Friday, March 10, 2023

We Are Not Free, by Traci Chee

     From the author of the wonderful Reader trilogy (Sea of Ink and Gold) comes this very powerful historical fiction story about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War 2. Chee's book tells the story from the perspective of 14 different teenagers, all living in San Francisco until they and their families are torn from their homes, businesses, and lives and sent to live in makeshift prisons in different parts of the country. Once Japan bombs Pearl Harbor, all Japanese Americans are seen as potential enemies, potential spies, and they become targets of American hate and prejudice, much like Middle Eastern-looking Americans did when 9-11 happened. The history of the United States is at once great and terrible, and Chee peels back the cover of one of the more terrible elements of our history.

    Years ago I read a book about two boys whose friendship was tested when Japanese Americans became "suspects" during WW2, but for the life of me I cannot remember the title (but I can still picture the cover!). However, there are some amazing authors writing about the Asian American experience, and if you want more like We Are Not Free, check out any books by Grace Lin, Cynthia Kadohata, or Under the Blood Red Sun by Graham Salisbury. I love books that create windows into lives I will never live, but by reading them we hopefully become more compassionate people. And who doesn't want a world with more caring and compassion in it?

    We Are Not Free is a strong and powerful book, and because of the way Chee structures each chapter to be the voice of a different teen, it reads almost like a book of short stories. It took me a chapter or two to settle into the rhythm of the story, but once I did, I could not read this fast enough! This will warm your heart - and break your heart - all at once. Written more for older middle grade readers than younger, everyone will get something important from this story. 5 paws!



Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Starfish, by Lisa Fipps

     A debut novel by author Lisa Fipps, this book tells the story of Ellie who, ever since she wore a whale swimsuit and cannon balled into a pool at her 5th birthday party, has been teased, bullied and labeled by others for her weight. Girls at school, her bother, and perhaps most impactful, her mother. Ellie does her best to cope, dodging barbs from seemingly all directions as she tries simply to be a middle school-age girl, doing things young teens do as they grow up. She finds refuge in the pool, where she feels weightless in a weight-obsessed world. In the water, she can take up all the space she wants, like a starfish!

    Starfish follows Ellie from being a victim to finding her voice, with ALL of her bullies. It is a wonderful book, written in verse, and author Fipps writes at the end of the story that even though the attacks Ellie survives seem over the top, that she writes this story from experience, which makes the book all the more impactful. 

    I read a lot of books, especially for a pug, and a lot of books show me lives different from my own. Those other lives and experiences can be because of race (Kwame Alexander), gender (Melissa, Lily and Dunkin), physical appearance (Wonder), and many other factors. I don't recall reading many (any?) books where weight issues take the stage, but Starfish leads the pack of well-written books tackling this issue. Read this, it is an important story! 5 paws!




Fantasy Baseball, by Alan Gratz

     It's spring, readers, and baseball is in the air - my favorite sport of all time! I'm still waiting for a professional team to ...