Book Lists

Beyond Bollywood: South Asian American Middle Grade Fiction

In honor of the new exhibit I’m longing to see at the Smithsonian Museum, Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape the NationI thought I would explore some South Asian American Middle Grade Fiction in today’s post. The last time I did such a round up was in 2011 on my blog (See South Asian Kidlit, and Desi Kidlit Part 2) so I thought it was high time to do another, this time focusing on fantastic middle grade reads!

For better or worse, the glitzy costumes, colorful dance numbers, and over the top romantic storylines of Bollywood movies have come to represent the South Asian subcontinent in the collective imagination of the U.S. Yet, our stories are clearly so much more than that: they are stories of struggle, activism, family, community, political change, cultural tenacity and so much more. Our stories are funny, tragic, brave, silly, and, most importantly, varied. As the writer Chimamanda Adichie has argued in her captivating TED talk, there is a danger in telling a “singular story” about any community.

So here’s an incomplete list of some great South Asian American Middle Grade Books we have read in my household in the last couple years. Please use the comments section to add your favorites!

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courtesy www.sheelachari.com

Vanished by Sheela Chari: (APALA 2012 Children’s Literature Honor Book and Edgar Award Nominee for Best Juvenile Mystery). 11 year old Neela must solve the mystery when her Veena vanishes!

 

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courtesy www.umakrishnaswami.com

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courtesy www.umakrishnaswami.com

The Grand Plan to Fix Everything and its sequel, The Problem with Being Slightly Heroic by Uma Krishnaswami. 11 year old Dini loves Bollywood movies, but when she moves with her family from America to India, even she could not imagine meeting her favorite movie star Dolly! 

courtesy www.marinabudhos.com

courtesy www.marinabudhos.com

Tell Us We’re Home by Marina Budhos. Officially, Marina calls this a YA, but since it’s about 8th graders, I thought I’d include it anyway! 3 immigrant daughters of maids and nannies in a New Jersey suburb deal with friendship, family, and the definition of ‘home.’

 

Subgenre Alert!: The Indian-Jewish Canon of Middle Grade Fiction! (There’s even this interesting New York Times article about two of them!)

 

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courtesy www.veerahiranandani.com

The Whole Story of Half a Girl by Veera HiranandaniAfter her father loses his job, Sonia is yanked out of private school and thrown into a public school, where for the first time, her classmates question her mixed heritage. 

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courtesy paulafreedman.com

My Basmati Bat Mitvah by Paula J. Freedman: In the Fall Leading to her Bat Mitvah, Tara has a lot of her mind, including wonders what it means to grow up with two cultures

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courtesy goodreads.com

Mira in the Present Tense by Sita Brahmachari (published as Artichoke Hearts in the U.K.): 12 year old Mira helps her beloved Nana Josie grapple with her impending death, including saying goodbye to her favorite places, painting her casket and eventually moving into a hospice.

A Timely Giveaway

beyond the doorAuthor Maureen Doyle McQuerry, author of the popular “The Peculiars”,  branches out into middle grade with this first of two books about quiet, Scrabble-loving Timothy James  and the quest he’s forced to undertake.

The first in the Time Out of Time duet from Maureen Doyle McQuerry, weaves a compelling coming-of-age story with fantasy and mythology. With his love of learning and the game of Scrabble, Timothy James feels like the only person who understands him is his older sister, Sarah, and he’s fairly certain nothing interesting will ever happen to him. But one night, while his parents and sister are away, the door opens, and mythical creatures appear in his own living room Soon, a mystery of unparalleled proportions begins to unfold, revealing an age-old battle of Light against Dark, and Timothy must embark on a quest to prevent the Dark from controlling the future and changing the past. But he can’t complete the quest alone. Timothy has to team up with his sister and the school bully, Jessica, to face an ancient evil, and in the process, this unlikely trio discover they are each more than meets the eye.

McQuerry’s book doesn’t pub till March, but you can win an advanced reader’s copy right now. Just enter a comment below to enter.