Starting over in Massachusetts is a challenge for Louisiana transplant Feliciana Fruge.
Feliciana, a Cajun girl from the bayous of Terrebonne Parish, is struggling to adjust to her new life. When her mom and stepdad, Bob, got married, the family left the South for Bob’s hometown of Boston. Feliciana doesn’t like anything about the place. It’s cold, the food is bland, and ever since she moved here last year, she’s been bullied and made to feel self-conscious for being and sounding different. Starting sixth grade at a new school, Feliciana hopes to keep her Southern origins to herself. There’s only one problem: On her first day at Revere Academy, a wolflike creature from Cajun legend shows up, watching her with glowing yellow eyes. It turns out that Grandma knows a thing or two about this rougarou. Juggling excitable Roux with a city-wide art competition makes Feliciana more homesick than ever. But she discovers there’s more to the rougarou—and Boston—than she ever expected. Marsh tackles bullying, alienation, and displacement through the powerful lenses of myth and legend. Feliciana’s journey to accept her new home and herself creates a compelling, moving character arc that acknowledges how hard it is to be uprooted from one’s home while also learning to find joy in a new place.
A magically charming debut.
(Fantasy. 8-12)