
.png)
Will she be able to save her friends-and herself- from a conspiracy that threatens everything she knows? Review With an ominous warning from her grandmother about being meshed, Hana begins to wonder if getting the implant early is really a good idea.ĭesperate to figure out what’s going on, Hana and her friends find themselves spying on one of the most powerful corporations in the country-and the answers about the mystery at Start-Up could be closer to home than Hana’s willing to accept. But the competition is fierce, and when her passion for tinkering with bots gets her mixed up with dangerous junkyard rebels, she knows her future in the program is at risk.Įven scarier, she starts to notice that something’s not right at Start-Up-some of her friends are getting sick, and no matter what she does, her tech never seems to work right. If she can beat out half her classmates at Start-Up, a tech school for the city’s most talented twelve-year-olds, she’ll be meshed to the multiweb through a neural implant like her mom and sister. This middle grade STEM heroine release would have thrilled MG me! Keep reading this book review for my full thoughts.

(Or is that just me?) That’s how I felt while reading Hana Hsu and the Ghost Crab Nation. You know those stories you read and think, “if I was reading this at a younger age, I would have made this my entire personality”.
