Book Description
for Mimi by John Newman
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
“Monday is Granny’s day … Tuesday is Aunt M.’s day.” Mimi’s mom died five months ago, and she and her older siblings, Conor and Sally, would be lost without the support of their wonderful extended family. Her grandparents, aunts, and uncles provide routine and a sense of normalcy while her dad remains in a fog of depression. But even surrounded by so much love, it still hurts. At school, Mimi struggles to stay engaged until a terrific new teacher combines compassion with expectation. At home, she and Sally are often at odds. Mimi has been reading Sally’s diary and discovers Sally has a secret: She’s been stealing from the neighborhood store. When Sally is caught, the resulting drama and chaos shock Mimi’s dad into action, and gradually the family begins to function again. Mimi’s voice is childlike and believable, and the behavior of Mimi and her siblings as well as her lively and loving extended family is utterly real, in John Newman’s honest, tender novel. As an aside, Mimi is adopted from China, while her two older siblings are not. When a classmate makes a nasty comment, saying Mimi hasn’t lost her “real” mother, Mimi’s response powerfully negates that lie and is a cathartic moment in the narrative. (Ages 8–10)
CCBC Choices 2012. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2012. Used with permission.