11/10/22
Omega Morales and the Legend of La Lechuza, by Laekan Zea Kemp
11/8/22
The Best-Kept Secret, by Emily Rodda, for Timeslip Tuesday
Joanna, a young girl in an ordinary small town, is a child beginning to realize she is leaving childhood behind. Her parents want to move to a bigger house, and she's appalled by the idea of leaving her home, her safe place. And though she doesn't quite realize it, she and her best friend, Cecelia, are growing apart--Cecelia is a rather stolid child who divides people into "nice" vs "weird." And Joanna is wondering if she herself is more on the weird side (which the reader, or at least me, realizes clearly is the better, more interesting sort of person).
When a carousel appear out of nowhere in a vacant lot in town one night, the townsfolk are drawn to its music. The two girls want to ride, but only a few people are able to gain access. Joanna is one of the few, and Cecilia, holding on to each other, makes it to the carousel with her. The strange old woman running it identifys Joanna as a proper rider, but lets Cecilia on board too, though noting she'll not get anything out of it. And off they go on their horses, with a strange assortment of other riders (I like how the horses matched the characters!)
The Carousel takes them seven years into the future. There the riders as ghosts, observing but unable to interact as they explore their future town. (Cecelia isn't able to participate, stuck in a dream on her horse, admiring how pretty the two of them look in the carosel's mirrors...). Some riders have powerful, meaningful experiences seeing their future selves. And there's one who concentrates on recording winning lottery numbers and the like. But nothing much happens to Joanna...until right at the end, when a bullied little boy flees toward the carousel, and without thinking, she reaches towards him and brings him on board.
This breaks the Carousel, stranding the passengers, and posing a dilemma--do they risk not making it home by pushing back toward the future again to drop off the little boy in his own time? The majority votes yes, and Joanna is given ten minutes to take the kid home....leading her toward the own bit of the future that was the reason she became a rider, because his home is hers as well....
And though the riders don't remember their experience clearly when they eventually get back to their own time, the feeling and dreams and deeply buried knowings remain, helping them be their best selves. (I did wonder what the greedy man took home with him though--it wasn't at all clear to me why he deserved to be a rider....)
It's a simple story, good for younger readers but not for the typical middle grade reader of today. But for sensitive kids it probably still works (which is almost me but not quite...). I like Joanna lots, and I think I would have liked the book lots back in the day, but am not sure it would have been one of the books that burned itself into my mind--it's awfully nice, but could have pushed harder and been even more.
Today I got my master list of timeslip books reviewed here updated, though I am a little perturbed that I have 20 more timeslip Tuesday posts than I do books reviewed, so something is wrong somewhere....didn't have enough enthusiasm to check all 501 posts to see which I missed. But in any even, I'll try to be on top of things going forward and add this one right now!
11/6/22
This week's round-up of mg fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (11/6/22)
A light week of links; Bloglovin wasn't working for me and so I doubless missed many posts (please let me know if I missed yours!). Nothing from me, because even though I have read lots of books I have been frantically trying to get five windows ready to go back into place before winter comes....
The Reviews
Amari and the Great Game, by B.B. Alston, at Always in the Middle… and Valinora Troy
Crater Lake, by Jennifer Killick at Sifa Elizabeth Reads
The Doll in the Garden by Mary Downing Hahn, at Book Den
The Extradimensional Reappearance of Mars Patel (Mars Patel 3), by Sheela Chari, at Say What?
Freddie vs. the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua, at alibrarymama
The Frost Fair | By Natasha Hastings, at Bookbugworld
The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)Leo's Map of Monsters: The Frightmare and The Shrieking Serpent by Kris Humphrey, illustrations by Pete Williamson, at Log Cabin Library
Ravenfall by Kalyn Josephson | alibrarymama
Rise of the School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani, at Say What?
The Switch, by Roland C. Smith, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Authors and Interviews
R.L. Stine (Pt. II) at The Yarn
Dan Poblocki (Tales to Keep You Up at Night) at Middle Grade Ninja
10/31/22
Odder, by Katherine Applegate
I approach animal books with caution; too much anthropomorphism makes me squirmish (I didn't really care for The One and Only Ivan, for instance). I didn't have that problem with Odder, though--I thought Applegate did a really good job making her titular otter a being to care about without straining credulity. It doesn't feel at all like fantasy, which so many books from an animal stand-point do. The choice to tell Odder's story in verse in the 3rd person worked really really well for otter-ish mindset too--it's a coherent story of vignettes, impressions, sensory detail, and emotions, such as how an otter might experience the world.
It is a very sweet story, spinning some gentle instruction about otters and their importance as a keystone species into the moving story of this one particular otter. None of the individual otters we meet die, for those who worry about these things, although there is one stillborn pup.
Very highly recommend for otter fans in particular of course (so easy to imagine this paired as a gift with a stuffed otter) but also for anyone who wants to swim with a playful, funny, otter who will steal the hearts of all readers.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.
10/30/22
this week's round up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi (10/30/22)
Good morning! Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Amari and the Great Game, by B. B. Alston, at Pages Unbound
Battle of the Beast, by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads
The Chestnut Roaster, by Eve McDonnell, at Book Craic10/25/22
The Rabbit's Gift by Jessica Vitalis
10/23/22
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs etc (10/23/22)
Windswept, by Margi Preus, at Sonderbooks
Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend [Winnie Zeng, Book 1] by Katie Zhao, at Book DragonAuthors and Interviews
Katherine Applegate (Odder), at The Children's Book Review10/18/22
You Only Live Once, David Bravo, by Mark Oshiro
10/16/22
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs 10/16/22
Good morning! Here's what I found this week. Please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Always Clementine by Carlie Sorosiak, at Scope for Imagination
Black Bird, Blue Road, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Charlotte's LibraryThe Black Slide, by J.W. Ocker, at Say What?
Bridge of Souls (Cassidy Blake #3) by Victoria Schwab, at Lazy Day Literature
Calix and the Fire Demon, by Ron Walters, at Say What?
The Chestnut Roaster. by Eve McDonnell. at Magic Fiction Since Potter
Children of the Quicksands, by Efua Traoré, at Charlotte's LibraryDungeon Academy: No Humans Allowed! by Madeleine Roux, at Twirling Book Princess
Gargantis, by Thomas Taylor, at Leaf's Reviews
The Ghost of Spruce Point, by Nancy Tandon, at Bookworm for KidsThe Girl in White, by Lindsay Currie, at Randomly Reading
Greenwitch, by Susan Cooper, at Entering the Enchanted Castle
Kiki Kallira Conquers a Curse [Kiki Kallira, Book 2], by Sangu Mandanna, at BookDragonThe Lords of Night, by J.C. Cervantes, at The Bookwyrm's Den and A Backwards Story
Moongarden (Plotting the Stars #1). by Michelle Barry, at Say What?
Mwikali and the Forbidden Mask, by Shiko Nguru, at Ms. Yingling ReadsThe Rat Queen by Pete Hautman, at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Thunderbird, Book 1, by Sonia Nimr, at Charlotte's Library
Where the Lost Ones Go, by Akemi Dawn Bowman, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Windswept, by Margi Preus, at Charlotte's LibraryTwo at Ms. Yingling Reads-- A Long Way From Home, by Laura Schaefer, and Nothing Interesting Ever Happens to Ethan Fairmont, by Nick Brooks
Two at alibrarymama-- Let the Monster Out, by Chad Lucas, and Secret of the Shadow Beasts, by Diane Magras
Authors and Interviews
Fleur Bradly (Daybreak on Raven Island) at Middle Grade Ninja
T.A. Barron ar Fuse #8R.L. Stine at The Yarn podcast
10/15/22
Children of the Quicksands, by Efua Traoré
10/13/22
Black Bird, Blue Road, by Sofiya Pasternack
Ziva and Pesah are inseparable twins. Even when Pesah is stricken with leprosy, and confined first to his room and then to his own small dwelling outside the main house, Ziva spends most of her time with him. She is the one who tends to his infected wounds (the first line of the story is "I have to cut off Pesah's finger today"). Pesah knows he is dying, and this is confirmed when he sees a vision of the Angel of Death. Ziva refuses to accept this. So when she finds out that her father is going to send Perah away to a leper colony, she harnesses up horses to a cart and escapes with him to set out for Byzantium to find a cure.
When robbers attack, all seems lost...except that with the robbers, bound to serve them, is a half-sheydem (demon) boy, Almas When at his urging Ziva breaks the charm that held him, he binds himself to her quest in return, agreeing to help her take Perah to the fabled city of Luz, where Death cannot enter.
Their journey really is a race against death, and they make it just in time. But is the promise of life that Luz offers one that Ziva and Pesah can live with?
Ziva is a formidably fierce character, whose single-minded determination blazes across the pages. In fact it blazes a bit too brightly, overshadowing Pesah and Almas. The scenes in which Ziva actually talks and listens to each of them are great, pushing her toward more self-knowledge and taking her out of her own headspace. But they are too few and far between.
Ziva is so very much the center of the story and so very, desperately, focused on saving her brother that she doesn't actually spend much time talking to him or to Almas, and so we as readers don't get to spend much time seeing anything from their point of view. This diminished my personal enjoyment of the book lots; though I sympathized with Ziva, she felt more than a bit one note to me. Pesah is shown to us through the lens of Ziva's thoughts about him, and doesn't get much page time to be his own person. Likewise half-demon Almas, literally dragged along in Ziva's wake by the binding between them, also with just enough time given to him on the page that we know he is an interesting person with his own tragic story. Ziva barely things about him at all though it is clear that there is going to be a romantic interest in their future, so we don't even get much of him second-hand,
But still the final conflict/resolution between Ziva and the Angel of Death was profoundly moving, and Pesah did get to make his final choice. The Angel turned out to be an interesting character in Its own right, which pleased me, adding depth to the final conclusion, in which Pesah, not Ziva, gets to choose the course of his own life.
It's not a fantasy for readers who like Adventure, but will appeal to those who like emotionally charged journeys through worlds rich in story, particularly those who are kicking against the injustice and pity of the world.
What I personally liked best--doing a deep dive into internet reading about the Khazars! I love it when middle-grade fantasy reading leaves me better educated!
I also appreciated that the fantasy in this story is rooted in Judaism, a very rare thing in mg sci fi/fantsy. This is one of three Jewish middle grade fantasy books that I know of eligible for this year's Cybils Awards. The others are Aviva vs the Dybbuk, by Mari Lowe, and The Two Wrong Halves of Ruby Taylor by Amanda Panitch.
None of these three have been nominated yet, so please consider adding Jewish representation to the list of Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction nominations! Cybils Awards Nomination Form. And if you know of more, please comment!
10/11/22
Thunderbird Book 1, by Sonia Nimr, for Timeslip Tuesday
A personal complaint is that the sadness with which the story begins made it hard for me to get hooked.. Noor's beloved parents died when she was 11, and for the past two years she has lived in the home of her uncle. His wife is shrewish, greedy, and unkind, but fortunately her grandmother is there to give her all possible love and comfort, and one night gives her an old ring from her parents....and then she too dies.
Noor runs away to visit an old family friend, a professor of antiquities, to try to find out more about the ring. The ring is tied to her parents research--they were convinced that the phoenix was a real bird. And they were not wrong. With its death and rebirth every 500 or so years, the phoenix maintained the boundary between the human world and the world of the djinn and other magical creatures. It is time for the phoenix to die again, but this time it might not be resurrected....and the balance between the worlds would be shattered.
And Noor finds herself, accompanied by one of the djinn (who are also worried about the boundary falling), undertaking a quest through time to recover four feathers from the phoenix's past immolations.
Arriving in 16th century Jerusalem, she meets a girl who looks just like her, who has the same ring. The two join forces to find the phoenix, and escape after being brutally captured by soldiers to make it just in time to see the phoenix burn....and this first installment ends.
I have left out many of the lovely fascinating elements of the story that made it a pleasure to read. Though there are a few uneven bits, like Noor getting a lesson in the Crusader history of the city from her new friend (interesting, but something of an info-dump), Noor was such a clearly drawn character that she carried me through the story without faltering. It was fascinating to go back in time with her, and also to see Jerusalem through her terrified, Palestinian eyes. And if I ever time travel, I would, like Noor, to have a djinn in cat form going with me to magically provide appropriate clothes!
I completely agree with the conclusion of the Kirkus review (which is how I found out about this one)--
"This richly descriptive novel paints a moving portrait of a lost, lonely girl; a historic land with a painful past and present; and an enchanting magical world. The cliffhanger ending will leave readers eager for more."
Book 2 comes out this November, and I will be buying it.
Thunderbird is eligible for this year's Elementary/Middle Grade Cybils Awards. Two other Muslim fantasies that have also not yet been nominated are Nura and the Immortal Palace, by M.T. Khan, and Amira & Hamza: The Quest for the Ring of Power, by Samira Ahmed. If you know of others, please let me know! And please consider nominating one of these books (here's where you go to do that), to uplift middle grade Muslim fantasy!
10/9/22
Windswept, by Margi Preus
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi/fantasy from around the blogs etc (10/9/2022)
The Book of Wondrous Possibilities, by Deborah Abela, at The Book Muse
*Ghostlight, by Kenneth Oppel, at Pages Unbound
*Map of Flames, by Lisa McMann, at Geolibrarian
Marikit and the Ocean of Stars, by Caris Avendaño Cruz, at Your Tita Kate
*Monster Club, by Darren Aronofsky and Ari Handel, at Always in the Middle
*New Dragon City, by Mari Mancusi, at Ms. Yingling Reads, The Bookwyrm's Den, and Boys' Mom Reads
*Nothing Interesting Ever Happens to Ethan Fairmont. by Nick Brooks, at Always in the Middle
Odder, by Katherine Applegate, at Mom Read It
*A Rover's Story, by Jasmine Warga, at Cracking the Cover.com
*Shelterlings, by Sarah Beth Durst, at YA Book Nerd
The Tale of Truthwater Lake, by Emma Carroll, at Book Craic
*This Appearing House, by Ally Malinenko, at Charlotte's LibraryThe Worst Villain Ever, by Amy Bearce, at Say What?
Yesterday Crumb and the Storm in a Teacup, by Andy Sagar, at Twirling Book PrincessTwo at alibrarymama -- *The Prince of Nowhere, by Rochelle Hassan, and *The Lock-Eater, by Zack Loran Clark
Two by Kris Humphrey at Log Cabin Library Leo's Map of Monsters-- *The Armored Goretusk & *The Spit Fang Lizard
Authors and Interviews
Kalynn Bayron (*The Vanquishers) at Paola M Guerrero (YouTube)Jessica Vitalis (The Rabbit's Gift) at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Michelle A. Barry (Moongarden) at Teen Librarian ToolboxAlyssa Colman (The Tarnished Garden) at Withywindle
Ally Malinenko (*This Appearing House) at Bent Biblios Podcast and w-enternews
Emi Watanabe Cohen (*The Lost Ryu). at MG Book VillageOther Good Stuff
New Children's Book Picks October 2022 - UK Post, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Watch the trailer for My Father's Dragon at SLJ
10/8/22
This Appearing House, by Ally Malinenko
So today I found amongst the electronic detritus of my gmail a B. and N. gift card I hadn't used, went out to spend it, and after much thought and wandering came home with This Appearing House, by Ally Malinenko (August 2022 by Katherine Tegen Books). And then I neglected household tasks and read it, so yay for me!
The House appears one day, at the end of a cul-de-sac. Jac tries to accept without question that it is there, when it wasn't the week before.
And what with the tensions already in her mind--the ordinary new kid in school sort, and the bigger trauma of her five year anniversary of cancer diagnosis, with a mom who's constant concern is becoming smothering. Every clumsiness, every nervous shaking of her hands, could be a sign that she isn't free and clear after all.
The House calls to her.
Two of the boys who are class bullies dare Jac and her friend Hazel (a boy named after the rabbit, which the bullies have a field day with), to go inside. All four end up going in. They find nightmare built on nightmare.
Jac knows the House wants something from her...and until she figures out what that is, it won't let her go.
Was it pleasure reading? Not exactly--horror isn't my thing, and the House is a horror-poloza. It is a good mix of the profoundly disturbing, the terrifying, and the repulsive. I think young horror lovers will enjoy it. I have to admit I didn't linger on all the different nightmarish encounters, because my mind has a bad habit of playing disturbing images from horror books and movies back to me in exquisite detail which I don't appreciate. (content warning--tooth trauma)
Before I could turn off the keen, alert, reading part of my mind, though, there was a tooth thing. If you, like me, knocked your front teeth out at a young age and subsequently had recurring nightmares where you bit into apples and saw your teeth imbedded in them, be warned! This is the closest I can remember to feeling physically ill because of a scene in a book.
But behind the smoke-screen of the grotesque, this is a moving and thought-provoking story, about acknowledging trauma, but not letting that be all-defining. Being angry, sad, and terrified about having gotten a crap deal, but being able to start letting life flow onward is good to think about. I rarely call books "heartfelt" because it seems a nebbishy thing to say, but in this case it feels valid-- Jac's story came from the author's heart and her personal experience, and it resonated with my heart and my personal experience (the teeth aren't my only past trauma--I had a bad patch of way too many MRIs myself. Seven months pregnant, told I had a tumor behind my right eye, no way to know till baby was born if it was benign or not.....then baby and brain surgery simultaneously. All better now, I hope, knock on wood....)
However, all that being said--short answer is that this is a good mix of horror, a really strong MG friendship (Hazel is great) and good and useful things to think about when one feels introspective.
This Appearing House is eligible for this year's Cybils Awards in Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction, and is still waiting to be nominated! If you would like to take care of that, here's the nomination page--Cybils Awards Nomination Form
10/4/22
The House in the Waves, by James Hamilton-Paterson, for Timeslip Tuesday
But then he finds a handmade balloon (not a party balloon, but handmade with parchment like stuff pieced together) stuck in a tree, with a note attached from a boy pleading to be rescued from imprisonment in a tower. Martin's attention is caught, and so he journeys illicitly from the institution to find and help the writer of the note.
And he finds himself in the 16th century, in a fishing village about to walloped by a tremendous storm. Following a few leads from the (suspicious, but preoccupied) villagers, he comes to the ancient and crumbling house of a mad alchemist. Locked up in a tower by the alchemist, his uncle, is Will, who has been sending out messages on balloons he has made from the skin of mice.... As the storm hits, the alchemist's house collapse, and Will and Martin barely escape.
It was very good time travel, with Will's desperate predicament vividly described, and a beautifully creepy, yet moving, picture of the crazed alchemist uncle. It is a transformative experience for Martin, who cannot help but be engaged in the trauma of it all.
But then he wakes up in his own bed back in the institution, not having left it at all. It was a dream, a Freudian dream that has cleared his mind, and he is no longer detached from reality.
It was very gripping, and I read it in a single sitting, but there is much that made me uncomfortable re mental illness and children suffering from it. The detail and care with which the fat body of another child who seems to have a development delay was described was unpleasant, for example. And then there's the magical healing of mental illness being cured through drug-induced time travel and a few pointed remarks from the doctor pointing out elements of Martin's story that resonate with his real life.....not a very satisfying conclusion for the modern reader.
On the other hand, the theme of oceans, and drowned shells, and the fishing village and alchemist's house devastated by waves, makes the story strangely cohesive. The alchemy part was fascinating. And it was pleasing to see Martin come out of his isolation, and I did read it in one engrossed gulp. Well worth the $5 I spent on it.
10/2/22
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (loosely defined to include instagram, podcasts, etc) 10/2/22
Good morning from Rhode Island. Here's what I found in my hunt for mg sci fi/fantasy reviews this week; please let me know if I missed your post.
but first--nominations for the Cybils Awards are open, and ANYONE from around the world can nominate books! (but authors and publishers--if you want your own book nominated, don't do it yourself just yet; you'll get a chance after the public nominations close October 15). Eligible books are those published in the US or Canada October 16 2021-October 15 2022.
It would be possible to make a brilliant shortlist of seven books from what got nominated yesterday, the first day. But there are so many wonderful elementary/middle grade speculative fiction books that NEED to be nominated! I've put asterisks next to books in today's round-up that are eligible and still waiting for love. (feel free to let me know if I made a mistake!)
The Reviews
*Alliana, Girl of Dragons, by Julie Abe, at alibrarymama
Amari and the Great Game by B.B. Alston, at Log Cabin Library and Kiss the Book
*Beneath the Sand (Unicorn Island #2), by Donna Galanti, at Children's Books Heal
*Charlie Hernández & the Golden Dooms, by Ryan Calejo, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
*Eden's Everdark, by Karen Strong, at Charlotte's Library
*The Fire Star, and The Wolf's Howl (Maven and Reeve, books 1 and 2), by A. L. Tait, at Charlotte's Library
The Girl, the Ghost and the Lost Name, by Reece Carter, at Book Craic and Library Girl and Book Boy
The Ghost of Midnight Lake, by Lucy Strange, at The Children's Book Review
*Ghostcloud, by Michael Mann, at The Bookwyrm's Den
*Haven: Small Cat’s Big Adventure, by Megan Wagner Lloyd, at Semicolon
*It's The End Of The World And I'm In My Bathing Suit, by Justin A. Reynolds, at Original ContentLeila and the Blue Fox, by Kiran Millwood Hargrave with Tom de Freston, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads
*LightCasters, by Janelle McCurdy, at eviebookish*Omega Morales and the Legend of La Lechuza, by Laekan Zea Kemp, at The Bookwyrm's Den and Unconventional Quirky Bibliophile
*The Patron Thief of Bread, by Lindsay Eagar, at Kiss the Book
The Spectaculars, by Jodie Garnish, at Book Craic and Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
*The Supernatural Society, by Rex Ogle, at Kiss the Book*The Vanquishers, by Kalynn Bayon, at Ms. Yingling Reads and The Story Sanctuary
*The Whispering Fog, by Landra Jennings, at Say What?
The Wintrish Girl, by Melanie La’Brooy, at wendy_orr_authorAuthors and Interviews
Lois Lowry at The New Yorker
George Jreije (*Shad Hadid and the Alchemists of Alexandria) at MG Book VillageKatherine Applegate (*Odder) at The Yarn podcast
Lindsay Currie (*The Girl in White) at Teen Librarian Toolbox. and Novel on my mind
9/29/22
The Fire Star, and The Wolf's Howl (Maven and Reeve, books 1 and 2), by A. L. Tait
The Fire Star and The Wolf's Howl are the first two books of a new series by Australian author, A. L. Tait (August 2022, Kane Miller in the US), and since I'd enjoyed others of her books, I was very pleased when they arrived in the mail.. And then I was very sad when I got to the end of book 2 and there was no book 3. Here's an image of them from the author's website (and I totally agree with the Kirkus quote!)
Two young teens--Reeve, a new squire, and Maven, the companion/servant of a noble lady==are thrown together in a castle full of secrets. When a precious jewel goes missing, they both are desperate to solve the mystery; Reeve because his new lord has told him to find it, and he's desperate not to be dismissed, Maven because the jewel was to be her ticket to freedom. Even though it takes a while for them to trust each other, and to learn each other's secrets, they make a great team (sparks fly, mutual respect grows), and it was delightful seeing all the intrigue and deception swirling around them through their eyes.
The Wolf's Howl sends them on a journey, accompanying Reeve's lord and Maven's lady (newly married) to demesne off in the cold and windy wilds. There they find another mystery to solve, and once again I enjoyed them doing so lots!
I just hate it when I have a really solid book comparison to offer, and then I see the clever little marketers have beat me to it-- "39 Clues meets Ranger’s Apprentice in bestselling fantasy author A. L. Tait's new medieval adventure series. " But then I read this in my own review of Tait's earlier duology, The Ataban Cipher--"Especially recommended to younger Ranger's Apprentice fans." I am the winner, and can now say how very much Ranger's Apprentice fans might enjoy this new series--likeable, smart main characters who are clearly the good guys being brave and having adventures and solving mysteries in an alternate medieval Europe-ish sort of place. The Ranger's Apprentice books have better food and their main characters have better fighting skills than Reeve, but Tait's books take a deeper dive into the oppression of women in a patriarchal society. And though I'm sad to reject the food, I'll take actively subverting the patriarchy.
Dunno about the 39 Clues comp. though...seems a bit of a stretch to me, and my elation of just a moment ago changes to disappointment as I fail to think of a better comp of my own. I can't think of any middle grade books that have illicitly educated girls solving mysteries in medieval court settings (but with no magic, dragons or ghosts). Surely more must exist? I shall ask twitter.
In any event, The Wolf's Howl ends up setting the next book up beautifully, and I hope I get to read it sooner rather than later.
disclaimer: review copies received from the publisher
9/28/22
Eden's Everdark, by Karen Strong
Eden's mother never took her to visit Safina Island off the Georgia Coast, home to generations of her family who were first enslaved there and then made it their own place, where they owned land and became a strong community. But after her mother dies, her father takes her to see her family there. Not only does Eden find love from her kin in this beautiful island full of history, but discovers it's dark side, a darkness that was the reason her mother and grandmother left when her mother was still a girl.
Her mother left behind a sketchbook full of terrifying images--monsters, strange and spooky children, and more. And Eden discovers these weren't drawn from imagination, but from real life. When she finds a rift into the darkness, she feels strangely drawn to it, and goes through. Just as the witch who rules this land of ever darkness, where the sun never shines, wanted.
The Everdark is a spectral overlay on the real world, and in the grand house built by the descendants of the plantation owners, the witch, who calls herself Mother Mary, exercises near total control of the ghosts she's captured. Two ghost girls have been made her children, and she want's Eden to be her third dear daughter. Eden is still alive, though...though possibly not for long....and she's determined to escape.
But getting free means figuring out the sources of Mother Mary's power, and how to break it before she herself is broken. And it means uncovering the secret of her mother's magic--the family gift of making things grow--and finding it with herself as well.
The warm and loving first section of the book is a sharp and very effective contrast to the horror of the Everdark, with its creeping rot, trapped ghosts, Mother Mary being terrifying inside, and monsters lurking outside. But her survival and ultimate escape comes in no small part from the warmth and love in her own self. Added interest comes from the identities of all the ghosts (who come from many different times) that Eden meets. Mother Mary's backstory packs an especially intense punch--she isn't just a cardboard villain, but someone who was badly wronged who really does want her "children" to love her.
There's no miraculous end to Eden's grief as a result of her sojourn among the dead, but the story does end back in a place of warmth and light. It's gorgeously atmospheric and enthralling, so much so it kept my mind firmly its grip, which is especially noteworthy because I read it in a single sitting while my car was failing inspection and The Price is Right blared very loudly over my head.....
9/27/22
My Second Impression of You, by Michelle I. Mason, for Timeslip Tuesay
16 year old Maggie is sure that her perfect boyfriend, Theo, is going to ask her to prom when he suggests meeting up at a coffee shop, but instead, he breaks up with her. Stumbling back to her car, she falls and hurts her foot. Theo does nothing to help, but his best friend, Carson, who Maggie has never liked, is there and drives her home.
Maggie turns out to have broken a foot bone, and needs surgery, and her life, which centers around drama and dances, crashes down to mingle with the loss of Theo. She wallows in self-pity. So when she gets a text offering her the chance to revisit the best day of her life, she can't revisit, and installs the app. She'll go back to the wonderful, giddy, fairytale day when she and Theo first met.
But this time around, the app keeps intruding, showing her the day from other points of view. Her best friend has a secret that might ruin the love and trust between them. Theo is not exactly the romantic hero Maggie had thought. Carson is more than just Theo's unwelcome wingman. And so Maggie is forced to think about things that in her self-centered way had never occurred to her....All that she missed the first time around pushes her into being a better, more aware person, and gives her the gift of someone much better than Theo....
The app doesn't deliver it all in one day, so Maggie's real time life keeps getting knocked out of kilter by bits of new information, making her character growth more believable. She has to work hard to process and act on what she learns, and though the reader might want to shake her (she's isn't very likeable for the first half of the book or so), she does get there in the end.
Michelle Mason is the author of Your Life Has Been Delayed, another fascinating and thought-provoking YA time slip/romance (my review), and I appreciated the interesting twist on time travel she's come with here too. Maggie was really in the past, and the app had to poke her to keep her from changing things, so it was more than just watching a movie. The app isn't explained at all, and I can't help wonder why Maggie was the chosen one....
It's a really fun premise, well delivered, and the developing romance was sweet. It was a fast and absorbing read, with the bonus of me wondering what I would do if I were Maggie, and what day I'd want to go back to if I were Maggie....and what I might learn.