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Saraswati's Way

Saraswati's Way by Monika Schröder Intermediate, Middle School Foster/Farrar 233 pp. 11/10 978-0-374-36411-3 $16.99
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Living in a small desert village in India, Akash dreams of studying mathematics, but he has always known that his prospects for a good education are dim. And now that his father has died, he is being sent to work off the family's debt to their landlord, breaking and shaping rocks at the man's quarry. Thanks to his skill at arithmetic, Akash soon learns that he will never be able to pay off the debt, so he escapes to Delhi, becoming one of the many children scavenging the streets for food and shelter. Akash, twelve, is an appealing hero for this urban survival story, his mathematical talent providing him with both a superior weapon and an ambition for education that give the story focus. Schröder occasionally leans on the culture-painting a little hard, but by and large Akash does a fine job of driving the story himself, through dangerous situations and unlikely comrades, to a happy conclusion. ROGER SUTTON
Gr 5-7 With his talent for math, 12-year-old Akash dreams of escaping his dreary existence by winning a school scholarship. He and his widowed father, Bapu, eke out a precarious existence with their extended family in rural Rajasthan, a drought-plagued region of India. After Bapu's death, Akash is sent to a quarry to work off his family's insurmountable debt. He runs away and ends up living in the New Dehli train station. He forages through trash heaps to find food, joins a group of homeless children, and moves from one perilous situation to the next. In one of the most harrowing episodes, he and a friend sell drugs for a dangerous drug lord. Akash's story is involving, yet the fast-paced plot outpaces character development, and the hopeful ending arrives abruptly. In an author's note, Schröder briefly describes the plight of street children in India; she also adds interest with references to Vedic math and Hindu gods. Despite its good intentions, Akash's story remains too thinly sketched to be memorable.-"Marilyn Taniguchi, Beverly Hills Public Library, CA" Copyright 2010 Media Source Inc.
Twelve-year-old Akash dreams of studying mathematics. Knowing his prospects for a good education are dim, he flees his small desert village in India for Delhi, becoming one of the many children scavenging the streets for food and shelter. Akash is an appealing hero for this urban survival story, driving the tale through dangerous situations and unlikely comrades to a happy conclusion.

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