cover image The Very Unfortunate Wish of Melony Yoshimura

The Very Unfortunate Wish of Melony Yoshimura

Waka T. Brown. Quill Tree, $18.99 (272p) ISBN 978-0-0632-3076-7

Brown (Dream, Annie, Dream) explores intergenerational trauma and cultural identity in this eerie interpretation of the Japanese folktale “The Melon Princess and the Amanjaku.” On Melony Yoshimura’s 12th birthday, her Japanese emigrant parents tell her about the shape-shifting demon spirit Amanjaku, the reason they left Japan for Oregon. But Melony doesn’t care about the Amanjaku or her parents’ memories of Japan; she wants to be like other American kids who have smartphones and get to attend sleepovers. That night, Melony makes a birthday wish for freedom from her overprotective parents. Soon after, she meets the Amanjaku, a “fuzzy gray creature—kind of like a person in a wolf suit,” who offers to grant her wishes. But even as things in Melony’s life seem to be looking up, she begins to realize that her relationship with the Amanjaku portends disaster. Brown conveys practical lessons on morality via an empathetic protagonist; by interweaving Melony’s contemporary struggles surrounding autonomy and independence with the origin text’s foundational narrative, the author delivers an evenly paced speculative tale whose anticipatory atmosphere sows tension. Ages 8–12. Agent: Penny Moore, Aevitas Creative Management. (July)