Not many reviews this week, but I wanted to get back in the swing of things! Let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
The Book of Boy, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock, at Waking Brain Cells
Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows, by Ryan Calejo, at Charlotte's Library
Clash of Beasts (Going Wild 3), by Lisa McMann, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Dragons in a Bag, by Zetta Elliot, at Raise Them Righteous
Etty Steele: Vampire Hunter, by Grayson Grave, at Sci Fi and Scary
Max and the Midnights, by Lincoln Peirce, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Rage of Lions, by Curtis Jobling, at Say What?
Two Cybils EMG Spec. Fic. panelists, Sherry and Katy, share middle grade spec. fic books they loved
Authors and Interviews
Gregory Funaro (Watch Hallow) at Always in the Middle
Other Good Stuff
The shortlists for the Cybils Awards have been announced, and here are the seven Elementary/Middle grade speculative fiction books the first round panelists picked! (if you think the Cybils sound fun, look for the call for panelists next August and join us!)
1/6/19
1/4/19
Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows, by Ryan Calejo
Now that my work as a Round 1 judge for the Cybils Awards in YA Speculative Fiction is done, I'm catching up on all the middle grade I missed! Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows, by Ryan Calejo, for instance, came out last October....but better late than never!
Charlie is not an ordinary middle school kid. His house burned down and his parents disappeared, he hasn't given up on finding them again. But's what really weird is the horns and feathers he grew for no apparent reason. This magical manifestation is the start of a wild ride that throws Charlie into the middle of an ancient battle between mythological beings fighting for the fate of the world. The horns and feathers could mean he is the chosen one who will tip the balance in favor of the side who wants to protect the land of the living....but unfortunately for Charlie, he doesn't have an instruction manual for possible chosen ones.
On the plus side, however, Charlie's grandmother filled his childhood with stories of Hispanic mythology from both the old world and the new, so he's able identify both the beings trying to kill him, and the smaller number of non-murderous beings on his side. And he also has the help of the smartest, coolest girl in school, Violet Ray, investigative journalist in training, who brings both a cool head and great research skills to Charlie's problems.
It's a fun and exciting ride as Charlie and Violet search for answers, and try to stay alive! It's perhaps a cliché to say that fans of Rick Riordan will enjoy this lots, but it's the same sort of story, although Charlie isn't a demigod, and has yet to have cool powers under his control (although this seems like it will happen in the next book....). The conversations are peppered with lots of Spanish, making this especially friendly for Spanish speaking kids, but not so much as to be problematic for non-Spanish speakers.
Charlie is not an ordinary middle school kid. His house burned down and his parents disappeared, he hasn't given up on finding them again. But's what really weird is the horns and feathers he grew for no apparent reason. This magical manifestation is the start of a wild ride that throws Charlie into the middle of an ancient battle between mythological beings fighting for the fate of the world. The horns and feathers could mean he is the chosen one who will tip the balance in favor of the side who wants to protect the land of the living....but unfortunately for Charlie, he doesn't have an instruction manual for possible chosen ones.
On the plus side, however, Charlie's grandmother filled his childhood with stories of Hispanic mythology from both the old world and the new, so he's able identify both the beings trying to kill him, and the smaller number of non-murderous beings on his side. And he also has the help of the smartest, coolest girl in school, Violet Ray, investigative journalist in training, who brings both a cool head and great research skills to Charlie's problems.
It's a fun and exciting ride as Charlie and Violet search for answers, and try to stay alive! It's perhaps a cliché to say that fans of Rick Riordan will enjoy this lots, but it's the same sort of story, although Charlie isn't a demigod, and has yet to have cool powers under his control (although this seems like it will happen in the next book....). The conversations are peppered with lots of Spanish, making this especially friendly for Spanish speaking kids, but not so much as to be problematic for non-Spanish speakers.
1/1/19
My 2018 reading
Happy New Year! 2018 didn't leave me with much to show for it (alhough Mia Wengen and I put together an awesome program for Kidlitcon 2019 in Providence RI this March, so do come!). But I read 458 books, and enjoyed many of them.
I set my goal pretty high (it was 501 for 2018), not because I want another source of stress in my life but because I would really like a smaller tbr pile. It's not working well. Of my 458 books, 163 were neither review copies nor library books, but this didn't make a dent. So for 2019 I've set my goal for 502, and I will meet it and I will start 2020 without the albatross of book guilt/chaos draped around my neck. (My other resolution for 2019 is to start 2020 with a clean and tidy house and no ongoing renovation projects making life a burden....in the spirit of the day, I have already started working on this).
But I made some good book friends in 2018!
The highlight of my reading year was meeting Murderbot (a series of four novellas by Martha Wells). Great is my love for Murderbot, fueled not just by my own enjoyment but by watching and listening to my 15 year read them. (my review of the first, All Systems Red). I had not read any Martha Wells before this, and will read more in 2019.
The close second highlight of my reading year was reading all the Penric and Desdemona books by Lois Macmaster Bujold; Penric is such a decent person and his relationship with Desdemona is fascinating.
As a result of these two series, I think I will look for more novellas in 2019; there's lots to be said in books that can easily be read in (literally) a single sitting (a Murderbot takes me about an hour).
Weirdest book I liked--The Adventures of Madalene and Louisa, by L. Pasley. If you like Victorian girl scientists, check it out!
Weirdest book that I didn't like-- Snowflake, by Paul Gallico (the biography of a snowflake, and her marriage to a raindrop, with lots of religion and little acknowledgement of the fact that rain etc. melt snow...)
Book I really enjoyed that surprised me most-- Not Even Bones, by Rebecca Schaeffer. Who would have thought that a heroine with a penchant for dissecting corpses that is basically a thriller would have gripped me as much as it did?
Book I really enjoyed that didn't surprise me at all (once I realized I didn't have to worry about the author getting everything wrong) The Key to Flambards, by Linda Newbery. I have reread K.M. Peyton's Flambards books multiple times, and loved the tv show back in the early 1980s, and it was lovely, just lovely, to visit modern day Flambards.
Books that I really enjoyed and didn't have to worry about enjoying them because of trusting the authors:
Beyond the Dreams We Know, by Rachel Neumeier
The Girl With the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis
The Lost Books: the Scroll of Kings, by Sarah Prineas
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford
and also three (!) new books from a favorite author, Sarah Beth Durst -- The Stone Girl's Story, Fire and Heist, and The Queen of Sorrow
And finally, it was lots of fun to be part of the YA Speculative Fiction first round panel for the Cybils Awads this year! Here are the books our panel selected. My personal favorites were Tess of the Road, by Rachel Hartman, and Summer of Salt, by Katrina Leno. (You too can be a Cybils judge! Look for the call for panelists in mid August!)
I set my goal pretty high (it was 501 for 2018), not because I want another source of stress in my life but because I would really like a smaller tbr pile. It's not working well. Of my 458 books, 163 were neither review copies nor library books, but this didn't make a dent. So for 2019 I've set my goal for 502, and I will meet it and I will start 2020 without the albatross of book guilt/chaos draped around my neck. (My other resolution for 2019 is to start 2020 with a clean and tidy house and no ongoing renovation projects making life a burden....in the spirit of the day, I have already started working on this).
But I made some good book friends in 2018!
The highlight of my reading year was meeting Murderbot (a series of four novellas by Martha Wells). Great is my love for Murderbot, fueled not just by my own enjoyment but by watching and listening to my 15 year read them. (my review of the first, All Systems Red). I had not read any Martha Wells before this, and will read more in 2019.
The close second highlight of my reading year was reading all the Penric and Desdemona books by Lois Macmaster Bujold; Penric is such a decent person and his relationship with Desdemona is fascinating.
As a result of these two series, I think I will look for more novellas in 2019; there's lots to be said in books that can easily be read in (literally) a single sitting (a Murderbot takes me about an hour).
Weirdest book I liked--The Adventures of Madalene and Louisa, by L. Pasley. If you like Victorian girl scientists, check it out!
Weirdest book that I didn't like-- Snowflake, by Paul Gallico (the biography of a snowflake, and her marriage to a raindrop, with lots of religion and little acknowledgement of the fact that rain etc. melt snow...)
Book I really enjoyed that surprised me most-- Not Even Bones, by Rebecca Schaeffer. Who would have thought that a heroine with a penchant for dissecting corpses that is basically a thriller would have gripped me as much as it did?
Book I really enjoyed that didn't surprise me at all (once I realized I didn't have to worry about the author getting everything wrong) The Key to Flambards, by Linda Newbery. I have reread K.M. Peyton's Flambards books multiple times, and loved the tv show back in the early 1980s, and it was lovely, just lovely, to visit modern day Flambards.
Books that I really enjoyed and didn't have to worry about enjoying them because of trusting the authors:
Beyond the Dreams We Know, by Rachel Neumeier
The Girl With the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis
The Lost Books: the Scroll of Kings, by Sarah Prineas
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford
and also three (!) new books from a favorite author, Sarah Beth Durst -- The Stone Girl's Story, Fire and Heist, and The Queen of Sorrow
And finally, it was lots of fun to be part of the YA Speculative Fiction first round panel for the Cybils Awads this year! Here are the books our panel selected. My personal favorites were Tess of the Road, by Rachel Hartman, and Summer of Salt, by Katrina Leno. (You too can be a Cybils judge! Look for the call for panelists in mid August!)
12/12/18
The books my boys are getting for Christmas (a post mostly for future me to remember it by...)
Ever since I've started blogging I've shared the books I've bought as Christmas presents for my loved ones, and it's fun for me to look back at them all! There was only one year when a child peeked, and he regrets it, so I think it's safe to share in advance....
For my 15 year old son--
Murderbot books 2 and 3 (Artifical Condition and Rouge Protocal) (although he'll get book 2 in advance, to read on the plane)
Made You Up, by Francesca Zappia, who's other book, Eliza and Her Monsters, is his most favorite book of all
Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: a Sortabiography, by Eric Idle (which he asked for; he is a big Monty Python fan)
In Other Lands, by Sarah Rees Brennan
For my 18 year old graphic novel loving son--
The Divided Earth (Nameless City book 3) by Faith Erin Hicks
Castle in the Stars: the Moon King, by Alex Alice
Tales from the Inner City, by Sean Tan
Books for my sister (whose reading taste if fairly close to mine, which is nice for both of us)
The Key to Flambards, by Linda Newbery
The Skylarks' War, by Hilary McKay
For my mother (whose taste is less similar to mine, but for whom I can still buy books I want to read too)
The Road Through the Wall, by Shirley Jackson
The Mitford Murders, by Jessica Fellows
And for my 15 year old nephew-Sanity and Tallulah, by Molly Brooks
For my 15 year old son--
Murderbot books 2 and 3 (Artifical Condition and Rouge Protocal) (although he'll get book 2 in advance, to read on the plane)
Made You Up, by Francesca Zappia, who's other book, Eliza and Her Monsters, is his most favorite book of all
Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: a Sortabiography, by Eric Idle (which he asked for; he is a big Monty Python fan)
In Other Lands, by Sarah Rees Brennan
For my 18 year old graphic novel loving son--
The Divided Earth (Nameless City book 3) by Faith Erin Hicks
Castle in the Stars: the Moon King, by Alex Alice
Tales from the Inner City, by Sean Tan
Books for my sister (whose reading taste if fairly close to mine, which is nice for both of us)
The Key to Flambards, by Linda Newbery
The Skylarks' War, by Hilary McKay
Emily and the Headmistress, by Mary K. Harris
For my mother (whose taste is less similar to mine, but for whom I can still buy books I want to read too)
The Road Through the Wall, by Shirley Jackson
The Mitford Murders, by Jessica Fellows
And for my 15 year old nephew-Sanity and Tallulah, by Molly Brooks
12/11/18
Dragons in a Bag, by Zetta Elliott, for Timeslip Tuesday
Dragons in a Bag, by Zetta Elliott (Random House, October 2018), is an urban fantasy for older elementary aged kids (8-10 ish years old, younger if they are a bookworm type kid, older if shorter books are more enjoyable) who are past Magic Treehouse but not yet at Harry Potter. The main character is a black boy who gets to have a fantasy adventure in his home city of Brooklyn. There are not many good diverse, urban books, and it's great that this one is out in the world!
Jaxon's mom needs to go to court to fight against them being evicted from their Brooklyn apartment, and so, in desperation, she takes him to the home of an old woman she calls Ma. Naturally, Jaxon thinks this is the grandma he's never met, but that's not who Ma is. Instead, she's a witch, who needs a helper with her magical work. Today the job is to deliver a clutch of baby dragons to a magical world where they can thrive; Brooklyn lacks the requisite ambient magic. They can't be let out of the bag, or they'll imprint on humans, and they can't eat anything sweet, or they'll grow....
Ma takes Jaxon with her to the portal to the magical world, and they cross through. But something has gone wrong--they've travelled back in time to the age of dinosaurs! And the dinosaurs aren't ready to be friends. Jaxon, at Ma's command, escapes back to Brooklyn with the dragons, and now he has to figure out how to get them where they belong, and find help for Ma, still stuck in the past.
His friends Vikram and Kavita have some experience with magic of their own, as described in Elliott's earlier book, Phoenix on Barkley Street, but they don't know the baby dragon rules...and break them both. Jaxon's problems keep escalating! Fortunately, help comes in the form of his mother's father, who he's never met before...and Jaxon learns that his own mother once had the chance to be part of the magic community herself!
It's a brisk adventure, with grown-ups to help along the way, as is fitting for this age group. There's a nice balance of magic and real-world happenings, and I appreciated Jaxon's mother's choice not to get involved with magic--that refusal made the magic more real and weighty to me--something not to be entered into lightly. The dragons get enough time out of their bag to be cute (although I would have liked to have seen even more of them!), and the dinosaur time-travel element makes it clear how much magic there is out there. It's great for young readers, and a quick fun read for grownups! Brooklyn kids will especially love it, since the setting will be so familiar to them.
As I said above, it's great to have a book like this--there really aren't many. In fact, the only other diverse urban fantasy books for this age group that I can think of (you get more moving into middle grade territory of books for 9-12 year olds) are Zetta Elliott's earlier City Kids books (with links to my reviews where applicable)--the aforementioned Phoenix on Barkley Street, Dayshaun's Gift, The Ghosts in the Castle, and The Phantom Unicorn (which I haven't reviewed yet, so it's a goodreads link). These earlier books were all self-published. While it's great to see Dragons in a Bag being traditionally published, with all the greater reach that offers, and I'm really happy about this, I am a teensy bit huffy about people saying Dragons is something new and different, when the other books are all excellent too, but the commenters maybe just don't know about them...
Jaxon's mom needs to go to court to fight against them being evicted from their Brooklyn apartment, and so, in desperation, she takes him to the home of an old woman she calls Ma. Naturally, Jaxon thinks this is the grandma he's never met, but that's not who Ma is. Instead, she's a witch, who needs a helper with her magical work. Today the job is to deliver a clutch of baby dragons to a magical world where they can thrive; Brooklyn lacks the requisite ambient magic. They can't be let out of the bag, or they'll imprint on humans, and they can't eat anything sweet, or they'll grow....
Ma takes Jaxon with her to the portal to the magical world, and they cross through. But something has gone wrong--they've travelled back in time to the age of dinosaurs! And the dinosaurs aren't ready to be friends. Jaxon, at Ma's command, escapes back to Brooklyn with the dragons, and now he has to figure out how to get them where they belong, and find help for Ma, still stuck in the past.
His friends Vikram and Kavita have some experience with magic of their own, as described in Elliott's earlier book, Phoenix on Barkley Street, but they don't know the baby dragon rules...and break them both. Jaxon's problems keep escalating! Fortunately, help comes in the form of his mother's father, who he's never met before...and Jaxon learns that his own mother once had the chance to be part of the magic community herself!
It's a brisk adventure, with grown-ups to help along the way, as is fitting for this age group. There's a nice balance of magic and real-world happenings, and I appreciated Jaxon's mother's choice not to get involved with magic--that refusal made the magic more real and weighty to me--something not to be entered into lightly. The dragons get enough time out of their bag to be cute (although I would have liked to have seen even more of them!), and the dinosaur time-travel element makes it clear how much magic there is out there. It's great for young readers, and a quick fun read for grownups! Brooklyn kids will especially love it, since the setting will be so familiar to them.
As I said above, it's great to have a book like this--there really aren't many. In fact, the only other diverse urban fantasy books for this age group that I can think of (you get more moving into middle grade territory of books for 9-12 year olds) are Zetta Elliott's earlier City Kids books (with links to my reviews where applicable)--the aforementioned Phoenix on Barkley Street, Dayshaun's Gift, The Ghosts in the Castle, and The Phantom Unicorn (which I haven't reviewed yet, so it's a goodreads link). These earlier books were all self-published. While it's great to see Dragons in a Bag being traditionally published, with all the greater reach that offers, and I'm really happy about this, I am a teensy bit huffy about people saying Dragons is something new and different, when the other books are all excellent too, but the commenters maybe just don't know about them...
12/10/18
Are You Ready to Hatch an Unusual Chicken? by Kelly Jones
I enjoyed Kelly Jones' first book about Sophie and her unusual chickens, Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer, very much (my review), and when I treated myself to a batch of new middle grade fantasy from the library last week, the second book, Are You Ready to Hatch an Unusual Chicken? (November 2018) was one I was very excited about! It is just as fun and warm and engrossing as the first book.
Sophie is now more than a beginner keeper of unusual chickens. She's used to caring for a small flock of poultry who are special in a magical kind of way, with a whole slew of paranormal talents. But she's never hatched eggs before. Part of being a keeper of unusual chickens is ensuring the survival of the vaious breeds, so hatching is part of the job, and eggs are on their way to her. So she must hunt around the chicken farm she inherited from Agnes, a great breeder of magical chickens, for all the incubation supplies she needs.
The eggs arrive, are incubated, and hatch, and Sophie learns a lot (as does the reader); fortunately she has chicken-savvy friends to rely on for help and advice....and in the meantime, Sophie works to get Agnes' place back into order, which means getting help from her whole rural community. And also in the meantime, summer comes to an end and school starts; Sophie worries that she'll be the only brown kid in a sea of white (she is not; there is a Mexican girl who is also new...) Sophie's cousin Lupe has come to stay while she attends the local college, and that's a change too, though a good one, and Lupe is also a big help.
And typing that pervious paragraph, it occurs to me that one theme of the book is letting other people help you, and realizing what you need to learn to do to make you able to carry out your passion in life! And it that sounds like the book is preachy, please don't think it is! It's told in letters from Sophie to Agnes, her deceased grandmother, and a fellow unusual chicken breeder, and Sophie's voice is fresh and sharp, and her letters are full of descriptive details, making her chickens, her people, and her place all come to vivid life!
The fact that the story is told in these sharp bursts of correspondence help keep the reader's interest going--there's not a lot of Excitement or Danger here, and no adversary to overcome, just the tension of egg hatching and coping with the unexpected chicks that result. So it won't be to everyone's taste.
But I found it a lot of fun. I would happily keep reading more about magical chickens, thought there are hints that the whole magical livestock/farming world might contain more than just poultry...
Give this book to kids who want to be zookeepers when they grow up; it is all about caring appropriately for your animal charges! Or give it to kids who just want a magical pet. Or kids who just want to spend some time out in the country in good company eating apple-blackberry crisp and watching chickens do impossible things.....
Sophie is now more than a beginner keeper of unusual chickens. She's used to caring for a small flock of poultry who are special in a magical kind of way, with a whole slew of paranormal talents. But she's never hatched eggs before. Part of being a keeper of unusual chickens is ensuring the survival of the vaious breeds, so hatching is part of the job, and eggs are on their way to her. So she must hunt around the chicken farm she inherited from Agnes, a great breeder of magical chickens, for all the incubation supplies she needs.
The eggs arrive, are incubated, and hatch, and Sophie learns a lot (as does the reader); fortunately she has chicken-savvy friends to rely on for help and advice....and in the meantime, Sophie works to get Agnes' place back into order, which means getting help from her whole rural community. And also in the meantime, summer comes to an end and school starts; Sophie worries that she'll be the only brown kid in a sea of white (she is not; there is a Mexican girl who is also new...) Sophie's cousin Lupe has come to stay while she attends the local college, and that's a change too, though a good one, and Lupe is also a big help.
And typing that pervious paragraph, it occurs to me that one theme of the book is letting other people help you, and realizing what you need to learn to do to make you able to carry out your passion in life! And it that sounds like the book is preachy, please don't think it is! It's told in letters from Sophie to Agnes, her deceased grandmother, and a fellow unusual chicken breeder, and Sophie's voice is fresh and sharp, and her letters are full of descriptive details, making her chickens, her people, and her place all come to vivid life!
The fact that the story is told in these sharp bursts of correspondence help keep the reader's interest going--there's not a lot of Excitement or Danger here, and no adversary to overcome, just the tension of egg hatching and coping with the unexpected chicks that result. So it won't be to everyone's taste.
But I found it a lot of fun. I would happily keep reading more about magical chickens, thought there are hints that the whole magical livestock/farming world might contain more than just poultry...
Give this book to kids who want to be zookeepers when they grow up; it is all about caring appropriately for your animal charges! Or give it to kids who just want a magical pet. Or kids who just want to spend some time out in the country in good company eating apple-blackberry crisp and watching chickens do impossible things.....
12/9/18
the Sunday round-ups of middle grade sci fi and fantasy will resume in 2019!
I'm taking a break on my weekly round-ups until 2019-- too much else to do! I still have lots of reading to do for the YA Speculative Fiction Cybils, and a lot of home renovation to do ere the snow really gets going (because of wanting to put the downstairs bathroom radiator back in the downstairs bathroom--heat makes a bathroom so much friendlier!). So happy reading to all of my middle grade spec fic/fantasy friends, and look for the round-ups to resume in January!
12/6/18
Fire & Heist, by Sarah Beth Durst
Fire & Heist, by Sarah Beth Durst is a great book for the younger YA set that twists dragons, a dangerous heist, and a portal fantasy into a family/friendship/coming of age real-world framework.
Imagine that some people in today's world are actually fire breathing wyverns; not shapeshifting into dragon form like their ancestors, but still busily hoarding gold (and stealing it from each other) and being all wyverny in a somewhat snooty way (but with no scales...). Sky is a wyvern, and her family used to be very close to the top of the draconic pecking order. But when a heist of her mother's went totally wrong, the family has been shunned by the other wyvern families. And her mother never came home.
Sky's boyfriend Ryan, and all her high school wyvern pals, have cut her off. She wants her mother back. And she wants to know what secrets her father and her three older brothers are keeping from her. So she sets off to find what her mother was trying to steal from Ryan's father, and steal it herself to redeem her family, and maybe find her mother too and bring her home. A good heist, especially when there are both magical and technological obstacles in the way, needs a good team, and Sky assembles one--Ryan, who only shunned her to save her from his father (or so he says), a wyvern magician, and a human classmate, Gabrielle, who researches interesting things as a hobby, and who was there to befriend Sky when her wyvern cohort abandoned her (I love Gabrielle!).
But Sky's heist doesn't go as planned....(this is where the portal fantasy part comes in, but I don't want to be too spoilery….). Dragons are involved, lots of them...
And then there's a happy ending!
Back when I was 13, YA fantasy wasn't really a thing; my local library had maybe 4 fantasy books on the three small shelves labeled "YA." (The only one I remember being shelved there is The Blue Sword). One went straight from the magical stories in the kids' section to Dragonriders of Pern etc. Today of course there's lots of YA speculative fiction....and I've read a lot of it, but many of the books don't seem written for readers like 13-year-old me; the concerns are mostly more realistically adult than I would have wanted, since I mostly wanted escapism. I almost never say about a YA book that I want to give it to young teen Charlotte, but this one is just perfect for the sort of 13 year old I was--not ready to think about growing up, dreaming of dragons and unicorns and kissing cute boys (all equally fantastical). And grown-up me enjoyed it just fine too!
So if you weren't or aren't that sort of reader, you might find this reads a bit young to you. But Sarah Beth Durst's writing is lots of fun regardless, Sky is a snappy sort of heroine, and the premise is lovely, so give it a try!
disclaimer: review copy received from the author
Imagine that some people in today's world are actually fire breathing wyverns; not shapeshifting into dragon form like their ancestors, but still busily hoarding gold (and stealing it from each other) and being all wyverny in a somewhat snooty way (but with no scales...). Sky is a wyvern, and her family used to be very close to the top of the draconic pecking order. But when a heist of her mother's went totally wrong, the family has been shunned by the other wyvern families. And her mother never came home.
Sky's boyfriend Ryan, and all her high school wyvern pals, have cut her off. She wants her mother back. And she wants to know what secrets her father and her three older brothers are keeping from her. So she sets off to find what her mother was trying to steal from Ryan's father, and steal it herself to redeem her family, and maybe find her mother too and bring her home. A good heist, especially when there are both magical and technological obstacles in the way, needs a good team, and Sky assembles one--Ryan, who only shunned her to save her from his father (or so he says), a wyvern magician, and a human classmate, Gabrielle, who researches interesting things as a hobby, and who was there to befriend Sky when her wyvern cohort abandoned her (I love Gabrielle!).
But Sky's heist doesn't go as planned....(this is where the portal fantasy part comes in, but I don't want to be too spoilery….). Dragons are involved, lots of them...
And then there's a happy ending!
Back when I was 13, YA fantasy wasn't really a thing; my local library had maybe 4 fantasy books on the three small shelves labeled "YA." (The only one I remember being shelved there is The Blue Sword). One went straight from the magical stories in the kids' section to Dragonriders of Pern etc. Today of course there's lots of YA speculative fiction....and I've read a lot of it, but many of the books don't seem written for readers like 13-year-old me; the concerns are mostly more realistically adult than I would have wanted, since I mostly wanted escapism. I almost never say about a YA book that I want to give it to young teen Charlotte, but this one is just perfect for the sort of 13 year old I was--not ready to think about growing up, dreaming of dragons and unicorns and kissing cute boys (all equally fantastical). And grown-up me enjoyed it just fine too!
So if you weren't or aren't that sort of reader, you might find this reads a bit young to you. But Sarah Beth Durst's writing is lots of fun regardless, Sky is a snappy sort of heroine, and the premise is lovely, so give it a try!
disclaimer: review copy received from the author
12/3/18
Any Second, by Kevin Emerson
I was very impressed by Kevin Emerson's middle grade sci fi story, Last Day on Mars. So when I saw he had a new book coming out this fall, my ears pricked up. Any Second (Crown Books, November 2018) is neither middle grade nor speculative fiction, being instead realistic YA, but it's not like I only read mg spec fic, and so I approached it with eager interest, and was not disappointed. (This one needs trigger warnings, for rape, physical abuse of a child, self-harm, and suicide).
This is the story of two teenagers who met at a mall during dire circumstances. One, Eli, was there to blow the mall up after being made into the weapon of a crazed zealot after four years of being brainwashed, tortured, and raped. Maya was the girl who stood next to him and kept him from letting go of the release mechanism that would detonate the bomb. Almost a year latter, both are traumatized. Eli has been reunited with has family, and is trying not to drown in post-traumatic stress. Maya is also trying to live in the present, and not let her obsessive hair pulling be her one release mechanism (she was dealing with mental health issues even before the mall, and now things are worse....).
And then fate rolls the dice, and they end up at the same high school. None of the students are supposed to know who Eli is, but Maya recognizes him. The two are drawn to each other--they were both at that same defining moment, and they are both trying to move away from it. But will they help or hurt each other?
They aren't left to peacefully discover which it will be. The evil zealot who kidnapped Eli is still on the loose, and Eli lives with police protection. Maya is in a toxic relationship with another girl, that's holding her back on her road to recovery. And Eli makes the worst possible friend at high school--a socially ostracized boy who became obsessed with Eli's story, and who fantasizes, like the kidnapper, of striking a blow against the "sheep." When he finds out who Eli really is, his obsession grows.
So not a comfort read. But though what has happened, and what is happening, to these three teenagers is grim, it manages not to be a grim book. It has more a feel of spring slowly coming after long winter. Maya and Eli practice their coping strategy of living in the present, and really noticing things around them, and their growing friendship, so improbable, brings both comfort. It is uplifting to see them getting stronger. Things end for Maya and Eli on a hopeful, forward-looking note.
It is also a very gripping page turner with the reader terribly anxious about the kidnapper and the third kid who might or might not go off...So even if you mostly read MG spec fic, you'll find this a good read!
disclaimer: review copy received from the author
This is the story of two teenagers who met at a mall during dire circumstances. One, Eli, was there to blow the mall up after being made into the weapon of a crazed zealot after four years of being brainwashed, tortured, and raped. Maya was the girl who stood next to him and kept him from letting go of the release mechanism that would detonate the bomb. Almost a year latter, both are traumatized. Eli has been reunited with has family, and is trying not to drown in post-traumatic stress. Maya is also trying to live in the present, and not let her obsessive hair pulling be her one release mechanism (she was dealing with mental health issues even before the mall, and now things are worse....).
And then fate rolls the dice, and they end up at the same high school. None of the students are supposed to know who Eli is, but Maya recognizes him. The two are drawn to each other--they were both at that same defining moment, and they are both trying to move away from it. But will they help or hurt each other?
They aren't left to peacefully discover which it will be. The evil zealot who kidnapped Eli is still on the loose, and Eli lives with police protection. Maya is in a toxic relationship with another girl, that's holding her back on her road to recovery. And Eli makes the worst possible friend at high school--a socially ostracized boy who became obsessed with Eli's story, and who fantasizes, like the kidnapper, of striking a blow against the "sheep." When he finds out who Eli really is, his obsession grows.
So not a comfort read. But though what has happened, and what is happening, to these three teenagers is grim, it manages not to be a grim book. It has more a feel of spring slowly coming after long winter. Maya and Eli practice their coping strategy of living in the present, and really noticing things around them, and their growing friendship, so improbable, brings both comfort. It is uplifting to see them getting stronger. Things end for Maya and Eli on a hopeful, forward-looking note.
It is also a very gripping page turner with the reader terribly anxious about the kidnapper and the third kid who might or might not go off...So even if you mostly read MG spec fic, you'll find this a good read!
disclaimer: review copy received from the author
12/2/18
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (12/2/18)
Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
A Babysitter's Guide to Monster Hunting by Joe Ballarini at Original Content
The Book of Boy, by Katherine Gilbert, at Mom Read It
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman, at Leaf's Reviews
The Hotel Between, by Sean Easly, at Middle Grade Book Village
Inkling, by Kenneth Oppel, at Pages Unbound
The Land of Neverendings, by Kate Saunders, at Read Till Dawn
Lodestar (Keeper of the Lost Cities 5), by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Seeing Red (Whatever After #12), by Sarah Mlynowski, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at The Book List Reader
The Third Mushroom, by Jennifer L. Holm, at proseandkahn
The Train to Impossible Places, by P.G. Bell, at Pages Unbound
The Wrath of the Dragon King, by Brandon Mull, at BooksForKidsBlog, Why Not? Because I Said So, and The Write Path
Wundersmith: The Calling of Morrigan Crow, by Jessica Townsend, at The Chronicles of Danielle
Two at alibraymama--The Turning, by Emily Whitman, and Strange Star, by Emma Carroll
Three ghost stories at alibrarymama--When a Ghost Talks, Listen, by Tim Tingle, A Festival of Ghosts, by William Alexander, and City of Ghosts, by Victoria Schwab
Authors and Interviews
Stephanie Burgis (The Girl with the Dragon Heart) at Kick-butt Kidlit
Kenneth Oppel at Fuse #8 (a Walking and Talking graphic interview)
Liana Gardner (The Journal of Angela Ashby), at Wishful Endings
Other Good Stuff
A celebration of Madeleine L'Engle at Tor
Victoria Schwab's City of Ghosts is getting a tv adaptation (more at Tor)
The Reviews
A Babysitter's Guide to Monster Hunting by Joe Ballarini at Original Content
The Book of Boy, by Katherine Gilbert, at Mom Read It
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman, at Leaf's Reviews
The Hotel Between, by Sean Easly, at Middle Grade Book Village
Inkling, by Kenneth Oppel, at Pages Unbound
The Land of Neverendings, by Kate Saunders, at Read Till Dawn
Lodestar (Keeper of the Lost Cities 5), by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Seeing Red (Whatever After #12), by Sarah Mlynowski, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at The Book List Reader
The Third Mushroom, by Jennifer L. Holm, at proseandkahn
The Train to Impossible Places, by P.G. Bell, at Pages Unbound
The Wrath of the Dragon King, by Brandon Mull, at BooksForKidsBlog, Why Not? Because I Said So, and The Write Path
Wundersmith: The Calling of Morrigan Crow, by Jessica Townsend, at The Chronicles of Danielle
Two at alibraymama--The Turning, by Emily Whitman, and Strange Star, by Emma Carroll
Three ghost stories at alibrarymama--When a Ghost Talks, Listen, by Tim Tingle, A Festival of Ghosts, by William Alexander, and City of Ghosts, by Victoria Schwab
Authors and Interviews
Stephanie Burgis (The Girl with the Dragon Heart) at Kick-butt Kidlit
Kenneth Oppel at Fuse #8 (a Walking and Talking graphic interview)
Liana Gardner (The Journal of Angela Ashby), at Wishful Endings
Other Good Stuff
A celebration of Madeleine L'Engle at Tor
Victoria Schwab's City of Ghosts is getting a tv adaptation (more at Tor)
11/29/18
Sanity and Tallulah, by Molly Brooks
This past week has been busy, with family, home-renovations, and determined reading of YA Speculative Fiction for the Cybils Awards. But now the family are gone the home renovation can take a back seat (no houseguests expected till February) and I should have the time to blog more! So here's one I just read, that's easy to write about because it is easy to see without much effort that it's good.
Sanity and Tallulah, by Molly Brooks (Disney-Hyperion, October 2018), is a fun science fiction graphic novel, particularly great for science-minded kids who love cats, but also good for story-minded kids/grown-ups who enjoy fun graphic novels.
Sanity and Tallulah are best friends, and so when Tallulah illicitly uses the lab of their space station home to create a three-headed kitten (Princess Sparkle Destroyer of Worlds), Sanity is there to help cuddle , and to be sad when the kitty is taken from them and imprisoned in the lab. But PSDofW is not lacking in smarts either, and breaks free, disappearing into the bowels of the space station. And at just about the same time, electrical malfunctions start plaguing the space station, and there are signs of chewed wires....is it the kitten(s) that are too blame, or some other menace? Sanity and Tallulah set out to investigate (breaking more rules in the process), and discover that the whole space station is in danger of destruction. Fortunately, Sanity's clandestine work in the lab has given her the skills she needs to fix the problem...but what will become of Princess Sparkle Destroyer of Worlds?
This is a great book for many reasons. The friendship of the two girls is a joy to see; they are supportive of each other just beautifully! The parents are involved and caring, though not always able to keep tabs on their kids, especially Sanity's parents, but they try. And of course it's a joy to see smart girls doing science; it's not clear to me where Tallulah's own gifts lie, but she's there for her friend and perhaps future stories will give her more of a chance to shine. The characters are diverse--Tallulah's mom, the senior scientist on the space station, is Latina and Sanity is black.
And on top of that, the story is interesting and engaging, and tense without being overwhelmingly so. The illustrations help keep things light and the story on the fun side, even when things are going wrong, though the entertaining text doesn't need much help.
My only quibble is that I really wanted to have more context for this space station; there's a bigger story hinted at, and hopefully we'll see more of that in future books!
But in any event, if you have a graphic novel loving kid of 8-on up, offer this book!
Sanity and Tallulah, by Molly Brooks (Disney-Hyperion, October 2018), is a fun science fiction graphic novel, particularly great for science-minded kids who love cats, but also good for story-minded kids/grown-ups who enjoy fun graphic novels.
Sanity and Tallulah are best friends, and so when Tallulah illicitly uses the lab of their space station home to create a three-headed kitten (Princess Sparkle Destroyer of Worlds), Sanity is there to help cuddle , and to be sad when the kitty is taken from them and imprisoned in the lab. But PSDofW is not lacking in smarts either, and breaks free, disappearing into the bowels of the space station. And at just about the same time, electrical malfunctions start plaguing the space station, and there are signs of chewed wires....is it the kitten(s) that are too blame, or some other menace? Sanity and Tallulah set out to investigate (breaking more rules in the process), and discover that the whole space station is in danger of destruction. Fortunately, Sanity's clandestine work in the lab has given her the skills she needs to fix the problem...but what will become of Princess Sparkle Destroyer of Worlds?
This is a great book for many reasons. The friendship of the two girls is a joy to see; they are supportive of each other just beautifully! The parents are involved and caring, though not always able to keep tabs on their kids, especially Sanity's parents, but they try. And of course it's a joy to see smart girls doing science; it's not clear to me where Tallulah's own gifts lie, but she's there for her friend and perhaps future stories will give her more of a chance to shine. The characters are diverse--Tallulah's mom, the senior scientist on the space station, is Latina and Sanity is black.
And on top of that, the story is interesting and engaging, and tense without being overwhelmingly so. The illustrations help keep things light and the story on the fun side, even when things are going wrong, though the entertaining text doesn't need much help.
My only quibble is that I really wanted to have more context for this space station; there's a bigger story hinted at, and hopefully we'll see more of that in future books!
But in any event, if you have a graphic novel loving kid of 8-on up, offer this book!
11/20/18
Knights vs Dinosaurs, by Matt Phelan, for Timeslip Tuesday
Knights vs Dinosaurs, written and illustrated by Matt Phelan (Greenwillow, Oct 2018) is a great one to give to kids who love Ursula Vernon's Hamster Princess books, but want a bit of a change! It's a fun story, and it's a graphic heavy one, with generous line spacing and not too many pages (148), making it friendly for Elementary School readers into the Middle Grade ages (so basically, 7-10 year olds).
Here's the story--
King Arthur's knights roam around the countryside, looking for bad guys/dragons to fight, but mostly they come up empty handed. Still, they have to boast about something when they gather around the Round Table, and one night Sir Erec boasts that he slew 40 dragons. Merlin decides it's time to teach the knights a little lesson about boasting....and challenges Sir Erec, and three other knights, to a very different sort of quest, one that involves battling giant reptiles...
The knights follow Merlin's instructions to a cave....and once inside, the four of them, plus one squire, Mel, are sent back in time to the age of the dinosaurs! At last there real monsters to fight, and the knights agree that they must be vanquished to complete the quest before they can return to their own time. The dragons chomp and chase and swing their spiked tails, the knights thwack and run away and swing maces and throw rocks and run away a bit more.
But after a bit of practice facing off against the dinosaurs, the knights start working together more effectively, and make it home again!
The coolest of all the knights, both brave and level-headed, is the Black Knight, who turns out to be a woman. Mel the squire is a girl in disguise. Gender equity in dino fighting! Harriet the Hamster Princess I mentioned above would be right at home amongst all the wild rampaging.
It is not a great time travel book qua time travel book, because, as Matt Phelan admits in his instructional guide to prehistoric fauna at the end, he included species that weren't contemporaneous. So it basically a generic "dinosaur past." But still it is lots of fun, and Phelan's illustrations are delightful. If ever Merlin planned a second adventure for these knights, I'd welcome it.
Here's the story--
King Arthur's knights roam around the countryside, looking for bad guys/dragons to fight, but mostly they come up empty handed. Still, they have to boast about something when they gather around the Round Table, and one night Sir Erec boasts that he slew 40 dragons. Merlin decides it's time to teach the knights a little lesson about boasting....and challenges Sir Erec, and three other knights, to a very different sort of quest, one that involves battling giant reptiles...
The knights follow Merlin's instructions to a cave....and once inside, the four of them, plus one squire, Mel, are sent back in time to the age of the dinosaurs! At last there real monsters to fight, and the knights agree that they must be vanquished to complete the quest before they can return to their own time. The dragons chomp and chase and swing their spiked tails, the knights thwack and run away and swing maces and throw rocks and run away a bit more.
But after a bit of practice facing off against the dinosaurs, the knights start working together more effectively, and make it home again!
The coolest of all the knights, both brave and level-headed, is the Black Knight, who turns out to be a woman. Mel the squire is a girl in disguise. Gender equity in dino fighting! Harriet the Hamster Princess I mentioned above would be right at home amongst all the wild rampaging.
It is not a great time travel book qua time travel book, because, as Matt Phelan admits in his instructional guide to prehistoric fauna at the end, he included species that weren't contemporaneous. So it basically a generic "dinosaur past." But still it is lots of fun, and Phelan's illustrations are delightful. If ever Merlin planned a second adventure for these knights, I'd welcome it.
11/18/18
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/18/18)
Welcome to this weeks round-up; please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Are You Ready to Hatch an Unusual Chicken? by Kelly Jones, at Neverending TBR
The Assassination of Brangwain Spurge, by M.T. Anderson and Eugene Yelchin, at Redeemed Reader
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford, at Hidden in Pages
The Boy, the Boat, and the Beast, by Samantha M. Clark, at Semicolon
City of Ghosts, by Victoria Schwab, at Pages Unbound and Bookish Wandress
Dactyl Hill Squad, by Daniel José Older, at Charlotte's Library
A Dash of Trouble (Love, Sugar, Magic #1), by Anna Meriano, at From the Biblio Files
Diego and the Rangers of the Vastlantic, by Armand Baltazar, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Evangeline of the Bayou, by Jan Eldredge, at Semicolon
Everblaze (Keepers of the Lost Cities #3) by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Flashback (Keepers of the Lost Cities #7), by Shannon Messenger, at Kitty Cat at the Library
The Frog Princess Returns, by E.D. Baker, at Sharon the Librarian
The Hotel Between, by Sean Easley, at Middle Grade Book Village
The House in Poplar Woods, by K.E. Ormsbee, at Milliebot Reads
The House with Chicken Legs, by Sophie Anderson, at Waking Brain Cells
Inkinling, by Kenneth Oppel, at Always in the Middle
The Jamie Drake Equation, by Chrisopher Edge, atBooksForKidsBlog
The Language of Spells, by Garret Wyre, at Books4yourkids
The Last Battle, by C.S. Lewis, at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles
Ogre Enchanted, by Gail Carson Levine, at Pages Unbound
Ottoline and the Yellow Cat, by Chris Riddell, at Pages Unbound
The Portal and the Veil, by Ted Sanders, at This Kid Reviews Books
The Scroll of Kings, by Sarah Prineas, at Off the Shelf Reviews
The Storm Runner, by J.C. Cervantes, at Book Dust Magic
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at Semicolon
The Turnkey of Highgate Cemetery, by Allison Rushby, at Cracking the Cover
Unicorn Quest, by Kamila Benko, at alibrarymama
Wundersmith: the Calling of Morrigan Crow, by Jessica Townsend, at Diva Booknerd
Lots of mini-reviews from Cybils reading at Library Chicken
Authors and Interviews
Tara Dairman (The Great Hibernation) at Bas Bleu
There's a new blog in town--Spooky Middle Grade, a collaboration of authors; here's an intro post, wherein authors share why they write spooky stories, and why these stories are important year round
Other Good Stuff
.A look at popular middle grade fantasy series, at Redeemed Reader
I love the posts showcasing what's new in the UK at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books!
The Reviews
Are You Ready to Hatch an Unusual Chicken? by Kelly Jones, at Neverending TBR
The Assassination of Brangwain Spurge, by M.T. Anderson and Eugene Yelchin, at Redeemed Reader
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford, at Hidden in Pages
The Boy, the Boat, and the Beast, by Samantha M. Clark, at Semicolon
City of Ghosts, by Victoria Schwab, at Pages Unbound and Bookish Wandress
Dactyl Hill Squad, by Daniel José Older, at Charlotte's Library
A Dash of Trouble (Love, Sugar, Magic #1), by Anna Meriano, at From the Biblio Files
Diego and the Rangers of the Vastlantic, by Armand Baltazar, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Evangeline of the Bayou, by Jan Eldredge, at Semicolon
Everblaze (Keepers of the Lost Cities #3) by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Flashback (Keepers of the Lost Cities #7), by Shannon Messenger, at Kitty Cat at the Library
The Frog Princess Returns, by E.D. Baker, at Sharon the Librarian
The House in Poplar Woods, by K.E. Ormsbee, at Milliebot Reads
The House with Chicken Legs, by Sophie Anderson, at Waking Brain Cells
Inkinling, by Kenneth Oppel, at Always in the Middle
The Jamie Drake Equation, by Chrisopher Edge, at
The Language of Spells, by Garret Wyre, at Books4yourkids
The Last Battle, by C.S. Lewis, at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles
Ogre Enchanted, by Gail Carson Levine, at Pages Unbound
Ottoline and the Yellow Cat, by Chris Riddell, at Pages Unbound
The Portal and the Veil, by Ted Sanders, at This Kid Reviews Books
The Scroll of Kings, by Sarah Prineas, at Off the Shelf Reviews
The Storm Runner, by J.C. Cervantes, at Book Dust Magic
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at Semicolon
The Turnkey of Highgate Cemetery, by Allison Rushby, at Cracking the Cover
Unicorn Quest, by Kamila Benko, at alibrarymama
Wundersmith: the Calling of Morrigan Crow, by Jessica Townsend, at Diva Booknerd
Lots of mini-reviews from Cybils reading at Library Chicken
Authors and Interviews
Tara Dairman (The Great Hibernation) at Bas Bleu
There's a new blog in town--Spooky Middle Grade, a collaboration of authors; here's an intro post, wherein authors share why they write spooky stories, and why these stories are important year round
Other Good Stuff
.A look at popular middle grade fantasy series, at Redeemed Reader
I love the posts showcasing what's new in the UK at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books!
11/17/18
Dactyl HIll Squad, by Daniel José Older
There is a special fun that comes when reading a book in which it's clear the author enjoyed the books nifty premise immensely (or at least gives that impression). The premise of Dactyl Hill Squad, by Daniel José Older (Arthur A. Levine, MG, Sept. 2018), is that instead of horses, 19th-century USA relied on dinosaurs and pterosaurs for transportation.
The story takes place in New York City, around the time of the Battle of Gettysburg. Magdalys Roca, an insignificant resident of the Colored Orphan Asylum, is away from the Asylum for a treat with her friends, when the Daft Riots break out, and New York City becomes a battleground. Richard Riker, an evil magistrate of the city, has his greedy eyes set on the orphans, who can be shipped out of the city as human cargo. The orphanage is burned down, the 100 plus kids there are missing. But Magdalys and her friends escape, and flee to Brooklyn.
There they find a group of men and women dedicated to stopping Riker and his ilk, Magdalys and the other kids determined to rescue their fellow orphans, now captives. And it turns out that Magdalys is just the secret weapon that's needed for the job. She has a rare ability to communicate mind to mind with the dinos and pterosaurs...and the determination to do what ever it takes to win!
It's a bright book (in the sense of bright as not dull)--it makes clear pictures in the reader's mind, it's, fast-paced, and the dino-wrangling is enjoyable mind candy. There's a serious depth to it though--though it's all good fun, the wrongs that are being fought against really happened. Kids wanting dinosaur fantasy fun and fighting won't be disappointed, but they'll also learn something. There's good back matter, with historical information, dino information, and a note on "weapons and words." Shakespearean dramatics also are part of the background, with the plays being embraced and played w by a famous African American actor who was part of Magdalys' escape to Brooklyn (it's nice to see Shakespear included as something fun and friendly). I myself especially appreciated the thought given to how each type of dinosaur would be useful, both in battle and in daily life.
Short answer--I enjoyed it, and would recommend it in a sec to kids who enjoy historical fiction, gun fights, and dinosaurs!
11/16/18
Honor Among Thieves, by Rachel Caine and Ann Aguirre
I have family coming to stay for Thanksgiving, and one of the most pressing things I need to do is to read all the books I have out from the library because my house looks like someone has vomited books all over it. In this diligent spirit, I have spent the last four hours reading Honor Among Thieves, by Rachel Caine and Ann Aguirre (Katherine Tegan Books, YA, February 2018), in a single sitting, all 465 pages of it, so clearly I found it engrossing as all get out!
A ways in the future, humanity was on the verge of wiping itself out when the Leviathans appeared from out among the stars, saving us from ourselves. All they wanted in exchange was to chose 100 young men and women each year to voyage with them. Most came home after one year. Others journeyed on, and did not return.
Black teenager Zara Cole lives as a petty criminal in one of the few unrehabed parts of urban Earth, and so she never expected to be one of the chosen ones. But she can't refuse the golden ticket. So she finds herself, with another young woman, Beatriz, on board Nadim, sentient, living creature who flies through space. It's a bit of an adjustment to be living inside Nadim, but Zara feels strangely at home, and as her bond with Nadim deepens, she can't imagine being anywhere else.
But though the media have spun the arrival of the Leviathans into a glorious deliverance, Zara, suspicious by nature and nurture, has always wondered if there's a con at work. And indeed, all is not well out in space...
Beatriz, Zara, and Nadim play of each other very well as they get to know each other, and I enjoyed watching them bond. There's smart-alecky bantering to lighten the mood, some moments where I was deeply moved, and intellectual pleasure from guessing where the plot was going (which wasn't hard to do). Nadim is a bit like a manic pixie dream girl in ungendered sentient ship form, and it's a bit of an insta love between Nadim and Zara, but I was able to take this in stride. Zara and Beatriz both have considerable abilities, both intellectual and physical, that are almost a bit much, but since they were chosen out of all of humanity, I felt it was allowable for them to be exceptional.
All in all it was a package of things I enjoy, and it took no effort at all to sit and read it more or less straight through.
A ways in the future, humanity was on the verge of wiping itself out when the Leviathans appeared from out among the stars, saving us from ourselves. All they wanted in exchange was to chose 100 young men and women each year to voyage with them. Most came home after one year. Others journeyed on, and did not return.
Black teenager Zara Cole lives as a petty criminal in one of the few unrehabed parts of urban Earth, and so she never expected to be one of the chosen ones. But she can't refuse the golden ticket. So she finds herself, with another young woman, Beatriz, on board Nadim, sentient, living creature who flies through space. It's a bit of an adjustment to be living inside Nadim, but Zara feels strangely at home, and as her bond with Nadim deepens, she can't imagine being anywhere else.
But though the media have spun the arrival of the Leviathans into a glorious deliverance, Zara, suspicious by nature and nurture, has always wondered if there's a con at work. And indeed, all is not well out in space...
Beatriz, Zara, and Nadim play of each other very well as they get to know each other, and I enjoyed watching them bond. There's smart-alecky bantering to lighten the mood, some moments where I was deeply moved, and intellectual pleasure from guessing where the plot was going (which wasn't hard to do). Nadim is a bit like a manic pixie dream girl in ungendered sentient ship form, and it's a bit of an insta love between Nadim and Zara, but I was able to take this in stride. Zara and Beatriz both have considerable abilities, both intellectual and physical, that are almost a bit much, but since they were chosen out of all of humanity, I felt it was allowable for them to be exceptional.
All in all it was a package of things I enjoy, and it took no effort at all to sit and read it more or less straight through.
11/13/18
Time Jumpers: Stealing the Sword, by Wendy Mass, for Timeslip Tuesday
Time Jumpers: Stealing the Sword, by Wendy Mass (August 2018), is the start of a new series in the Scholastic Branches line, aimed at kids just beginning to read easy chapter books independently. It's the story of two siblings, Chase and Ava, who we meet in a flea market where they are helping sell their mom's art. Exploring the flea market, they spot an old suitcase that has a strange appeal for them...and the manager of that stall lets them have it for nothing. An angry man comes demanding that she give him that very suitcase, but she stands her ground and claims she doesn't know what he's talking about.
Clearly, it is a special piece of luggage....and when Chase and Ava open it, they find an array of strange objects, one of which looks like a dragon-headed doorknob. When it almost flies into Chase's hand, the two kids find themselves whisked back in time to the court of King Arthur!
All is not well back in the past; Merlin and the King are both in trouble, and the same angry man from the flea market is back in the past as well, and seems just as angry.... But the dragon-headed doorknob (which is Not a doorknob!) is just what it needed to save the day.
It is a perfectly fine story for what it is; it's meant for an audience still not quite ready for the Magic Tree House book (I actually found the writing, on a very basic work level, more interesting than Magic Treehouse, but I am scarred for life by having to listen to MTH books on audio where the fact that it is "….said Jack" and …."said Annie" over and over is inescapable). The siblings are supportive of each other, and though there's not quite enough time for them to become fully developed characters, Mass does quite bit in that direction, rather skillfully. The addition of the sinister bad guy adds interest to the story, and a mystery that is yet to be resolved.
So it's fine, like I said, and the illustrations on every page will help kids still acquiring reading conviction enjoy the book.
But as a fan of time travel and medieval fiction...it was disappointing. We don't get any educational value out of the time travel experience; there's almost no detail about the past, except that this being King Arthur's court, there are tapestries and knights and stone walls....And of course it's not even a real past, though never does the story acknowledge that this high medieval King Arthur is just a story. I feel Wendy Mass could have pushed her word limit to get a bit more history in there....Oh well.
Clearly, it is a special piece of luggage....and when Chase and Ava open it, they find an array of strange objects, one of which looks like a dragon-headed doorknob. When it almost flies into Chase's hand, the two kids find themselves whisked back in time to the court of King Arthur!
All is not well back in the past; Merlin and the King are both in trouble, and the same angry man from the flea market is back in the past as well, and seems just as angry.... But the dragon-headed doorknob (which is Not a doorknob!) is just what it needed to save the day.
It is a perfectly fine story for what it is; it's meant for an audience still not quite ready for the Magic Tree House book (I actually found the writing, on a very basic work level, more interesting than Magic Treehouse, but I am scarred for life by having to listen to MTH books on audio where the fact that it is "….said Jack" and …."said Annie" over and over is inescapable). The siblings are supportive of each other, and though there's not quite enough time for them to become fully developed characters, Mass does quite bit in that direction, rather skillfully. The addition of the sinister bad guy adds interest to the story, and a mystery that is yet to be resolved.
So it's fine, like I said, and the illustrations on every page will help kids still acquiring reading conviction enjoy the book.
But as a fan of time travel and medieval fiction...it was disappointing. We don't get any educational value out of the time travel experience; there's almost no detail about the past, except that this being King Arthur's court, there are tapestries and knights and stone walls....And of course it's not even a real past, though never does the story acknowledge that this high medieval King Arthur is just a story. I feel Wendy Mass could have pushed her word limit to get a bit more history in there....Oh well.
11/11/18
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (11/11/18)
Welcome to this week's round-up; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
Archie Greene and the Alchemists’ Curse by D.D. Everest, at This Kid Reviews Books
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford, at Puss Reboots and Magic Fiction Since Potter
The Darkdeep, by Allie Condie and Brendan Reichs, at Semicolon
Freya and the Magic Jewel, by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams, at Pages Unbound Reviews
The Girl Who Saved Christmas, by Matt Haig, at Jill's Book Blog
The Girl with the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis, at The Story Sanctuary and YA Book Nerd
The House in Poplar Wood, by K.E. Ormsbee, at From the Biblio Files
Hurricane Katrina Rescue (Ranger in Time), by Kate Messner, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, at Charlotte's Library
The Language of Spells, by Garret Weyr, at The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Max Tilt: 80 Days or Die, by Peter Lerangis, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Music Boxes, by Tonja Drecker, at Laurisa White Reyes
Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow (Nevermoor, Book 1) by Jessica Townsend, at Hidden in Pages
The Royal Rabbits of London, by Santa Montefiore, at From the Biblio Files
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein, at alibrarymama
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at Redeemed Reader
The Train to Impossible Pages, by P.G. Bell, at Magic Fiction Since Potter
Twilight of the Elves (Adventurers Guild 2), by Zack Loran Clark and Nick Eliopulos, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
Unwritten, by Tara Gilboy, at Lost in a Good Book
Watch Hallow, by Gregory Funaro, at Middle Grade Mafia
Whiskerella, by Ursula Vernon, at Becky's Book Reviews
Winterhouse, by Ben Guterson, at alibrarymama
Authors and Interviews
Melanie Crowder (The Lighthouse Between Worlds) at Literary Rambles
E.D. Baker (More Than a Princess) at Publishers Weekly
Other Good Stuff
Charles Vess on Working with Ursula Le Guin on the illustred version of The Books of Earthsea, at Tor
The Reviews
Archie Greene and the Alchemists’ Curse by D.D. Everest, at This Kid Reviews Books
Bluecrowne, by Kate Milford, at Puss Reboots and Magic Fiction Since Potter
The Darkdeep, by Allie Condie and Brendan Reichs, at Semicolon
Freya and the Magic Jewel, by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams, at Pages Unbound Reviews
The Girl Who Saved Christmas, by Matt Haig, at Jill's Book Blog
The Girl with the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis, at The Story Sanctuary and YA Book Nerd
The House in Poplar Wood, by K.E. Ormsbee, at From the Biblio Files
Hurricane Katrina Rescue (Ranger in Time), by Kate Messner, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, at Charlotte's Library
The Language of Spells, by Garret Weyr, at The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia
Max Tilt: 80 Days or Die, by Peter Lerangis, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Music Boxes, by Tonja Drecker, at Laurisa White Reyes
Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow (Nevermoor, Book 1) by Jessica Townsend, at Hidden in Pages
The Royal Rabbits of London, by Santa Montefiore, at From the Biblio Files
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein, at alibrarymama
Sweep, by Jonathan Auxier, at Redeemed Reader
The Train to Impossible Pages, by P.G. Bell, at Magic Fiction Since Potter
Twilight of the Elves (Adventurers Guild 2), by Zack Loran Clark and Nick Eliopulos, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
Unwritten, by Tara Gilboy, at Lost in a Good Book
Watch Hallow, by Gregory Funaro, at Middle Grade Mafia
Whiskerella, by Ursula Vernon, at Becky's Book Reviews
Winterhouse, by Ben Guterson, at alibrarymama
Authors and Interviews
Melanie Crowder (The Lighthouse Between Worlds) at Literary Rambles
E.D. Baker (More Than a Princess) at Publishers Weekly
Other Good Stuff
Charles Vess on Working with Ursula Le Guin on the illustred version of The Books of Earthsea, at Tor
11/10/18
The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh
Not my greatest blogging week, but at least I'm getting one post up!
The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh (HarperCollins, middle grade, July 2018), is the sequel to last year's fantastic horror story, Spirit Hunters. In that book, Harper Raine learns to use her gift for communicating with spirits, with the help of her Korean grandmother, and saves her little brother from a horrible ghost. Now she's off to a family vacation on a remote Caribbean island, and has a bad feeling about it. With justification, as it turns out to be demon infested. Some years ago, 13 people were found horrible killed, and the mystery of their deaths was never solved. It quickly becomes clear to Harper that supernatural forces were to blame, and when she experiences visions of what happened back then, she learns that it's not ghosts she's dealing with; it's demons. And the demons are determined to claim more victims so that they can use their life force to break into our world and run amok.
Her grandmother can't come to island to help her, so Harper must take the lead on freeing the trapped spirits inside the demons, and sending them away from our world before they can kill again. Fortunately her best friend, Dayo, has come along for the trip too, and she's a stalwart ally, but it is all very touch and go, and the horrible death of her little brother, and other young people, is only a whisker away!
Spirit Hunters is a stronger book, because it deals more deeply with mundane concerns of middle school kids--moving to a new town, family tensions, friendship worries, wondering if the fact that you see ghosts makes you weird. Here the story is almost entirely focused on the immediate threat, and that's certainly enough to keep the pages turning, but though the supporting characters are all clearly drawn and there's a mystery to solve about the past deaths, it's not quite so emotionally interesting to me story-wise.
That being said, kids who love horror (and it's pretty horrible, with some nasty disemboweling) will eat it up!
The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh (HarperCollins, middle grade, July 2018), is the sequel to last year's fantastic horror story, Spirit Hunters. In that book, Harper Raine learns to use her gift for communicating with spirits, with the help of her Korean grandmother, and saves her little brother from a horrible ghost. Now she's off to a family vacation on a remote Caribbean island, and has a bad feeling about it. With justification, as it turns out to be demon infested. Some years ago, 13 people were found horrible killed, and the mystery of their deaths was never solved. It quickly becomes clear to Harper that supernatural forces were to blame, and when she experiences visions of what happened back then, she learns that it's not ghosts she's dealing with; it's demons. And the demons are determined to claim more victims so that they can use their life force to break into our world and run amok.
Her grandmother can't come to island to help her, so Harper must take the lead on freeing the trapped spirits inside the demons, and sending them away from our world before they can kill again. Fortunately her best friend, Dayo, has come along for the trip too, and she's a stalwart ally, but it is all very touch and go, and the horrible death of her little brother, and other young people, is only a whisker away!
Spirit Hunters is a stronger book, because it deals more deeply with mundane concerns of middle school kids--moving to a new town, family tensions, friendship worries, wondering if the fact that you see ghosts makes you weird. Here the story is almost entirely focused on the immediate threat, and that's certainly enough to keep the pages turning, but though the supporting characters are all clearly drawn and there's a mystery to solve about the past deaths, it's not quite so emotionally interesting to me story-wise.
That being said, kids who love horror (and it's pretty horrible, with some nasty disemboweling) will eat it up!
11/4/18
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/4/18)
Welcome to this week's round-up; let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
The Adventurer's Guide to Successful Escapes, by Wade Albert White, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
The Adventures of a Girl Called Bicycle, by Christina Uss, at Fuse#8
Amoung the Hidden, by Margaret Peterson Haddix, at Proseandkahn
Begone the Raggedy Witches, by Celine Kiernan, at Randomly Reading
The Boy, the Bird, and the Coffin Maker, by Matilda Woods, at Rosi Hollenbeck
The Frame-Up, by Wendy McLeod MacKnight, at alibarymama
Exile, by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Frostfire, by Jamie Smith, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Grump, by Liesl Shurtliff, at Semicolon
Inkling, by Kenneth Opel, at Imaginary Friends
Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Let Sleeping Dragons Lie, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Charlotte's Library
Midnight Reynolds and the Spectral Transformer, by Catherine Holt, at Sharon the Librarian
Monstrous Devices, by Damien Love, at Books4yourkids
The Mortification of Fovea Munson, by Mary Winn Heider, at A Backwards Story
The Nameless Hero (Joshua Dread #2), by Lee Bacon, at Say What?
Skulduggery Pleasant, by Derek Landy, at Geo Librarian
Small Spaces, by Katherine Arden, at Always in the Middle
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein, at Charlotte's Library
The Snow Witch, by Rosie Boyes, at Kitty Cat at the Library
The Stone Girl's Story, by Sarah Beth Durst, at From the Biblio Files
The Storm Runner, by J.C. Cervantes, at The Reader Bee
The Train to Impossible Places, by P.G. Bell, at Laura Noakes
The Wild Book, by Juan Villoro, at alibrarymama
To Catch a Thief: an Endless Quest Book, by Matt Forbeck, at The Write Path
Two at Falling Letters-- The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, and Fesitval of Ghosts, by William Alexander
Two at alibrary mama-- Last (Endling #1) by Katherine Applegate, and Heartseeker, by Melinda Beatty
Two at Ms. Yingling Reads--The Girl With the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis, and Let Sleeping Dragons Lie, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams
Authors and Interviews
Jan Eldrege (Witch Girl) at Alittlebutalot
Adam Gidwitz, on his podcast Grimm, Grimmer, and Grimmest, at Educating Alice
Other Good Stuff
A look at the busy reading of an Elementary/Middle Grade Cybils panelist, at A Library Chicken
"How Narnia and Harry Potter Wrestle with Death and Rewrite Christianity" at Tor
Afun dreary Edward Gorey quiz at The BookList Reader
The Reviews
The Adventurer's Guide to Successful Escapes, by Wade Albert White, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
The Adventures of a Girl Called Bicycle, by Christina Uss, at Fuse#8
Amoung the Hidden, by Margaret Peterson Haddix, at Proseandkahn
Begone the Raggedy Witches, by Celine Kiernan, at Randomly Reading
The Boy, the Bird, and the Coffin Maker, by Matilda Woods, at Rosi Hollenbeck
The Frame-Up, by Wendy McLeod MacKnight, at alibarymama
Exile, by Shannon Messenger, at Say What?
Frostfire, by Jamie Smith, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books
Grump, by Liesl Shurtliff, at Semicolon
Inkling, by Kenneth Opel, at Imaginary Friends
Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Let Sleeping Dragons Lie, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Charlotte's Library
Midnight Reynolds and the Spectral Transformer, by Catherine Holt, at Sharon the Librarian
Monstrous Devices, by Damien Love, at Books4yourkids
The Mortification of Fovea Munson, by Mary Winn Heider, at A Backwards Story
The Nameless Hero (Joshua Dread #2), by Lee Bacon, at Say What?
Skulduggery Pleasant, by Derek Landy, at Geo Librarian
Small Spaces, by Katherine Arden, at Always in the Middle
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein, at Charlotte's Library
The Snow Witch, by Rosie Boyes, at Kitty Cat at the Library
The Stone Girl's Story, by Sarah Beth Durst, at From the Biblio Files
The Storm Runner, by J.C. Cervantes, at The Reader Bee
The Train to Impossible Places, by P.G. Bell, at Laura Noakes
The Wild Book, by Juan Villoro, at alibrarymama
To Catch a Thief: an Endless Quest Book, by Matt Forbeck, at The Write Path
Two at Falling Letters-- The Island of Monsters, by Ellen Oh, and Fesitval of Ghosts, by William Alexander
Two at alibrary mama-- Last (Endling #1) by Katherine Applegate, and Heartseeker, by Melinda Beatty
Two at Ms. Yingling Reads--The Girl With the Dragon Heart, by Stephanie Burgis, and Let Sleeping Dragons Lie, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams
Authors and Interviews
Jan Eldrege (Witch Girl) at Alittlebutalot
Adam Gidwitz, on his podcast Grimm, Grimmer, and Grimmest, at Educating Alice
Other Good Stuff
A look at the busy reading of an Elementary/Middle Grade Cybils panelist, at A Library Chicken
"How Narnia and Harry Potter Wrestle with Death and Rewrite Christianity" at Tor
A
11/3/18
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein
Snared: Escape to the Above, by Adam Jay Epstein (Imprint, June 2018), is a fun adventure fantasy for the young end of middle grade; if you have a kid of ten or so who's intrigued by Dungeons and Dragons style fantasy, offer this book!
The only life young Wily has ever known has been spent down in a monster-filled maze of caverns, making traps to snare adventurers searching for his masters treasure. Fortunately, many of the monsters are his friends, and one young hobgoblet girl, Roveeka is like a sister to him, even though he himself is a strange sort of hobgoblet, not shaped quite like all the others. And fortunately, Wily enjoys creating puzzle and traps (cleaning up giant snail slime and pushing boulders back into place not so much).
No adventures ever make it anywhere close to the treasure. And Wiley never goes outside. But the boredom of this state of things is relieved when a party of adventures arrive who don't play by the rules. The elf, the fighter with the magical detached arm, and the earth golem make it through alive, and as well as the treasure, they want to take him away with them too; his skill with traps makes him valuable in his own right
So Wily, and Roveeka, who comes too, get to see the Above world. Though it is wonderous in many ways, it is a place of danger as well. It is ruled by a fanatic king, who is determined to bring order to everyone's lives, kidnapping them with his mechanical minions to live perfectly structured lives in his mechanical city. Wily and the adventures, against their will, find themselves not looking for treasure, but looking for a way to bring the tyrant down, and, along the way, to solve the mystery of Wily's parents.
The strength of the story is the charm of the found family of the two kids, human and hobgoblet, and the adventures. The adventures are not at first interested in the kids except as a means to an end (treasure enough to escape the kingdom), but gradually strong bonds form, and that's a pleasure to read. It's also lots of fun to see the above world through Wily's eyes, but I wish his innocence had lasted longer...I think the strangeness should have lasted longer than it did.
The adventure part is fun too, and any kid who enjoys tricksy dangers and creepy creatures will be enthralled. Suspension of disbelief is required with regard to Wily's mechanical brilliance (he manages to quickly whip together a propeller plane at one point), but it's a fantasy, so one can let that slid.
In short, it's not a particularly complicated book, and the final challenge is perhaps too easily overcome (it's a bit "voila, a happy ending!), but it has charm, and I think it's one that works well for its target audience, though I myself didn't love it enough to imagine wanting to re-read it.
The only life young Wily has ever known has been spent down in a monster-filled maze of caverns, making traps to snare adventurers searching for his masters treasure. Fortunately, many of the monsters are his friends, and one young hobgoblet girl, Roveeka is like a sister to him, even though he himself is a strange sort of hobgoblet, not shaped quite like all the others. And fortunately, Wily enjoys creating puzzle and traps (cleaning up giant snail slime and pushing boulders back into place not so much).
No adventures ever make it anywhere close to the treasure. And Wiley never goes outside. But the boredom of this state of things is relieved when a party of adventures arrive who don't play by the rules. The elf, the fighter with the magical detached arm, and the earth golem make it through alive, and as well as the treasure, they want to take him away with them too; his skill with traps makes him valuable in his own right
So Wily, and Roveeka, who comes too, get to see the Above world. Though it is wonderous in many ways, it is a place of danger as well. It is ruled by a fanatic king, who is determined to bring order to everyone's lives, kidnapping them with his mechanical minions to live perfectly structured lives in his mechanical city. Wily and the adventures, against their will, find themselves not looking for treasure, but looking for a way to bring the tyrant down, and, along the way, to solve the mystery of Wily's parents.
The strength of the story is the charm of the found family of the two kids, human and hobgoblet, and the adventures. The adventures are not at first interested in the kids except as a means to an end (treasure enough to escape the kingdom), but gradually strong bonds form, and that's a pleasure to read. It's also lots of fun to see the above world through Wily's eyes, but I wish his innocence had lasted longer...I think the strangeness should have lasted longer than it did.
The adventure part is fun too, and any kid who enjoys tricksy dangers and creepy creatures will be enthralled. Suspension of disbelief is required with regard to Wily's mechanical brilliance (he manages to quickly whip together a propeller plane at one point), but it's a fantasy, so one can let that slid.
In short, it's not a particularly complicated book, and the final challenge is perhaps too easily overcome (it's a bit "voila, a happy ending!), but it has charm, and I think it's one that works well for its target audience, though I myself didn't love it enough to imagine wanting to re-read it.
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