Christina Soontornvat grew up in a small Texas town, where she spent many childhood days behind the counter of her parents’ Thai restaurant with her nose in a book. She is the author of many books for young readers, including three Newbery Honor Books: A Wish in the Dark, also a Jane Addams Children’s Book Award winner; The Last Mapmaker, also a Walter Dean Myers Award Honor Book; and All Thirteen: The Incredible Cave Rescue of the Thai Boys’ Soccer Team, also a Robert F. Sibert Honor Book and a YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults finalist. Her picture books include A Life of Service: The Story of Senator Tammy Duckworth and The Blunders: A Counting Catastrophe! Christina Soontornvat lives in Tennessee.
It’s a novel—a stand- alone, no less—that seems to have it all: a
sympathetic hero, a colorful setting, humor, heart, philosophy, and
an epic conflict that relates the complexity and humanity of social
justice without heavy-handed storytelling. Soontornvat deftly
blends it all together, salting the tale with a dash of magic that
enhances the underlying emotions in this masterfully paced
adventure. An important book that not only shines a light but also
shows young readers how to shine their own. Luminous.
—Booklist (starred review)
Set in a fantasy analogue of Thailand, all characters are presumed
Thai, and Thai life and culture permeate the story in everything
from the mangoes Pong eats in prison to the monks he meets beyond
the prison's walls. It's also a retelling of Victor Hugo's Les
Misérables, and Soontornvat has maintained the themes of the
original while making the plot and the characters utterly her own.
Pong's and Nok's narratives are drawn together by common threads of
family, loyalty, and a quest to define right and wrong, twining to
create a single, satisfying tale. A complex, hopeful, fresh
retelling.
—Kirkus Reviews
Soontornvat artfully builds up to a triumphant confrontation,
weaving in important themes about oppression and civil disobedience
along the way.
—Publishers Weekly
Nuanced questions of morality, oppression, and being defined by
one’s circumstances are compounded with exciting action in this
novel inspired by Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables. The characters are
resonant, and the action is enhanced by the fantastical
Thailand-like setting. The original storyline and well-developed
characters make this a standout novel. Highly recommended.
—School Library Journal
Combining themes of coming-of-age, protest, and the power of
freedom, this book will inspire young readers to stand up for their
own beliefs as well as those of all people. This is a
thought-provoking adventure that will cause readers to ask
themselves whether being safe or having freedom is the better
option, and if that needs to be a choice at all.
—School Library Connection
The rich, atmospheric Thai-inspired settings ground Pong and Nok’s
journeys toward self-understanding, from bleak Namwon to the
peaceful temple Wat Singh to Chattana’s bustling, colorful Light
Market...The novel offers satisfying meditations on moral choices
as well as age-friendly openings into conversations about prison
pipelines, autocracy, and socio-political action.
—Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Alternating between Pong's and Nok's stories, Soontornvat tells a
satisfyingly intricate tale of escape and chase while raising
questions about institutionalized injustices of privilege and want.
Her Thai-inspired world is fully engaging, but perhaps most winning
is the innocence, hope, and humor she conveys in the context of the
struggle for social justice and with respect to the children's
growth.
—The Horn Book
A thrilling fantasy, set in a fresh, original world, with a vital
message at its heart. A Wish in the Dark is incandescent.
—Adam Gidwitz, Newbery Honor–winning author of The Inquisitor’s
Tale
At once timeless and timely, Christina Soontornvat’s A Wish in the
Dark is a richly imagined portrait of the power of hope, courage,
and compassion to shine a light in dark times and the ability of
small people to effect great change. Ingenious, captivating, and
utterly gorgeous.
—Anne Ursu, National Book Award–nominated author of The Real
Boy
Do you hear the people sing? Christina Soontornvat’s Les
Misérables-inspired A Wish in the Dark will have readers cheering
for Pong, the young boy who escapes a life of unfair imprisonment,
discovers the powers of friendship and forgiveness, and raises his
voice against oppression. I was swept away by the Thai setting, the
Buddhist teachings of Father Cham, and the sheer grit and
determination of these young characters. At the heart of this
novel, like Victor Hugo’s, are the struggle for justice and the
power of marginalized communities to change our world for the
better. Young readers will be rooting for Pong and his band of
revolutionary friends and inspired to spread more light in their
own communities.
—Sayantani DasGupta, New York Times best-selling author of the
Kiranmala and the Kingdom Beyond books
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