In this story loosely based on the author’s childhood, a tween stuck at home with her younger siblings while they all recover from chickenpox must summon patience while struggling with anxiety from shifting friendships.
It’s 1994 in Indonesia, and 12-year-old Abby Lai is irritated that her younger brothers and sisters—Amy, 11, Remy, 8, Andy, 6, and Tommy, 3—make her house feel like “a wild zoo.” They take (and sometimes ruin) her things, and there’s never a moment’s peace amid the bickering and fart jokes. After a disastrous visit with best friends Monica Chandra and Julia Hartono, during which Abby spectacularly lost her temper at her siblings, she’s embarrassed to overhear Julia telling someone at school that she was “acting like such a fourth grader.” But then Julia succumbs to chickenpox—and it emerges that when she was over, she infected the Lai kids as well. Abby, who’s already feeling isolated, now faces quarantining at home with her pesky siblings. The expressive art and clear sequencing in this humor-filled, emotionally intelligent story highlight Abby’s journey as she finds her footing as a better big sister and friend who can give and receive grace for human missteps. Iconic aspects of ’90s life (like eavesdropping on someone’s conversation on a landline phone extension) and facets of life in Indonesia (jaywalking when there are no crosswalks) add to the strong sense of time and place.
Honest, atmospheric, and full of heart.
(author’s note) (Graphic fiction. 8-12)