Emmeline randomly found
Pavi Sharma's Guide to Going Home by Bridget Farr on the shelf at the library, and when I read the inside of the book jacket, I knew it was my kind of book. The description says, "Twelve-year-old Pavi Sharma is an expert at the Front Door Face: the perfect mix of puppy dog eyes and a lemonade smile, the exact combination to put foster parents at ease as they open their front door to welcome you in. After being bounced around between foster families and shelter stays, Pavi is a foster care expert, and she runs a 'business' teaching other foster kids all she has learned. With a wonderful foster family in mom Marjorie and brother Hamilton, things are looking up for Pavi. Then Pavi meets Meridee: a new five-year-old foster kid, who is getting placed at Pavi's first horrendous foster home. Pavi knows no one will trust a kid about what happened on Lovely Lane, even one as mature as she is, so it's up to her to save Meridee."
This was such a good read! I think I finished it in like a day because I was just super interested in the story and loved the characters. I also have been so busy reading books for various book clubs lately that it was refreshing to just read a book for me. This was one of those books where the kids don't tell adults things that they really should, which kind of drives me crazy, but that's kind of what makes all these middle grade stories work. :) I thought Pavi was such a cool person, and I loved her relationship with both Hamilton and Santos. Definitely recommend this book. I only wish that the author was either Indian-American or a foster child herself, but it sounds like the based the story on her husband, who is ethnically Indian and grew up in the Canadian foster care system. So definitely still some authenticity there.
Rating: * * * (3/3 = Loved it)
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