Saturday, September 10, 2022

JENNIFER CHAN IS NOT ALONE by Tae Keller

 

Jennifer Chan Is Not Alone by Tae Keller

Realistic Fiction, Bullying, UFO's, 

277 pages

Description

Horn Book Magazine (May/June, 2022)

Twelve-year-old narrator Mallory is distressed to learn that her neighbor and sometime-friend Jennifer Chan has disappeared. Having recently moved to town (deemed "Nowhereville" Florida by Mallory), Jennifer -- who is Chinese American; lives with a young, single mother; and wholeheartedly believes in aliens -- doesn't fit in at snobby, homogenous Gibbons Academy. Socially insecure Mallory (whose own mom is "half Korean") and her two mean-girl besties had bullied Jennifer. Alternating between "Now" and "Then," and with heavy foreshadowing of something known as "the Incident," Mallory slowly, guiltily, reveals what happened, and how she's determined to make things right. Occasional interspersed journal entries from "Jennifer Chan's Guide to the Universe" provide the missing girl's thoughts on family, friendship, and the inevitability of extraterrestrial existence, plus how to make contact; the story's climax leaves room for interpretation regarding her success. Keller (Newbery Medalist for When You Trap a Tiger) writes with uncommon compassion for all of her characters -- even the cruel-seeming ones -- addressing such issues as peer pressure, individuality, identity, and microaggressions from a variety of perspectives. A heartfelt and hopeful appended note provides further details about the author's motivation and methodology. Elissa Gershowitz May/June 2022 p.146


My Comments

I absolutely loved this one! Keller is a superb writer who writes from different perspectives with compassion. Her characters are realistic and well developed. She is a master of showing, not telling. Jennifer's fervent belief in UFO's adds excitement to the plot, but also sheds light on how desperately Jennifer misses her father who died of cancer, the reason for their move to a small town from Chicago. The quest to find UFO's is the link to her dad.The vicious bullying is painful to read, but Jennifer's courage and belief in herself is inspiring. This should be on summer reading lists. It would be a great book for literature circles or classroom discussions.

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