This fascinating modern fantasy has overtones of C.S. Lewis at his best. Jared, Shireen, and Miranda are siblings whose father has taken a visiting professor position in Venice for a semester. While getting their bearings of the city, the three stumble upon an old junk shop, where they meet a mysterious old man. Seeming to know something the children don't, he gifts them with a trinket apiece from a mysterious bag along with a copy of the folktale classic One Thousand and One Nights in Latin. Soon, the children are involved in a fantastic romp through Venice along with a stone lion come to life, a faun who's stepped out of a painting, and another trio of children from another time.
Francesca, Maria, and Rashid are somewhat allegorical characters; the commentary they are meant to represent will be obvious to adult readers, but less so to target-aged middle-grade or YA readers. I loved this book not only for the flights of fancy it took, but also for the imaginative way Baucom used two vastly different contexts to his advantage. For the perceptive, mature middle-grade reader, this will be a delight... but don't read the inside jacket! It spoils a plot point that comes along later and really ruined my enjoyment of the early parts of the book because I was waiting for that plot point to crop up.
This book features a family formed through international adoption - Jared and Shireen were adopted from India, while Miranda is the white biological child of the siblings' parents. This is a point in a few places, but the issues of international adoption are mostly glossed over. Although Baucom describes Jared and Shireen as having brown skin, they are illustrated in cover and interior art as having a skintone roughly the same as Miranda's. Just thought I'd throw that out there in case anyone was looking for books that deal with this issue; although it's a part of this book, it wouldn't be my first pick for a child looking for characters to relate to.