Kirkus Reviews
(Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
A teenager grapples with poor body image and family conflict in her multigenerational immigrant family.It's 2000, and 16-year-old Chinese Canadian Rosalind, who lives in Toronto with her single mother, Lydia, is distressed about her weight. It doesn't help that Lydia labels them "the fat family," makes disparaging remarks about "big people," and constantly comments on Roz's body and food choices. When Roz, who dreams of showing up at prom skinny and wearing a stunning dress, decides to lose weight and Por Por, her maternal grandmother, suddenly visits from Hong Kong, Roz's conflicts with her mother over her body only increase. Roz is further distressed by Por Por's cutting remarks and the heightened domestic stress due to her disruptive presence in the household. Seamless flashbacks to both Lydia's 1970s Hong Kong childhood and Por Por's young adulthood in 1950s Guangdong, China, shed light on the body shaming and misogyny that they endured, showing the roots of their estrangement and the fierce (if misguided) love that's still present. Learning about unspoken parts of their family history ultimately helps Roz, Lydia, and Por Por find some measure of peace and understanding. All three are sympathetically and fully portrayed, and Roz's struggles unfold realistically. The largely monochromatic panels use a shifting color palette to cue each era, allowing Fung to integrate the three colors in a touching and symbolic way in this poignant story's resolution.An affecting story of family estrangement, body shaming, and the journey to self-acceptance. (resources, historical note) (Graphic fiction. 12-18)
School Library Journal
(Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Gr 10 Up— It's 2000, 1972, and 1954 in this graphic novel that is as much a historical snapshot of these time periods for an Asian teen as it is about how the teen experience is universal. Rosalind, Lydia, and Mei Laan center each of these years with their experiences of growing up female with cultural, gender, and generational expectations thrust upon them. Their reactions move the narrative forward in time and slowly reveal how the three stories interweave. The plot setup is similar to Alan Gratz's Refugee , which also fluidly navigates several time periods and stories that eventually interconnect, but Fung's book has the added benefit of using art to enhance the narrative. Color is the defining feature of each time and place; when one of the colors appears in another time line, Fung's cleverness manifests exponentially. The creator's lived experiences seep into the story; the emotional weight of each of the teens' lives at a tender age is captured with authenticity and realism. Topics like body image and PTSD are delicately but deliberately confronted, as is the mother-daughter dynamic. However, equally recognizable are events like prom and maintaining friendships. VERDICT Getting to see three lives unfold in different locations and times is a gift Fung eloquently unwraps in this graphic novel that increases the visibility of AAPI stories in books for teens.— Alicia Abdul