Publisher's Hardcover ©2023 | -- |
Fathers and daughters. Juvenile fiction.
Money-making projects for children. Juvenile fiction.
Best friends. Juvenile fiction.
Friendship. Juvenile fiction.
Chinese Americans. Juvenile fiction.
Fathers and daughters. Fiction.
Moneymaking projects. Fiction.
Best friends. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Chinese Americans. Fiction.
Shang finds the right blend of serious and comedic in this novel about friendship, grief, and tween romance. Musical theater fan Chloe Wong, still grieving the loss of her mother, an ER doctor who died from COVID-19, yearns to attend her middle school's Broadway trip, but she's afraid her widowed inventor father cannot afford the $375 ticket. Determined to pay her way to New York City, Chloe (with best friend Sabrina's help) brainstorms money-making ideas involving the Tea Palace, where her show tuneâhating classmate/sometimes crush, Henry, happens to work. Several screwball events ensue when Chloe gets banned from the tea shop after confronting the local mean girl and eventually starts her own bubble tea business with help from friends and family. (Foodies will enjoy the detailed descriptions of the flavors and bubble teaâmaking process.) Some of the novel's strongest passages are also the most heartfelt: those focusing on Chloe missing her mother, the kindness Henry shows Chloe, and the epiphany our protagonist reaches at the end. "The house was never going to be like it was with Mom, but we could still have love, just a different kind, with different people and creatures. And happiness. And mistakes."
Kirkus ReviewsBoba tea may be the source of-and the solution to-this middle schooler's troubles.Twelve-year-old music lover Chloe desperately wants to go on her school's Broadway trip despite the teasing of her classmate Henry, "Mr. I-Hate-Broadway." But the cost for the shows, meals, and transportation is $375, and ever since Chloe's mom died, her dad has been working from home as an inventor, and she's sure the money's not there. Sabrina, Chloe's best friend, is eager to help her raise the funds, but when it becomes clear that Chloe's not cut out for babysitting and she gets banned from Henry's family's bubble tea shop for disruptive behavior, the two of them, with help from Chloe's new dog, develop a brilliant and delicious moneymaker. This is buoyant fare, touching only lightly on tough topics like grief and financial troubles. Chloe's and Henry's families are Chinese American; Sabrina is cued Latina. Chloe's intense desire for organization and neatness hints at neurodivergence, and while this is not explicitly identified, her family and friends seem to recognize and accommodate her needs. The story's primary and secondary romances are predictable, sweet, and age appropriate. What may linger longest are the fantastic bubble tea descriptions, which will have readers salivating-and curious about the science of popping boba. Indeed, the only thing missing here may be a recipe.Sweet fun. (Fiction. 8-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In this lighthearted novel by Shang (
Horn Book (Tue Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Award-winning author Wendy Wan-Long Shang brews a frothy and bright story, filled with humor and heart, about friendship, first crushes, and finding ones own way in Bubble Trouble.
How many problems can a delicious cup of bubble tea cause? Plenty, if youre Chloe Wong. For starters, Chloe wants to go on the class trip to Broadway -- an expense Chloes not sure she and her dad can afford since her mom passed away -- and those yummy cups of boba cost money. And then theres the fact that the incorrigible Henry Lee is the bobamaster at Tea Palace, and when hes not annoying Chloe, hes usually coming up with the perfect drink for every occasion. For Chloe, lover of neatness and control, the arrival of bubble tea is nothing but trouble!
But bubble tea really wreaks havoc when Chloe finds herself banned from Tea Palace (for dumping boba on someone who really deserved it!). She comes up with the idea to make her own boba and sell it, with the help of her best friend Sabrina, her inventor dad and (whether she wants it or not) her rescue dog. Suddenly neatnik Chloe will have to contend with sticky drinks, the complications of running her own business and...maybe the messiness of admitting that she actually like-likes someone? Will Chloe be able to step out of the bubble she has built around herself and into an exciting new adventure to go along with her boba tea?