FICTION

Because It Is My Blood

September 2012. 350p. 978-0-37438-807-8.
COPY ISBN
Gr 8 Up–In this sequel to All These Things I’ve Done (Farrar, 2010), Anya Balanchine’s life become very complicated not long after she is released from a prison located near a future Manhattan. In her continued attempts to protect her siblings, manage her family’s standing in the mafiya world of black-market chocolate, and plan her future, the teen finds herself in Mexico where she sees the cacao business from a different angle. Here she learns about the healing powers of chocolate and its rich folkloric tradition, causing her to wonder why it was outlawed and if it were possible that chocolate wasn’t dangerous, or even unhealthy.  Anya’s on-again-off-again romance with Win Delacroix persists in spite of numerous obstacles, including her rocky relationship with his District Attorney father. Threatened by her competitors in the criminal world, she is forced to return quickly to New York to intervene in her family’s affairs. Anya finally finds a way to legitimize her family’s longstanding ties to chocolate. The sequel is not as strong as the first book–the multitude of characters, plot twists, and conspiracy theories take readers on a bit of a bumpy ride. The romance is downplayed in favor of Anya’s familial and political pursuits, but there is a satisfying, friendly relationship between Anya and Theo, a boy whose family is also in the chocolate business. Readers who enjoy mob stories and visions of future societies will be pleased. As in the first book, Zevin provokes thought about what we make illegal and why. Nora Murphy
Seventh grader Ren's world is a mess. Her father moved out shortly before being deployed to Afghanistan, and her mother seems to be running around with another guy. So Ren escapes, if only as far as the nearby "ghost town" of Fortune. She finds refuge in a dilapidated, abandoned school being renovated into a boarding house by quirky octogenarian Hildy Baxter. Ren enjoys poking around the mysterious old building and soon meets Hugh, a younger boy with a penchant for spying. It turns out that Hildy is in search of treasure—a stash of pearls collected during Fortune's button-making heyday (before the supply of mussel- and clam shells dried up and the button factories closed). It was intended to be Hildy's nest egg, hidden by her brother before he died in battle in the Korean War. The mystery is a satisfying one, filled with dead ends, scary moments, and surprising plot twists. However, it's the relationships between the characters that make this story memorable. Hildy holds her dwindling town together, even when things seem to be falling apart; on the brink of young adulthood, Ren learns to face her own fortune with reflection and grace. And one thing is for sure: buttons will never look quite so insignificant again. The author's historical note rounds out this story in a satisfying way. Robin Smith

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