cover image Ruby Lost and Found

Ruby Lost and Found

Christina Li. Quill Tree, $19.99 (304p) ISBN 978-0-06-300893-9

In an affecting contemporary novel from Li (Clues to the Universe), Chinese American Ruby Chu, 13, struggles to process the death of her beloved paternal grandfather, Ye-Ye; her sister’s impending departure for college; and the splintering of her friend group. After Ruby gets in trouble for ditching school, her parents decide that she will spend summer weekdays and weeknights with her Nai-Nai, who lives near San Francisco’s Chinatown. Despite some initial awkwardness, Ruby finds comfort and stability in the routine of visiting Nai-Nai’s friends at the senior recreation center, where she also befriends schoolmate Liam Yeung. But the news that May’s Bakery—a Chinatown institution as well as a beloved spot for Ruby and Ye-Ye—may sell to developers, and Nai-Nai’s worsening memory, threaten Ruby’s fragile peace. Interspersing the present-day narrative with past scenes of Ruby and Ye-Ye’s time together, Li balances youthful optimism as Ruby and Liam seek to save the bakery with harder realities as Ruby contends with her guilt about Ye-Ye’s death and her own grief. It’s an economically told, emotionally driven story that deftly incorporates multiple strands—around community care, gentrification, and the messy parts of familial change—while representing an inclusive Cantonese- and Mandarin-speaking Chinatown community. Ages 8–12. Agent: Jessica Regel, Helm Literary. (May)