3/31/11

Rage, by Jackie Morse Kessler

I enjoyed Hunger, Jackie Morse Kessler's 2010 story of an anorexic girl who becomes the titular horseman of the Apocalypse, immensely (my review). It was both gripping and amusing. So the second book, Rage (Graphia, 2011, 228 pages), was one of my most anticipated reads of this spring.

Sadly, although I found Rage an un-put-downable page-turner, it didn't convince and entrance me in the same way Hunger did.

Rage tells of a girl named Missy, who turns to her razor blade when life seems to much to bear--in cutting, she finds comfort. Then Death shows up at her door, and offers her a sword in place of her razor, and the wounds of violence to cauterize. Missy has been offered the role of War.

Her anger and pain impel her to mount her blood ride stead, and ride out over the world, leaving violence in her wake. And unless Missy can master her own feelings, and take control of her new power, the world faces a blood-bath of epic proportions....

Starting, perhaps, with her peers.

"You have something to say?" Jenna demanded.

Missy heard the girl's scorn, felt her anger. Tasted her fear. That made Missy grin wider. Jenna only thought she was afraid. She didn't know what terror was, not really.

Missy could teach her.

She could teach her so very much.

KILL THEM ALL!

Just before she could call her Sword and massacre her team-mates, she heard a cold voice whisper: Control.

Clinging to that word--both a command for humanity and a plea for sanity--Missy walked away." (page 106)

It's a gripping story, but I had two issues with it. I never understood why Missy cut herself--her life wasn't that bad. And I felt that she was lacking the true, fierce, terrible anger that would make her a good candidate for War. Her social situation becomes utterly awful, and she has good reason to be angry, but it still wasn't enough to convince me. I appreciate that Kessler takes a seriously look at the issue of self-harm, and doesn't trivialize it, and she does make a nice connection between Missy gaining control over her addiction to cutting and gaining control of her new role. But it didn't quite work for me.

Still, I love Kessler's Death (my favorite character in the series!), and her combination of lightness of narrative touch with serious teenage issues is commendable. And I'm so I'm looking forward to the next two books of the series--Loss (Pestilence) and Breath (Death).

Note on age: there's explicit sex, violence, and the unflinchingly described self-harm.

Other thoughts at Burning.x.Impossibly.x.Bright, A Novel Source, Tez Says, and stories from my bookshelf

(disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher)

3/30/11

Meet Monster, by Ellen Blance and Ann Cook

Meet Monster: Six Stories About the World's Friendliest Monster, by Ellen Blance and Ann Cook, illustrated by Quentin Blake.

Back in 1973, Blance and Cook teamed up with ordinary kids to create the six stories about a kindly, friendly monster--stories prefect for the young reader just finding their reading feet. Marshall Cavendish has just brought it out again for a new generation to enjoy.

"A monster comes to this city to live.

Monster is not ugly like other monsters. He's very tall, and his head is skinny."

And monster needs a house to live in, so he looks and looks till he finds one that's just right. Some are not right.

"This house is dark all over. Not many things happen in this house.

He can't live here."

(isn't that rather brilliant?)

But he finds a tall, thin house that's perfect for a tall, thin monster.

And monster needs to make his house tidy, and he needs a friend, and it's always nice to meet another monster....

Quentin Blake's illustrations bring Monster to charming life in true Blake style. And the end result is an easy chapter book that seems to me just utterly spot on for a kid learning how to read.

Knowing that this was a reissue of an earlier book, I read with gimlet eyes, looking for things that might seem odd to a reader in 2011. The only thing I noticed was that the authors use "fine" quite a bit, as in "it will look really fine." "Fine" seems to be falling by the wayside these days....nice, I guess, rules supreme!

At any event, if Marshall Cavendish had released this just three years earlier, I would have bought it in a shot for my little one! It is just fine (actually, what with Blake's illustrations, it's considerably more than fine--I'd go so far as to say very nice indeed).

(I'd especially recommend this one to the five year old (or thereabouts) who's moving to the big city. It makes the big city seem like a place in which one might be able to live....although I still have my doubts).

disclaimer: book received (just yesterday! It was the first one I read from the big box I got--I was drawn to it) from the publisher.

Sequel to Finnikin of the Rock-- Froi of the Exiles, by Melina Marchetta, for Waiting on Wednesday

Exciting news! Last weekend, Melina Marchetta posted the following on her blog--a synopsis of a sequel to Finnikin of the Rock, coming out in Australia this fall:

"Three years after Lumatere is united, Froi has adopted the ways of his new homeland, dividing his days between rebuilding the kingdom and training with the Queen’s Guard. Until a mysterious man arrives with a promise that he can grant a young assassin access into the palace of Lumatere’s enemy: to kill the King of Charyn.

But once inside the secretive kingdom of stone, Froi is forced to protect the half mad Princess Quintana and her unborn child who will be the first babe born to Charyn in eighteen years. And in breaking his bond to his beloved Queen Isaboe and Finnikin, Froi may just be the one to bring peace between two kingdoms and find out the truth to his past."

Finnikin (my review) was too harsh a book for me to love it, but I did respect it lots, and so I might well be availing myself of the Book Depository (free shipping worldwide) for this one.

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

3/29/11

The Time-Traveling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky, for Timeslip Tuesday

I'm envious of those who write their blog posts well in advance; every Tuesday I seem to be right down to the wire with my Timeslip book of the week. Fortunatly, this week's book was a fun, fast read, so I was able to finish it in time....and so, I offer

The Time-Traveling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky (Little Brown, 2011, middle grade, 272 pages)

Louise marches to her own drum when it comes to clothes--not for her the racks of the new and never worn. She's drawn to the vintage, and is fascinated by the name brands and designs of the past. So when a fancy invitation comes in the mail, inviting her to a vintage fashion show, she's thrilled to have a chance to do just the sort of shopping she loves, and maybe pick out a dress for the middle school dance while she's there.

And indeed, there is a dress waiting for her, a beautiful pink one. But when she puts it on, she's not in Connecticut anymore. Instead, she's on board a luxurious ocean liner, on of the White Star line, a hundred years in the past. And she's not her plain old 12 year-old, braces-wearing self anymore; she's a glamorous young film star, with enough beautiful dresses to make glad the heart of any fashionista.

At first, Louise relishes the her new life, despite the unpleasant fact of corsets...there's even an attractive young man interested in her, which makes nice change from middle school! Thanks to a fainting spell, she can pretend to have lost her memory, and happily her maid, Anna, is willing to help her move through her new life.

"The White Star Line" seems to offer all Louise could want...except for one small detail--she's on the Titanic. Which, of course, is about to hit an ice berg and sink.

Louise tries to warn the captain...but no one takes her seriously. Unless she can find a way to reverse her journey through time, she'll never get home again....

In general, it's a nicely simple, yet not unsatisfying story. The Titanic plot line was dealt with somewhat lightly--the horror is not front and center, but there's enough tension to make it interesting. I would have liked more actually sinking than the twenty pages that was all we got, but you can't have everything. On the plus side, Louise's reactions felt pretty spot on; again, not overwrought, but convincingly appalled.

What I really loved was how Louise had set herself to the serious study of fashion; it isn't just a passing fad, but a real part of who she is, and I appreciated her interest and expertise. The finished version of the book has thirty full-color fashion illustrations--they were only hinted at in the ARC I read, but they were more than enough to make me determined to take a look at the finished book as soon as I come across it! Just the descriptions of all the beautiful dresses were swoonworthy--with art, I bet this will be a book that will enchant any vintage-fashion-loving middle school girl.

Other reviews at Confessions of a Book Addict and TheHappyNappyBookseller

Note on age: Louise is in seventh grade, and the book only lightly touches on the YA subjects of love and teenage angst. So although it's marketed as YA, I say it's a great one for a girl of ten or eleven, and I think a teenager picking this up might find the story too slight to hold their interest.

(disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher)

Shaun Tan has won the Astrid Lindgren Award!

Breaking news--Shaun Tan has won this year's Astrid Lindgren Award!

From the Award's website: "The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award is presented every year. The award total is SEK 5 million, making it the biggest international children's and young adult literature award in the world. The award total indicates that reading by children and young adults is extremely important. The total is also intended to inspire those involved in this field."

3/28/11

Dragonbreath: Lair of the Bat Monster

Danny Dragonbreath, and his iguana pal, Wendell, have been through many hair-raising adventures together. They have their system down pat--"Danny was fearless, and Wendell was terrified, and it worked out between them" (page 163).

But in Lair of the Bat Monster, the fourth installment of Ursula Venron's Dragonbreath saga (Dial 2011, 202 pages), Wendell has to be the hero, and crawl into the titular lair to save his friend! Because Danny has been adopted, or captured, depending on how you look at it, by a mama Camazotz, the most giant of mythical bats...and only Wendell can crawl through the rocks to reach him.

This is perhaps the most comprehensible of all the Dragonbreath stories--sure, it's utterly fantastical, but it makes sense. And it's also, I think, the most overtly education--one learns quite a bit about bats (the real ones). This time out, Danny and Wendell have headed down to Mexico, where Danny's cousin (a feathered serpent dragon named Steve) is a bat researcher.

Comprehensible and educational are both things I like, and the humor that I've come to expect from this series is here too. But as usual, what really appeals to me are Vernon's lovely drawings. I utterly adore the expressions with which she endows her characters--they make me happy.

A great one for the 8 to 10 year old looking for some fun!

Other thoughts at TheHappyNappyBookseller

3/27/11

The Guardian's obituary for Diana Wynne Jones

The Guardian has published its obituary for Diana Wynne Jones--here's the link.

And here are Neil Gaiman's words about her.

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.

3/26/11

Fantasy: An Artist's Realm, by Ben Boos

Last week, I requested a book from Candlewick, and was tickled pink when they included in the package a second book-- Fantasy: An Artist's Realm, by Ben Boos (2010). It's a beautiful book, but one I find very hard to "review" dispassionately.

Back in the day, when I was 12 or so (and for a few years after, until my friends abandoned me for Boys), I played Dungeons and Dragons. The most important part of it, for me at least, was the world building--I still have pages and pages and pages of my D. and D. inspired drawings (happily, the drawing aspect continued through high school--I still had my faithful little sister to play with me).

Typically, my fantasy world building descended into farce. There was no river without its dead sheep floating downstream (easy to draw--4 lines, close together, sticking out of the water), and an odd cult of Rabbit Worship (with dark and sinister elements!) developed. And although I can draw, rather nicely, someone dressed in a carrot suit, hopping toward the Great Rabbit, my grasp of the human form is shaky, and many of my people are curiously armed (anatomically, not weapons-wise. The advantage of drawing people in carrot suits is that they have no visible arms).

This is the background that I brought to my perusal of what is one of the handsomest books of fantasy world building I've ever seen. Fantasy: An Artist's Realm is a gorgeously and generously illustrated guide to a very D. and D.-ish fantasy realm, with familiar character types (paladins, mages, clerics, thieves etc), and non-human beings (like elves). In it are tons of small and detailed pictures, of weapons and potions and other assorted magical accoutrements, as well as full-color double-page spreads of action scenes and maps and landscapes....

Here's what Ben Boos drew more of than me: weapons (lots of weapons). Here's what I drew more of: unicorns and girls in pretty dresses. There are no unicorns (unless I missed them?) in this book, and only one pretty dress. That being said, Boos has a number of girls doing action-y things, which is pleasing.

This is a book that my ten-year-old pored over with rapt attention, the sort of book that calls out to be given to the young D. and D. player, the sort of book that has that luxurious feeling of Gift. I myself found it rather engrossing, in much the same way as the Gnomes book from my own youth--both have lots of little drawings of things, with accompanying facts and clarifications, and I like that sort of thing.

I think, though, that I prefer Ben Boos' first book--Swords: an Artist's Devotion. It is stunningly single-minded, and wonderfully quirky in its obsessiveness (and the swords are more than a bit lovely). Fantasy is a beautiful book, but doesn't have that same originality to it, and so it isn't quite as outstanding.

I've been trying to imagine what would have happened if this book had been given to me back then. Would it have inspired me to draw better? To consider perspective to be more than an optional curiosity? To actually look at the things I was drawing (something many artists seem to find helpful)? Or would my enthusiasm have been quenched?

Maybe this summer I should pick up my pencil again, enlisting my boys as companions. At the very least, I can teach them to draw dead sheep floating downstream.

Goodbye, Diana Wynne Jones

Diana Wynne Jones isn't with us any more--she died last night, and the world is poorer for it.

Her books have given me so much to enjoy and savor that I will be forever grateful to her.

(stares at screen and cries)

added: here's a link to the compilation of DWJ quotes on Goodreads. I'm glad the giant marrow is here--nobody has every included a giant marrow in a fantasy book more successfully than DWJ.

3/24/11

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, by Jennifer Trafton

There is, in my mind, a certain sub-genre of middle grade fantasy that offers a particular type of story--whimsical, light-hearted, adventures with the sort of almost-but-not-quite over-the-top imaginary garnishes that one could imagine a kid coming up with herself in her own writing (which is not a criticism). Books like Drizzle, by Kathleen Van Cleeve, The Magical Misadventures of Prunella Bogthistle, by Deva Fagan, and Green, by Laura Peyton Roberts, to name a few that I think have that sort of flavor (does this make sense?)

Here's a new one of that ilk--The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, by Jennifer Trafton, illustrated by Brett Helquist (Dial 2011, mg, 339). It tells of a girl named Persimmony Smudge, who dreams of Greatness--but how, she wonders, can she find it on the small island where she lives? It's true that this island is the center of everything (and all the land there is, as far as she knows), and it is true that it a magical place--Mount Majestic, the center of the island, gently rises and falls (literally--in an up and down way) every day. And it is not without dangers. There are the poisonous tortoises, the restless mangroves, and the mysterious Leafeaters living hidden lives, and the young despotic boy who's king of the island forces many of its inhabitants to slave in his pepper mill. But none of this really gives a girl scope for doing great things....

Until one day Parsimmony happens to break a pot. And because of that, she hears two Leafeaters talking in the forest about the gold buried beneath the mountain...and that, in turn, leads her to the terrifying discovery that there is a giant under the mountain! One who might well be woken by diggers looking for gold...

And so Parsimmony is launched on an adventure that includes peril! magic pots! a very special starfish! and more! Including, of course, the chance to save the whole island and win glory for the despised name of Smudge.

It is indeed, as Ingrid Law puts it in the blurb on the cover, a magical, buoyant, and lively. Kate, in her review at Book Aunt, contributes more apt adjectives--gleeful, playful, giddy, whimsical, rambunctious! And it is indeed all these things. Not desperately rich or dense or imbued with heart-wrenching Meaning, but succeeding very nicely at being an imaginative and fun read for kids who enjoy the fantastical (almost but not quite) ridiculous.

It's best suited, I think, for the younger end of middle grade (4th and 5th graders who haven't yet become cynical and jaded), and is also one I think would make an especially good book to read aloud to an eight year old girl (or something like one), not just because "Parsimmony" is fun to say. The chapters are shortish, with points of view bouncing around between characters (making it easy to find stopping points), but there's a continuum of energy that I imagine would make the young reader keep asking for more.

That being said, older people (ie me) might not be entirely convinced by the world building and the characters, but it's easy to imagine its intended audience enjoying it lots.

Other thoughts at Nothing Witty Never Pretty, Kiss the Book, Mrs. Hill's Book Blog, and the Book Aunt review linked to above.

3/23/11

Skeleton Man, by Joseph Bruchac

Looking for a middle-grade horror story that takes a terrifying Native American tale and sets it, with great effect, in the present? Probably you weren't, exactly, because you didn't (like me until recently) know that such a book existed. But it does--it is Skeleton Man, by Joseph Bruchac (HarperCollins, 2003, 128 pages), and it is a real page-turner and nail-biter of squirming scariness!

Molly's parents have told her stories from her Mohawk ancestors all her life. Some funny, some inspiring, and some downright creepy. The story of the Skeleton Man is one of the later. It tells of a lazy man, always hungry, who burns his finger one day...and the charred flesh tastes so delicious when he puts his finger in his mouth that he eats himself down to the bone. And then he waits for his family to come home...he's still hungry for more.

Molly, safely wrapped in her parents' love, knows it's just a story. But one day when she wakes up, and finds her parents haven't come home, and a skeletally thin man shows up, claiming to be her uncle. Handed over to him, Molly begins a life of fear and desperation--she knows something is horribly wrong, but no-one believes her. And her "uncle" keeps trying to fatten her up....

Dreams come to help her, dreams that show her a way out and inspire her to try to escape. But when all her worst fears about the Skeleton Man come true, it will take all the courage her dreams have given her for Molly to escape.

Fastly, furiously, suspensfully good! This is the first book by Joseph Bruchac I've read, and the first in which he took a story from his own Abenaki heritage and recast it in the present, and it works beautifully. The Native American elements of the story give a resonance to Molly's experience that lifts this up above straight horror, Molly's a great "brave girl heroine," and Bruchac's writing never disappointed me (right after I post this, I'll be busily adding more of his books to my tbr list--does anyone have any recommendations?).

It's short, and a very fast read, making it not quite enough to completely satisfy the adult reader (ie me), but making it perfect for the 10 year old (on up) who isn't easily disturbed (I think the scariest part is not so much Skeleton Man qua Skeleton Man, but the fact that Molly's parents are gone, presumed dead, and she's trapped in a nightmare that no grown-up can save her from. So not recommended to children that have separation anxiety!).

eek--I just found out that there is a sequel, The Return of Skeleton Man! Poor Molly....

3/22/11

The Book of Tomorrow, by Cecelia Ahern, for Timeslip Tuesday

The worst of my library booksale behind me, I can now get back to blogging! Yay!

So this being Tuesday, I have, as usual, a timeslip book...one for grown-ups (although I think it has tons of YA cross-over appeal). It's The Book of Tomorrow, by Cecelia Ahern (Harper Collins, 2011, 320 pages)

Just shy of her seventeenth birthday, Tamara's life of wealth and privilege collapses when her father kills himself, and she's the one who finds him. All his money is gone, and Tamara and her mother, who's deeply depressed, must leave their repossessed mansion outside Dublin to stay with her aunt and uncle in the country. Her uncle is the caretaker of a ruined castle, her aunt an insanely perfectionist housekeeper, and life in this little piece of rural Ireland could not be more different Tamara's hedonist, material past.

Angry, rebellious, and worried about her mother's retreat into an unspeaking stupor, Tamara is appalled at her new circumstances. But then the travelling book mobile (driven by a very cute boy) arrives, and with it a blank diary. Tamara claims it, and toys with actually writing in it....but never gets the chance. Because when she opens it, she finds her entry from the next day, already written.

Knowing what's gone right (and badly wrong) for her future self, Tamara begins to explore the world in which she finds herself--a place where there are painfully dark secrets, hidden for years, waiting for her to find them.

I found this a fascinating read, not just for the timeslippy premise of reading the diary entries one is going to write tomorrow (which is a brilliant premise, that added tons to the book). Tamara is an unreliable narrator, in as much as her emotions are horribly roiled. She presents herself to the world as unlikeable (one of her habits is alienating others so as not to risk becoming attached), and she's does indeed come across as obnoxious and foul-mouthed. But, rather miraculously, as Ahern unfolds Tamara's experiences, she makes her someone to care about. She was never entirely likable--I wavered between being annoyed with her, feeling sorry for her, and finding her entertaining--but never once did I consider not finishing her story.

But what really hooked me was the wealth of detail. Tamara's new existence comes alive with lovely descriptions of the ruined castle, the beekeeping neighborhood nun whose not averse to curling up with a romance novel, her aunt's disturbingly over-zealous cooking, and the two cute boys (yes, there's a second cute boy on the scene, even though they are all miles from anywhere--nice for Tamara). It's all very suspenseful, but the sun shines a lot and there are lightness in the narration (like the squirrel portrait painting episode) that kept me entertained as well as anxiously intrigued.

However, I did not like the end, which I felt was rushed. I was reading along nicely, letting the suspense of the mystery build up, and patiently waiting for Clues (which I was probably missing), when Bam, everything fell into place (and rather implausible it was, I though). It's possible, of course, that I was just turning the pages too fast in my feverish interest, and maybe it actually was more subtle than I'm giving it credit for--that's the downside of being a fast reader. But still, I felt let down, and not terribly satisfied.

Ant the time-slippish diary is never explained--it is clearly magical, and does indeed foretell the future, but there's no reason for it linked back into the story. So it ended up feeling untidy to me, and not as Magical as it could have been. Oh well.

(age-wise--Tamara uses bad language, gets drunk, and has sex. In short, nothing that would surprise an older teenaged reader)

3/20/11

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

Here's this week's middle grade sci fi/fantasy round-up; it seems a bit on the skimpy side, and I'm afraid I might have overlooked things (it was a hectic week) so do let me know if I missed your mg sff post!

Bless This Mouse, by Lois Lowry, at A Patchwork of Books

Blue Fire, by Janice Hardy, at Let the Words Flow

The Bone Magician, by F.E. Higgins, at Beyond Books

Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword, by Barry Deutsch, at Book Nut

Kat, Incorrigible, by Stephanie Burgis, at aleeza reads and writes

The Last Polar Bears, and the next books in the series by Harry Horse, at books4yourkids

Max Quick--The Pocket and the Pendent, by Mark Jeffrey, at watchYAreading?

Searching for Dragons, by Patricia Wrede, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Trouble With Chickens, by Doreen Cronin, at Bookends

Zita the Space Girl, by Ben Hatke, at Bookends

Authors at large:

Stephanie Burgis (Kat, Incorrigible) at Steph Su Reads (with bonus giveaway)

At A Year of Reading, you will find a video of Gennifer Choldenko (No Passengers Beyond this Point) discussing this book and her writing (and you'll also find some quick looks at other middle grade books).

And Gennifer Choldenko is also interviewed at Shelf Elf.

Brian Chick (The Secret Zoo series) talks about school visits at Under the Green Willow

Kelly Barnhouse (The Mostly True Story of Jack) is interviewed at nancyfulda

Other good stuff:

The folks over at the Enchanted Inkpot are talking small this week, looking at fantasy books where the scale of the characters is miniature.

These round-ups are very fantasy heavy, so it's nice to have a bit of sci fi news- the first book in PJ Haarsman's Softwire series, Virus on Orbis, is available free in ebook form until April 30th, 2011. Exciting adventures out in space, with lots of aliens and other sci fi goodness!

Over at School Library Journal's Battle of the Books, the mg fantasy showdown match took place, with Keeper up against Hereville.

And here's a really cool thing: you know the "X-wing" fighters from Star Wars? Well, here's the whole alphabet of fighters, created from lego. The "M-wing" at right looks pretty serviceable; others, not so much. Thanks to Geek Dad for the link.

3/19/11

Cloaked, by Alex Flinn

Being a person with utterly unrealistic expectations, I took with me to my library booksale a bag of books to read. It didn't happen...although we did sell a fair number of books (but oh goodness, this was the booksale in which we had all the library's adult fiction discards to sell, and boy are they a drag on the market...)

But anyway, when I came home, shattered, I chose what proved to be the perfect book for pleasant unwinding-ness--Cloaked, by Alex Flinn (2011, Harper Collins, YA, 337 pages). It tells of the adventures of a young cobbler named Johnny, who is struggling to keep the family shoe repair business, based in a posh Miami hotel, afloat. With his father no longer in the picture, he and his mother are poor but worthy....and it is his worthiness that attracts the attention of the fabulously wealthy, and very hot, visiting princess. She enlists him (with the promise of marriage, and the concomitant solution to his financial problems) in a quest to find her brother, who's been turned into a toad by an evil witch.

With the help of his best buddy, Meg (who's got a few secrets up her sleeve) Johnny is off to the Florida Keys, in an adventure full of fairy tale riffs--six enchanted swans, a fox with a past, two greedy giants, a wish-granting fish, and more. Fortunately, the princess gave Johnny a magic cloak, and other helpful magics turn up, but still, it's touch and go for the toad...(and Johnny and Meg! Not to mention the six enchanted swans).

Fun and frolicsome stuff. I enjoyed meeting the familiar fairy tales in their new Floridian guise (the swan story, especially). Johnny did disappoint me by not following the fox's advice (since I know that story (the one with the golden bird), I knew he was making Bad Choices), and he was a tad "clueless teenage boy-ish" with regard to girls. But he meant well, and gets points for talking things over with his mother before setting off (I hope my boys will trust me enough to do the same). He also gets points for his serious interest in shoe design and the craft of cobbling (I like Craft Elements in my fantasy).

It's a vignettish kind of book. Flinn introduces lots of different fairy tales here, and the story moves briskly from one to the next. The downside of this is a scattering of emotional umph, but the upside is a humorous and diverting lightness. In short, this book was just the sort of diversion I needed, and I read it cover to cover in a (more or less, but I take what I can get) single sitting.

Especially recommended for the kid who loved Sarah Beth Durst's Into the Wild when they were two years younger, who now wants a more contemporary romance feel with their fairy tales.

(but the cover is wrong. It looks sort of Darkly Romancy, and it isn't; there are bits of bright young love, but no raw and tortured angst. And I kept expecting, based on the thorns, that Sleeping Beauty was going to turn up, but she didn't, and I don't recall any thorns at all).

3/18/11

Library booksale-ing....

One might have thought, that inasmuch as I am married to an Irish piper, I spent St. Patrick's Day in a whirl of Irish music and gaiety.

Nope--it was the Friends' Preview Night of my library booksale, and since I seem unable to delegate (or indeed, even to round up potential delegatees), I basically set up the whole darn booksale myself (essentially I have moved 4000 about four times each). Which is why I didn't post anything yesterday, and why I don't have a review today! But I hope that during the afternoon stint to come there will be a period of calm in which I can get something up....

Only six more booksales to go before our Friends group has enough money to start applying for a matching grant for solar panels...I daydream a lot about those solar panels, and the money they will save....

3/16/11

The new releases of fantasy and sci fi for kids and teens--second half of March, 2011

Just in case you needed more books on your tbr list, here are the new release of fantasy and sci fi for kids and teens from the second half of March....as is so often the case, I ran out of time before I could put in the pictures for the YA books....sorry, YA books.


THE DEVIL'S TRIANGLE by Mark Robson "The Bermuda Triangle has cast a shadow over Sam and Niamh Cutlers' lives since their mother vanished nine years ago. Her whereabouts remains a mystery and every year they return to the Florida Keys with their father, Matt, who is obsessed with solving the haunting puzzle. But Sam is bored with lazing around by the pool while his father hunts for the truth. Craving excitement, he and his friend, Callum, "borrow" Matt's boat. At first it's great fun, but when they find themselves marooned in a terrifying land, the boys realise they too have fallen victim to the Triangle's mysterious effects. Can they find a way home, or will they be lost forever?"

THE DOOR IN THE FOREST by Roderick Townley "At the mid point of three towns, in the center of three streams, in the heart of a forest, lies a mysterious island. Encircled by quicksand and sewn shut by vines, it is impenetrable to all but the poisonous snakes patrolling its waters. But Daniel is determined to get there, along with his friend Emily.

Emily is a bit mysterious herself. A girl who seems to know more than she can say, whose mother was taken away by government troops, and whose eccentric grandmother reads the future in her bubble bath.

Enter the soldiers. Their menacing commander is terribly interested in sleepy little Everwood. Is he searching for something? A treasure map? The island? The girl?"

FANTASY BASEBALL by Alan M. Gratz "Alex Metcalf must be dreaming. What else would explain why he's playing baseball for the Oz Cyclones, with Dorothy as his captain, in the Ever After Baseball Tournament? But Alex isn't dreaming, he's just from the real world. And winning the tournament might be his only chance to get back there, because the champions get a wish granted by the Wizard. Too bad Ever After's most notorious criminal, the Big Bad Wolf, is also after the wishes. Anyone who gets in his way gets eaten. Watch out, Alex!

In a land where classic literary characters are baseball crazy and people from the real world don't technically exist, Alex must face his fears, play the best baseball of his life, and come to discover the surprising truth about himself."


GIRL WITH THE SILVER EYES by Willo Davis Roberts (reissue) "Katie Welker is used to being alone. She would rather read a book than deal with other people. Other people don’t have silver eyes. Other people can’t make things happen just by thinking about them!

But these special powers make Katie unusual, and it’s hard to make friends when you’re unusual. Katie knows that she’s different but she’s never done anything to hurt anyone so why is everyone afraid of her? Maybe there are other kids out there who have the same silver eyes . . . and the same talents . . . and maybe they’ll be willing to help her."

LAIR OF THE BAT MONSTER: DRAGONBREATH by Ursula Vernon "Danny Dragonbreath is hoping to see lots of cool bats when he and his best friend, Wendell, visit Danny's cousin, a bat specialist in Mexico. But he isn't expecting to get up close and personal with a giant bat monster, who kidnaps Danny and carries him off to her lair! Now nerdy Wendell will finally get a chance to be a hero . . . but only if he can hunt down the bat monster before she permanently adopts Danny as her bat monster baby.

Ursula Vernon has packed the fourth book in this laugh-until-smoke-comes-out-of-your-nose series with fantastic bat facts and hilarity of the highest order. Wimpy Kid fans everywhere will love this decidedly un-wimpy (but often unlucky!) dragon."


THE LAST MARTIN by Jonathan Friesen “There's always a Martin. One Martin. Martin Boyle already has plenty to worry about. His germaphobic mother keeps him home from school if she hears so much as a sneeze, and his father is always off somewhere reenacting old war battles. Julia, the most beautiful girl in school, won't even speak to Martin, and the gym teacher is officially out to get him. Which is why Martin really doesn't need this curse hanging over his head. On a trip to the family cemetery, Martin wanders among the tombstones of his ancestors and discovers a disturbing pattern: when one Martin is born, the previous Martin dies. And---just his luck---Martin's aunt is about to give birth to a baby boy, who will, according to tradition, be named Martin. Martin must find a way to break the curse, but every clue seems to lead to a dead end. And time is running out.” Quite possibly the “curse” isn’t real (and the book not, therefore, a fantasy) but it sounds like fun….


RAJAH: KING OF THE JUNGLE by Balraj Khanna "Classic Indian folk tale brought to life with an exciting new story and wonderful illustrations."




SHIMMER by Alyson Noel "Having solved the matter of the Radiant Boy, Riley, Buttercup, and Bodhi are enjoying a well-deserved vacation. When Riley comes across a vicious black dog, against Bodhi’s advice, she decides to cross him over. While following the dog, she runs into a young ghost named Rebecca. Despite Rebecca’s sweet appearance, Riley soon learns she’s not at all what she seems. As the daughter of a former plantation owner, she is furious about being murdered during a slave revolt in 1733. Mired in her own anger, Rebecca is lashing out by keeping the ghosts who died along with her trapped in their worst memories. Can Riley help Rebecca forgive and forget without losing herself to her own nightmarish memories?"

SUDDENLY IN THE DEPTHS OF THE FOREST, by Amos Oz. "In a village far away, deep in a valley, all the animals and birds disappeared some years ago. Only the rebellious young teacher and an old man talk about animals to the children, who have never seen such (mythical) creatures. Otherwise there’s a strange silence round the whole subject. One wretched, little boy has dreams of animals, begins to whoop like an owl, is regarded as an outcast, and eventually disappears.

A stubborn, brave girl called Maya and her friend Matti, are drawn to explore in the woods round the village. They know there are dangers beyond and that at night, Nehi the Mountain Demon comes down to the village. In a far-off cave, they come upon the vanished boy, content and self-sufficient. Eventually they find themselves in a beautiful garden paradise full of every kind of animal, bird and fish - the home of Nehi the Mountain Demon. The Demon is a pied piper figure who stole the animals from the village. He, too, was once a boy there, but he was different, mocked and reviled, treated as an outsider and outcast.

This is his terrible revenge, one which has punished him too, by removing him from society and friendship, and every few years he draws another child or two to join him in his fortress Eden, where he has trained the sheep to lie down with the wolves, and where predators are few. He lets the two children return to the village, telling them that one day, when people are less cruel and his desire for vengeance has crumbled, perhaps the animals might come back…
"


TRUNDLE'S QUEST: THE SIX CROWNS by Allan Jones "Trundle doesn't think he's an adventurer. He's a lamplighter. He likes everything safe and cozy, and that's the way things are in his peaceful part of the Sundered Lands.

Until Esmeralda barrels through his door.

Esmeralda, a princess with a knack for magic and for finding trouble, is convinced that Trundle is the only one who can help her find the six crowns. Lost and scattered long ago, the crowns could unite the Sundered Lands once again. But not if the pirates find them first.

Suddenly, Trundle is on the run. He becomes a stowaway, a drifter, a thief's accomplice, and a swordsman.Trundle may find that he is a true hero, after all... and that this is only the beginning of an epic journey."

UNDEAD AHEAD: THE ZOMBIE CHASERS by John Kloepfer "BRAAAAAINS!!! Zack Clarke, his best pal, Rice, and middle-school queen bee Madison Miller survived the night of the living dead—but the nightmare's not over yet!

Zack's sister is a zombie and his parents might be goners. Rice has uncovered the source of the zombie outbreak, and Madison's health-drink habit may be the key to a cure. Ozzie, the newest zombie chaser, is a nunchaku-wielding, monster-fighting machine who's ready to kick some undead butt.

The whole country—from their parents to the president—is counting on them. Can the Zombie Chasers save the nation from brain-gobbling ghouls? Or will the US of A become the US of Z?"


WISHES AND WINGS: THE FAERIES' PROMISE by Kathleen Duey "Alida has escaped Lord Dunraven’s castle and defied his law to find her exiled faerie family. Using new magic to protect themselves, Alida and her family make the dangerous journey home, back to their beloved meadow near the human village of Ash Grove. When Dunraven’s greed threatens the villagers with starvation, Alida wants to help them. But if Lord Dunraven’s guards find out that fairies are helping humans, her family will be in terrible danger."



A WORLD WITHOUT HEROES: BEYONDERS by Brandon Mull "Jason Walker has often wished his life could be a bit less predictable--until a routine day at the zoo ends with Jason suddenly transporting from the hippo tank to a place unlike anything he's ever seen. In the past, the people of Lyrian welcomed visitors from the Beyond, but attitudes have changed since the wizard emperor Maldor rose to power. The brave resistors who opposed the emperor have been bought off or broken, leaving a realm where fear and suspicion prevail.

In his search for a way home, Jason meets Rachel, who was also mysteriously drawn to Lyrian from our world. With the help of a few scattered rebels, Jason and Rachel become entangled in a quest to piece together the word of power that can destroy the emperor, and learn that their best hope to find a way home will be to save this world without heroes."

Young Adult

BLOODLINE RISING by Katy Moran "The Ghost is the fastest, most cunning young criminal in Constantinople. Skilled at lying and deceit, he has the power to twist the minds of men, bending them to his will. He is both invisible and invincible. Or at least he thinks so - till the day his father returns from the desert. A ruthless barbarian assassin, Essa is not pleased to discover that his wild son Cai has become the city's most notorious thief. But sinister forces are moving against Cai and he finds himself captive on a trading ship.The Ghost no longer, he is now a slave. But luck has not deserted him completely - the ship is bound for Britain, the home his barbarian parents fled, long ago. When he becomes a slave to Wulfhere, prince of Mercia, Cai soon discovers that his Anglish masters know more about his family than he does - what secrets have his mother and father been keeping from him? As Cai sharpens his skills of subterfuge and persuasion, war threatens, and he must choose: will he use his phenomenal talents for good, or evil?"

BORN AT MIDNIGHT: SHADOW FALLS by C. C. Hunter "One night Kylie Galen finds herself at the wrong party, with the wrong people, and it changes her life forever. Her mother ships her off to Shadow Falls—a camp for troubled teens, and within hours of arriving, it becomes painfully clear that her fellow campers aren’t just “troubled.” Here at Shadow Falls, vampires, werewolves, shapshifters, witches and fairies train side by side—learning to harness their powers, control their magic and live in the normal world.

Kylie’s never felt normal, but surely she doesn’t belong here with a bunch of paranormal freaks either. Or does she? They insist Kylie is one of them, and that she was brought here for a reason. As if life wasn’t complicated enough, enter Derek and Lucas. Derek’s a half-fae who’s determined to be her boyfriend, and Lucas is a smokin’ hot werewolf with whom Kylie shares a secret past. Both Derek and Lucas couldn’t be more different, but they both have a powerful hold on her heart.

Even though Kylie feels deeply uncertain about everything, one thing is becoming painfully clear—Shadow Falls is exactly where she belongs…"

BREAKING DOWN by Stefan Petrucha The fourth “Twilight Saga” film gets sliced up in this unauthorized parody of the blockbuster book and movie series! For fans sick of shiny vampires and wonky werewolves, here’s an hilarious antidote."

CHIME by Franny Billingsley "Before Briony's stepmother died, she made sure Briony blamed herself for all the family's hardships. Now Briony has worn her guilt for so long it's become a second skin. She often escapes to the swamp, where she tells stories to the Old Ones, the spirits who haunt the marshes. But only witches can see the Old Ones, and in her village, witches are sentenced to death. Briony lives in fear her secret will be found out, even as she believes she deserves the worst kind of punishment.

Then Eldric comes along with his golden lion eyes and mane of tawny hair. He's as natural as the sun, and treats her as if she's extraordinary. And everything starts to change. As many secrets as Briony has been holding, there are secrets even she doesn't know."

THE DARK AND HOLLOW PLACES by Carrie Ryan "There are many things that Annah would like to forget: the look on her sister's face when she and Elias left her behind in the Forest of Hands and Teeth, her first glimpse of the horde as they found their way to the Dark City, the sear of the barbed wire that would scar her for life. But most of all, Annah would like to forget the morning Elias left her for the Recruiters.

Annah's world stopped that day and she's been waiting for him to come home ever since. Without him, her life doesn't feel much different from that of the dead that roam the wasted city around her. Then she meets Catcher and everything feels alive again.

Except, Catcher has his own secrets -- dark,terrifying truths that link him to a past Annah's longed to forget, and to a future too deadly to consider. And now it's up to Annah -- can she continue to live in a world drenched in the blood of the living? Or is death the only escape from the Return's destruction?"

DEPARTMENT NINETEEN by Will Hill "Jamie Carpenter's life will never be the same. His father is dead, his mother is missing, and he was just rescued by an enormous man named Frankenstein. Jamie is brought to Department 19, where he is pulled into a secret organization responsible for policing the supernatural, founded more than a century ago by Abraham Van Helsing and the other survivors of Dracula. Aided by Frankenstein's monster, a beautiful vampire girl with her own agenda, and the members of the agency, Jamie must attempt to save his mother from a terrifyingly powerful vampire.

Department 19 takes us through history, across Europe, and beyond - from the cobbled streets of Victorian London to prohibition-era New York, from the icy wastes of Arctic Russia to the treacherous mountains of Transylvania. Part modern thriller, part classic horror, it's packed with mystery, mayhem, and a level of suspense that makes a Darren Shan novel look like a romantic comedy."

ENTWINED by Heather Dixon "Azalea is trapped. Just when she should feel that everything is before her...beautiful gowns, dashing suitors, balls filled with dancing...it's taken away. All of it.

The Keeper understands. He's trapped, too, held for centuries within the walls of the palace. And so he extends an invitation. Every night, Azalea and her eleven sisters may step through the enchanted passage in their room to dance in his silver forest.

But there is a cost. The Keeper likes to keep things. Azalea may not realize how tangled she is in his web until it is too late."

FURY OF THE PHOENIX by Cindy Pon "The Gods have abandoned Ai Ling.

Her mysterious power haunts her day and night, and she leaves home—with just the moon as her guide—overwhelmed by her memories and visions and an unbearable sense of dread. For Ai Ling knows that Chen Yong is vulnerable to corrupt enchantments from the under-world. How can she do nothing when she has the skill and power to fight at his side? A dream has told her where he is, the name of the ship he is traveling on, his destination. So she steals off and stows away on board.

The ocean voyage brings with it brutal danger, haunting revelations, and new friendships, but also the premonition of a very real and terrifying threat. Zhong Ye—the powerful sorcerer whom Ai Ling believed she had vanquished in the Palace of Fragrant Dreams—is trapped in Hell, neither alive nor dead. Can he reach from beyond the grave to reunite with Silver Phoenix and destroy Chen Yong? And destroy whatever chance Ai Ling has at happiness, at love?

IN THE ARMS OF STONE ANGELS by Jordan Dane "Two years ago, Brenna did the unthinkable. She witnessed the aftermath of a murder and accused her only true friend--the first boy she ever loved--of being a killer.

Now sixteen, Brenna returns to Oklahoma only to discover that Isaac "White Bird" Henry isn't in juvie. The half-breed outcast is in a mental hospital, frozen in time, locked in his mind at the worst moment of his life. And when Brenna touches him, she's pulled into his hellish vision quest, seeing terrifying demons and illusions she doesn't understand.

Feeling isolated and alone, she's up against the whole town, targeted by bullying former classmates, a bigoted small town sheriff, and a tribe who refuses to help one of their own. But when Brenna realizes she's as trapped by the past as White Bird is, this time she won't turn her back on him. She's the only one who can free them both.

Even if she has to expose her secret--a "gift" she's kept hidden her whole life."

INVINCIBLE: THE CHRONICLES OF NICK by Sherrilyn Kenyon "Nick Gautier’s day just keeps getting better and better. Yeah, he survived the zombie attacks, only to wake up and find himself enslaved to a world of shapeshifters and demons out to claim his soul.

His new principal thinks he’s even more of a hoodlum than the last one, his coach is trying to recruit him to things he can’t even mention and the girl he’s not seeing, but is, has secrets that terrify him.

But more than that, he’s being groomed by the darkest of powers and if he doesn’t learn how to raise the dead by the end of the week, he will become one of them..."

LEMNISCATE by Jennifer Murgia "For Teagan, these last few months have been heaven on earth- especially now that Garreth, her boyfriend and guardian angel, is earthbound. But perhaps Garreth is becoming a little more human than either of them expected.


Now, Teagan must realize that her world is once again about to shift, as she questions the faith she held in others against those once considered enemies.
In this continuation of Angel Star, Lemniscate will draw you even deeper into the world of dark and light as Teagan realizes the angel who could possibly save them all is the one angel she feared the most."

THE LENS AND THE LOOKER by Lory S. Kaufman “It's the 24th century and humans, with the help of artificial intelligences, (A.I.s) have finally created the perfect society. To make equally perfect citizens for this world, the elders have created History Camps, full-sized recreations of cities from Earth’s distant pasts. Here teens live the way their ancestors did, doing the same dirty jobs and experiences the same degradations. History Camps teach youths not to repeat the mistakes that almost caused the planet to die. But not everything goes to plan.Like in all groups of youth, there are those who rebel, “hard cases” who just don’t get it. In this first installment of a trilogy, three spoiled teens from the year 2347 are kidnapped back in time to 1347 Verona, Italy. There they are abandoned and left with only two choices: adapt to the harsh medieval ways, or die.”

THE SCREAMING SEASON by Nancy Holder "The gutsy heroine of Possessions and The Evil Within returns for another year of boarding school at the haunted Marlwood Academy. Lindsay wakes to find herself strapped down in the infirmary. She had a breakdown and might have tried to kill her nemesis Mandy or Mandy's boyfriend, Troy-or both. The details are hazy, but one thing is certain: she is possessed by a spirit she cannot trust.

Lindsay soon realizes that nowhere on campus is safe. Then, she finds a surprising ally in her former rival. Together, Lindsay and Mandy must figure out who can be trusted-and who wants them dead. But when Lindsay's ex-boyfriend shows up at Marlwood, she is given a chance to get away and be free of the curse. Will she take Riley's hand and run, or team up with a new love to save Marlwood from the evil spirits forever?"

SLEEPING ANGEL by Greg Herren "Eric Matthews survives a near-fatal accident only to find his whole life has changed.

Eric Matthews wakes up in the hospital with no memory of how he wound up there—and soon learns that it’s vital that he remember. Apparently, he was in a car accident—and the body of classmate Sean Brody was found in his car, shot to death. But nothing makes sense to Eric. He and Sean weren’t friends. In fact, they disliked each other--Sean was gay and Eric is...well, he's not sure of much right now! Except he is certain he didn’t shoot Sean, even though he can’t remember anything about the day of the accident.

To make matters worse, he starts having psychic flashes about the people around him: his doctor, a nurse, his mother, and other visitors. As Eric’s memories slowly start to come back to him, he becomes more and more certain that not only is he innocent, but that the real murderer is out there….and wants to shut him up permanently."

STEEL by Carrie Vaughn "Sixteen-year-old Jill has fought in dozens of fencing tournaments, but she has never held a sharpened blade. When she finds a corroded sword piece on a Caribbean beach, she is instantly intrigued and pockets it as her own personal treasure.

The broken tip holds secrets, though, and it transports Jill through time to the deck of a pirate ship. Stranded in the past and surrounded by strangers, she is forced to sign on as crew. But a pirate's life is bloody and brief, and as Jill learns about the dark magic that brought her there, she forms a desperate scheme to get home—one that risks everything in a duel to the death with a villainous pirate captain."

THOSE THAT WAKE by Jesse Karp "New York City’s spirit has been crushed. People walk the streets with their heads down, withdrawing from one another and into the cold comfort of technology. Teenagers Mal and Laura have grown up in this reality. They’ve never met. Seemingly, they never will.

But on the same day Mal learns his brother has disappeared, Laura discovers her parents have forgotten her. Both begin a search for their families that leads them to the same truth: someone or something has wiped the teens from the memories of every person they have ever known. Thrown together, Mal and Laura must find common ground as they attempt to reclaim their pasts."

THE VAMPIRE DIARIES - THE RETURN: MIDNIGHT by L.J. Smith "With the help of charming and devious Damon, Elena rescued her vampire love, Stefan, from the depths of the Dark Dimension. But neither brother returned unscathed.

Stefan is weak from his long imprisonment and needs more blood than Elena alone can give him, while a strange magic has turned Damon into a human. Savage and desperate, Damon will do anything to become a vampire again—even travel back to hell. But what will happen when he accidentally takes Bonnie with him?

Stefan and Elena hurry to rescue their innocent friend from the Dark Dimension, leaving Matt and Meredith to save their hometown from the dangerous spirits that have taken hold of Fell's Church. One by one, children are succumbing to demonic designs. But Matt and Meredith soon discover that the source of the evil is darker—and closer—than they ever could have imagined. . ."

WAKE UNTO ME by Lisa Cach "Caitlyn Monahan knows she belongs somewhere else. It's what her dead mother's note suggested, and it's what her recurring nightmares allude to. Desperate to flee these terrifying dreams--and her small town--she accepts a spot at a boarding school in France. Only, when she arrives, her nightmares get worse.

But then there are her amazing dreams, so vivid and so real, with visits from an alluring, mysterious, and gorgeous Italian boy from the 1500s. Caitlyn knows they are soul mates, but how can she be in love with someone who exists only in her dreams? Then, as her reality and dream world collide, Caitlyn searches for the real reason why she was brought to this school. And what she discovers will change her life forever."

WITHER by Lauren DeStefano "Thanks to modern science, every human being has become a ticking genetic time bomb—males only live to age twenty-five, and females only live to age twenty. In this bleak landscape, young girls are kidnapped and forced into polygamous marriages to keep the population from dying out.

When sixteen-year-old Rhine Ellery is taken by the Gatherers to become a bride, she enters a world of wealth and privilege. Despite her husband Linden's genuine love for her, and a tenuous trust among her sister wives, Rhine has one purpose: to escape—to find her twin brother and go home.

But Rhine has more to contend with than losing her freedom. Linden's eccentric father is bent on finding an antidote to the genetic virus that is getting closer to taking his son, even if it means collecting corpses in order to test his experiments. With the help of Gabriel, a servant Rhine is growing dangerously attracted to, Rhine attempts to break free, in the limted time she has left."

3/15/11

Wishful Thinking, by Alexandra Bullen, for Timeslip Tuesday

Wishful Thinking, by Alexandra Bullen (Alloy Entertainment, 2011, YA, 243 pages)

The woman who had adopted Hazel died soon after she brought the baby home, leaving Hazel to a miserable and unsettled childhood. But she left a sealed envelope for Hazel to open when she turned eighteen, and inside was the answer to the question Hazel had been asking her whole life --the name of her real mother. A name distinctive enough to be google-able (Rosanna Scott).* And so Hazel decides to drop by a fundraising event hosted by Rosanna Scott, to try to meet her....and for that she needs to get her one fancy dress, a thrift store bargain that had called to her, mended.

When she gets it back from the seamstress, it is a different dress. The seamstress has worked magic (literally) and it is now a dress that will make Hazel's wish come true, with two more dresses, and concomitant wishes, in store as well.

At the fundraiser, Hazel is devastated to learn that Rosanna Scott had recently died. And so her first wish, made with all her heart, is that she could meet her mother....

The next thing she knows, Hazel is on the ferry bound for Martha's Vineyard, 18 years and eight months (give or take) in the past. She's about to meet the woman who will be her mother, she's about to fall in love, and she's about to make friendships that will strengthen her and change her life for ever. When she returns to her own time, not only will she know where she came from, but she'll know where she wants to go (for a start, art school in New York).

As time travel experiences go, Hazel's is the most idyllic I've ever read about. Not only does she meet a Really Cute Boy Who Fancies her within minutes of her arrival, Rosanna Scott immediately offers her a cushy and not un-interesting job, that comes with a place to stay and lots of cast off clothes. Despite the job, there's lots of time to enjoy the beautiful scenery of Martha's Vineyard, hang out at the beach, and eat tasty food. The only thing that stands in the way of Hazel's happiness is her prickly room-mate, who doesn't seem to want to be friends....even the mystery of why Hazel was given up for adoption seems not desperately pressing now that she has been taken to meet her mother and it has all turned out so well.

But the story of her birth is considerably more complicated than Hazel imagines, and it's always tricky to fall in love with someone eighteen years before the time when you belong. Fortunately, Hazel has two more dresses/wishes waiting for her...

So its a pleasantly light, romantic read, with sufficient inclusion of serious subject matter (giving up one's baby for adoption, growing up in foster care, searching for one's place in the world) to keep it from being all sweetness and light. Bullen does a nice job with Hazel's emotions, and makes her a person to care about. It's a companion novel to Bullen's first book, Wish (same dress, same magical seamstress); that book explored the death of a sibling, and packed considerably more emotional punch, but this one is more fun to read, what with the time travel and the mystery....

Here's what I like best about the series--the wonderful daydream of finding a dress that is absolutely perfect for me, not once, but three times; a dress that changes all by itself to give you just the look you need.... (note on cover--Hazel's third dress has "elegant golden flowers" embroidered on it. I think the cover designer's could have tried a bit harder to achieve that).

Here's what I'm wondering--how far back in time can you go before it's clear you are from the future? Hazel never once puts her foot into it by saying anything that dates her; like "Oh, Pluto isn't a planet" or what have you. 18 years isn't all that long ago, but surely there have been some changes in slang, style, and general way of being in the world that might be noticeable? (pause for thought...18 years ago was the tail end of my competitive bridge period, just before the competitive pool playing period....if I could look the same again (sigh), I don't think anyone back then would notice anything different about me if I were to travel back in time. Except that my both my bridge and my pool playing are not what they used to be).

*being nothing if not thorough I tried; the results are somewhat clouded by reviews of the book, but it seems reasonable, given that there are only 14 Rosanna Scotts in the US; 588 people have my name, which irks me.

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