
In the story a teenage girl from, Kyrgyzstan wants to be a typical American teenager, but she is struggling to convince her parents that she can be a typical American teenager while also able to stick to their family heritage.

These selections will provide teachers with a wealth of material to use in multicultural literature units.-Alison Follos, North Country School, Lake Placid, NY Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.“My Favorite Chaperone” is a work of fiction and is a short story written by, Jean Davies Okimoto. There's the chronic irony of children shrugging off anchors from their homeland while laden with guilt to respect the traditions that their parents cling to they're caught in a conflict of change, assuming responsibility while remaining obediently subordinate. Many of the stories open with a brief description of the country the family is leaving, or the lifestyle they flee details that set a foundation for the teens' achievements and relationships. In Jean Davies Okimoto's "My Favorite Chaperone," an immigrant from Kazakhstan describes her relationship with her conservative parents, who rely on her to translate for them but still limit her freedom.

Lee's "The Rose of Sharon" describes a spoiled girl's animosity toward her adoptive parents and her desire to return to Korea to find her birth family. In Pam Mu-oz Ryan's "First Crossing," a boy experiences the risks of being smuggled across the Mexican border. Gr 7 Up-Covering a wide range of cultural and economical backgrounds, these stories by 11 well-known authors touch on a variety of teen experiences, with enough attitude and heartfelt angst to speak to young adults anywhere. Alden Carter's "The Swede" gives readers a horrifying picture of the tormenting of a Swedish teen from the point of view of his American persecutor, while Rita Garcia-Williams illustrates the tensions between two Haitian girls in the ultimately hilarious "Make Maddie Mad." The anthology's stronger stories provide insights into human behavior and the universal experiences of being "different." Let's hope teens hang on till they get to them. In Lensey Namioka's "They Don't Mean It!," Mary Wang and her friend Kim find out that Chinese customs don't translate easily into American culture. Several of the stories do stand out as slices of life with real characters and a lightness of touch or depth of feeling that make them a pleasure to read. Some of the earlier stories read more like essays, explaining the characters' problems rather than working as successful fiction. Gallo sets the stage-explaining the rationale for the book and presenting a short biographical sketch of the author after each story-for this well-meaning, uneven anthology.


Newly transplanted teens will find the voices represented in this collection far more relevant than those echoing forth from the huddled masses of Ellis Island, and American-born readers will gain insight from the palpable depictions of what it's like to be thrust into "the middle of a game where don't know the players, the rules, or even the object." Overtly tolerance-promoting tales are well balanced with irreverent ones: Lensey Namioka reflects on Chinese etiquette and David Lubar takes a comic look at a Transylvanian immigrant who finds unexpected friends among his school's vampire-obsessed Goths. Among the 10 stories, readers will encounter teens who have left homelands behind for reasons not so different from those of earlier generations others'circumstances are more distinctly modern, such as the Korean-born girl adopted by white parents and the Swedish teen uprooted from his home by his father's globetrotting career. The contemporary teen immigrants in Gallo's newest story collection hail from a mix of countries-Cambodia, Haiti, Kazakhstan, Mexico, South Korea-reflective of current immigration trends.
