and working together. Piper, her family, and Jewel present white; Pyron uses hair and naming convention, respectively, to cue Ree as black and Piper’s friend Gabriela as Latinx.

Entrancing and uplifting. (Fiction. 9-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 13, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-06-283922-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: April 9, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2019

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THE PARKER INHERITANCE

A candid and powerful reckoning of history.

Summer is off to a terrible start for 12-year old African-American Candice Miller.

Six months after her parents’ divorce, Candice and her mother leave Atlanta to spend the summer in Lambert, South Carolina, at her grandmother’s old house. When her grandmother Abigail passed two years ago, in 2015, Candice and her mother struggled to move on. Now, without any friends, a computer, cellphone, or her grandmother, Candice suffers immense loneliness and boredom. When she starts rummaging through the attic and stumbles upon a box of her grandmother’s belongings, she discovers an old letter that details a mysterious fortune buried in Lambert and that asks Abigail to find the treasure. After Candice befriends the shy, bookish African-American kid next door, 11-year-old Brandon Jones, the pair set off investigating the clues. Each new revelation uncovers a long history of racism and tension in the small town and how one family threatened the black/white status quo. Johnson’s latest novel holds racism firmly in the light. Candice and Brandon discover the joys and terrors of the reality of being African-American in the 1950s. Without sugarcoating facts or dousing it in post-racial varnish, the narrative lets the children absorb and reflect on their shared history. The town of Lambert brims with intrigue, keeping readers entranced until the very last page.

A candid and powerful reckoning of history. (Historical mystery. 8-12)

Pub Date: March 27, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-545-94617-9

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Levine/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Dec. 2, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2018

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