Star Daughter‘s greatest strength is Shveta Thakrar’s skill as a sentence-by-sentence wordsmith. She discovers that star blood (yes, they bleed) is a healing agent, so she and one of her friends pop off to what may as well be Heaven to convince her long-absent mother to give them some blood so that she can heal her father’s wounds. And as Sheetal gets closer to her 17th birthday, her star side begins to overtake her human side, and she accidentally injures her father during an argument. Stars in this book are both the actual real flaming balls of gas and thermonuclear physics that they are in the real world and immortal– or functionally so, at least– personified beings. Her father is human, her mother is a star, and she is their biological child. It may be that you blinked at that sentence. Star Daughteris Shveta Thakrar’s first book, and it’s the story of Sheetal, a sixteen-year-old girl who is half human and half star. This is one of those books that was really hard to boil down to just a star rating– because I loved it, but it’s definitely got some flaws. I’m told that early editions of the book featured painted page edges I would perform unnatural acts to acquire one. Let’s take a moment and appreciate this outstanding cover.
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