Welcome to this week's middle grade sci fi/fantasy round-up!
Please let me know if I missed your post, and I hope your Memorial Day weather is nicer than ours.
The Reviews:
The Ability, by M.M. Vaughan, by Leila at Kirkus
Apprentice Cat, by Virginia Ripple, at Escaping Reality
Bad Unicorn, by Platte F. Clarke, at Librarian of Snark
The Boy With Two Heads, by Andy Mulligan, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint, at Fantasy Literature
Chasing the Prophecy, by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at For Those About to Mock
The Fire Chronicle, by John Stevens, at Librarian of Snark
Handbook for Dragon Slayers, by at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
A Hero for WandLa, by Tony DiTerlizzi, at Sonderbooks
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle, by Christopher Healy, at Bunbury in the Stacks
House of Secrets, by Ned Vizzini and Chris Columbus, at Beyond Books
The Incredible Charlotte Sycamore, by Kate Maddison, at Charlotte's Library
Jinx, by Sage Blackwood, at Wrighty's Reads
The King's Equal, by Katherine Paterson, at Slatebreakers
Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at Guys Lit Wire and The Book Smugglers
Mousenet, by Prudence Breitrose, at Jen Robinson's Book Page
The Mysterious Howling (Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place) at Shelf Love
New Lands, by Geoff Rodkey, at Librarian of Snark
Oddfellow's Orphanage, by Emily Winfield Martin, at Rosanne Parry
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos, at Ms. Yingling Reads, Book Spot Central and The Book Cellar
Reckless, by Cornelia Funke, at alibrarymama
The Runaway King, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Beyond Books
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, at Wondrous Reads and an audiobook review at Book Loving Mom
The Spies of Gerander, by Frances Watts, at Charlotte's Library
Teacher's Pest, by Charles Gilman, at Good Books and Good Wine
The Thief of Always, by Clive Barker, at Fyrefly's Book Blog
The Trap Door (Infinity Ring 3), by Lisa McMann, at Books for Kids
The Trouble With Toads, by Danyelle Leafty, at Writer's Alley
Wednesdays in the Tower, by Jessica Day George, at Cinjoella and MG/YA Book Reviews
Wonder Light, by R.R. Russell, at A Dream Within a Dream
The Year of Shadows, by Claire LeGrand, at Great Imaginations (giveaway)
Two quick ones: Frogged, by Vivian Vande Velde, and The Colossus Rises, by Peter Lerangis, at In Bed With Books
Time travel toys at Time Travel Times Two
Authors and Illustrators
Tim Tingle (How I Became a Ghost) at edmundsun.com
Polly Holyoke (The Neptune Project) at Cynsastions and Project Mayhem
Jessica Day George (Wednesdays in the Tower) at The Write Path
Dorine White (The Emerald Ring) at Literary Rambles (giveaway), She Writes, and Carrie Dalby Cox
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle fun continues, with posts at Small Review (giveaway), Alison's Book Marks, There's a Book, and Bunbury in the Stacks (giveaway)
Other Good Stuff
I won't be at BEA this year, but I will be taking part in Armchair BEA! I've done it before, and it's a lot of fun.
And the weekend after that is the annual MotherReader 48 Hour Book Challenge, hosted this year at Ms. Yingling Reads. Also fun.
And finally, this is a lot of lego:
5/26/13
5/25/13
The books that followed me home today
So next weekend I'm running my library's used booksale, and today I went on over to organize the dangerously high en-pilements of library discards.
Here is what came home with me (displayed on my shoe rack shelf, stripped of its previous inhabitants so as to go to the booksale and hold videos). I never took these out when they were on the shelves I peruse every week...but somehow, seeing them there for the (very cheap) taking, I couldn't resist. They can always go back....
The Garden, by Carol Matas (1997) "Ruth Mendenberg, a survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, has risked her life to help smuggle a group of refugees into Palestine. Now she wants to forget the past and forge a new life. But violence is escalating all around her as Arabs and Jews disagree over the partitioning of Palestine. Ruth will be forced to fight -- and maybe even kill -- in defense of a long-awaited prize: a place to call home."
I hope there is actual gardening...I prefer gardening to fighting.
The Bronze Chrysanthemum Mystery, by Sheena Porter (1965). I don't know what this is about...but it's old, and English, and I like the cover...
Adam Bookout, Louisa R Shotwell (1967). Boy runs away to his cousins in the city....I hope there is something about books in it, and Adam's last name isn't just a snare and a delusion...
The Secret of the Sea Rocks, by Carol Reuter (1967). 18 year old girl in Italy with archaeologist father, romance, mystery. Here's what Kirkus said about it back in the day: If the frumpy fashion show doesn't put the reader off, she'll probably stomach the routine romant-aches and swallow the good stolid values." Uh.
A Castle for Tess, by Ruth Simon (1967) sounds more hopeful. "When a family of migratory workers comes to their first real home, the ten-year-old daughter is afraid that one of her father's strange black moods will return and they will have to move again." Moving into old houses is always a favorite plot of mine.
The Lion in the Gateway, by Mary Renault (1964). Non-fiction Greek battles. I'm a big fan of Renault, and even if this isn't nice historical fiction like The King Must Die, I'm happy to give this a try and to learn something into the bargain.
How's Business, Alison Prince (1988) "A young boy, sent to the country from London during World War II, comes into conflict with some local boys who find ways to test his courage." I can't say no to WW II evacuee books.
The Wild Oats of Han, by Katharine Susannah Prichard (1973). Girl growing up in 19th-century Australia.
The Sunday Doll, by Mary Frances Shura (1988) "Thirteen-year-old Emmy finds herself sheltered again from her family's problems when she is hastily sent to Aunt Harriett's for the summer because of a serious problem involving her older sister Jayne." Will there be dolls, I ask? Without dolls, I'm not sure I'll like it....
Anatomy of an Epidemic is about the first big outbreak of Legionaries Disease, and the last two books in the picture above are from the Ghost in the Dollhouse series by Kathryn Reiss; I brought them home because of that rare thing, a black girl on the cover, and I can add them to my multicultural sci fi/fantasy list, and I sure do wish that there will come a day when I do not notice such things because it has become a non-issue. I seem to have books 2 and 3.
and finally, two that weren't library discards:
From 1980. A quick glance reassures me that in the future lots of things will be free.
And another from the pen of Harriette Abels, this one pulp sci fi for the young (1979):
I have sent a lot of time with books today, what with one thing and another...I hope tomorrow the sun will shine and I will get to take on my own little patch of green...
Here is what came home with me (displayed on my shoe rack shelf, stripped of its previous inhabitants so as to go to the booksale and hold videos). I never took these out when they were on the shelves I peruse every week...but somehow, seeing them there for the (very cheap) taking, I couldn't resist. They can always go back....
The Garden, by Carol Matas (1997) "Ruth Mendenberg, a survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, has risked her life to help smuggle a group of refugees into Palestine. Now she wants to forget the past and forge a new life. But violence is escalating all around her as Arabs and Jews disagree over the partitioning of Palestine. Ruth will be forced to fight -- and maybe even kill -- in defense of a long-awaited prize: a place to call home."
I hope there is actual gardening...I prefer gardening to fighting.
The Bronze Chrysanthemum Mystery, by Sheena Porter (1965). I don't know what this is about...but it's old, and English, and I like the cover...
Adam Bookout, Louisa R Shotwell (1967). Boy runs away to his cousins in the city....I hope there is something about books in it, and Adam's last name isn't just a snare and a delusion...
The Secret of the Sea Rocks, by Carol Reuter (1967). 18 year old girl in Italy with archaeologist father, romance, mystery. Here's what Kirkus said about it back in the day: If the frumpy fashion show doesn't put the reader off, she'll probably stomach the routine romant-aches and swallow the good stolid values." Uh.
A Castle for Tess, by Ruth Simon (1967) sounds more hopeful. "When a family of migratory workers comes to their first real home, the ten-year-old daughter is afraid that one of her father's strange black moods will return and they will have to move again." Moving into old houses is always a favorite plot of mine.
The Lion in the Gateway, by Mary Renault (1964). Non-fiction Greek battles. I'm a big fan of Renault, and even if this isn't nice historical fiction like The King Must Die, I'm happy to give this a try and to learn something into the bargain.
How's Business, Alison Prince (1988) "A young boy, sent to the country from London during World War II, comes into conflict with some local boys who find ways to test his courage." I can't say no to WW II evacuee books.
The Wild Oats of Han, by Katharine Susannah Prichard (1973). Girl growing up in 19th-century Australia.
The Sunday Doll, by Mary Frances Shura (1988) "Thirteen-year-old Emmy finds herself sheltered again from her family's problems when she is hastily sent to Aunt Harriett's for the summer because of a serious problem involving her older sister Jayne." Will there be dolls, I ask? Without dolls, I'm not sure I'll like it....
Anatomy of an Epidemic is about the first big outbreak of Legionaries Disease, and the last two books in the picture above are from the Ghost in the Dollhouse series by Kathryn Reiss; I brought them home because of that rare thing, a black girl on the cover, and I can add them to my multicultural sci fi/fantasy list, and I sure do wish that there will come a day when I do not notice such things because it has become a non-issue. I seem to have books 2 and 3.
and finally, two that weren't library discards:
From 1980. A quick glance reassures me that in the future lots of things will be free.
And another from the pen of Harriette Abels, this one pulp sci fi for the young (1979):
I have sent a lot of time with books today, what with one thing and another...I hope tomorrow the sun will shine and I will get to take on my own little patch of green...
5/24/13
The Spies of Gerander--brave young mice ftw!
The Spies of Gerander, by Frances Watts, is the second book in The Song of the Winns (Running Press Kids, April 2013). The first installment, The Secret of the Ginger Mice, came out last year, and introduced us to three young mice triplets--Alice, Alex, and Alistair, the only one to have ginger fur. The Secret of the Ginger Mice tells of how these triplets, along with Tibby Rose, another young mouse with ginger fur, survive all manner of attempted kidnappings and perilous travails. While so doing, they learn of the persecution of Gerander, once a free country, now a savagely oppressed territory....
And having introduced characters and setting, the second book, The Spies of Gerander, is free to really take off! The four mice are now part of the Gerander freedom movement. Alice and Alex set off as spies to the castle of the enemy queen, while Alistair and Tibby venture into Gerander in search of the triplets' imprisoned parents....and it is truly exciting, in the best dramatic style of kids thwarting the enemy! (The first book I found a tad slow, but I genuinely enjoyed the second).
These books are very upper elementary friendly--the adventures are exciting, the plot twists and mysteries interesting, and the young mice are sympathetic characters. It's told lightly and briskly; serious matters are dealt with straightforwardly, but the truly dark happenings of this world, that the young mice are themselves only gradually become aware of, are off-page. Here's what I appreciated--the mice kids were kids, and behaved as such. They are smart and brave enough to make fine protagonists, but they were not preternaturally gifted! Here's what I also appreciated--there were good, kind people who happened to be in the enemy army. Yay for avoiding black and white dichotomies in fantasy for kids!
Of course, instead of "people" I should have said "mice." I think the mouse-ness of it all adds lots to its kid appeal, making the books warmer and fuzzier fantasy, as it were, than if the central characters were actual human kids. These books are pretty much surefire winners with small mammal fans, and probably there are many mammal-indifferent readers who would enjoy the mouse adventures too...
That being said, there's no particular Reason within the world of the story why the characters should be mice--they are for all intents and purposes ordinary historical people with fur. There's almost no attempt to world-build from a mouse point of view (one can easily forget that the protagonists have tales and whiskers), and there's little consideration of scale. At one point, for instance, Alex carries two hard-boiled eggs into the room, and I was forced to stop reading and ponder the fact that your standard egg is about the size of your standard mouse....at another point, the mice are uprooting rose bushes...So my reading experience included a firm and vigorous suspension, even stomping and thwacking, of disbelief.
Short answer: not ones I'd go out of my way to urge my grown-up friends to read for their own pleasure, but definitely books I'd give to an eight or nine year old who enjoys animal fantasy. Especially because they are Nice books qua books, the sort that say Present, with that thick crinkle-edged paper that there is undoubtedly a technical term for....
Frances Watts is an Australian writer; the third book, The Secret of Zanzibar, is already out over in those parts.
disclaimer: books received for review from the publisher
And having introduced characters and setting, the second book, The Spies of Gerander, is free to really take off! The four mice are now part of the Gerander freedom movement. Alice and Alex set off as spies to the castle of the enemy queen, while Alistair and Tibby venture into Gerander in search of the triplets' imprisoned parents....and it is truly exciting, in the best dramatic style of kids thwarting the enemy! (The first book I found a tad slow, but I genuinely enjoyed the second).
These books are very upper elementary friendly--the adventures are exciting, the plot twists and mysteries interesting, and the young mice are sympathetic characters. It's told lightly and briskly; serious matters are dealt with straightforwardly, but the truly dark happenings of this world, that the young mice are themselves only gradually become aware of, are off-page. Here's what I appreciated--the mice kids were kids, and behaved as such. They are smart and brave enough to make fine protagonists, but they were not preternaturally gifted! Here's what I also appreciated--there were good, kind people who happened to be in the enemy army. Yay for avoiding black and white dichotomies in fantasy for kids!
Of course, instead of "people" I should have said "mice." I think the mouse-ness of it all adds lots to its kid appeal, making the books warmer and fuzzier fantasy, as it were, than if the central characters were actual human kids. These books are pretty much surefire winners with small mammal fans, and probably there are many mammal-indifferent readers who would enjoy the mouse adventures too...
That being said, there's no particular Reason within the world of the story why the characters should be mice--they are for all intents and purposes ordinary historical people with fur. There's almost no attempt to world-build from a mouse point of view (one can easily forget that the protagonists have tales and whiskers), and there's little consideration of scale. At one point, for instance, Alex carries two hard-boiled eggs into the room, and I was forced to stop reading and ponder the fact that your standard egg is about the size of your standard mouse....at another point, the mice are uprooting rose bushes...So my reading experience included a firm and vigorous suspension, even stomping and thwacking, of disbelief.
Short answer: not ones I'd go out of my way to urge my grown-up friends to read for their own pleasure, but definitely books I'd give to an eight or nine year old who enjoys animal fantasy. Especially because they are Nice books qua books, the sort that say Present, with that thick crinkle-edged paper that there is undoubtedly a technical term for....
Frances Watts is an Australian writer; the third book, The Secret of Zanzibar, is already out over in those parts.
disclaimer: books received for review from the publisher
5/22/13
The Last Academy, by Anne Applegate
The Last Academy, by Anne Applegate (2013, Point, a Scholastic Imprint, younger YA)
Sometimes one can rely on cold, hard facts to judge one's reaction to a book. Fact--I started reading The Last Academy at 4:40pm, waiting for my bus ride home. Fact--when I came home, instead of getting a snack, tidying the house, spending time with the family, I kept reading. Fact--I read straight on through, finishing ten minutes ago (c. 6:10), and still feel somewhat teary and shaken.
I guess that I can say of The Last Academy that it was "gripping." "Moving." "Memorable."
I was not without doubts at first--it starts with two best friends, fourteen years old, falling out. The beautiful one is mean to our heroine, Camden. Not so interesting.
Then Camden is on her way to boarding school, in California--I knew it was a boarding school book, so I wasn't surprised; I like school stories, so I kept reading. A sinister dude shows up on her airplane. Turns out his last name is Charon. Turns out the school is called Lethe Academy. I began to expect that Camden would start manifesting Greekly mythological wonderfulness. My doubts continued.
The appearance of a Handsome Dude and subsequent insta-crush intensified them.
But then...it became clear that I was all wrong about the direction the story would take. I began to care about the characters--even the new bitchy beautiful girl character and the Handsome Dude. And I realized, still pretty early on in the book (I take no credit for this--it's spelled out pretty clearly, and I think we're supposed to guess) that things were not all sunshine and roses at Lethe Academy.
And I was teary at the end. I hugged the nearest child, but it wasn't really what I wanted...I think I would like to call my own mother, but she is currently birdwatching in Kazakhstan.
This isn't one I'd give to a reader who is grieving. It would be too close to home. But it's one I can imagine being intensely appealing to the teen girl readers out there who want an emotional punch packaged inside lightly paranormal romance/generic teen angst wrappings.
True, it is not subtle. True, it is possibly a tad manipulative in its emotional knife twistings. True, since the clues were all there, the characters really should have figured things out a lot more briskly...But it worked for me.
Be warned--not every one loved this one. Here are some reviews much less favorable than mine:
Katie's Book Blog
Birth of a New Witch
The YA Sisterhood
Dear Restless Reader
Supernatural Snark
One thing that seems to have been off-putting is how young Camden is; I barely registered this, maybe since I read more middle grade than Young Adult, and so I was unbothered...So in light of that, I'll revise my recommendation--give this to a twelve-year old girl. Not to a committed reader of YA.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Sometimes one can rely on cold, hard facts to judge one's reaction to a book. Fact--I started reading The Last Academy at 4:40pm, waiting for my bus ride home. Fact--when I came home, instead of getting a snack, tidying the house, spending time with the family, I kept reading. Fact--I read straight on through, finishing ten minutes ago (c. 6:10), and still feel somewhat teary and shaken.
I guess that I can say of The Last Academy that it was "gripping." "Moving." "Memorable."
I was not without doubts at first--it starts with two best friends, fourteen years old, falling out. The beautiful one is mean to our heroine, Camden. Not so interesting.
Then Camden is on her way to boarding school, in California--I knew it was a boarding school book, so I wasn't surprised; I like school stories, so I kept reading. A sinister dude shows up on her airplane. Turns out his last name is Charon. Turns out the school is called Lethe Academy. I began to expect that Camden would start manifesting Greekly mythological wonderfulness. My doubts continued.
The appearance of a Handsome Dude and subsequent insta-crush intensified them.
But then...it became clear that I was all wrong about the direction the story would take. I began to care about the characters--even the new bitchy beautiful girl character and the Handsome Dude. And I realized, still pretty early on in the book (I take no credit for this--it's spelled out pretty clearly, and I think we're supposed to guess) that things were not all sunshine and roses at Lethe Academy.
And I was teary at the end. I hugged the nearest child, but it wasn't really what I wanted...I think I would like to call my own mother, but she is currently birdwatching in Kazakhstan.
This isn't one I'd give to a reader who is grieving. It would be too close to home. But it's one I can imagine being intensely appealing to the teen girl readers out there who want an emotional punch packaged inside lightly paranormal romance/generic teen angst wrappings.
True, it is not subtle. True, it is possibly a tad manipulative in its emotional knife twistings. True, since the clues were all there, the characters really should have figured things out a lot more briskly...But it worked for me.
Be warned--not every one loved this one. Here are some reviews much less favorable than mine:
Katie's Book Blog
Birth of a New Witch
The YA Sisterhood
Dear Restless Reader
Supernatural Snark
One thing that seems to have been off-putting is how young Camden is; I barely registered this, maybe since I read more middle grade than Young Adult, and so I was unbothered...So in light of that, I'll revise my recommendation--give this to a twelve-year old girl. Not to a committed reader of YA.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Waiting on Wednesday--Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem
Now on to a new book I'm waiting for!
Ellen Booraem has demonstrated with her first two books (The Unnamables, and Small Persons With Wings--my review) that she can write thoughtful and fun middle grade fantasy--and I'm very curious to see how her writing continues to evolve--those first two books are very different in feel! So I'm looking forward to her forthcoming book, Texting the Underworld, lots. It comes out August 15, 2013, from Dial.
Here's the blurb:
Perpetual scaredy-cat Conor O'Neill has the fright of his life when a banshee girl named Ashling shows up in his bedroom. Ashling is--as all banshees are--a harbinger of death, but she's new at this banshee business, and first she insists on going to middle school. As Conor attempts to hide her identity from his teachers, he realizes he's going to have to pay a visit to the underworld if he wants to keep his family safe.
"Got your cell?"
"Yeah . . . . Don't see what good it'll do me."
"I'll text you if anything happens that you should know."
"Text me? Javier, we'll be in the afterlife."
"You never know. Maybe they get a signal."
Ellen Booraem has disclosed that there's a riff on the story of Orpheus and Eurydice here, which I might have guessed, what with the Underworld and all, but which certainly piques my interest more, fan of reimaginings that I am.
(I find it amusing that corvids seem to be continuing their popularity on mg and YA speculative fiction covers...which reminds me of a crow joke--What do call two crows hanging out together? An attempted murder (as in "a murder of crows").
Waiting on Wednesday is a meme hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine.
5/21/13
Terra Tempo: Ice Age Cataclysm!, by David Shapiro
Terra Tempo: Ice Age Cataclysm!, by David Shapiro (illustrated by Christopher Herndon with color by Erica Melville; Craigmore Creations, 2010) is a time travel graphic novel in which three kids use a magical map to travel back to the end of the Ice Age in North America, just in time to watch Glacial Lake Missoula break through its ice dam. It's essentially a science lesson nestled within an adventure story--the intent of the book is to instruct, and indeed it's a clearly presented look at a fascinating moment in time.
Twins Jenna and Caleb find the great uncle's mysterious travel journal that seems to contain instructions for time travel, along with a map showing the Missoula flood. Along with a third kid, Ari (keenly interested in Ice Age fauna), they follow the directions....and they work. Now the kids must keep from being eaten by the local fauna, with the help of a friendly Thunderbird, who flies them over the landscape, giving them a chance to see the lake, and its flood, from a wonderfully unique perspective.
The illustrations are lovely, and engrossing; the adventures of the kids somewhat less so. However, because the story is punctuated with didactic intrusions, it doesn't flow all that smoothly as fiction. I don't mind learning through fiction, but the balance felt a bit off to me here...It didn't help that the great uncle's journal contained important bits of information conveyed in forced rhyme.
At one point, toward the end, the kids see a village from the air, right in the path of the flood, and I was hopeful that some honest to goodness Story would happen (as opposed to sight-seeing and occasionally menacing fauna), but nothing more comes of it.
Sort answer--this would be an invaluable tool to use in introducing kids to the end of the Ice Age. It is beautifully illustrated, and the subject is interesting. But it's not one to necessarily offer your kid who loves graphic novels for their stories.
That being said, this one might not have worked that well for my particular family because we have watched Mystery of the Megaflood a gazillion times because that's the sort of kid my oldest is...so I think I'll get hold of the second book, The Four Corners of Time. We know a lot less about the Cretaceous Period on the Colorado Plateau, and the good thing about visually appealing graphic novels like this is that they will be read by the aforementioned picky reader kid, even if they are not passionately loved.
Twins Jenna and Caleb find the great uncle's mysterious travel journal that seems to contain instructions for time travel, along with a map showing the Missoula flood. Along with a third kid, Ari (keenly interested in Ice Age fauna), they follow the directions....and they work. Now the kids must keep from being eaten by the local fauna, with the help of a friendly Thunderbird, who flies them over the landscape, giving them a chance to see the lake, and its flood, from a wonderfully unique perspective.
The illustrations are lovely, and engrossing; the adventures of the kids somewhat less so. However, because the story is punctuated with didactic intrusions, it doesn't flow all that smoothly as fiction. I don't mind learning through fiction, but the balance felt a bit off to me here...It didn't help that the great uncle's journal contained important bits of information conveyed in forced rhyme.
At one point, toward the end, the kids see a village from the air, right in the path of the flood, and I was hopeful that some honest to goodness Story would happen (as opposed to sight-seeing and occasionally menacing fauna), but nothing more comes of it.
Sort answer--this would be an invaluable tool to use in introducing kids to the end of the Ice Age. It is beautifully illustrated, and the subject is interesting. But it's not one to necessarily offer your kid who loves graphic novels for their stories.
That being said, this one might not have worked that well for my particular family because we have watched Mystery of the Megaflood a gazillion times because that's the sort of kid my oldest is...so I think I'll get hold of the second book, The Four Corners of Time. We know a lot less about the Cretaceous Period on the Colorado Plateau, and the good thing about visually appealing graphic novels like this is that they will be read by the aforementioned picky reader kid, even if they are not passionately loved.
5/20/13
The Incredible Charlotte Sycamore, by Kate Maddison
The Incredible Charlotte Sycamore, by Kate Maddison (Holiday House, 2013, mg/ya) is a lightly romantic steampunk mystery for tweens (which is not something I get to type every day). And I love the cover. It's one I might well hand to the upper middle school girl (7th grade, or so), who isn't quite ready to plunge into the deeper waters of YA speculative fiction/romance, who wants something different and undemanding. That being said, I myself found it somewhat lacking. It ticked along nicely at a surface level, but never deeply engaged me.
Charlotte Sycamore, narrator of the story, is certainly not your run-of-the mill alternate-Victorian teenager. For one thing, her father is Queen Victoria's own physician, elevating her to a social status that may be below that of the nobility but which is very comfortable indeed. For another, she likes to sneak out of Buckingham Palace at night and practice swordfighting with her friends, Peter and Jillian. They may be far, far below her socially, but she's happy to defy convention to enjoy their company.
But one night, right as the story opens, the threesome are attacked by savage dogs who appear rabid. Though their skill at weapons saves their lives, all three are bitten, Jillian gravelly so. And to add to the horror, the dogs are not normal creatures--they are mechanical monsters.
Charlotte makes it home after summoning help for her friends, but they are placed under guard, presumed victims of rabies. And indeed, Charlotte herself begins feeling ill. Snatched perusals of her father's mechanical tomes suggest the worse--that she's going to die. But even as her symptoms worsen, Charlotte cannot just let the mystery of the mechanical dogs lie.
Then Jillian and Peter escape from their virtual prison, but are wanted by the law. Matters get progressively worse, as Jillian nears death, and Peter and Charlotte sicken further. The rabid mechanical dogs are joined by mechanical bats of death, and Queen Victoria herself is in grave danger....unless Charlotte and her friends can stop the power-hungry twisted genius behind the murderous mechanicals.
So it's a fine story qua story, nicely paced and quite gripping. The alternate, steampunk Victorian setting was different enough to have zest, without being so different as to overwhelm the story. I especially like Queen Victoria's magical game pieces! The mystery, however, ends up solving itself--there isn't much actual detection being done by the characters.
There is a romantic triangle, of a mild sort, that is not desperately necessary to the plot. As well as the handsome Peter, Charlotte is good friends with an equally attractive young groom Benjamin; both are attracted to her. To add to her romantic difficulties, she's been engaged to a naturalist she's never met--he's out of the picture, naturalizing. For the younger reader, the somewhat unsubtle romantic intrusions may well be appealing; for readers who prefer meaningful build-up to young love, they may not:
It was hard to see Peter as a real person.
And indeed, the book never delivers any convincing depths for its central protagonist, let alone the supporting characters. Charlotte's interest in the mechanical and natural sciences, for instance, were all well and good--but this is presented at a surficial level, and not as a moving, intrinsically essential, part of her character (and she isn't at all convincing as a methodical, thoughtful, scientist). Charlotte makes friends with people well-below her social class, but this does not present more than an occasional awkwardness, and without contemplating any big, difficult questions, she's happy to help and be friends with poor people. For instance, she sends one of the Queen's own surplus baby blankets to a very impoverished barmaid, who cherishes it--I think in real life she'd pawn it quick as a wink.
In short, this isn't real life--it's an fairly entertaining mystery that doesn't ask hard questions of its reimagined historical setting, or expect too much in the way of characterization from its cast.
Note on age of reader: My 10 year old agreed heartily with me that the cover and premise were appealing, but I don't think that besotted teens are really his thing so I'm just going to pass this on to the library. Charlotte's a teenager, there are lots of romantic intrusions--not 10 year old boy stuff. The 11 to 12 year old girl, however, who hasn't yet read any fictional smolders, is the perfect target audience (the smoldering only goes as far as a passionate kiss).
Charlotte Sycamore, narrator of the story, is certainly not your run-of-the mill alternate-Victorian teenager. For one thing, her father is Queen Victoria's own physician, elevating her to a social status that may be below that of the nobility but which is very comfortable indeed. For another, she likes to sneak out of Buckingham Palace at night and practice swordfighting with her friends, Peter and Jillian. They may be far, far below her socially, but she's happy to defy convention to enjoy their company.
But one night, right as the story opens, the threesome are attacked by savage dogs who appear rabid. Though their skill at weapons saves their lives, all three are bitten, Jillian gravelly so. And to add to the horror, the dogs are not normal creatures--they are mechanical monsters.
Charlotte makes it home after summoning help for her friends, but they are placed under guard, presumed victims of rabies. And indeed, Charlotte herself begins feeling ill. Snatched perusals of her father's mechanical tomes suggest the worse--that she's going to die. But even as her symptoms worsen, Charlotte cannot just let the mystery of the mechanical dogs lie.
Then Jillian and Peter escape from their virtual prison, but are wanted by the law. Matters get progressively worse, as Jillian nears death, and Peter and Charlotte sicken further. The rabid mechanical dogs are joined by mechanical bats of death, and Queen Victoria herself is in grave danger....unless Charlotte and her friends can stop the power-hungry twisted genius behind the murderous mechanicals.
So it's a fine story qua story, nicely paced and quite gripping. The alternate, steampunk Victorian setting was different enough to have zest, without being so different as to overwhelm the story. I especially like Queen Victoria's magical game pieces! The mystery, however, ends up solving itself--there isn't much actual detection being done by the characters.
There is a romantic triangle, of a mild sort, that is not desperately necessary to the plot. As well as the handsome Peter, Charlotte is good friends with an equally attractive young groom Benjamin; both are attracted to her. To add to her romantic difficulties, she's been engaged to a naturalist she's never met--he's out of the picture, naturalizing. For the younger reader, the somewhat unsubtle romantic intrusions may well be appealing; for readers who prefer meaningful build-up to young love, they may not:
"Take care of yourselves," Peter whispered, more to me than Benjamin. I thought I detected a look of longing in Peter's smoldering eyes, but then he turned away from me to bravely lead his sister out of danger, his shoulders squared and his long stride resolute. (pp 179-180).
It was hard to see Peter as a real person.
And indeed, the book never delivers any convincing depths for its central protagonist, let alone the supporting characters. Charlotte's interest in the mechanical and natural sciences, for instance, were all well and good--but this is presented at a surficial level, and not as a moving, intrinsically essential, part of her character (and she isn't at all convincing as a methodical, thoughtful, scientist). Charlotte makes friends with people well-below her social class, but this does not present more than an occasional awkwardness, and without contemplating any big, difficult questions, she's happy to help and be friends with poor people. For instance, she sends one of the Queen's own surplus baby blankets to a very impoverished barmaid, who cherishes it--I think in real life she'd pawn it quick as a wink.
In short, this isn't real life--it's an fairly entertaining mystery that doesn't ask hard questions of its reimagined historical setting, or expect too much in the way of characterization from its cast.
Note on age of reader: My 10 year old agreed heartily with me that the cover and premise were appealing, but I don't think that besotted teens are really his thing so I'm just going to pass this on to the library. Charlotte's a teenager, there are lots of romantic intrusions--not 10 year old boy stuff. The 11 to 12 year old girl, however, who hasn't yet read any fictional smolders, is the perfect target audience (the smoldering only goes as far as a passionate kiss).
5/19/13
This week's middle grade science fiction and fantasy round-up (5/19/13)
Welcome to yet another week of what I found in my blog reading of interest to us fans of middle grade sci fi/fantasy, and possibly of interest to people who aren't fans themselves but have to buy the books for others. Please let me know if I missed your post, please feel free to send me links any time during the week, please feel free to tell me about the posts of others, and please feel free to mention these round-ups on your own blog if the spirit moves you!
The Reviews
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Pryce, at Journey of a Bookseller
The Bell Between Worlds, by Ian Johnston, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint, at Fantasy Book Critic
The Clan of the Scorpion (Ninja Meerkats), by Gareth P. Jones, at Jean Little Library
The Circle, by Cindy Cipriano, at SA Larsen
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at The Book Smugglers and Cover2CoverBlog
Fyre, by Angie Sage, at Unlikely Librarian
Goulish Song, by William Alexander, at That Blog Belongs to Emily Brown
and Tor
The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom, by Christopher Healy, at Between the Pages
Iron Hearted Violet, by Kelly Barnhill, at Great Imaginations
The Last Timekeepers and the Arch of Atlantis, bySharon Ledwith, at swlothian
Loki's Woves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at One Librarian's Book Reviews
Nation, by Terry Pratchett, at The Book Smugglers
New Lands, by Geoff Rodkey, at Geo Librarian
The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman, at Charlotte's Library
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos, at The O.W.L.
The Princelings of the East, by Jemima Pett, at The Ninja Librarian
The Reluctant Assassin, by Eoin Colfer, at Book Nut
The Rose Throne, by Mette Ivie Harrison, at Kiss the Book
Seeds of Rebellion, by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature
Summerkin, by Sarah Prineas, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Tilly's Moonlight Garden, by Julia Green, at Kid Lit Geek
The Tree of Mindala, by Elle Jacklee, at alibrarymama
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blackwood, at Charlotte's Library
Wednesdays in the Tower, by Jessica Day George, at Sharon the Librarian, The O.W.L. and Small Review (giveaway)
Wonderlight, by R.R. Russell
A World Without Heroes, by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature
ps: just once I would love to have a book for every letter of the alphabet. So please, why not consider reviewing a book beginning with E, I, J, K, M, O, Q, U, V, X, Y, or Z? Then I would not have to search frantically, and disappointingly, for reviews of The Menagerie, or Undertown. For a while, Jinx and The Key and the Flame covered those two difficult letters, but that well seems to have run dry... You Only Die Twice, by Dan Gutman, gave me a Y once, but no one has reviewed Zombie Kid or Zombie Tag or Zeus and the Thunderbolt of Doom for ages...
It's probably a fruitless task-- I don't know if I have ever been able to include a book beginning with X. I once read a book beginning with X, but did not feel moved to review it.....
Authors and Inverviews
Sage Blackwood (Jinx) at Charlotte's Library (giveaway)
Anne Nesbit (Box of Gargoyles) at The Enchanted Inkpot
"Lemony Snickett" (Who Could That Be At This Hour?) at The Children's Book Review
Soman Chainani (The School for Good and Evil) at The Enchanted Inkpot
Ari Goelman (The Path of Names) at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia and Brooklyn Arden (who edited the book; giveaway)
Jessica Day George (Wednesdays in the Tower) at Small Review
Kelley Armstrong (Loki's Wolves) at Literary Rambles (giveaway)
Kit Grindstaff (The Flame and the Mist) at Cynsations
R.R. Russell (Wonderlight) at A Backwards Story
Barbara Brauner and James Iver Mattson (Oh My Godmother: The Glitter Trap) at All For One and OneFour Kidlit
Dorine White (The Emerald Ring) Blog Tour stops so far:
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle blog tour continues, at Candace's Book Blog, The Modge Podge Bookshelf, and The Hiding Spot
Other Good Stuff:
There's a Book has a giveaway for all three books of the Lovecraft Middle School series
Fair Coin, by E.C. Myers (Pyr) has won the Andre Norton Award (I've not yet read it--should I?); here's the list of all the Nebula winners.
The Vindico, by Wesley King (G.P. Putnam’s Sons/ Penguin Group) has won the 2013 Red Maple™ Fiction Award (grades 7-8). I haven't read this one either....
Here's a nice little list of Historical Fantasy at Views from the Tesseract
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, has been optioned
Finally, here is my favorite new fantasy animal--the alot. I like the alot a lot. I think it needs its own book.
The Reviews
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Pryce, at Journey of a Bookseller
The Bell Between Worlds, by Ian Johnston, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest, by Charles de Lint, at Fantasy Book Critic
The Clan of the Scorpion (Ninja Meerkats), by Gareth P. Jones, at Jean Little Library
The Circle, by Cindy Cipriano, at SA Larsen
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at The Book Smugglers and Cover2CoverBlog
Fyre, by Angie Sage, at Unlikely Librarian
Goulish Song, by William Alexander, at That Blog Belongs to Emily Brown
and Tor
The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom, by Christopher Healy, at Between the Pages
Iron Hearted Violet, by Kelly Barnhill, at Great Imaginations
The Last Timekeepers and the Arch of Atlantis, bySharon Ledwith, at swlothian
Loki's Woves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at One Librarian's Book Reviews
Nation, by Terry Pratchett, at The Book Smugglers
New Lands, by Geoff Rodkey, at Geo Librarian
The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman, at Charlotte's Library
The Planet Thieves, by Dan Krokos, at The O.W.L.
The Princelings of the East, by Jemima Pett, at The Ninja Librarian
The Reluctant Assassin, by Eoin Colfer, at Book Nut
The Rose Throne, by Mette Ivie Harrison, at Kiss the Book
Seeds of Rebellion, by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature
Summerkin, by Sarah Prineas, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Tilly's Moonlight Garden, by Julia Green, at Kid Lit Geek
The Tree of Mindala, by Elle Jacklee, at alibrarymama
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blackwood, at Charlotte's Library
Wednesdays in the Tower, by Jessica Day George, at Sharon the Librarian, The O.W.L. and Small Review (giveaway)
Wonderlight, by R.R. Russell
A World Without Heroes, by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature
ps: just once I would love to have a book for every letter of the alphabet. So please, why not consider reviewing a book beginning with E, I, J, K, M, O, Q, U, V, X, Y, or Z? Then I would not have to search frantically, and disappointingly, for reviews of The Menagerie, or Undertown. For a while, Jinx and The Key and the Flame covered those two difficult letters, but that well seems to have run dry... You Only Die Twice, by Dan Gutman, gave me a Y once, but no one has reviewed Zombie Kid or Zombie Tag or Zeus and the Thunderbolt of Doom for ages...
It's probably a fruitless task-- I don't know if I have ever been able to include a book beginning with X. I once read a book beginning with X, but did not feel moved to review it.....
Authors and Inverviews
Sage Blackwood (Jinx) at Charlotte's Library (giveaway)
Anne Nesbit (Box of Gargoyles) at The Enchanted Inkpot
"Lemony Snickett" (Who Could That Be At This Hour?) at The Children's Book Review
Soman Chainani (The School for Good and Evil) at The Enchanted Inkpot
Ari Goelman (The Path of Names) at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia and Brooklyn Arden (who edited the book; giveaway)
Jessica Day George (Wednesdays in the Tower) at Small Review
Kelley Armstrong (Loki's Wolves) at Literary Rambles (giveaway)
Kit Grindstaff (The Flame and the Mist) at Cynsations
R.R. Russell (Wonderlight) at A Backwards Story
Barbara Brauner and James Iver Mattson (Oh My Godmother: The Glitter Trap) at All For One and OneFour Kidlit
Dorine White (The Emerald Ring) Blog Tour stops so far:
Tuesday, May 14- From The Mixed up Files of Middle Grade Authors- Author Interview and giveaway
Tuesday, May 14- The Misadventures of a Twenty Something- Review
Wed, May 15- I am a Reader, Not a Writer- Author Interview and giveaway
Thurs, May 16- Word Spelunker- Spotlight/Giveaway
Fri, May 17- The Writing Blues- Review
Fri. May 17- Adventures in Reading- Review
Sat. May 18- Mels Shelves- Review
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle blog tour continues, at Candace's Book Blog, The Modge Podge Bookshelf, and The Hiding Spot
Other Good Stuff:
There's a Book has a giveaway for all three books of the Lovecraft Middle School series
Fair Coin, by E.C. Myers (Pyr) has won the Andre Norton Award (I've not yet read it--should I?); here's the list of all the Nebula winners.
The Vindico, by Wesley King (G.P. Putnam’s Sons/ Penguin Group) has won the 2013 Red Maple™ Fiction Award (grades 7-8). I haven't read this one either....
Here's a nice little list of Historical Fantasy at Views from the Tesseract
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, has been optioned
Finally, here is my favorite new fantasy animal--the alot. I like the alot a lot. I think it needs its own book.
5/18/13
Bout of Books update
I've read embarrassingly little for the Bout of Book Readathon....I was actually too sick to want to read in the middle of the week (the horror!) and work does get in the way something fierce...
But for what it's worth, here's what I've read in the past five days:
3 Terry Pratchett books--Small Gods, Lords and Ladies, and Soul Music, plus 104 pages of Hogfather (there's a reason why I am reading Pratchett straight through....but I'm not quite convinced its going to happen, so more later on that score....)
The Secret of the Ginger Mice, by Frances Watts
197 pages of The River of No Return, by Bee Ridgeway
89 pages of The Bank of Bob, by Bob Harris (a nonfiction book about Kiva loans)
56 pages of Penelope, by Penelope Farmer
But for what it's worth, here's what I've read in the past five days:
3 Terry Pratchett books--Small Gods, Lords and Ladies, and Soul Music, plus 104 pages of Hogfather (there's a reason why I am reading Pratchett straight through....but I'm not quite convinced its going to happen, so more later on that score....)
The Secret of the Ginger Mice, by Frances Watts
197 pages of The River of No Return, by Bee Ridgeway
89 pages of The Bank of Bob, by Bob Harris (a nonfiction book about Kiva loans)
56 pages of Penelope, by Penelope Farmer
5/16/13
2013 Mythopoeic Award finalists announced
I quite like the choices made by the folks handing out the Mythopoeic Awards--they have historically have very good taste. The awards are given in the categories of Adult Literature, Children's Literature, and two categories of scholarship--Inklings Studies, and Myth and Fantasy Studies.
The Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children’s Literature honors books for younger readers (from “Young Adults” to picture books for beginning readers), in the tradition of The Hobbit or The Chronicles of Narnia.
I'm not at all sure that this year's finalists actually meet that criteria, but it's a nice list none the less (special yay for Giants Beware!, a book I adored):
The Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children’s Literature honors books for younger readers (from “Young Adults” to picture books for beginning readers), in the tradition of The Hobbit or The Chronicles of Narnia.
I'm not at all sure that this year's finalists actually meet that criteria, but it's a nice list none the less (special yay for Giants Beware!, a book I adored):
- Jorge Aguirre and Rafael Rosado, Giants Beware! (First Second)
- Sarah Beth Durst, Vessel (Margaret K. McElderry)
- Merrie Haskell, The Princess Curse (HarperCollins)
- Christopher Healy, The Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom (Walden Pond Press)
- Sherwood Smith, The Spy Princess (Viking Juvenile)
- Alan Garner, Weirdstone trilogy, consisting of The Weirdstone of Brisingamen (Collins), The Moon of Gomrath (Collins), and Boneland (Fourth Estate)
- Caitlin R. Kiernan, The Drowning Girl (Roc)
- R.A. MacAvoy, Death and Resurrection (Prime Books)
- Tim Powers, Hide Me Among the Graves (William Morrow)
- Ursula Vernon, Digger, vols. 1-6 (Sofawolf Press)
The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman-- fantasy rooted in Judaism
Quick! How many current middle grade fantasy books can you think of whose magic is rooted in Judaism? There was a flowering of Golem books a little while ago--here's a good summary, and there's The Inquisitor's Apprentice, and its forthcoming sequel. There are a number of other fantasy books whose protagonists are Jewish, but which don't take place in an imagined space in which Judaism and magic co-mingle.
This space, however, is exactly where The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman (Scholastic, April, 2013), is set, and to make it even more unusual, it is primarily contemporary. The setting is a camp for Jewish kids, and the magic that drives the plot comes specifically and exclusively from the magic of the Kabbalah.
13-year old Dahlia did not want to go to a camp for Jewish kids. She wanted to spend all her summer at magic (the stage kind) camp, honing her skills as a magician. As a math and magic geek, she's pretty certain that this paritular camp isn't going to full of new friends. (Irrelevant aside--I tried going to camp only once--Scottish dancing camp--when I was a grown-up. It was horrible. All the other campers knew each other already. I felt for Dahlia.)
And Dahlia did not want to start seeing ghosts--two little girls who only she could see, who seemed to be trying to communicate to her. And she most certainly did not want to be possessed (on occasion) by the spirit of a long-dead young Rabbi from New York, whose book of esoteric writings just happened to show up on the camp bookshelf...
And Dahlia most certainly did not want to be involved in a life or death struggle in which she is forced to use her fledgling understanding of the Kabbalah against an extremely powerful enemy willing to kill children in his quest for magical power...
I think this is one that will appeal most strongly to the self-identified geek girl. The mystery and the magic and the backstory and the subplots are complex and somewhat esoteric, and as a result it helps to pay close attention while reading. Happily for me, I found the story more than interesting enough to do so. The parts that I liked best were the flashbacks to the story of the young Orthodox Jewish man who is haunting Dahlia. He's a young man who has found the 72nd Name of God, in a system of belief where names and numbers have real power--power for which bad guys will kill-- and his story is tremendously exiting.
But sadly for me, I never managed to care all that much about Dahlia as a person. She's kind of cross at life for most of the book, and rather stiff--and not tremendously sympathetic, emotionally, although intellectually she was more so. And, again on a personal level, I never quite found that the supernatural elements of this story (and there were lots of them, very interesting ones) ever roused in me more than intellectual curiosity. In short, this isn't a book that pulled on my heart or made my hair stand on end.
Your mileage may, of course, vary--and I do, as I said above, think that there is an audience for this one--the smart, mystery-loving 10-12 year old girl (especially the one who likes math puzzles and who doesn't care for summer camp bonding activities).
So, having written my own review, I'm now curious to see what other people thought, especially since I myself had a trouble deciding whether I really liked it (interesting, engrossing story!) or not (left kind of disappointed emotionally).
Here's what Kirkus had to say. I don't know why they put 12-15 for age of reader. There isn't any sex, and the horrible deaths (not that many of them, and not that horrible) happened in the past, the bad guy is less scary than Voldemort, and Dahlia is only 13. The Kirkus reviewer calls the book "challenging," so maybe that's it, but if that's the case, I think it underestimates the 11 year olds of today, whose minds seem to me considerably more agile than those of most adults. Typical smart 11 year old--oh, esoteric system of numerology that involves the hidden names of God? Bring it on.
You can read the starred Booklist review at Amazon, but here's the punch line: "With the help of her friends, she uses her mystical powers to confront the Illuminated One, who selfishly seeks the name for himself. Debut author Goelman’s story is full of exciting plot twists and well-rounded, engaging characters—all amped up by thrilling esoteric magic." Ok, maybe it was just me not hitting it off with Dahlia.
And finally, here's an interview with Ari Goelman at The Lucky 13s.
Feel free to mention any other contemporary fantasy books drawing on Judaism in the comments (which is to say, not books in which the main character just happens to be Jewish and then meets a unicorn or whatever).
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
This space, however, is exactly where The Path of Names, by Ari Goelman (Scholastic, April, 2013), is set, and to make it even more unusual, it is primarily contemporary. The setting is a camp for Jewish kids, and the magic that drives the plot comes specifically and exclusively from the magic of the Kabbalah.
13-year old Dahlia did not want to go to a camp for Jewish kids. She wanted to spend all her summer at magic (the stage kind) camp, honing her skills as a magician. As a math and magic geek, she's pretty certain that this paritular camp isn't going to full of new friends. (Irrelevant aside--I tried going to camp only once--Scottish dancing camp--when I was a grown-up. It was horrible. All the other campers knew each other already. I felt for Dahlia.)
And Dahlia did not want to start seeing ghosts--two little girls who only she could see, who seemed to be trying to communicate to her. And she most certainly did not want to be possessed (on occasion) by the spirit of a long-dead young Rabbi from New York, whose book of esoteric writings just happened to show up on the camp bookshelf...
And Dahlia most certainly did not want to be involved in a life or death struggle in which she is forced to use her fledgling understanding of the Kabbalah against an extremely powerful enemy willing to kill children in his quest for magical power...
I think this is one that will appeal most strongly to the self-identified geek girl. The mystery and the magic and the backstory and the subplots are complex and somewhat esoteric, and as a result it helps to pay close attention while reading. Happily for me, I found the story more than interesting enough to do so. The parts that I liked best were the flashbacks to the story of the young Orthodox Jewish man who is haunting Dahlia. He's a young man who has found the 72nd Name of God, in a system of belief where names and numbers have real power--power for which bad guys will kill-- and his story is tremendously exiting.
But sadly for me, I never managed to care all that much about Dahlia as a person. She's kind of cross at life for most of the book, and rather stiff--and not tremendously sympathetic, emotionally, although intellectually she was more so. And, again on a personal level, I never quite found that the supernatural elements of this story (and there were lots of them, very interesting ones) ever roused in me more than intellectual curiosity. In short, this isn't a book that pulled on my heart or made my hair stand on end.
Your mileage may, of course, vary--and I do, as I said above, think that there is an audience for this one--the smart, mystery-loving 10-12 year old girl (especially the one who likes math puzzles and who doesn't care for summer camp bonding activities).
So, having written my own review, I'm now curious to see what other people thought, especially since I myself had a trouble deciding whether I really liked it (interesting, engrossing story!) or not (left kind of disappointed emotionally).
Here's what Kirkus had to say. I don't know why they put 12-15 for age of reader. There isn't any sex, and the horrible deaths (not that many of them, and not that horrible) happened in the past, the bad guy is less scary than Voldemort, and Dahlia is only 13. The Kirkus reviewer calls the book "challenging," so maybe that's it, but if that's the case, I think it underestimates the 11 year olds of today, whose minds seem to me considerably more agile than those of most adults. Typical smart 11 year old--oh, esoteric system of numerology that involves the hidden names of God? Bring it on.
You can read the starred Booklist review at Amazon, but here's the punch line: "With the help of her friends, she uses her mystical powers to confront the Illuminated One, who selfishly seeks the name for himself. Debut author Goelman’s story is full of exciting plot twists and well-rounded, engaging characters—all amped up by thrilling esoteric magic." Ok, maybe it was just me not hitting it off with Dahlia.
And finally, here's an interview with Ari Goelman at The Lucky 13s.
Feel free to mention any other contemporary fantasy books drawing on Judaism in the comments (which is to say, not books in which the main character just happens to be Jewish and then meets a unicorn or whatever).
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
5/15/13
Interview with Sage Blackwood, author of Jinx
I am thrilled as all get out today to present Sage Blackwood, author of the excellent middle grade fantasy, Jinx (my review). Jinx is the only book I have re-read this year, and I can easily imagine happily reading it a third time. Since re-reading is the highest level of personal favor I can give a book, this is saying a lot.
So when Sage Blackwood asked if I might be interested in hosting her for her first interview, I said yes, with quick conviction! My questions are in bold.
The most important question first: Will
there be a next book, and can you tell us anything about it? I want to
know what happens next! I am hoping for more about Sophie and her
world...
Yes! A sequel, Jinx’s Magic, is due out from
HarperCollins in January, 2014, and yes, there will be more of Sophie and her
world. Jinx will go to Samara and, of course, get into all kinds of trouble.
And Sophie… well, you’ll see. (She said annoyingly.)
And speaking of Sophie, one of things I loved about Jinx
was the sense that there is lots of backstory to her, and to others in
the book, that is very nicely implied without being spelled
out. Because the characters give such a full feeling of
lives lived outside the pages of this particular book, I'm wondering
which people from Jinx actually became known to you
first, and in what imagined context(s) did they first appear?
Oh, great question! The characters wandered into my head at
different times, over the course of several years, before finally hooking up
with each other. The first character was the Urwald… the fairy tale forest
which I think is inside each of us. I wanted to evoke it, hopefully in a way
that begins on the page but ends in the reader’s imagination. Then came Elfwyn…
a girl in a red hood who was smarter than history has given her credit for
being. Elfwyn would not have any difficulty distinguishing her grandmother from
a wolf.
Next was Simon Magus, a legendary figure about whom we know
very little… and from what we know, it’s not really clear if he’s good or evil.
Simon Magus had a wife named Sophie. Or possibly Helen. But Sophie seemed like
a better name for the character. I forgot that it was also the name of the
protagonist of Howl’s Moving Castle.
I was on my front porch drawing pictures of these characters
when another one showed up—Jinx. There’s a rather enigmatic comment in the
Simon Magus legend: that he got his power from a boy who had died a violent
death. (The boy in the legend doesn’t actually seem to be dead, though, violent
death notwithstanding.) So I planned for the first scene to be Simon strangling
Jinx. When I actually sat down to write the scene, though, Simon refused to do
that. So I had to figure out what really happened, as it were.
So I doodled some more, and eventually drew a picture of a
boy, a troll and a wizard in a forest. And there the story begins.
Jinx is a book with tons of appeal for those of us adults
who still sincerely love reading (good) fantasy for kids. Are
you yourself one of those? When you were writing Jinx,
did you consciously recall books you loved when you were the target
audience? Or to put it another way, what books helped shaped your
writerly experience? And are there any favorite books of yours that you could recommend to the reader (young or not so young)
who enjoyed Jinx?
Oh yes, I’m definitely one of those!
My favorite author is Diana Wynne Jones. My memory insists I
have loved her since childhood, when I came across a copy of The Magicians
of Caprona at the village library. Unfortunately the publication date
doesn’t back me up on that. Apparently I was 15 when the book came out. Anyway
I sat down on the little bench in the children’s section, opened the book, and
was hooked.
You know what’s different about Ms. Jones? It’s that her
characters live in a real world. They’re not too noble to be irritated by
life’s little annoyances. They’re not too concerned with truth and justice to
care who gets the last brownie. And that makes her heroes more heroic, not
less.
Books I’d recommend: All of DWJ, but especially Drowned
Ammet (sheer brilliance), Cart & Cwidder (especially to
writers), The Homeward Bounders (more brilliance), The Lives of
Christopher Chant, The Magicians of Caprona… I feel as if I’m forgetting
something important, so everyone please insert your favorite DWJ book here.
I highly recommend Terry Pratchett too, but to your blog
readers, that’s probably like saying I highly recommend breathing. Of his
children’s books, The Amazing Maurice is my favorite.
I know that my personal representative of the target
audience (in this case, a 9 year old fantasy loving boy) enjoyed the
adventure/danger/questy part of the story most, whereas I (and I bet more
of the other grown-ups who've read Jinx), enjoyed the more personality-driven first
half (although I could be wrong!). Which part of the book was
more fun/more challenging to write?
I’m so glad to hear he enjoyed the book. I really enjoyed
writing the first half, with its focus on character and everyday life. I think
a lot of people like reading about everyday life, which is why Alexander McCall
Smith’s Botswana books are such a hit.
It was a lot of fun creating the Urwald, and creating
Simon’s house, both of which are somewhat archetypal so it was largely a matter
of writing my way into familiar places. And of course it was fun getting to
know the characters. Then of course the story developed out of who the
characters are.
My impression so far is that children like the idea that
Jinx can do magic. They would like to do a bit themselves. They like the
action, the monsters, the scary stuff at Bonesocket, and they think it would be
pretty cool to live in a wizard’s house.
And just dragging Sophie back into it, I don't think I'm
alone in feeling that if you ever felt like writing Sophie and Simon
stand-alone stories they would be welcomed....
Simon’s and Sophie’s backstory! I’d love to write that. Not
sure if I’ll ever get the chance. It’s a bit darker than Jinx’s, so it might
not make good middle grade material.
If there are any questions that I didn't ask, that you
have answers to all ready to go, do feel free to ask them of yourself!
Oh, thank you! I do have one of those, and no one is ever
going to ask it. So here goes:
Some have called Jinx’s ability to learn foreign
languages a form of magic. But isn’t it an application of second language
acquisition theory, meaning that pretty much anyone could do what Jinx does,
and isn’t this a rather loaded question?
Yes!
Thank you so much, Sage, for the fascinating answers to my questions! I'm so glad there isn't going to be a long wait for the next instalment.
The winner of the giveaway was alibrarymama.
5/14/13
Night Watch, by Terry Pratchett, for Timeslip Tuesday
By the end of June, I hope to have read all of the Discworld books by Terry Pratchett. This, like so much else in my life, is an unreasonable expectation, but whatever; at any rate, I've been enjoying the process. Especially since I have just finished my favorite of the series--Night Watch (2002). It knocked my socks off, wrung them out, and left them to dry.
Sam Vimes has risen through the ranks to become Commander of the City Watch of Ankh-Morpork. He is a duke. He is rich. He loves his wife, and looks forward to the birth of their first child.
Then time turns ugly on him. A magical storm sweeps down on the city, and with bolt of lightning, sends Sam back to the very year he first joined the City Watch. The mysterious History Monks reassure him that history really wants to make things come out the way they should, but their vagueness is hardly comforting. Sam's arrival coincides with the untimely, and temporally wrong death of the Watch's sergeant-- the man who was supposed to be Sam's own mentor. Unhappy, confused, and wanting home to still be a place that he can someday get to, Sam is at first uncertain about what he should do.
But he knows what's about to happen in the city--it's about to go up in flames of violence and rioting and death, and there are bad, bad people there pushing the violence forward. And he knows that young Sam needs his mentor, or he won't grow up to be himself. But most of all, he knows that he is a policeman, and he knows he is needed.
So he takes the place of the dead sergeant, and does the best he can to keep as many people safe. Even though he knows that people will die, regardless.
And oh my gosh, I love books so much where the hero is a truly decent, good person, who knows that things are hopeless, but does the best he or she can because that is the only thing do to. And I love books where that hero not only clings to a dogged, hard-won refusal to give up, but also is smart enough to see chances where none exist. Sam Vines reminded me, to my great surprise and pleasure, of two of my favorite heroes-- Phaedrus from The Mark of the Horse Lord, by Rosemary Sutcliff, and Eugenides, from Megan Whalen Turner's Queen Thief Series.
Of course, since this is Pratchett, it isn't the same as either of those two. It's funnier, and more farcical, in true Discworld style. There were plenty of bits that made me chuckle. But I wept a little, at the end...
It is, I think, the time-travel of it that makes it so poignant--because Sam knows what's going to happen. Because he can see his young self, about to face things that shouldn't happen. Because he doesn't know if he'll get home again, to see his wife and unborn child... And still he does the best he can.
If you've not read any Discworld books before, but are intrigued--this can be read as a stand-alone, as long as you don't try to make sense of the things you don't understand, and just accept, for instance, the fact that the librarian of the Unseen University of wizards is an orangoutang.
Sam Vimes has risen through the ranks to become Commander of the City Watch of Ankh-Morpork. He is a duke. He is rich. He loves his wife, and looks forward to the birth of their first child.
Then time turns ugly on him. A magical storm sweeps down on the city, and with bolt of lightning, sends Sam back to the very year he first joined the City Watch. The mysterious History Monks reassure him that history really wants to make things come out the way they should, but their vagueness is hardly comforting. Sam's arrival coincides with the untimely, and temporally wrong death of the Watch's sergeant-- the man who was supposed to be Sam's own mentor. Unhappy, confused, and wanting home to still be a place that he can someday get to, Sam is at first uncertain about what he should do.
But he knows what's about to happen in the city--it's about to go up in flames of violence and rioting and death, and there are bad, bad people there pushing the violence forward. And he knows that young Sam needs his mentor, or he won't grow up to be himself. But most of all, he knows that he is a policeman, and he knows he is needed.
So he takes the place of the dead sergeant, and does the best he can to keep as many people safe. Even though he knows that people will die, regardless.
And oh my gosh, I love books so much where the hero is a truly decent, good person, who knows that things are hopeless, but does the best he or she can because that is the only thing do to. And I love books where that hero not only clings to a dogged, hard-won refusal to give up, but also is smart enough to see chances where none exist. Sam Vines reminded me, to my great surprise and pleasure, of two of my favorite heroes-- Phaedrus from The Mark of the Horse Lord, by Rosemary Sutcliff, and Eugenides, from Megan Whalen Turner's Queen Thief Series.
Of course, since this is Pratchett, it isn't the same as either of those two. It's funnier, and more farcical, in true Discworld style. There were plenty of bits that made me chuckle. But I wept a little, at the end...
It is, I think, the time-travel of it that makes it so poignant--because Sam knows what's going to happen. Because he can see his young self, about to face things that shouldn't happen. Because he doesn't know if he'll get home again, to see his wife and unborn child... And still he does the best he can.
If you've not read any Discworld books before, but are intrigued--this can be read as a stand-alone, as long as you don't try to make sense of the things you don't understand, and just accept, for instance, the fact that the librarian of the Unseen University of wizards is an orangoutang.
Why I wish I could be a guest in my own home (it's the books...), plus Bout of Books Sign Up
My sister-in-law just returned to England after a lovely two week visit. In large part it was lovely because she is a reader (and published writer) of children's books, and I got to do one of the things I love best--browse my shelves and find piles and piles of books for a guest to read!
Here's what she got through during her visit:
The only bittersweet part of all this book fun was that I had to go to work. I did not get to be a guest too--reading and basking in the sun and resting (whiney whiney whiney). So when my dear boy said his throat was killing him, and could he stay off school on this lovely sunny spring day, I tenderly acquiesced (I'm not feeling that great either...). And though I won't actually get to be a guest for the day (there are Chores to be done), I'm planning on doing a lot of reading. It will be good for my mental health.
And so I am sneaking in under the sign-up wire for the Bout of Books Readathon...
And I will start reading, after, of course, I carefully put all the books shown above back to their proper places, and restore the lego creations I stashed in the laundry room two weeks ago.
Here's what she got through during her visit:
The only bittersweet part of all this book fun was that I had to go to work. I did not get to be a guest too--reading and basking in the sun and resting (whiney whiney whiney). So when my dear boy said his throat was killing him, and could he stay off school on this lovely sunny spring day, I tenderly acquiesced (I'm not feeling that great either...). And though I won't actually get to be a guest for the day (there are Chores to be done), I'm planning on doing a lot of reading. It will be good for my mental health.
And so I am sneaking in under the sign-up wire for the Bout of Books Readathon...
And I will start reading, after, of course, I carefully put all the books shown above back to their proper places, and restore the lego creations I stashed in the laundry room two weeks ago.
5/13/13
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore (Walker Childrens, middle grade, Jan. 2013)
The three Appledore-Smith kids were leading a perfectly normal life until the horrible day their father suffered a debilitating stroke. Next thing they know, their mother is dragging them off north to the town of Crystal Springs, Maine--to the mysterious old Water Castle, a tangled labyrinth of a house built by their ancestor. There he had hoped to find the water of life...and there Ephraim, the middle child, can't help but hope that if the stories of the water of life are true, it might break his father free from the prison the stroke has trapped him in.
With the unlikely, and at first unwilling, help of Mallory, whose family worked for the Appledore family long ago, and Will, whose family has nursed a feud against them for over a century, Ephraim begins to explore the Water Castle. He and his new comrades find themselves solving a mystery that combines science and story, past and present. And at the end, there is the water...
Interspersed with the story of Ephraim and co. are flashbacks to the past of 1908, that tell the story of Nora, a young black girl from Mallory's family, recruited by old Mr. Applebaum so long ago to help him in his quest for the water of life. She was his research assistant, hobnobbing with the likes of Nicola Tesla, seizing the chance to learn all she could so that she could explore all the great, vast world, like the explorers racing to be the first to find the North Pole...and her story plays an integral part in shaping the present.
The Water Castle is perhaps slow to start, and I was initially unwarmed by the uncomfortable social dynamics in which Ephraim finds himself enmeshed--lots of things go wrong at first, especially at school. It didn't seem like the book was going to live up to the promise of its utterly appealing cover. But as the story progressed, and grew simultaneously more focused and more complex, I was sucked in. And was rewarded by the very nice twist at the end.
There's radioactivity, tragedy, generations of complex social relationships, a Van der Graaf generator that turns ugly on Ephraim, libraries full of books, hidden rooms that defy conventional architecture, questions about what science is, and what exploration is--why does it matter if the North Pole is found? And there's the biggest question of all--if the water of life was real (even if it just extended your natural life), would you drink it?
Best thing--the science is really cool, and the book stars both girls and boys who love it. Give this one to your kid who likes both fantasy and the history of science--it's not fantasy, but it has that feel.
It's possible to explain everything that happens rationally, and the reader can have fun doing that. But it's a much more powerful story (that twist I mentioned....) if you can suspend disbelief, and accept, along with Ephraim and Mallory and Will, that science can be truly wondrous.
Here are other reviews, at Fuse # 8 and at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Disclaimer: I received a surprise review copy from the publisher just recently. I had already gone out and bought my own on a biblio-shopping-therapy whim (at an indie bookstore, so I could feel Righteous), and I had picked this one out because it was the only one that had a kid on the cover who wasn't white--Mallory (because if enough people buy more books with non-white kids on the cover, maybe there will be more of them some day), and because the cover was, in more general terms, one that screamed at me that this was a book I had to read. Stone griffins etc. Of course, having bought the book, I felt no pressure to actually read it, because there was no rush to do so, so I'm very glad I got a second one that came with the all impetus attached to review copies! Now I keep one, the library gets one, and everyone is happy.
Except perhaps Ephraim and Will and Mallory, who are left in a somewhat "eeks what will happen next" place....
The three Appledore-Smith kids were leading a perfectly normal life until the horrible day their father suffered a debilitating stroke. Next thing they know, their mother is dragging them off north to the town of Crystal Springs, Maine--to the mysterious old Water Castle, a tangled labyrinth of a house built by their ancestor. There he had hoped to find the water of life...and there Ephraim, the middle child, can't help but hope that if the stories of the water of life are true, it might break his father free from the prison the stroke has trapped him in.
With the unlikely, and at first unwilling, help of Mallory, whose family worked for the Appledore family long ago, and Will, whose family has nursed a feud against them for over a century, Ephraim begins to explore the Water Castle. He and his new comrades find themselves solving a mystery that combines science and story, past and present. And at the end, there is the water...
Interspersed with the story of Ephraim and co. are flashbacks to the past of 1908, that tell the story of Nora, a young black girl from Mallory's family, recruited by old Mr. Applebaum so long ago to help him in his quest for the water of life. She was his research assistant, hobnobbing with the likes of Nicola Tesla, seizing the chance to learn all she could so that she could explore all the great, vast world, like the explorers racing to be the first to find the North Pole...and her story plays an integral part in shaping the present.
The Water Castle is perhaps slow to start, and I was initially unwarmed by the uncomfortable social dynamics in which Ephraim finds himself enmeshed--lots of things go wrong at first, especially at school. It didn't seem like the book was going to live up to the promise of its utterly appealing cover. But as the story progressed, and grew simultaneously more focused and more complex, I was sucked in. And was rewarded by the very nice twist at the end.
There's radioactivity, tragedy, generations of complex social relationships, a Van der Graaf generator that turns ugly on Ephraim, libraries full of books, hidden rooms that defy conventional architecture, questions about what science is, and what exploration is--why does it matter if the North Pole is found? And there's the biggest question of all--if the water of life was real (even if it just extended your natural life), would you drink it?
Best thing--the science is really cool, and the book stars both girls and boys who love it. Give this one to your kid who likes both fantasy and the history of science--it's not fantasy, but it has that feel.
It's possible to explain everything that happens rationally, and the reader can have fun doing that. But it's a much more powerful story (that twist I mentioned....) if you can suspend disbelief, and accept, along with Ephraim and Mallory and Will, that science can be truly wondrous.
Here are other reviews, at Fuse # 8 and at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Disclaimer: I received a surprise review copy from the publisher just recently. I had already gone out and bought my own on a biblio-shopping-therapy whim (at an indie bookstore, so I could feel Righteous), and I had picked this one out because it was the only one that had a kid on the cover who wasn't white--Mallory (because if enough people buy more books with non-white kids on the cover, maybe there will be more of them some day), and because the cover was, in more general terms, one that screamed at me that this was a book I had to read. Stone griffins etc. Of course, having bought the book, I felt no pressure to actually read it, because there was no rush to do so, so I'm very glad I got a second one that came with the all impetus attached to review copies! Now I keep one, the library gets one, and everyone is happy.
Except perhaps Ephraim and Will and Mallory, who are left in a somewhat "eeks what will happen next" place....
5/12/13
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantsy (5/12/13)
Happy Mother's Day, and welcome to this week's round-up of middle grade sci fi/fantasy postings from around the blogs. If I missed your post, let me know!
The Reviews
The Ability, by M.M. Vaughan, at Charlotte's Library
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Price and Joel Naftali, at Now Read This!
Astronaut Academy Re-Entry, by Dave Roman, at Charlotte's Library (I don't generally include graphic novels, but I love this one lots and its my own review. Also it is science fiction, which is thin on the mg ground)
Canary in a Coal Mine, by Madelyn Rosenberg, at Geo Librarian
Charlotte Sometimes, by Penelope Farmer, at The Book Smugglers
The Cheshire Cheese Cat, by Carmen Agra Deedy, at Bunbury in the Stacks (audiobook review)
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy, LibLaura5, Salima Korri Reviewing the Writing, The Book Cellar and YA Bibliophile (audiobook review)
The Game of Sunken Places, by M.T. Anderson, at Great Books for Kids and Teens
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman, at Nerdy Book Club
Gustav Gloom and the Nightmare Vault, by Adam-Troy Castro, at Log Cabin Library
Here Where the Sunbeams are Green, by Helen Phillips, at Book Nut
In a Glass Grimmly, by Adam Gidwitz, at There's a Book
Jinx, by Sage Blackwood, at io9 and Reading Rumpus
Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at Ms. Yingling Reads, Great Imaginations, Charlotte's Library, and Alice, Marvels
The Menagerie, by Tui T. Sutherland and Kari Sutherland, at Readers by Night
Museum of Thieves, and City of Lies, by Lian Tanner, at Kid Lit Geek
New Lands (The Chronicles of Egg, 2), by Geoff Rodkey, at Akossiwa Ketoglo
and thehopefulheroine
The Runaway King, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Bibliophilic Monologues
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, at Kid Lit Geek and Scott Reads It
The Silver Bowl, by Diane Stanley, at Madigan Reads
The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver, at That's Another Story
Stolen Magic, by Stephanie Burgis, at Waking Brain Cells
The Storm Bottle, by Nick Green, at Geo Librarian
Summer and Bird, by Catherine Catmull, at alibrarymama
Teacher's Pest, by Charles Gilman, at BookYAReview, and Tim's Book Reviews
The Time Cavern, by Todd Fonseca, at Time Travel Times Two
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Wednesdays in the Tower, by Jessica Day George, at Kid Lit Geek
Authors and Interviews:
(note to publicists--please feel free to send me blog tour lineups with links to the specific posts--I'd be happy to include them, but don't always have time to track them all down myself!)
Jessica Day George (Wednesdays in the Tower) at Cracking the Cover
Soman Chainani (The School for Good and Evil) at Cracking the Cover
Liesl Shurtliff (Rump) at Literary Rambles
A Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle character intros. at Ms. Yingling Reads, Kid Lit Frenzy, The Write Path, and The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Megan Whalen Turner (The Thief) at KidsEBookBestsellers
Kelley Armstrong and Melissa Marr (Loki's Wolves) at Entertainment Weekly And here are the stops from the Loki's Wolves blog tour:
Geoff Rodkey (New Lands--The Chronicles of Egg, book 2), joined by his agent and editor, at From the Mixed Up Files and all by himself at Book Dreaming
Ari Goelman (The Path of Names) at The Lucky 13s
Stuart Webb (Jenny at Chatsworth) at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Other Good Stuff:
I could have put this in the reviews section, but thought it would be happier down here--Kate Forsyth takes a loving look at an old favorite--The Stone Cage, by Nicholas Stuart Gray, at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles.
I made a short quiz of mother's shown on covers of recent mg sff books for Mother's Day. It's short cause there aren't many.
And finally, librarians on parade to celebrate spring and promote summer reading (found at 100 Scope Notes). I find it strangely moving (no pun intended).
The Reviews
The Ability, by M.M. Vaughan, at Charlotte's Library
An Army of Frogs, by Trevor Price and Joel Naftali, at Now Read This!
Astronaut Academy Re-Entry, by Dave Roman, at Charlotte's Library (I don't generally include graphic novels, but I love this one lots and its my own review. Also it is science fiction, which is thin on the mg ground)
Canary in a Coal Mine, by Madelyn Rosenberg, at Geo Librarian
Charlotte Sometimes, by Penelope Farmer, at The Book Smugglers
The Cheshire Cheese Cat, by Carmen Agra Deedy, at Bunbury in the Stacks (audiobook review)
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy, LibLaura5, Salima Korri Reviewing the Writing, The Book Cellar and YA Bibliophile (audiobook review)
The Game of Sunken Places, by M.T. Anderson, at Great Books for Kids and Teens
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman, at Nerdy Book Club
Gustav Gloom and the Nightmare Vault, by Adam-Troy Castro, at Log Cabin Library
Here Where the Sunbeams are Green, by Helen Phillips, at Book Nut
In a Glass Grimmly, by Adam Gidwitz, at There's a Book
Jinx, by Sage Blackwood, at io9 and Reading Rumpus
Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at Ms. Yingling Reads, Great Imaginations, Charlotte's Library, and Alice, Marvels
The Menagerie, by Tui T. Sutherland and Kari Sutherland, at Readers by Night
Museum of Thieves, and City of Lies, by Lian Tanner, at Kid Lit Geek
New Lands (The Chronicles of Egg, 2), by Geoff Rodkey, at Akossiwa Ketoglo
and thehopefulheroine
The Runaway King, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Bibliophilic Monologues
The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, at Kid Lit Geek and Scott Reads It
The Silver Bowl, by Diane Stanley, at Madigan Reads
The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver, at That's Another Story
Stolen Magic, by Stephanie Burgis, at Waking Brain Cells
The Storm Bottle, by Nick Green, at Geo Librarian
Summer and Bird, by Catherine Catmull, at alibrarymama
Teacher's Pest, by Charles Gilman, at BookYAReview, and Tim's Book Reviews
The Time Cavern, by Todd Fonseca, at Time Travel Times Two
The Water Castle, by Megan Frazer Blakemore, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Wednesdays in the Tower, by Jessica Day George, at Kid Lit Geek
Authors and Interviews:
(note to publicists--please feel free to send me blog tour lineups with links to the specific posts--I'd be happy to include them, but don't always have time to track them all down myself!)
Jessica Day George (Wednesdays in the Tower) at Cracking the Cover
Soman Chainani (The School for Good and Evil) at Cracking the Cover
Liesl Shurtliff (Rump) at Literary Rambles
A Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle character intros. at Ms. Yingling Reads, Kid Lit Frenzy, The Write Path, and The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Megan Whalen Turner (The Thief) at KidsEBookBestsellers
Kelley Armstrong and Melissa Marr (Loki's Wolves) at Entertainment Weekly And here are the stops from the Loki's Wolves blog tour:
Wednesday, May 8 – Mundie Kids featuring Odin
Thursday, May 9 – Novel Thoughts featuring Thor
Friday, May 10--Charlotte's Library featuring Freya and Frey
Saturday, May 11 – Bewitched Bookworms featuring Loki
Geoff Rodkey (New Lands--The Chronicles of Egg, book 2), joined by his agent and editor, at From the Mixed Up Files and all by himself at Book Dreaming
Ari Goelman (The Path of Names) at The Lucky 13s
Stuart Webb (Jenny at Chatsworth) at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Other Good Stuff:
I could have put this in the reviews section, but thought it would be happier down here--Kate Forsyth takes a loving look at an old favorite--The Stone Cage, by Nicholas Stuart Gray, at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles.
I made a short quiz of mother's shown on covers of recent mg sff books for Mother's Day. It's short cause there aren't many.
And finally, librarians on parade to celebrate spring and promote summer reading (found at 100 Scope Notes). I find it strangely moving (no pun intended).
5/11/13
Can you identify the Cover Mothers of middle grade sci fi/fantasy? A short (because there aren't many) quiz.
My own Mother's Day fun is that I get to stay home with the kids and my husband's sister while my husband is off doing his Irish Music thing in New York. Happily, I like my children and sister-in-law more than I like New York, so that's fine.
But none the less, in an effort to Take Part in the national celebration, and perhaps even Contribute, I offer this short quiz.
It's a truism that mothers don't play an active role in middle grade fantasy and science fiction--mostly they are shown either not noticing their kids are gone/replaced by aliens etc., too busy with their own lives/too critical of their children to have a clue, or, occasionally, sad their children aren't there any more. But there are exceptions. The four mothers (one a stepmother, one a ghost) shown below are all made it (more or less) on to the covers. Do you recognize them? (Hint: 2 are from 2012, one is from 2011, and one is from 2009). I've put the answers at the end.
I'm pretty sure this shows both father (left) and mother (right), because of them having breakfast together as a family, even though the "mother" looks about 10....
And finally, I'm not quite sure which of these is the mother of the main character (though if pressed, I'd say the last one), but in any event, they are all mothers...
If you can think of any other mothers shown on mg sff covers, do share!
Answers (highlight to see): Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cotrell Boyce, Fairest of All, by Serena Valentino, Spellbinder, by Helen Stringer, and A Greyhound of a Girl, by Roddy Doyle.
But none the less, in an effort to Take Part in the national celebration, and perhaps even Contribute, I offer this short quiz.
It's a truism that mothers don't play an active role in middle grade fantasy and science fiction--mostly they are shown either not noticing their kids are gone/replaced by aliens etc., too busy with their own lives/too critical of their children to have a clue, or, occasionally, sad their children aren't there any more. But there are exceptions. The four mothers (one a stepmother, one a ghost) shown below are all made it (more or less) on to the covers. Do you recognize them? (Hint: 2 are from 2012, one is from 2011, and one is from 2009). I've put the answers at the end.
I'm pretty sure this shows both father (left) and mother (right), because of them having breakfast together as a family, even though the "mother" looks about 10....
And finally, I'm not quite sure which of these is the mother of the main character (though if pressed, I'd say the last one), but in any event, they are all mothers...
If you can think of any other mothers shown on mg sff covers, do share!
Answers (highlight to see): Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, by Frank Cotrell Boyce, Fairest of All, by Serena Valentino, Spellbinder, by Helen Stringer, and A Greyhound of a Girl, by Roddy Doyle.
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