A teenage refugee adapts to a new country, a new language, new school
and even finds a wonderful best friend, until the pressures of past and
present collide and lead to a lie that changes everything.
Refugees from the Bosnian War, Lazar's family flees the Siege of
Sarajevo and arrives in Winnipeg in the early 1990s. Despite various
mini dramas unfolding at home, as his parents and older sisters navigate
a new language, the bitter cold and a strange city and country, Lazar
manages to find a place for himself at school, largely by making friends
with Elle, a sassy, outspoken girl who divides her time between living
with her hoarder mother (who stuffs their tiny apartment with bargains
she finds at Liquidation World) and her hippie father, Jimmy, who lives
in British Columbia. But as two geeky loners, Elle and Lazar are happy
in their own bubble of friendship, especially after they form a pop duo
and dream of making it big on Star Search. Soon Lazar's desperate
escape out of Sarajevo seems far away, even as the trauma of his broken
homeland looms large with his family at home.
Then Elle comes back from Vancouver after a summer at Jimmy's, and
things are different. They're in high school, Elle has lost weight and
blossomed into popularity, while Lazar remains small, skinny and
forgettable. She seems to have forgotten all about their singing plans
and starts spending time with a new kid, Ivan. Lazar is unmoored and
filled with new longings -- for Elle, for Ivan, for a sense that he
belongs somewhere. His mother and older sisters worry about his health,
that he's so thin, that he's not interested in sports, even though the
doctors can't find anything wrong.
And then, in an impulsive moment, Lazar tells Ivan that he's seriously
ill. And with this one reckless lie he suddenly gets -- and loses --
everything he thought he wanted.
Key Text Features
author's note
historical context
Correlates to the Common Core State Standards in English Language
Arts:
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.6.6
Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or
speaker in a text.