Bound To Stay Bound

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 Kaya Morgan's crowning achievement
 Author: Tew, Jill

 Publisher:  Freedom Fire (2025)

 Classification: Fiction
 Physical Description: 275 p.,  22 cm

 BTSB No: 876615 ISBN: 9781368104685
 Ages: 8-12 Grades: 3-7

 Subjects:
 Renaissance fairs -- Fiction
 Camps -- Fiction
 Prejudices -- Fiction
 Self-esteem -- Fiction
 Family life -- Fiction
 African Americans -- Fiction

Price: $23.28

Summary:
Twelve-year-old African American Kaya struggles to remain true to herself when she encounters bias while competing for the role of queen at the Renaissance Faire camp.


Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (02/15/25)
   Booklist (01/01/25)

Full Text Reviews:

Other - 01/13/2025 Middle schooler Kaya Morgan’s happiest memories are of summer days at the North Georgia Renaissance Faire, "a magical place grounded in the real world," where she bonded over funnel cake fries with her late father, a bowman who ruled the fair’s archery stall on the weekends. Now 12, Kaya is thrilled to finally join the fair’s apprentice camp and train for the role her father promised her: queen. Instead, Kaya is cast as court jester. Nevertheless determined to become "the first Black queen in the Faire’s forty-year history," Kaya’s royal pursuits end in hollow victory when administrators, desperate to diversify the financially struggling camp’s image, name her the "face of the Faire," even as they continue to maintain traditions and policies that reinforce racial stereotypes. Kaya slowly gains awareness of the real-world biases that govern the fair’s carefully crafted illusions and, with help from a few friends, sets out to create the world she wants to rule. This earnest middle grade debut from Tew (The Dividing Sky) makes big questions surrounding profiling and systemic racism accessible via a smart and relatable narrator whose burgeoning, joyful agency proves a crowning achievement, indeed. Ages 8-12. Agent: Jennifer Azantian, Azantian Literary. (Apr.) - Copyright 2025

Booklist - 01/01/2025 Twelve-year-old Kaya Morgan’s favorite thing is to attend the Brightcastle Renaissance Faire. Before her father was sick and passed away, he was the Head Archer and a popular figure at the fair. In addition to making memories each summer weekend, Kaya and her father dreamed of her becoming the first Black queen of the fair. When her uncle signs her up for the Faire Apprentice Camp, instead of apprenticing the queen, she is given the role as the jester. Kaya quickly sees that there are those at the faire that believe minorities only fit a certain mold, and it is up to her to break it. Since her father’s death, Kaya doesn’t feel like she fits in with her mom and brother, and her competitive spirit over becoming queen hinders her from building relationships with the other campers. Kaya’s spunky attitude and heart will have readers rooting for her. A mix of overcoming adversity, working through grief, and creating the space where you belong, Kaya’s apprenticeship journey is a perfect fit for middle-grade readers. - Copyright 2025 Booklist.

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