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Fathers and daughters. Fiction.
Motion picture industry. India. Mumbai. Fiction.
Mumbai (India). Fiction.
India. Fiction.
Lifelong Texan Abby Spencer, thirteen, had no idea that her absent father is a Bollywood movie star--and none of his millions of adoring fans know he has a daughter. When she departs for Mumbai to finally meet him, Abby doesn't know what she's getting into. The mostly lighthearted plot holds few surprises, but Mumbai's beauty--and poverty--are creditably developed.
Kirkus ReviewsThirteen-year-old Abby Spencer learns that the father she's never met is a Bollywood superstar and travels from Houston to Mumbai to meet him. Abby has been stonewalled by her pie-shop–owning single mother when she's asked about her dad, but hereditary concerns about a bad allergic reaction bring the matter to a head. Rather incredibly, Abby's father, Naveen Kumar—a really nice guy who just happens to be the Brad Pitt of India—immediately accepts the situation and invites her to come to Mumbai to meet him and his loving but ailing mother. Besides the establishment of the likable Abby's mostly smooth relationship with Kumar's household and entourage, the rest of the story involves Abby's reaction to India, her nascent romantic relationship with handsome Shaan and her difficulty remaining mum about the fact that she's Kumar's daughter. Unfortunately, nice is great in a girlfriend, but for characters in a novel, spice is necessary, and there's not enough of it in Bajaj's pleasant but bland first-person cross-cultural tale. Nevertheless, readers will want for Abby what she wants for herself—to find her place in her two families—and should be touched and satisfied by the story's ending. Culturally intriguing but dramatically dry, this story showcases the glamour and grit of Mumbai and gives readers an entertaining glimpse of backstage Bollywood. (Fiction. 9-13)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Abby Spencer, 13, is thrown for a loop when she learns that her estranged father is actually a Bollywood heartthrob, Naveen Kumar. Naveen is equally shocked to hear that he has a daughter (he never saw a letter Abby-s mother sent when she was pregnant), and he invites Abby to visit him in Mumbai. Picture book author Bajaj-s (T Is for Taj Mahal) first middle-grade novel conveys Abby-s mixed emotions about meeting her father, getting her first taste of celebrity, and visiting India, though not always believably (-The muddy color of poverty was interspersed by the bright blue color of tarpaulin people used to keep the rain out,- reflects Abby about Mumbai-s slums). Information about India is laced throughout the story, and although the father/daughter reunion is slightly canned and the dialogue sometimes difficult to swallow (-At first, the hurt and the feeling of rejection felt like shackles that I could never break free,- Abby-s mother says of her failed romance with Naveen), Abby-s extravagant travels and first romance are enough to satisfy and amuse. Ages 9-13. Agent: Jill Corcoran, Jill Corcoran Literary Agency. (Mar.)
School Library JournalGr 5-8 Thirteen-year-old Abby Spencer longs for excitement in her happy but uneventful life as a middle schooler in Houston, Texas. After she has a severe allergic reaction to coconut, Abby finds the excitement for which she has been waiting. Needing details about Abby's inherited medical history, her mother contacts the girl's father for the first time in more than 13 years. Soon after, Abby finds herself traveling to India on a whirlwind trip to meet hima Bollywood film starfor the first time. If not for the Indian setting, Abby Spencer would be a typical, cute-but-nothing-special story of a young girl meeting her estranged father. Abby is a sweet, relatable character, but it's the lush backdrop that sets this book apart. The narrator describes the beauty and the extreme poverty of Mumbai. She feeds beggars and street dogs and reflects on her own day-to-day luxuries in comparison. She learns some Hindi words and phrases, tastes Indian foods, and spends a day on a Bollywood film set. A light, clean romance adds a second plot thread, but this story is mainly about the teen's exploration of her Indian heritage and the relationships between Abby and her parents. Pair with Narinder Dhami's Bollywood Babes (Random, 2006) or Kashmira Sheth's Boys Without Names (HarperCollins, 2010).— Leigh Collazo, Ed Willkie Middle School, Fort Worth, TX
Voice of Youth AdvocatesWhen thirteen-year-old Abby Spencer has a severe allergic reaction to coconut, she finally learns about the father she has never known. Abby's mother explains she and Kabir Kapur were in love in college, but when they graduated, he returned to his home in India. Abby's mother did not want to move, and did not realize until after he had left that she was pregnant. When she wrote to him, he never answered. Googling Kabir Kapur, Abby and her mother suddenly find themselves looking at the top Bollywood box office star of the day, Naveen Kumar.á After all these years, Abby's mother manages to contact Kabir, now Naveen, through his production company. He is stunned to learn he has a daughter he never knew about, having never received her letter. Both Naveen and his ailing mother are eager to meet Abby, so she travels to Mumbai. There, she not only meets her father and grandmother, but the also the people closest to them, including her father's co-star and girlfriend, and a cute boy named Shaan. Abby learns more about the world and her place in it in the process.Abby Spencer Goes to Bollywood is a lighthearted exploration of human connections across distance and cultures. While surprisingly problem-free, the characters are endearing and the story is engrossing. Young readers who enjoy light, realistic fiction with a touch of romance will enjoy spending time with Abby.Kim Carter.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
Finalist 2014 Cybils Award: Middle Grade Fiction
2015 Crystal Kite Winter (Texas/Oklahoma Chapter)
Thirteen-year-old Abby discovers that her long-lost father is Bollywood's biggest movie star. She travels to Mumbai to reconnect with the family she never knew.
What thirteen-year-old Abby wants most is to meet her father. She just never imagined he would be a huge film starin Bollywood! Now she's traveling to Mumbai to get to know her famous father. Abby is overwhelmed by the culture clash, the pressures of being the daughter of India's most famous celebrity, and the burden of keeping her identity a secret. But as she learns to navigate her new surroundings, she just might discover where she really belongs.