Book Descriptions
for That Thing about Bollywood by Supriya Kelkar
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Eleven-year-old Indian American Sonali has learned to tamp down her feelings about many things, but especially the obvious tension and growing dysfunction between her parents. When her life begins transforming into a Bollywood musical, Sonali has no idea what is happening. She and her best friend, Pakistani American Zara, are huge Bollywood fans, but that doesn’t explain why everyone around Sonali is suddenly bursting into song while others become chorus members and backup dancers. Rooms transform into Bollywood-like sets with saturated colors, and people she loves become shining, Bollywood versions of themselves. Even more confusing is how everyone around her takes it all in stride, as if there’s nothing unusual happening. Like her dad, Sonali does not like to share her feelings, and she finds her own compulsion (and his) to burst into song alarming. But when she can’t resist, the words that come out of her mouth as she sings and dances convey how she’s really feeling about what’s going on in her family, and in her changing friendship with Zara. Amidst the abundant humor of this laugh-out-loud story is a tender, honest exploration of family and friendship, with characters who are anything but Bollywood-like in their complexity.
(Ages 8-12)
(Ages 8-12)
CCBC Choices 2022. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2022. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Bollywood takes over in this “effervescent” (Booklist) and magical middle grade novel about an Indian American girl whose world turns upside down when she involuntarily starts bursting into glamorous song-and-dance routines during everyday life.
You know how in Bollywood when people are in love, they sing and dance from the mountaintops? Eleven-year-old Sonali wonders if they do the same when they’re breaking up. The truth is, Sonali’s parents don’t get along, and it looks like they might be separating.
Sonali’s little brother, Ronak, is not taking the news well, constantly crying. Sonali would never do that. It’s embarrassing to let out so many feelings, to show the world how not okay you are. But then something strange happens, something magical, maybe. When Sonali gets upset during a field trip, she can’t bury her feelings like usual—instead, she suddenly bursts into a Bollywood song-and-dance routine about why she’s upset!
The next morning, much to her dismay, Sonali’s reality has shifted. Things seem brighter, almost too bright. Her parents have had Bollywood makeovers. Her friends are also breaking out into song and dance. And somehow, everyone is acting as if this is totally normal.
Sonali knows something has gone wrong, and she suspects it has something to do with her own mismanaged emotions. Can she figure it out before it’s too late?
You know how in Bollywood when people are in love, they sing and dance from the mountaintops? Eleven-year-old Sonali wonders if they do the same when they’re breaking up. The truth is, Sonali’s parents don’t get along, and it looks like they might be separating.
Sonali’s little brother, Ronak, is not taking the news well, constantly crying. Sonali would never do that. It’s embarrassing to let out so many feelings, to show the world how not okay you are. But then something strange happens, something magical, maybe. When Sonali gets upset during a field trip, she can’t bury her feelings like usual—instead, she suddenly bursts into a Bollywood song-and-dance routine about why she’s upset!
The next morning, much to her dismay, Sonali’s reality has shifted. Things seem brighter, almost too bright. Her parents have had Bollywood makeovers. Her friends are also breaking out into song and dance. And somehow, everyone is acting as if this is totally normal.
Sonali knows something has gone wrong, and she suspects it has something to do with her own mismanaged emotions. Can she figure it out before it’s too late?
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.