cover image Shark Teeth

Shark Teeth

Sherri Winston. Bloomsbury, $17.99 (304p) ISBN 978-1-5476-0850-8

Winston (Lotus Bloom and the Afro Revolution) delivers a nuanced telling about a Black family in crisis via this harrowing, compassionate read. After having been placed in separate foster homes, “all because Mama went out one night and decided not to come back for nine days,” 12-year-old Sharkita has just been reunited with her five-year-old sister, Lillieana, and her eight-year-old brother, Lamara, who was born with fetal alcohol poisoning. Though her mother promises things will be different this time, Sharkita—whose classmates bully her for her “shark teeth,” or hyperdontia—is prepared to single-handedly care for her siblings like she always does. Surprisingly, however, Mama allows her to join her school’s newly founded majorette squad, instead of requiring Sharkita to return home immediately after school to tend to her siblings like she used to. Joining the majorettes sparks a flicker of normalcy, but Sharkita still contends with anxiety stemming from her mother’s neglect that feels like a shark swallowing her whole (“I didn’t know which was worse—a life with her or one without”). Driven by an emotionally intelligent and complex protagonist, this courageous story about strength in the face of neglect, and the bravery to demand what is best for one’s family and oneself, is potent and powerful. Ages 9–11. (Jan.)