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Children of immigrants. Fiction.
Honesty. Fiction.
Theft. Fiction.
Families. Fiction.
Popularity. Fiction.
High schools. Fiction.
Schools. Fiction.
Lost and found possessions. Fiction.
Bad choice, good choice always come back—like ghosts." Avvy Go's mother's words haunt her. Avvy Go, a student at Oak Ridge High School, lives in a community of immigrants across a railway bridge separating her from the older, richer part of town. Her parents run a Chinese take-out restaurant at the food court, where Avvy works, but she wants to fit in at school, to cross that bridge separating the two communities and cultures. She's tried the disappearing act, keeping to herself—trying to fit in by not being seen—but realizes that "if you act like a nobody, that's what people see. No body." But to fit in, she makes a series of bad choices—stealing, lying and befriending her sister's enemy. A good girl with a powerful conscience, Avvy consults "The Oracle" in her school newspaper, who advises her to face up to her mistakes. Though Avvy's first-person voice is didactic, her story ends realistically, with no simple solutions—just a determination to get on with her life, as complicated as it may be. Lee's prose in this high-interest/low–reading level novel for teens is simple, adorned with an occasional glittering phrase: Avvy's brother, in his new, too-big white karate outfit, "drooped like an ice cream melting on a stick." A brisk tale with an important message. (Fiction. 10-15)
School Library Journal (Tue Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2011)Gr 6 Up-Avvy Go lives and works in Chinatown, Toronto, where the immigrant community struggles, but she goes to school in a beautiful, wealthy neighborhood that features large houses and entitled peers. When she finds a bank gift card loaded with money, the dualities of her life really begin to pile up. Avvy becomes the keeper of many secrets but she longs to tell them. She wants friends but also wants to go through school unnoticed. She wants to do the right thing and help her family but cannot find a way that does not involve stealing. Lee's tale provides all the angst of young adult fiction with a reading level appropriate for struggling readers, which is laudable. However, the story and characters are developed in a facile manner. The narrator tells readers that Avvy is conflicted but this confliction is never demonstrated. Ultimately, the story feels too light and cannot carry the necessary weight needed to propel the characters. Naphtali L. Faris, Youth Services Consultant, Missouri State Library, Jefferson City, MO
ALA Booklist (Tue Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2011)Avvy speaks Mandarin at home, helps out at her family's stall in the food court, and attends school in the fancy neighborhood across the highway, where her beloved older stepsister, Jen, works as a nanny in the home of Avvy's classmate. Jen is being molested by her employer, but she can't afford to lose her job or she will also lose her visa. In Avvy's home, money is desperately scarce, so when Avvy finds a wallet, she uses the bank card to take out cash. There is a lot going on in this SideStreets title, aimed at reluctant readers. Told from an immigrant child's authentic viewpoint, the story's fast, contemporary action never gets preachy, though: even the advice column in the school newspaper offers no sweet messages. Readers will feel for the desperate thief even as it is clear that she is wrong. And the suspense builds: Whose wallet is it?
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Tue Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2011)
ALA Booklist (Tue Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2011)
Excerpted from Thief Girl by Ingrid Lee
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.
Sixteen-year-old Avvy Go straddles the line— between the immigrant neighborhood were she lives and works and the established neighborhood where she attends high school, the line between right and wrong, and the line between telling secrets and keeping them.
Set in an urban Chinatown neighborhood, Thief Girl is a frank look at the challenges faced by one teen caught between two worlds.