Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Merci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina


So this just won the Newbery. WOAH. 

For once, I have actually read both the winner of the Newbery and the winner of the Caldecott. To be honest, I was quite surprised that Hello, Lighthouse won. I was expecting Dreamers or Drawn together. But they didn't even get honors. Which just goes to show you how much I know about judging the Caldecott. But I LOVE Hello, Lighthouse and I LOVE Merci Suárez. And Dreamers and Drawn Together both won in different categories, so they will not be medal-less. 

All is well in my world. 

So Merci. Merci is a great heroine. There is a time and place for the weak main character that finds their strength after a series of plot points, but in a refreshing difference, Merci is strong from the beginning. That doesn't mean she always gets the better of the mean, popular girl who decides to hate Merci for no real reason, but it means she doesn't cower in a corner for three quarters of the book.  

Merci's strength is partly due to being a scholarship student at a private school in Florida. Living next door to her boisterous extended Hispanic family, helping out with her father's painting company, and babysitting her little cousin is in stark contrast to her classmate's luxurious lives. Being different can either make you bitter and fearful or independent minded and strong. Fortunately for us, Merci chose the latter option. Being different is always there as a part of her, but she is not ashamed of her life necessarily. She adores soccer and loves her extended family and brilliant brother. Her life has a rhythm that makes sense to her and gives her life parameters. 

Merci's rhythmic life is interrupted when her beloved grandfather starts acting differently and the popular girl at school decides to make Merci's life miserable because Merci is a Sunshine Buddy to the new, cute guy. 

As Merci deals with meanness at school, disappointment in soccer, and the change in her home life, she begins to resent all this upheaval in her life. But Merci soon finds herself up to the challenge. Because what else can you do when life changes but improvise right along with it?

I love Merci and her love for her family and her confusion about growing up. Her situations and worries and concerns will be as recognizable and relatable to middle graders as her eventual triumph.

Life is never perfect, but Merci finds a way to make it okay.  

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