Kingston and the Echoes of Magic, by Rucker Moses and Theo Gangi, at Proseandkahn
Too Bright to See, by Kyle Lukoff, at Sonderbooks
Julian Randall (Pilar Ramirez and the Escape from Zafa) at Fuse #8
So I was eager to rejoin Thom as she tries to stop the Monkey King in his tracks. It is a pretty difficult proposition--she has to find her way back into the Heavens, and figure out if there is any weakness she can use against the Monkey King. Much of the story involves a quest for allies. Accompanied by her dragon friend, Kha, and a fox demon who was once a fairy, Thom tries to find someone who will help her get back to the Heavens before the Monkey King and his demons take over...though she's not at all sure what she'll do when she gets there!
Interestingly, the more she thinks about what the Monkey King wants--respect, and a place for demons in the Heavens--the more she can understand his point of view, though she can't condone his approach. Adding to her confusion are visits from the Monkey King's magical doubles--she can remember trusting him (though memories of betrayal are sharper). Her friendship with Kha is strained, and when she gets to the Heavens, she has to get the person she herself betrayed most unforgivably, the daughter of the Jade Emperor, to believe she knows what's she doing.
There's all the cultural richness that filled the first book, and plenty of adventures, but it's a bit more thought-provoking, in a good way. An excellent series for middle grade readers who enjoy kids having their lives upended by magical figures of legend, and a nice addition of Vietnamese mythology to the "books for kids who love Rick Riordan" genre. Thom is a very relatable kid (though the universal "finding one's self" middle school ARC is of course complicated by being the child of a deity, and also complicated by Thom's feeling out of place as a Vietnamese American kid) and even her sometimes questionable choices make sense for someone her age, and work well within the framework of the story.
This second book closes everything nicely, but I wouldn't mind more....
Mason and Ty were the best of friends, as close as it is possible for two twelve year old boys to be. But then new kid Ava arrives at their school, they both crush on her hard, and she unwittingly destroys their friendship when she picks Mason....even when they are 17, the wound is still raw, and leads to trouble that gets Mason expelled from school.
Then, bang. A car accident sends Mason back in time, and now he is 12 again, still remembering the original time-line. Knowing what went wrong last time, can he save his friendship with Ty? (and while he's at it, his dog from a fatal encounter with a Rotter-rooter truck, and his parents' marriage?)
It is not the deepest time-travel story in the world, but not without interest and entertainment. Mason #2 decides to shake his life up by joining the football team (and as one of the top geeky nerds of the school, the others being Ty and Clarisse, a girl whose been their third wheel for year). This is a shocker to everyone, and leads to some quite funny football bits). It hits one main bulls eye of the middle grade experience--friendships of childhood strained by adolescence, and the whole exploration of other possibilities and identities will ring true to the target audience.
I would have preferred it, I think, from a time travel perspective, if Mason had lived out the entirety of his new timeline; instead, he gets another blow to the head that shoots him back to being 17 again, and it's rather abrupt--17 the second time around is a mix of the original timeline and difference from his being 12 a second time, and the reader is presented with this rather abruptly. I would have liked more time exploring this, but I realize this isn't the point of the book....
In any event, it's fun, fast read, and its easy to imagine kids liking it lots, though as an adult, it mostly evokes even more reflections on what a do-over like this would involve for oneself....
The Reviews
The Counter Clockwise Heart, by Brian Farrey, at Where the Lost Boys Met
Haven: A Small Cat's Big Adventure, by Megan Wagner Lloyd, at Bookworm for KidsKelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts, by Erika Lewis, at Log Cabin Library and A Dance With Books
The Midnight Unicorn, by Alice Hemming, at Charlotte's LibraryThe Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at The Winged Pen
Pax, Journey Home, by Sara Pennypacker, at Not Acting My Age
Revenge of the Beast (The Beast and the Bethany #2), by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, at Get Kids into Books
A Storm of Sisters, by Michelle Harrison, at Bellis Does BooksWillow Moss and the Vanished Kingdom, by Dominque Valente, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads
Two at Book Page-Kelly Barnhill's The Ogress and the Orphans and Ethan M. Aldridge's The Legend of Brightblade
Authors and Interviews
David Anthony Durham (The Shadow Prince) at The Brown Bookshelf
Pam Muñoz Ryan (Solimar), at SLJErika Lewis (Kelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts)-- "The Benefits for Kids in Reading Fantasy" at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Beth McMullen (Secret of The Storm), at From the Mixed Up FilesLisa Stringfellow (A Comb of Wishes) at The Horn Book
Other Good Stuff
"7 of the Most Anticipated Middle Grade Fantasy Retellings" at Book RiotA close examination of heroine super powers in Cece Rios and the Desert of Souls at kidlitcraft
The story starts with two twin sisters being sent away in desperate haste by their mother, the Queen, when her wicked younger brother attacks to claim the crown for himself. One girl, Alette, is sent off with the Queen's sorcerer, and the other, Audrey, goes with their nurse. They have very different childhoods, with one raised in the wilds and learning magic, and the other raised in a peaceful village, learning baking. But each feels the lack of their twin...even though they don't know of each other's existence.
Then Alette learns the truth, and sets out, with her father figure, the sorcerer, to find her missing half...and fate indeed brings them together. Through the magic inherited from their mother, they can take the form of beautiful unicorns, which stands them in good steed on the fraught journey back to the city. There they find unexpected treachery, but are able to reclaim the throne, though only one can be queen....
Transforming into a unicorn is something sure to delight many young readers (and indeed I liked it too). And those readers will, I think, be more ready than I was to accept the unexpected magical encounters along the way (for adult me, one significant encounter presented me with much more magic than the world building thus far has led me to expect!). Young readers also won't be surprised by how easy it is in the end for the girls to take control of the court, which has a noticeable lack of power-hungry nobles, flunkies, and indeed, any semblance of people actually running the place!
I enjoyed seeing the sisters figuring out their relationship after being raised so differently. Fierce, wild, and magical Alette has trouble accepting Audrey, who has lots less flash and flamboyance, but strengths of her own. I always like a good sister story, and this did not disappoint in this regard.
Short answer--not necessarily one to read yourself if you are an adult fan of fantasy, but one that should delight the target audience. It is also the first book in a series, which is a plus if you have a unicorn loving bibliophile to find books for!
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
In The Amber Crane, by Malve von Hassell (YA, Odyssey Books, June 2021), a boy from the 17th century and a girl from the 20th cross paths in a moving story of war and perseverance. (content warning--there is a rape in the book)
Peter was born in Pomerania (on the Baltic coast, an area now split between Poland and Germany) just a few years into the thirty years war. Now a teenager, apprenticed to a master amber worker, war is all he's ever known. The armies of both sides have left a land full of refugees and memories of the dead, including Peter's older brother. Peter feels he can't compete with the shadow of his dashing brother, and his home, where his merchant father is on the verge of bankruptcy and his younger sister, Effie, is not like other girls--she is nonverbal, and non-neurotypical. And, soon after the book begins, she is raped and retreats even further away from other people. Peter is distressed but feels powerless to fix anything, and so he visits home infrequently. In his master's house, he has a place dreaming of being a journeyman, and working to make beautiful things of amber...the amber that washes ashore on the beaches that the powerful Guildmaster's have closed so that no-one can gather amber for themselves.
But one day, Peter, discouraged by life, wanders out onto the beach and finds two pieces of amber that call to him. And in defiance of the laws, he claims them, and starts, in the dark of night, to work them. One becomes a heart for Effie to wear (the amber is known to have healing properties). In the other, he sees a crane, and starts to set it free.
Magically, mysteriously, the amber sends Peter forward in time, where he meets a girl, a bit older than him, caught in her own war, WW II. Lioba is desperately travelling west ahead of the advancing Russian army, trying to make it back to her parent's home. His visits don't last long, but they are frequent enough so that he becomes invested in her journey, and all the while he is working on the amber crane....
Lioba's story is, for the first two thirds of the book, much more interesting that Peter's, but when Effie is accosted at a rare outing by the man who raped her, Peter takes action and attacks her assailant. The amber heart Effie wears is revealed and makes her the object of suspicion. She's accused of being a witch, and Peter is held for assault, and it is just as interesting as Lioba's increasingly hopeless quest to escape to a place where she can follow her own dreams.
Time travel-wise, this is great. Peter's reactions to the future ring true, and despite the circumstances, make for diverting reading, and the amber crane is a satisfactory bridge between the two time periods. Character-wise it is harder to call great, because Peter is not a very charismatic lead; he's not a Doer, and he's rather self-absorbed, so it's hard at first to care much about him. He gets a romance, but it didn't feel quite earned. Lioba, seen only in brief vignettes, is appealing, but her story remains secondary.
Where the book felt weak to me was with regards to the historical setting. If you go into this book knowing very little about the Thirty Years War, you will leave it not knowing much more. Yes, it's in character for Peter not to be thinking much about the bigger picture, but I wanted more about the context for what was happening in his world. The root cause of it was a religious struggle--Catholic vs Protestant, but religion barely registers in Peter's pov. It made him feel kind of dead to the world. I also wanted more geography; I knew it was on the Baltic Coast, but it still felt unrooted in place. There is a glossary at the end that includes some background, I wish it had been integrated into the story.
By the halfway point, I was absorbed in the story, and closed it with a sense of having read a good book, and as someone who loves reading about the making of things, I very much appreciated the amber-working, but it still fell just a bit short of what I'd hoped it would be.
From CBC--25 Canadian middle-grade books to watch for in spring 2022 (include lots of enticing fantasy!)
Likewise, March releases over in Ireland from Book Craic...so many I want!
Polly is an imaginative only child of a coal miner father who's sympathetic to her sense of magic in the world (he is a great father, playing rhyming games with her, and with a keen awareness of the importance of a mind that can fly free). Her mother is also a good mother, but much more practical. They are happy...till the accident down in the mines that leaves her dad unable to walk. The family must move to their aunt's house when he gets out of the hospital...and her aunt, stiff and set in her ways, is not fun to live with.
But her house is near a large park land with a beautiful lake. And Polly learns that there was once an older village, that slipped down and away through the net of time and was lost. As she explores the park and the margins of the lake, Polly hears children she cannot see, and on Sundays she can here the sound of the church bells rising up from the lost village below.
Finally, she meets some of the lost villagers ("time gypsies" as they call themselves)--a raggedy old woman, a man, a baby, and a boy about her own age (though centuries older, of course). The villagers out of time can visit, unseen to everyone one but Polly, and return through a tunnel across the lake to their own place. But something goes wrong, and the little group gets stuck in real world time. Polly has to help figure out how to getting home...without coming unstuck in time herself.
The book started just lovely, with its sensitive heroine attuned to wonder, and the haunting story of the lost village. (I also liked the quotidian moving to unsympathetic aunt's house too). But somehow as things progressed it lost its touch of numinous magic (possibly because "time gypsies" made me feel uncomfortable, possibly because there was a whole group of them and the old woman was unpleasant). Still, it was enjoyable reading all in all even if it's not a new favorite timeslip story.
I'm always a bit taken aback when I am able to post a review that's appropriate for a Special Day--today (with help from its publisher) I have an enjoyable YA fantasy romance for Valentine's Day--Ferryman, by Claire McFall (October 2021 by Walker Books US, 2013 in the UK) .
Dylan isn't the happiest teenaged girl in England--her best friend moved away, her relationship with her mother is currently prickly, and she has no great passions or interests in her life. She has, though, just reconnected with her father, who she hasn't seen since she was five, and is going to be going to see him up in Scotland. Fed up with a miserable day at school, she cuts out to take an earlier train than she'd planned on, and in so doing, changes her life (and death).
Inside a tunnel there's a terrible accident. And when Dylan becomes conscious, she's alone in the dark (she can't, mercifully, see what's around her, but there are no other living people....). She makes it out of the train, and walks down the tunnel, hoping to find help, but instead she finds herself in a wasteland. There is one other person--Tristan, a strangely unhelpful and uncommunicative boy her own age. Having no better choice, she follows his lead. As they walk on with no sign of civilization around them, warning bells start going off in her head, and at last she gets the truth out of Tristan--she is dead, and he is the ferryman tasked with taking her to her final destination.
As they journey from safe house to safe house through the wasteland, beset by ghastly beings that long to rip Dylan's soul from her, they both succumb to the irresistible attraction that is growing up between them. It is an attraction that stems more from circumstance than from any deep knowledge of each other, and so as a cynical adult I have to admit I rolled my eyes, but given that Dylan has no strong anchors to her past life, and no information about what's next, and given that Tristan has spent uncounted centuries ferrying the dead with no chance to develop close personal relationships, it's understandable. And so Dylan makes the one choice that she has--to reject what lies beyond, and try, desperately and dangerously, to go back to her old life, and take Tristan with her.
It's a fascinating set-up, and I enjoyed the journey through the wasteland very much. I read it in one afternoon, with enjoyment. And even though I had to not think too hard about the growing love between them, it was sweet, and even though there's not all that much character development, it was easy as a reader to fill that in given the bits given. The ending doesn't resolve everything, but it is satisfying, leaving what comes next to the reader's imagine in a way that that is just fine. That being said, there are two more books in the series...and those who took pleasure in this unusual love will want to seek them out quickly!
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
Counterclockwise Heart, by Brian Farrey, at Plaid Reader Reviews
The Great Bear (The Misewa Saga #2) by David Alexander Robertson, at Charlotte's Library
The Hideaway, by Pam Smy, at Valinora Troy
Legend Keepers: The Chosen One by Bruce Smith, at Kids Lit Book CaféThe Lock-Eater, by Zack Loran Clark, at PamelaKramer.com
The Mutant Mushroom Takeover, by Summer Rachel Short, at Mom Read ItHere's another great middle grade sci fi book that read for the Cybils Awards --The Monster Missions, by Laura Martin (June 1, 2021, Harper Collins). Lots of sea monster adventure goodness, underwater tech, friendship, and danger, with an appealing science-minded heroine!
The scrappy ship Atlas is the only home Berkeley and her best friend Garth have ever known. Ever since the Tide Rising flooded the world, ships like this carry little pockets of humanity, trying to survive on very limited resources. Berkeley and Garth work as scavengers, diving down into flooded cities, but when Berkeley ends one mission by pissing off a monstrous kraken, it ends up battering the poor Atlas badly. To make up for the economic loss, the two kids are about to be sent off to a work boat (basically a floating prison of hard labor) when the Britannica, a state of the art sub swings by. Her captain offers the two kids a place on the sub, and so they are off to new adventures, with no chance to say goodbye to their families, who are left to assume they are dead.
The Britannica is a monster hunter, prowling the seas in order to keep ships from being destroyed. Berkeley loves this new life of training and learning and speculating about sea monsters (there are tanks of young ones in the ship's lab) alongside the two other kids already on board. But it's dangerous--the sea monsters aren't the only predators, and when pirates take over the sub, and the four kids are the only free crew members, it's up to them to use all the sea monster skills and knowledge they've acquired to take back the ship! (note--as an adult reader and parent, I'm glad that after all the excitement Berkeley and Garth got to go on board Atlas again and see their families!)
There's lots of really good monster hunting and excitement (some if it rather icky, like when the Britannica actually gets swallowed by a sea monster), and a nice dose of monster study and speculation as well. Berkeley isn't interested in just killing individual monsters attacking ships; she wants to learn how to keep the attacks from happening in the first place. And she's a tinker-er, able to look at junk and see potential, a creativity that is key in the pirate struggle! The details of life in the sub are great, the kids are a good mix of different personalities and skills, and the flooded world with its monster filled oceans is a vivid backdrop for the story.
(My only quibble, as a scuba diver myself back in the day, was the wonderful visibility enjoyed by the scuba diving kids--it was harder to swallow than the sea monsters)
That being said, I can imagine this book being happily passed around a fifth grade classroom really easily!
disclaimer--review copy gratefully received from the publisher for Cybils Award consideration, and now on its way to my local public library to win Laura Martin new fans!
Greatings from snowy Rhode Island! Here's what I found this week of interest to us fans of mg sci fi/fantsy; please let me know if I missed your post!
first, congratulations to The Last Cuentista for winning the Newberry Award and the Pura Belpré Award, and Too Bright to See, for its Newberry Honor! Also to Temple Alley Summer, for the Batchelder Award! MG sci fi/fantasy ftw! (here's the full list of ALA Youth Media Awards)
The Reviews
Beasts and Beauty, by Soman Chainani, at SonderbooksDaughter of the Deep, by Rick Riordan, at Say What? and proseandkahn
The Gilded Girl, by Alyssa Colman, at Staircase WitIf you visit here regularly, you know that I mostly review middle grade sci fi and fantasy. This does not mean this is all I read--today's book, The Genius Under the Table, by Eugene Yelchin (October 2021, Candlewick), is a mg autobiography (though one I think has lots of appeal for mg sci fi/fantasy fans, about which more later...).
Young Yevgeny grew up in the Soviet Union. The Cold War still threatens to become hot, fear of the KGB is part of life (there is a KGB spy right there in his apartment complex), and keeping warm and fed is a constant struggle. On top of this is the antisemitism of the USSR. Yvegeny's older brother is a talented ice-skater, and on track for a life free of some of this struggle in a society that rewards its international stars, and his family hopes Yvegeny too might have some talent that will be his ticket into comfort and relative security.
So to please his mother, who works at a dance studio, he tries ballet...and although Barishnikov has burst onto the scene and a shining exemplar of what is possible (his mother even takes him backstage to see him dance), Yvegeny's talents don't lie in that direction. Instead, he draws. Mostly at bedtime, under the table where his cot is placed at night (there is no room for it anywhere else in their cramped space. The underside of the table is his canvas, and he fills it with drawings. When his parents find his drawings, they know that art is his path forward, and they encourage him as best they can.
It's not a full autobiography with facts about the author's life from birth to the present. Instead, it's a slice of life in this particular time and place, quite often bitterly humorous, and just as often bitterly grim, though the child the author once was doesn't realize the grimness and fear of his family's life the way the reader might, and in this group of "readers" I include not just people my age, who remember that time, but even 9-12 year olds living in comfort in the US today.
And this vivid picture of a dystopia, in which a wonderful pair of jeans has to be kept secret, in which many records are banned, in which anyone can turn on you and report you to the authorities and all the adults in the family live in fear, will I think especially appeal to middle grade fantasy/science fiction fans! The book starts with a visit to see Lenin's corpse, a lovely horrific hook for that demographic!
So if you have such a kid in your life who you think needs a nudge to a different genre, or needs a biography to read for school, give them this book! It's also the sort of book-- accessible, interesting, and despite all the differences, very relatable (there are lots and lots of kids out there, wanting to discover a talent that will make their parents proud!)-- that is lovely for teaching young readers history. I wish for the sake of young readers that there was an introduction with time and place and a bit of context, but they know how to google/ask their parents for information.
Lots of Yelchin's quirky drawings accompany the text, adding lots to the kid-appeal of the story. And though the story ends with him still in the Soviet Union, it's very easy to follow on to one of his illustrated fiction books (I'd suggest The Assassination of Brangwain Spurge for the mg demographic) to see how his art developed! I'd also show the young reader a clip of Barishnikov dancing (that being said, I just watch a few clips, and Simone Biles is more amazing so kids today might not be that impressed).
I myself have a brother-in-law who is an artist who grew up in Leningrad at around the same time as the author, which added a personal feeling to my reading of this fascinating, disturbing, and moving autobiography. I am not sure he will want to revisit his own childhood as vividly as the book would make him, but I will offer it to him and see.disclaimer--review copy received from the publisher
The enticing part was the forest, where Charlie's friend Dizzy led her one day to see the strange patterns of sticks he'd seen there. Charlie has recently moved from London, and so the woods are a new thing, and Dizzy, who has a limp leftover from polio (the first clue to the time period), and who is, along with new kid Charlie, on the sidelines of the games played by the other kids, seems to be a good guide.
But the class bully, Johnny, follows them there to scare them by pretending to be Old Chrony, the wild man rumored to live there. Scare them Johnny does, but then when the kids realize they are lost, the fear of the dark woods grows more and more palpable. There seems to be no way out, and though the three kids start to work together as a team, they can't figure out how to get home.
And thing grow more scary still, and more confusing. Reality shifts, and twists, and the dangerous visions that rise up in the night might or might not be real. And on top of that, Old Chrony turns out to be real...and very powerful indeed.
At which point the reader gets confirmation that time has been slipping, and that for kids in England in 1933, the future isn't going to be a safe and comforting place. Which leads to me crying at the end.*
It also lead to me forgiving the story for ever confusing me. It all makes sense in retrospect, and I want my own copy now so I can reread it in a year or too. It's not a book for readers who want things explained, or for there to be Reasons and all the backstory to be spelled out. But it is a book for young (or not so young) readers who want to journey into a terrifying wood beyond the boundaries of what is real, where time slips, and the only way out is through.
personal note--the reader doesn't find out for a while that Charlie is a girl, which I think was a bit of a distraction; it felt a little like a trick trying to be clever, and it throws one out of the story to have a gender switch in the middle of things.
further note on Charlie--she's a good character for girls who like to code and decipher things to read about!
final note on Charlie--I always hated that nickname for Charlotte, so if you ever meet me in real life, please don't use it!
note on Johnny--though he's a bully, he's not a terrible one, and it's believable that he's able to work with the other kids as things progress.
note on the time travel side of things--this is one in which time slips, and the future is glossed over the present; there's no actual travel to different times.
* the thing that made me cry is a spoiler! turn back now!
I wasn't expecting Dunkirk, and Dunkirk makes me sob every single darn time.