It's YA in that it's about high school kids, with dating moving towards real romance, but it's a fine read for older middle grade kids too. These are high school kids still on the younger end of things, still dressing up for Halloween, still just starting out. There's some familiar school drama--some misunderstandings, some strains in friendships--that is not quite the high stakes of books that are firmly young adult.
1/10/22
The Forgotten Memories of Vera Glass, by Anna Priemaza
It's YA in that it's about high school kids, with dating moving towards real romance, but it's a fine read for older middle grade kids too. These are high school kids still on the younger end of things, still dressing up for Halloween, still just starting out. There's some familiar school drama--some misunderstandings, some strains in friendships--that is not quite the high stakes of books that are firmly young adult.
1/9/22
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (1/9/21)
No Humans Allowed (Dungeons and Dragons Academy) by Maleleine Roux, at Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub
Gods, Spirits, and Totoros: Exploring Miyazaki’s Fantasy World, at Tor
1/8/22
Relatively Normal Secrets, by C. W. Allen
But in any even, I have a review today gosh darn it! Relatively Normal Secrets, by C. W. Allen (September 2021, Cinnabar Moth Publishing), is a fun portal fantasy/science fiction story.
Zed and his sister Tuesday know that their parents are odd, and Tuesday in particular is determined to discover the secrets she's sure they are hiding. When their parents leave on a last minute "business trip," leaving behind Nyx, their mother's huge guard dog who has never left her side before, the kids decide to search the house for anything that might shed light on their strange parents. But this search is cut short when thuggish intruders, armed with magical, shapeshifting weapons, show up. And Nyx the dog bursts into flames and attacks them. The two kids run from the house into the woods, and their day gets even weirder when a portal opens, transporting them to the world of Falinnheim, where Nyx is mysteriously there with them.
1/2/22
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (1/2/22)
Jadie in Five Dimensions, by Dianne K. Salerni, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Honest June, by Tina Wells, at Cindy's Love of Books and Nine Bookish LivesThe Lost Amulet, by Mary Farrugia, at Tinted Edges
A Wish in the Dark, by Christina Soontornvat, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)
two at A Library Mama--The Last Cuentista, by Donna Barba Higuera, and The Monster Missions, by Laura Martin
Authors and Interviews
Sasha Thomas (The Slug Queen Chronicles) at Storyteller Station (podcast)
Other Good Stuff
The Nerdie Awards for MG fiction include some great sci fi/fantasy books
The finalists for the Cybils Awards have been announced; here's the elementary/middle grade speculative fiction list! (and of course it wasn't possible to shortlist every great books...Here's panelist Valinora Troy on some others she loved)
1/1/22
This year's EMG Spec fic Cybils Shortlist!
And here they are, this year's Middle Grade Speculative Fiction Finalists!!!
- Amari and the Night Brothers (Supernatural Investigations #1) by B.B. Alston
- Cece Rios and the Desert of Souls (Cece Rios #1) by Kaela Rivera
- Kiki Kallira Breaks a Kingdom by Sangu Mandanna
- The Last Cuentista by Donna Barba Higuera
- Ophie’s Ghosts by Justina Ireland
- Too Bright to See by Kyle Lukoff
- The Troubled Girls of Dragomir Academy by Anne Ursu
12/19/21
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (12/19/21)
12/14/21
The Bookshop of Dust and Dreams, by Mindy Thompson
Yay me! I have a Timeslip Tuesday post! I also have a house that is slowly becoming habitable after a home renovation project, which involved moving the washer/dryer from a small back room to the pantry, freeing up the whole ex-laundry room for books. The floor of this room has now been varnished, the walls (mostly) painted, and bookshelves are back in place. The books in this room are all stock for my retirement plan (a new and used children's bookstore), though there are shelves of stock in many other rooms and in all the closets too, and on the top shelves in the kitchen that are too high for me to reach. So basically I am living in a used bookstore, a bookstore of dust (thanks to the floor sanding) and dreams, just like the title of today's book--The Bookshop of Dust and Dreams, by Mindy Thompson (middle grade, Oct 21, 2021, Viking Books)
Poppy also lives in a bookstore, named Rhyme and Reason. It is the heart of her world. It is also magical--its doors open to any place and time where there is someone who needs the respite a bookstore can offer. The year of the story is 1944, the place is Sutton, New York, and young men are starting to return from war. Poppy's big brother, Al, didn't go to war because of his asthma, but his best friend Carl did. When Carl is killed, Al is crushed not just by grief but by a huge sense of wrongness....and becomes determiend to use the bookstore's time travelling magic to save his friend, even though this is utterly forbidden by the Council that governs the world's magical bookstores.
When Al starts pushing the magic towards his goal, it has dark and dire consequences. The bookstore magic is a beacon of light against a terrible darkness, but now the darkness starts to find a way in. Things go wrong in the shop, and Poppy's father becomes very ill. Al isn't interested in the store anymore, and Poppy is basically the only person keeping it going. As Al becomes almost entirely a creature of darkness, Poppy struggles to pull him back from the abyss before it is too late...not just for her brother, but for the magical bookstores.
And she does set things right, with the help of two friends she makes in the magical bookstore world during this crisis, and with a time travelling trip of her own to a battlefield in Europe, the one in which Carl is killed. But it is a bittersweet ending....
The bookstore is of course a wonderful setting for a story, and the stress and anxiety Poppy goes through makes the story gripping (especially for those of us who like stories of kids desperately trying to keep the family business going, a niche subgenre I am fond of)! Lonely kids will relate, kids with older siblings going down dark roads will have the heartstrings pulled hard, as will kids who are forced to take on the work of grownups before they are ready for it. That being said, the playful magic of the bookstore never quite becomes overshadowed by the threat of the Darkness, although it came close (I found the threat of the darkness the least interesting part of the book, actually; existential magical threats aren't as interesting to me as small details of daily life).
(I'm a bit surprised by the bit I remember most clearly--two characters from different time periods both like to sit in the same chair, and get into fierce arguments about it. Finally, Poppy gets fed up with their bickering, and instead of just getting annoyed as she usually does, she asks each of them why that particular chair, and when she knows their reasons, she's able to solve the conflict for good. A useful little life lesson that I appreciated!)
12/12/21
this week's round-up of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (12/12/21)
The Dragon's Blood (Explorer Academy #6), by Trudi Trueitt, at Say What? and Sally's Bookshelf
Three at alibrarymama--Willodeen, by Katherine Applegate, The Beatryce Prophecy. by Kate DiCamillo, and Robber Girl, by Franny Billingsley
Three at alittlebutalot - Greta and the Ghost Hunters, by Sam Copeland, Stuntboy, In the Meantime, by Jason Reynolds, and Peanut Jones and the Illustrated City, by Rob Biddulph
Authors and Interviews
Seanan McGuire (The Up-and-Under series) at Middle Grade Ninja
12/11/21
The Last Cuentista, by Donna Barba Higuera
Halley's comet has been knocked off course, and is about to smash into Earth. Petra Peña is one of the lucky ones who gets a chance to flee across space to a new home, and though her heart breaks to leave her grandmother, she's determined to take with her all her grandmother's stories, and as many other stories from Earth that she can cram into her head. But instead of waking up from stasis a few hundred years later at the planet that will be her new home, with her parents and brother next to her, she wakes up to a dystopian nightmare.
The ship has been overtaken by zealots of the Collective (who believe the group is all that is important, and that conformity and unthinking cooperation are the path toward peace, because when everyone is the same there is no reason for war). All the sleeping colonists have been brainwashed as they travelled through space, and have been awakened in bits and dribbles during the journey, to serve the cause of the Collective. They remember nothing of their former lives on Earth.
Petra is one of the last to be woken, and the brainwashing did not work on her. She remembers everything...all the stories her abuelita told her, all the books she read, all her love for her family, are still there. And so she sets out to thwart the Collective by making the planet they've finally reached into a home for herself and a handful of other children, a place where she can tell her stories, and new stories can be made.
It is not a comfortable read. It is a powerful, wrenching, disturbing one. I couldn't read it all in one sitting even though the writing was great, Petra was a great heroine, and the story was tremendously compelling. Perhaps the target audience (who I'd put at 10-13 years old) won't find it as emotionally difficult; young readers are better, I think, at taking fictional darkness in their stride...
Happily it ends (after an extra sharp bit of heart-ache) at a happy and hopeful point. I wish I could relax and assume that now everything will be fine....but there is lots of room for a sequel that would be another emotional wringer....
Middle grade science fiction is fairly thin on the ground compared to fantasy, and there are very few books about kids travelling through space and exploring exo-planets (the Zero series, by Dan Wells, and Sovereign, by Jeff Hirsch, are the only ones that come to mind). I very much enjoyed the parts of The Last Cuentista that involved Petra's work as a biologist (the role the Collective determined for her) on the planet. But though this was something of respite from the tension of the Collective controlled space ship, it was overhung by the wrongness that what should have been a magical experience shared with her family was instead part of a desperate child's struggle to find a way to be free to remember and to dream.
It's a powerful, memorable, compelling, terrifying story. I have one reservation regarding disability rep. though--Petra has retina pigmentosa, and right at the beginning it's made clear that this is already having a negative impact on her vision. But once she wakes up from stasis, it becomes back-burnered, and we don't hear about it even when she's on the surface of the planet, with strange vistas all around her, or sneaking around the space ship in dim lighting....there are maybe two more mentions of it, with no substance. I felt a little cheated by this, but not enough to substantively dim my admiration for the book as a whole.
disclaimer: review copy received for Cybils Award consideration.
12/5/21
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (12/5/21)
The Golden Dreidel, by Ellen Kusher, illustrated by Kevin Keele, at Sydney Taylor Shmooze
11/29/21
Guardians of Porthaven, by Shane Arbuthnott
11/28/21
no round-up this week
Instead of round-up the mg sci fi/fantasy post from this week, I get to go on a long long drive on the worst possible day of the year to do same in order to take my kid back to college.....
11/21/21
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/21/21)
Welcome to this week's round-up, in which I have nothing of my own to share because I have bitten off way more than I can chew in the home renovation department.....sigh. Let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
Aru Shah and the City of Gold, by Roshani Chokshi, at Sifa Elizabeth ReadsDragon Mountain, by Katie & Kevin Tsang, at Valinora Troy
Dragon’s Winter by Kandi J Wyatt, at The Faerie Review11/14/21
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/14/21)
Hi all! Here's what I found of interest to us fans of mg sci fi and fantasy this week; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
The Accidental Apprentice (Wilderlore #1), by Amanda Foody, at SemicolonBeasts and Beauty by Soman Chainani, at Fantasy Cafe
Beyond the Birch, by Torina Kingsley, at Quirky Cat's Fat StacksThe Unforgettable Logan Foster, by Shawn Peters, at Booklist
11/13/21
The Shadow Prince, by David Anthony Durham
Ash lives in an alternate ancient Egypt, where the gods walk among the mortals, and where solar tech has reached great heights (literally--cool solar powered flying ships!). But there's no reason the gods would want to come to Ash's village, out in the middle of the desert, and though there's solar tech, Ash and his guardian can't afford the cool things Ash would like. Ash's guardian has been training him fiercely all his life, in martial arts, survival, and learning, but Ash can't visualize a future beyond the backwater village that's all he's seen of the world.
On the night of his 12th birthday, that changes. His guardian explains that Ash was born on the same day s Prince Khufu, making him a candidate for the honor of serving as the princes shadow--a companion for life, tasked with protecting, and even dying, for the prince. And the next day a solar barge arrives to take Ash and his mentor to the royal capital, where the candidates will be pitted against each other. There can only be one shadow prince.
And so Ash takes part in five days of tests, each day orchestrated by a different deity. Demon slaying, battle with monsters, and impossible tasks await. It is expected that many candidates will be killed. Ash doesn't give himself great odds, but he's determined to try, and as he begins to see in Khufu someone he'd be glad to serve, his resolve stiffens.
Some of the other contenders are friendly, and form an alliance with Ash. Others are determined to win at any cost. And this group of shadow prince contenders faces an additional challenge. The god Set does not want any of them to survive, and uses his powers of chaos to interfere with the tests, making them even more horrendous, and there's tension in the royal family that also adds to the danger the kids are in.
It's tremendously gripping and readers who love dangerous contests will of course be hooked! The violence is not so great, though, that it will be off-putting to those who prefer more character-driven books; though the trials are violent they don't pit the kids directly against each other until the very last day, and there's plenty of time for Ash to develop the first real friendships of his life, and have his mind blown by the royal city and all its panoply.
So basically lots of really exciting stuff happens, some of it tense, some entertaining (I loved Prince Khufu's fierce little bouncing hippo protectors), and Ash is a good kid who's easy to cheer for. There are a lot of characters introduced, but the important ones are easy to track of. The Egyptian gods are incredibly powerful, and idiosyncratically weird, adding entertainment value and a Riordan-esque feel to the story. I loved the solar-punk alternate Egypt too--it was just straight out really cool.
Short answer-this book gave me Wings of Fire vibes, even though I can't do a point by point argument for this. Give it to your sixth graders, and they will love it!
(added kid appeal bonus--one of the contenders who are Ash's friends is a young lioness....)
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
11/9/21
Welcome to Dweeb Club, by Betsy Uhrig, for Timeslip Tuesday
At the start of seventh grade, Jason and his friend Steve are confronted with bewildering fair of clubs they could join. Amongst the panoply and promotion is one odd club, H.A.I.R. There's no description, nothing to try to make it alluring; there's just a piece of paper on which no one has signed their name. Jason and Steve seize the chance to be founding members....and when other kids see Glamorous Steve, as he's known, signing up, they do to.
So H.A.I.R. ends up with with 8 seventh graders, who are surprised to learn that the club will be in charge of monitoring the school's ritzy new security cameras (donated with the stipulation that H.A.I.R be created for this purpose). The kids are a mixed lot, but all are eager to mess with their new tech, and they are given a tiny room down in the basement, and start going through the security footage.
The footage proves more interesting then they could have guessed. They see themselves in the school cafeteria, five years in the future! None of them are happy about what they see.
And so they set themselves to figuring out what's going on, determined to change the future. In the processes there's social tension the way only 7th grade can be social tense, quite a few bits that made me chuckle, and many more that made me grin, some mayhem, and a very affectionate skunk....and the outcome is just what the instigator of the whole shebang would have wanted (or will be wanting, and will be inspired to set in motion....).
It's a quick and entertaining read, and it might inspire a few of the target audience to introspection about what they might change about themselves (one character, for instance, decides to embrace her inner nerd, another starts working on being less self-centered, etc.; the sort of things that are useful nudges for many 7th graders.). If you are looking for an oddball, funny sci-book with middle grade angst (and a skunk), this is a good pick!
(Oddball and quirky is not own personal favorite sort of sci fi, and I don't like being made to think of all the things I'd like future me to have nudged me to change, but despite that I enjoyed it quite a bit!)
11/7/21
this week's round-up of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (11/7/21)
Sara Pennypacker ( Pax: Journey Home) at The Horn Book
11/2/21
Time Villains, by Victor Piñeiro , for Timeslip Tuesday
Yay me! I have my Timeslip Tuesday act together this week, with Time Villains, by Victor Piñeiro (Sourcebooks, May, 2021). And it's an exciting one (as the title suggests)!
10/31/21
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blog (10/31/21)
Small Spaces series, by Katherine Arden, at Bookshelves of Doom, and Small Spaces and Dead Voices at Introverted Reader
Time Travel for Love and Profit, by Sarah Lariviere, at Time Travel Times TwoVashti Hardy (Crowfall) and Tom Huddleston (FloodWorld trilogy), at climate fiction writers league
Jessica Vitalis (The Wolf's Curse), at Smack Dab in the Middle
Ally Condie (The Darkdeep, coauthored with Brendan Reichs, at The Salt Lake Tribune
10/30/21
Archibald Finch and the Lost Witches, by Michel Guyon
Instead of his present, he finds an ancient globe, it surface covered not just with maps but with fantastical creatures. When, in a stroke of luck (?), he unlocks the globe so that it can spin again, he is drawn into it, and on into a world called Lemuria. It is a world of monsters--Marodors--who come in a slew of deadly, twisted shapes, and the only people living there are the girls dedicated to keeping themselves and their enclaves from falling prey to tooth and talon.
Though Archibald would be among the first to admit he's not much of a fighter, he has no choice but to join the girls who found him lost and confused in the monster infested wilderness. But Archibald, with his fresh perspective, see something in the monsters that the girls don't, and sees, as well, all the questions they aren't asking...
Hailee, back in the ordinary world, and traumatized by watching her brother disappear into the globe, is also faced with mysteries to unravel. Following a twisty path of clues, she too finds herself facing monsters...in human form.
500 years ago, girls were burned as witches. 500 years ago, an escape for them, to Lemuria, was crafted. But Lemuria was never a utopia; the evil that created the need for it warped it from the beginning, and is still very much alive and well...
I was not immediately hooked by this one. Archibald is not an appealing character; he's annoying, and anxious (the author himself says "To put it plainly, our hero is a bit of a wimp." And the story is told in the first person present, which isn't my favorite. But as the pages turned, I realized that I was reading one heck of a mystery. I also very much enjoyed the immersive look at the lives of the girl monster hunters, a world in which Archibald gets to grow into himself, becoming a character I enjoyed spending time with. I also liked Hailee very much, once she stopped being a unsympathetic big sister and became passionately determined to get her brother back. (I became resigned to the third person present, but never to the point of enjoying it....).
The book is generously illustrated with detailed, creepy black and white drawings, which I'm sure added value to people who are able to stop and look at pictures and appreciated them when they are reading (I have to force myself to do this, which I find jarring and uncomfortable, but I did go back and appreciate them after I was finished with the words).
But regardless, somewhat to my surprise, by the time I reached the end I was hooked, and I will happily (despite the choice of tense), continue on deeper into this maelstrom of magic and malevolence! Recommended in particular to young readers who love monster hunting; lots of really top-notch monster battling!)
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher