Review of A Strange Thing Happened in Cherry Hall

A Strange Thing Happened in Cherry Hall A Strange Thing Happened in Cherry Hall
by Jasmine Warga
Intermediate, Middle School    Harper/HarperCollins    224 pp.
9/24    9780062956705    $19.99
e-book ed.  9780062956729    $9.99

Sixth grade is not going well for Rami Ahmed: his friends no longer want anything to do with him, leaving him feeling lonely and invisible. His single mother, a Lebanese immigrant to the U.S., works as the cleaning-crew supervisor at the local art museum, which is where he must hang out over spring break. When a painting is stolen from one of the rooms in the museum, Cherry Hall, Rami’s mother falls under suspicion, and he starts seeing an apparition of a girl almost no one else can see, which underscores his feeling of being invisible. But the ghost girl has a link to the stolen painting, and Rami believes that if he can find the painting, it will right his life’s wrongs: his friends will like him again; his father, who left when he was two, will return; and his mom will be happy. With the help of the ghost girl and an artistic turtle, Rami and a new friend team up to solve the mystery of the stolen painting. Warga’s lighthearted mystery dances around some serious issues—loss, abandonment, and a yearning to belong—but it’s tempered by witty banter, a touch of whimsy, and just enough suspense to make it a page-turner.

From the March/April 2025 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Julie Hakim Azzam

Calling Caldecott co-author Julie Hakim Azzam is a communications project manager in Carnegie Mellon University's Finance Division. She holds a PhD in literary and cultural studies, with a specialization in comparative contemporary postcolonial literature from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Southeast Asia. Her most recent work focuses on children's literature, stories about immigrants and refugees, and youth coping with disability.

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