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Spring Reading

STEPHEN BLUE FOR TIME FOR KIDS (3)

May is Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month. Here are three recent books with AAPI themes or characters. Which one would you like to read?

The Last Fallen Star

In The Last Fallen Star, 12-year-old Korean-American Riley Oh wants to become a healing witch like her sister, Hattie. Hattie creates a spell so she can share her magic with Riley—but the spell goes wrong. To fix things, Riley must find the last fallen star. Riley feels like she doesn’t belong. Author Graci Kim told TIME for Kids that she hopes readers know it’s okay to feel like an outsider. “True acceptance and true belonging start within ourselves,” she says. —By Karena Phan

Three Keys

Three Keys follows an 11-year-old girl named Mia Tang. She and her family have emigrated from China to the United States, where they own and operate a motel. As immigrants, they’re forced to deal with prejudice. Kelly Yang is the author of Three Keys. Her experiences as an Asian American inspired Mia’s character. Yang says representation is important. “Growing up, I never saw an Asian-American girl on the cover of a book,” she told TFK. “It’s really important for kids . . . to see that there isn’t just one American narrative.” —By Ellen Nam

Sugar and Spite

Sugar and Spite, by Gail D. Villanueva, finds 12-year-old Jolina newly arrived on an island in the Philippines. It’s there that she learns how to make magic. Jolina uses that magic to take revenge on a bully named Claudine. But revenge comes at a price. Filipino history and culture are woven into the book. Villanueva told TFK that kids should read about places and cultures different from their own, “because doing so helps build empathy.” —By Rebecca Mordechai