Gr 3–6—Estefania "Stef" Soto just wants to be a typical seventh grader. She wants to have friends. She wants to fit in, and she wants a bit of independence from her overprotective immigrant parents. Stef knows enough not to expect to be able to take a city bus to school, the way her former friend Julia does, but even a school bus is deemed too risky by her parents. Her
papi insists on picking her up every day in Tia Perla, his beat-up taco truck. Each day, he asks, "
¿Aprendiste algo??" (Did she learn something?) Then they find a spot for her father to drum up business while Stef does her homework. Deep down, she's proud of her parents and knows they are working hard to provide for her, but she's also resentful of the ease with which some of her classmates, especially Julia, get things—like tickets to see Vivian Vega in concert. Even if she could earn the money for tickets, she knows her parents would never let her go. This earnest debut features a relatable narrator, stalwart friends, and caring parents who are working hard and struggling. The subplot involving a pop idol threatens to veer into after-school special territory but avoids doing so. The core of the story—friendship and the importance of family—wins out, leaving tweens with a satisfying, gentle read.
VERDICT A worthy addition to library shelves; hand this to younger middle grade readers looking for family-centered realistic fiction.—
Brenda Kahn, Tenakill Middle School, Closter, NJEstefania "Stef" Soto wants nothing more than for her parents to stop treating her like she's a little kid. That means letting her walk home from school alone instead of having her dad pick her up in her family's unsightly food truck, Tía Perla (which ex-best friend Julia Sandoval has convinced her makes her smell like tacos). It also means allowing her to go to the Viviana Vega concert that everyone in the entire world is attending. When new regulations threaten to shut down her father's business, Stef thinks it isn't the worst thing in the world. No Tía Perla means no food truck waiting for her after school and maybe even some freedom from her overprotective parents. But when a power failure almost ruins the school's fundraiser, Stef realizes that Tía Perla might not put such a cramp in her style after all. Torres perfectly captures what it's like to be a young person seeking independence and learning about responsibility. She breathes life into the old food truck, which becomes another character. We meet her in the school parking lot: "Tía Perla, huffing and wheezing and looking a little bit grubby no matter how clean she actually is." Young readers will feel a kinship with Stef as she struggles to spread her wings in this engaging and relatable middle-grade novel about growing up. celia c. pérez
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