5/2/22

The Blood Trials, by N.E. Davenport


The Blood Trials, by N.E. Davenport, is a fierce read about a young woman consumed by grief and anger who is determined to bring her grandfather's killer to justice, and who ends up setting herself against a world controlled by rival evil (and incredibly powerful) governments.  Though readers of YA may well appreciate it, it's a book for adults--there is considerable, very detailed, violence, and a graphic sex scene. 

Ikenna was ready to give up on her ambition to become one of the elite Praetorian Guard after her grandfather's death throws her into acute depression.  But when she finds out she was murdered, she becomes fueled by rage and determination to find the killer, and becoming one of the Guard will help her do that.  The trials the would-be guard members, the best and brightest of the military recruits, are put through are brutal, and often fatal (which seemed really wasteful as a military strategy; this thought kept distracting me).   Ikenna gives and gets horrible injuries, the body count is in the hundreds, and things seem pretty hopeless for her at many points in the story.

Ikenna, having inherited the dark skin of her grandfather's family, faces awful racism, is a woman in a misogynist society, and is often self-sabotaged by her lack of emotional control born from anger and grief, but she has a secret advantage--she has a blood gift, from the old gods...one that her country's greatest enemy uses as a terrible weapon.  She can't risk having it discovered, but she can't help but uses it when needed, to ferret out secrets and heal herself from the many injuries the trials inflict on her.

In the course of the trials, surrounded by people she cannot trust, many of whom hate her (even without knowing about her blood gift) more death and guilt add to her burden, and a night of forbidden passion doesn't help.  But she perseveres, leaving a blood-stained wake, until, like opening a series of nesting dolls, she realizes at the end of the book that the fight she's undertaken for justice, and her own right to exist, is much greater than she'd imagined.

Ikenna's strong emotions are perfectly understandable, but don't leave much room in her headspace for the reader to get to know other dimensions of her personality.  (I would have liked more intelligence, and less emotional response....).  And the pretty much non-stop violence of the trials, and the hate she gets thrown, and the betrayals she endures, don't make for easy reading; it was all a bit much for me.  I didn't actually enjoy it much, though I never considered not finishing the book, because of wanting to know what happened.  But having reached the end of the book, with the stakes becoming increasingly higher, Ikenna at last has reached a point where she has people on her side, and no longer has to hide who she is, so I'm pretty willing to give the second book at try.

So not a book for me, but if you look at the Goodreads reviews, plenty of people loved it.....

disclaimer: review copy received from the publicist.



5/1/22

In which I join Wyrd and Wonder

Wyrd and Wonder is a month long celebration of the fantastic (now in its fifth year) and I decided I needed to do something fresh here at my blog, and so I'm joining in with the read a longs and discussion prompts, and some vigorous reading from my tbr pile.

I had a fun time shopping in that huge pile for books to read this month along side my regular middle grade and time travel reading, and here's what I came up with.



Some of these have been on the pile for years-I have a bad habit of buying books I really want to read, and then once I've secured them, somehow the potential to read them takes the place of actually doing so.

Because I can't take good pictures, here are the books--

A Castle of Tangled Magic, by Sophie Anderson

Prophesies, Libels & Dreams, by Ysabeau Wilce

Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City, by K.I. Parker

Nikoles, by Rachel Neumeier

The Bird and the Blade, by Megan Bannon

Empress of Salt and Fortune, by Nghi Vo

The Story of Owen, Dragon Slayer of Trondheim, by E.K, Johnston

A Psalm for the Wild Build, by Becky Chambers

A College of Magics, by Caroline Stevermer

Foxheart, by Claire Legrand

Interworld, by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves

Stealing Death, by Janet Lee Carey

Kingfisher, by Patricia McKillip

The House of Mountfathom, by Nigel McDowell

The Privilege of the Sword, by Ellen Kushner

Look for my wrap-up review post on May 31! (d.v.)


This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (5/1/22)

Here's what I found this week!  Enjoy, and let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

The Art of Magic, by Hannah Voskuil, at Say What?

The Court of the Stone Children, by Eleanor Cameron, at Semicolon

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell, at Charlotte's Library

Eudora Space Kid: The Great Engine Room Takeover, by David Horn, at Valinora Troy

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Book Craic

Immigrant from the Stars, by Gail Kamer, at Mom Read It

Lia Park and the Missing Jewel, by Jenna Yoon, at Crafty Moms Share

The Lion of Mars, by Jennifer L. Holm, at Sonderbooks

The Mermaid and the Unicorns, by L.T. Getty, at Kit 'n Kabookle

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Redeemed Reader

Once Upon Anther Time, by James Riley, at Cracking the Cover

The Prince of Nowhere, by Rochelle Hassan, at Say What?

Scary Stories for Young Foxes, by Christian McKay Heidicker, at Proseandkahn (audiobook review)

Secret Beneath the Sand (Unicorn Island #2) by Donna Galanti, at alibrarymama and Jean Little Library

The Silk Road (Lucy and Dee #1), by Kirsten Marion, at Say What?

Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos (Theodosia, Book 1) by R. L. LaFevers, at Rapunzel Reads

Unseen Magic, by Emily Lloyd-Jones, at and other tales

Wilder Than Midnight, by Cerrie Burnell, at Book Craic

Wind, by Ellen Dee Davidson, at Dragonfly.eco

Witchlings, by Claribel A. Ortega, at Pages Unbound and YA Books Central


Authors and Interviews

Katie Zhao, (Winnie Zeng Unleashes A Legend) at WNDB

Betsy Uhrig (The Polter-Ghost Problem), at MG Book Village

Kali Wallace (Hunters of the Lost City), at  Whatever 

Rochelle Hassan (The Prince of Nowhere) at Kidlit 411

Bree Barton (Zia Erases The World), at A Novel Mind 

A.F. Steadman (Skandar and the Unicorn Thief) at Booktopia

Stacy Hackney (The Sisters of Luna Island), at Deborah Kalb Books

4/26/22

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell, for Timeslip Tuesday

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell (June 2020, Everything With Words), is a must read for time travel fans (and a very good read for middle grade fantasy fans, mg historical fiction fans, and so on....). Though it has, to the best of my knowledge, not been published yet here in the US, it's well worth getting your hands on (says one who did so!). I do have a slight caveat though--it's a book that will be most enjoyed by those able to wrap their minds tightly around the sort of twists and turns that so often happen with time travel, and if, like me, you have a tendency to gallop through good stories, you might suddenly find yourself a bit confused...I think I will enjoy it more when I reread it in two or three years!

In London in 1928, 12 year old Glory has lied about here age to get a job in a jewelry shop. She designs beautiful things, but the fact that one of her hands is wooden prosthetic means she can't always bring her creations to fruition. The rather nasty woman she works for is not sympathetic, paying Glory a pittance while profiting off her designs.

In 1864, Needle is desperately trying to keep himself and his mother fed, following in the footsteps of his father who mysteriously disappeared by scrounging in the mud of the Thames for bits and pieces to turn into saleable ornaments. Like his father, Nettle has a magical gift--he can feel the stories of the things he finds. When he finds some metal fragments from 1928, with the names of victims of a horrible flood, he travels in time to that year, determined to give a warning.

There he meets Glory, and their stories intersect. The clock is ticking, and Glory herself might be one of those who will drown...but the two kids are up against villainous characters, and the problems that come with time travel. Fortunately, a very clever crow named Magpie, Nettle's helper from his own time, is a fellow time-traveler, and gives them just the assistance they need to add to their own determination and cleverness. And though Nettle, in the end, returns to his own time, he's changed both his life and Glory's for the better, in a lovely way (and not just by saving Glory's life...).

It's a truly engrossing story of friendship and hardship and creativity, given great tension by the threat of the devastating flood to come (a real event). McDonnell paints vivid pictures and brings her characters beautifully to life. And though the twist at the end didn't quite work for me (see caveat above), because I though one of the characters was perfectly capable of being more helpful earlier on, it was still one I enjoyed lots. Since I love to read about making things, I especially loved the crafting parts of the story, of which there were a generous plenty!


4/24/22

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (4/24/22)

Sadly (for me) I have nothing to contribute this week, because life, but here's what other people wrote about.  Let me know if I missed your post!

Aru Shah and the Nectar of Immortality, by Roshani Chokshi, at a backwards story

Bibi Blundermuss and the Tree Across the Cosmos, by Andrew Durkin, at Independent Book Review

The Children of Green Knowe by L.M. Boston, at Staircase Wit

Curse of the Night Witch, by Alex Aster, at Pages Unbound

Dragon Legend (Dragon Realm #2) by Katie Tsang and  Kevin Tsang, at Rajiv's Reviews

Dragon Mountain (Dragon Realm #1) by Katie Tsang and Kevin Tsang, at Rajiv's Reviews

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at A Tale of Two Pages, The Book Dutchesses, And On She Reads, Rebbie Reviews, ForBooksSake, Book Craic, Herding Cats, Sifa Elizabeth Reads, and Gina Rae Mitchell

Freddie vs. The Family Curse, by Tracy Badua, at Say What?

Healer and Witch, by Nancy Werlin, at Bookends

The Horse and his Boy, by C.S. Lewis, at Staircase Wit

Hunters of the Lost City, by Kali Wallace, at Bookworm for Kids

The Lucky Diamond, by Valinora Troy, at Book Craic

Magicborn, by Peter Bunzl, at Scope for Imagination

The Marvellers by Dhonielle Clayton, at Log Cabin Library

Pony, by R.J. Palacio, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)

The Rainbow Weaver's Apprentice (The Fairy Tunnels Book 1), by  Elena Jagar, at N.N. Light's Book Heaven

Tiger Honor by Yoon Ha Lee, at Children's Books Heal

We Are the Song, by Catherine Bakewell, at nerds of a feather, flock together

Willodeen, by Katherine Applegate, at Not Acting My Age

Witchlings, by Claribel Ortega, at PR Review

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking, by T. Kingfisher, at Sonderbooks (audiobook review)

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, by Eleanor Cameron, at Staircase Wit

Two by Deva Fagan--The Mirrorwood and Nightingale, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction

Two at Paper Fury--The Astronaughties by Andrew Cranna, and Loki: A Bad God’s Guide to Being Good by Louie Stowell


Authors and Interviews

Jodi Lynn Anderson (Thirteen Witches series), at Middle Grade Ninja (podcast)


Other Good Stuff

"Next Level Middle Grade Fandom, or, What Erin Hunter’s Warriors Series Hath Wrought" at Fuse #8

"‘Nevermoor’ Musical Adaptation in the Works at Paramount" at The Hollywood Reporter

4/17/22

this week's round-up of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs 4/17/22

Happy Easter to those celebrating today. I always enjoy picking a Victorian card to share....



as always, please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Aru Shah and the Nectar of Immortality, by Roshani Chokshi, at Log Cabin Library

Aviva vs. the Dybbuk by Mari Low, at YA Book Central

The Dragon Realm Series, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at The Bookwyrm's Den

Dragon Rising, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

A Dragon Used to Live Here, by Annette LeBlanc Cate, at Charlotte's Library

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at Book Craic

The Frights of Fiji, by Sunayna Prasad, at paper fury 

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Book Craic

The Impossible Girl, by Ashley White, at Bookworm for Kids

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Charlotte's Library

The Midnight Unicorn, by Alice Hemming, at Log Cabin Library

The Mirrorwood, by Deva Fagan, at Charlotte's Library

The Revelry by Katherine Webber, at Whispering Stories 

Rules for Vampires, by Alex Foulkes, at Twirling Book Princess

The Sisters of Straygarden Place by Hayley Chewins, at Rapunzel Reads

Skandar and the Unicorn Thief, by A.F. Steadman, at Say What?

Troubletwisters, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Amy Rosenfeldt

Wildseed Witch, by Marti Dumas, at WOC Read

Two at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, and The Button Box, by Bridget Hodder and Fawzia Gilani-Williams


Authors and Interviews

Dhonielle Clayton (The Marvellers) at WNDB

Deva Fagan (The Mirrorwood) at What Angela Reads (podcast)

Stacy Hackney (Sisters of Luna Island) at Book Briefs

Payal Doshi (Rea and the Blood of the Nectar), at Queries, Qualms, and Quirks (podcast)

Xiran Jay Zhao (Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor) at MG Book Village 

Stephanie Kate Strohm (Once Upon A Tide: A Mermaid’s Tale) at Pop Goes the Reader

Nancy Werlin (Healer and Witch) at Whatever


Other Good Stuff

At Book Riot, 20 of the best middle grade fantasy books

4/15/22

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat (middle grade, April 12, 2022, Candlewick), tells of a fascinating voyage of discovery, with pleasing twists, a great heroine, lots of lovely mapmaking for those of us who like to read about work being done, and even dragons!

In a Thai-inspired reimaging of South East Asia, twelve-year-old Sai is determined to escape the poverty and miserable living conditions of the Fens.  She only has a year to save up enough money to make a new life for herself the kingdom of Mangkon, because only those who are given golden lineal beads (that show off their ancestry) when they turn thirteen are respected members of society.  She's managed to get work as an assistant to Paivoon, a famous mapmaker, and allows herself to hope she can make a future for herself, despite her lack of ancestors..

Then the Queen of Mangkon and all of its conquered territories decides to launch expeditions in all directions seeking new lands to add to the empire's glory.  Paivoon is chosen to be the mapmaker on board the ship headed south under the command of the woman who is one of the most famous war heroes in the kingdom.  But Paivoon has started to suffer from tremors, and can no longer trust his hands to write and draw clearly, so he offers Sai a place on the voyage to serve as his scribe.

After miserable sea sickness, Sai takes a keen interest in the voyage that takes her past new islands that are new to her and then off into uncharted waters.  The crew hopes to find the fabled southern continent of Sunderland (there's a lucrative prize if they do),  and Sai certainly would like that too.  But she can't convince Paivoon to take Sunderland's existence seriously.

Her life on the ship is somewhat complicated by a stowaway, an island boy named Bo, who proves important to the story both plot-wise and addition of character interest-wise.  And then her life becomes truly complicated by treachery that leads to her and Bo being castaway on their own, and then finding Sunderland.  And meeting dragons....(although to those who want lots of DRAGON, it's not a great feast of dragon-ness; its more like a soupçon of  dragon, that adds welcome fantasy spice and contributes to the central tension of the book very nicely).

What I liked lots--
The mapmaking.  Paivoon doesn't rely on the corpus of official maps, but takes seriously scraps of knowledge from fishermen, conveyed in their tales and rough drawings on scraps of cloth.  

Related to mapmaking, Paivonn teaches Sai that "discovering unknown lands" is a somewhat meaningless concept, because official voyages of discovery are by no means the first time people have ever reached place.  I especially appreciated how he leads her to understand that official claims to "newly discovered" places often leads to their exploitation (though it's not stated nearly so baldly in the book, so no need to worry about heavy-handed Messaging), and how at the end of the story the final map we see Sai make uses names to try to keep the Sunderland, and its dragon family, safe (at least for a little while).  I love it when words have power!

I loved Sai and Paivoon's teacher/student relationship more generally, and how Sai ends the story by passing on the opportunity she was given to another poor kid. 

I liked the pacing of the story...the time taken to establish the context, the ocean voyage in which very little that's Exciting happens, but much is learned.  (I have reservations about this in terms of young readers liking the book though--it won't be for every kid. I think the cover does a great job conveying the feel of the story--any reader drawn to that image will probably enjoy the book.)

And being a sucker for survival stories, I like the bit where Sai and Bo are stranded on a miserable island, and struggle to survive and escape.

To summarize:  I liked the book lots!  

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

4/12/22

The Mirrorwood, by Deva Fagan, for Timeslip Tuesday

Happy book birthday to the lovely middle grade fantasy, The Mirrorwood (April 12, 2022,  Atheneum Books for Young Readers), by Deva Fagan! What with all the new mg fantasy books this week, and the scramble to get reviews up, I was worried that Timeslip Tuesday would interfere with my plans....happily The Mirrorwood has enough timeslip in it that I can in good conscience count it as today's offering!

Fable's family lives near the impassibly thorny border separating the Mirrorwood, full of dangerous blight magic, from the safe, ordinary world. But blight still gets through, twisting whatever it touches into something impossible. And Fable was touched by it when she was born. She has no face of her own, but must borrow other's faces.... wearing them until they start fading into featureless gray, taking her life force with them. Her family loves her, and share their faces, but she can't go far from their farm, because those who are blighted are feared, and even hunted and killed.

And when a father/daughter blight hunter team sets their sights on her, the only way to escape is to try to get through the thorns into the Mirrorwood, where she had been heading to try to find a way to free herself of her curse. She's accompanied by the daughter, Vycorax, who hadn't been able to killer despite her father's orders. The two girls agree to truce as they set off to explore the world beyond the thorns.

There they find a world lost in a spell, cast by one of the Subtle Powers, the twisty immortals who can grant wishes, or make bargains that could snare the unwary. The people of the Mirrorwood have been trapped in a time loop; every day time resets and they live the day again for the first time. The only people who know of this trap are those who have themselves, like Fable, been blighted. They can see the horrible reality.... but can't do anything to fix it.

Fable and Vycorax are found by one of the Subtle Powers, the wish granter, who tells them how the Mirrorwood came to be cursed. The true prince has been caught by the time warp, and a blighted demon imposter has taken his place. If the demon is killed, the curse will be lifted, but it is an almost impossible task. Which the girls, in true mg fantasy form, set off to undertake regardless.... there really isn't a choice. Fable has made a wish of her own, as well--that she could have her own true face.

And this is where things really get interesting! Not only are the girls moving from enemies to loyal friends, but there's a twist to the whole demon prince thing.... the curse isn't exactly what the Subtle Power told them it was. Lyrian, the demon prince, proves to be a much more complex character than the girls had anticipated...

And also at this point is where I stopped just happily reading along, enjoying the story, and became grimly determined to read faster and faster so that I could see what would happen next! Twists and turns, new characters to meet and learn to care about, depth to the story and more about the darkness that preceded the curse, more impossible questing, riddle and illusions, alongside growth in Fable's character.

There's also an increase in the tension of the time warp; it's concentrated inside the castle, where instead of a day, those at the heart of the curse have only seconds of life repeating endlessly, those just outside have minutes or hours, not necessarily nice ones (one bit of this was immensely powerful, driving home the horror of what had happened.

It's clearly a riff on Sleeping Beauty, and it will please fans of reworked fairy tales just fine, but it's more than a reimagining; it's its own thing.  A lovely, gripping thing, with a strong message that it's what's inside that really counts.  Fable realizes that she is still her true self, no matter what her face is, and Vycorax learns that she can make her own choices, and not be bound to her single-minded killer of a father.  People who look like monsters aren't necessarily bad, and the converse as well.  

And as an added bonus, Fable's lovely cat, with whom she can speak, is along for the ride as well! 

The ending is satisfactory, making this a stand-alone, but I'd love to return to the Mirrorwood for more. Partly because it's such a wonderfully strange place, and partly because I'd like to see if the glimmerings of attraction between Fable and Vycorax, and a little between Fable and Lyrian, come to anything....I can't decide which I'd prefer!

short answer: I truly enjoyed it!

disclaimer: review copy received from the author, and deposited by the delivery person in shrubbery next to a door I don't use, so I was very glad I found it safely after who knows how long!



4/11/22

A Dragon Used to Live Here, by Annette LeBlanc Cate


A Dragon Used to Live Here, written and illustrated by Annette LeBlanc Cate (April 12, 2022, Candlewick) is an entertaining story within a story that I think would make a lovely read aloud for older elementary kids and the younger end of middle grade (7-10 year olds). Older kids, on their way to teen cynicism, might have to wait till they are grown-ups before they can enjoy it....

Thomas and Emily live in their parents castle, learning castle-y things, like archery, tapestry weaving, and courtly manners.  They are also skilled at writing and illustrating, and this comes in useful when they come across the den of the castle scribes while exploring a bit of the castle they'd never gotten around to before. The scribes, under the authority of a somewhat cranky woman called Meg (is she a witch? the children wonder), are happy to let the kids help with the heavy workload of party invitations.  And while they work, Meg starts telling the story of how the kids' parents met.

It's a story of a fierce dragon, who used to live in the castle, and knights of varying degrees of bravery, and elves; their mother was the dragon's captive, and their father helps with her rescue (she also helps herself).  As Meg's story unfolds (and is she telling the truth?), the kids stop thinking of her as possible witch, and more as a friend, and hearing how Meg and their mother used to be best friends before a terrible falling out makes them want to bring the two of them back together.   

There's a somewhat refreshing? jarring? unexpected? amusing? mix of modernity with the medieval. Yes it's castle life without modern technology, but there's a real world sensibility to it.  It ended up working for the story, but don't go into it expecting high fantasy.  And the dragon may or may not have been real; readers will have to decide for themselves! 

The writing is snappy and on point, carrying things briskly along.  Thomas and Emily don't just sit passively listening and scribing, but make plans, squabble, and do a bit of (mild) adventuring to try to move Meg and their mother back to friendship.   But Meg is definitely the star of the story.  She's a great character and a great storyteller, and I loved the den of scribes who are entertaining in their own right.  They are really good with paper and ink and sharp knives too--I loved their creativity!  And throughout the book there are many funny details and bits of dialogue that readers of all ages (but especially the target audience) will appreciate. Generous illustrations, also often amusing, add to the entertainment.

Story within story isn't my favorite framework, but when done well, as I think it is here, because I liked it, it is good entertainment!  For what it's worth, me and the Kirkus review are on the same page here--"Clever, multistranded, and off the charts in read-aloud potential."

but was the dragon real????? (and will Thomas continue to let himself enjoy drawing flowers...I hope so!)

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

4/10/22

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (4/10/22)

Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians, by Brandon Sanderson, at Say What?

Area-51 Interns: Alien Summer, by James S. Murray and Carsen Smith, at Crafty Moms Share

Aru Shah and the Nectar of Immortality (Pandava #5) by Roshani Chokshi, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction

The Button Box, by Bridget Hodder and Fawzia Gilani-Williams, at Always in the Middle

Dragon City, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at Bookworm for Kids

Dragon Rising, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

A Dragon Used to Live Here, by Annette LeBlanc Cate, at Jean Little Library

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at JenJenReviews

Greta and the Ghost Hunters, by Sam Copeland, at Twirling Book Princess

Healer and Witch, by Nancy Werlin, at Charlotte's Library

How to Set the World on Fire, by T.K. Riggins, at The Children's Book Review

Hunters of the Lost City, by Kali Wallace, at Alison in Bookland 

It's the End of the World and I'm in My Bathing Suit, by Justin Reynolds, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Last Mapmaker, by Christiana Soontornvat, at Log Cabin Library

Map of Flames (The Forgotten Five #1) by Lisa McMann, at Pamela Kramer

The Monster Missions, by Laura Martin, at Valinora Troy

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Bellis Does Books

Once Upon Another Time, by James Riley, at The Bookwyrm's Den and Carstairs Considers

Operation Do-Over, by Gordon Korman, at Semicolon

Relatively Normal Secrets, by C. W. Allen, at BIbliomanaic Aza

Ripped Away, by Shirley Vernick, at alibrarymama

Secret Beneath the Sand (Unicorn Island #2), by Donna Galanti, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow

Shinji Takahashi and the Mark of the Coatl, by Julie Kagawa, at Ms. Yingling ReadsLog Cabin Library, and Feed Your Fiction Addiction

A String in the Harp, by Nancy Bond, at Semicolon

The Sisters of Luna Island, by Stacy Hackney, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Tiltersmith, by Amy Herrick, at A Bookish Way of Life

Witchlings, by Claribel A. Ortega, at Utopia State of Mind

A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking, by T. Kingfisher, at Not Acting My Age

Two at the NY Times--The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, and The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill


Authors and Interviews

Leah Cypess (Glass Slippers) at Whatever

Skye McKenna (Hedgewitch) at Love Reading 4 Kids

Claribel Ortega (Witchlings) at WNDB



4/9/22

When the Sky Falls, by Phil Earle


When the Sky Falls, by Phil Earle  (April 5th 2022 in the US by Bloomsbury Children's Books, June 2021 in the UK), is a moving book about a boy battered by life, and further traumatized by World War II.  

When we first meet 12-year old Joseph he's a kid arriving in London during the blitz; unlike the other young travelers at the station who are being evacuated out of the city, he's been sent into it after his grandmother decides she can no longer cope with him.  He's been packed off to stay with an old friend of hers, Mrs. F., who doesn't really want Joseph either.  Joseph is violently furious at his situation, and at the world, and before the reader knows his story, his frightening anger makes it hard to warm to him.

Mrs. F. is strong enough, though, to compel Joseph to some degree of cooperation, setting him to work helping keep up her family's zoo.  It's not much of a zoo anymore, thanks to the war.  Most of the animals have been shipped off to other zoos, or died.  One of the few left is a gorilla, Adonis.  Joseph finds Adonis terrifying at first, but as he sees the love Mrs. F. has for him, and learns that Adonis is grieving for the lost of his mate and his child, he opens himself to empathy and caring.  

School is a torment (again, his extremely reluctant attendance is a testament to Mrs. F.'s strong will), where his dyslexia keeps him from being able to read (he, and all the teachers he's had throughout his life, who have convinced him he's stupid, don't know it's dyslexia), and other boys make his life miserable. When the boys climb the zoo's fence to come beat him up, one gets too close to Adonis' cage, and the gorilla grabs him by the jacket.  Although the boy isn't physically harmed, he could well have been, and his father wants Adonis killed because of being a danger to the community.

Indeed, every night there's an air raid, which is most nights, Mrs. F. sits outside Adonis' cage with a gun to shoot him if he's ever freed by an explosion, because of the threat a free, angry gorilla would pose.....even though she loves him. (This part is based on a true story).

Gradually we learn details of Joseph's past--how his mother abandoned the family when he was five, and how his father went to war. Gradually Joseph becomes able to accept help, both from Mrs. F. (espeically when she's found the strength to share her own past tragedy with him) and from a girl who's just been orphaned by a bomb; neither will give up on him.  But it is his growing bond with Adonis that helps him most.  Part of it is the warmth of growing trust, that makes Jacob feel like a person worthy of trust.  I'm wondering a bit as well, though it's never stated, if Jacob gets a bit of help with anger management from the dreadful possibility of what Adonis, with no control over his own anger, is capable of.  The book is thought provoking like this, which I appreciated.

In any event, I found their relationship nicely convincing; I'd been afraid that my suspension of disbelief re human/primate friendships was going to be put to the test.  I needn't have worried; it was a plausible relationship, not a sentimentally idealized anthropomorphic one.  

There is not a happy ending.  But though it is sad, it is an ending that give hope for a new beginning, as Mrs. F. and Joseph become family. 

It's a grimly vivid picture of life in a city being destroyed, with a protagonist on the verge of destroying his own life.  When I reached the end, it took me a while to shake of the tension of it all; like all really good and engrossing books, I'd been living it.  A truly powerful read.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher


 

4/7/22

Healer and Witch, by Nancy Werlin

I just gave five stars on Goodreads to Healer and Witch, by Nancy Werlin (mg* Candlewick, April 12, 2022).  I am chary with my stars--only 6 out of the 92 books I've read so far this year have gotten 5 of them--all books that not only are very good books, but very good reads that make reality vanish and remind me why I love reading!  Such as Healer and Witch.

Sylvie is a girl learning healing from her mother and grandmother in Renaissance France.  Her mother's skill as a healer is based on knowledge and understanding, but her grandmother can do more, to the point of being magical.  When Sylvie gets her first period, her own gifts blossom, and like her grandmother there a magical twist to them--she can enter peoples minds, and tweak their memories.  When her grandmother dies, Sylie can't stand to see her mother suffering in a morass of grief, and so tries to help with a bit of memory removing.  It goes horribly wrong, and her mother doesn't remember her own mother, or even Sylvie.

So Sylvie sets out alone into the world to try to find another wise woman who can teach her how to use her gifts, so that she can fix what she broke, and never make such a mistake again.  She is both healer and witch...and the later is a dangerous thing to be when suspicions of witchcraft can lead to death.  A much younger boy, the blacksmith's son whose always getting into trouble, follows her out of their village, and refuses to be sent home, and proves to be an important part of her journey (and a nice part of the story!).  A meeting with a wise woman in the nearest town sets her off to the city of Lyon, as part of a wealthy young merchant's caravan.  

But neither the wise woman or the young merchant are exactly who they seem, and Sylvie's gifts place her in great danger.  She must fight fiercely for her right to use her powers as healer/witch as she sees fit, figuring out how to use them ethically, and making sure she is making decisions for herself in a time and place that's often unkind to young women.  There's a nice romance too-- the powerful young merchant offers to protect her by marrying her, and she declines (and figures out how to protect herself), but in the course of travelling together they start trusting each other enough to share their darkest secrets.  It's a slow romance, but a sweet one.  

It's not a swirling fast-paced book full of Things Happening, and indeed a lot of what happens takes place in Sylvie's head, which was fine with me!  Sylvie is beautifully thoughtful and intelligent, and I appreciated her lots. There is trauma (in the young merchant's past too, from his desperate childhood as a thief "and worse") and of course in Sylvie's life--her love for her mother is unchanged though her mother doesn't know who she is.  But there is healing too, and (slight spoiler) I appreciated that magic isn't the answer for this.

It's good historical fiction too, with enough of the history part (especially social and economic history) to be interesting without info dumping on the reader. My only gripe is that the blurb says this is medieval France.  Not.  Clearly it's Renaissance- Henry VIII is on the throne in England, and the Medici family is busily doing their Medici thing down in Italy....

short answer--I really liked it!  

*note about target audience--recently there was a lot of chat on twitter from folks wanting more books for the 12-14 year old kids who are leaving middle grade (9-12 years old) but who aren't the target audience just yet for much of Young Adult. This is a book for those in-betweenish sort of readers, who want a bit of romance, who want books about independent young women (the heroine here is 15) figuring out what sort of person they want to be.  This isn't a book that I'd give to a 9 or 10 year old, but I'd give it in a flash to 11-13 year old me and other dreamy kids who aren't quite ready to grow up but are enjoying starting to think about it from the safe perspective of fantasy....and I think the cover does a great job at targeting this group of readers!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher


4/4/22

Meant to Be, by Jo Knowles

Though most of my middle grade reading is sci fi/fantasy, I also enjoy escaping into other peoples reality with good non-magical mg fiction!  Case in point, this weekend's read--Meant to Be, by Jo Knowles (March 22, Candlewick).

We first met sisters Rachel and Ivy in Where the Heart Is, which ends with the family loosing their home out in the country and having to move to an apartment.  That book was mostly Rachel's story; this is Ivy's, and it stands alone just fine.

Ivy is happy with the new apartment home.  For the first time in her life, she has friends close at hand--Lucas and Alice, two other kids the same age as her.  Together they religiously watch a cooking show, and try to use the ingredients the contestants use in their own culinary experimentation (which is mostly successful).  She is not happy, though, that the her sister and parents can't see that the apartment, though small, is a great place to live. She just doesn't empathize with them.

And when Alice, who lives with her grandmother, gets sad news about her absent mother, whose troubles with addiction lead to her leaving Alice behind, Ivy missteps her response, straining their friendship almost to the breaking point.

With the help of the building superintendent, who's teaching Ivy how to fix things, she starts to realize that helping other people with their problems doesn't always mean doing what she, Ivy, things is best for them.  And though she still, at the end of the book, likes living in the apartment, and is still anxious because she doesn't want things to change, she's become quite a bit wiser and more considerate of other people's feelings.

Which isn't to say this is a preachy book!  It all happens naturally and warmly, and although I imagine that if I'd read this when I was ten or so I might have taken the message to heart, there's definitely enough happening (small things, but interesting ones) to make this a good story and a good read.  

Definitely one for kids who like sort of quite slice of life books, particularly for young foodies!  I myself would have put a cupcake prominently on the cover if I'd been designing it...the eggs and mixer do indicate the cooking, but not as appealingly, perhaps, as a nice cupcake!

short answer--I enjoyed it lots, and perhaps am an even more thoughtful person than I was before (?)

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher (thanks!)



4/3/22

This week's round-up of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (4/2/22)

A late round-up this week (bloglovin, where many of my links were waiting for me) was troubled today...but I'm glad it came back, because most of the reviews this week are for books that I haven't seen in past round-ups! Please let me know if I missed your post; it's more likely this week because even when I was in bloglovin, it was off kilter....

The Reviews

The Accidental Apprentice, by Amanda Foody, at Books YA Love

Aviva vs. the Dybbuk, by Mari Lowe, at Say What?

A Darkening of Dragons, by S.A. Patrick, at The Bookwyrm's Den, and  Log Cabin Library

Kelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts, by Erika Lewis, at Prose and Kahn

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Book Nut

Paola Santiago and the Forest of Nightmares, by Tehlor Kay Mejia, at Puss Reboots

River (Warriors: A Starless Clan #1), by Erin Hunter, at Say What?

The Sea of Always (Thirteen Witches #2), by Jodi Lynn Anderson, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Secret of the Storm, by Beth McMullen, at Books YA Love

The Sheep, the Rooster, and the Duck, by Matt Phelan, at Redeemed Reader

A Storm of Sisters, by Michelle Harrison, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

The Thief Who Sang Storms, by Sophie Anderson, at A Dance with Books

The Tiltersmith, by Amy Herrick, at Say What?

The Triplets get Charmed (Trillium Sisters #1) by Laura Brown and Elly Kramer, at Rajiv's Reviews


Authors and Interviews

Dhonielle Clayton The Marvellers and Julian Randall (Pilar Ramirez and the Escape from Zafa) at SLJ

Lisa McMann (The Forgotten Five: Map of Flames) at From the Mixed Up Files

Gabriela Houston (The Wind Child), at PaperBound Magazine

Gregory Maguire (Cress Watercress) at Middle Grade Ninja

Adam Perry (Ghosts Come Rising) at MG Book Village (nb--I'm not sure this is actually fantasy, but it sounds cool whether there are any real ghosts or not!) 

today's mg sci fi/fantasy round up is delayed

 blogloving is over capacity, and I can't get in to find all the posts I was saving for today.....will keep trying!  

In the meantime, here's a cautionary tale--don't put books on radiators.

Today's example of "Why Charlotte can't accomplish anything because of always having to spend precious time solving problems of her own creation"-- I thought, as I placed the library book on top of the radiator--"sure hope this doesn't fall down the back of it!" It did. And the book was too wide to just be pulled out (and even my small, delicate (?) hands don't fit) so it had to be lifted up and out with a piece of random home-renovation wood that was conveniently close at hand...ten minutes of my life, gone just like that!

But the book has been recovered, so all is well in the end.....



3/29/22

Black Was the Ink, by Michelle Coles, for Timeslip Tuesday

A sub-genre of time travel books that I quite like (becuase I like learning things) uses the time travelling to frame a history lesson.  Black Was the Ink, by Michelle Coles (November 2nd 2021 by Lee & Low Books) is one of these; it is a brilliant lesson on the Reconstruction-- the years immediately after the Civil War when black men were elected to congress, the first Civil Rights Act was signed into law, and KKK murderers were brought to trial and found guilty.  Not much talked about in school history class, and  tremendously well presented here.  

Malcolm, a black teenager, was almost shot playing basketball with his friends in Washington D.C. in 2015, and then almost arrested by the police who came to investigate.  His mother, scared for him, sends him down to Mississippi to stay with his dad's family for the summer (his dad was killed by the police a while before this story begins).  There he finds the diary of his ancestor, Cedric, who worked for many of the black representatives to Congress, recording the triumphs they achieved, the horrors being inflicted on black people in the south by the KKK, and the ultimate failure of Reconstruction to establish lasting equality.  

But Malcom isn't just reading words on the pages.  Cedric brings him literally back in time, and Malcom lives bits of Cedric's life.  He sees horrible tragedies, that amplify the ongoing horrors of the present day.  And Malcom emerges from the experience galvanized to take up the fight that Cedric had been part of, starting by trying to save the family farm, Cedric's farm, from being lost to a highway expansion project (which turns out to be the main reason Cedric is manifesting himself...) 

The heavy weight of the past is lightened somewhat by time with family and by Malcom's nascent relationship with a neighbor girl, but it is a past that is much too heavy for lifting to be possible.  It is not a fast easy read, but it sure is an important one.  The author doesn't do much in the way of condensing the history, which is makes it thorough and very real, but it does make for hard going at times. I can't help but feel it could have been just as powerful without quite so many long speeches from the politicians, while being appreciative of those speeches as important parts of history. 

That being said, Malcolm is an engaging character, and his believable teen self does a pretty good job carrying the narrative along. It takes him a while to get used to being Cedric, and it requires some suspension of disbelief that he carries that role off as well as he does when back in the past (although this was one of my favorite aspects of the book, time travel fan that I am).  And there are joyous moments of family and friendship, and lots of good food, that cheer the reader on.

Still, as a whole, it's a pretty devastating read (though the ending is hopeful), but so important and timely....

side note: speaking as someone who works for a state historic preservation office-- sadly, even if a property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places (which is a lot more time-consuming and tricky than is the case even for the conditional determination of eligibility which Malcolm achieves through a single afternoon's work) it can be bulldozed.  So I ended the story less optimistically than Malcolm does...there's going to be a struggle ahead.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher


3/27/22

this week's round-up of mg sci fi/fantasy from around the blogs 3/27/22

 Hi all,
here's what I found this week of interest to us avid mg sci fi/fantsy readers!  Let me know if I missed your post.

The Reveiws

Alien Summer, by James S. Murray, and Carsen Smith, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Barren Grounds, by David Alexander Robertson, at Dead Houseplants

Cameron Battle and the Hidden Kingdoms, by Jamar J. Perry, at Charlotte's Library

Cress Watercress, by Gregory Maguire, at the StarTribune

Dream Magic (Shadow Magic #2) by Joshua Khan, at Colorful Book Reviews

Kelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts, by Erika Lewis, at Always in the Middle

The Dream Spies (The Nightmare Thief #2) by Nicole Lesperance, at Say What?

Imaginary, by Lee Bacon, at Rosi Hollinbeck

Journey to the Parallels, by Marcie Roman, at Bookworm for Kids

The Lock-Eater, by Zack Loran Clark, at Fuse #8

The Magician’s Elephant, by Kate DiCamillo, at Readaraptor

The Map of Flames, by Lisa McMann, at The Neverending TBR

The Midnight Unicorn, by Alice Hemming, at Books YA Love

The Ogress And The Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Forever Bookwandering

Out of Time (Throwback #3) by Peter Lerangis, at Charlotte's Library

The Ship of Doom, M. A. Bennett, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

The Song that Sings Us, by Nicola Davies, at Bellis Does Books

S.T.E.A.L.T.H.: Access Denied, by Jason Rohan, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

The Total Eclipse of Nestor Lopez, by Adrianna Cuevas, at Pamela Evans

Witchings, by Claribel A. Ortega, at MG Book Village


Authors and Interviews

Julian Randall (Pilar Ramirez and the Escape from Zafa) at Nerdy Book Club

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

Skye McKenna (Hedgewitch) at Toppsta


Other Good Stuff

An essay at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles--"Exchanging Certainty for Uncertainty: Mervyn Peake Explores the Realms of Children’s Fiction"

For Narniathon, an in depth look at a scene from The Silver Chair, and how it's a jumping off point to bigger Narnia questions, at Entering the Enchanted Castle

A gathering of upcoming sequels and companions at A Dance With Books

3/22/22

Out of Time, by Peter Lerangis, for Timeslip Tuesday

I just this minute finished Out of Time (Throwback #3) by Peter Lerangis, this week's Timeslip Tuesday book...I am not very good at keeping my own personal time well managed, and am always scrambling to do what needs doing.  In this case, the scrambling to finish the book (155 pages to go an hour ago) was actually very easy, since I was nicely absorbed.  It was certainly nothing compared to the desperate scramblings through time of the two main characters!

This is the third book of a series about a kid from New York, Corey, who finds out he's a time traveler, like his grandfather (there are more time travelers around than one would think...), as told in Throwback. Corey turns out to be a one of a kind time traveler, though--he can alter the past.  And so he does.  In the second book of the series (The Chaos Loop), he traveled to Germany right at the end of WW II to save his great uncle...but in doing so, he changed the past by keeping his grandparents from meeting, and so he was never born. The Corey who time travelled makes it back to his own present day in New York....but changed into a wolf.

His best friend, Leila (another time-traveler), is the only one who remembers the Corey who no longer belongs in the current time line, and she's determined to help him figure out how to become himself again.  They find help from a secret society of time travelers, who are able to take the gene that gives Corey his unique ability and transfer it to her.  Now the two of them, wolf and girl, head back to the cold winter at the end of Nazi Germany, hoping to give Corey's grandparents their chance to meet, while still keeping his great-uncle alive....

It is tremendously tense!  Wolf Corey's health is failing (a side effect of his situation), and Leila isn't certain she can change the past...but it all works out in the end, mostly thanks to Leila's bravery.

I didn't register it at the time of my reading, but the secret society of time travelers, which includes "trackers" who can tell when the past has been changed, shouldn't really want to be able to create other's with Corey's gift--they are creating for themselves the problem of altered realities that they are contending with (unless Corey and Leila are responsible for them all)....but no matter.  The story at hand is well worth reading regardless!

Time travel-wise, not only to we get to go back to Nazi Germany, but we also get a solo trip by Leila to witness the building of Central Park, and learn a bit of its history, which was very interesting.  

short answer--a solid series, that I can easily imagine middle grade kids loving!


3/21/22

Cameron Battle and the Hidden Kingdoms, by Jamar J. Perry

Cameron Battle and the Hidden Kingdoms, by Jamar J. Perry (February 1 2022 by Bloomsbury Children's Books) is a middle grade fantasy inspired by West African and Igbo history and mythology that I added enthusiastically to my tbr list when I first heard of it months ago.

It's the story of a boy whose mother read to him the magical Book of Chidani, full of stories about a kingdom whose queen called on the gods of the Igbo people of west Africa to seal themselves off from the world in order to save her people from the slave trade.  But Cameron's mother and father disappeared two years before the book begins, and his grandmother has hidden the book. 

But Cameron finds it, up in the attic, and when he and his best friends Zion and Aliyah open it again, the magic of the book draws them into Chidani.  All the magical stories are true, except that Chidini is in danger.  The three talismans that kept the queen and her people from aging, part of her bargain with the gods, have been stolen by her sister, and without them, Chidani will collapse, and be open to the world again.   Not only that, but the dark powers that the queen's sister has bargained with will flood into our own world.

And in true middle grade fantasy style, Cameron, heir to the magic of the book, must train to be a warrior and find the three missing relics.  He did not want to be a hero, but here he is.

So yes, this is familiar ground--the magical fighting, the griffins with whom the three kids form telepathic bonds, the chase after stolen objects of power while fighting terrifying wraiths.   But it's engrossing, and even if this was all there was to the story, it would be a fun (though not deeply memorable) read.  Several things, however, give depth and heart to the story, making it more than generic mg fantasy.

First there's the premise, that the magical kingdom was created in response to the horror of the slave trade,  that took Cameron's ancestors from their homes.  This weighted past, tied to the real world, makes it a place the the reader must come to with a certain gravitas, a taking-seriously-ness that most portal fantasies don't have.

Second, the queen's sister has at least one good reason to want to break down the bubble protecting Chidani--time stopped for everyone living there when it was formed, and no one has aged.  Four hundred years of stasis is not a pleasing thought; it is basically a prison.  I was hoping that the sister, once she made this point, would go on to have more nuance to her villainy than she did, but there was enough doubt in my mind to start questioning everything that was supposedly so wonderful, which added lots of interest!  There's a  goddess, for instance, who is basically the patron of the Chidanians, that I have my suspicious eye on.....

Thirdly, Cameron's parents died fighting in Chidani, failing to do what Cameron must now attempt.  Echoes of their struggle keep bringing his grief, anger, and frustration welling up, and make his assigned task as Savior and Hero a burden he's even more unwilling to bear.  There's a horrifying twist toward the end, too, which ups the dead parent stakes even more!

And Fourthly,  there's his friendship with Zion.  Are the two boys just really close and affectionate friends, like two brothers who love each other, sometimes even holding hands for mutual reassurance  (which would be great, because this sort of boy friendship is rare in fiction) or do all the possible hints mean its going to turn into more than friendship (which would also be great, because MG fantasy with gay boys is really rare!)?  

So yes, much of the story runs along familiar rails (which won't, of course, be as familiar to the target audience as they are to veteran MG fantasy reader, me, and so this is not a criticism but a personal statement), and I would have been happy with some of the fantasy filler descriptions and such pared down a bit (again, I'm not the target audience),  but seeing where  plot bits 2, 3, and 4 go next will have me come back eagerly for the next book!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

3/20/22

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (3/20/22)

Here's what I found this week; let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Children of the Flying City, by Jason Sheehan, at Cracking the Cover

A Comb of Wishes, by Lisa Stringfellow, at Charlotte's Library

A Festival of Ghosts (Ingot #2) by William Alexander, at Colorful Book Reviews

Icebreaker, by Lian Tanner, at Leaf's Reviews

Much Ado About Baseball, by Rajani LaRocca, at Sonderbooks

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Say What? and Sifa Elizabeth Reads

Secret Beneath the Sand |(Unicorn Island #1), by Donna Galanti, at  Always in the Middle

Temple Alley Summer, by Sachiko Kashiwaba, at GeekDad

Thirty Talks Weird Love, by Alessandra Narváez Varela, at Charlotte's Library

The Total Eclipse of Nestor Lopez, by Adrianna Cuevos, at Sonderbooks

The Wolf’s Curse by Jessica Vitalis, at Children's Books Heal

Wulfie-A Ghostly Tail, by Lindsay J Sedgwick, at Valinora Troy

Yesterday Crumb and the Storm in a Teacup, by Andy Sagar, at Book Craic

Two at Ms. Yingling Reads--Asking for Trouble, by Sarah Prineas, and Aviva vs. the Dybbuk, by Mari Lowe


Authors, Interviews, and Illustrators

Andy Sagar (Yesterday Crumb and the Storm in a Teacup), at A Little But a Lot

Natalie Smillie (illustrator of The Griffen Gate, by Vashti Hardy) at Scope for Imagination

Alysa Wishingrad (The Verdigris Pawn), at Caroline Starr Rose


Other Good Stuff

"The Children's Sci Fi Renaissance" at Science Meets Fiction podcast

A look at 8 upcoming stand-alone books, at A Dance With Books

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