New from Here
New from Here book cover

New from Here

Hardcover – March 1, 2022

Price
$9.39
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1534488304
Dimensions
5.5 x 1.1 x 8.25 inches
Weight
15.7 ounces

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 4–7—Chinese American fifth grader Knox Wei-Evans's world is turned upside down when his parents decide that Mom will take Knox, older brother Bowen, and younger sister Lea from their home in Hong Kong to the United States to get away from the novel coronavirus that just shut down the city of Wuhan. The kids have to pack quickly and leave their dog and their dad—Knox's best friend—behind. In Northern California, they quarantine for 14 days and attempt online school before starting public school, where, for the first time ever, Knox has a teacher who understands and encourages him, and he has a friend. Christopher is also Asian American and has ADHD. But the virus "knows no borders" and soon arrives in the States, triggering a wave of fear and anti-Asian racism. Knox's mom says that love is the only vaccine for hate, and Knox stands up to racist classmates—his own and Bowen's. As California enters a state of emergency, Knox, Bowen, and Lea bond in a creative desperate effort to raise money to bring their dad to join them. The Wei-Evans family faces the pandemic, racism, and worries about jobs, income, and healthcare with "consistent courage," and finds that being more open and honest with each other helps. Knox's struggles will resonate with all children who lived through the scary and uncertain first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. VERDICT A pandemic book that is also a story of the importance of family, friendship, and standing up for what is right; another knockout from Yang, highly recommended for all collections.—Jenny Arch "Yang deftly touches on complex issues including China–Hong Kong relations, racism, the grief of separation and dislocation, and the pandemic, all while maintaining a hopeful tone. A timely and compelling family journey."xa0 -- Kirkus Reviews"Narrating from Knox’s approachable, first-person-present perspective, Yang adeptly maintains a sense of hope and belief in love, balancing haunting dramatic irony...with moments of levity as the family works to be reunited." -- Publishers Weekly"Yang again demonstrates her talent for honest, age-appropriate storytelling from a child’s perspective that both entertains and educates. A compelling story that conveys the importance of showing love and kindness, especially during hard times. Highly recommended for all middle-grade collections." -- Booklist, starred review"Without beating the reader over the head the author manages to emphasize values such as family first, kindness, and courage throughout the story. The genuine nature of this pandemic tale stems from Yang's experiences with her own family. This book will keep readers turning pages, if not for its recognizable elements than for its ability to transmit the love and strength of a family under duress in an unusual time...highly recommended." -- School Library Connection"Based on the real-life experiences of Yang and her family, the story does not soften the trauma of moving somewhere for safety, only to realize that place has its own dangers and hardships, and it also recognizes the pandemic’s specific social and economic losses, as well as the emotional toll it takes on Knox and the people he cares about....plenty of adults and kids alike are exhausted by the pandemic, but this is a timely mid-grade must-have and a story that needs to be told." -- BCCB"Knox’s struggles will resonate with all children who lived through the scary and uncertain first year of the COVID-19 pandemic...axa0pandemic book that is also a story of the importance of family, friendship, and standing up for what is right; another knockout from Yang." -- School Library Journal, starred review"Despite the serious subject matter, Yang includes plenty of humor, with wry observations about Zoom schooling and the kids’ efforts to “help out” with a garage sale and LinkedIn job hunt. Knox’s experience with ADHD is portrayed with nuance and empathy." -- The Horn Book Magazine Kelly Yang is the New York Times bestselling author of Front Desk (winner of the 2019 Asian Pacific American Award for Children’s Literature), Parachutes , Three Keys , Room to Dream , New from Here , Finally Seen , and Finally Heard . Front Desk also won the Parents’xa0Choice Gold Medal,xa0wasxa0the 2019 Global Read Aloud, and has earned numerous other honors including being namedxa0a best book of the year byxa0Amazon, Thexa0Washington Post , Kirkus Reviews , School Library Journal , Publishers Weekly , andxa0NPR. Learn more atxa0KellyYang.com. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • An instant #1
  • New York Times
  • bestseller!
  • This “timely and compelling” (
  • Kirkus Reviews
  • ) middle grade novel about courage, hope, and resilience follows an Asian American boy fighting to keep his family together and stand up to racism during the initial outbreak of the coronavirus.
  • When the coronavirus hits Hong Kong, ten-year-old Knox Wei-Evans’s mom makes the last-minute decision to move him and his siblings back to California, where they think they will be safe. Suddenly, Knox has two days to prepare for an international move—and for leaving his dad, who has to stay for work. At his new school in California, Knox struggles with being the new kid. His classmates think that because he’s from Asia, he must have brought over the virus. At home, Mom just got fired and is panicking over the loss of health insurance, and Dad doesn’t even know when he’ll see them again, since the flights have been cancelled. And everyone struggles with Knox’s blurting-things-out problem. As racism skyrockets during COVID-19, Knox tries to stand up to hate, while finding his place in his new country. Can you belong if you’re feared; can you protect if you’re new? And how do you keep a family together when you’re oceans apart? Sometimes when the world is spinning out of control, the best way to get through it is to embrace our own lovable uniqueness.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(191)
★★★★
25%
(80)
★★★
15%
(48)
★★
7%
(22)
-7%
(-22)

Most Helpful Reviews

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This book is like the equivalent of a pretty dress splattered with ink

I really wanted to like this book. As a Hong Kong native who moved to the US and is familiar with the California area that the author writes about, I should have been the target audience. However, any enjoyment I might have gotten were spoiled by the glaring inaccuracies and exaggerations I encountered. By chapter 3, the author is already trying to draw a "prejudice bad" parallel by referencing anti-Mainland feeling by the HK natives. I realize this is a kid's book, but the obvious pro-PRC slant left a bad taste in my mouth. And despite living in HK, Yang gets several basic things wrong. The children live in a flat with a view of Central, and all 3 kids have their own bedroom. This would be the equivalent of having a 4 bedroom on the Upper West Side in NYC. But they can't afford health insurance in the US and they don't have domestic help other than the "cleaning lady." Even lower middle class workers in HK have live in help. Bowen, the eldest brother gets mistaken for native Chinese all the time, although he's 5"10 at age 12 (average height of a full grown man is 5"7). There's a huge scene around how the mom has no work clothes and Knox accidentally ruins her only interview outfit - clothes are cheap as dirt in Hong Kong. And so on...

It doesn't end there. We hear about how Knox is the only East Asian in his class and it's full of Hispanic, Latino and white kids. They're in a surburb outside of Berkeley - which is a city 20% Asian. The Asian population is almost twice the Hispanic/AA population combined. Although the Bay area had its share of anti Asian incidents, everybody gawking at the Wei Evans children feels like Texans aghast at someone speaking Spanish.

The book is not without its merits. Knox's ADHD is referenced with sensitivity, and the children's relationships are drawn carefully and realistically. The kids have a child's understanding of adult situations and their "solutions" can be both funny and poignant. There's some heart in how they feel lost and alienated. If I'd have a criticism, it would be that the parents don't seem to try to do any sort of learning situations or natural consequences. Every conflict seems to go this way: a child (usually Knox) screws up and costs them money they can't afford. The mom gets angry and yells, feels guilty about yelling and then quietly grumbles "don't do that again" without ever trying to teach them better ways to handle things.

This is a book that's not unlike its protagonist: well-intentioned, but seriously flawed.
11 people found this helpful
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Couldn’t put it down

I heard Kelly speak about this book at the SCBWI conference and the premise sounded interesting so I ordered a copy. I couldn’t put it down. It’s such a well written, eye opening window into the world of prejudice on a number of levels, and also of human resiliency in the face of great unfairness. It should be a must-read for all.
6 people found this helpful
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Pandemic Perspective: Another Slam Dunk from Yang!

4 stars

For me, Kelly Yang is a sure bet when it comes to middle grade and YA, and this newest middle grade installment is no exception. But come to this one wanting to get a young person's view of the pandemic, not with the hope of escaping it.

Yang begins with an author's note that is not to be missed. In it, there's a brief description of Yang's children and their immediate family's experience with being split across continents during a long stretch of the pandemic. I thought about this note the entire time I read, and it really adds a meaningful layer to the fictionalized account.

Knox is the main character in this novel, and he is one of three siblings. At the start of the novel, the pandemic is just getting rolling, and Knox is living with his siblings, dog, mom, and dad in Hong Kong. The parents make a tough decision; dad remains in Hong Kong with the dog and mom heads to Northern California with the kids. Each character - as anticipated - has their own struggles with this arrangement, not to mention the turmoil that everyone experiences at this time. Also, the family is multiracial. Mom is East Asian, dad is white, and the kids - while all of the same parentage - experience differing degrees of racist nonsense based on their appearances. The conversation around anti-Asian racism flows through the whole novel and is portrayed in both a layered and age appropriate manner. Although there is A LOT happening in this novel - which is required since it's supposed to be realistic and we all know there are apparently no breaks to be caught during this time - what really stands out is Knox's development and the relationships within the family. There are some really great moments.

As much as the family relationships are a highlight for me throughout, I did struggle quite a bit with the mom. She's portrayed as (reasonably!) challenged by sudden single parenthood of three children in another country, but WOW does she make some wild choices. The kids are young, and at least one is prone to making particularly wild decisions. Why she trusts them in some of these situations is really beyond me unless it's supposed to be for comic relief, but I just found some of these moments stressful and odd. That author's note left me wondering if there is some vicarious self-deprecating happening here, but I still didn't love some of this content.

This is not just another great middle grade novel or another noteworthy work by Yang. It captures the pandemic - and this particular moment - in ways I haven't seen much yet for this audience. I'll be recommending this one to students (and all interested parties) for a long time for very specific reasons.
6 people found this helpful
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Great book for tweens

My daughter really loves all of the Kelly Yang books, and she especially loved this one. We even talked about some of the themes of New From Here because it made her feel really empathetic for the characters. I highly recommend it! :)
5 people found this helpful
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Both kids’ favorite book

We read this book as a family. Both my children (son- 10 and daughter- 8) absolutely loved this book. They’d ask for more and more every time we picked it up. We just finished the book a couple of days ago and they are still talking about it. They both say it’s their new favorite book.
5 people found this helpful
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Great Asian & Asian American representation

This story shows the racism and Asian hate that happens when the coronavirus spreads. Knox and his family flee Hong Kong to USA in hopes of safety. Only to be faced with hate. They also show how it is for families and children to transition to a new county. Lovely story with a tough topic! Very relatable after our own pandemic. It even briefly mention Black Lives Matter and police brutality and how we relate on the hate African Americans receive.
3 people found this helpful
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Kelly Yang continues with her semi-autobiographical series about being Asian and an immigrant..

Amusing but with a lot of deep lessons . I read it to my grandson and it sparked some great conversations.
3 people found this helpful
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Loveable characters and a wonderful story!

A huge thank you to Simon & Schuster Books and NetGalley for an advanced copy of New from Here.

New from Here is based on Kelly Yang's personal covid experience as a Chinese-American living abroad and being part of a multiracial family. I think her own experiences being woven into the book made a major positive impact on how I connected to the story.

10-year old Knox and his family were living in Hong Kong when Covid-19 started in mainland China. They've already lived through SARS and his mom didn't want to take any chances with covid so she decided to move herself, Knox, and his 2 siblings back to America. Unfortunately, Knox's dad had to stay in Hong Kong for work. As much as Knox hated to leave his dad and his dog behind, life in California has some perks - a new friend and a teacher who understands ADHD. His teacher and his friend both help Knox thrive in school for the first time. Knox soon learns that America has its own problems, however. Anti-Asian hate is on the rise and America isn't as safe from covid as Knox had believed.

Despite the heaviness of the topic, this book handles it with humor and hopefulness. Readers will fall in love with Knox and his entire family.
3 people found this helpful
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ADHD is not a death sentence

What I loved: the story I started this book thinking I'm keeping this for my son to read to see how bad the virus was (he was so little when it started). I liked how the story really showed the fear we all felt not to long ago.

What I disliked: Knox has ADHD how this was approached was so wrong. This poor kid messed up EVERY chapter (keep in mind there are 100 chapters). I felt like any kid reading this might hate themselves or start to disrespect themselves if they have ADHD. The mom BUGGED me so badly! Everytime Knox messed up she'd lash out in such an unhealthy way. Get the kid some freaking medicine or help him understand! Don't just let this keep happening. She was so out of it too. I mean your kids do a garage sale and you don't know what they're selling at all? I hated how the mom and dad hid EVERYTHING from the kids, as parents we want to protect but those kids deserved more.
2 people found this helpful
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Another powerful MG novel from Kelly Yang

Like all of Kelly's middle-grade books, she doesn't shy away from the hard topics in NEW FROM HERE, whether they be the looming threat of the covid-19 pandemic or the equally destructive pandemic of racism. Instead, Kelly masterfully lifts her readers up, encouraging them to look the hard stuff square in the face and empowering them to make their small corner of the world better in spite of it. Yet another must-read book from one of my must-read authors.
2 people found this helpful