Warrior girl

Carmen Tafolla, 1951-

Book - 2023

"Celina and her family are bilingual and follow both Mexican and American traditions. Celina revels in her Mexican heritage, but once she starts school it feels like the world wants her to erase that part of her identity. Fortunately, she’s got an army of family and three fabulous new friends behind her to fight the ignorance. But it’s her Gramma who’s her biggest inspiration, encouraging Celina to build a shield of joy around herself. Because when you’re celebrating, when you find a reason to sing or dance or paint or play or laugh or write, they haven’t taken everything away from you. Of course, it’s not possible to stay in celebration mode when things get dire–like when her dad’s deported and a pandemic hits–but if... there is anything Celina’s sure of, it’s that she’ll always live up to her last name: Guerrera–woman warrior–and that she will use her voice and writing talents to show the world it’s a more beautiful place because people like her are in it" --

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Subjects
Genres
Novels in verse
Published
New York : Nancy Paulsen Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Carmen Tafolla, 1951- (author)
Physical Description
205 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 10 up.
ISBN
9780593354711
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

From a young age, people have tried to suppress Celina's expression of her Mexican heritage, but her grandmother is one of the few who have taught her to be proud of who she is. It has not been easy dealing with the constant moving as her father tries to find work, and more recently, his deportation has left Celina feeling lost. Celina and her mother decide to stay with her grandmother as they work through their situation. At school, she starts to experience some blossoming friendships. Only, just as Celina begins to find her voice through her writing, the pandemic pauses her progress. However, with the help of her friends, Celina gains the courage to be the warrior she was meant to be by making a difference with her writing. Readers who enjoy novels in verse will be moved by Tafolla's touching story. This is an emotional novel about the journey of finding where you belong, making your voice heard, and the friendships you can forge along the way.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Using rhythmic first-person verse, Tafolla (I'll Always Come Back to You) presents messages about the importance of family and friends, social justice, and using one's voice to incite change. Celina Teresa Guerrera Amaya, 12, is used to frequently moving house, especially because of her Mexican immigrant father's odd jobs. When her father is deported, she and her mother move to San Antonio to live with Celi's Gramma. Starting at yet another new school is tough, but Gramma teaches Celi about the history of her ancestors and encourages her to draw strength from their stories. The two develop a strong connection that buoys Celi during difficult times ("Talking with Gramma can be/ a splash of sunshine/ in a dark, cold cave"), and Gramma's steadfastness, as well as new friendships at school, help Celi navigate the onset of Covid, the Black Lives Matter movement, and fraught familial dynamics. Via the protagonist's journey to articulate her complex feelings through succinct and polished phrases, Tafolla crafts an astute and evolving heroine. The lyrical verse--structured as Celi's own poetry, which teachers and Gramma embolden her to pursue--eventually culminates in powerful vocalizations of Celi's values. Ages 10--up. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 5 Up--She's Celina Teresa Guerrero Amaya, but the nurse decided "four is too many names" and wrote a shortened portmanteau on her birth certificate: Guerrera, presciently meaning "WOMAN warrior." At 12, Celi's life is complicated: Dad's been deported to Mexico (again); she's moved (again), this time to Gramma's in San Antonio; and she's struggling to adjust to another new school (again). Gramma becomes her greatest champion, filling Celi with inspiring memories, empowering her with powerful histories. Further buoyed by new friends, Celi claims the promise of her name: "No matter what, they will not silence me." Prolific Mexican American poet/writer Tafolla's verse novel--and first audiobook (the Spanish edition follows in January 2024)--is mellifluously ciphered by fellow Mexican American Escamilla. Her Spanish fluency is distinctly appreciated, as Celi's voice as poet and warrior evolves and expands. VERDICT Nimbly inserted contemporary events--#BlackLivesMatter, COVID-19, anti-Asian hate--ensure timely resonance.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A 12-year-old girl claims her place in a turbulent world. After years of being silenced at school, Mexican American Celina is ready for a clean start. It's not easy starting middle school in a new town, and now her dad has been deported yet again. While she, her mother, and Gramma trust her papacito will find a way to return, as he has before, his absence is always painful. Still, Celi makes one friend, then two more, and the four middle schoolers quickly find refuge and strength in each other. The friendships become lifelines over the course of the year as they face ordinary middle school challenges--homework, mean kids--and broader social turmoil with the emerging Covid-19 pandemic, the killings of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd, increasing awareness of global warming, and more. Tafolla skillfully weaves these significant recent historic moments and the hopeful stories of leaders like Emma Tenayuca and César Chávez together with the more specific experiences of the four friends as Celina is racially profiled by a teacher and a Covid death hits close to home. The friends, who are Chicano, are distinct enough, but a few are more thinly drawn; protagonist Celi, an emerging poet, is consistently and vividly rendered, though, and her righteous, powerful, and joyful voice carries the day. An exuberant, rousing celebration of youth activism. (author's note, land acknowledgement) (Verse fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Life Slapped Her Hard Hand Felt like Life had slapped her hard hand over my mouth and tried to shut me up, tried to keep me from being me, keep me from even my song, even my name. Yes, she tried to shut me up, and for a little while, she did. How I Got My Name So when I was born, my mom said , Ay, qué preciosa. I want to name her Celina. But my dad said, I want to name her after your mom, Teresa. And Mom nodded (kind of) and said, We'll name her Celina Teresa, and we can call her Tere around the house so Gramma can know how much we love her. And they did. And everything was good with my name except for one thing: My dad's last name is Guerrero and my mom's is Amaya, and the nurse got confused when she saw "all those names" (Celina Teresa Guerrero Amaya. I don't think four is too many names, but I guess the nurse did), so she wrote down Guerrera with an A at the end of the name instead of an O . And dropped the Amaya completely. No one noticed right away 'cause they were too busy oohing and aahing over me. Then the birth certificate came in the mail, and they noticed it and Dad just laughed. He said, Well . . . Guerrera means a "WOMAN warrior." I bet she'll be brave and strong and fight for justicia . And then he said, We could get it fixed later . . . Maybe. And Mom repeated, Maybe . . . Then, the very next month, they deported my dad back to Mexico for not having the right papers. Funny how papers can be so right and so wrong and can even mean more than people in some folks' eyes. What Matters Luckily, my dad returned to us pretty soon because there's no way he was gonna leave my mom alone to raise their beautiful baby girl (me). Mama said to get back, Dad had to work to raise money and borrow some from his cousin too. He had to swim across a river at night and then cross a desert with no water and then walk through a field of snakes, but he came back. And he kept working here to pay for the rent and for the food and the diapers. He kept trying to get his papers, but something else always had to be paid first, like taking me to get my shots or getting the motor fixed on the car or learning enough English to do his taxes or working to help Mama pay for her nurse's aide schooling. But nothing was going to stop him from being there for me and being the best dad, and that's what really matters. Gramma Said I Was Wonderful Life is so much fun, so rica with adventure and dreams when you're little and at home with people who love you and look at you with eyes full of hope. That's what my grandma did. She looked at me (even when I was bad and snuck an extra pan de polvo off the plate before the party) and laughed and said, ¡Qué sinvergüenza esta muchacha! Even though her words said I was rascally, that's not what her eyes said. I saw her eyes. They said I was Wonderful. Couldn't Wait I couldn't wait for the first day of first grade. I was big. I was cool. I was ready to go and show la teacher that I was smart and pretty and wonderful . . . I even put TWO bows in my hair so that I'd look "bien purty." I thought first grade was going to be better than Christmas! But instead of getting things, we'd be learning things. And I especially wanted to show the teacher that I already knew how to write my name in BIG letters, like a BIG girl: TERE. Tere, the name of my grandmother. And my grandmother's grandmother. And my grandmother's grandmother's grandmother. I remember that day so clearly, remember bursting with excitement. But sometimes things don't turn out the way you hope. First-Grade Tere Tells Her Story My teacher was so pretty. A big, tall lady with blond hair. But our first conversation went like this: Hi. I'm Miss Jones. Hi. I Tere. Awww . . . Terry. No, iss Tere. No, it's pronounced Terry. Iss . . . per-nounce . . . Tere. No. Watch my mouth. Teh. Reee. See? No, iss Teh-reh. Iss always been Tere. Look. Make your mouth like this and pronounce it right. Teh. REEEE! That's what your name is here, and you will learn to say it right. Pero RIGHT iss Tere, miss. She lookin' at me so mean. And her eyebrows, they like two standing-up lines of mad, so I say, Okay, because no importa, it doesn't matter. I in first grade, I smart, and I want teacher lady to like me. Erased When I color the Cinderella princess, I make her look like my big cousin, with long black hair down to there and blue glitter above her eyes. But teacher says, Cinderella has blond hair . She takes away my picture, says, Do it over. Do it right. And I think, No importa 'cause maybe she doesn't understand. Then we go to the cafeteria, and the food looks weird. I'm hungry after lunch, but no importa, doesn't matter. In gym I get my own coach (like in the Olympics). He lets the boys go first to show us how to run the races (even though I run faster than Juanito and Chale). When I yell, ¡Córrele, Juanito! Coach comes over to scold me, says, This is the U.S. Speak English! So I say, Run, Johnny. Run! Coach still looks at me funny. But I think, No importa 'cause gym is over. We go back to the class and teacher says she's gonna teach us how to write our names. I show her my paper full of big proud letters that say TERE. She erases my name! Says I got too many capitals and not enough R 's. Tells me, Do it over. Do it RIGHT! But my paper looks so empty and I feel like I just disappeared, got erased, turned invisible. And it hurts. So I'm glad we have a game at the end of the day so I can show la teacher how smart I am. Teacher explains the game: When I touch your head, jump up and say your name. I jump up, say, TERE, and she mumbles something 'bout putting me in the slow class. I don't WANT to be in the slow class, to move slow and run slow and act slow. But I don't say anything. I go home and take off my two bows. I have first grade again tomorrow, but . . . No importa. It doesn't matter. Moving We had to move. I don't remember why. My dad got a new job or the old job finished or didn't pay enough to stay. The new town wasn't any bigger than the old one, but the people were meaner to us and I felt a lot more lost, especially in school. The teacher there must've taken lessons from the teacher in the old place, because she, too, changed my name to Terry. Guess none of them liked names that sounded like Spanish. So they took away my name. I wonder what is left that they CAN'T take away. Celebrating a Chubasco We didn't live with Gramma back then, but she'd always come to visit and tell us stories to remind us who we were. The house would fill with laughter, and nothing--nothing ever-- could keep us from celebrating everything. One day when she arrived, the summer sky changed in a flash. Chubasco! When your sweltering hot boring day turns dark as night and the wind begins to blow like magic and heavy clouds roll in to throw a big surprise party as they throw down a confetti of icy hail. Chubasco! When thunder booms so big Gramma says it sounds like a huge fiesta with someone banging hard on the drums. But you and Dad watch it while sitting safely on the porch and laugh and pretend to play drums right along with the sound that beats down from that cool wild drummer in the sky. My Gramma Tere Taught Me One of the things my gramma Tere taught me was how to make a fiesta out of every day. Every day she would whisper, Today is a celebration! It's the feast of San Fulano de Tal! And she would tell me the name of the saint for that day or the celebration for that day or the reason we should be happy that day. El Día del Mariachi! So we'd listen to mariachi music. El Día del Chef! So we'd cook something special and exotic. El Día de la Risa! So we'd spend the day joking and laughing. Now I know why Tere is just as strong a warrior name as Guerrera. Because when you're celebrating, when you find a reason to be happy, a reason to sing or dance or paint or play or laugh or write, they haven't taken everything away from you. Excerpted from Warrior Girl by Carmen Tafolla All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.