Forward Me Back to You
Forward Me Back to You
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Square Fish
Annotation: The highly anticipated next YA novel from the author of National Book Award-nominated You Bring the Distant Near explores new love, tenuous friendships, and the dark underworld of human trafficking.
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #6651988
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Square Fish
Copyright Date: 2020
Edition Date: 2020 Release Date: 09/22/20
Pages: 415 pages
ISBN: 1-250-61990-4
ISBN 13: 978-1-250-61990-7
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2018038352
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

A budding romance, a richly evoked setting, and beautiful intergenerational relationships pepper this story set half in Boston, half in Kolkata, about teens on a church-sponsored trip to assist an anti human trafficking organization. This is a surprisingly sweet and delicately plotted novel. Kat, a multiethnic California transplant, is finishing her junior year in Boston after experiencing trauma. Indian-born, adopted Robin, whose parents are white, is struggling to reconcile his desi identity. His lifelong friend, Mexican American Gracie, harbors a deep crush and secrets of her own. The teens set foot in Kolkata with heroic aspirations t intends to teach martial arts, and Robin has a plan to track down his birth mother t quickly their weeks in India become more about growing as people through hard work, vulnerability, and trust. Perkins' present-tense prose and the use of stage direction like notations about scene locations work to give the book an ethereal tone, which is in dreamy contrast to the grit and sadness that the characters endure and is more reflective of the overall message of hope, connectedness, and love.

Horn Book

Boston boy Robin (born in Kolkata and adopted by wealthy white parents) joins a service trip to India to help survivors of human trafficking; biracial Kat, temporarily living in Boston following a sexual assault, goes too. Alternating chapters explore Robin's journey to learn more about his birth parents and Kat's healing through helping other victims. Well-rounded secondary characters deliver moments of levity and emotional support for the protagonists.

Kirkus Reviews

A summer church trip to Kolkata allows two American teens to serve, grow, and heal their own suffering in unexpected ways.Katina King is a 16-year-old Brazilian jujitsu champion, a scholarship student at an elite Oakland school, and the brown-skinned, biracial daughter of a single white mother. After a male student assaults her, Kat's anxiety, rage, and anguish disrupt her focus on winning matches and applying to college. Eighteen-year-old Robin Thornton was adopted as a toddler from an Indian orphanage by wealthy white Bostonians. He can't seem to find true belonging or be more than a rudderless sidekick to his white jock friend.When Kat's mother sends her to Boston for a break from Oakland, the teens meet, traveling to Kolkata with their pastor to work with survivors of child trafficking. Kat decides to teach the young women how to fight while Robin, now going by Ravi, hopes to find his birth mother. But they learn the hard way that they must first earn the trust and respect of those they serve and that service may be very different from what they imagine. Perkins (You Bring the Distant Near, 2017, etc.) celebrates Christian faith, superheroes, and Kolkata life through the interleaved perspectives of sympathetic and earnest protagonists and in simple language that speaks straight to the heart.A hymn to faith, friendship, and social justice, sung by gentle men and strong women of many colors and ages. (Fiction. 14-adult)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Perkins-s latest follows alternating protagonists: brown-skinned Kat, a superhero-obsessed, tough-as-nails regional jiujitsu champion and California girl with a single, white-skinned mother; and India-born superhero enthusiast Robin, adopted by wealthy white parents in Boston. After Kat fights off an attempted sexual assault by a popular athlete at school, her mother sends her east to stay with a family friend-s great-aunt, Grandma Vee. Kat is angry at the world (at her mom for sending her away, at the -wolf- who attacked her), but when Grandma Vee asks Kat to visit with her friend Robin at her Christian church-s youth group, she reluctantly complies. Soon, Kat gets pulled into a trip to fight human trafficking and serve victims in Kolkata-Robin-s birthplace. While in India, Robin takes on his birth name, Ravi, and the two face their demons, meet family, make friends, and find the best inside themselves called upon. In fast-moving prose that is layered with emotion-rage, grief, dismay, hope, vulnerability, love-Perkins-s novel pulses with heart and questions of identity as well as talk of faith, prayer, God, and social justice. Ages 14-up. (Apr.)

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ALA Booklist
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Word Count: 84,240
Reading Level: 4.5
Interest Level: 7-12
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.5 / points: 12.0 / quiz: 508410 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:5.3 / points:20.0 / quiz:Q76757
Lexile: HL690L

The award-winning author of You Bring the Distant Near explores identity, homecoming, and the legacy of assault in this personal and ambitious new novel. Katina King is the reigning teen jujitsu champion of Northern California, but she's having trouble fighting off the secrets in her past. Robin Thornton was adopted from an orphanage in India and is reluctant to take on his future. If he can't find his roots, how can he possibly plan ahead? Robin and Kat meet in the most unlikely of places--a summer service trip to Kolkata to work with survivors of human trafficking. As bonds build between the travelmates, Robin and Kat discover that justice and healing are tangled, like the pain of their pasts and the hope for their futures. You can't rewind life; sometimes you just have to push play . In turns heart wrenching, beautiful, and buoyant, Mitali Perkins's Forward Me Back to You focuses its lens on the ripple effects of violence--across borders and generations--and how small acts of heroism can break the cycle. This title has Common Core connections.


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