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Middle schools. Fiction.
Schools. Fiction.
Best friends. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Racially mixed people. Fiction.
East Indian Americans. Fiction.
Mustaches. Fiction.
In the litany of indignities wrought by puberty, the unwelcome appearance of female facial hair gets short shrift in middle-grade fiction. Wientge candidly takes up this topic and others in her earnest debut about soon-to-be sixth-grader Karma Khullar. There's a lot of upheaval in Karma's life as summer draws to a close, and sprouting a mustache is just icing on the cake. Her father has recently become unemployed, and her mother's time is being consumed by a new full-time job. Plus, something indefinable has shifted between Karma and her long-time best friend Sara. While floundering amid these changes, Karma, who is half Indian, latches on to the Sikh teaching of karma and tries to alter her seemingly cursed start to middle school. Karma's mixed heritage keeps this book from becoming standard fare, and Wientge does a nice job of organically incorporating it into the plot. Though Karma's agonizing can be excessive, it accurately reflects the tween state of mind. Funny and relatable, this is a solid pick for those transitioning to middle school.
Kirkus ReviewsEverything has been so different this year for Karmajeet Khullar. She is worried about starting middle school, about her dissolving relationship with her white best friend, Sara, and about Sara's new friendship with mean girl Lacy, also white. At home, she misses her beloved Dadima, who recently passed away, as she confronts changing family dynamics, with her Sikh father now the stay-at-home parent, her white mother working way too many hours at her new job, and her surly 14-year-old brother rubbing everyone the wrong way. And worst of all, dark-haired Karma has no idea what to do about the 17 hairs she discovers on her upper lip just before the start of sixth grade—and now her classmates are teasing her about her mustache (" 'Stache Attack!"). Could it be bad karma? Debut author Wientge has sensitive, anxious Karma confronting the universal preteen problems of self-esteem, bullying, and changing friendships, with everyday details of her interracial family's Sikh faith and culture seamlessly woven in. Although the story meanders slightly, it articulates well the protagonist's angst, insecurities, strength, and perseverance, along with the pressures she faces. Readers will enjoy seeing how Karma navigates the complexities of adolescence, middle school, and the 17 hairs on her upper lip in this realistic and humorous story of new friendships and family support. (Fiction. 10-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Karma Khullar-half Indian, half white; half Sikh, half Methodist-is starting sixth grade, and she-s pretty sure that the universe is against her. With her mother working full-time, leaving her father to make lunches and take Karma bra shopping, life at home has required adjustments. Meanwhile, Karma-s best friend Sara is suddenly obsessed with hair, makeup, and the snarky girl from California who just moved in across the street. But Karma-s biggest problem is the 17 new hairs on her upper lip that are a magnet for attention-the unwelcome kind. As tension grows with Sara, and her classmates- taunts about her hairy lip escalate, Karma attempts to take control of her own destiny. Debut author Wientge neatly captures how it feels to be different, especially as an adolescent. The bullying that Karma faces, both for her -mustache- and the Indian dishes her father packs for her lunches, will be relatable to many readers. The novel-s ending-hopeful but not completely happily-ever-after-sends a strong message of self-acceptance and resilience. Ages 8-12.
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Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Chapter One
Dadima used to say I'd be as strong as a lion if I drank milk twice a day. She never mentioned I'd get as hairy as one too. There should have been a disclaimer--bold letters and a voice-over with a list of side effects scrolling along the side of my grandma's face whenever she handed me a cup of hot milk.
Daddy's back was to me as he pried paratha dough off the rolling pin in a misshapen glob. The orange ties of his Karma Is Served apron clashed with the pale green of his turban. He loved that he'd found an apron with my name on it, but whenever he reminded me for the hundredth time that he was wearing my name, I had the urge to accidentally spill curry down the front of the apron.
Once he had the paratha on the smoking pan, I tipped the milk he'd poured for me into a potted plant next to me.
This entire summer the universe had been against me. The hair on my face just happened to be the most recent tragedy. The worst part was, I didn't know how to get rid of it.
Luckily for me, my best friend, Sara--a walking, talking guide to fashion and personality quizzes--had returned from vacation. She'd just called to figure out what time I should be at her house that afternoon to compare notes on our class placement lists, which had just arrived in the mail. Thank Babaji we were in the same block.
Daddy flipped the paratha and turned to me. "Just like Dadima's," he said, grinning. "Am I right, beta?"
The almost-burned smell of Daddy's parathas on the roti pan that Dadima'd brought from India stirred a lump behind my heart, which I quickly tried to ignore. Parathas hadn't been the same since Dadima had died last summer.
I cupped my hand over the mouthpiece of the phone when Daddy turned back to the stove. "I'm serious, Sara. There are exactly seventeen of them." I pinched the hairs above my lip, hoping no more had grown. I didn't want to show up at orientation with a mustache, even if Sara would be there at my side.
"Mmm-hmm." Sara's breath rattled through the phone.
I pictured her blowing a loose strand of hair out of her eyes.
This was the second time I'd brought up my mustache to her. She wasn't paying attention. Again.
Daddy pushed a hot paratha across the counter to me. It wasn't exactly square-shaped like Dadima's used to be, but anything tasted better than Mom's freezer-burned casseroles. He reached across the counter and held out the carton of milk. I slid my hand over the mug and shook my head.
"What about being strong--" Daddy started to say.
"As a lion?" I went to the fridge and grabbed the orange juice.
Overdosing on milk probably hadn't given me my mustache, but Daddy had stopped buying organic now that he was a stay-at-home dad. I'd overheard Mom tell him that the hormones in non-organic milk weren't good for girls. So, for the past two weeks I'd been dumping my milk into the nearest potted plant whenever Daddy wasn't looking.
"What about lions?" Sara asked.
"Nothing," I said as I poured my juice. Then I lowered my voice, even though Daddy was humming a Bollywood tune and most likely daydreaming he was the star, and not really paying attention to my conversation. "Well . . . don't you think it's odd? Maybe a hormonal imbalance or a gene mutation, or maybe I'm turning into--"
"Oh. My. Gosh! Please don't say what I think you're about to say."
"What?"
"A werewolf."
My breath stuck in my throat. I needed to swallow, but something was in the way--my heart. "I was going to say 'a boy.' "
Sara hadn't said "werewolf" as an insult, but now that the idea had been verbalized, it was free to run wild. It existed now. I could imagine the boys at school saying it with smirks on their faces. Friday. At orientation, ruining the school year before I even had a chance to make my own first impression.
"Oh." Sara let out another sigh, but this one was a softer, I'm sorry kind that sounded more like the Sara from the beginning of summer, who I could tell anything to, and less like the Sara who ignored me. "Look, we'll talk about it when you come over later. Okay?"
"Yeah, okay. See ya later." I tore off a piece of paratha and dabbed it into the stream of melted butter that ran through the middle of the rhombus-shaped bread.
"Watch this, beta," Daddy said, trying his hand at tossing another paratha into the pan with a flip of his wrist.
He'd definitely watched too many cooking shows recently.
I finished breakfast as quickly as possible. The phone call with Sara left me shaky. She'd only been on vacation for two weeks, but the space between us that had always been pulled together like we were two attracting magnets now felt like it was pushing us apart, as if her pole had flipped. Once I saw her, it'd probably all go back to normal. I mean, she did only come back last night, and it was a long drive from her cousin's house in South Carolina.
"Thanks, Daddy." I kissed him on the cheek and rushed upstairs to claim the bathroom before Kiran.
Once I'd locked the door, I leaned close to the mirror to get a good look at my face. I counted again. Yep. Seventeen. Seventeen hairs on either side of my upper lip.
How many hairs made a mustache? At least twenty? I hoped it was at least twenty. Fifty or a hundred would be perfect. The further away I was from having a real-life mustache, the better. Best of all would be finding a way to get rid of it, especially before school started.
The hairs around my mouth were dark enough that each strand was visible. When I stretched the skin, I could pinpoint each pore that a hair grew out of, the way grass sprouted out of a sandbox.
My Horrible Histories books mentioned that ancient monks rubbed stones on their heads to make themselves bald. After reading that a couple of weeks ago, I started to rub the sides of my mouth in circles with my finger, in the hopes that the motion would work for my face. It wasn't exactly scientific, but it was the only thing I had, considering Mom didn't own a single pair of tweezers and she drew in her barely-there-blond eyebrows every morning, and Sara hadn't been very helpful on the phone. But all that the rubbing had done was make the sides of my mouth red and chapped.
I turned the water on to cover up my ritual. I knew it was silly, but at least everyone would think I'd brushed my teeth really well.
"Hurry up!" Kiran yelled, banging on the door.
I squirted toothpaste into my mouth and swished some water around. I also ran my toothbrush under the water so it looked like I'd brushed properly.
Kiran stood outside the door when I opened it. His black hair stuck out at random places, and his breath stunk worse than the tennis shoes he'd been mowing in all summer.
"You forgot to shave," he said, and pinched the hair at the edges of my mouth.
It annoyed me that he knew what I'd been doing, even though I'd left the water running. "Stop it, jerk." I swatted his hand away.
He was fourteen and probably wanted a mustache, so why was I the one with hair on my face?
Excerpted from Karma Khullar's Mustache by Kristi Wientge
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
In the tradition of Judy Blume, debut author Kristi Wientge tackles the uncomfortable—but all too relatable—subject of female body hair and self-esteem with this “sparkling and triumphant tale of a middle school misfit” (Heather Vogel Frederick).
Karma Khullar is about to start middle school, and she is super nervous. Not just because it seems like her best friend has found a newer, blonder best friend. Or the fact that her home life is shaken up by the death of her dadima. Or even that her dad is the new stay-at-home parent, leading her mother to spend most of her time at work. But because she’s realized that she has seventeen hairs that have formed a mustache on her upper lip.
With everyone around her focused on other things, Karma is left to figure out what to make of her terrifyingly hairy surprise all on her own.