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Aida Salazar

Author of The Moon Within

11+ Works 853 Members 45 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Aida Salazar

Works by Aida Salazar

The Moon Within (2019) 278 copies, 9 reviews
Land of the Cranes (2020) 206 copies, 9 reviews
A Seed in the Sun (2022) 85 copies, 3 reviews
Ultraviolet (2024) 62 copies, 5 reviews
Calling the Moon: 16 Period Stories from BIPOC Authors (2023) — Editor; Contributor — 36 copies, 1 review
When Moon Blooms (My Living World) (2024) 9 copies, 1 review
When Water Flows (My Living World) (2024) 9 copies, 1 review
When Sun Rises (My Living World) (2025) 5 copies, 1 review
Stream (2026) 4 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

This Is Our Rainbow: 16 Stories of Her, Him, Them, and Us (2021) — Contributor — 202 copies, 5 reviews
Living Beyond Borders: Growing up Mexican in America (2021) — Contributor — 109 copies, 3 reviews
Allies: Real Talk About Showing Up, Screwing Up, And Trying Again (2021) — Contributor — 90 copies, 6 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

46 reviews
In this novel in verse, Celi Rivera lives in Oakland with her parents and younger brother. She loves to dance bomba to her best friend ("best echo") Magda's drums, she feels tingly around her crush Iván, and she does NOT want the moon ceremony her mother is planning for when Ceci has her first period. When Magda delicately comes out as nonbinary, Ceci promises to support her friend - but when Iván makes fun of Magda's (now Mar or Marco's) boyishness, Ceci doesn't defend him. She feels show more guilty, but she continues to see Iván - and her mother continues to plan the moon ceremony over Ceci's wishes. When Ceci's period does arrive, however, it's Marco who rescues her from embarrassment, and their mothers have a ceremony for them both - and despite Ceci's initial resistance, her feelings change.

An authentic, sensitive portrait of a character at a tender, transitional age, learning to embrace and feel pride in her cultural heritage (Ceci is Black-Puerto Rican-Mexican).

See also: Revenge of the Red Club

Quotes

Sometimes we do things
we don't mean
when we're hurt.
(Magda to Ceci, 53)
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worthy successor to Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret set in present-day Oakland.

Eleven-year-old Celi, mixed black–Puerto Rican–Mexican, dreads the imminent arrival of her period, less because of the menstruation itself and more because her mother insists that Celi have a “moon ceremony,” in which the members of her mother’s “women’s circle” will mark the transition from childhood to womanhood. Meanwhile, her best friend is going through a different transition—from show more girl to xochihuah, “neither / female nor male but both.” While Celi is initially shocked by the adjustment, she loves Mar, as her best friend now prefers to be known, no less. But when other kids, including her crush, Iván, say cruel things about Mar, Celi is torn between the possibility of a first kiss and loyalty to her friend. Salazar’s verse novel is sensitive and fresh, featuring modern interpretations of pre-Columbian coming-of-age traditions that arise organically from the characters. Mar’s heritage is Mexican, and Iván is mixed, black and Mexican; Celi and Mar’s participation in a Puerto Rican performance group and their mothers’ shared, deeply felt Xicana identity allow Salazar to naturally explore cultural nuances not often seen in middle-grade fiction. Genderfluid Mar takes both that name and the masculine pronoun midway through the book, and Celi’s narration adjusts accordingly even if some of their peers’ attitudes do not.

An authentically middle school voice and diverse Latinx cast make this book a standout . (Verse fiction. 8-12)

-Kirkus Review
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Sixteen short stories and poems from well-known and award-winning authors explore how young people experience and celebrate their periods.

The protagonists in this excellent, accessible middle-grade collection are all tweens and teens who are Black, Indigenous, and people of color with different cultural and faith-based beliefs, traditions, and reservations about their periods. Christina Soontornvat’s sweet and funny opening story, “The Rules of the Lake,” places a sixth grader’s show more first period during a much-anticipated field trip to a lake. In Ibi Zoboi’s touching “Bloodline,” 12-year-old Adjoa participates in a New Moon Rebirth ceremony in which she receives a special gift passed down from mothers to daughters in her family. Erin Entrada Kelly’s “Mother Mary, Do You Bleed?” follows a Filipina American Catholic girl who contemplates whether Jesus’ mother also had her period. While most of the stories are heartwarming and emphasize renewal and rest, the authors also delve into how their characters deal with challenges like sexism, racism, microaggressions, immigration, religion, deadnaming (one character is nonbinary), addiction, divorce, and grief. Guadalupe Garcia McCall’s emotionally resonant “Ofrendas,” for example, features three sisters, 10, 12, and 13, reeling in the aftermath of their mother’s sudden death. This is a memorable anthology featuring uniformly strong entries from broadly diverse voices that delve into the subject matter in ways ideally suited to the target audience.

A powerful, vibrant, and empowering celebration of an important milestone. (letter from the editors, resources) (Anthology. 9-13)

-Kirkus Review
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This book was hard for me to read, because it centers on the subject of menstruation, something that has long been a topic full of shame and secrecy. I applaud Salazar for creating a story that not only captures the extreme discomfort many women feel with the topic (in her young main character), but offers a different perspective, a celebration, that acknowledges the tie to the moon, and the sacred traditions of many indigenous cultures. I also love the thoughtful plotline that surrounds her show more best friend, a genderfluid character. Really, it's lovely book, well written, well-centered in modern teen life, and both kind and powerful. show less

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Statistics

Works
11
Also by
3
Members
853
Popularity
#30,000
Rating
4.1
Reviews
45
ISBNs
52
Languages
2

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