Bound To Stay Bound

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 Everyone loves lunchtime but Zia
 Author: Liao, Jenny

 Publisher:  Knopf (2023)

 Classification: Easy
 Physical Description: [31] p., col. ill., 26 x 28 cm

 BTSB No: 572413 ISBN: 9780593425428
 Ages: 3-7 Grades: K-2

 Subjects:
 Food -- Fiction
 Chinese Americans -- Fiction

Price: $23.78

Summary:
Even though Zia loves the Cantonese food her parents prepare at home, she is embarrassed to eat it at school, but when she realizes each meal has a special meaning, she begins to look forward to lunchtime. Includes a recipe for Zia's lucky yi mein.

 Illustrator: Chen, Dream


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Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (12/15/22)
   School Library Journal (01/01/23)
   Booklist (03/01/23)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 01/01/2023 K-Gr 3—A familiar story with a fresh twist grounded in Cantonese cooking. Zia loves the Cantonese food that her family makes at home but when it comes to lunch at school it just makes her feel different from everyone else. The other students ask hurtful questions about her food and when she takes this concern home her parents devise a clever solution. Each of the subsequent days of the week she is sent to school with a Cantonese dish and a special meaning for each item. On Wednesday, for example, Zia brings soy sauce chicken, called see yao gai (also written in Cantonese), and her father explains that it is eaten to bring success. After eating the dish, Zia gets a star on her art project and wonders if there is a connection between her lunch and her reward. By the end of the week it is Zia's birthday and her family sends her to school with a feast for the whole class. Her classmates celebrate Zia and her family's cuisine and Zia now loves lunch time. The ending includes extensive illustration notes on the huge variety of Chinese cuisine and detailed information on Cantonese cooking, plus a recipe for Zia's favorite noodles. VERDICT While the resolution to the protagonist's problem might have come relatively easily in one week, children will connect with Zia's struggles and will be encouraged to share their family traditions with others.—John Scott - Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Booklist - 03/01/2023 A familiar outsider experience inspires children to find pride in their identity in this celebration of Cantonese food and family. At home, young Zia loves the smells and textures of her family’s Cantonese food. But at school, her classmates make fun of her homemade lunches, making Zia feel different. When Zia, longing to fit in, pleads with her parents to bring other food, her parents respond that they’ll do something special this coming week: “a different lunch every day, each with a special meaning.” After some initial resistance, Zia discovers over the course of the week that when she eats her special lunch, something wonderful related to the Cantonese dish happens. On Friday, Zia’s birthday, she and her classmates all enjoy a feast of Cantonese cuisine. Pairing perfectly with Liao’s heartwarming story are Chen’s bright and expressive illustrations, which include mouthwatering drawings of Cantonese dishes. Cantonese spelling of various foods, a recipe, an author’s note, and a food glossary add additional cultural depth. A simple and sweet story told through a delicious Chinese cultural lens. - Copyright 2023 Booklist.

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