Angela Cervantes is the award-winning author of several popular children's novels including Lety Out Loud, which won the Pura Belpré Honor Award in 2020.
Her other novels include The Cursed Moon, which won Florida's Sunshine State Young Readers Award. Angela's other middle grade novels include the Frida Kahlo-inspired mystery, Me, Frida and The Secret of the Peacock Ring; Allie, First At Last; and Gaby, Lost and Found.
Her latest children’s novel is Anomalies 53: Into the Shadows which is book 1 of a two-book series published by Harper Collins.
Additionally, Angela authored the junior novelization for Disney/Pixar's animated-film, Coco and Disney's animated film, Encanto. She also collaborated with American Girl Dolls for the novel Maritza: Lead With Your Heart.
Angela’s short stories have been featured in Chicken Soup for The Latino Soul and the Young Adult anthology Beyond Borders: Growing Up Mexican in America.
Angela is a daughter of a retired elementary-school teacher who instilled in her a love for reading and storytelling. Angela writes from her home in Kansas City. When she's not writing, Angela enjoys reading, running, gazing up at clouds, and taking advantage of Taco Tuesdays.
To learn more about Angela and her books, visit her website at angelacervantes.com.
Very well laid out! I still don't understand why the entirety of the journal was rewritten and added to this book. We don't get to new content until about halfway through. I don't fully understand why AG has gone in the direction of duplicating the journals within the chapter book.
2.5 stars. Yeah yeah I read this because Samantha was the doll I had as a kid, I am not immune to nostalgia bait.
I didn't think I'd like this to begin with due to some pretty annoying tense switching at first and the VERY abrupt switching between topics in an attempt to get everything set up quickly. I don't think the book needs to be longer, per se--I'm sure AG has some pretty strict requirements on authors regarding length, among other things--but I do think the information could have been introduced at different times and in a different way that would have been as (or more) comprehensible for the intended audience of second-graders. That being said, I do think it found its stride and ended up tying together the things it rushed to establish at first. While I predicted the adoption storyline pretty quickly (not a bad thing), it was genuinely surprising and impactful to get the story about Sloan's birth mom reaching out to her, and I think the way her behavior manifested prior to that reveal was pretty realistic and a little heartrending. There was development of side characters that I didn't expect, even if it was necessarily a little rushed. The characters were mostly enjoyable, even if I found myself wishing that some of their personalities were distinguished more--they essentially all talk the same way. Basically, I liked the characters and like that everything worked out for them, and isn't that what you're looking for out of a Girl of the Year book?
As far as what we're all here for, the Samantha content: yes, I enjoyed seeing my girl, I enjoyed the multiple references to her actual accessories even while knowing that they were essentially merch plugs ("I had that as a kid!"), I enjoyed the way her diary entries were written and got excited to read them every time. I was a bit surprised by the lack of references to Nelly, but the entries that were present were clearly there for a reason, so I can't really complain.
In other things that are not problems with the book itself as much as problems with reading AG for the first time in over 15 years as a 28-year-old: really kind of jarring to see an American Girl, even a modern-day girl of the year, use terms like "legit" and "deejay goals." Of course she would be taking a selfie, because the kids of today are taking selfies and it's perfectly normal to them; I was just personally thrown off. However I did love the introduction of the antagonistic girliepop pickleball team with their Barbie-pink pickleballs. I wish I could be them.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This reeeeeeally should have been in third person. It had the feeling of having been written that way and then forcibly rewritten into first but with a lot of awkward narrative lines that work better in a third person voice than pretending to be a ten-year-old. I also felt like there was waaaaaay too much going on for something as short as this was, and I'm sorry, but do children even play pickleball? I've never met anyone under 50 who plays it and never met anyone under 35 who even expressed an interest in it.
Having read the journal, I also don't understand the point of these miniseries being basically an abridged journal when you buy the doll and then the full novel later, but then again, I don't understand most choices Mattel makes with Pleasant's brand, and I'm convinced now that I'm on an actual blacklist with them.
Anyway.
I was mad at the way adoption was handled in the journal and I don't love it here either, and again, it's because American Girl has a policy of mostly choosing cultural accuracy consultants who aren't actually cultural insiders (I know this for a fact because someone there who once hired me to do a sensitivity edit on an American Girl project then told me that they were no longer going anywhere but to a white woman's DEI company for those consults in the future, so suuuure, Jan). I don't believe for a second that any of the ways Sloan responds and reacts and talks about her adoption were Cervantes' choice, I think they were dictated by the woman from the adoption organization that is anti-adoptee and pro-Quiverfull white saviorism, pro-adoptive parent, because that's who they chose as an adoption consultant instead of an actual fucking adopted person.
ok i preordered this with my adult money and haven’t shut up about it and how i just knew we’d find out more about nellie and other important figures to samantha. i guess not. which as an adoptee i appreciate them bringing in an advisor but without more on this story they just left out a huge connection to adoption in the family which would make the connection with sloan more rich. i’m not sure if we’re supposed to make comparatives on our own but it felt missing. i liked the raiding of the attic and really do like raquel overall but this did leave me wanting more and finishing the book like “where’s the rest of ye”.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I really loved that they finally made a girl of the year doll that is a descendant of the original historical characters and I really hope that they keep creating characters that are descendants of the original historical characters
It's been at least a decade since I aged out of American Girl as a brand, but those stories and those dolls (especially the historical ones) were integral to who I am today, so this was really nostalgic. Raquel being Samantha Parkington's great-granddaughter probably helped, but I think even without that, I would have felt that sense of nostalgia. This story weaves together so many different things: family, adoption, cousin relationships, dolphins, marine conservation, pickleball, family history, and paletas, but it works, and I am very satisfied with this tale. I actually learned something about pickleball as a lifelong Washingtonian, that might be shocking, but I didn't know anything about our state sport...I am not a sporty person. I liked how Samantha's tale was woven into Raquel's, and I wouldn't be mad if they did this with other historical figures, because it's so much better than having Courtney, the 1980s historical character, have her own Molly doll or there being dolls that are worried about Y2K. My one question is, what about Nellie and her sisters, didn't Uncle Gard and Aunt Cornelia adopt them? Honestly, this is making me want to do a deep dive into more of the AG stories, because this was lovely! If you see me reading more AG books, mind your business!
Thank you to Libro FM and Penguin Random House for the Advanced Listening Copy
Raquel is excited to visit her mom's family for her cousin Harper's wedding, and ends up discovering things that belonged to her great-great grandmother Samantha Parkington at their family's home in Mount Bedford. As an OG AG fan from the 80s, I was excited to learn more about Samantha's future, and to have the clothes and furniture I remember so well be described. It's a sweet story, I like Raquel and her cousin Sloan, and I hope we learn more about Sam in the second book.
It's interesting how the dolls have become popular with younger kids, but the book are much more complex and long now than they were originally.
So cute to take a look into the lives of Samantha’s family so many years later. Raquel and her cousins were likable characters and I loved the nods to Samantha’s diary and her clothes and accessories left behind at the Mount Bedford house.
The only piece I think was missing was the mention of Nelly and her sisters as part of the adoption story and theme. That would have added one more tie to the original stories.
My 9 year old and I loved reading this one together. I have been a fan of Samantha for years and it was very nostalgic to see how her posterity and some of their adventures.