Showing posts sorted by date for query small persons with wings. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query small persons with wings. Sort by relevance Show all posts

6/26/21

River Magic, by Ellen Booraem

I read a Lot of middle grade fantasy (c 150-200 books a year), to the point where I wonder when I pick up a new book if it will really offer me something that will stick in the crowed part of my mind where I keep all the books I've read.  River Magic, by Ellen Booraem (April 2021 by Dial Books), did not disappoint.  Indeed, since I have enjoyed her previous books lots, I was not at all surprised.

Donna's aunt Annabelle was a fixture of her life--teaching her woodworking, and carving beautiful details around the family home, swimming with her in the river they both loved, and generally being loving and supportive. But then Annabelle drowned in the river. Now Donna's mother is working desperately to pay the bills, her big sister has become a total pill, her best friend Rachel has ditched her for the cool/mean girls on the basketball team, and Donna's in danger of being sent off to rich Cousin Betty to look after her horrible little boys. If only she could make enough money to help her mother somewhere closer to home...

When a strange old woman moves in to the ramshackle house next door, and hires Donna to clean it up, things are (perhaps) looking up. But the old woman is strange and scary, bad tempered and a terrible (and unlicensed) drive. She is, in fact, a thunder mage. And she's paying Donna in gold.

This does not, though, magically solve all Donna's problems. The gold is cursed, and isn't enough to save the her house, her friendship with Rachel crumbles further when Donna becomes friends with a quirky (aka weird) ex-homeschooled boy (unwillingly at first but with growing appreciation), and the mage's temper means the number of her chickens keeps growing. Then Rachel becomes one of the flock (I liked writing that sentence).

This is a lovely middle grade fantasy sort of Ack! pivotal moment, and also in true mg fantasy style, Donna rises to the occasion but doesn't have to be a hero all by herself. (not really a spoiler, because of the cover--there is a dragon on her side. The cool/mean girls and the unpleasant sister also rise to the occasion). And so there was a very satisfactory ending...

I am a visual and emotional reader, not a dispassionate critical reader. I'm not sure that River Magic is "wildly original," whatever that means, but I do know that I can scroll through it in my minds eye with beautiful clarity, and I remember bits that made me laugh, and that made me sorry for Donna. And I know it worked beautifully for the 45 minutes I was waiting in the car for one of my kids to do a thing, and I finished it up quickly once we got home. Though it isn't a book that I personally will love best forever (perhaps because it didn't push my mind anywhere it hadn't already been), it was a good one. The target audience, of course, have more roomy minds, and I bet this one will be popular with them!

From Kirkus, whose reviews are being paid to be more dispassionately critical (and who aren't allowed to say "nice fun mind pictures I liked it" and leave it at that):  "A carefully constructed interweaving of reality and magic that will transport and delight."  

(I have now decided to try to figure out of the next book I read is carefully constructed.  Do you suppose that is the same thing as "everything slots neatly into place?"  Eveything in River Magic slotted just beautifully, so there you go).

Here are my reviews of Ellen Booraem's earlier books--

Small Persons With Wings

Texting the Underworld (with an interview; a very interesting one at that)

I don't seem to have reviewed The Unnamables (so this is the goodreads link)



2/7/21

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (2/7/21)

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

The Reviews

City of the Plague God, by Sarwat Chadda, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction

Crystal Keepers by Brandon Mull, at Fantasy Literature

The Doldrums, and The Helmsley Curse, by Nicholas Gannon, at Leaf's Reviews 

Double Helix (Explorer Academy #3), by Trudi Truit, at Say What?

Dragon Fury (Unwanteds Quest) by Lisa McMann, at Plaid Reader Reviews

Flood City, by Daniel José Older, at Charlotte's Library

The In-Between, by Rebecca K.S. Ansari, at alibrarymama, Iowa Amber Reads, Storymamas, and Charlotte's Library

The Lost Wonderland Diaries, by J. Scott Savage, at Geo Librarian 

Maya and the Rising Dark, by Rena Barron, at Pages Unbound

The Mysterious Disappearance of Aidan S., by David Levithan, at Ms. Yingling Reads (nb-the second in a two book post, so scroll down)

 Rome Reframed. (Wish & Wander #2), by Amy Bearce, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Root Magic by Eden Royce, at Locus

The Shark Caller, by Zillah Bethell, at Book Craic

Small Persons with Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Jean Little Library

The Star Dunes (Explorer Academy #4),  by Trudi Trueit, at Say What?

The Storm Keeper’s Island, by Catherine Doyle, at The Book Muse

Thirteens, Kate Alice Marshall, at Book Den 

Unicorn Island, by Donna Galanti, at Charlotte's Library

The Wild Robot, by Peter Brown, at Never Not Reading


Authors and Interviews

Jessica Vitalis (The Wolf's Curse) at Watch. Connect. Read.

Ben Gartner (Sol Invictus) at Log Cabin Library 


Other Good Stuff

"Finding Paradise in The Magician’s Nephew" at Tor

At Seven Miles of Steel Thistles, an exploration of portals continues...

John Scalzi shares his thought on Wolfwalkers, the newest and final addition to Moore’s “Irish Folklore Trilogy” of animated films.

and happy SuperbOwl Sunday to you all!  Here are some mg fantasy owl (ish), or at least Owl titled, books--

The Owls Have Come to Take Us Away, by Ronald L. Smith (my review
The Owl Keeper, by Christine Brodien-Jones
The Owl Service, by Alan Garner

and for younger readers there's of course Owl in Winnie the Pooh, and The Gaurdians of Ga'hoole series...

I am surprised I can't think of more owls....I feel I must be missing lots! 






8/7/13

Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem--review, interview, and giveaway!


Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem (Dial, Middle Grade, Aug. 15, 2013), deserves the star it got from Kirkus--this is a smart, funny, fantasy, set primarily in the real world, but with a most diverting excursion to the Underworld!  It's the story of what happens when a (relatively) young and inexperienced Banshee, Ashling (who once was an Irish girl from the Dark Ages), shows up at the Boston bedroom of a somewhat timorous 12 year old Conor.   The arrival of a Banshee means that someone is going to die...a frightening thing for anyone, but for Conor, to whom the world already seems dangerous and difficult, it's especially distressing!  And to complicate matters further, Ashling is in no hurry to scream and leave; no, she wants to stick around in 21st century Boston, as a sort of supernatural exchange student, quite visible, quite audible, and quite difficult to explain to friends and family and the school principal.

Ashling doesn't particularly want to be a harbinger of death, and Conor most emphatically doesn't want anyone in his family to die, so the two of them (with help from Conor's grandfather and his little sister) hatch a plan.  They'll visit the Underworld from whence Ashling was sent, and try to sort things out there....But the Underworld is a twisty and dangerous place, more so even than middle school, and Conor, deeply reluctant even in real life to visit places that aren't mapped,  has to find the bravery and determination to face the supernatural challenge of  lifetime.

The story zips along zippingly, the premise and its various ramifications are fascinating and fun (and even chuckle out loud funny at times), and there's lots of engrossing detail in both the characterization and mythological mayhem!  Added to this is a thought-provoking subtext about living  life in the face of death that gave it depth, and the author doesn't shy from delivering an appropriatly powerful emotional punch at the end.  In short, I liked it lots, would recommend it to both kids and MG SFF reading grownups, and was very happy to have the chance to ask Ellen questions about it!

The Interview (with me in bold)
I adore the title. Was it there from the beginning as part of your whole conception of the story, or did it come to you at some later point in a flash of inspiration?
I didn’t realize how big a role texting would play until I was well into the story, so the title was more of a last-minute endeavor. And I can’t take credit for it, except that I knew I wanted to combine the mundane with the otherworldly. (At one point I wanted to call it Death & Jelly Beans.) I emailed ideas back and forth with my editor, Kathy Dawson—we had lists and lists and LISTS of possible word combinations—and she’s the one who came up with the winning combination. 

Conor is a scaredy cat, and somewhat neurotic—not your typical hero (which, of course, is the point—this lets him have a character arc). I found that he teetered just on the brink of being too unheroic at the beginning of the book, and felt you walked a fine line between making him realistically an anti-hero and making him so much so that he becomes unsympathetic. How did you approach this conundrum? Was this something that caused difficulties in the writing of the book? 
It’s always a problem making sure your characters are realistically flawed and yet likeable. Fortunately, fearfulness is a more likeable trait than obnoxiousness, which was the problem I had to overcome with Conor’s predecessor,  Mellie in SMALL PERSONS WITH WINGS. Being afraid of things is such a familiar feeling to all of us that we usually can empathize with it. Also, most of Conor’s fears are also mine, so I definitely was on his side when I was writing him!
There are so many zestily entertaining aspects of the book. I especially loved Nergal (one of the denizens of the Underworld--a Babylonian god of death). Was there any part or character who gave you special enjoyment?
I’m fond of Nergal, too, and I was so glad when he showed up—he’s a nice, sensible guy, compared to most of the others who help run the Underworld. I like that he’s eager for knowledge and not content with the status quo the way so many in the Underworld are. 
I came up with him after I realized that my afterlife could not be just Celtic—I mean, the Irish aren’t the only ones who die, are they? So I started looking into death deities from other cultures, and there was Nergal, the Babylonian Lord of the Dead. He’s half lion, and for some reason in my mind that meant dignity and kindness.
I enjoyed writing the Underworld scenes in general. Another favorite character was the Cailleach, the unpleasant, black-robed portal guard, who is based on a Scottish/Irish goddess of winter but actually turned out as a weird combination of dementor, Ghost of Christmas Future, and every ill-tempered old lady I’ve ever met.

How did you come to write middle grade, as opposed to YA or adult, books? I'm wondering, for instance, if you assayed attempts at those older type books and found they just didn't work for you, or if you always knew you wanted to write MG. 
In my twenties I concentrated on short stories for adults (none of which ever got published, thank heavens). I started writing for younger readers because of characters my partner, Rob Shillady, a painter, had developed on a whim in art school. He put Medford (his alter-ego) and his sidekick the Goatman in paintings he did for friends, and I decided in my mid-30s to write a picture book based on them. It stopped being a picture book almost immediately, and over the next 20 years years (15 of them spent in a desk drawer) it finally turned into THE UNNAMEABLES.
I don’t have a specific age group in mind when I start books—they turn into middle grade all by themselves. The voice and the themes that resonate most with me apparently lend themselves to that “tween” age, when we’re first struggling with the issues of who we are and where we fit in the world.

I am sitting here trying to think of a comparable book to T. the U.--one that has a contemporary setting, and an ordinary hero (ie, not the son of a god), and one in which the stakes are personal, or at least familial, but which has fully flowering mythological/fantasy mayhem. My mind is blank. Can you think of any?
The ones that first come to mind are some books by Diana Wynne Jones, whose work I just love. Many of her heroes are of the Harry Potter variety—normal kids who discover they have supernatural powers—but she also has some protagonists who are just regular kids in a fix of some kind. EIGHT DAYS OF LUKE’s David Allard, for example, is dealing with unpleasant relatives as well as a bunch of Norse gods, and the children in THE OGRE DOWNSTAIRS are contending with a new stepfather and the effects of a magical chemistry set.
But you’re right—it’s far more common that the hero in a “domestic” fantasy like mine turns out to be supernatural in some way.

Easy one next--what were your favorite books as a child? Were you any that you feel have exerted an particular influence over your writing?
To my constant surprise and chagrin, no one’s ever heard of the formative book of my childhood. It’s THE DAUGHTERS OF THE STARS, published in 1939 in England by an American author, Mary Crary. It ran afoul of World War II, and was rushed to publication before the country ran out of paper and ink. As a result, it only has two of a planned set of Edmund Dulac illustrations, which are utterly gorgeous, of course. My copy was a ninth birthday present from an elderly lady in my neighborhood (definitely not one of the models for the Cailleach).
The story is about the bureaucracy that runs the natural world, meaning the stars, the wind, the rain, the oceans, and so forth. Astrella, the younger Daughter of the Stars, is named Luminary of Two Continents and has to transfer from one post to the other for a time. She takes her young daughter, Perdita, on a hazardous journey across the heavens. In the second half of the book, Perdita has adventures of her own.
In a foreword, the author complains that she’s sick of reading stories in which the mother is dead, so she created one in which the mother is the only parent in evidence. The heavenly bureaucracy, moreover, is pretty much run by women, usually in their own right but also as the power behind the throne. Astrella and Perdita are perfectly capable of taking care of themselves with no knight in shining armor coming to their rescue. 
I loved all that, and as well as Crary’s sense of humor.  Her book has been important to me both personally and professionally. I realized after the fact that my concept of a bunch of bureaucrats running the Underworld probably owed something to THE DAUGHTERS OF THE STARS.
 (Me:  I shall add it to my Christmas list!  It sounds great, and I love Dulac).

And finally, another easy one---what are you working on now?
I have two middle grade books and one for younger kids in various stages of development—and the one farthest along might never see the light of day so I probably shouldn’t talk about it.  Suffice it to say that I’m always working on something!
Thanks for the interview, Charlotte—this was fun!
 Thank you, Ellen, for writing both the book and your answers to my questions! 

The Giveaway
Penguin is offering two copies of Texting the Underworld to two winners (US only); please leave a comment to be entered!  Ends next Wednesday (August 14) at midnight.

And if you want even more, Ellen has shared the scene in which Conor and Ashling meet for the first time here at Scene 13ers!

The next stop on Ellen’s blog tour for TEXTING THE UNDERWORLD is YA Books Central. See you there!
 

5/22/13

Waiting on Wednesday--Texting the Underworld, by Ellen Booraem

Just a quick reminder, before I get to the Waiting part--you can win a personalized copy of Jinx, by Sage Blackwood, by leaving a comment on my interview with her by midnight tonight.  If you like middle grade fantasy and haven't read this one, do so posthaste.

Now on to a new book I'm waiting for!
 
Ellen Booraem has demonstrated with her first two books (The Unnamables, and Small Persons With Wings--my review) that she can write thoughtful and fun middle grade fantasy--and I'm very curious to see how her writing continues to evolve--those first two books are very different in feel!   So I'm looking forward to her forthcoming book, Texting the Underworld, lots.  It comes out August 15, 2013, from Dial. 


Here's the blurb:

Perpetual scaredy-cat Conor O'Neill has the fright of his life when a banshee girl named Ashling shows up in his bedroom. Ashling is--as all banshees are--a harbinger of death, but she's new at this banshee business, and first she insists on going to middle school. As Conor attempts to hide her identity from his teachers, he realizes he's going to have to pay a visit to the underworld if he wants to keep his family safe.

"Got your cell?"
"Yeah . . . . Don't see what good it'll do me."
"I'll text you if anything happens that you should know."
"Text me? Javier, we'll be in the afterlife."
"You never know. Maybe they get a signal."


Ellen Booraem has disclosed that there's a riff on the story of Orpheus and Eurydice here, which I might have guessed, what with the Underworld and all, but which certainly piques my interest more, fan of reimaginings that I am.

(I find it amusing that corvids seem to be continuing their popularity on mg and YA speculative fiction covers...which reminds me of a crow joke--What do call two crows hanging out together?  An attempted murder (as in "a murder of crows").

Waiting on Wednesday is a meme hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine.


6/17/12

This Sunday's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs

The problem with a regular feature such as this is that it is boring to write the same introduction every week:

Welcome to another week of the posts I gathered from around the blogs of interest to fans of middle grade fantasy and science fiction. Please let me know if I missed yours, and feel free to send me links at any time!

It can't be helped. Onward.

The Reviews:

Cold Cereal, by Adam Rex, at Alexia's Books & Such and Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Coming of the Dragon, by Rebecca Barnhouse, at library_mama

Ebenezer's Locker, by Anne E. Johnson, at Readatouille

The False Prince, by Jennifer Nielsen, at The Book Smugglers (with bonus Code Name Verity before you get to it....)

Fever Crumb, by Philip Reeve, at Fantasy Book Review

Halt's Peril, by John Flanagan, at Karissa's Reading Review

Juniper Barry, at Jean Little Library

The Lunatic's Curse, by F.E. Higgins, at Karissa's Reading Review

The Odyssey, by Gareth Hinds, at Children's Book-a-Day Almanac

Out of Time, by John Marsden, at HumbleIndigo

The Outcasts, by John Flannagan, at Fantasy Book Review

The Phantom Tollbooth, by Nortan Juster, at Book Nut

Rapunzel's Revenge, by Shannon and Dean Hale, at Challenging the Bookworm

Revenge of the Horned Bunnies, by Ursula Vernon, at AmoXcalli

The Stones of Ravenglass, by Jenny Nimmo, at Charlotte's Library

Stonewords, by Pam Conrad, at Charlotte's Library

Stormswept, by Helen Dunmore, at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles

A Tale Dark and Grimm, by Adam Gidwitz, at Sharon the Librarian and at Wicked Awesome Books

Authors and interviews

Geoff Rodkey (Deadweather and Sunrise), at Educating Alice

Pete Johnson (The Vampire Fighters) at Babbleabout Children's Books and Nayu's Reading Corner

Robin LaFevers (Theodosia series, as well as the YA Grave Mercy) at Finding Wonderland

Susan Cooper (The Dark is Rising et al.) at School Library Journal

Ellen Booraem (Small Persons With Wings) at Roots in Myth

Amanda Ashby (talking about the covers of Sophie's Mixed-up Magic series) at Melissa Walker

Other Good Stuff:

A Monster Calls, by Patrick Ness, illustrated by Jim Kay, wins both the Carnegie (for writing) and Kate Greenway (for illustration) awards in one fell swoop!

And the winner of the Locus Award for Young Adult book is The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, by Catherynne M. Valente

Here's an amusing list of 20 things characters in fantasy books should do more often, from Lev Grossman at Lytherus.

A list of middle grade beach reads with lots of sci fi/fantasy at Readatouille

A selection of sci fi picture books at io9 (and here's my own sci fi picture book post from awhile back)

And finally, happy Father's Day! From Darth Vader and Son, by Jeffry Brown (found at Gizmodo, where you can see more)



10/30/11

Middle grade science fiction and fantasy--this week's round-up for your reading pleasure (and mine)!

Here are all the middle grade fantasy and science fiction related blog posts etc. I found this week; please let me know if I missed your!

The Reviews:

The Apothecary, by Maile Meloy, at Eva's Book Addiction

The Bassumtyte Treasure, by Jane Louise Curry, at Charlotte's Library

Beasts (The Mystic Phyles) by Stephanie Brockway and Ralph Masiello, at Charlotte's Library

Blue Fire, by Janice Hardy (Healing Wars book 2) at books4yourkids

The Cheshire Cheese Cat, at Books of Wonder and Wisdom

The Crowfield Curse, by Pat Walsh, at Bookish

Darkfall, by Janice Hardy (Healing Wars book 3) at books4yourkids

Dragon Castle, by Joseph Bruchac, at Fuse #8

Elliot and the Pixie Plot, by Jennifer A. Nielsen, at Boys and Literacy

Galaxy Games, by Greg Fishbone, at TheHappyNappyBookseller

The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland...., by Catherynne M. Valente, at Reads for Keeps

Ghostopolis, by Doug Tennapel, at Karissa's Reading Review

Goliath, by Scott Westerfeld, at Karissa's Reading Review and Biblio File

Jake Ransom and the Howling Sphinx, by James Rollins, at Becky's Book Reviews

Jake Ransom and the Skull King's Shadow, by James Rollins, at Becky's Book Reviews

Kevin's Point of View, by Del Shannon, at Nayu's Reading Corner

Lair of the Bat Monster (Dragonbreath) by Ursula Vernon, at Good Books and Good Wine and Jean Little Library

Liesl and Po, by Lauren Oliver, at Ex Libris

The Magic City, by E. Nesbit, at Tor

Masterwork of a Painting Elephant, by Michelle Cuevas, at Book Dragon

Monstrum House: Locked In, and Creeped Out, by Z. Fraillon, at Cracking the Cover

The Mostly True Story of Jack, by Kelly Barnhill, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile and Paige in Training

The Orphan of Awkward Falls, by Keith Graves, at My Favorite Books

Pilot and Huxley, by Dan McGuiness, at Jean Little Library

The Princess Curse, by Merrie Haskell,at The Adventures of Cecelia Bedelia

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, by Jennifer Trafton, at Good Books and Good Wine

Small Persons With Wings, by Ellen Booream, at slatebreakers

A Tale Dark and Grimm, by Adam Gidwitz, at The Book Smugglers

Tuesdays at the Castle, by Jessica Day George, at Sonderbooks and Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Wikkeling, by Steven Arntson, at Becky's Book Reviews

Wildwood, by Colin Meloy, at My Reading Frenzy

Kate aka Book Aunt compares and contrasts this year's trio of mice books.

In the spirit of the season, at Great Kid Books you can find a compilation of truly creepy stories.

And I also want to mention the Animorphs Re-Read that's ongoing at the Intergalactic Academy

Authors and Interviews

James Riley (Half upon a Time) at Cynsations

Roderick Gordon at The Guardian on self-publishing Tunnels, and how it became the start of a successful series.

Greg Fishbone (Galaxy Games) shares his experiences on "surviving the sophomore outing" at Cynsations, and talks about "making the jump from writer to author" at Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing.

Leonard Marcus annotated the fiftieth anniversary edition of The Phantom Tollboth, and stops by Educating Alice to chat about it.

An interview with M.P. Kozlowsky (Juniper Berry) at From the Mixed Up Files

Other Good Stuff:

NPR's Kids' Book Club
kicks off with Neil Gaiman and The Graveyard Book.

Alice in Wonderland fans must read this article in The Guardian, and consider visiting Liverpool.

You've probably already seen the official trailer to The Secret World of Arrietty--but if you haven't, here at The Book Yurt is one of the many places you can watch it. I tried to read The Borrowers to my boys, but the beginning is slow, and it didn't take sigh sigh.

A giant lego figure washes up on a Florida beach--


I'd suggest not reading the news story; it's more fun to imagine one's own! My mind immediately rewrote The Iron Giant, by Ted Hughes....

And if you're looking for something to add a little rainbow sparkle to your holiday table:

You can actually buy this--visit ThinkGeek to see what's really in the can!

And finally, never before seen illustrations for the Hobbit, by JRR Tolkien, can be seen at The Mary Sue:

9/3/11

This Sunday's round up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs



Hi everyone! Here are the middle grade science fiction and fantasy blog postings I found this week---please let me know if I missed yours.

The Reviews

Breadcrumbs, by Anne Ursu, at Heise Reads & Recommends

The Dragon's Tooth, by N.D. Wilson, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Earwig and the Witch, by Diana Wynne Jones, at Bart's Bookshelf

Floors, by Patrick Carman, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

Fly Trap, by Frances Hardinge, at By Singing Light

The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, by Catherynne Valente, at Finding Wonderland

Goliath, by Scott Westerfeld, at Book Yurt and Bart's Bookshelf

Happenstance Found, by P.W. Catanese, at Abby the Librarian

The History Keepers: The Storm Begins, by Damian Dibben, at The Book Zone (For Boys)

Icefall, by Matthew Kirby, at Bookalicious

Inkheart, by Cornelia Funke, at Challenging the Bookworm

Jacob Wonderbar and the Cosmic Space Kapow, by Nathan Bransford, at Musings of a Restless Mind

Janitors, by Ty Whitesides, at Elana Johnson

The Last Dragon, by Jane Yolen, at Bea's Book Nook

The Magnificent 12: The Call, and The Trap, by Michael Grant, at The Book Smugglers, and The Call at Book Dreaming

A Monster Calls, by Patrick Ness, at Bookends

Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes, by Jonathan Auxier, at Birdbrain(ed) Book Blog and Page in Training

Return to Exile, by E. J. Patten, at Other Stuff Exists

Sally's Bones, by MacKenzie Cadenhead, at Wicked Awesome Books

The Scarcrow and His Servant, by Philip Pullman, at Fantasy Literature

Small Persons With Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Jean Little Library

The Silver Bowl, by Diane Stanley, at Sonderbooks

Smells Like Treasure, by Suzanne Selfors, at Donna St. Cyr

The Softwire, Books 1 and 2--Virus on Orbis, and Betrayal on Orbis, by P.J. Haarsma, at Books and Movies

Stinkbomb, by Rob Stevens, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

The Unwanteds, by Lisa McMann, at Steph Su Reads and Libri Dilectio

The Wikkeling, by Steven Arnston, at books4yourkids

Wildwood, by Colin Meloy, at Figment

Zita the Spacegirl, by Ben Hatke, at Wandering Librarians

Authors and Interviews:

Julia Durango (Sea of the Dead--my review) at Following My Dreams -- she's currently working on a mg fantasy novel set in the Andean highlands in collaboration with Tracie Vaughn Zimmer. I'm sold!

Sue Perkins (the forthcoming Spirit Stealer) at Rebecca Ryals Russell

Other things of interest:

Back to school time is here! Here's a post on sci fi books for kids with schools at Suite 101, and here's a post about education in fantasy books at The Enchanted Inkpot.

Tablet has a feature on "Going Golem" (not the Lord of the Rings Golem, but Jewish golems in children's books)

Here's my compilation of the new releases of mg sff for the beginning of September.

And don't forget, all you mg sff reading and reviewing folks, that the time to put your name in the ring for the Cybils Awards is Now! (lots more people volunteer to be panelists than there are slots for, and I know picture books and YA are always inundated, but I am really curious about what happens with mg sff. Is there a glut or a dearth of people making it their first choice?)

Finally-- two people contacted me who I could not help, and I was wondering if any of you all could!

Request the first: A teacher of 4th and 5th graders is doing unit on archetypal characters ala Joseph Campbell. She's seeking a sci fi/fantasy short story to illustrate the archetype of the Threshold Guardian-- "The threshold is the gateway to the new world the hero must enter to change and grow.

 The threshold guardian is usually not the story's antagonist. Only after this initial test has been surpassed will the hero face the true contest and the arch-villain."

She's also looking for stories illustrating the shapeshifter and the shadow characters.

Request the second: a blog reader is looking a time travel book at least ten year old, shelved near Katherine Paterson. She says: "The title that I "remember" was Inbetween Time, which apparently is non-existent in the book world. The book was part of a trilogy series and the main character was named Strauss and a girl. The basic story line was that a girl would travel back in time and she fell in love with Strauss. I think it was based in the 1800's when she did travel back. Basically, she had to decide rather to stay with him or come back to her own time because he could not travel with her."

Any thoughts?

5/29/11

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction

Greetings, middle grade science fiction and fantasy friends, and welcome to another week's worth of what I found from around the blogs that of interest to us mg sff fans (please let me know if I missed your post--things were more scattered than usual this week!). If you are new to these round-ups, here's the full story.

But first, a Giveaway. At Book Expo America, I found three extra mg sff ARCs, and brought them home to give away here. And I'm not announcing it elsewhere, or putting it in the header, because you who read these round-ups are the people to whom I want to give these books (technical details at the bottom the post).


Here they are:

(although the ARC
of The Orphan of
Awkward Falls has a
different cover)




And now the reviews:

The Blue Sword, by Robin McKinley, at Steph Su Reads

The Cabinet of Wonders, by Marie Rutkoski, at books4yourkids

Day of the Assassins, by Johnny O'Brien, at Charlotte's Library

The Emerald Atlas, by John Stephens, at Candace's Book Blog and The Fringe Magazine

Kat, Incorrigible, by Stephanie Burgis, at Waking Brain Cells

Knightly Academy, by Violet Haberdasher, at A Backwards Story

The Lost Conspiracy, by Frances Hardinge, at By Singing Light (which should have gone in last week's round-up, but ended up in a draft post all by itself)

The Midnight Gate, by Helen Stringer, at The O.W.L. and at Wicked Awesome Books

No Such Thing as Dragons, by Philip Reeve, at books4yourkids

Small Persons With Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Geo Librarian

The Society of Dread (Candleman) by Glenn Dakin, at Nayu's Reading Corner (and she has a give-away here)

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, by Grace Lin, at Reading Vacation

The Wikkeling, by Steven Arntson, at The Book Smugglers


Authors and Interviews:

Janice Hardy (The Healing Wars series) at The Compulsive Reader

Stephanie Burigs (Kat, Incorrigible) at The Enchanted Inkpot

Glenn Dakin (Candleman) at Nayu's Reading Corner

Helen Stringer (The Midnight Gate), at The O.W.L. (includes give away)

Nathan Bransford (Jacob Wonderbar and the Cosmic Space Kapow) at From the Mixed Up Files

Eric Nylund (The Resistors) at Random Acts of Reading

Matthew Kirby (The Clockwork Three) at From the Mixed Up Files

Other Good Stuff:

The Book Smugglers (it was great to meet them in person at the Book Blogger Convention!) showcase the mg sff books they took home with them.

Here's Alan Rickman's good-bye to Snape, from Empire Magazine, via Bookshelves of Doom

Giveaway Details:
There will be three winners (ie, one book each). Leave a comment to enter, make sure there's a way to contact you, and let me know the order in which you want them. International friends are welcome to enter too! I'll pick the winners just before I post (d.v.) next week's roundup.

4/17/11

This Sunday's round up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction

Here's what I found in my blog reading this week--if I missed your post, let me know! (and if you are a new visitor to these round-ups, here's more info. about how I compile them).

The Reviews:

Bloodline Rising, by Katy Moran, at Charlotte's Library (older mg)

The Broken Citadel, by Joyce Ballou Gregorian, at Just Booking Around (older mg, or possibly even just plain old YA)

The Emerald Atlas, by John Stephens, at Booking Mama

Falling In, by Frances O'Roark Dowell (audio review), at Book Nut

Invisible Inkling, by Emily Jenkins, at Book Dreaming

Kat, Incorrigible, by Stephanie Burgis, at Fuse #8

Keeper, by Kathi Appelt, at Challenging the Bookworm

The Lost Hero, by Rick Riordan, at Challenging the Bookworm

The Magnificent 12: The Call, by Michael Grant, at One Librarian's Book Reviews

The Mask Wearer (Amos Daragon, Book 1), by Bryan Perro, at Kiss the Book

The Shadows (Books of Elsewhere 1), by Jacqueline West, at Books & Other Thoughts and an audio review at The O.W.L.

Small Persons With Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Narrative Investigations

My Sparkling Misfortune, by Laura Lond, at Reading Vacation

The Spellcoats, by Diana Wynne Jones, at Becky's Book Reviews

The Museum of Thieves, by Lian Tanner, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Ravenwood, by Andrew Peters, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

Shimmer, by Alyson Noel, at Reading Vacation and The Bibliophilic Book Blog

Theodosia and the Eyes of Horace, by R.L. LaFevers, at Strange and Random Happenstance

Theodosia and the Last Pharaoh, by R.L. LaFevers, at Strange and Random Happenstance

The Time-Travelling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky, at Reading Everywhere

Uncommon Magic, by Michelle Scott, at Reading Vacation

Under the Green Hill, by Laura L. Sullivan, at Eating Y.A. Books

A Year Without Autumn, by Liz Kessler, at I Was a Teenage Book Geek (where you will also find the first chapter of the book)

Zeus: King of the Gods, and Athena: Grey-Eyed Goddess, by George O'Connorat at Book Nut

Ms. Yingling reviews a trio of sci fi boy books, and at Nayu's Reading Corner you'll find some fun books by Steve Cole (author of the Astrosaurs series and more)

And finally, Anne at Black and White has a post about first read-aloud fantasy chapter books!

Interview and authors:

Nathan Bransford (Jacob Wonderbar and the Cosmic Space Kapow) at Anita Laydon Miller's Middle Grade Blog

Greg Van Eekhaut (The Boy at the End of the World) writes about "Tarkin’s Jodhpurs and Dystopia for Kids" at Tor

Other Good Stuff:

The authors over at The Enchanted Inkpot offer tributes to Diana Wynne Jones.

Grace Lin is celebrating the paperback release of Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by giving away to eight people the free print of their choice from her etsy shop! Here's the one I would like:


My best friend in seventh grade had a series of recurring dreams in which Anne MacCaffery's Dragon Riders of Pern came to the big screen, with dead chickens (painted appropriately, if such a thing can be said of a dead chicken) being used for the fire lizards. That was long, long ago---and now her dream (sans chickens) is becoming a reality-- the dragons are actually coming to the big screen!

And finally, Peter Jackson has posted video diary entries from
The Hobbit on his facebook page (and you can watch it here at Suvudo)

4/3/11

This Sunday's middle-grade fantasy and science fiction round-up!

It's a beautiful Sunday, and there's lots to do outside, so I haven't scavenged to hunt down links to middle grade science fiction and fantasy posts that weren't already in my google blogger reader.

So if I missed your post, I'm sorry, and do let me know about it!

The Reviews:


13 Secrets, by Michelle Harrison, at Nayu's Reading Corner

The Brimstone Key (Grey Griffins) by Derek Benz & JS Lewis, at somewhere in the middle

Charmed Life, by Diana Wynne Jones, at The Written World

The Dragon of Cripple Creek, by Troy Howell, at Educating Alice

The Familiers, by Adam Jay Epsteina and Andrew Jacobson, at One Librarian's Book Reviews

Forest Born, by Shannon Hale, at Beyond Books

Invisible Order: Rise of the Darklings, by Paul Crilley, at GreenBeanTeenQueen

Kat, Incorrigible, by Stephanie Burgis, at Steph Su Reads, Ex Libris, and Reading Fairy Tales

Lair of the Bat Monster (Dragonbreath 4), by Ursula Vernon, at Charlotte's Library

Mortal Engines, by Philip Reeve, at Read in a Single Sitting

River Secrets, by Shannon Hale, at Beyond Books

The Rotten Adventures of Zachary Ruthless, by Alan Woodrow, at Project Mayhem

Season of Secrets, by Sally Nichols, at Madigan Reads

The Seventh Princess, by Nick Sullivan, at Back to Books

Small Persons with Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile and Mother Reader

A Tale of Two Castles, by Gail Carson Levine, at Eva's Book Addiction

The Time-travelling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky, at Charlotte's Library

Under the Green Hill, by Laura Sullivan, at One Librarian's Book Reviews

A World Without Heroes, by Brandon Mull, at Emily's Reading Room

and at Bookworming in the 21st Century there's a lovely bunch of middle grade short revews.

Just two interviews this week (that I found)
Danika Dinsmore (Brigitta of the White Forest) at I Am A Reader, Not a Writer

Cindy Callaghan (Just Add Magic) at Cynstations

Other things:

Excitingly, fantasy rules over at School Library Journal's Battle of the Kids Books! Keeper vs The Ring of Soloman vs Consipracy of Kings (come back from the Dead!)

Here (from me, Charlotte's Library) are the new releases of middle grade sff for the first half of April

Thoughts by Emily Asher-Perrin at Tor on the reality of Neverland

The Carnegie Medal Shortlist has been announced...mg sff is represented (I think, kind of) by The Death Defying Pepper Roux (but is this really sff??? I haven't read it)

And finally, Judith at Misrule has been compiling all the links of memories and obituaries for Diana Wynne Jones. Thank you, Judith.

3/27/11

This Sunday's middle grade fantasy and science fiction roundup

Welcome to another week's worth of carefully (more or less) gathered blog posts pertaining to middle grade science fiction and fantasy! If you like these round-ups, do please consider mentioning them on your own blog--I'd love more people stopping by to enjoy all the great reviews etc.!

If I missed your post, let me know...and anyone, including authors and publishers and publicists, is welcome to send me links to blog posts at any time during the week--charlotteslibrary at blogspot dot com. Thanks.

The Reviews:

Artemis the Brave (Goddess Girls) by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams, at Biblio File

Behemoth, by Scott Westerfeld, at Fantasy Literature

Beyonds, by Brandon Mull, at The Literary Wife

Ella Enchanted, by Gail Carson Levine, at Anita Silvey's Children's Book-a-day Almanac

Fantasy: An Artist's Realm, by Ben Boos, at Charlotte's Library

Fourth Grade Fairy, by Eileen Cook, at Manga Maniac Cafe

Lair of the Bat Monster (Dragon Breath) by Ursula Vernon, at The HappyNappyBookseller

Luka and the Fire of Life, by Salman Rushdie, at Tia's Book Musings

The Magic Thief, by Sarah Prineas, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Magnificent 12: The Call, by Michael Grant, at Book Review Blog for Caroline Hooton

Priscilla the Great, by Sybil Nelson, at Reading Tween

The Red Pyramid (audiobook), by Rick Riordan, at The O.W.L.

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, by Jennifer Trafton, at Charlotte's Library

Skeleton Man, by Joseph Bruchac, at Charlotte's Library

Small Persons With Wings, by Ellen Booraem, at Stella Matutina

Spellbinder, by Helen Stringer, at Books & Other Thoughts

A Tale Dark and Grimm, by Adam Gidwitz, at Book Nut

Time Cat, by Lloyd Alexander, at BellaOnBook's Blog

The Time Travelling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky at TheHappyNappyBookseller and Confessions of a Book Addict

Under the Green Hill, by Laura L. Sullivan, at Middle Grade Ninja

Authors talking:

Laura L. Sullivan (Under the Green Hill) at Middle Grade Ninja
Katherine Langrish's blog tour for West of the Moon continues, more info. here at her blog
Kate Milford (The Boneshaker) at Novel Journey

Other Things of Interest:

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is getting a sequel. I was pleasantly surprised when I actually got around to reading the book (actually listening to it....); it wasn't that bad. But still, I wasn't desperate for more. However, since the writer of the sequel is going to be I writer I admire lots, Frank Cottrell Boyce (Cosmic), I am cautiously optimistic.

And in a similar vein, Jacqueline Wilson is going to be updating Five Children and It, by E. Nesbit (1902) for modern children. Why, I ask. Why.

Over at the SLJ Battle of the Books, Team MG SFF is holding its own--A Tale Dark and Grimm and Keeper both won their last matches.

The Magician's Nephew will be the next Narnia movie....I was hoping for The Silver Chair...

Booklist has assembled their top 10 graphic novels for kids, with fantasy nicely represented.

The shortlists for 2010 Aurealis Awards (Australian spec fic) have been announced; here are the children's books:

Grimsdon, Deborah Abela, Random House
Ranger's Apprentice #9: Halt's Peril
, John Flanagan, Random House
The Vulture of Sommerset
, Stephen M Giles, Pan Macmillan
The Keepers
, Lian Tanner, Allen & Unwin
Haggis MacGregor and the Night of the Skull
, Jen Storer & Gug Gordon, Aussie Nibbles (Penguin)

This is more a general interest item than a mg sff specific one, but if you have a few minutes, do visit the 2011 White Raven list! It's a list compiled each by the International Children's Library in Germany, and it is fascinating glimpse of what's being published around the world. I found this over at Mitali's Fire Escape--her book, Bamboo People, is one of the 8 that represents the US, and she is in most excellent company (you can see the list at her blog)!

And finally, there is the sad news of the passing of Diana Wynne Jones. I love her books dearly; they live right next to my bed.

There are two new books coming--Earwig and the Witch
(Greenwillow, Summer 2011), and a collection of DWJ's articles, lectures, and talks from David Fickling Books next year.

Still, I would have been happy if she had kept on writing forever.

3/13/11

This Sunday's Middle Grade Fantasy and Science Fiction Round-up

Happy daylight savings time (Maybe. I'd like to keep falling back myself, with lots more light anyway).

Here's another weeks worth of blog posts carefully (?) gleaned by me relating to middle grade science fiction and fantasy--please let me know if I missed your post, or the posts of your loved ones etc.

The Reviews:

Another Whole Nother Story, by Dr. Cuthbert Soup, at Charlotte's Library

The Bloomswell Diaries, by Louis L. Buitendag, at Charlotte's Library

The Clockwork Three, by Matthew Kirby, at Karissa's Reading Review

The Deadly Conch, by Mahtab Narsimhan, at Back to Books

The Door in the Forest, by Roderick Townly, at Eva's Book Addiction and Ms. Yingling Reads.

The Emerald Atlas, by John Stephens, at Dog Ear

Johnny Mackintosh: Star Blaze, by Keith Mansfield, at Charlotte's Library

Kat, Incorrigible, by Stephanie Buris, at BookLust

No Passengers Beyond This Point, by Gennifer Choldenko, at One Librarian's Book Reviews and Great Kid Books.

Priscilla The Great, by Sybil Nelson, at The O.W.L.

Running from Secrets, by Stephanie Void, at My Precious

The Thirteen Clocks, by James Thurber, at Charlotte's Library

The Thirteen Secrets, by Michelle Harrison, at Ex Libris

Well Wished, by Francis Hardinge, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Weirdstone of Brisingamen, by Alan Garner, at Teach the Fantastic

A World Without Heros, by Brandon Mull, at Reading Fairy Tales, Milk and Cookies, and Reading at Dawn

Authors and interviews:

Ellen Booraem (Small Persons with Wings) at Cynsations

Katherine Langrish (West of the Moon) has been on blog tour this week--lots of fantastic posts about story writing and mythology and more. She has links to the various stops at her blog, Seven Miles of Steel Thistles.

Joanne Levy (Small Medium at Large, coming summer of 2012 ) at Book Junkies

Danika Dinsmore (Brigitta of the White Forest) at Just Deb

Other stuff:

As part of Share a Story Week, two authors (Mitali Perkins and Tanita Davis, and an editor, Hannah Ehrlich of Lee and Low) talk about reading (and writing) diversity at Scrub-a-dub-tub.

And the authors who blog at The Enchanted Inkpot offer their best advice for writing fantasy.

Zoe at Playing By the Book has announced a new twitter forum for adults who want to talk about children's books--up and running later today (3:00 pm EST)

Those who want their Shannon Hales to match can now be happy--here's the new hardcover edition of Forest Born that matches the earlier books in the series (at left)! (I like it lots better than the old version. I never liked the sleeves on the old one. In fact, I would go so far as to say that they are my Least Favorite Ficitonal Sleeves of all time).



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