Review by Booklist Review
Chokshi is well known for her best-selling Aru Shah series, but she has outdone herself with her newest addition to the Rick Riordan Presents line, a standalone adventure that centers Filipino mythology. Corazon Lopez is a young babaylan (Filipino shaman) whose powers haven't yet fully awakened. Once they do, her number one goal is to bring back her parents, who passed away several years ago, leaving her in the care of her Aunt Tina, a babaylan with all of the power yet none of the warmth of Corazon's deceased mother. Her plan (and the fate of the world) is threatened when a ghost steals Corazon's soul key, a magical object with the power to tip the balance of the world, both human and spirit. Corazon's quest to retrieve the key unearths many secrets, including the one hidden deep in her heart. The Spirit Glass is a classic quest story with all the fun and danger one might expect from such a tale. Corazon's spirit companion, a gecko named Saso, provides much of the levity, but at its heart, this book is a story about grief. Corazon learns many hard truths, and young readers going through similar loss might find comfort in Corazon's trials. If nothing else, they have these words from the spirit glass in Tina's House: "I see you, little one. Your pain is not invisible to me." A must-have for any reader who loves folklore-inspired fantasy.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Featuring a Filipina protagonist coming into her powers, Chokshi (the Aru Shah series) writes a memorable spin on a tween's looking-glass adventures. Three years after her parents' deaths, 11-year-old Corazon Lopez lives with her magically powerful but emotionally distant aunt Tina in a wondrous House "that tucked her in each evening and made sure she always had a sweater when it got cold." Like the women in their family, both Corazon and Tina are babaylans--mortals who guard the boundaries between the human and spirit worlds--but two days before her magic-manifesting 12th birthday, Corazon's specific power remains unknown even to her. She waits impatiently on the cusp with her wisecracking companion anito, an earth spirit named Saso who resembles a blue lizard, and a soul key that allows her to visit with her parents' ghosts each Saturday. She plans to bring them back to life once she gains, and trains in, her powers, but when Corazon and Tina travel through the Library of Mirrors en route to the spirit realms' marketplace, a figure pursues Corazon and steals the soul key, and Corazon must work to put the worlds-threatening specter to rest. Filipino folklore and a smart magical system of "bargains and balances" thread this wholly original narrative, which employs laugh-out-loud humor, sensory-forward prose, and deliciously dark threats to explore personal identity and tweenhood. Ages 8--12. Agent: Thao Le, Sandra Dijkstra Literary. (Sept.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
An open heart leads a girl to what she needs in this page-turner embedded in Filipino mythology. Corazon Lopez comes from a family of babaylans, mortals "who guarded the boundaries between the human world and the realm of spirits." She must wait until her 12th birthday for her powerful magic to awaken so she can be trained by her aunt Tina. Corazon is especially eager to develop the ability to bring her deceased parents back to life instead of just having weekly dinners with their ghosts. Despite the presence of Saso, her anito or spirit companion who takes the form of a small lizard, and being cared for by Tina's sentient home, Corazon feels lonely. Things take a turn for the worse when Corazon encounters Flordeliza, a vengeful ghost who steals her soul key, a token of powerful magic gifted to her by her mother that is essential to bringing her parents back. Soon the Library of Mirrors that contains portals to the spirit realms shows warning signs of an imbalance between worlds. Corazon, Saso, and their new ghost friend, Leo, must attempt to surmount daunting obstacles before it's too late in Chokshi's action-packed quest that balances tragedy and grief with comical antics. Family secrets, folktales, and the cultural diversity of the Philippines add interest to this story that ends on a hopeful note. A thrilling tale brimming with magic and love. (author's note, glossary) (Adventure. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.