12/5/23

The Sky Over Rebecca, by Matthew Fox, for Timeslip Tuesday

The Sky Over Rebecca, by Matthew Fox (November 14, 2023, Union Square Kids in the US,  April 14, 2022, Hodder Childrens in the UK), is my favorite of all the new to me books I've read so far this year.  It was supposed to be last week's timeslip Tuesday, but when I was done reading it, instead of sitting down to review it, it was all too fresh and raw and sad in my mind (in a good way) for me to want to think cogently about it.

It's the story of ten-year-old Kara, a lonely girl living in Stockholm with her mother.  Although her beloved Grandfather lives close enough to visit often, which is a comfort, she has no friends, just bullies.  But one day looking out the bus window on her way to school, she sees a snow angel...with no footprints left by its maker.  And that is the start of a magic timeslip adventure, that leads her to Rebecca and her little brother Samuel, two kids living in hiding on an island in the middle of the frozen lake where she and grandfather go ice skating.  

Even Kara's great happiness about making a friend (and being the sort of person who can make friends, which she had worried about), doesn't mean she's not curious about the strangeness of Rebecca and her circumstances.  Gradually she realizes that Rebecca and Samuel slipped through time to hide from the Nazis, the only two from her family to escaped being murdered by them back during WW II.  Now Rebecca and Samuel, who can't walk, are stuck in their island hideaway, in the middle of the Swedish winter, in need of food and warmth, which Kara tries to provide (I liked that Kara's mother is able to help with this, concerned about situation but trusting Kara to do the right thing without trying to take over).  Even the boy who is the worst of the bullies is drawn into the mystery and becomes a good companion and helper (Kara grew tired of living in fear, and punched him, which tilted the balance of their relationship enough so that he, not redeemed but with a greater appreciation of Kara, can reshape their relationship).  

But she can't think of what she can do to help them move on....until Rebecca's prophetic vision of an airplane, from the Allies in the war, landing on the frozen lake comes true.  And oh my gosh do things take an utterly gut wrenching turn at this point, and I wept.  

It is utterly gorgeous time travel, of just the sort of magical slipping through the years that I love best. It's not just the two kids from the past here in the present, but enough of Kara slipping back to make the whole thing dreamlike and wonderful (and also gut wrenching).  It won awards over in England where it was first published, and I'm so glad I heard about it and got hold of a copy.  If you like Action and Adventure, it might not work for you, but if you want a story of a remarkable friendship between brave girls in a cold and snowy setting, with time travel that will remind you of old favorites (and some tense moments that I would count as action with a small a) do seek it out!

I would so dearly love to give it to my young self, who would have read it over and over, but am glad I haven't gotten so old as to not love children's books (even though I have so many on hand that I don't get to reread as much as I'd like...)




12/3/23

this week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (12/3/23)

an unusually short round-up this week...please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Amari and the Great Game (Supernatural Investigations #2), by B.B. Alston, at megsbookrack

The Beastly Baron of Beaux Bottom, by Jeremy Hullah, at Book Craic

Festergrimm (Legends of Eerie-On-Sea #4), by Thomas Taylor, at Log Cabin Library

Finney And the Secret Tunnel, by Jamie Lane Barber, at  Always in the Middle…  

The Little Match Girl Strikes Back, by Emma Carroll, at Ms. Yingling Reads 

Loki: A Bad God’s Guide to Ruling the World, by Louie Stowell, at Twirling Book Princess

Omega Morales and the Curse of El Cucuym, by Laekan Zea Kemp, at Charlotte's Library

The Secret of the Ravens, by Joanna Cacao, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Secrets of Splint Hall, by Katie Cotton, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads 


12/2/23

Omega Morales and the Curse of El Cucuym by Laekan Zea Kemp

It was a pleasure to revisit Omega Morales in her second adventure--Omega Morales and the Curse of El Cucuy (Omega Morales, 2) by Laekan Zea Kemp (October 2023, Little Brown).  A new monster, the legendary Mexican boogeyman El Cucuy, has come to town, and he is kidnapping children, and sending adults into an enchanted sleep.  Omega, her cousin Carlito, and Clau, her ghost friend, are determined to defeat him, but the game he is playing with them has twists and turns that seem to make this almost impossible.

Fortunately Omega has a new magical creature friend at her side, who is both cute and brave, as well has help from other kids in town.  And although most of the adults in her family are asleep, she can still find some help through dreams with them, and those who aren't asleep try to help (with little success, though).  In the end, as was the case with the first book, it is understanding and empathizing with the monster that lets Omega put an end to his reign of terror.

As I said in my review of the first book in the series, Omega Morales and the Legend of La Lechuza, "it never ceases to amaze me how the familiar middle grade themes of navigating family and friends and one's own changing self can be explored in so many different magical ways."  And as was the case with the first book, Omega isn't just dealing with a monstrous external threat but is also struggling to understand her own magic and how it is manifesting.  As was the case in the first book, her mother and grandmother are not helpful in this regard (even when awake), and I continue to be displeased with them.  On the plus side, though, this sequel doesn't have the disturbing bullying Omega experienced in the first book.

It is a book dense with magic, dangers, and Omega's relationships with a swirl of other characters (lots of minor characters)--it pays to read it slowly, because if you are a fast reader like me, you might from time to time become unsure of the particulars of what's happening and who is involved.  And be warned--it ends with a cliffhanger.  But those two caveats aside, it's an engrossing and entertaining story!

11/26/23

this week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy (11/26/23)

Morning all!  Here's what I found this week. As ever, let me know if I missed your post, and feel free to let me share if you have one for next week!

The Reviews

Amari and the Great Game, by B. B. Alston, at The Story Sanctuary

Beak to the Future (Two-Headed Chicken 2), by Tom Angleberger, at Mark My Words

Charmed Life, by Diana Wynne Jones, at Shiny New Books

City of Bones ( Bubba and Squirt), by Sherry Ellis, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow 

The Girl in White, by Linday Currie, at Twirling Book Princess

The Golden Key, by George MacDonald, at Faith Elizabeth Hough

The Ice Children, by M.G. Leonard, at Bellis Does Books 

The Impossible Girl, by Ashley White, at Log Cabin Library

The Incredibly Amazing and Magical Flying Chair, by Bob Schumaker and Nancy Machlis Rechtman, at Bookworm for Kids 

The Kingdom of Broken Magic, by Christine Aziz, at Book Craic

The Lost Library, by Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Lucky Diamond, by Valinora Troy, at Carol Baldwin's Blog

 Nimbus, by Jan Eldredge, at Charlotte's Library

The November Witches, by Jennifer Claessen, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads 

The Queen of Thieves, by Johan Rundberg, at Mark My Words

The Secret Library, by Kekla Magoon, at Rosi Hollinbeck

Slumber of Silence (The Talisman #4.5), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words

The Sky Over Rebecca, by Matthew Fox, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Stitch, by Pádraig Kenny, at Valinora Troy

World Weavers, by Sam Gayton, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

Two at A Library Mama--The Grace of Wild Things and Moongarden | 

Two at The Book Search--Juniper Harvey and the Vanishing Kingdom, by Nina Varela, and The Spirit Glass by Roshani Chokshi.


Other Good Stuff

Best Middle Grade Books 2023 | SLJ Best Books | School Library Journal



Nimbus, by Jan Eldredge

If magical cats are a thing you like, Nimbus, by Jan Eldredge September 2023, Balzer + Bray) is an obvious and excellent choice!  

Nimbus was rescued by Fletcher's family when she was a wounded, abandoned kitten, unwanted because of being a black cat.  Nursed back to health and dearly loved by Fletcher, Nim thought her bad luck was a thing of the past.  But then Flecher opens an old jar which had imprisoned a nightmare demon.  Nim instantly fought the demon when it attached Fletcher, and thought she'd one, though she'd been badly injured.  But Fletcher's cat-hating Aunt Caroline, roused by the commotion, assumed Nim had been the one to attach the boy, and took her off to a dump and left her there.

Happily, a friendly rat helps Nim reach the safety of a witch's home.  Agatha has a soft spot of cats in need (she has four already), and tries to help Nim heal (though Nim is so desperate to get back to Fletcher to make sure he's safe that this is rather frustrating for Agatha).  While at Agatha's, Nim discovers she's taken the demon's ability to dream walk, and at night she finds herself in the dream world, where her travels through the dreams of her new cat companions, and her own dreaming, help her to figure out how to defeat the demon for once and for all.

It's about more than just cat vs demon, though....a large part of the story is set at Agatha's house, an interlude of little direct action and much about Nim learning from the other cats, and understanding their stories.  It's also about the brave rat friend who helped Nim, who has his own important role in defeating the demon.  I found this enjoyable reading, though kids who come for demon fighting action might find it a bit slow....

That being said, the final demon showdown is great, with Aunt Caroline making a humorously grotesque appearance! 

Nim is a very sweet brave kitten, and the supporting cast of rat, cats and witch are great too!  I enjoyed it, and it would be a great gift for a kid who read all the Warriors books last year and still doesn't want to part with them.


11/19/23

this week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi 11/19/2023

Hi all, here what I found this week!  please let me know if I missed your post/a post about your book. And please if you review a mg sci fi/fantasy book this week, feel free to let me know in advance!  What with Goodreads eliminating mg as an award category, MG authors can use all the love you can give them (and showing MG spec fic books love my main motivation for doing these round-ups instead of renovating, or even cleaning my house on Sunday mornings, or even evener, actually reading and reviewing myself), so review away and let me know!

The Reviews

The Dark Lord’s Daughter, by Patricia C. Wrede, at Pages Unbound

Darkness and Demon Song (Marius Grey 2) by M.R. Fournet, at Mark My Words

The Dreamatics, by Michelle Cuevas, at YA Books Central

The Invitation (Book 1 of Kepler62), by Timo Parvela and Bjorn Sortland, at Mark My Words

The Memory Thieves, by Dhonielle Clayton, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads  

The Midnight Switch, by Samuel J. Halpin, at BookMurmuration

The Nighthouse Keeper (Blight Harbor 2) by Lora Senf, at Mark My WordsMs. Yingling Reads, and Kiss the Book 

The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate DiCamillo, at SonderbooksMiss Cleveland is reading, and Magic Fiction Since Potter

Time After Time, by Sarah Mlynowski and Christina Soontornvat, at Ms. Yingling Reads

 We the Future, by Cliff Lewis, at  Charlotte's Library 

 The Whispering Walls (Shadowhall Academy #1), by Phil Hickes, at Scope for Imagination

Two at A Library Mama -- The Lost Library, by Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass, and The House of the Lost on the Cape by Sachiko Kashiwabe, translated by Avery Fischer Udagawa


Authors and Interviews

Danny Weston (Postcards from Valhalla) at Mr. Ripley's Enchanted Books and Scope for Imagination

DaVaun Sanders (Keynan Masters and the Peerless Magic Crew) at Literary Rambles


Other Good Stuff

8 Baking Fantasy Books, at  A Library Mama

At Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books - Best Children's Book Picks November 2023 in the UK 

11/14/23

We the Future, by Cliff Lewis, for Timeslip Tuesday

We the Future, by Cliff Lewis (April 2023, North Star Editions), is a powerful story of a girl from the future working as a catalyst to start, one friend, one school yard conversation at a time, a flood of climate activism.  Don't be put off, as I almost was, by some climate change information dumping at the beginning, or by the pink spacesuit the girl, Sunny, from the future is wearing.  Stay of the growth of the movement and ride its wave toward hope.  

And on the way, watch Jonah, a kid with asthma so bad it could kill him, a lonely kid with no friends, find with Sunny's help how to use his voice and his gift for reading people to be a founder of a movement that will change Sunny's disastrous present a century in the future.  There's lots of good storytelling here, and it really builds and builds beautifully.  

The time travel aspect of the plot provides not just Sunny the catalyst but also two goons who have followed her back into the past to retrieve the time travel device they feel she stole from them. There are also, thanks to this device, little jumps into the recent past that pleasingly allow events to work out.  

All in all, very satisfying, and I was sincerely moved.  I'd be curious to know what actual young readers make of it--will they react with cynicism or zeal?  Possibly I will feal more cynical about this story tomorrow than I do right now, having just finished, but I did finish fired up....And that's all I will type, as my nose is very cold (the wood stove is in another room, and the heats not on.  Though I knew even before reading this that individual "green" actions aren't what's needed, I still grimly live in a cold house....).  

11/12/23

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (11/12/23)

Good morning from Rhode Island!  Here's what I found this week--please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Camp Sylvania (Camp Sylvania #1), by Julie Murphy, at Jill's Book Blog

Emperor of the Universe Series, by David Lubar, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Field of Screams, by Wendy Parris, at Charlotte's Library

Glassborn, by Peter Bunzl, illustrated by Katarzyna Doszla, at Scope for Imagination

The Girl in the Window, by Lindsey Hobson, at Bookworm for Kids

The Haunted Mansion: Storm & Shade, by Claudia Gray, at Kiss the Book 

Impossible Creatures, by Katherine Rundell, at Book Craic

Into the Shadow Mist, by Christina Soontornvat, at Pages Unbound

November Witches, by Jennifer Claessen, at  Library Girl and Book Boy

Postcards from Valhalla, by Danny Weston, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books 

The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate DiCamillo, at A Kids Book A Day and The Book Nut (audiobook review)

RiverHome for the Holidays (The Adventures of Toby Baxter: Book 2), by Tim Wright, at Reading With Your Kids Podcast

Shades of Winter (Misfit’s Magic), by Fred Gracely, at  Mark My Words: 

The Song of the Swan, by Karah Sutton, illustrated by Pauliina Hannuniemi, at Log Cabin Library 

Tiffany Aching’s Guide to Being a Witch by Rhianna Pratchett and Gabrielle Kent, illustrated by Paul Kidby, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

Wand, by Landra Jennings, at Always in the Middle…  

The Wolf-Girl, the Greeks and the Gods, by Tom Holland, illustrated by Jason Cockroft, at Magic Fiction Since Potter


Authors and Interviews

Esme Symes-Smith (Sir Callie and the Dragon’s Roost) at The Nerd Daily

Christopher Mackie (Cloudlanders) at Parrot Street Book Club

Kerstin Stanford (Escape from Portaliege: A Sam Harte Adventure) at The Worldshapers podcast

Jennifer Claessen (The November Witches) at Scope for Imagination


Other Good Stuff

"Epic Quests & Enchanted Worlds" at From The Mixed Up Files

11/9/23

Field of Screams, by Wendy Parris

If you are looking for a middle grade ghost story that's spooky and scary but not so horrifying as to be disturbing, Field of Screams, by Wendy Parris (August 2023 by Delacorte Press), is a great pick!

Rebecca is a would-be ghost hunter who hasn't yet managed to actually see a ghost.  When her mother decides the two of them are going to spend the summer with her deceased dad's family on a farm in Iowa, the only comfort her best friend (who she was hoping to go to camp with) can offer is that an old house in the middle of nowhere sounds like a great place for ghosts.

And indeed, this proves to be the case.  The mundane world of family time, including reminiscences about her dad that make her feel closer to him (he too believed in ghosts, for instance), is disturbed by creepy happenings.  They are small at first, and possible to for Rebecca dismiss with intense logical thought, and certainly nothing anyone else takes seriously.  Not even Nick, the cute boy who is willing to at least consider the possibility that ghosts are real, is convinced at first.  But the creepiness turns into a genuine haunting that can't be dismissed.  

Rebecca, now certain there is a real ghost, struggles to keep investigating like a good paranormal researcher while becoming increasingly frightened.  The ghost is getting stronger and more terrifying every day.  It becomes a race to find the clues to who the ghost is and what they want, before a tragedy from long ago strikes again.

The mystery is a satisfying one, leading down an interesting path of Rebecca's family history to a really great abandoned (and haunted) house (I liked the abandoned house exploring bits lots!).  The haunting is also satisfying, and the ghost makes sense--there's a reason they are still around.  The writing is very vivid; it is easy to feel Rebecca's fright and admire her determination to keep going.  Real world tensions (is Rebecca's mom falling in love with Kelsie's dad?  And why is Kelsie so awful to Rebecca?) play on Rebecca's nerves alongside the strain of being haunted, adding to general discomfort that's looming like an approaching storm.

And then when then the storm breaks, all the pieces come together very nicely indeed in a tense and moving climax.

Don't expect, though, all the jump scares and bloody horror the title might conjure up; there's actually no running-while-screaming through a corn field, and the field is only a minor part of the haunting.

But you can expect to be gripped and entertained by the supernatural mystery, that touches on themes of loss and change that are very relatable to the target audience!


11/5/23

this week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (11/5/23)

Here's what I found this week; nothing from me becuase of me still desperatly trying to finish outside work before winter, sigh.

The Reviews

Adventures of Takuan From Koto, by Ryu Zhong, at Bookworm for Kids

The Clockwork Conspiracy, by Sam Sedgman, at Scope for Imagination

Dogtown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, illustrated by Wallace West, at A Kids Book A Day

Dragon Daughter, by Liz Flanagan, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

The Fall of the House of Tatterly, by Shanna Miles, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Finch House, by Ciera Burch, at A Kids Book A Day

Glassborn, by Peter Bunzl, at a Library Lady 

The Great Weather Diviner, by Andrew Dolberg and Rob Long, at Always in the Middle…

The Hunt for the Hollower, by Callie C. Miller, by Pages Unbound

Keynan Masters and the Peerless Magic Crew, by DaVaun Sanders, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Mermedusa, by Thomas Taylor, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads  

Odder, by Katherine Applegate, at proseandkahn

Once We Were Witches, by Sarah Driver, at Kiss the Book

The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate DiCamillo, at Faith Elizabeth Hough

A Ranger’s Guide to Glipwood Forest, by Andrew Peterson, at Mark My Words

Scariest.Book.Ever. by R.L. Stine, at Kiss the Book

Shadowhall Academy: The Whispering Walls, by Phil Hickes, at Book Craic

Spooky Stories of the World, by Wendy Shearer, illustrated by Teo Georgiev, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Tales to Keep You Up At Night, by Dan Poblocki, at Twirling Book Princess

The Taming of the Cat, by Helen Cooper, at Scope for Imagination

The Wild Robot Protects, by Peter Brown, at Miss Cleveland is reading… 

Two at The Book Search -- The Lost Library, by Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass, and The Carrefour Curse by Dianne K. Salerni

Three at the New York Times--Jeanne DuPrau’s “Project F,” Patricia Forde’s “The Girl Who Fell to Earth” and Donna Barba Higuera’s “Alebrijes”


Authors and Interviews

 R. L. Stine (Scariest Book Ever) at People


10/31/23

Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh, by Rachael Lippincott for Timeslip Tuesday

A YA sapphic love story for this week's Timeslip Tuesday--Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh, by Rachael Lippincott (August 29, 2023, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers).

Audrey is in a depressed holding pattern--dumped by her boyfriend and waitlisted by her dream school, the RI School of Design, she puts in the motions of working at the family corner store in Pittsburgh.  If she can send RISD the additional art they asked of her, maybe she'll get in, but she's not feeling any creative spark at all.  But then a regular customer, a curmudgeonly old man, sends her back to England in 1812.  Which turns out to be just the unsticking adventure she needs!

Back in 1812, wealthy and lovely Lucy is also stuck--her father is planning to marry her off to a much older man who is an awful piece of work.  Then Audrey pops into her life.  Lucy takes Audrey in hand, molding her as much as possible into a proper regency young lady, albeit one who's American upbringing can be used to try to explain all the bits of Audrey that refuse to be molded, and there are lots of these.  

Audrey figures out that she has 24 days in the past, and figures that she needs to find her spark again to get home.  So she casts around at the local eligible young men for love....  And Lucy, talking all this over with her new friend, yearns for a spark of her own.  

And then they realize it is each other that is making sparks fly....

It's a charming enough romance, and there's considerable humor in fish out of water Audrey back in 1812, and considerable sympathy evoked for poor trapped Lucy.  But the story didn't go beyond "charming enough" for me into any sort of moving, gripping reading experience.  It's pretty clear what's going to happen romance-wise, so it was more a waiting for the inevitable to happen than a what will happen next story.  Also the only Pride and Prejudice tie in was the time period, which disappointed me.  If you want a bit of escapism with two girls falling sweetly in love, and if you like your Time Travel to be a diverting bit of plot device, it will do nicely, but if you want more, not so much.

10/29/23

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (10/29/23)

Good morning all!  Here's what I gathered this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Bite Risk, by S.J. Wills, at Valinora Troy

Coyote Queen, by Jessica Vitalis, at ReadWonder and Watch. Connect. Read.

Dogtown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, illustrated by Wallace West, at Charlotte's Library

Ghost Rescue, by Jenny McLachlan, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads 

Grumbones, by Jenn Bennett, at Pages Unbound 

Hellaween, by Moss Lawton, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Hollowthorn, by Kalyn Josephson, at The Story Sanctuary and  It's All About the Book 

Just a Pinch of Magic, by Alechia Dow, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Kingdom of Dust by Lisa Stringfellow, at Watch. Connect. Read.

Mia and the Traitor of Nubis, by Janelle McCurdy, at Books Up North

The Midnight Switch, by Samuel J. Halpin, at Book Craic

Project F, by Jeanne DuPrau, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate DiCamillo, at Redeemed Reader

Shakti, by S. J. Sindu & Nabi H. Ali, at  Pages Unbound

Show Us Who You Are, by Elle McNicoll, at  Kiss the Book

Sixteen Souls, by Rosie Talbot, at Ms. Yingling Reads 

The Snow Girl, by Sophie Anderson, at Book Craic and My Book Corner

The Song of the Swan by Karah Sutton, at The Story Sanctuary and Charlotte's Library

The Spirit Snatcher, by Cat Gray, at Book Craic

The Witch-Stone Ghosts, by Emily Randall-Jones, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

Two dog stories at A Library Mama--Elf Dog and Owl Head, by M.T. Anderson, and The Eyes and the Impossible, by Dave Eggers

Two more at A Library Mama- Between Monsters and Marvels, by Alyssa Wishingrad, and Don’t Want to Be Your Monster, by Deke Moulton

Two at The Book Search--Creatures of the In Between, by Cindy Lin, and The Bellwoods Game, by Celia Krampien

Two at Ms. Yingling Reads -- Alex Wise vs. The End of the World Terry J. Benton-Walker, and Futureland: The Nightmare Hour (Futureland #2), by H.D. Hunter


Other Good Stuff

10 Enchanting Dungeons and Dragons Books for Kids (imaginationsoup.net)

Spooky Books for Halloween! - (mybookcorner.co.uk) and another great Halloween list at kellybyrd.com

Urusla Le Guin's absolutely charming Cat Wings series is being reissued!  via Cracking the Cover

The winners of the 2023 Ignyte Awards have been announced! Congratulations to Claribel Ortega!

Best in Middle Grade

for works intended for the middle grade audience
  • Ruby Finley vs. the Interstellar Invasion – K. Tempest Bradford (Farrar, Straus and Giroux Books for Young Readers)
  • The Last Mapmaker – Christina Soontornvat (Candlewick Press)
  • The Marvellers – Dhonielle Clayton (Henry Holt & Company)
  • WINNER: Witchlings – Claribel Ortega (Scholastic Press)
  • You Only Live Once, David Bravo! – Mark Oshiro (HarperCollins)

10/28/23

The Song of the Swan, by Karah Sutton

The Song of the Swan, by Karah Sutton, illustrated by Pauliina Hannuniemi (middle grade, Oct 24, 2013, Knopf Books for Young Readers), is a magical, fairytale inspired mystery. The fairytales in this case are Swan Lake and Giselle, but there are undertones of other tales as well. 

It's the story of a young girl, Olga, who was taken in by a swindling crook after her mother's death.  She uses her strands of magic to craft illusions that make items of shoddy workmanship appear (to a small number of people) worth buying.  A strong and steadfast young man, Pavel, travels with them, and is Olga's only friend, although she is so hardened by her unpleasant upbringing that she takes him for granted.

When Olga hears of a mysterious castle, avoided by anyone with sense, that is home to an immensely valuable gem, she becomes determined to go looking for it.  And she and Pavel find it, and much to their surprise instead of being the ruin they were expecting it is full of light, with guests enjoying the ballroom dancing every night and all creature comforts readily available.  The lord of the castle is a gracious host.  

Olga is suspicious, but not quite suspicious enough at first; there's a magic at work, urging complacency, and Pavel falls almost completely under its spell. But still Olga, driven by the desperate need to find the gem, and achieve a comfortable independent life, persists in her hunt, following the strands of her magic through a twisted maze of evil.  Not only does she risk her friendship with Pavel, but she almost loses herself to the horribly dark magic of her host and the curse that has trapped all the other guests.  

Fortunately, she has help from the magical spider queen, who was the original grantor of threads of magic to mortals.  And fortunately, as well, she discovers she still has the ability to care for others.  (nb--although there are indeed spiders in the story, arachnophobes should be able to cope--they aren't monstrous). And although I predicted many of the twists, this did not make me less interested in see how things played out.

I really enjoyed seeing the plot unfold, and glad to see Olga become less ruthless and start to develop a moral compass, seeing beyond her own immediate desires.  If you like cursed castles (with lots of rooms full of stuff, which I personally like lots) and plucky youngsters unravelling curses, you will, like me, enjoy this one lots!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.

10/23/23

Dogtown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, illustrated by Wallace West

Dogtown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, illustrated by Wallace West (younger middle grade, September 19, 2023, Feiwel & Friends) arrived at my home unexpectedly, and I'm very glad it did, because it is a charmer!  It touched the heart of even cynical non-dog person me, and if it can do that, I'm sure that young uncynical dog lovers will be utterly and completely in love with it!

It's the story of a dog named Chance, who lives at Dogtown, a shelter for both regular dogs and robotic ones.  Chance longs every day for her family to come take her home again, though she's worried that they won't want her anymore when they find she only has three legs now.  But this doesn't mean that she spends her days pining.  She has a wonderfully caring personality, and this is what drives the plot.

When a robot dog, Metal Head, arrives at Dogtown, Chance is at first dismissive of them--robot dogs don't have hearts like real ones.  But Metal Head proves her wrong.  This is the catalyst for a chain of events include a tense (and entertaining) adventure for Chance, Metal Head, and Chance's mouse friend outside the safety of Dogtown.  And it's because of Metal Head that Chance finds her family again.  

And although I (cynical, as noted above) tend to squirm at sweet messages, the last message Chance gets from Metal Head made me sniff (in a good way)--"Your heart is a muscle.  It grows stronger the more you use it."  The sweet message is set in the context of a solid story, with characters the reader can't help but care for, and the illustrations make the book all the more appealing.  So many cute dogs!  

But don't think it is all caring friends and happy endings!  Sensitive kids might be distressed by some aspects of the story--Dogtown, sadly, is not a no kill shelter.  And although none of the dogs we meet suffer this fate, it hangs over their heads, adding to their desperate wish to find homes.  Chances backstory is sad--a horrible dog sitter was responsible for the accident that cost Chance her leg.  And Metal Head's story has a twist that might distress--(spoiler) the boy he lived with discarded him as being a childish toy, which reminds me of what happens to kids when friends grow up faster than they do.

Still, the feeling at the end is warm and loving, and I would happily give it as a gift if I had any 8 or 9 year old animal lovers to shop for.

10/22/23

This week's round up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (10/22/23)

Here's what I found, let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

The Cats of Silver Crescent, by Kaela Noel, at Mark My Words

The Deadlands: Survival (The Deadlands 3), by Skye Melki-Wegner, at Mark My Words

Deadly Deep, by Jennifer Killick, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

Deephaven, by Ethan M. Aldridge, at Pages Unbound and Ms. Yingling Reads

The Ghost Job, by Greg Van Eekhout, at Always in the Middle… 

The Great Ghost Hoax (The Great Pet Heist #2), by Emily Ecton and David Mottram, at Kiss the Book

Grave Mistakes, by Kitty Curran, at  Geo Librarian

How Not to Be A Vampire Slayer, by Katy Birchall, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Kingdom of Broken Magic, by Christine Aziz, at Book Craic

Lunar, by Chris Bradford, at Book Craic

Mahahaa, by Neil Christopher, at Mark My Words

Moongarden (Plotting the Stars 1), by Michelle A. Barry, at Susan Uhlig

The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow Jessica Haight and Stephanie Robinson, at Valinora Troy

The Secret of the Ravens, by Joanna Cacao, at Mark My Words

Sir Cumference and the 100 PerCent Goose Chase by Cindy Neuschwander and Wayne Geehan, at Sharon the Librarian

Slime Doesn’t Pay, by R.L. Stine, at Mark My Words 

Vivian Van Tassel and the Secret of Midnight Lake, by Michael Witwer, at Mark My Words

Welcome to Dead Town, Raven McKay, by Eibhlís Carcione, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

White House Clubhouse, by Sean O'Brien, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Two at A Library Mama--Finch House, by Ciera Burch, and Nightmare House, by Sarah Allen

Two at The Book Search--Three Tasks for a Dragon, by Eion Colfer, and  Dogtown, by Katherine Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko

Other Good Stuff

"We Don't Talk About Harry Potter," by Dhonielle Clayton (publishersweekly.com)


the new WONKA Trailer at 100 Scopenotes

10/18/23

Ways to Build Dreams, by Renée Watson

Though I mostly review middle grade sci fi/fantasy here, I do actually read other genres too! And Ways to Build Dreams, by Renée Watson, illustrated by Niña Mata (October 17th 2023, Bloomsbury), was just the right heartwarming read for this difficult week.

This is the fourth story about Ryan Hart, and in this outing she is on the cusp of change.  Starting middle school next year, quite possibly without her best friend at her side, is a daunting prospect.  And it feels like she's being pushed to figure out not just who her future self will become, but how she will make change for good in the world.

The story is full of lots of small moments in ordinary life; there's nothing dramatic, but it's all interesting, and there's enough going on, and enough food for thought, to invest the reader in Ryan's world. 

But most of all the story is full of love --from her parents, from her friends (with empathy even coming from a boy she hadn't before been able to quite trust), from her teacher, and from herself--not just love back to all those people, but loving herself, and believing, as the title promises, that she will keep on building dreams. Though the honor of being her class valedictorian comes with the horror of public speaking, Ryan rises to the challenge.  And her speech, which brings this part of her life, and the book, to a close, says something many of us need to be reminded of--

"So, instead of telling you to dream big and change the world, I want to say, go change your world--your family, your neighborhood, your community.  I've learned that it's not only important to dream of doing big, big, big, things, it's also important to dream of simple, everyday things we can do to make the world a better place."

Yes. I needed to hear that.

disclaimer--review copy received from the publisher.




10/15/23

this week's round up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs etc. (10/15/23)

 Welcome to this week's round-up!  Please let me know if I missed your post.

first--today is the last day of public nominations for the Cybils Awards!  If you haven't yet shown love for a elementary/middle grade sci fi/fantasy book published in the US or Canada between Oct 16 2022 and Oct 15 2023, don't miss your chance!  I have gathered together a list of some of the books still waiting for your consideration--do visit and see if there's one you love and give it its chance to shine! And I've starred the books in this round-up that are eligible and haven't been nominated yet.  (There are of course lots of other worthy categories, from picture books to HS non fiction....)

The Reviews

Alex Wise vs. the End of the World, by Terry J. Benton-Walker, at Mark My Words

Bella Bright and the Ghost Game, by Carolyn Ward, at Scope for Imagination and Book Craic

The Bellwoods Game, by Celia Krampien, at Bookworm for Kids

Book Review: 'Percy Jackson: The Chalice of the Gods' (thecosmiccircus.com)

Coyote Queen, by Jessica Vitalis, at  Always in the Middle… 

*The Enchanted Life of Valentina Mejía, by Alexandra Alessandri, at The Banner

*Forever Twelve, by Stacey McAnulty, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Grave Thief, by Dee Hahn, at Pages Unbound 

Ice Children, by M.G. Leonard, at Valinora Troy

Just a Pinch of Magic, by Alechia Dow, at Punk-Ass Book Jockey  

*Kelcie Murphy and the Hunt for the Heart of Danu, by Erika Lewis, at proseandkahn

*The October Witches, by Jennifer Claessen, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

*Project F, by Jeanne DuPraa at Dede  (@professional_bookworm_dede) 

*The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate di Camillo, at Semicolon and Cracking the Cover

Scarewaves, by Trevor Henderson, at  Ms. Yingling Reads

Sky, by Holly Webb, at Book Craic

Three Tasks for a Dragon by Eoin Colfer, illustrated by  P.J. Lynch, at Mark My Words  and Cracking the Cover

Vivian Lantz's Second Chances, by Kathryn Ormsbee, at Charlotte's Library


Authors and Interviews

Shanna Miles (*The Fall of the House of Tatterly) at teenlibrariantoolbox.com

Alechia Dow (Just a Pinch of Magic) at teenlibrariantoolbox.com

Zana Fraillon and Bren MacDibble (The Raven’s Song) at Bellis Does Books (wordpress.com)

Sylvia Whitman (*If you Meet the Devil, Don't Shake Hands) at Smack Dab in the Middle

Sean O’Brien (*White House Clubhouse) at Literary Rambles:

Jessica Vitalis (Coyote Queen) on Telling the Truth: Sometimes You Have to Make It Up, at Cynthia Leitich Smith and an interview at From The Mixed Up Files

 Lisa Schmid (Hart & Souls), at From The Mixed Up Files


Other Good Stuff

Spooky Stories for Middle Grade Readers 2023 – Scope for Imagination

Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books - Best Children's Book Picks October 2023 

10/10/23

Vivian Lantz's Second Chances, by Kathryn Ormsbee for Timeslip Tuesday

Today's Timeslip Tuesday, Vivian Lantz's Second Chances, by Kathryn Ormsbee (middle grade, June 2023 HarperCollins) is a Groundhog's Day style repeating the same day over and over again.  In this case, Vivian is stuck repeating the first day of  8th grade.  And her track record of truly horrible first days is not broken by the many misfortunes that befall her, with every do-ever day bringing fresh distress.

Vivian isn't thrilled about starting 8th grade without her best friend Cami who has moved away.  But she's determined to do it right, and so she writes a to-do list in her new journal to help her have a great experience.  She does not.  Slipping in the mud, accidently bringing a bag of dog poop to school, destroying the class fish tank, and getting her first period (and first period stain) in the cafeteria at lunch is just some of what happens.  

And when she wakes up the next day, she gets to do it all again (but this time without the poop and with a pad...)  She starts figuring out some of the social dynamics that she'd missed before--the boy she was crushing on is a jerk, the queen bee girl is a viper, and Gemma, who used to be tight in that circle of friends, has had enough of them, and is (maybe) ready for a new friend....as of course is Vivian.  Maybe even more than just friends.... (though there is explicit attraction, it is not acted on, which makes sense because although Vivian gets to know Gemma through 8 or so days, Gemma keeps meeting Vivian for the first time....)

But there's more going on in Vivian's life than just school. That first day is when her 17-year-old brother leaves with no warning, to go off travelling with his band. She and their dads have to somehow come to terms with this; Vivian feels angry and abandoned.  So a few of her repeat days are spent with her brother as her main focus, which is a nice change from middle school awful-ness, and she tells her brother what's been happening to her, and though he has no answer about how to stop the time loop, he does give her food for thought.

Back at school, Vivian keeps messing things up in her quest to have a perfect first day, and is getting fed up.  She tells her best friend Cami all about it, and Cami's insights blend with her brother's.... Instead of trying to have a Perfect Day, Vivian is going to simply live it authentically.  And miraculously, that works!  It isn't, in fact, a perfect day, but it's far from being a disaster.

So reliving a horrible 8th grade day is not exactly fun reading, but it was fun seeing how things played out differently each time. The magic is explained more or less satisfactorily, and the ending is such that there's a teasing though that it might come into play again, which I'd be up for!   And though I wanted to shake Vivian at times, I was glad she was able to do some quick growing up.  I'm sure this will resonate with many of its target readers, and perhaps even give them food for thought as well.

Glad to have a new one to add to my LGBTQ middle grade fantasy list!  (as well as Vivian's crush on Gemma, who is explicitly identified as gay, there are Vivien's two dads, a nice discussion she has with one of them about how he realized he was gay, a brief reference to how they weren't allowed to marry for years, and Vivian's own reflection that she didn't have to choose either/or boys/girls).

NB.  This one has been safely nominated for this year's Cybils Awards, but there are lots and lots of great books still waiting to be picked.  Please show a book the love it deserves by nominating it before the deadline at the end of the day on the 15th!  Here and also here are some (though by no means all) of the books you could pick, and here's where you go to nominate.

10/8/23

Some elementary/middle grade fantasy and sci fi books waiting for their Cybils Awards slot



I read a lot of middle grade fantasy and sci fi books every year, and every October when I'm a panelist for the Cybils Awards, I desperately want every one of them, as well as all the ones I haven't read yet, to be honored with a nomination! So if you have a few minutes to spare to show a book some love, here are some elementary/middle grade speculative fiction books that haven't gotten the call yet!

 I hope you see one you really loved and nominate it! Here's where you go--#CYBILS2023 Public Nomination Period

TODAY OCT 15 is the last day!!!!

Heroes of the Water Monster, by Brian Young

Rumaysa, by Radiya Hafiza

The Chalice of the Gods, by Rick Riordan

Seagarden, by Michelle A. Barry

City of Secrets, by Alex London

The Book of Stolen Dreams, by David Farr

Oscar From Elsewhere, and also The Secret of Lillian Velvet, by Jaclyn Moriarty

The Portal Keeper: The Misewa Saga, Book Four a book by David A Robertson

The Fall of the House of Tatterly by Shanna Miles

A Pocketful of Stars, by Aisha Bushby

The Unforgettable Logan Foster and the Shadow of Doubt, by Shawn Peters

Heroes of Havensong: Dragonboy by Megan Reyes

Emma and the Queen of Featherstone by Lindsay Fryc

Maggie and the Mountain of Light by Mark Snoad

Escape from Grimstone Manor (Monsterious, #1) by Matt McMann

The Hunt for the Hollower by Callie C. Miller

Maybe There are Witches, by Jude Atwood

Field of Screams by Wendy Parris

Peril at Price Manor by Laura Parnum

The Otherwoods, by Justine Pucella Winans

Bee Bakshi and the Gingerbread Sisters, by Emi Pinto

Golden Frog Games. Witchlings #2 by Claribel Ortega

Islands of Elsewhere by Heather Fawcett

Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind, by Misa Siguira

Ring of Solomon, by Aden Polydoros

Winston Chu vs. the Whimsies, by Stacey Lee

Serwa Boatang’s Guide to Witchcraft and Mayhem, by Roseanne Brown

Theo Tan and the Fox Spirit by Jesse Q. Sutanto

The Little Match Girl Strikes Back, by Emma Carroll

The Ghost Job, by Greg Van Eekhout

The Glass Witch, by Lindsay Puckett

The Enchanted Bridge, by Zetta Elliott

The Enchanted Life of Valentina Mejía, by Alexandra Alessandri

The Pearl Hunter, by Miya Beck

The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic

Marikit and the Ocean of Stars, by Caris Avendaño Cruz

The Dollhouse, by Charis Cotter

Where the Black  Flowers Bloom, by Ronald L. Smith

Princess of the Wild Sea, by Megan Frazer Blakemore

Sir Calli and the Champions of  Helston, by Esme Symes-Smith

Sisters of the Lost March, by Lucy Strange

both The Chaos Monster and The Poison Waves by Sayantani DasGupta

The October Witches, by Jennifer Claessen

The Puppets of Spelhorst, by Kate di Camillo

Scarewaves, by Trevor Henderson

White House Clubhouse, by Sean O'Brien

Project F, by Jeanne DuPrau


this week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs is up! (10/8/23)

 Welcome to this week's round up!  Please let me know if I missed your post.

It's Cybils Awards nominating season--you have till the end of the day on October 15 to show love for your favorite Elementary/middle grade speculative fiction books! (and books in other categories too...)  I've put stars next the books in this week's round up that are eligible and haven't been nominated yet.  More great books needing nomination can be found at A Library MamaHere's where you go to show your book love!

The Reviews

*Bite Risk, by S.J. Wills, at Mark My Words

The Carrefour Curse, by Dianne K Salerni, at Pages Unbound

Coyote Queen by Jessica Vitalis, at Log Cabin Library

The Disappearing Diamond, by Glen Blackwell, at  Book Craic

Dogtown, by K.A. Applegate and Gennifer Choldenko, at Ms. Yingling Reads

*Forever Twelve (The Evers), by Stacy McAnulty, at Mark My Words

*The Ghost Job, by Greg Van Eekhout (with interview!), at Charlotte's Library

*It Found Us, by Lindsay Currie, at Geo Librarian

Just a Pinch of Magic, by Alechia Dow, by Punk-Ass Book Jockey 

*The Little Match Girl Strikes Back, by Emma Carroll, illustrated by Lauren Child, at Charlotte's Library

The Lost Library, by Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass, at Staircase Wit and The Cosy Dragon

*Odwar vs. the Shadow Queen (The Intasimi Warriors), by Shiko Nguru, at YA Books Central

*Quest Kids and the Dark Prophesy of Doug, by Mark Leiknes,, at Cracking the Cover

 Read, Scream, Repeat, edited by Jennifer Killick, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads 

*Seagarden, by Michelle A. Barry, at Cracking the Cover 

Skrimsli, by Nicola Davies, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

The Taming of the Cat, by Helen Cooper, at  Book Craic

*Three Tasks for a Dragon, by Eoin Colfer, illustrated by P.J. Lynch, at Charlotte's Library

The Weather Well, by Vashti Hardy, at Scope for Imagination

*White House Clubhouse. by Sean O'Brien, at Charlotte's Library,  Always in the Middle and The Story Sanctuary

Three at Ms. Yingling Reads-  *Gone Wolf, by Amber McBride,  *Adia Kelbara and the Circle of Shamans, by Isi Hendrix, and  *Mari and the Curse of El Cocodrilo, by  Adrianna.Cuevas,

Two at The Book Search: Nell of Gumbling, by Emma Steinkellner, and *The Mossheart's Promise, by Rebecca Nix

Authors and Interviews

Adrianna Cuevas (*Mari and the Curse of El Cocodrilo at  From The Mixed Up Files

Jessica Vitalis  (Coyote Queen) at Mr Schu Reads and MG Book Village

 Sinéad O’Hart  (The Silver Road) at Valinora Troy

Dianne K Salerni  (The Carrefour Curse) at Legit KidLit

Geri Halliwell (*Rosie Frost and the Falcon Queen) at Today

Other Good Stuff

"2023 Releases by Latine Authors Perfect for the Horror Season" with lots of great mg titles, at  A Kernel of Nonsense

How sci-fi books can help kids better understand science - UND Today

lovely wyverns of yesteryear (zoom in for wyvern goodness)!  Rare 1,000-Year-Old Brooch Goes on Display in England



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