A Glasshouse of Stars
Meixing and her parents, Ma Ma and Ba Ba, move from China to the New Land, where they will live in the New House left to them by Meixing’s uncle. Meixing calls the house Big Scary. It seems to communicate with her, sometimes glowing pink, or expanding or contracting depending on how Meixing is feeling and what is happening in her life. In the backyard there us a glasshouse with an orange orchard, her deceased uncle’s ghost, and seeds that grow impossibly fast to reveal the planter’s memories. It’s magical and comforting, and Meixing needs both as she struggles with feeling so ungrounded. After a rough start, things at Meixing’s new school begin to improve thanks to the efforts of the one teacher who doesn’t make her feel unwelcome and the two friends Meixing makes in her ESL class—one from Vietnam, one from the Middle East—where all three gain confidence. But things at home, already tense, fall apart when Ba Ba is killed in an accident and pregnant Ma Ma grows severely depressed. The arrival of Meixing’s aunties brings temporary relief, but in the wake of their leaving Ma Ma gets worse, and Meixing feels even more alone. It’s up to readers to decide whether the magic that permeates this story is Meixing’s imagination helping her cope or a tangible part of her world, but what’s clear is that it takes courage to ask for help, and that there are people willing to answer when you do. ©2022 Cooperative Children’s Book Center
CCBC Age Recommendation: Ages 9-12
Age Range:
Grades 3-5 (Ages 8-10)
Grades 6-8 (Ages 11-13)
Format:
Novel
Subjects:
Aunts
Chinese and Chinese Americans
Death and Dying
Depression
Empathy and Compassion
English Language Learners
Families
Friendship
Grief and Loss
Hope and Healing
Immigration and Immigrants
Magical Realism
School
Diversity subjects:
Asian
Middle East
Publisher:
Simon & Schuster
Publish Year: 2021
Pages: 246
ISBN: 9781534488830
CCBC Location: Fiction, Marr