What the jaguar told her

Alexandra V. Méndez

Book - 2022

Jade is starting eighth grade in a new city--Atlanta. She just wants to go back to Chicago, where her friends are. Where her Abuela lives. There, Jade meets Itztli, an elderly storyteller who exists between dreams and reality. In the golden afternoons when Itztli appears, he steps out of the forest as a lithe, agile jaguar. But when he speaks to Jade, he is a wise old man who makes intricate works of art and tells her ancestral stories of Mexico. At first, Itztli's stories feel far removed from Jade's life. But as her Abuela suddenly falls ill, two towers come crashing down in New York City, and Jade becomes someone or something she doesn't yet understand, Itztli's stories take on new meaning. Jade must learn to have pat...ience and strength to become who she was always meant to be, as the stirrings of an ancient power awaken within her.

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Published
Montclair : Levine Querido 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Alexandra V. Méndez (author)
Physical Description
409 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781646141753
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Thirteen-year-old Jade is starting school in a new city. She misses Chicago, where her friends and abuela are, but she is happy to have made her new friend, Chloe, in Atlanta. To get to her school, Jade takes a woodsy path filled with big trees and beautiful greenery. From the beginning she feels a connection to the woods, like something is calling her, watching her. Soon after she meets Itztli, an older man who can turn into a jaguar. Itztli is a storyteller who passes on to Jade many stories of his ancestors from Mexico. What is her connection to him, and could it have something to do with the old mirror that was given to her by her mother? This title is a reminder to hold the stories of family and culture near and dear to our hearts before they are lost to the world. The magic realism and tie-in to Latino folklore create a wonderful coming-of-age story about a girl who's exploring who she is while discovering the power of stories through art.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

In this novel set in 2001, Jade's family has recently moved to Atlanta thanks to her journalist mom's new job. Their new house is bigger (no more sharing a room!), and there is a nice backyard with a path into the forest. But Jade had to leave behind her best friends and her abuela in Chicago, and to make matters worse, Abuela soon suffers a stroke. Amid all these changes, Jade doesn't find it too strange when during a walk in the forest she meets Itztli, a mysterious old man who also appears in the shape of a jaguar, and who invites Jade to listen to his story, a story that connects him to her family and her Mexican ancestors. The third-person narration flows naturally, sticking closely to the authentic point of view of a middle-school girl as she faces the challenges of growing up during a turbulent time. The novel is deepened through Mendez's characterization of Jade's family as rich in cultural traditions and strong relationships and by the presence of magical elements and stories of the Mexica and other Indigenous cultures. "A Note on Research" provides further reading. Alicia K. Long November/December 2022 p.92(c) Copyright 2022. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

In many ways, Jade is a typical middle schooler. She loves running and art and is working hard to make friends at her new Catholic school after a move to Atlanta from Chicago for her mom's new job as a CNN anchorwoman. In a magical departure from the expected, Jade discovers a jaguar living in the woods behind her home who takes the shape of Itztli, an amiable elder who shares with her art and incredible oral history reaching back to Mesoamerican civilizations just when she needs it the most. Jade is astounded to find that the challenges that Itztli describes in his stories mirror the difficulties she herself is facing in 2001, from getting her first period to making a home in a new place. Jade's maternal heritage is Mexican, and her dad has Irish ancestry; Jade's light skin, blond hair, and green eyes bring intricacy to her Latina experience, especially since her sister's complexion is darker. The novel explores themes of identity, friendship, crushes, loss, and looking for answers to life's toughest questions in sumptuous detail. A coming-of-age story with parallels to Judy Blume's classic Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret., this work captures the complexities of being a tween girl seeking to find her place in the world and connections to ancestors through a Latine cultural lens. A thoughtful, richly woven tapestry illuminating the pains and joys of growing up. (research notes) (Fiction. 10-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.