Sarai and the meaning of awesome

Saraí González, 2005-

Book - 2018

Fourth grader Saraí Gonzalez can do anything. She can bake, dance, and run her own cupcake business. But when Saraí's grandparents are forced to move, even Saraí's not sure what to do. So she hatches a super-awesome plan with her younger sisters and cousin to buy back the house. Will Saraí find a way to save the day?

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jFICTION/Gonzalez, Sarai
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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Published
New York, NY : Scholastic Inc [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Saraí González, 2005- (author)
Other Authors
Monica Brown, 1969- (author), Christine Almeda (illustrator)
Physical Description
106 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
Audience
Appeals to: 2-4th graders.
Readint level: Grade 3.
ISBN
9781338236682
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 1-3-Sarai Gonzlez is awesome. She has a sign that says so in case anyone forgets. When she encounters a problem, she tackles it with her usual can-do attitude. Of course, raising enough money to help save her grandparents' house will take more than just cupcake sales, so she concocts a plan that involves her whole family in lemonade sales and a dance competition. The inspiration for this new series is 11-year-old Sarai Gonzalez, an Internet sensation, actress, and activist, who co-authored the story with the award-winning Brown. The duo has teamed up to create an upbeat, energetic tale full of positive vibes and feel-good family moments, all based on Gonzalez's life. Latinx readers will appreciate the Spanish terms sprinkled throughout, while colorful spot art adds charm. Young readers will embrace the Gonzalez family and appreciate Sarai's boundless enthusiasm. VERDICT A lively, fast-paced book with short chapters, perfect for intermediate readers looking for inspiring and optimistic family tales.-Laura Fields Eason, Parker Bennett Curry Elementary School, Bowling Green, KY © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Young debut author Gonzalez joins veteran co-author Brown (Lola Levine and the Halloween Scream, 2017) to kick off a semiautobiographical chapter-book series based on her life growing up with a large and loving immigrant family in New Jersey.Fourth-grader Sarai is the oldest of three girls in a tightknit Latinx family (her mom was born in Peru, and her dad was born in Costa Rica). She is the epitome of positive thinking, with ambition to spare. When her beloved grandfather learns that the owner of the house he has been renting, and which he shares with his extended family, has decided to sell, Sarai is immediately concerned. Where will her abuelos, tos, and primos live? What if they are no longer close by? Sarai's optimism does not let her stay down for long, and she immediately hatches a plan to use her fledgling cupcake business to raise the money needed to buy the house. Little sisters making a mess of the kitchen cause some trouble, but basic economics presents insurmountable oddsstill, the ending is undoubtedly happy all the same. Sarai's neighborliness and strong family values may be aspirational for many in our contemporary society, but her contagious joy might just set readers on the road to remedy that. Though none of her plans ultimately succeed, she remains irrepressibly hopeful throughout; it's an admirable hope that fuels hard work and ingenuity. Almeda's illustrations depict Sarai and her family with brown skin and black hair.A Pollyanna for the 21st century. (Fiction. 7-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.