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THE PROBLEM WITH BEING SLIGHTLY HEROIC by Uma Krishnaswami

THE PROBLEM WITH BEING SLIGHTLY HEROIC

by Uma Krishnaswami ; illustrated by Abigail Halpin

Pub Date: Aug. 13th, 2013
ISBN: 978-1-4424-2328-2
Publisher: Atheneum

Best friends Dini and Maddie and Bollywood movie star Dolly Singh, from Krishnaswami’s The Grand Plan to Fix Everything (2011), return for a breathless dance through Washington, D.C.

Dini’s visit from India, where she’s been living, back to Takoma Park, Md., reunites the sixth-graders. They plan to take part in the grand opening of the star’s latest film, part of an Indian festival at the Smithsonian. But this dance doesn’t progress smoothly: The flighty star has lost her passport; she wants an elephant for the festival parade; she needs rose-petal milkshakes and a really nice cake for her party. And there’s more. The caterers have canceled. Maddie hopes her new friend Brenna can be part of their performance. When Mini, a young elephant in the National Zoo, takes off down Connecticut Avenue, the tranquilizing dart meant for her hits Dolly’s husband. Jumping from one scene to another, the fast-paced, present-tense narrative conveys Dini’s jittery jet-lagged feeling as she struggles to choreograph her own steps and to make Dolly happy. Just as the star drops jewelry, the author flings pieces of plot everywhere, but she pulls it all back together in fine Bollywood style. Halpin’s grayscale illustrations (final art not seen) add flavor.

Bits of Indian culture and Bollywood drama add delicious undertones to this confection, a treat for middle-grade readers.

(Fiction. 9-12)