cover image Shine, Coconut Moon

Shine, Coconut Moon

Neesha Dosanjh Meminger, . . S&S/McElderry, $16.99 (253pp) ISBN 978-1-4169-5495-8

“Before Uncle Sandeep walked back into my life, I'd never cared that I was a Sikh.... But that was before 9/11.” Raised in suburban New Jersey, 17-year-old Samar has few connections to her Indian heritage. Her mother, having felt oppressed by her conservative Sikh parents, cut ties with them years earlier (“My mom spent a whole lot of time... smudging the hard lines that made us different from everyone around us”). Samar's uncle, eager to reconnect in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, helps the teenager learn about her background, taking her to a Sikh temple and reintroducing her estranged grandparents into her life. A number of acts of violence, including an incident in which some classmates throw bottles at her uncle's car while they are driving, further spur Samar's awakening, causing her to reconsider what it means to be Indian in America. Debut novelist Meminger raises complex questions of identity, but avoids moralizing or spelling out answers for readers, who will likely be hooked as Samar takes a second look at her relationships with her boyfriend, friends and family, while seeking a better understanding of herself. Ages 14–up. (Mar.)