|
Drawn from the Book Description
Fourteen-year-old Jess is only just coming to terms with her father's death in a car accident. Until now she believed her mother put aside the family's plan to adopt a daughter from China. But a year has passed, Xiao Ting is ready to be picked up from her orphanage, and Jess is having second thoughts.
Jess is still walled up by grief, but within a matter of weeks she's traveling to China accompanied by her mother, seven other families, and one energetic adoption facilitator. Among her traveling companions is fifteen-year-old Winnie Moore, who was adopted from China thirteen years earlier. Like Jess, Winnie has lost a parent. Yet Jess quickly discovers that Winnie isn't quite like anyone she's ever met before.
China, too, holds many surprises. A country with a long, complex history and an uncertain future, this strange land is the birthplace of her new sister, Xiao Ting. Until she gets there, how can Jess possibly begin to imagine that she, too, will come to feel connected to a country thousands of miles from home? How can she predict what the trip and her new sister hold in store for her? How can she understand why the Chinese birth family could not keep their daughter? How can she believe that Emily's words just might come true?
From the Publisher
"Jess is a smart, modern heroine with whom readers, young and old, will identify. Her journey to China to find, and bring home, Grace is an engaging, well-informed introduction to the adoption process. GRACE FROM CHINA is equally a story about healing and the rebuilding of families through opening one's heart to love. In the process, the reader and Jess grow wings. Congratulations to Jacqueline Kolosov for having written a beautiful book that addresses a complex issue of our contemporary times." -- Mary Swander, author of The Desert Pilgrim
Roberta's Note: I gave this to my 13-year old to read and as a sibling to an adopted sister and brother, and this is what she said, "This book would be great for an older child whose parents are adopting from China or any other country. It gives a unique perspective into what goes through one child's mind while going through this long, and sometimes tedious, process. A very enjoyable story."
There isn't enough Young Adult literature about sibling adoption making Grace from China an important addition to the literature. Whether you're adopting from China or elsewhere, this is an excellent read!
- 179 pages
- hardcover
- ages 9-12
|