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Days of the Dead

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
By the critically acclaimed author of Tyger Tyger, a warm, magical story of a girl's struggle to keep a promise to her dead mother.
Glorieta Magdalena Davis Espinosa is happy that Papi married Alice. She's happy that he can smile again after years of mourning Mamá. But the urn containing Mamá's ashes disappeared into a drawer the day Alice moved in.
If everything about Glorieta's life is going to change, then she wants one thing to go her way: She wants to hear stories about her mamá when the family gathers on the last night of los Días de los Muertos. And that can only happen if Tia Diosonita will allow Mamá to be buried with the Espinosas in holy ground. If she will allow people to speak Mamá's name.
With the help of her best friend, River, and her cousin Mateo, Glorieta sets out to convince Diosonita that Mamá is not burning in Hell. To do so, she'll have to learn to let hate go—and to love the people who stand in her way.
In prose that sparkles with magical undertones, author Kersten Hamilton weaves a tender story about grief, faith, and the redemptive power of love.
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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2018
      A blended family learns to cope and have compassion for each other.Mexican-American Glorieta Magdalena Davis Espinosa takes her obligations to her family very seriously. Her mother's family, the Espinosas, has lived in the same house for 400 years, and her aunts are the matriarchs of the town of Puerto de la Luna, which was swallowed up by Epoch, New Mexico, when it became a part of the United States but kept much of its magic and Mexicanness. But no magic can soothe Glorieta's grief over losing her mother to suicide years ago. Her great-aunt, la Doña Diosonita, forbade a burial in consecrated ground because they believed her death to be a mortal sin, and since her father remarried six weeks ago, her mother's ashes have been socked away in a drawer. Glorieta has about a month before Día de los Muertos, and she wants to use that time to convince her aunt that her mother deserves to be honored and not forgotten. But she also has to deal with a cruel new stepsister, an out-of-work father, and political disagreements among neighbors, some of whom call the town's many undocumented immigrants "aliens" and others who say "refugees." Although the plot grows too busy at times, the combination of magical realism, syncretism, and Catholicism is thoughtful and realistic, not preachy, and is accessible to believers and nonbelievers alike. Perhaps most important, Glorieta's desperation is affecting and wrenching.The complex, layered plot pulls no punches. (Fiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2018
      Grades 6-8 From the author of Tyger Tyger? (2010) comes an emotional coming-of-age story about family and loss. Glorieta's family has found happiness again with Alice, Papi's new wife, but Glorieta's mom's urn has been placed out of sight in a drawer. Tia Diosonita says that, because of her suicide, she can't be buried with the other Espinosas. But Glorieta doesn't want her mother to disappear forever, and with her two best friends at her side, she fights to keep her mother's memory alive. Hamilton takes an honest look at several serious topics, including suicide, bullying, grief, loss, and immigration. In a story about culture and staying true to your heart, Glorieta goes on a journey to understand her mother's suicide, all while dealing with her grief. With a touch of magic and lots of heart, this is a story about real situations and issues that looks poignantly at immigration and humanity. This is a story that needs to be read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2018
      A blended family learns to cope and have compassion for each other.Mexican-American Glorieta Magdalena Davis Espinosa takes her obligations to her family very seriously. Her mother's family, the Espinosas, has lived in the same house for 400 years, and her aunts are the matriarchs of the town of Puerto de la Luna, which was swallowed up by Epoch, New Mexico, when it became a part of the United States but kept much of its magic and Mexicanness. But no magic can soothe Glorieta's grief over losing her mother to suicide years ago. Her great-aunt, la Do�a Diosonita, forbade a burial in consecrated ground because they believed her death to be a mortal sin, and since her father remarried six weeks ago, her mother's ashes have been socked away in a drawer. Glorieta has about a month before D�a de los Muertos, and she wants to use that time to convince her aunt that her mother deserves to be honored and not forgotten. But she also has to deal with a cruel new stepsister, an out-of-work father, and political disagreements among neighbors, some of whom call the town's many undocumented immigrants "aliens" and others who say "refugees." Although the plot grows too busy at times, the combination of magical realism, syncretism, and Catholicism is thoughtful and realistic, not preachy, and is accessible to believers and nonbelievers alike. Perhaps most important, Glorieta's desperation is affecting and wrenching.The complex, layered plot pulls no punches. (Fiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.4
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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