A magical sardine can brings a Victorian girl the promise of three wishes.
Stuck at Miss Salamanca’s School for Upright Young Ladies, Maeve Merritt, prone to foul language and fisticuffs, wants a life of her own making filled with travel and cricket, not the stultifying life dictated by family and society. But an unopened sardine can found in a rubbish pile brings the unexpected arrival of Mermeros, an ancient djinni. Will Maeve lose her integrity to greed like all the previous djinni masters? Soon Maeve, her roommate Alice, and local orphan Tom are in the midst of more adventure, blackmail, and danger than they ever imagined possible. Maeve’s first-person narrative moves swiftly, peppered by her droll observations and witty dialogue. Small details weave together to create an engaging tapestry that becomes more complex and compelling with every page turn. Maeve is highly possessive of her good fortune, but an altruistic eleventh-hour choice leads to happy endings for all after she wrestles with her conscience and ponders the gap between rich and poor. When Maeve and Tommy raid the sarcophagus of a long-ago Persian king, Alice pushes back against the theft. Human characters are cued as White; the cover shows Maeve with brown skin and black hair, but her appearance and ethnicity are not described in the text. (This review has been updated to reflect a change between the advance reader copy and final edition.)
A nostalgic Dickens and Nesbit mashup.
(Historical fantasy. 10-13)