Not a Chance

Not a Chance book cover

Not a Chance

Author(s): Michelle Mulder (Author)

  • Publisher: Orca Book Publishers
  • Publication Date: March 1, 2013
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 160 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1459802160
  • ISBN-13: 9781459802162

Book Description

Dian has been coming to the Dominican Republic with her doctor parents for years. Now that she’s thirteen, she had wanted to stay home in Canada, but instead she is helping her parents set up their clinic and looking forward to hanging out with her Dominican friend Aracely. When fourteen-year-old Aracely makes a shocking announcement–she is engaged to be married–Dian struggles to accept that Aracely has the right to choose her own destiny, even if it is very different from what Dian would choose for her.

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Gr 5-8–Set in present-day Dominican Republic, Not a Chance explores the contrasts between traditional island-culture mores and Western ideals. Dian, a Canadian teen, and her family visit Cucubano, D.R. every summer, but this year she is appalled to learn that her closest friend in the Caribbean town will be married now that she is 15. She and her do-gooder parents had plans to provide Aracely an opportunity for higher education in North America, but Aracely would rather stay near her family. While the two girls are at odds, a friendship develops between Dian and a Haitian boy, a social taboo in this small village. Because of the community’s racial prejudice, the teens’ social standing and Aracely’s future are threatened. The story moves swiftly with animated writing and plenty of dialogue. Readers will empathize with Dian as she exposes her parents’ pretensions: “What’s the point of having family meetings if no one wants to hear what I have to say?” Though overbearing, they don’t just talk about their values, they devote their summers to providing free medical care. The Dominican characters are likewise complex, welcoming the Canadian visitors, but shunning dark-skinned immigrants. Cultural details and Spanish words are incorporated into the text. Complicated issues, including children’s rights, Western ethnocentrism, and racism, are all illuminated in this story of cross-cultural friendship and respect. Readers will grow in understanding, along with Dian, who concludes, “It’s about balancing the dancing with the doing.–Toby Rajput, National Louis University, Skokie, ILα(c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

From Booklist

Imagine Dian’s shock when her friend Aracely announces marriage plans—set for when she turns 15. Dian and her doctor parents had planned for Aracely to immigrate to their Canadian homeland to pursue higher education rather than follow the traditional pattern of early marriage in her impoverished Dominican Republic village. Who would throw away such an opportunity? Aracely’s announcement and Dian’s reaction quickly estrange the girls from each other. Mulder’s provocative tale about a cultural clash avoids heavy didacticism with lively dialogue and carefully nuanced behavior for each of the believable characters. Readers will feel for Dian as she tries to establish her identity, engage her overbearingly politically correct parents, and begin a friendship with a Haitian boy that provokes a racist response from the community. It’s a lot of growing up for one summer, but this engaging story intelligently takes on the matter of haves and have-nots. Who really has the better lives? Grades 6-9. –Anne OMalley

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