Review by Booklist Review
Cruzita is Mexican American, but her Spanish is limited, and she isn't connected to her culture. Her sixth-grade year doesn't end well, and she is sentenced to a summer of servitude at her family's bakery instead of going to a singing audition at a music theme park. That is, until her grandmother hands her an antique violin and signs her up for mariachi school. At first, Cruz thinks her summer cannot possibly get any worse, but after spending some time with the kids at the music school, maybe learning Spanish and a new instrument won't be so bad after all. Like Jennifer Torres' Stef Soto, Taco Queen (2017), this ends up being a story about finding your voice and standing up for the family business. The descriptions of traditional Mexican foods and pastries are a love letter to the culture and are sure to get anyone's mouth watering. This excellent debut has heart and soul, with an obvious deep love and appreciation for the culture in each word.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
A Mexican American seventh grader's dream leads to her embracing her heritage with vigor in Granillo's tender debut. In Pacomina, Calif., Cruzita Tayahua aspires to become a singer. Her plans to enter a singing contest--and hopefully win the prize money--go awry when her beloved great-uncle Chuy dies, leaving the Tayahuas scrambling to keep their family-owned bakery afloat. To curb Cruzita's upset surrounding her parents' inability to take her to the contest and the neglect she feels over their increased workload, her grandmother gives her an old family violin and enrolls her in mariachi lessons, hoping that Cruzita can find comfort through her love of music. But Cruzita worries that her not speaking Spanish will result in ridicule from fellow bandmates ("I never feel like I'm Mexican enough"). As she makes new friends and learns to embrace Latin music, however, she devises a way to win the contest and help save the bakery. Granillo gently tempers the Tayahuas' grief over Tio Chuy's death by focusing on the characters' lighthearted developing relationships and relates the feeling of being disconnected from one's heritage via Cruzita's learning more about her roots. An author's note concludes. Ages 11--14. Agent: Hannah Andrade, Bradford Literary. (Apr.)
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Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 5--7--The summer before middle school is not going as Cruzita expected. Instead of preparing for the Rising Star Contest at Encore Island amusement park, she is stuck working in her family's struggling bakery. Things go from bad to worse, when her mother tells her she can no longer listen to the CDs of 1990s boy bands and pop stars that she loves and must focus solely on work. In an effort to give her back some music, her grandmother enrolls her in mariachi lessons. As Cruzita attends the classes, she gains more than music; she finds friends and a newfound respect for her culture and family. Readers will empathize with Cruzita, who feels like she doesn't quite fit in as a Mexican American who does not speak Spanish. The recent passing of her great-uncle, the only family member who understood her, has left Cruz and her family dealing with their grief in different ways. Readers will root for Cruzita to embrace her new love of her mariachi family and her attempts to save the family business. Back matter includes Cruzita's CD playlist and questions for discussion. VERDICT Mariachi, family, and pan dulce are the ingredients for this perfect middle grade novel. Highly recommended for all middle grade collections.--Ashley Leffel
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Review by Horn Book Review
Cruzita Tayahua ends sixth grade with a D in Spanish, which is embarrassing considering her family's Mexican roots. But being fluent in Spanish isn't a priority for Cruz, who dreams of being an American pop music superstar. Her summer plan: visit the music theme park Encore Island and enter the Rising Star Contest. A trip to Hollywood isn't part of Cruz's parents' plans, however. They need her help in the family's struggling panaderia in the Pacoima neighborhood of Los Angeles, which has been losing customers since her tio Chuy's death a month earlier. When her grandmother gives Cruz a violin "that once belonged to my great-grandpa" and signs her up for mariachi lessons, Cruz is reluctant: "So I'm supposed to learn to speak Spanish and play the violin at the same time?" She's surprised to find that she can sing in Spanish and to discover that she likes being connected to her culture. An unexpected opportunity means she has to choose between her dreams and obligations to family and new friends. Cruz's inner conflict and search for identity are sensitively drawn, and Granillo weaves a believable sense of community pride into the heartfelt and enjoyable story. Yesica HurdMay/June 2024 p.139 (c) Copyright 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
When Cruzita's great-uncle Chuy passes away, the family bakery is put in jeopardy, and Cruzita scrambles to save it in the only way she knows how: through her singing. Although 12-year-old Cruzita is Mexican American and growing up in the historically Black and brown Los Angeles community of Pacoima, she struggles with her identity. Her peers look down on her as a "no sabo kid" and a "coconut" (brown on the outside, white on the inside). After the death of her beloved Tío Chuy, the family members pull together to save the struggling panadería, Lupe's Bakery. Though Cruzita dreams of finding pop stardom--and saving the bakery--through the Encore Island theme park singing contest, her family needs her feet to be more firmly planted on the ground: for example, by helping out in the bakery over her summer vacation. Hoping to support her, Cruzita's abuela signs her up for mariachi classes, but playing the violin and singing in Spanish aren't Cruzita's idea of a good time. Still, through the classes, she begins to make friends, and these relationships help her claim her heritage. Holding on to to her dreams of singing stardom while balancing the present-day needs of her family pulls Cruzita in uncomfortable new directions. Many readers will resonate with the demands on her time, and the children and grandchildren of immigrants will likely identify especially strongly with Cruzita's journey toward connecting with her roots. A sweet summer quest for identity and belonging. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.