12/13/20

This week's roundup of mg fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (12/13/20)

Here's what I found this week (it was a good one for the first third of the alphabet!).  Please let me know if I missed your post.

The Reviews

Amari and the Night Brothers, by B.B. Alston, at Book Craic and Ramblingmads

Anya and the Nightingale, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Fantasy Literature

The Beast and the Bethany, by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, at Cover2Cover  and Bibliosanctum

Cleo Porter and the Body Electric, by Jake Burt, at Geo Librarian

The Crowns of Croswald (The Crowns of Croswald #1), by D.E. Night, at Looking Glass Reads

Embassy of the Dead, by Will Mabbitt, at Cover2Cover

Fae Child, by Jane Holly Meissner, at Rajiv's Reviews

Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Silver Button Books

Ghosts Never Die (Haunted #2), by Joel Sutherland, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Girl and the Ghost, by Hanna Alka, at Puss Reboots

Hide and Seeker, by Daka Hermon, at Charlotte's Library

Midsummer’s Mayhem, by Rajani LaRocca, at  House Full of Bookworms

The Miracle on Ebenezer Street, by Catherine Doyle, at  Sifa Elizabeth Reads

Never After: The Thirteenth Fairy, by Melissa de la Cruz, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Always in the Middle

Paola Santiago and the River of Tears, by Tehlor Kay Mejia, at Santana Reads 

The Sisters of Straygarden Place by Hayley Chewins, at Rosi Hollinbeck 

A Wolf For a Spell, by Karah Sutton, at The Wandering Wordsmith

Five at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Sisters of Straygarden Place, Rival Magic, Quintessence, Horace Fox in the City, and The Clockwork Crow

Other Good Stuff

8 wintery middle grade fantasy books at alibrarymama

"Fantastic Reality in The Time of the Ghost by Diana Wynne Jones" at Tor

Here's the shortlist for the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children’s Literature (books published during 2018 or 2019 that exemplify the spirit of the Inklings) 

12/11/20

Hide and Seeker, by Daka Hermon

If you are on the look out for middle grade (9-12 year olds) horror, do not miss Hide and Seeker, by Daka Hermon (Scholastic, September 2020)!  It's a page-turner full of scary.

Justin's best friend, Zee, disappeared just a week after Justin's very much loved mom died. Now a year later, Zee is back...but is not himself.  Something horrible happened to him, and he can't slot nicely back into Justin's circle of best friends (he can't even talk coherently, and his mother locks him in his room when she must leave him so he doesn't go on destructive rampages).  But regardless, his mother is throwing him a welcome back party.

As well as Justin and the two other members of the former foursome, Nia and Lyric, a couple of other neighborhood kids show up.  Zee's unable to hang out like he used to, so it's pretty depressing.  Lacking anything better to do, the kids start a game of hide and seek, but quit before it's finished.  And this seemingly harmless choice dooms them.

Because the Seeker comes for any kid who breaks the rules of the game....just like he came for Zee last year.

One by one, the kids are sucked into an evil other world, Nowhere.  Justin is the last to go, and therefore the most prepared.  He's determined to save his friends, and they have more information about the Seeker (from both Zee's incoherent snatches of rhyme and from another former victim who made it out) than most kids who are taken.  But will the camping supplies he's packed actually help against a being who makes your worst fears come true, feeding off your fear to become ever stronger?*

Nowhere is home to several hundred kids, some captured almost a century ago.  They live in constant fear, hiding from the Seeker, because at any moment whatever they are most afraid of can become real.  One girl, Mary, for instance, is constantly made to relive the horror and physical pain of being trapped in an old well with hungry rats--she is hunted by rat-snake hybrids.  Other kids are burned, stung by swarms of insects, and struck by lightning.  Some have internal fears that come true, over and over; Justin is plagued by his dead mother, a ghastly facsimile who torments him, Lyric becomes unable to find his friends, and is invisible to them, and Nia, who delights in her encyclopedic knowledge, starts to forget everything, like her grandmother has. 

Justin finds his friends, and they resolve to somehow escape the Seeker's horrible game.   Since this is a kid's book, of course they do, by being smart and working together.

After just a few chapters, it was unputdownable, and I can see this delighting its target audience lots and lots!   I myself prefer more creeping psychological horror to in your face worst fears come true, and I would have appreciated more depth to the Seeker's story, but still I was totally gripped.   I appreciated that the kids aren't little privileged white saviors--all but one of the four main kids is black, and there's a touch of racial profiling by the police, Lyric (the one white kid) has a father in jail, and Justin and his big sister are in pretty desperate financial straights.  I also appreciated what a good kid Justin is; he's being going through a horrible time even before the nightmare begins, but he's still able to look after others. 

In short, definitely offer this one to a kid who wants a terrifying trip to a hellscape of nightmares!  And when they've finished it, and are maybe ready to move past middle grade books, offer them The Call, by  P
  


12/6/20

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (12/6/20)

Welcome to the last first round up of the month of 2020!  Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post.

The Reviews

Anya and the Dragon, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Fantasy Literature

Artemis Fowl (Book 1), by Eoin Colfer, at S.W. Lothian

The Battle of the Bodkins (Max and the Midknights #2), by Lincoln Peirce, at Ms. Yingling Reads 
Bloom by Kenneth Oppel, at Puss Reboots

Dragon Ops, by Mari Mancusi, at Ms. Yingling Reads

A Dreidel in Time: A new Spin on an Old Tale, by Marcia Berneger, illustrated by Beatriz Castro, at Randomly Reading

Frank Penny and the Last Black Stag, by Jeremy Elson, at Rajiv's Reviews and Jazzy Book Reviews

Gartgantis, by Thomas Taylor, at dinipandareads

Ghost Squad, by Claribel A. Ortega, at Say What?

The Girl and the Ghost, by Hanna Alkaf, at Charlotte's Library

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Completely Full Bookshelf 

Island in the Stars (The Problim Children #3)  by Natalie Lloyd, at Children's Books Heal

Jungledrop, by Abi Elphinstone, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

The Lost Child’s Quest, by James Haddell, at Book Craic and Library Girl and Book Boy

The Magician's Elephant, by Kate DiCamillo, at Say What?

The Monster Who Wasn't by T.C. Shelley, at Geo Librarian 

The Narroway Trilogy, by Otillie Colter (Series Review) at A Dance With Books

Parsifal Rides the Time Wave, by Nell Chenault, at Semicolon

The Purple Bird, by Dylan Roche, at Books. Iced Lattes. Blessed.

The Retake, by Jen Calonita, at Ms. Yingling Reads

A Tale of Magic, by Chris Colfer, at divabooknerd

Tristan Strong Destroys the World by Kwame Mbalia, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)

Unlocked (Keeper of the Lost Cities 8.5) by Shannon Messenger, at Pages Unbound

Untwisted (Twinchantment #2), by Elise Allen, at Goodreads with Rona

Four at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Unexplainable Disappearance of Mars Patel by Sheela Chari, The Time of Green Magic by Hilary McKay, When You Trap a Tiger by Tae Keller, and The Lost Wonderland Diaries by J. Scott Savage

Authors and  Interviews

Dianne Salerni (Eleanor, Alice & the Roosevelt Ghosts) at From the Mixed Up Files

Other Good Stuff

Here's the Costa Book Awards childrens book shortlist:
  • Wranglestone by Darren Charlton (Little Tiger)
  • Voyage of the Sparrowhawk by Natasha Farrant (Faber & Faber)
  • The Super Miraculous Journey of Freddie Yates by Jenny Pearson (Usborne)
  • The Great Godden by Meg Rosoff (Bloomsbury Publishing)

12/3/20

The Girl and the Ghost, by Hanna Alkaf

The Girl and the Ghost, by Hanna Alkaf (middle grade, Harper Collins, August 2020), was on my radar for ages, but this year I've been having a hard time reading (mindless computer game playing dulls my sense more than reading provides an escape), and it took reading for the Cybils Awards for me to get to it (this incentivizing is one reason I like being a Cybils panelist so much). Once I started reading it, it replaced my feelings of nebulous dread and depression with other feelings, lots of them.....(in a good way!), and transported me on a spooky trip to Malaysia.

Here's the first line--“The ghost knew his master was about to die, and he wasn’t exactly unhappy about it.” The witch's blood, which once filled this spirit, a pelesit, with magic, has grown thin, and though he didn't have any ethical qualms about carrying out the malicious errands she used to send him on, he is read for a change. And so when she dies, he sets out to find his new master, who must be someone of the same bloodline, with the same magic within them. That someone is the witch's baby granddaughter, Suraya.

When Suraya becomes aware of the pelesit, she welcomes his friendship, and names him Pink, the sort of name her stuffed animals have. Her mother is cold and distant, and Suraya is a lonely child, and so Pink becomes her inseparable companion as she grows up. Pink, though he's a spirit made for nasty mischief, grows to love Suraya, and would do anything to keep her safe and happy. But when Suraya makes friends with another girl, Jing, and finds happiness outside of Pink, he is consumed by angry jealousy. And since a pelesit has no moral compass, he persecutes Jing. Though Suraya then shuts Pink out of her life, she can't cut all ties with him--they are bound by blood. Finally in desperation she turns to her mother for help, and her mother, for pretty much the first time ever, is there for her.

But when her mother brings in a pawing hantu, a man who can capture spirits, Suraya can't go through with consigning Pink to his custody. And her instincts are sound in this--he is not collecting spirits for altruistic reasons. Suraya and Jing, and Pink, agree to find their way back to the place where Pink was created by the witch, and lay him to peaceful rest. The pawing hantu pursues them, with his own small army of spirits, and in the cemetery where Pink was made, things almost go horribly wrong before all is set right....

My heart ached for Suraya so much. This is a powerful exploration of loneliness and friendship, and though Pink and Suraya's relationship is toxic in many ways, and Pink's jealousy almost spoils it entirely, there is still genuine love between them. Likewise, though Suraya and her mother have a terrible relationship, there's still enough of a bond between them that there's hope they will move forward with love. And Jing is simply a great friend, with nothing toxic about her at all!

People and places, ghosts and graveyards, all become vividly real. It's not a comfort read, but it is a gripping and immersive one, and middle school kids, with all the angst of that age group, will find much to relate too.




11/29/20

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (11/29/20)

Here's what I found this week in my blog reading; please let me know if I missed your post!  I find it rather heartening that, even though I am not finding the strength and time to write as many reviews as I did pre-pandemic, the reading and reviewing, and of course the publishing of great new books, still goes on.

The Reviews

Adventure to Dark Island, by Bev Mietz, at Rajiv's Reviews

Anya and the Nightingale, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Pizza Stained Pages

The Beast And The Bethany, by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, at Fazila Reads

City of the Plague God, by Sarwat Chadda, at Say What?

Dragonfire (Dragon Keeper's Chronicles #4), by Donita K. Paul, at Say What?

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

Girl Giant and the Monkey King, by Van Hoang, at Utopia State of Mind

Hollowpox: The Hunt for Morrigan Crow (Nevermoor #3), by Jessica Towsend, at Pages Unbound and divabooknerd

Knights vs. Monsters, by Matt Phelan, at Sonderbooks

Mouse Watch, by J.J. Gilbert, at Ms. Yingling Reads

On These Magic Shores, by Yamile Saied Méndez, at Charlotte's Library

Outlaws of Time, by N. D. Wilson (series review), at Redeemed Reader

The Princess who Flew with Dragons, by Stephanie Burgis, at Geo Librarian 

A Sprinkle of Sorcery (A Pinch of Magic #2), by Michelle Harrison, at Evelyn reads

A Tale of Magic, by Chris Colfer, at Say What?

Tristan Strong Destroys the Universe, by Kwame Mbalia, at Book Nut

The Willoughbys Return, by Lois Lowry, at Not Acting My Age 

The Wizards of Once: Never and Forever, by Cressida Cowell, at Twirling Book Princess

Wonderscape, by Jennifer Bell, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

Two at alibrarymama-- The Girl and the Ghost by Hanna Alkaf, and The Girl Who Lost
Her Shadow by Emily Ilett

Authors and Interviews

Rajani LaRocca (Much Ado about Baseball) at Fuse #8

Roslyn Muir (The Chimera's Apprentice) at Jazzy Book Reviews

11/23/20

On These Magic Shores, by Yamile Saied Méndez

On These Magic Shores, by Yamile Saied Méndez (middle grade, Tu Books, June 2020), blends real world problems and fairy magic to create a compelling story of a 12-year-old girl doing the best she can to keep her family together.

Minerva (in her mind, and at school she's Minnie) might be in 7th grade, but she has her long range plan in place--get the part of Wendy in the school's yearly production of Peter Pan, use that as a springboard to leadership at school, and from there on up to becoming the first Latina president of the United States. In the short-term, her primary responsibility is looking after her two little sisters while their mother, an Argentinian American, works two jobs. Money is tight, and their basement apartment is unlovely, but the family is managing.

Then the night before Minnie's audition, Mamá doesn't come home, and Minnie is overwhelmed by worry for her, and for herself and her sisters. Will the girls be sent to separate foster homes? Minnie can't leave her much younger sisters home alone, but she can't stand to miss the audition. So she brings her sisters, and it goes badly.

Then comes a week of trying to pretend everything is normal, though Minnie has a hard job of it--a 12- year-old can't go to school and look after kids at the same time, and without Mamá, what will they eat? And how can Minnie come up with the $50 audition fee for the play? (aside--do public schools really charge that much for kids to be in the play? This surprised me lots).

But Minnie and her sisters aren't exactly alone. Their mother has filled their ears from babyhood with stories of the fairies who came first from Europe to Argentina, and then from Argentina to the United States. Her little sisters believe, and insist on leaving saucers of milk for them. Minnie's a skeptic. But when little bits of glittery luck start coming her way, the evidence becomes undeniable that there's magic at work.

And with the help from magic, and with a new friend, a quirky kid named Maverick and his wealthy family, and with some help from their landlord, who is kinder than Minnie had thought, things are held together. But Mamá is still missing, and Minnie decides to take action, contacting the grandmother in Argentina she's never met. The grandmother had had a premonition she'd be needed (possibly thanks to the magic), and is able to come to the US. And Mamá comes home from the hospital.

With huge relief, Minnie is able to shed her responsibilities, and her Mamá, still gravely ill, is able to as well, now her own mother is there. And Minnie now believes in fairies just as much as her little sisters do.

In the meantime, there's the play--Minnie isn't cast as Wendy, but as Tiger Lily (because of her brown skin, she wonders?) and she puts her foot down about the racism of the story, refusing to take the part. She's able to convince the school to tweak the play, finds another girl, a newly arrived immigrant, to take the part of Lily, a leader of Amazons. There are many other bits that speak to the experience of being a browned skinned, Spanish-speaking, child of immigrants in the story, including a nasty run-in with a racially profiling cop, that make the story relevant to the real world.

This is a great one for readers who are fascinated by stories of kids coping on their own without grownups! It's believable and scary, but the magic of the fairies leavens the darkness with its subtle sprinkles of gold, and the ending is warm and comforting. Because the magic is so subtle, this is also a great one for the fan of realistic fiction who has to read a fantasy book for school!

I personally enjoyed it lots, though I wasn't certain at first; Minnie starts of as a rather unsympathetic character, but as the story unfolds she grew on me lots. And I loved the magic, and didn't even mind that there was no big reveal of fairies (it stays subtle, but undeniable, till the end).  I hadn't heard about this one until it was nominated for the Cybils Awards, and I'm glad it was so that I was compelled to read it!









11/22/20

This week's roundup of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (11/22/20)

Hi all, here's what I found this week.  Please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

The Boy, the Wolf and the Stars, by Shivaun Plozza, at The Book Dutchess

Carnival Catastrophe (The Problim Children #2), by Natalie Lloyd, at Say What?

The Clockwork Ghost, by Laura Ruby, at Leaf's Reviews

Curse of the Night Witch, by Alex Aster, at Geo Librarian 

The Endangereds, by Philippe Cousteau & Austin Aslan, at Mom Read It

Finn and the Intergalactic Lunchbox, by Michael Buckley, at Jean Little Library

Freya and Zoose, by Emily Butler, at Log Cabin Library

The Ghost of Gosswater, by Lucy Strange, at Magic Fiction Since Potter 

The Gryphon's Lair, by Kelley Armstrong, at Puss Reboots 

Kenny & the Beast of Books (The Tales of Kenny Rabbit # 2), by Tony DiTerlizzi, at Kids Lit Review

The Lost Girl, by Anne Ursu, at Falling Letters

The Midnight Hour, by Benjamin Read and Laura Trinder, at Charlotte's Library

Sky Song, by Abi Elphinstone, at The Bookwyrm's Den

The Time of Green Magic, by Hilary McKay, at alibrarymama

Five at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--Kiki's Delivery Service by Eiko Kadono, Embassy of the Dead by Will Mabbitt, The Total Eclipse of Nestor Lopez by Adrianna Cuevas, Middle School Bites by Steven Banks, and Into the Tall, Tall Grass by Loriel Ryon

Three at Evelyn Reads--Hollowpox (Nevermoor #3), by Jessica Townsend, Nightfall (Keeper of Lost Cities #6), by Shannon Messenger, and Cogheart (The Cogheart Adventures #1), by Peter Bunzl.

Four at thebookactivist--The Ten Riddles of Eartha Quicksmith by Loris Owen, The Griffin Gate by Vashti Hardy, The Thing in Black Hole Lake by Dashe Roberts, and My Life As A Cat by Carlie Sorosiak

Authors and Interviews

Summer Rachel Short (The Mutant Mushroom Takeover), at Literary Rambles

Ash Van Otterloo (Cattywampus) at Cynthia Leitich Smith

Other Good Stuff

At Tor, "The Horse and Her Girl"--a look at C.S. Lewis and Aravis

and just for the heck of it, some exciting dinosaur news--World’s first 100% complete T-rex skeleton found locked in battle with a Triceratops

11/20/20

Accidental Archaeologists: True Stories of Unexpected Discoveries, by Sarah Albee


As far as I know, I'm the only professional archaeologists who has a children's book blog. So I was delighted when I was offered a review copy of Accidental Archaeologists: True Stories of Unexpected Discoveries, by Sarah Albee, illustrated by Nathan Hackett (Scholastic Nonfiction, November 10th 2020). I enjoyed the reading of it very much, and learned lots I didn't know, and I think it's a great one to offer the 10-12 year old who has an interest in archaeology.


The book is self-described as a collection of "chance discoveries by ordinary people" that contributed to our understanding of the past. Arranged in chronological order of the discoveries (which has the added bonus of seeing how archaeology has changed over time), these chance finds from around the world are indeed extraordinary, marvelous, discoveries. Included are some that will be familiar to many kids in the US, like Pompeii and Herculaneum, and some that will quite possibly be new, like an Aztec temple in Mexico City, and a South African cave full of the fossils of a previously unknown early human species. They really are all tremendously exiting finds from around the world!

Albee does a truly great job providing historical context for many of the finds (along the way, for instance, you'll learn lots about the history of Thailand, and slavery in New York), and in some cases, the discoverers are brought to life too--like the black cowboy who found the first huge bison kill site in the US--which adds human interest. Lots of vintage illustrations, maps, and sidebars give even more substance to the already rich descriptions of each discovery. The accessible, almost conversational style of the stories allows Albee to include past injustices, misconceptions, and mistakes in a way that's thought provoking without being preachy.

In short, reading books like this is a great way to learn, and there's lots to learn here, not dumbed down at all, and so much more fun than reading books written for grown-ups!

(I only have one professional quibble--one of the discoveries wasn't accidental at all, but the result of cultural resource buraucracy working like it's supposed to. The discovery of New York's African American cemetery occured not by chance, but becuase the laws protecting historic sites worked--a regulatory archaeologist (like me!) reviewed the project, and called for an archaeological survey. And so, though it's a great story, it doesn't really belong in the book....and I wish Albee had used this story to hammered home a little harder than she does the point that many important discoveries are made becuase people know what they are doing and are trained professionals! In fairness, she does make the point clear that the finding of neat things is only the first step, and doesn't get you far without the professionals to do the analysis and conservation....)


11/17/20

The Midnight Hour, by Benjamin Read and Laura Trinder, for Timeslip Tuesday


The Midnight Hour, by Benjamin Read and Laura Trinder (middle grade, Chicken House, March 2020), isn't a typical time travel story.  But a bit of magical time twisting is central to the world building, and so I shall count it as time slip.

After her mother leaves home ostensibly for family reasons (surprising Emily, who's never met any of that family), and doesn't come back, her father leaves Emily alone while he goes to look for her.  With just a rescued hedgehog for company for the next few days, Emily gets increasingly anxious, and at last decides to go to the post office where her father works the night shift, to see if she can find any word of what's become of her parents.

But he is no ordinary postman, and it is no ordinary post office.  Instead, it is the Night Post, a way through to the Midnight Hour--a bit of Victorian London  frozen in time and cut off from reality to make a protective home for magical beings.  Visitors from the day-time world are not welcome there, and on top of her anxiety about her parents, Emily must face annoyed authorities.  But that's not the worst of her problems.  On the streets of the Midnight Hour, full of marvels and monsters, she is hunted by a malevolent bear person....

….who turns out to be working for someone more powerful and frightening still.  A being who needs something Emily has in order to break the confining magic of the Midnight Hour.  

Emily's situation is fairly awful; the mix of Victorian urban life with monsters and magic is dizzying, and she and her parents are in real danger.  For most of the book she doesn't even have any allies to buttress her, save for her loyal hedgehog.  Fortunately, she's a quick learner.  When she's about to give into despair, she has the intelligence to think of exactly the right way to use the rules of the Night Post, and it works like a charm.  After seeing Emily muddling through somewhat passively for much of the book, it was great to see her using her brains to gain control of the situation!  It was also lots of fun to see the secrets of her family gradually revealed.

If you think it would be fun to visit a Victorian London full of monsters, you'll love Emily's adventures.  I myself am not all that fond of confusing monster-filled alternate worlds in general, but Emily's cleverness and snarkiness won me over enough that I'll read the next book of her adventures with pleasure!  

11/15/20

The week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from aroung the blogs (11/15/20)

Hi all!  Here's what I found this week; enjoy!  (and please let me know if I missed your post)

The Reviews

The Candy Mafia, by Lavie Tidhar, illustrated by Daniel Duncan, at Kids Lit Review

The Creature Keeper, by Damaris Young, at bookloverjo

Eva Evergreen, Semi-Magical Witch, by Julie Abe, at Geo Librarian 

A Game of Fox and Squirels, by Jenn Reese, at Heavy Medal

Harding's Luck, by E. Nesbit, a post by Delia Sherman at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles

Hatch, by Kenneth Oppel, at Fantasy Literature

Hide and Seeker, by Daka Hermon, at Geo Librarian

How to Save the Universe (Dimension Why #1), by John Cusick, at Ms. Yingling Reads 

In the Red, by Christopher Swiedler, at Say What?

Just Beyond the Very, Very Far North by Dan Bar-el, illustrated by Kelly Pousette, at Randomly Reading

Mañanaland, by Pam Muñoz Ryan, at Children's Books Heal

Maya and the Rising Dark, by Rena Barron, at The Caffinated Reader

Night of the Living Ted, by Barry Hutchison, illustrated by Lee Cosgrove, at Jean Little Library

Rival Magic, by Deva Fagan, at Geo Librarian 

Scritch Scratch, by Lindsay Currie, at Say What?

Toro, by Andrew Avner, at Log Cabin Library  

The Undrowned,  by K.R. Alexander, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Unexplainable Disappearance of Mars Patel, by Sheela Chari, at Mom Read It

Wishes and Wellingtons, by Julie Berry, at Charlotte's Library

The Wizards of Once, by Cressida Cowell, at Fantasy Literature

Two books starring apprentice witches at alibrarymama-Kiki’s Delivery Service, by Eiko Kadono, and Eva Evergreen, Semi-Magical Witch, by Julie Abe 

Three "stunning sequels" at A little but a lot - Tilly and the Map of Stories, by  Anna James, Frostheart 2: Escape from Aurora, by Jamie Littler, and The Midnight Howl, by Benjamin Read and Laura Trinder

Four at Feed Your Fiction Addiction-Paola Santiago and the River of Tears, by Tehlor Kay Mejia, Mañanaland, by Pam Muñoz Ryan, The Copycat by Wendy McLeod MacKnight, and Shuri: A Black Panther Novel by Nic Stone

Author and Interviews  

Katharine Orton (Glassheart), at A little but a lot,  and Library Girl and Book Boy

Sofiya Pasternak (Anya and the Nightingale), at The Book of Life podcast



11/12/20

Wishes and Wellingtons, by Julie Berry

Wishes and Wellingtons, by Julie Berry (Sourcebooks, October 2020, first published as an Audible Original in 2018), is a middle grade fantasy in the tradition of E. Nesbit that will delight anyone who loves reading about feisty girls finding magic and struggling to control it!

Maeve wants to be a world-famous cricket player, or perhaps an explorer, or both, but Victorian England isn't offering her many opportunities for either.  For the moment she stuck at a boarding school for "Upright Young Ladies," and when the book begins, she's being made to sort through the trash as punishment for her latest transgression against the rules of upright young lady-ship.  

But fortune smiles on her (perhaps) when she finds a sardine tin in which a djinni has been trapped.  The power of magical wishes is hers...but she only has three of them, and the djinni isn't going to help her make the best use of them.  On the contrary...

Though Maeve wastes her first wish on a silly bit of revenge against another girl, she is fortunate to have two more level headed allies--an orphan boy from the adjacent charitable home (who hopes to get his own chance with the sardine tin), and her best friend Alice, a girl from a wealthy family who's quieter personality makes her good foil for Maeve.

The three of them use Maeve's second wish to take them on an adventure in search of treasure--and they find themselves in the ancestral home of the djinni himself!  It's a place of curses and angry spirits, and needless to say it doesn't make them rich.  With only one wish left, how will Maeve foil the plotting of a powerful business man who's found out about the sardine tin djinn, and make a better future for herself and her friends?

It's touch and go, but she does it, and I was happy to cheer her own!

I myself am a big fan of Nesbit (The Phoenix and the Carpet and The Story of the Amulet in particular, despite the discomfort of some racist and classist elements typical of their time), and of Edward Eager, who follows in her footsteps with stories of kids finding magic (with much less for modern readers to object to), and then figuring out its rules.  Maeve obviously hasn't read these books, and it takes her a while to really think things through.  The evil business man, who threatens Maeve's family, gives her a worthwhile foe, and it's lots of fun to watch him getting his comeuppance!  I was a bit disappointed that the djinni didn't get more of a redemption arc, but you can't have everything.

A great read if you are in the mood for a light  historical fantasy romp that's lots of fun!  I dunno if kids these days ever read Nesbit and Eager, but this would conceivable be a great gateway to her books, and so I endorse it wholeheartedly for that reason as well as for its own sake!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

11/8/20

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/8/20)

Welcome to the first post-election round-up.  I for one am breathing a huge sigh of relief, and am hoping that now that I'm not staring at the NY Times homepage for most of the day I can get back to reading!  

Here's what I found this week.

The Reviews

The Barren Grounds (The Misewa Saga #1), by David Robertson, at Say What?

The Boy, The Wolf and The Stars, by Shivaun Plozza, at Glam Adelaide

Cinders & Sparrows by Stefan Bachmann, at Phoenix Book Company

City of Ghosts by Victoria Schwab, at Suzanne Goulden

Geeks and the Holy Grail (The Camelot Code #2), by Mari Mancusi, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Genny Faces the Green Knight, by Darrel Gregory, at Foreward Reviews

The Ghost in Apartment 2R, by Denis Markell, at Charlotte's Library

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Never Not Reading

Haunting at the Hotel (Case Closed #3) by Lauren Magaziner, at Pages Unbound

In the Red, by Christopher Swiedler, at Geo Librarian

The Midnight Guardians, by Ross Montgomery, at Book Lover Jo

The School for Good and Evil (The School for Good and Evil #1), by Soman Chainani, at Jill's Book Blog

Scritch Scratch, by Lindsay Currie, at Puss Reboots

Tristan Strong Destroys the World, by Kwame Mbalia, at alibrarymama

The Way to Rio Luna by Zoraida Cordova, at alibarymama

A Wish in the Dark, by Christina Soontornvat, at Geo Librarian and Redeemed Reader

Two at alibrarymama- When You Trap a Tiger, by Tae Keller, and The Magic in Changing Your Stars, by Leah Henderson

Two more at alibrarymama- Water Bears, by Kim Baker, and The Girl Who Speaks Bear, by Sophie Anderson

Authors and Interviews

Pam Muñoz Ryan (Mañanaland) at Kirkus

Bassem Youssef and Catherine Daly (The Magical Reality of Nadia) at WNDB

Karrie Fransman and Jonathan Plackett (Gender Swapped Fairy Tales) at A little but a lot

Jeff Rosen (Caley Cross and the Hadeon Drop) at Middle Grade Minded

Catherine Gilbert Murdoc ( Da Vinci’s Cat), at Fuse #8

Ross Montgomery (The Midnight Guardians) at A little but a lot


Other Good Stuff

“A Second Rabadash” — C.S. Lewis and Dangerous Leaders" at Tor


and not mg sff related, but I wanted to say happy book birthday to Serena Says, by Tanita Davis! (Tanita is the first, and so far only, internet friend I've invited to stay at my house (actually it was mother's house) without having met them.  It was a truly lovely visit.)









The Ghost in Apartment 2R, by Denis Markell

The Ghost in Apartment 2R, by Denis Markell (middle grade, Delacorte Press, November 2019), was the only book I finished these past five days of compulsive news watching.  I'm hoping now it's over nothing horrible and stressful will happen, and I'll rebound into a more normal book a day routine...But in any event, this middle grade Brooklyn ghost story was a fun read, despite the distractions!

Danny has always lived in the shadow of his smart big brother Jake, and he's always lived in a converted closet, while Jake has occupied the second bedroom of the Brooklyn apartment.  Now that  Jake's off to college (Cornell), Danny assumes his parents will make good on their promise that he can move out of the closet and into Jake's room.  But no.

Instead, his parents, anxious about financing Jake's education, decide to rent it as an Air Hotel room.  Danny's pretty bitter; it hurts to watch his parents spending money and time fixing up the room that should have been his.  Then the room situation becomes the least of his problems.  Spooky things start happening--a girl looking in through the window of Jake's room shows up in photographs, computer glitches make it hard for guests to rent the room, and the bed falls apart-- and though alone they could be attributed to rational explanations, a ghost seems more and more likely.

But when he hears an angry moaning, and a pale, angry face appears at the window, he can't pretend something scary isn't happening.

Danny shares his fears Gus and Nat (Natalie), but though they're supportive, and Nat immediately clears out the library's ghost section for research, they don't know what to do.  Then the ghost starts possessing the house guests, using them to ask Danny where her little boy is.  Danny tells his Bubbe Ruth what's been happening, and she is sure it's a dybbuk, a spirt who needs help before it can find peace.   So, spearheaded by Nat, the trio embark on historical research, and at the Brooklyn Historical Society they find out about a tragedy that occurred years ago in Jake's room, in which a little boy died.

After much argument, Nat is allowed to stay overnight so she can help communicate with ghost.  Gus shows up uninvited too, and when the ghost possess him, they're able to put the pieces together to figure out how to comfort the ghost.

It's a creepy story, but not tremendously spooky.  For on thing, though the possession of various house guests is understandably scary for Danny when they come bursting into his room, the way it plays out is actually rather entertaining.  For another, there's no sense of impending danger; the ghost is angry, but doesn't seem malevolent.  The spooky parts are also considerably off-set by the warm reality of Danny's friends and the neighborhood they live in; details of all the epicurean delights sold in Nat's family's Middle Eastern deli, for instance, are so enticing that it's hard to remember the ghost (unless you're Danny....).  

So this one is a very good "first middle grade ghost story," just fine for the younger kids in the middle grade ranger (the nine year olds).  Those who have already read lots of mg ghost books might find it tame, but will still enjoy the humor and lively picture of Brooklyn, and story of the Air Hotel venture and the collection of guests it attracts.

It's also one I'm glad to recommend because there are very very few mg fantasy books with Jewish protagonists.  Danny's family aren't particularly observant, but it's still a central part of his family identity, and his Bubbe Ruth is a great Jewish grandma!  Nat, Middle Eastern, and Christian, adds diversity too.  On a more specific note, I really appreciated that Nat points out all the dead white men ornamenting the historical society!  Good job, Nat!

Glad it was nominated for the Cybils, which is why I read it!  

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