3/30/23

Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti

Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti, illustrated by Bethany Stancliffe (April 4, 2023 by Andrews McMeel Publishing), is the third and final book in one of the strongest new fantasy series for the younger range of middle grade (8-10 year olds, or even 7 year old voracious readers like young me).  That being said, there aren't, actually, all that many books for this demographic compared to all the series for kids 10-14, which means these books really feel a felt need, and kids who loved all the magical vet books like the Pip Bartlett series, the Imaginary Veterinary Series and the like will find the Unicorn Island a good place to continue their fantasy reading! Here are my reviews for Unicorn Island and Secret Beneath the Sand, the first two books- the series really needs to be read in order both to understand what's happening and appreciate the steadily deepening plot.

Discovering Unicorn Island, a sanctuary for magical creatures, and learning the father she'd never met before was its caretaker was just the start of Sam's adventures.  In this final book, she's determined to find her biological mom, who vanished through a portal into the land that was the unicorns original home, a place where they were hunted almost to extinction.   Her best friends, Tuck, and a young unicorn, Barloc, go with her.  They have only a narrow window to find Sam's mother....and when they discover, to their horror, that unicorn hunting is still being practiced, and Barloc is captured, things become very tense indeed!  And then Sam finds that her mother is the community unicorn hunter, who takes their horns from them, and all her hopes for bringing this stranger back into her life are upended.

But things aren't black and white.  The community needs the magic of the unicorn horns to survive; they aren't just hunting them for fun.  She can't let Barloc be robbed of his magic, but she wants to help the townsfolk too....fortunately, with a little luck, lots of determination, and unicorn magic, she and her friends find a way to save not only the town but the de-horned unicorns.

It's not a deeply complex story, as expected, but it is a satisfying and memorable one, full of unicorn goodness, an interesting ethical dilemma, and the mending of a family.  The full color illustrations add to the charm.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher


3/26/23

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (3/26/23)

Here's what I found this week, please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

The Dark and Dangerous Gifts of Delores Mackenzie, by Yvonne Banham, at Book Craic

The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic, at Charlotte's Library

Fablehouse, by Emma Norry, at  Scope for Imagination

Hide or Seek (The Superpower Protection Program) by Dan DiDio, at Mark My Words

The Last Saxon King, by Andrew Varga, at Karen Werkema on Instagram

Lucha of the Night Forest, by Tehlor Kay Mejia, ar Confessions of a YA Reader  and Subjectify Media.

Maggie and the Mountain of Light, by Mark Snoad, at The Children's Book Review

Minecraft Legends: Return of the Piglins, by Matt Forbeck, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Nic Blake and the Remarkables, by Angie Thomas, at Book Page

Olivia and the Gentleman From Outer Space, by Moses Yuriyvich Mikheyev, at Mark My Words

The Rabbit's Gift, by Jessica Vitalis, at Log Cabin Library

SuperQuesters: The Case of the Missing Memory, by Thomas Bernard and Lisa Moss,at Scope for Imagination

The Super Secret Monster Experiment, by Tian En, at Popthebutterfly Reads

The Superteacher Project, by Gordon Korman, at Geo Librarian.

Thunderbird, Book 1, by Sonia Nimr, at Islamic School Librarian

The Way of the Cicadas, by Audrey Henley, at Independent Book Review

What Stays Buried, by Suzanne Young, at Utopia State of Mind

Two at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, and Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind by Misa Sugiura


Authors and Interviews 

Alice M. Ross (The Nowhere Thief) at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books 


Other Good Stuff

I missed this when it was first announced, so here you are-- 2022 Aurealis Awards Shortlist Announcement   (lots of enticing Mg!)

"10 Middle Grade Books Featuring a Magic School" at The Story Sanctuary

3/22/23

The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic


I am mostly saying no to review copies from independently published authors these days, because of feeling overwhelmed by books and life, but I'm really glad I took a chance on The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic!  I enjoyed it lots.

Chloe is sad--her busy parents are neglecting her, and her best friend is growing up faster than she is and has started leaving her behind.  Then one rainy London afternoon, walking home from school through a curious little London street, she tries to shelter in a shop doorway.  The rain comes down harder, and though the shop isn't open for business yet, she tries the door in desperation, and enters "The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox."  

There she finds magic, for Ixworth and Maddox aren't just ordinary sellers of curious things.  They are London magicians, creating, with the help of their resident brownies, magical marvels to sell to others such as themselves...and surprisingly, they welcome Chloe; after all, the door opened for her.  She finds herself spending more and more time with them, and the two kindly magicians encourage her own potential for magic.  

When Ixworth disappears with no warning or reason, Chloe is determined to help Maddox find him.  They set off on a journey that takes Chloe deep into magical London, where dark and ancient magic is being worked in a struggle for power.  It's not just Ixworth who needs saving (if saving him is even possible).....

Like I said, I enjoyed this.  I very much like interesting fantasy shops, and though some readers might find the first half of the book slow, I loved being introduced gently, with lots of details, to what the shop was selling and the workings of the magical city.  And then when things got going plot wise, and there was a mystery to solve and bad people and dangerous magic to foil, I enjoyed that too. Chloe has both believable agency and believable emotional reactions.  

In short, it doesn't break any particularly new ground, but it is does what it sets out to do very satisfactorily.  And if, like me, you like middle grade fantasy shop keeping, it's a must!  I hope there is a sequel.


3/21/23

Llama Rocks the Cradle of Chaos, by Jonathan Stutzman, for Timeslip Tuesday

 

A fun picture book for today's Timeslip Tuesday, as my brain is somewhat fried.  Llama Rocks the Cradle of Chaos, by Jonathan Stutzman, illustrated by Heather Fox (July 22, 2022, Henry Holt).  This is the third adventure of the titular llama, but happily I am a strong enough reader that I was able to plunge right in.  

Llama is a creature of many interests.  Chief among them  is eating delicious baked goods, especially donuts.   When his birthday donut proves to be the most delicious thing he's ever eaten, the sadness of not being able to eat it again overwhelms him.  Fortunately, the time travelling pants he has on hand can solve the problem!  And so he sets off to the past to be reunited with the donut....unfortunately, without reading the instructions....

And things go haywire, ending up with Llama, his younger self, and a whole bunch of other creatures brought along by mistake in Llama's house, which is getting wrecked....All ends well though, and more treats are eaten.

It is a bright and cheerful romp, a good introduction for the very young to the central question of time travel--the peril of changing the past!  Interestingly, some reviewers on Goodreads seem to have found the time travel confusing, but I do not think children will have this problem, because of course if you have time travel pants (or a time travel diaper, as Baby Llama has), you can travel through time and of course things can get mixed up.....and of course if you are reading, as I have done, time travel books where the time travel gets confusing, the only thing to do is shrug and role with it because otherwise your head hurts.  This did not make my head hurt, and Bably Llama was adorable.

3/19/23

This week's round up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (3/19/23)

Sorry I didn't have my act together last Sunday, but here's what I found this past week! Let me know if I missed anything.


The Reviews

The Battle for Verdana (Talisman 4), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words

 Carnival Quest (Candy Shop War #3), by Brandon Mull, at Kiss the Book and Ms. Yingling Reads

Dead Alley: A Motley Education Book, by S.A. Larsen, at Log Cabin Library 

Desperate Tides, Desperate Measures (Talisman 5), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words

The Guardian of Whispers, by B. E. Padgett, at Literary Potpourri 

 Illuminations, by T. Kingfisher, at Locus Online  and  Escape Reality, Read Fiction! 

In the Heart of the Linden Wood, by Ekta R. Garg, at Independent Book Review

Kelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts, by Erika Lewis, at Pages Unbound

Legends of Lotus Island: The Guardian Test, by Christina Soontornvat, at  PBC's Book Reviews  and| Children's Books Heal 

May's Moon: Fortis Mission, by S.Y. Palmer, at Bookworm for Kids

Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy, by Angie Thomas, at Log Cabin Library

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Smack Dab in the Middle

Princess of the Wild Sea, by Megan Frazer Blakemore, at Redeemed Reader

Ring of Solomon by Aden Polydoros, at Books and Such 

The Shimmer (Kingdom Keepers Inheritance #1), by Ridley Pearson, at Carstairs Considers

Skyriders, by Polly Holyoke, at Cracking the Cover

Ten Percent Magic, by Gina Zapanta-Alder & Michael Alder, at Mark My Words

Thunderbird: Book Two, by Sonia Nimr, at Charlotte's Library

Tourmaline and the Island of Elsewhere, by Ruth Lauren, at Book Craic

Wilder, by Penny Chrimes, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

Two at The Breadcrumb Forest--Spellstone by Ross Montgomery, and Onyeka: Rise of the Rebels by Tolá Okogwu


Authors and Interviews

Anna Brooke (Monster Bogey), at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books 

Cindy Callaghan (Just Add Magic) at Middle Grade Ninja

Dianne K. Salerni (The Carrefour Curse ) at From The Mixed Up Files


Other Good Stuff

The 2023 Unicorn Report  at 100 Scope Notes

35 Incredible Middle Grade Magical Realism Books at Imagination Soup



3/14/23

Thunderbird: Book Two, by Sonia Nimr, for Timeslipe Tuesday

In the first Thunderbird book, which I reviewed last fall) by Sonia Nimr we met Noor, an orphaned Palestinian girl who finds she must save the world from a collapsing chaos of demonic intrusion into our world by finding four phoenix feathers.  The catch is that the phoenix only sheds one feather per immolation, and immolations only happen once every 500 years or so, so she must travel back through time with the help of a djinn in cat form to find them.  The first book was good, but the second book (November 22, 2022 by University of Texas Press) is even better.  With all the set up in place, the reader is plunged into a  really gripping time travel back to Jerusalem of the Crusades.  

Noor arrives outside of the 12th century Jerusalem dazed and confused.  Almost immediately she is captured and taken, blindfolded, to the secret home of  the resistance to the Crusaders who have seized the city, who think she might be a spy.  Fortunately they believe her story when she finally brings herself to try to tell the truth (made more convincing by her talking cat comrade).  Her own quest of the phoenix feather gets slightly derailed when she throws herself into the plans of the resistance to humiliate the crusader overlord, and save the precious library that he plans to burn.

It is a lovely mix of the magical (the boundaries between our world and the supernatural world are starting to slip....) and the historical; very satisfying both as middle grade time travel and as plucky girl adventure!  It's a fairly short, tightly written book, with humor alongside of tension and heartfelt emotion, and it's a vivid portrayal of this particular moment in time. Of course "let's save the precious library!" is a plot I am always there for, and fortunately I wasn't kept in too much desperate tension....

I am very much looking forward to volume 3, which sadly isn't out right now.....

3/7/23

The Dollhouse, by Caris Cotter, for Timeslip Tuesday


This week's Timeslip Tuesday is The Dollhouse: A Ghost Story, by Caris Cotter...and I havered a bit about whether this was timeslip or, as the title would suggest, a ghost story, but I decided it counted as the former...

It's the story of Alice, a girl who's life is upended where her mother decides to leave her father after he once again puts work before family.  So instead of the long anticipated summer vacation together, Alice is dragged off by her mother to a remote mansion, where her mother will be the live in nurse for the old lady who recently bought the place who just had an accident, and Alice will be at loose ends.  The journey is inauspicious--their train has an accident, and Alice is left with a mild concussion.  And when they arrive at Blackwood house, grand and beautiful, Lily, the housekeeper's daughter who though 16 has the mind of a much younger child, shows Alice the bedroom she'll stay in, and confides that it is haunted.  

And indeed, when Alice wakes up the next morning, there in bed with her is a red headed girl.  Their brief meeting ends when Alice (not unnaturally) starts screaming her head off...and the girl is gone, and Alice's concussion is blamed for the experience.  Alice and Lily explore the house together, and a hidden stairway takes them up to the attic, where they find a marvelous miniature replica of Blackwood House.  One of the dolls looks just like the red headed girl...because she is (sort of).

This girl, Fizz, lived in the house back in the 1920s, and over the next few weeks Alice finds herself going back and forth from the present into Fizz's life, where only Fizz, and her old sister, Bubble (who is also developmentally delayed).  But it is not straight time travel--the dollhouse acts a conduit to the past, and when Alice changes things in the dollhouse, they change in reality.  The secrets and tensions of the past overlap with Alice's own worries, and Fizz's instance that Alice is in fact the dead ghost do nothing to sooth anybody's nerves...

And then tragedy upends Fizz's life, and that too is mirrored in what happens to Alice...

I really don't think there any actual ghosts, despite the title, just the ghostly memories of the past....unless you count the dollhouse, as a menacing ghostly power from the past, or perhaps Fizz showing up in Alice's time, waking up in the bedroom that used to be hers long ago....but Fizz never sticks around to do any actual haunting....so readers who go in expecting ghosts might be confused and disappointed. 

The one thing I didn't care for was the two girls, one in the past and one in the present, with developmental delays, described as being like "little girls"--they were too much like each other, sweet, innocent, happy, and un-three-dimensional, and that jarred a bit.  They seemed to be in the book to provide foils for Fizz's sharpness and Alice's vivid imagination (I guess), but while just one of them I could have accepted, having two felt forced.

(I have to be a bit spoilery to talk about the time travel, so if you are intrigued at this point, you can stop reading this now and go get ahold of the book--it is very good, full of mystery and emotion and tension, and the dollhouse and its wonderful miniatures is fascinatingly horrific to read about!)

This reminded me, timeslip wise, of Tom's Midnight Garden.  As is the case with that book, in which an old woman's memories are what creates the young boy's time travel, Alice is caught in Fizz's memories, tied strongly to the anchor of the dollhouse.  In both, time travel is a sort of tourism to the past; Alice doesn't affect any real change in Fizz's life, but I found it very satisfactory to read about. 




3/5/23

This week's round up of middle grade sci fi and fantsy from around the blogs (3/5/23)

Good morning from Rhode Island, where the sun is melting the winter ick of yesterday!  Here's what I found this week; let me know if I missed your post.


The Reviews

Alex Neptune, Pirate Hunter, by David Owen, at Vicky's Never Ending TBR and Book Craic

Amari and the Night Brothers, by B.B. Alston, at The Book Nut

Aviva vs. the Dybbuk, by Mari Lowe, at Kiss the Book 

Black Bird, Blue Road, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Kiss the Book

Claire and the Dragons, by Wander Antunes, at Pages Unbound

Disconnected, by Riley Cross, at Bookworm for Kids

Elf Dog & Owl Head, by M.T. Anderson, at Mark My Words

The Frost Fair, by Natasha Hastings, at YA Books Central

The Gathering by Dan Poblocki, at Puss Reboots

Haven: A Small Cat’s Big Adventure, by Megan Wagner Lloyd, at  Rosi Hollinbeck

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Kiss the Book

The Magician's Elephant Movie tie-in, by Kate DiCamillo and illustrations by Yoko Tanaka, at Log Cabin Library

The Moth Keeper, by K. O'Neill, ar Sharon the Librarian

The Nowhere Thief, by Alice M. Ross, at Book Craic

Nura and The Immortal Palace, by M. T. Khan, at YA Books Central

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Pages Unbound

Riders of Fire and Ice (Talisman 2), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words

The Secrets of the Stormforest, by L D Lapinski, at Rapunzel Reads 

Tourney of Terror (D&D: Dungeon Academy #2), by Madeleine Roux, at Mark My Words: 

Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti, illustrations by Bethany Stancliffe. at Log Cabin Library

Two at Dead Houseplants: Fenris and Mott, by Greg Van Eekhout, and Freddie vs the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua 

Five mini reviews at A Cat, A Book, and A Cup of Tea: The Nowhere Thief, by Alice M Ross, Yesterday Crumb and the Teapot of Chaos by Andy Sagar, Tourmaline and the Island of Elsewhere, by Ruth Lauren, The Time Tider, by Sinéad O’Hart, and  Wildsmith: Into the Dark Forest, by Liz Flanagan


Authors and Interviews

 Russell Ginns (1-2-3 SCREAM) at Middle Grade Ninja

 Gill Lewis (Moonflight) at Library Girl and Book Boy

Peter Bunzl (Dragonracers) at Scope for Imagination


Other Good Stuff

One of my favorite regular posts to read-Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books - Children's Book Picks UK - March 2023

9 Books Inspired by The Magician's Elephant, at Literacious

The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival Enters Its 12th Year.  (slj.com)

Katie (aka alibrarymama), whose recommendations have never failed to please me, shares her 2022 in Review

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