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From the award-winning author of the;Lei and the Legends duology comes a sharp new fantasy about a Hawaiian boy who can transform into what people fear most: a shark. In a small Hawaiian village, Nohea is;the;latest son in a long line of male ancestors with a horrible secret: he''s half-human, half- Worse yet, when he eventually succumbs to his;shark-like cravings, he''ll be put to death and his family will be kicked out of;their home on;the;Hawaiian homelands. But when Nohea sees a flyer;for;a surf competition three valleys over, he realizes;the;prize money might be enough to move his family to a new home when he''s gone.;The;catch?;The;competition is;for;school teams only. So taking;the;biggest risk yet, Nohea joins;the;local public seventh-grade class, where he makes new friends, contends with a school bully, and gets so angry, he discovers a new row of supersharp teeth in his mouth! But this is only;the Because soon, Nohea realizes that, one by one, his surfing friends are
About the author
Malia Maunakea is a Kanaka ʻŌiwi (Native Hawaiian) writer whose desire to tell her son about Hawaiʻi resulted in her award-winning novel Lei and the Fire Goddess and its sequel, Lei and the Invisible Island. Malia splits her time between her island home and the mountains of Colorado. Learn more at maliamaunakea.com and @MaliaMaunakea on Instagram.
Summary
From the award-winning author of the Lei and the Legends duology comes a sharp new fantasy about a Hawaiian boy who can transform into what people fear most: a shark.
In a small Hawaiian village, Nohea is the latest son in a long line of male ancestors with a horrible secret: He’s half-human, half-shark. After his father—also cursed as a shark—kills someone while surfing and subsequently disappears, Nohea is left isolated with only his mom and tūtū as company. He knows he’ll suffer the same fate one day, so he can’t go to school or make any friends.
Worse yet, when he eventually succumbs to his shark-like cravings, he’ll be put to death, and his family will have to move to the continent. But when Nohea sees a flyer for a new surf competition, he realizes the prize money might be enough to help his family afford to stay in Hawaii when Nohea is gone. The catch? The competition is for school teams only.
So taking the biggest risk yet, Nohea joins the local public seventh-grade class where he makes friends, contends with a school bully, and gets so angry, he discovers a new row of supersharp teeth in his mouth! But this is only the beginning of Nohea’s problems.
Because soon, Nohea realizes that one by one, his surfing friends are disappearing. Is Nohea killing his classmates without knowing it? Or is something even more dangerous afoot?