A young Black boy and his two best friends discover a new world in his family’s ancestral book.
Cameron Battle is a 12-year-old boy of Igbo descent living in Atlanta who starts noticing strange happenings around his house but second-guesses himself, instead blaming his active imagination. At the start of summer vacation, Cameron has a sleepover with his two best friends, Zion and Aliyah. Despite being strictly prohibited from entering the attic and reading The Book of Chidani, a record of ancestral history passed down through the generations of Cameron’s family, all three kids disobey and find themselves literally pulled into the book—and with it, the country of Chidani. There, Cameron finds out that the odd things he’s noticed were indeed real and that, as the only living Descendant of the people of Chidani, he has been tasked with saving the country from a power grab by the queen’s sister. Perry presents a fantasy full of adventure, loss, bravery, and perseverance. Themes of love, intergenerational hardship, and sacrifice are woven throughout the story. Its potential, however, is largely unfulfilled thanks to the cast members’ constant vacillation in thought and action. Some characters feel one-dimensional, making it difficult for readers to become fully invested in the novel. The cast of characters is made up of Black people of various ethnicities.
A promising West African–inspired tale about courage and legacy let down by inconsistent characterization.
(Fantasy. 8-12)