cover image The Second Chance of Benjamin Waterfalls

The Second Chance of Benjamin Waterfalls

James Bird. Macmillan/Feiwel and Friends, $16.99 (288p) ISBN 978-1-250-81156-1

Thirteen-year-old Ojibwe Benjamin Waterfalls excels at shoplifting and justifies his myriad offenses by citing the usurping of Native lands (“This is America. Everybody steals. This country was founded on theft”). When a judge sentences him to juvenile detention, though, his mother suggests an alternate punishment: sending Ben to the Grand Portage Indian Reservation, three hours north of their home in Duluth, Minn. There, he will spend time with his father, whom he despises, and stepfamily, while attending an Ojibwe “boot camp” led by the chief’s 12-year-old daughter Niimi Waatese, who wears a mask over her eyes. As Ben struggles through the camp’s regimen, he must reconcile the thrill of stealing with the growing awareness that his actions affect others, and that this may be his last chance to “find the right path home.” While a too-neat ending undercuts the book’s emotional resonance, Ben’s voice is snappy and captivating, and Bird (The Brave), who is Ojibwe, delivers an uplifting narrative that demonstrates how returning to one’s roots can have transformative power. Select chapters open with an Ojibwe word or phrase; Native customs and traditions feature throughout. Ages 10–14. Agent: Rosemary Stimola, Stimola Literary Studio.(Apr.)