10/21/12

Another week's worth of Middle Grade Speculative Fiction links, rounded-up for your reading pleasure!

Please let me know if by some horrible chance I failed to link to your post, or to the posts of your loved ones.

The Reviews

Beswitched, by Kate Saunders, at Semicolon

The Borrowers, by Mary Norton, at Reading To Know

Down the Mysterly River, by Bill Willingham, at Fyrefly's Book Blog

The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There, Catherynne M. Valente, at Tales of the Marvelous 

Goblin Secrets, by William Alexander, at The Book Smugglers

Gregor the Overlander, by Suzanne Collins, at Quirky Bookworm

Grimm Tales, by Philip Pullman, at The Telegraph

The Hidden Gallery, by Maryrose Wood, at Confessions of a Bibliovore 

Island of Silence, by Lisa McMann, at Michelle Mason

The Maelstrom (The Tapestry Book 4), by Henry H. Neff, at The Write Path

Margaret and the Moth Tree, Kari and Brit Trogen, at Jean Little Library 

The Mark of Athena, by Rick Riordan, at Guys Lit Wire

Monsters on the March (Scary School 2) by Derek the Ghost, at Good Books and Good Wine 

Nanny Piggins and the Wicked Plot, by R.A. Spratt, at Semicolon

On the Day I Died, Candace Fleming,  Random Musings of a Bibliophile and Semicolon

The Savage Fortress, by Sarwat Chadda, at Charlotte's Library

Seeing Cinderella, by Jenny Lundquist, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Shadow of the Hawk, by Curtis Jobling, at In Bed With Books

The Sixty-eight Rooms, by Marianne Malone, at Wandering Librarians

The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver, at The Musings of ALMYBNENR and Charlotte's Library

Splendors and Glooms, by Laura Amy Schlitz, at Sonderbooks

Tilly's Moonlight Garden, by Julia Green, at Books Beside My Bed 

Time Snatchers, by Richard Ungar, at Semicolon

The Time-Travelling Fashionista at the Palace of Marie Antoinette, by Bianca Turetsky, at BooksYALove

Troll Hunters, by Michael Dahl, at The Book Monsters

User Unfriendly, by Vivian Vande Velde, at Books & Other Thoughts

Verdigris Deep (aka Well Witched in the US), by Frances Hardinge, at The Book Smugglers

What Came from the Stars, by Gary Schmidt, at Waking Brain Cells, and a chat review at Reads for Keeps

The Whispering House, by Rebecca Wade, at Charlotte's Library


Authors and Interviews

Cornelia Funke (Ghost Knight) at The Telegraph

Adam Gidwitz (In a Glass Grimmly) talks spooky fairy tales at Educating Alice 

Nikki Loftin (The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy) at Cynsations

Marissa Moss (Mira's Diary: Lost in Paris) at A Backwards Story

Jennifer Nielsen (The False Prince) at A Thousand Wrongs (giveaway)

Craig Everett (Toby Gold and the Secret Fortune) at A Thousand Wrongs (giveaway)


Other Good Stuff 

R is for Ravana at Scribble City Central, with Sarwat Chadda

How cool is it to use lego minifigures in your book trailer? Here's one at Cynsations for Chronal Engine that does just that, plus a giveway of the book.

A lovely list of time travel book series for kids at Time Travel Times Two

And a list of middle grade science fiction at Educating Alice, that inspired me to make my own page of reviews.

Portal Fantasies--agents diss. them, writers and readers react (conversation starts at Dangerous Jam, with lots of comments, and continues at Making Light)  My take: the portal fantasy is alive and well in middle grade fantasy).

Neil Gaiman explains All Hallows Read at Tor

To mark 200 years of the Brothers Grimm, Germany has established a fairy tale route--over 375 miles of German castles, forests, and medieval towns.  Here's a review from the Guardian.


10/20/12

Science Fiction for kids--a new page I just made

Over at Educating Alice today, I saw that she had compiled a list of middle grade science fiction titles, and asked for suggestions for others.  This inspired me to go through all 1994 posts that I have written and pull out all the middle grade science fiction books I've reviewed....

And now they have their own page.

As usual, I was left wondering why there aren't more sci fi books being written/published for kids.  Specifically, why aren't there more sci fi books about robots for 10 year olds? Why isn't there more cryptozoology?

And, also as usual, I am left pondering the fuzzy nature of the boundary between sci fi and fantasy.  For instance, I've never understood why A Wrinkle in Time is considered sci fi, or time travel, by so many other readers (that being said, I just parsed my feelings in a comment below, and conclude that since they are traveling to alien planets and meeting aliens, it is clearly sci fi!  though it will always feel like fantasy to me...)  Likewise, there are probably books on my list that others would say weren't sci fi at all!  So much easier, but perhaps less helpful, to use the catch-all term of Speculative Fiction.

10/19/12

The Whispering House, by Rebecca Wade

I almost missed my bus stop this morning--I was so utterly engrossed by the ghostly shenanigans going on in The Whispering House, by Rebecca Wade (Katherine Tegen Books, 2012, middle grade), that we could have been driving through the Sahara Desert, for all I knew.   And when I arrived at work (having mercifully finished reading just before my stop),  I was still so caught up in the story that, instead of saying "Hello" politely to my co-worker, I said Oh my gosh your daughter likes ghost stories doesn't she this one is excellent (with wavy motions of the book).

Here's what happens in it:

Hannah (likable girl, good at art) moves temporarily into old house of reduced rent with locked room.

She begins to dream--creepy, fairytale like dreams that don't seem like nightmares till she wakes up.

Her friend Sam (her partner in adventure) opens the locked room.  And the blocked way up to the attic.  In the attic is one of the most creepy, spooky dolls ever.

It belonged to Maisie, a little girl who died in the house in the late 19th century.

And Maisie turns out to be rather desperate for attention....and oh my gosh it is so spooky as the whole house deteriorates around Hannah and things get really creepy and how can Hannah focus on her exams when her mind is full of questions like--How did Maisie die?  Was she murdered?  Is the doll cursed?  Why is the house deteriorating? EEKKK!

The pacing is spot on, the mystery is satisfyingly twisty, and it gripped me at pretty much the highest level of book grip there is.   A fine supporting cast of reasonable adults adds value.  Plus extra bonus points for information about Napoleon's death (you never know when that will come in useful).

So, like I said up at the top--if you have a sixth through eight grader who wants a good ghost story that isn't gory but is tremendously creepy, this is a good one.  Or heck, if you want a good girl in old haunted house story for yourself, go for it.  (I think the cover will winnow its audience very well indeed--those who find the ghost girl too young looking, or too girl looking, will not be the right readers).

Those who are put off by witchcraft (which I, myself, am not) might be disturbed by the inclusion of a not-unsympathetic Wiccan character, but she's nicely balanced by the Bishop, who's tremendously sympathetic.

This is a sequel of sorts to The Theft and the Miracle, which tells of Hannah and Sam's previous adventure, and which is now on my wish list.  The events of that story are alluded too, but it's not at all necessary to have read it before this one.

A final musing--Rebecca Wade is English, and this was published at the same time in the UK and the US.  At last one change (chips to fries) was made (edited to add--round-about changed to merry-go-round.  Sigh).   But the more familiar one is with both versions of English, the harder it is to spot things that are particular to one or the other.   If you're going to make changes (and surely they mostly unnecessary these days) you need translators who are the opposite of fluent in the other English.... (edited to add:  I wish publishers wouldn't bother.  Keep local color!  Keep things interesting, instead of trying to homogenize the language!)

10/18/12

The Savage Fortress, by Sarwat Chadda

The Savage Fortress, by Sarwat Chadda (Scholastic, 2012, middle grade/YA)*--in which an Anglo-Indian boy of no particular talents (except at computer gaming) must use the power of Kali, Goddess of Death, to take down Ravana, the legendary Demon King!

Ash Mistry had been looking forward to his visit to his uncle in India.  But after three weeks of heat and people and confusion, home in England has never looked so good...but he's not going to get to go back any time soon.  Instead, he has to save the world from an evil sorcerer, a wealthy Englishman named Lord Savage, who is scheming to reawaken Ravana, the demon king.  If Ravana returns, he will bring utter annihilation.

The chance (?) find of a golden arrowhead sets Ash on the path to becoming the one hero who can stop  Lord Savage and his demonic henchmen.  But Ash isn't at all sure that he is hero material.  It's not until his little sister is kidnapped by the enemy that he steels himself to fulfill his destiny--to use the golden arrowhead to finish the job that the great hero king Rama started millennia ago, and destroy Ravana once and for all.

Fortunately, Ash has help, from the beautiful half-demon Parvati who will fight at his side, and from Rashti, a mysterious old man who gains him entry into a secretive school where he will be taught to fight.  But he has more than that--he has the golden arrowhead was a gift to Rama from Kali, goddess of death.  To use it is to invite Kali into his very soul, but when faced with an army of demons, the imminent destruction of the world, (and the danger his own little sister is in), what choice does he have?

Ash, at first, is not the most likable protagonist--he's rather a sullen adolescent type, not displaying many sterling character traits.  And the book starts rather slowly.  But as it becomes clear just how nasty a piece of work Lord Savage is, people start dying, demons start being demonic, and Ash accepts his fate, the fast paced action and violence of his adventures makes it almost irrelevant what Ash's particular character is like--the story (an a very exciting one it is) has taken over.

Far more interesting is the character of Parvati, the half demon teenager.  Her motivations and her conflicts are deeply rooted in the history of all her many reincarnated lives.  She is fierce, and very kick ass, and yet emotionally vulnerable, and although I was mildly pleased that Ash made it through his adventures, it was Parvati I was really anxious about!

The Savage Fortress is an excellent book for those looking for a rather thrilling fantasy questy/adventure, set far outside the tropes of Europe.  With its violence, which is rather gruesome at times (demons are messy eaters), and which includes upfront deaths, and its tremendously high stakes, it won't be for every young reader.    But for the slightly older Rick Riordan fan (yes, I know "Rick Riordan" has almost become a cliche, but I think it's true) this might very well be a good fit.  I put both middle grade and YA labels on this one--the perfect reader (if such a thing exists) is probably about 12 or 13.

Bonus feature:  go check out the Ash Mistry website, where you'll find lots more about the characters and the mythology.

Archaeology bonus:  a nice little introduction (more of a teaser than an educational treatise, but still) to the Harrapan civilization

Other reviews:  The Book Smugglers -- "Brilliantly done and definitely a highlight of my reading year so far."

Book Lust  -- "I found it to be a much deeper read than I expected, and I really appreciate Chadda's willingness to bring to light both the positives and negatives of Indian culture.  Definitely looking forward to more in this series!"

Final side note: Fans of Chadda's books about Billi SanGreal (Dark Goddess and The Devil's Kiss) will be pleased to see those stories obliquely referenced.

Disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

*first published in the UK as Ash Mistry and the Savage Fortress

10/17/12

Waiting on Wednesday--The Moomins and the Great Flood

I first met the Finn Family Moomintroll books by Tove Jansson years and years ago, and fell hard for them.  Moominland Midwinter is one of my top ten books of all time.   But I was always vaguely confused as to which book counted as the first in the series...because there was a reference to a book that didn't exist, that came before all the published adventures.

Finally my confusion will end.  There will be a clear first book.

Shamelessly quoting the whole press release from the Guardian:

"Written in 1945, The Moomins and the Great Flood comes out in Britain this November

Tove Jansson's first ever Moomins book, a quest to find the lost Moominpappa which has never been published in the UK before, is set for release next month.

Written in 1945, The Moomins and the Great Flood sees Jansson using a mix of sepia washes and pen and ink line drawings to tell the story of Moominmamma and young Moomintroll's hunt for the long lost Moominpappa "through forest and flood". On the way, they meet a little creature – an early version of Sniff – and what publisher Sort Of Books described as "the elegantly strange Tulippa".

The translation, by David McDuff, was published in Finland in 2008, but will be released in the UK for the first time on 1 November. "We delayed the UK publication as we wanted to launch it in the approach to Tove Jansson's centenary year (2014) and did our best to make it a lovely possession," said publisher Natania Jansz. "I now wish we had similar works for all our great children's titles – the earliest Pooh, or Alice. It offers such a fascinating insight into the creative process."
Jansz called the book "a revelation … showing how Jansson's ideas and artworks evolved as she developed the Moomin themes and series".

"Written in the dark days of war – and as an escape from them – she uses a mixture of beautiful sepia and ink washes and pen and ink line drawing," she said. "It would take another decade before the Moomins could burst into full colour with The Book About Moomin, Mymble and Little My."  "

I am so there.

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

10/16/12

Transcendence, by C.J. Omololu, for Timeslip Tuesday

Before I get started on this review, look at this cover.  Here is a black teenage boy front and center as the romantic lead in a paranormal YA story.  He is not one of an ensemble cast, and he is not shown from behind, or in shadow.  I cannot think of one single other contemporary YA speculative fiction book cover that does this (tell me if I'm wrong!).   I hope it is selling well, so that having a black main character on the cover can become something normal and unremarkable (I have made a point of leaving it face up around the house for several weeks, to brainwash my boys into thinking it normal.  I'm not sure it registered, but you never know).   Now that's out of my system, here's the review.

Transcendence, by C.J. Omololu (Walker, 2012, YA) is a type of time travel book that I've never reviewed before--on in which reincarnation is front and center.  But since reincarnation in this story is more than just having memories of past lives--it's actually reliving bits of the past, in a vivid, really being there way--I'm counting it as time travel.

Cole (short for Nicole) had no idea that she had lived many lives before her present, teenage cello playing existence until she is beheaded at the Tower of London.  Fortunately for Cole, this happened in the past...though the experience felt very real.  And also fortunately for Cole, maybe, a handsome boy named Griffon is there to catch her as she faints.   He knows that she's more than just a tourist overwhelmed by the history of the place....because he, too, has memories of many lives.

Griffon and Cole are both from the same California town, and their paths cross again.  And Cole is caught up in a fluster of teenaged crush-ness, which is a new thing for her, because until now the cello has filled her time very fillingly.   But her uncanny visions of the past are happening more often... and Griffon has answers for her that are almost unbelievable.  There is a secret cabral of  those who remember their past lives exists, and Cole has just become eligible to join the club.

But the energies of her gradually remembered pasts have attracted someone who has born a grudge against her for over a hundred years....a deadly grudge.  Murderous, even.  So Cole must figure out the mystery of what happened back then, or else she may well not live long enough to be able to settle nicely into her romance with Griffon....let alone sort out her various pasts, and what her future might hold.

This is definitely one for readers who like their teenage romance right up there, front and center. Following along with Cole's first person present narration, the reader gets to share the anxiety, the attraction, the heat of passion (which takes a while to actually heat up, but which is rather steamy once it gets going.  Although they don't have sex.  Yet.).   The reader, thanks to this first person present, also is privy to lots of miscellaneous details and thoughts that don't advance the story all that quickly.  It is very much a slow build to the really exiting, "will Cole be killed," part (the realization that she can remember past lives, like Griffon, isn't actually all that exciting--explanation from Griffon that he is special, incredulous acceptance from Cole that she is special too...and repeat intermittently).

In fact, things were so slow to get going  that I started and put the book down twice....but I pressed on the third time, and was rewarded with a final third of much more excitingness (the "will Cole be killed"part, and the whole mystery of why).   That being said, if you like teenaged paranormal romances, but want to keep the paranormal on the human end of things, this might really work for you.

Fans of time travel might be a tad disappointed in as much as there really isn't any travel qua travel--there's reliving of things that happened, and as such Cole in the past doesn't have any free will as her modern self.  There's no  culture shock or paradoxes or other time related entanglements, except for the reverberations of the past into the present.   So, time travel fans, be aware that you are going to get more contemporary romance than  time slippishness.

All that being said, the final third of the book redeemed the whole for me, and I do recommend it in a mild way to anyone not off-put by my caveats!


10/15/12

If you don't nominate books for the Cybils, then....5 good reasons and 2 less good ones to Nominate Now!

Nominations for the Cybils close today (at 11:59 PST, Oct. 15)) (edited to add: nominations are now closed)

If you don't nominate a book you love for the Cybils, you won't:

1.  Have your good taste vindicated when it makes it to the short list with your name and link next to it, nor will you have lots of blog visitors as a result.

2.  Be telling a much loved author you love her or his book

3.  Be thanking the publisher of a book you love

4.  Be ensuring that the book is read by up to seven bloggers, who might well love it too and spread the word on their blogs

5.  Be sending a message to anyone who cares about children's book awards that we who are part of the children's and YA blog community, as writers of blogs or readers of blogs or both, are incredibly passionate about great books for young readers!

And if you don't nominate a book in mg sff, and the book you don't nominate is a  really good book that I have never read, I might never get the pleasure of reading it and that would be sad for me! (and, because I am not selfish, sad for my fellow panelists as well).

And YA sff will win viz number of books.   (I am also not competitive.  I just like to add excitement to things by pretending I am.  Really).

Here I am not being competitive:  Middle grade sci fi/fantasy nominations are trailing YA 117 books to 157 (edited to add: this is now the more or less final tally or nominations from the floor; the numbers may change slighty as books get shifted between categories) and although YA gets a boost, numberwise, from accepting ebooks, and there are some over in regular mg that might get shifted to mg sff, still. 

Here's where you go to nominate. (nominations now closed)

Here are the books that have already been nominated.

And here are just a few mg sff books that haven't been nominated (and which I haven't necessarily read, so I have no real idea if they truly should be or not....)

(and just to say--one of the real, sincere reasons I keep bringing up all the books that haven't been nominated is that in YA, the actual audience for the books are people old enough to go forth and support the books they love--in mg, it's the responsibility of the gatekeepers!  This applies to many other categories too, so do feel free to fill out an entire slate of nominations.  And continuing to be sincere, I care about what's nominated because of being a panelist--I want the list of books from which we have to choose to be the best that it can be)

(and this year, since the publishers are going to get a chance to fill in the gaps, I'm not as sad about how long this list is as I have been in years past...)

(this is an incomplete list; I'm sure I'm forgetting many great books, and don't mean to hurt anyone's feelings by not including their book....)

The Crimson Shard, by Teresa Flavin

The Mourning Emporium, by Michelle Louvric

Zeus and the Thunderbolt of Doom, by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams

Troll Hunters by Michael Dahl

Of Giants and Ice by Shelby Bach

Heart of Stone, by M.L. Welsh

The Last Guardian, by Eoin Colfer

Crow Country, by Kate Constable (ages 10-14, so perhaps more at home in YA)

Dark Lord, by Jamie Thomson

The land of Neverbelieve, by Norman Messenger (perhaps more at home in picture books)
Unlocking the Spell, by E.D. Baker

Muncle Trogg by Janet Foxley

 SEEDS OF REBELLION: BEYONDERS by Brandon Mull

THE STAR SHARD by Frederic S. Durbin

BLISS by Kathryn Littlewood

 THE CROWFIELD DEMON by Pat Walsh

THE WHISPER by Emma Clayton

 PRINCESS OF THE WILD SWANS by Diane Zahler

STEALING MAGIC: A SIXTY-EIGHT ROOMS ADVENTURE by Marianne Malone

The Golden Door, by Emily Rodda

Claws, by Mike Grinti and Rachel Grinti

The Serpent's Shadow by Rick Riordan

The Adventures of Sir Balin the Ill-Fated, by Gerald Morris

The Stones of Ravenglass, by Jenny Nimmo

 MOUSENET by Prudence Breitrose

THE FUTURE DOOR: NO PLACE LIKE HOLMES by Jason Lethcoe

 LITTLE WOMEN AND ME by Lauren Baratz-Logsted 

MADAME PAMPLEMOUSSE AND THE ENCHANTED SWEET SHOP by Rupert Kingfisher


THE OUTCASTS: BROTHERBAND CHRONICLES by John Flanagan

 THE TWILIGHT CIRCUS: WOLVEN by Di Toft



The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver

Has anyone else noticed how many siblings need rescuing these days in middle grade fantasy?  The missing sibling is a much more popular quest item than some non-human object of destiny (although these still exist).   Usually (though not always) it is a younger sibling of the opposite gender of the protagonist.  Examples include The Peculiar, Summer and Bird, Claws, Seven Sorcerers, 13 Curses, Wildwood, Breadcrumbs (if you count really close friendship as almost siblingness), The Golden Door....

Well, maybe that's not all that many.  But in any event, The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver (HarperCollins, 2012, middle grade), begins with the hideous Spindlers of the title, nightmarish soul stealers, infesting Liza's little brother Patrick,  and I felt as though I was on familiar ground.  Liza, as expected, must go on a quest through Below (accessed via her basement) to rescue Patrick's soul.  On the way to the dark and mysterious stronghold of the Spindlers, she encounters dangers and is almost killed.  She finds an unexpected ally, a large sentient rat named Mirabella who seems mentally unstable; she is able to overcome her repugnance of Mirabella's ratish ways and think of her as a friend.  She outwits the Spindlers thanks to some clever thinking and frees her brother. 

It's all perfectly fine--nicely imagined, competently written, briskly paced.  The only thing that raised my eyebrows was Liza's relationship with the rat, Mirabella--Liza seemed both ungrateful for the help and companionship, and totally uninterested in why Mirabella might be risking death to accompany her--but that was resolved by the end.

I seem to be the only reader of this one who doesn't find it all that much to write home about.   It felt somewhat programmatic to me- finding the way to another land, then moment of danger, miraculous salvation, repeat,  then outwit a more a powerful enemy and return to a home that is made better by the experience.  It didn't move me emotionally, and it didn't strike me as a particularly three-dimensional fantasy world (more like a series of fantasy vignettes).

Yet the starred review at Kirkus said:  "Richly detailed, at times poetic, ultimately moving; a book to be puzzled over, enjoyed and, ideally, read aloud."

School Library Journal gave it a star, and said "This imaginative fantasy emphasizes individual initiative and the power of hope and friendship. Below is a fully realized alternate world with echoes of both classic literature and mythology."

Publishers Weekly also gave it a star, and said "[this] magical, mesmerizing quest affirms the saving power of story, friendship, and love."

And I say, gee.  It was a fairly entertaining, not unpleasant, fast little read, that I think lots of kids (and clearly, at least some adults) will enjoy lots, but I don't think it's all that.

disclaimer:  review copy received from the publisher at Kidlitcon

10/14/12

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi/fantasy from around the blogs--"like Calvin and Hobbes, but with muffins"

"Like Calvin and Hobbes, but with muffins" (as in, the two main characters are muffins) is how my youngest described the graphic novel he's currently working on.  It tickled me very much; however, this week's round-up of the mg sff posts I found in my blog reading has nothing to do with muffins.  In any event, let me know if I missed your post!

First:  Nominations for the Cybils close tomorrow.  Middle grade sci fi/fantasy nominations are trailing YA 101 books to 132 (as of 6:26 pm).  MG SFF fans, represent!  Nominate!  (It seems like there are fewer nominations this year.  Last year we had c. 150 in mg sff....why is this?)

Here's where you go to nominate.

Here are the books that have already been nominated.

(I have a few posts of mg sff books that haven't been nominated yet here, here, and here)


The Reviews:

Breadcrumbs, by Anne Ursu, at The Accidental Novelist

Circus Galacticus, by Deva Fagan, at Book Nut 

Darkbeast, by Morgan Keyes, at The Book Smugglers

Demons of the Ocean, by Justin Somper, at Madigan Reads

The False Prince, by Jennifer Neilsen, at Book Nut, Finding Wonderland, and Semicolon

The Fire Chronicle, by John Stephens, at Karissa's Reading Review and The Artolater

The Freedom Maze, by Delia Sherman, at Slatebreakers

The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Fantasy Literature

Goblin Secrets, by William Alexander, at Semicolon 

The Golden Door, by Emily Rodda, at The Write Path

How to Seize Dragon's Jewel, by Cressida Cowell, at The Telegraph

In a Glass Grimmly, by Adam Gidwitz, at A Monster Ate My Book Report and Charlotte's Library

Keeper of the Lost Cities, by Shannon Messenger, at The Book Smugglers

The Last Dragonslayer, by Jasper Fforde, at LiterariTea

The Last Hunt, by Bruce Coville, at Fantasy Literature

The Mark of Athena, by Rick Riordan, at Riffs and Reviews

Mira's Diary--Lost in Paris, by Marissa Moss, at Bumbles and Fairy Tales

The Orphan of Ellis Island, by Elvira Woodruff, at Time Travel Times Two

Palace of Stone, by Shannon Hale, at Bibliophilia--Maggie's Bookshelf 

Path of Beasts, by Lian Tanner, at Bewitched Bookworms

The Peculiar, by Stefan Bachmann, at Book Nut and Charlotte's Library

The Prince Who Fell From the Sky, by John Claude Bemis, at Semicolon

Princess Academy, and Palace of Stone, by Shannon Hale, at The Book Smugglers

Princess of Glass, by Jessica Day George, at Confessions of a Bibliovore

Runemarks, by Joanne Harris (audiobook review) at library_mama

Seeing Cinderella, by Jenny Lundquist, at Semicolon 

The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver, at books4yourkids and Shelf Elf

Splendors and Glooms, by Laura Amy Schiltz, at books4yourkids and Becky's Book Reviews

Starry River of the Sky, by Grace Lin, at BookDragon and Reads for Keeps

The Storm Makers, by Jennifer E. Smith, at library_mama

Storybound, by Marissa Burt, at Semicolon

Summer and Bird, by Katherine Catmull, at The Book Smugglers

The Time Garden, by Edward Eager, at Tor

The Unwanteds, by Lisa McMann, at HumbleIndigo

What Came from the Stars, by Gray Schmidt, at Becky's Book Reviews and Random Musings of a Bibliophile

When Marnie Was There, by Joan C. Robinson, at Charlotte's Library

The Whisper, by Emma Clayton, at Paranthetical

The Wikkeling, by Steven Arntson, at 300 Pages

Wildwood, by Colin Meloy, at Book Nut

Wings of Fire, by Tui T. Sutherland, at Fantasy & SciFi Lovin' News & Reviews

Winterling, by Sarah Prineas, at Semicolon and Bookworm Blather

Woodenface, by Gus Grenfell, at Read in a Single Sitting

Young Fredl, by Cynthia Voight, at Great Books for Kids and Teens

and a two for one at Ms. Yingling Reads--Behind the Bookcase, by Mark Streensland,  and Terra Tempo: Ice Age Cataclysm, by David Shapiro


Authors and Interviews

Grace Ling (Starry River of the Sky) at Abby the Librarian

Lana Krumwiede (Freakling) at A Thousand Wrongs (giveaway)

RL Stine is asked "How do you think scaring kids is different than scarring adults?" at The Huffington Post

Lisa McMann (Island of Silence) at A Thousand Wrongs (giveaway)

Katherine Catmull (Summer and Bird) at Cynsations 

JK Rowling at Scholastic, answering fans questions live

Other Good Stuff:

Q is for Questing Beast, with Mary Hoffman, at Scribble City Central

New Zealand is releasing Hobbit coinage that's going to be legal tender.   The New Zealand Post said it expected "strong international interest"-- that would include my boys. 

And if you want a quick little Lord of the Rings chuckle, here's a fun video clip of demonstrating the power of Saruman's voice...

10/13/12

24 Hour Readathon minichallenge--a great way to directly celebrate the reading child

My actual reading for the readathon doesn't go all that well--2 books finished, 1 short story finished (about which more later), and 2 books each half done...

But there's a mini challenge going on right now that I can take part in wholeheartedly! Celebrate the Reading Child, at joystory, asks bloggers to do something celebratory and reading child related-ish...

so

I just went to the Fall Book Fair for Ballou, a high school in D.C. where the library is pitifully bare of books, and bought Vessel, by Sarah Beth Durst (which I'd like to buy for myself one of these days....it sounds super amazing, and is that a beautiful cover or what).

If you'd like to help book hungry teens celebrate reading, here's the information at the blog behind the book fair, Guys Lit Wire

Horten's Incredible Illusions, by Lissa Evans

Horten's Incredible Illusions--Magic, Mystery & Another Very Strange Adventure, by Lissa Evans  (Sterling Children's Books, September, 2012, middle grade)

In Horten's Miraculous Mechanisms (my review), we were introduced to young Stuart Horton, transplanted to the small town in England where his illustrious great-uncle Tony, a renowned stage magician, had lived, invented magical mechanisms, and mysteriously disappeared.  Stuart followed the clues his uncle left, and found the cache of miraculous mechanisms....but does he have a legal right to them? Not unless he can find his uncle's will...

So Stuart and his friend April (one of the triplet girls next door) are off following a second hunt devised by Uncle Tony that requires them to enter each of the illusions.  In the first book, true magic only came into play right at the end.  But here, it soon becomes clear that each of the elaborate mechanisms--the Well of Wishes, the Arch of Mirrors, the Cabinet of Blood and more--holds a magical trap, from which only the keen witted can escape.

I found this book more entertaining than the first--I loved the various mechanisms and their tricks, and enjoyed the little humours side plots spinning off from the main story.   But on the other hand, it was perhaps not as emotionally involving as the first book--Stuart is now established in his new life, so there is less emotional angst...

Still, a good, fun, fast read!

So fun and fast that I just finished it in the first hour of Dewey's Readathon, in which I am a last minute participant.

Readathon!

During my morning blog browse, I happened to see over at April's that this is a Readathon Day!  And so I quickly jumped on board...I'm not very very hopeful about being able to read for 24 hours, but I will try to get at least ten books read!

Off I go...

Questions via 24hourreadathon.com

Dewey Readathon
1) What fine part of the world are you reading from today?
Southern New England-- a crisp fall day, with a hint of the first frost still on the grass

2) Which book in your stack are you most looking forward to?
I'm really looking forward to not having a stack at all...but one book I'm most certainly going to read is The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver.

3) Which snack are you most looking forward to?
The cranberry apricot bread I'm going to make

4) Tell us a little something about yourself!
I am woefully unprepared for winter, both in fact (there are still windows awaiting reglazing in the barn) and in mind--this cold dark morning stuff rots.

5) If you participated in the last read-a-thon, what’s one thing you’ll do different today? If this is your first read-a-thon, what are you most looking forward to?
I'm not going to fret about having to do other things in between reading--I'll give the books my best shot, and get at least 14 hours of reading in, but won't feel bad about not reading every book in my pile!

10/12/12

In a Glass Grimmly, by Adam Gidwitz

In a Glass Grimmly, by Adam Gidwitz (Dutton Juvenile, Sept. 27, 2012, middle grade)

In A Tale Dark and Grimm (2010), Gidwitz fractured the story of Hansel and Gretel into a quest that was a conglomeration of several fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm.  In a Glass Grimmly is a companion to that story, again drawing on several desperate tales to make a surprisingly coherent narrative about the trials and tribulations that befall royal children Jill and Jack.  As in the first book, there are frequent intrusions from the narrator, a considerable helping of danger, and some really unpleasant moments.  But there's also humor, and hope, and character growth to balance off the less cozy aspects of the tale....

Both Jack and Jill are leading lives that are somewhat twisted--Jack longs to be accepted by the village boys, and Jill longs to be as beautiful as her beautiful mother, so as to win attention from her.    But when the tailor responsible for the Emperor's New Clothes comes to town, Jill finds herself the victim of his cruelty....and runs off the village where Jack lives.   Jack has his own problems--he's just traded a cow for a bean.  And these happenings set in motion a journey that will take the children on a quest of a mirror that will tell the truth to whoever looks into it...if they can deliver the mirror to the mysterious woman who asked them to find it, they'll get their hearts desire.  If they don't get it, they've agreed their lives are forfeit.  It's the sort of quest that involves dangers from goblins, giants, evil mermaids, and finally a face to face encounter with a massive, very fiery salamander.

And it's the sort of quest where, when all the pieces fall into place, Jill and Jack have changed so much that what they thought they wanted--validation from others--has changed as well....

Comic relief along the way is provided by a three-legged frog (throwing a frog against a wall doesn't actually turn a frog into a prince, you know.  It just hurts him).  And the pluck of the two kids, and their quick wits adds zest to the story.   So all in all, I found it a very diverting read, one I preferred to the first book.   I'm not quite sure why that last is so--perhaps this book had a more hopeful, interior oriented character arc, perhaps the authorial intrusions were intruded with a more practiced hand, perhaps I just found Jack and Jill more interesting...perhaps it's because I liked the frog.

In short, although A Tale Dark and Grimm didn't work for me, this one did, and I can wholeheartedly recommend it to kids from fourth grade on up (yeah, it's dark, but so is Harry Potter).   I know lots of people loved ATDAG--I'd love to hear from any of you who did about whether this one worked as well for you!

And as a final aside--there's no need to have read the first book before picking this one up, and there's no real need to know the fairy tales, although it adds considerably to the interest.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

10/11/12

Summer of the Mariposas, by Guadalupe Garcia McCall

Summer of the Mariposas, by Guadalupe Garcia McCall (Tu Books, October 2012, 12 and up), is an utterly enthralling story about five Mexican American sisters who go on road trip to take a dead man home to Mexico, and who are beset by supernatural forces on the way.

When I get a book to review that I already know I want to read,  I don't look at the blurb on the back jacket--I don't want preconceptions.   I'm saying this because all the while I was reading Summer of the Mariposas, I was thinking--wow, this is almost a retelling of the Odyssey! How clever I am to have noticed this! (I was also thinking that I would never want to take a road trip with a corpse).   And then I look at the back, and read, in big letters:  "Odilia and her four sisters rival the mythical Odysseus."  I guess that means I was on to something, but I feel a lot less original now....

When their papa left Odilia and her sisters, their mama had to go to work.  So the girls are spending their summer neglecting their chores and running wild--which includes going down to a secret spot on the Rio Grande to swim.  And there, one day, they find a drowned man, and in his wallet are pictures of his children....   Growing up on the boarder, the girls are well aware of boarder crossings gone wrong, and their hearts are moved by the thought of his family waiting for news in Mexico.   So the younger sisters decide that the only thing to do is to avoid the tangles of boarder bureaucracy and drive him home themselves.  Having made their delivery, they'll then go further into Mexico, to visit their paternal grandma, who they haven't seen for years.

Odilia, the oldest of the five, is the only one who thinks the whole thing is a bad idea.  But she can't let her sisters go alone.  And so, with the corpse neatly dressed, a touch of rogue applied, and a spritz of perfume for freshness --"Oh great," [Odilia] retorted, "So now he's not just going to look like a prostitute, he's going to smell like one too?"--they cross the border. 

But while they were extracting the drowned man from the river, Odilia was visited by the spirit/ghost/goddess Llorona--doomed for eternity to try, and fail, to keep her own boys from drowning.  Llorona has come to help Odilia find her way on this quixotic quest--giving her a magical earring that will bring help in times of trouble. The reader begins to suspect that this is going to be no ordinary, earth-bound, adventure...

Indeed it isn't.  The girls' journey takes them from one supernatural trap to another.  Though Odilia finds her instincts screaming at her with almost every encounter, her sisters rush on heedlessly into danger (it takes the younger girls a long time before they start learning from their mistakes--which is useful for the plot, but which stretches credulity). There's a witch who wants to keep them as her pets forever, an almost deadly encounter with a ravenous chupacabras, harpy-like owls who torment the sisters with a litany of their failings, and a deadly warlock.   But each time hope seems lost, Odilia calls on the magic of her earring, and help comes.

And then the girls must go home, face the music of the police and the feds (they were all over the news as suspected kidnapping victims) and bring what they learned back with them to their poor hardworking mama...Which leads to my only slight reservation about the book--the whole quest seemed largely to have come about so that the girls could be pushed into growing-up a bit, which seems like a lot of effort for not all that much point on the Supernatural Force's side of things (although Odilia does give something back).  But still.  Better that, I think, than the girls being Chosen Ones of Too Much Point--this way, the fantastic is still part of our world, part of the very real character arcs of this family of sisters.

It's often easy to describe a book as an amalgamation of other books...This meets That.  It's tricky here, because I can't think of a single other YA book that is at all like a story of five very real sisters on a road trip through a Mexican fantasia (The closest I'm getting is The Indigo Notebook, by Laura Resau, but it's a stretch).  The Odyssey meets...something oh so very different from the cannon of European-based quest fantasy, something fresh, and fascinating, and entertaining as all get out.

Here's another review at Finding Wonderland.

Disclaimer:  review copy received from the publisher.

10/10/12

Dangerously Ever After--a lovely fantasy picture book

I don't, in general, review picture books, but sometimes one comes my way that demands attention (in a good way). Such a book is Dangerously Ever After, by Dashka Slater, illustrated by Valeria Docampo (Dial, September 13, 2012).


It's the story of Princess Amanita, who loves dangerous things--her pet scorpion, her brakeless bicycle, but most of all, her beautifully, horribly dangerous garden, full of stinging plants, stinking plants, spiky plants...

And then Prince Florian comes to visit:

"Hello," he said.  "Nice flowers."
"They're not at all nice," said Amanita. "Their itch is worse than a thousand mosquito bites."
Then she noticed the prince's sword, which looked very sharp and dangerous.  "Nice sword," she remarked.

Florian's sword unfortunately proves sharp enough to slice off what he assumed were harmless grapes...and the ensuing explosion (they were actually grenapes!) destroys Amanita's wheelbarrow.  By way of apology, he brings her roses, and when Amanita realizes just how beautifully thorny they are, she decides she must grow them in her garden.  So Florian sends seeds...but instead of roses, they sprout noses!

And the noses seem to have allergies (with yucky results).

So off she goes, on her brakeless bicycle, all in a huff, determined to stick the noses in Florian's ears.  Unfortunately, she doesn't know the way to Florian's castle.  And so, for the first time in her life, Amanita, lost in a dark forest,  encounters Danger!  Fortunately, she has a bicycle basket full of Noses....

It's a charming, quirky little story, and the pictures add tons of nuance, humor, and charm (bonus cats!  Bonus sea serpent topiary!  Bonus scorpion stinger pony tale!) There's enough pink to draw in your basic princess lover, and even Amanita's armoured dress is delightful, but the story subverts the standard tropes of the princess genre very nicely.

I also liked the fact that even though Amanita had a rather harrowing time of it, she didn't suddenly switch gears and renounce dangerous things--the story ends with her planting nine of the thorniest rosebushes in her garden.

So all in all, a rather delightful fantasy picture book, one I enjoyed lots!

(disclaimer:  review copy received from the publisher)

National Book Awards finalists announced

The finalists for the National Book Awards have been announced!  Here are the books in Young People's Literature:  William Alexander's Goblin Secrets, Carrie Arcos' Out of Reach, Patricia McCormick's Never Fall Down, Eliot Schrefer's Endangered, and Steve Sheinkin's Bomb: The Race to Build -- and Steal -- the World's Most Dangerous Weapons.

It strikes me as a very nicely balanced list--something for everyone (more or less) including a nice middle grade fantasy for me.  I myself bought Goblin Secrets after Ursula Le Guin recommended it, but then it got lost behind a radiator before I could read it, and has only just now surfaced....and I must now really put my mind to reading it, because it is also in the running for the Cybils in MG SFF!

10/9/12

A third list of books to tempt the reader who hasn't yet nominated anything in mg sci fi/fantasy

I really thought that I'd read a lot of middle grade sci fi/fantasy this past year...but lo, I didn't.  And as a direct result, I continue to wonder if one of the mg sff books that I haven't yet read from this Cybil's year is The One.

And so I spent a happy little time at Kirkus, reading reviews....and found these, none of which have been nominated!  So if you think one of these combines most beautifully kid appeal and quality writing, do nominate it

The Crimson Shard, by Teresa Flavin

Gustav Gloom and the People Taker

The Mourning Emporium, by Michelle Louvric

Zeus and the Thunderbolt of Doom, by Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams

Troll Hunters by Michael Dahl

Of Giants and Ice by Shelby Bach

Heart of Stone, by M.L. Welsh

The Last Guardian, by Eoin Colfer

Deadly Pink, by Vivian Vande Velde (nominated-goody!  I'm looking forward to reading this one!)

Crow Country, by Kate Constable (ages 10-14, so perhaps more at home in YA)

Dark Lord, by Jamie Thomson

The land of Neverbelieve, by Norman Messenger (perhaps more at home in picture books)

Unlocking the Spell, by E.D. Baker

The Icarus Project by Laura Quimby (now nominated!)

The Mapmaker's Sons by VL Burgess (now nominated, but yoiks!  Not eligbile cause of coming out too late in the month.  Sorry.)

Robin Hood, by David Calcutt  (although goodness knows Robin Hood might not be fantasy...Scarlet, for instance, is in regular YA not YA sff, but it sounds really good!)


And all of these are in addition to the books from my previous two posts, here and here.

When Marnie Was There, by Joan C. Robinson, for Timeslip Tuesday

When Marnie Was There, by Joan C. Robinson (1967) is a lovely example of the sort of character driven, atmospheric, haunting story that's my favorite type of time travel.

Anna is an orphan, with foster parents who love her, but who have never been able to make her feel loved.   Withdrawn to an alarming degree, with no friends (she's not really even fond of herself) she holds herself tight within a shell of indifference.  When she is sent from London for an extended stay on the coast of Norfolk, to build up her strength, she spends her days idly exploring the shore, drawn in particular to an empty house by the water....a house that feels strangely familiar.  A house that isn't empty, after all.

Because Marnie lives there--the kindred spirit who Anna had never dreamt of meeting.  Marnie, whose parents are rich and fond of her, but who, like Anna, is lonely and neglected.  Marnie, who appears almost out of no-where, and who fills Anna's thoughts...

And when Marnie must go back to the city, she has left Anna the gift of being a person who can have friends... and Anna finds herself drawn into the large family who have moved into the old house, filling its emptiness with love and warmth.  Her memories of Marnie fade like a dream, until the revelation comes that Marnie and Anna are connected more deeply than either girl could have imagined.

Marnie wasn't actually there after all; somehow Anna had gone back into her time (just before WW I).   But it isn't a story about an adventure in the past--Anna doesn't even realize that Marnie was from an earlier time.  Instead, it is a story about friendship, and how Anna's character changes as a result.    So don't pick this one up if you want Excitement.  Do pick it up if you want gripping and poignant introspection.  Highly recommended to my ten-year old self, and to any girl who feels out of step and alone.

My only quibble is with the overly tidy and hasty wrapping up at the end...surely Anna's foster parents had made enquires about her family?  Did she really have no living relatives?

Harper Collins republished it as a "modern classic" in 2002, so although at the moment it's a tad on the expensive side in the places I just looked, if you keep you eye on it you can find a reasonably priced copy (I paid about $5 for the one I just bought--thanks, blog reader Julia, for recommending it to me!).

10/8/12

The Peculiar, by Stefan Bachmann--a murder mystery/alternate history/faery steampunk/brave brother/unwilling hero/utterly gripping story

I like the cover of The Peculiar, by Stefan Bachmann (Greenwillow, Sept 2012, middle grade)  very much--it is a most intriguing clockwork bird, and the feathers add a nicely mysterious touch.  What the cover does not convey is that this is a book about a 19th-century England in which the gates to the land of faery opened, and a vicious and bloody war resulted--the Smiling War, so called because of all the grinning skulls that covered the fields.   But fairy magic proved to be no match for the British military, and with the gate now closed again, the faeries had no choice but to remain in the human world...constrained both by laws and by the inimical effects of iron and church bells.

Yet some humans and some faeries found each other not unobjectionable....and Changeling resulted--Peculiar children despised by both races.  Bartholomew and his little sister, Hettie, are two such children, confined by their mother for their own protection to the inside of a rundown home in a marginal area of war-torn Bath, now a predominantly faery town.   Bartholomew can pass as human, from a distance; Hettie, with branches growing from her head instead of hair, is much too Peculiar...

But danger finds the two of them, nonetheless.  Nine changelings have been horribly murdered...and all unwillingly, and rather unwittingly,  Arthur Jelliby, a gentleman of means and a junior member of Parliament, finds himself embroiled by conscience and coincidence in keeping the tenth changeling alive.

And Barthlomew might be that child.  Or perhaps Hettie...little branch-haired Hettie, with her raggedy handkerchief doll, who can never play with other children...

Oh gosh, how to describe this murder mystery/alternate history/faery steampunk/brave brother/unwilling hero/utterly gripping story?

Perhaps it would give you some idea of the taste and texture of it if I said it reminded me at times of Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman, and Jonathan Stroud, with a generous dash of Diana Wynne Jones, but you have to add steampunk-ness.

I could tell you that Mr. Jelliby becomes lost in passageways that cannot exist, chases a mechanical bird across the streets of London, and is almost eaten by his furniture...and would much rather be sleeping late and drinking tasty drinks than actually doing anything forceful, but that makes him sound too absurd--he is a true hero.  I could say that Bartholomew is a boy scarred by loneliness and poverty, whose one sure place in the world is at his sister's side--almost pitiable, but without self-pity.   I cared, very much, for both these heroes...pitted against an enemy much more powerful, knowledgeable, and capable than either of them.

Because in this world where monsters and magic (beautiful and grotesque) and the steam stink of industry live side by side, there is a dangerous plot afoot that might bring about an even more destructive conflict between humans and faeries than the previous war.  With Bartholomew and Mr. Jelliby the only ones trying to stop it.

Short answer:  this was a truly excellent, gripping read that should utterly knock the socks of 11 to 13 year old readers, and if no one else nominates it for the Cybils (why has no one done so yet?) I will. 

Thank you so much, Maria, for passing on your ARC to me!!!

10/7/12

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi/fantasy from around the blogs (10/7/12)

 Good morning, and welcome to another week's worth of my middle grade sci fi/fantasy blog reading!  If I missed your post, please let me know.

First: Nominations for the Cybils are open till October 15; if you haven't nominated your favorite eligible mg sff book (one published between Oct 16, 2011 and Oct 15, 2012 in the US or Canada) please do so!  I say "middle grade," but this category also includes elementary--so it's anything above easy readers/short chapter books but below YA (so the Dragonbreath books, for instance, go into this category).  YA sci fi/fantasy has c. 120 books so far;  mg/elementary has only about 80, in large part, I think, because it relies more on gatekeepers to nominate its books.

To jog people's memories, I've put together two little lists of books published in the first half the nomination year--here, and here.  Last year, for the record, this category had c. 150 books.  (The nonfiction, poetry, and book apps. categories also need more love!)

And here's a Cybils related question for those of you who have read The One and Only Ivan to ponder--typically, talking/sentient animals go in the fantasy category (The Cheshire Cheese Cat, for instance, won last year).  Is Ivan a real guerrilla, or a fantasy guerrilla?

The  Reviews:

3 Below, by Patrick Carman, at Book Nut

The Bridge of Time, by Lewis Buzbee, at Time Travel Times Two

The Brixen Witch, by Stacy DeKeyser at Random Musings of a Bibliophile 

The Castle in the Attic, by Elizabeth Winthrope, at Quirky Bookworm

The Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls, by Clairat Presenting Lenore

Cold Cereal, by Adam Rex, at Semicolon

Cosmic, by Frank Cottrell Boyce, at Maria's Melange

The Death of Yorik Mortwell, by Stephen Messer, at Akossiwa Ketoglo

The Demonkeeper Series, by Royce Buckingham, at Musings of a Book Addict (the last two, Demoncity and Demoneater, are Cybils eligible)

Down the Mysterly River, by Bill Willingham, at 300 Pages

Ever, by Gail Carson Levine, at Read In a Single Sitting

The Ghost of Graylock, by Dan Poblocki, at Fantasy Literature

The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There, by Catherynne M. Valente, at Good Books and Good Wine and The Book Smugglers

Keeper of the Lost Cities, by Shannon Messenger--this one is on a blog tour with lots of stops; you can find a nice list of them here; other reviews at In Bed With Books, and Carina's Books

The Key (Magnificent 12), by Michael Grant, at Book Dreaming

Mira's Diary: Lost in Paris, by Marissa Moss, at Good Books and Good Wine and The Write Path

Monsters on the March (Scary School), by Derek the Ghost, at Imaginary Reads

Mr. and Mrs. Bunny: Detectives Extraordinaire! by Polly Horvath, at Semicolon

Operation Bunny, by Sally Gardner, at Nayu's Reading Corner and Fantastic Reads (more elementary than middle grade)

Ordinary Magic, by Caitlen Rubino-Bradway, at Semicolon 

Professor Gargoyle, by Charles Gilman, at Jen Robinson's Book Page and Now is Gone

Renegade Magic, by Stephanie Burgis, at Semicolon

The Seven Tales of Trinket, by Shelley Moore Thomas, at My Brain on Books 

The Sinister Sweetness of Splendid Academy, by Nikki Loftin, at Presenting Lenore

The Spindlers, by Lauren Oliver, at My Precious and My Favorite Books

Splendors and Glooms, by Laura Amy Schlitz, at Semicolon

Unlocking the Spell, by E.D. Baker, at Cracking the Cover

The Unwanteds, by Lisa McMan, at Back to Books

The Voyage of Lucy P. Simmons, by Barbara Mariconda, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Wednesdays, at Puss Reboots

The Wikkeling, by Steven Arnston, at Novels, News, and Notes

Authors and Interviews

Philip Pullman (Grimm Tales) at The Telegraph

Lois Lowry (The Giver, and now Son) at Story Snoops

Catherynne M. Valente on "Looking Glass Girls" at Good Books and Good Wine and on "Childhood and Growing Up" at The Book  Smugglers (giveaway) and as "the Big Idea" at Whatever

Shannon Messenger (Keeper of the Lost Cities) at Bookyurt

Lisa McMann (Unwanteds: Island of Silence) at The Enchanted Inkpot

Grace Lin (Starry River of the Sky) at The Enchanted Inkpot
Jama's Alphabet Soup , Pragmatic Mom, and Charlotte's Library

Stephanie Burgis (Renegade Magic) at Templar Publishing--the third, and final, book in her trilogy is coming out this month in the UK

Margaret Peterson Haddix at A Thousand Wrongs (giveaway)

Morgan Keyes (Darkbeast) at Avery Flynn

Jenn Reese (Above World) at The Writing Nut


Other Good Stuff

100 YA books with characters of color, at Pinterest.  I might have to try doing this for mg, although I think it would be hard to come up with 100.  However, check out this paperback cover for Claws, by Mike and Rachel Grinti (my review)--I just saw it at my son's Scholastic Book Fair.  You can also note how the "cut off face trend" extends to the cat.

A director's cut of the Harry Potter books??? at BBC News

A new fairy tale reimagining, revisiting, retelling blog/literary journal--Unsettling Wonder

It's always fun to buy a sci fi/fantasy book for a needy library serving kids who needs books badly--so here's your chance, at the Guys Lit Wire book fair for Ballou Sr High School in D.C.

Ray Bradbury's final, beautifully inspiring, essay, at LitStack 

So this newly discovered worm is supposed to look like Yoda?



I don't see it.  However, I am glad to know what is being shown on the cover of this book (A Love Episode, by Zola Aemile), or perhaps it's something else...but what? This is just one of the many mind-shakingly awful book covers from Tutis Digital Publishing, whose ability to create incomprehensibly horrible covers is unmatched (thanks to the Guardian, for bringing this to my attention.  Seriously, if you have five minutes, check these covers out).

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