When 17-year-old Francine Zhang overhears her dying grandfather expressing regret at not having any direct male descendants, she comes up with The Plan: find a boy to be A Gūng’s (fake) honorary heir.
Classmate Ollie Tran is the perfect candidate: Like Francine, he’s Chinese Vietnamese American; he speaks enough Cantonese to chat with A Gūng; and their families have known each other since before they came to the U.S. It makes sense that he’d follow the old custom of assuming the role of male heir for a family that needs one to look after their ancestors. Ollie has no desire to get involved, however. He knows how devoted Francine is to her family but has kept his distance ever since an awkward incident in middle school. Ollie also has his own problem: His strategy of exerting the least amount of effort at school to produce decent results means he has little to show for extracurricular activities. With Francine’s help, Ollie joins the Multicultural Club, where he’s asked to host a booth at their annual fundraising event and showcase his family history, about which he knows little. Alternately hilarious and heartbreaking, this story highlights the interweaving of family and tradition and how this impacts ways love is demonstrated. Francine and Ollie are appealing and three-dimensional characters with opposite personalities that turn out to be unexpectedly complementary when they team up to figure out solutions to each of their challenges.
Insightful and emotionally resonant.
(Fiction. 13-18)