Book Description
for How Moon Fuentez Fell in Love with the Universe by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Mexican American Moon Fuentez is spending the summer following high school graduation on a Fotogram (aka Instagram) tour with her twin sister, Star, and other young social media influencers. A gifted nature artist, Moon is there as Star’s photographer. Physically Star takes after their dad’s European ancestry; her “brand” is beautiful, pale, pure, delicate, religious teen waif. Moon sees herself as the opposite in every way. She has a large, curvy body, dark coloring, and very different attitudes about religion and sex. Their mom calls Moon a heathen slut for having had sex; the fact that their mother clearly has mental health issues makes her assaults no less painful for Moon. Moon works the merch table on the tour along with Santiago, brother of Fotogram’s founder. Biracial (Colombian/white) Santiago is initially taciturn and crabby, but Moon’s verbal sparring—ranging from witty to profane—amuses him. Moon is attracted to Santiago but can’t believe he might feel the same for her; she’s outwardly rejected the purity/whore narrative, and has been defiant of her mother and the way she’s been treated all her life, but she’s also internalized all of it. The sparks and stutters between Moon and Santiago provide a traditional romantic arc for this story, but Moon’s transformative perception of herself as someone worthy of love—helped along by her supportive Tía—is among the things that makes it a standout. Elements of magical realism add to the wonder of a lush tale full of gorgeous writing and radical self-affirmation. (Age 14 and older)
CCBC Choices 2022. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2022. Used with permission.