When Kambia Elaine Flew in from Neptune
Summary:
So I just made another note to add to my blue notebook later, when the house had cooled off: Tia's nature is boiling out of her like hot soup out of a pot, and Kambia Elaine just flew in from Neptune. Shayla Dubois lives in a Houston neighborhood known as the Bottom, where life is colorful but never easy. She wants only two things out of life: to become a writer and to have a nice, peaceful home. Instead, her life has been turned upside down. Shayla's mama kicked her sister, Tia, out of the house for messing around with an older guy, and months later Tia still hasn't come home. Shayla's father, Mr. Anderson Fox, has rolled back into town and has been spending a lot of time at the house with Mama. And Shayla still doesn't know what to make of her strange new neighbor, Kambia Elaine.
Kambia tells Shayla the most fantastic stories: that the Lizard People turn into purple chewing gum when the sun comes up; that Memory Beetles gather up and store people's good memories; that she is a piece of driftwood from the Mississippi River. All Shayla knows for sure is that Kambia's mother has a lot of male visitors and that Kambia doesn't look too healthy. When Kambia tells Shayla about the vicious Wallpaper Wolves that hide in her walls to catch bad little girls, Shayla knows something is wrong. But she doesn't know how she can help Kambia when she can't get past her stories, and when Tia still hasn't come home.
Told lyrically and gracefully by debut author Lori Aurelia Williams, When Kambia Elaine Flew in from Neptune shows how complicated life can get when children are forced to grow up too quickly, while it also celebrates the bonds of a strong, loving family. (Summary and cover courtesy of goodreads.com)
Review:
Initially when I started reading this book I was not particularly impressed, but it slowly grew on me. If I hadn’t committed to reading it for the challenge, I’m not sure that I would have continued, but I’m glad I did. It’s not a book I would have chosen to read at the age it was marketed to, but it would have been a good one for school!
Shayla felt naïve to me reading as an adult, but that may be that’s the 20/20 hindsight perspective on the book. There are some concepts that are tackled that I think are valuable to address, but I also think there are other books that articulate them better. The last quarter of the book is where Shayla’s voice really comes out and that’s what pulled it all together for me. Had the book received one more pass by an editor, I think it could have really blown my socks off.
Warning: Contains content that may be explicit for young readers
Rating: 3 stars!
Who should read it? Young tweens still not sure what they want to do.