Culture

Room to Dream

Room to Dream

Room to Dream Kelly YangIn the book Room to Dream by Kelly Yang, the third installment of the Front Desk series, Mia and her family finally saved up enough money to go to China. When she arrives, she is linked with an editor of a Chinese middle school newspaper by her grandfather. She starts writing about her own life, with all the drama happening with it. The editor says that is good. Mia is not as sure. 

She goes back home, only to see that Calivista is running out of business and that her best friend Lupe got placed in high school math. She is devastated to hear that the Magna hotels bought the two hotels next to them, and their cleaning services don’t even clean everything. Mia eventually works out a plan, and it works! People are coming back to Calivista, and Lupe can help out again.

I liked this book because it encourages readers to go with their dreams and achieve them, proving that you can do anything. Mia faces challenges such as not being able to see her best friend, and Jason turning his back on her. She finds a way to fix these problems, while managing the Motel. 

I didn’t like how ignorant Mia was. When her mom was pretending to be rich to impress another woman, Mia gets angry and blurts out things that make them sound poor. I understand why she would be angry, because she doesn’t care what others think but she should have thought about her mom’s feelings. After working and scrubbing bathrooms for weeks straight, when she finally has an opportunity to hang out with cool people at the mall, Mia ruins it for her.

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Three Keys

Three Keys

by Kelly Yang

Three Keys book cover Kelly YangIn the book Three Keys, Mia’s motel is a success, with no vacancy for over five days. Lupe, her best friend, comes over every day to help out at the front desk, to check in new customers. They go to school, and they have a new teacher for 6th grade, Ms. Welch. Mia thinks Ms. Welch is very close minded since she supports this new law to not allow illegal immigrants into school. Since Lupe is an illegal immigrant, she won’t be able to go to school anymore, but she likes going to school, so Mia and her set up a support club just for anyone who wants to talk about their feelings.

I liked this book because it talks about real world issues and how illegal immigrants are scapegoats. It’s a good book that gives us a good perspective on what is happening right now in our society. I liked this story because of the plot. Many books are very predictable but this was not. One example is that You would think mia’ motel would get sold but it doesn’t because she thinks of a brilliant idea to save it. I also liked how original this book was. I never read a book like this, and I liked it very much. All the little plots were tied together in the end, and it made a lot more sense.

Overall I thought this was an inspiring book.

Read my review on Kelly Yang’s third book of the motel series, Room to Dream.

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Clap When You Land

Clap When You Land

by Elizabeth Acevado

Clap When You Land book coverIn the book Clap When You Land, the father of two 15 year old girls dies in a plane crash. Camilo is from the Dominican Republic and Yahari is from New York. Both are devastated after hearing the news of the crash. As each family tries to sort things out, the families find that the two girls are sisters. The father had a secret second life with another family. The realization of the truth sparks confusion and fury.

The sisters find each other on the internet and slowly bond as friends. Camilo wants a chance to get her family out of poverty by getting a good education. Yahari goes to meet Camilo to help her get into a college in America. They attend their father’s funeral and fly back to New York together to finish high school.

The author formatted the novel like poetry which was unfamiliar to me, but it was nice to see something different. After more research, I found that many authors formatted their words like her.  I enjoyed how the narrative point of view switched between the two sisters because it spread the story out more evenly, developing the characters better. Other books that follow this format are The Girl That Fell From the Sky, and Refugee, both which I really enjoyed.

I liked the plot of the book because the climax was unexpected, motivating me to read more. After the first few pages, I didn’t want to stop reading because every chapter ended with a cliffhanger. For example, in one chapter Yahari found a “very bad piece of paper”, not telling us that those were the papers of her father’s marriage to another woman.

Overall, it was a much better book than I thought it would be. I would recommend this book to mature teens because they may be able to relate to it better than younger children.

 

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Parachutes

Parachutes

by Kelly Yang

Parachutes by Kelly Yang book cover Parachutes by Kelly Yang is a great book for young adults. In this book, Claire, the daughter of a rich Asian family, is told that she will be moving to the US. Dani, the daughter of a Filipino immigrant, will soon become Claire’s host-sister and classmate. Dani has a favorite teacher named Mr. Connelly, who is the coach for the debate club. He really likes Dani’s talents and always invites her to eat with him off campus. Claire, who first seems bratty and spoiled, is actually very smart and after being placed in English 1 for international students, she tests out into the regular English 3 class.  They both face many problems, but they also have many similarities. Many characters in this book are Asian students studying in America without their parents nearby. Multiple times they are harassed because of their “parachute” identity.

I like this book because it is very realistic with real life references, such as the Me-too movement and Crazy Rich Asians movie. The author tells us that this book is based on her three years in college and how she was harassed and assaulted, so this book is a warning telling us to be careful. Yang describes everything in a lot of detail, which is helpful but at the same time, I wish there weren’t as much. Many parts in this book describe sexual harassment, so when I read it, I regret reading it because it makes me feel uncomfortable. 

Another part I like is how the chapters are not numbered, instead they switch back and forth between Claire and Dani in first person perspectives. I like these kinds of books because when one character ends, it ends on a cliffhanger, making you want to read more but you are paused by another character who introduces a new problem, creating a new cliffhanger.

One part I don’t enjoy as much is where Dani started becoming uncomfortable with Mr. Connelly, but doesn’t share what’s going on, only trying to talk to him less. When something is bothering you, you should tell a friend and an adult so you can feel better and figure out what to do. Dani tells her best friend Ming, and Ming says that it’s ok to say no. Dani takes this advice, and the next time Mr. Connelly invites her to lunch, she says no. I liked that part because it shows that she is standing up for herself.

Overall, I think this book is worth reading.

Posted by Hellen in Books, Reviews, 0 comments
Three Girls from Bronzeville – A Uniquely American Story of Race, Fate, and Sisterhood

Three Girls from Bronzeville – A Uniquely American Story of Race, Fate, and Sisterhood

by Dawn Turner

Three Girls from Bronzeville by Dawn Turner book coverIn the book Three Girls from Bronzeville by Dawn Turner, three black girls by the names of Dawn, Kim, and Debra grow up in a small community in Chicago in the 1980s, with Kim only several years younger than Dawn and Debra. Kim is Dawn’s little sister while Debra is her best friend. 

I liked the quote, “Prophet told us a storm was coming.” because it symbolized the part where Kim dies. I think that’s important because Kim’s death deeply impacted Dawn’s life. The storm represents the death of Kim and the sorrow that sweeps over the family. The Prophet works at the church they go to.

I disliked this book because it was too sad. Kim died from a drug overdose, Dawn was struggling with depression, and the Blacks were being discriminated against. They were all very sad events. It was also very difficult to comprehend, with many words I didn’t understand.

I thought the book was realistic, as if it could happen to any one of us right now. We could be going to school and our friends quit doing bad things, our sisters start them, and we are stuck in the middle.

Overall, it was ok. I recommend this book to teenagers in high school and college because it was hard to understand

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Be Prepared

Be Prepared

by Vera Brosgol

Recently, I just finished an amazing graphic novel named Be Prepared by Vera Brosgol. It’s a slightly modified memoir from the author’s childhood. She came from Russia to America when she was five, and longed to fit in. Every summer, her American friends would go to a camp while she was stuck at home with her brother and baby sister, but this year was going to be different. Vera was going to go to a camp as well. A Russian camp. A place where she thought she would be accepted.

She arrived there in July, ready to have fun, but she was unaware of how disappointed she would be in the next coming days. She met her cabin mates, both named Sasha, and both 4 years older than she. No one wanted to be her friend, and the outhouse smelled terrible. Everyone treated her like an outcast, until she started to gift her drawings to everyone. They instantly wanted to be friends with her.

But, buying friends wasn’t the right way to do it. That’s why, when Vera took some of Sasha’s skittles, thinking her new friend wouldn’t mind, she got the whole cabin in trouble, and now no one wanted to play with her. But later in the book, Vera found a better friend. Someone who loved drawing and nature as much as she. 

This book reminded me heavily of an outdoor camp I went to this past summer. I went there with my friend from home, so I did not need to worry about losing any, and I definitely gained some more new friends. I had a lot of fun there, and all the counselors were very nice.

I thought that the author’s palette for this book was intriguing.The green really roughed out the nature in the camp, which I thought was unique. The ink also looked cool with the green and shades of grey. It just focused on the green parts in the scene a bit more.

Overall, I really enjoyed this book, and I think that it is fit for children ages 5 to 14.

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Life of Pi

Life of Pi

by Yann Martel

Life of Pi is about a boy names Piscine Molitor Patel, who became stranded in a lifeboat with three dead animals and a tiger named Richard Parker. His family were planning on moving to Canada on a cargo ship put sadly, the ship sank, killing his parents and brother. The crew threw him off the ship to the lifeboat before being swept into the ocean themselves. On the boat Pi saw a zebra with a broken leg, an orangutan, and a hyena. The hyena killed the zebra and orangutan but then the tiger jumped out and killed the hyena. Pi learned to fish and tame Richard Parker while drifting for seven months.

I liked how quickly Pi adapted to life on a lifeboat with Richard Parker. He cared for Richard by hunting and feeding the tiger. Pi was a strict vegetarian before the ship wreck but now he eats raw fish and meerkats. This is very brave of him. Since he could’ve died, he knew he would have to eat meat to survive.

I also liked Pi’s comparison of animal world and humanity. Near the end of the book, people from the Japanese company who owned the ship came to ask Pi questions about his journey. They thought his story was unrealistic because it’s impossible for anyone to survive at sea for that long. So, Pi retold the story but replacing the animals with people. Pi outsmarted their skepticism and asked which story feels more interesting and natural. They replied the one with the animals and that’s how the story made it to the press.

One thing I didn’t like about the book is the excessive detail about gory or gruesome events. It’s violent and I felt that the author was magnifying the violence with sentences like “his blood oozed out all over me and Richard Parker”, and many vivid descriptions of killing. The cannibalism told in the people-version of the story is especially disturbing.

Posted by Hellen in Books, Reviews, 0 comments