The great banned-books bake sale

Aya Khalil

Book - 2023

Kanzi, the immigrant girl of Aya Khalil and Anait Semirdzhyan's bestselling picture book The Arabic Quilt, has come to feel welcome in her American school--that is, until an entire shelf of books about immigrant kids and kids of color suddenly disappears from the school library. Upon learning that the books with kids who look like her have been banned by her school district, Kanzi descends into fear and helplessness. But her classmates support her, and together--with their teacher's help--they hatch a plan to hold a bake sale and use the proceeds to buy diverse books to donate to libraries. The event is a big success; the entire school participates, and the local TV station covers it in the evening news. Prodded by her classmates ...to read the poem she has written, Kanzi starts softly but finds her voice. "You have banned important books, but you can't ban my words," she reads. "Books are for everyone." The crowd chants, "No banned books! No banned books!" and the next week, the ban is reversed. Aya Khalil appends a note about how The Arabic Quilt was briefly banned from the York, Pennsylvania school system, and the backmatter also includes a recipe for baklawa, the Egyptian pastry that Kanzi prepares for the bake sale.

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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Khalil Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Children's stories
Picture books
Published
Thomaston, Maine : Tilbury House Publishers 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Aya Khalil (author)
Other Authors
Anait Semirdzhyan (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780884489672
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Per an author's note, Khalil and Semirdzhyan respond to a Pennsylvania school district's 2021 banning of their previous collaboration, The Arabic Quilt, with this empathic, text-heavy follow-up. When "the new diverse books" in the school library are removed from circulation, Kanzi, who is of Egyptian descent, and classmates, portrayed with various skin tones, react with shock and dismay. Asked why anyone would ban books, Ms. Jackson answers, "Some books are so powerful that they intimidate people." While the creators fully explore the range of emotions the protagonist experiences in response to the books' removal ("She walks a little slower, a little smaller"), they also highlight concrete actions that empower the child. In sketches washed in earthy hues, Kanzi journals, talks to her Teita about protests in Tahrir Square, and helps coordinate a protest and bake sale for the purchase of books for Little Free Libraries. It's a motivating title whose concluding triumph underlines the idea that "our voices are important!" An author's note and recipe conclude. Ages 7--10. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

Kanzi (the Arabic-speaking Egyptian girl whose potholed transition to life in America was portrayed in The Arabic Quilt) feels marginalized when her school's library is denuded of books that reflect the experiences and perspectives of underrepresented groups. Adult characters scaffold a discussion with the kids about the current book banning movement (some readers might find the school librarian's explanation for the bans simplistic). Kanzi proposes a school-wide protest-slash-bake-sale that sees her using her voice for change, raises money to buy books to donate to Little Free Libraries, gains local attention, and occasions a book ban reversal. Digital illustrations incorporating Arabic text add to the instructiveness of a story put into context by an author's note. (c) Copyright 2024. 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

A districtwide book ban sparks a protest in this follow-up to The Arabic Quilt (2020). Kanzi, an Egyptian immigrant, and her classmates are dismayed to learn that a number of diverse stories--defined as "books showing people of many identities, backgrounds, and walks of life" --have been removed from their library and classrooms (oddly, these titles appear to have been confined to a single "diverse books" section). Not finding any books that reflect her identity, Kanzi retreats into her poetry notebook. A class discussion leads Kanzi to suggest a bake sale, with proceeds going to purchase banned books for the diverse community's Little Free Libraries. Later, as she and her grandmother Teita bake baklawa, Teita draws a connection between this protest and those she marched in during the 2011 Egyptian uprising, impressing on Kanzi the need to raise her voice. The book takes on an all-too-relevant topic--indeed, the author's note discusses how this tale was inspired by a real-life attempt at banning The Arabic Quilt in 2021. However, it suffers from rushed pacing and didactic writing. It's not clear why the ban is reversed so quickly or why the books were removed to begin with. The librarian's explanation that "some books are so powerful that they intimidate people" is a misguided statement at odds with the story's message that books centering marginalized identities are especially being targeted. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A well-meaning effort at exploring censorship that doesn't quite hit the mark. (recipe) (Picture book. 7-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.