In this to the middle-grade novel Front Desk, 11-year-old Mia Tangās courage, grit, and willingness to stand up against injustice fuel the narrative. Mia is the daughter of Chinese immigrants. After much sweat and opposition, her parents are able to buy the Calivista Motel with the help of immigrant investors and others.
For a while, Miaās familyās fortunes improve as they create an extended family with other newcomers and people from various ethnic backgroundsāa true home. But then āa dark cloud settled over the state of California.ā Mia hears adults talking about Proposition 187, a bill introduced by a state governor that has led to an increase in hate crimes. If the bill passes, Mia realizes, āProp 187 would kick undocumented children out of California schools, making it illegal for them to get an education or use public services like hospitals.ā Mia wonders what will happen to her best friend Lupeāthe only friend she has ever had. Lupeās parents fled Mexico when she was an infant and lived in California without āpapers.ā
As Mia and Lupe face intensifying struggles together, forging a deeper bond of friendship, they come up against forces far beyond their control. But they use their skills to do what they can to battle injustice and receive kindness from unexpected quartersāa teacher, government officials, a sympathetic lawyer, and even strangers.
Three Keys is a novel for our times. Based on historical factsāin 1994, Proposition 187 was voted in and anti-immigrant sentiments ran highāit mirrors the current political reality in the United States. Author Kelly Yang, who immigrated from China to California with her parents as a young child and helped to run the family motel, was 10 years old when Proposition 187 passed. In an authorās note she writes, āIt was a permanent and irreversible slap across the face to me and every immigrant I knew.ā Yang adds that she lived and breathed the story of Three Keys for years before writing it, wanting to represent in her book something she had never read about in other booksāāworrying about oneās immigration status, being preoccupied by doubts and fears I couldnāt say out loud to my classmates but sat very much in the pit of my stomach, wondering whether I was āAmerican enough,ā whether I was ātoo American,ā ānot Chinese enough, ātoo Chinese.āā
Though Three Keys, which has several instances of profanity, deals with some hard realities, it is undergirded by the foundations of family, friendship, mercy, justice, and love and is peppered with humor and cultural insights. (Scholastic Press)
About the Author
Sonya VanderVeen Feddema is a freelance writer and a member of Covenant CRC in St. Catharines, Ontario.