The class is so quiet you can hear Tina's hard shoe soles on the floor.
Everyone is watching us. Sisters, they are thinking.
Ten-year-old Sarah misses her best friend and neighbor, Victoria,
terribly. She still waits for her in the backyard just in case she comes
back. The last thing Sarah needs is to be paired with the new girl at
school, Tina, who has just arrived from China. Sarah is used to being
confused with other Asian students at school, but she doesn't want
people to assume that she and Tina have a lot in common. In fact, even
simple communication is hard for them: Tina's English is poor, and Sarah
doesn't speak a word of Chinese. Thrown together amidst a swirl of
problems at home and at school, Sarah and Tina are reluctant to forge a
friendship. But both of them must come to terms with the changes in
their lives--whether they are able to overcome their differences or not.
Andrea Cheng has remained true to the hearts and voices of two
ten-year-old girls in this moving story about friendship.
Told in alternating stories and in the innocent voices of two ten year
old girls, Honeysuckle House addresses alienation, longing, prejudice,
and cultural differences without ever losing touch with the true
preoccupations of childhood.