REVIEW: A Kind of Paradise by Amy Rebecca Tan

Summary


Volunteering at the library for her summer vacation wasn’t Jamie’s idea. It was her penance, her punishment. One epically bad choice at the end of the school year – and the fall out over the next few days – left Jamie ashamed and humiliated.

The library was quiet, but there was a routine to it. Black Hat Guy always shows up around 4 pm, sits in the same chair charging his phone, and taking a nap. Wally always comes in on Tuesdays with a fresh carnation for the desk and 5 DVDs to return. Jamie comes to love the library. She loves the tasks she learns to do, the staff, and the patrons. But any reminder of school, any hint of what happened at the end of the year, floods Jamie with guilt and shame all over again. Can she ever hope to move past her failure? Will some people from her school ever let her move on?

Review


This was delightful!! I loved the library setting – the staff, the regular patrons, the fight to save the library from closure. It was a terrific setting for the story. Jamie learns so much from her friends there – and also from the books that surround her every day.

Jamie is a great protagonist. When readers get the full story about what she did at school, they’ll see why she did what she did and what the impact was. She earned her guilt, but she also should be able to turn a fresh page in her story. At the start, she doesn’t know how to do that. But she can learn.

I loved the heart of this book. It’s a relatively low-stress story with lots of character insights. The relationships between the characters feel authentic and warm. These are people I’d love to know. This library would be my second home. And Jamie’s growth over her summer at the library is everything I love about character-driven middle grade fiction! Highly recommend.

Rating: ♥♥♥♥½