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    The Children's Book Review

    The Last Fallen Star, by Graci Kim | Book Review

    Dr. Jen HarrisonBy Dr. Jen Harrison3 Mins Read Ages 4-8 Ages 9-12 Best Kids Stories Books with Girl Characters Fantasy: Supernatural Fiction Novels for Kids and Teens
    The Last Fallen Star by Graci Kim Book Review
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    Book Review of The Last Fallen Star
    The Children’s Book Review

    The Last Fallen Star: Book Cover

    The Last Fallen Star

    Written by Graci Kim

    Ages 8+ | 336 Pages

    Publisher: Disney Hyperion | ISBN: 9781368059633

    What to Expect: Magic, adventure, Korean mythology and culture, adoption

    Drawing heavily on Korean culture and mythology, The Last Fallen Star is a rollercoaster ride filled with k-pop, demons, magic, monsters, and delicious baking. At the same time, it explores some universal themes, like community, belonging, family ties, grief, and responsibility for actions.

    Riley Oh belongs to a clan of powerful healing witches. Unfortunately for Riley, she’s adopted and has the bad luck of being the clan’s only saram (non-Witch). Scorned and mistrusted by other community members despite her loving and supportive family, Riley struggles to fit in and be accepted – that is, until her sister Hettie comes up with a brilliant idea: they’ll complete a power-sharing spell. Then, Riley can be a witch too.

    However, the plan goes wrong, revealing that Riley is not a saram after all – she’s the orphan of banished witches from the outcast clan, and her heritage and willingness to cast an illegal spell have been the last straw for the elders. They utter a devastating command: either Riley’s family must disown her, or they will be stripped of their powers and outcast alongside her.

    Desperate, Riley and Hettie appeal to the clan Goddess for help, but things get worse when the spell exhausts Hettie and sucks the life from her. The Goddess proposes a deal: if Riley brings her the last fallen star, she will restore life to Hettie. However, the harder Riley works to fulfill her end of the bargain, the more it becomes clear that everything she thought she knew about the clans, magic, and her family is not as it seems. Much more may be at stake than Hettie’s life…

    Riley is a believable and engaging protagonist whose desperation to be accepted and to know who and what she is supposed to become will be relatable to many young readers, whatever their culture. At the same time, the rich and detailed portrayal of Korean culture offers readers an inclusive alternative to traditional Western-based fantasy fiction, like all volumes in the Rick Riordan Presents series.

    The Last Fallen Star is gripping and heartwarming – a story no reader will want to put down until the end.

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    About the Author

    Graci Kim is the award-winning and New York Times bestselling author of The Last Fallen Star, The Last Fallen Moon, and The Last Fallen Realm. Called a “sparkling yarn” by Entertainment Weekly and featured in TIME Magazine for Kids, the Korean mythology-inspired trilogy has been optioned by the Disney Channel for a live-action television series and is being translated into multiple languages. It was named a 2021 Goodreads Choice Award Nominee for Best Children’s Book, an Amazon Best Book, a Barnes & Noble Young Reader Pick, and a Whitcoulls Kids Top 50. In 2022, Graci was awarded the Sir Julius Vogel Award for Best New Talent.

    In a previous life, Graci was a New Zealand diplomat and a cooking show host, and once ran a business that turned children’s drawings into cuddly toys. She lives in Aotearoa, New Zealand, with her husband and daughter.

    You can find her via her website: https://www.gracikim.com.

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    Graci Kim: Author Headshot

    Dr. Jen Harrison reviewed The Last Fallen Star. Discover more books like The Last Fallen Star by reading our reviews and articles tagged with Adoption, Adventure, Culture, Magic, Mythology, and Rick Riordan Presents.

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    Adoption Adventure Culture Disney-Hyperion Graci Kim Korean Magic Middle Grade Books Mythology New Zealand Authors Rick Riordan Presents
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    Dr. Jen Harrison
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    Dr. Jen Harrison currently teaches writing and literature at East Stroudsburg University. She also provides freelance writing, editing, and tuition services as the founder of Read.Write.Perfect. She completed her Ph.D. in Children’s and Victorian Literature at Aberystwyth University in Wales, in the UK. After a brief spell in administration, Jen then trained as a secondary school English teacher and worked for several years teaching Secondary School English, working independently as a private tutor of English, and working in nursery and primary schools. She is an editor for the peer-reviewed journal of children’s literature, Jeunesse, and publishes academic work on children’s non-fiction, YA speculative fiction, and the posthuman.

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