Late today with the round-up because of starting a watercolor class at RISD this morning! Yay me; I am trying to find more things that give me joy, and although it would have given me more joy if the car keys hadn't fallen inside a shoe when I put them down last night (this caused Confusion and Delay) it was fun! In any event, please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
The Aesir Kids, by James Grant Goldin & Charlotte Goldin, at Bitchs n Prose
Beastkeeper, by Cat Hellisen, at The Book Wars
The Castle Behind Thorns, by Merrie Hasell, at Bibliobrit
Copper Magic, by Julia Mary Gibson, at Kid Lit Geek
The Dark Secret (Wings of Fire book 4) by Tui T. Sutherland, at Hidden in Pages
Doll Bones, by Holly Black, at Challenging the Bookworm
A Dragon's Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, by Laurence Yep and Diane Ryder, at Librarian of Snark
Fairy Tale Reform School, by Jen Calonita, at Mom Read It
Fleabrain Loves Franny, by Joanne Rocklin, at Bookshelves of Doom
Hook's Daughter, by Heidi Schulz, at So Many Books, So Little Time and Readaraptor
How To Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jenks, at Becky's Book Reviews
The Jumbies, at Views From the Tesseract
The Map to Everywhere, by Carrie Ryan and John Parke Davis, at Log Cabin Library
Mark of the Thief, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Pages Unbound
Mars Evacuees, by Sophia McDougall, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Monstrous, by Marcykate Connolly, at Book Nut
The Night Gardener, by Jonathan Auxier, at Kid Lit Geek
Nightmares! by Jason Segel and Kirsten Miller at Literary Hoots
Peter Pan in Scarlet, by Geraldine McCaughrean at Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
A Question of Magic, by E.D. Baker, at Leaf's Reviews
The Ordinary Princess, by M.M. Kaye, at Redeemed Reader
Story Thieves, by James Riley, at Read Till Dawn and Ms. Yingling Reads
Tuesdays at the Castle, by Jessica Day George, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Wish Girl, by Nikki Loftin, at Charlotte's Library
Witch Wars, by Sibéal Pounder, at Wondrous Reads
Four Spec Fic Pirate books at School Library Journal
Authors and Interviews
Catheryn M. Valente (theFairyland series) shares her Big Idea at Whatever
Jessica Day George (Tuesdays at the Castle, et seq.) at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Stephanie Burgis (Kat, Incorrigble et seq.) at Strange and Random Happenstance
Laurence Yep and Joanne Ryder (A Dragon's Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans) at My Brain on Books
Other Good (?) Stuff
At Reading Rainbow there's a list of 13 Children's books that are helpful for those wishing to raise a reader of science fiction
This is the one that led to the question mark above-- Big Barbie is watching you! But they're obeying all applicable government regs., so no need to worry.....via Boing Boing
A Tuesday ten of Remarkable Female Protagonists at Views From the Tesseract
And I love xkcd's tribute to Terry Pratchett!
3/15/15
3/12/15
Thank you, Terry Prachett
Thank you, Terry Prachett, and goodbye. I came late in life (as in, the year before last) to Terry Prachett's Discworld...but oh, the joy of that year of reading all of the books in chronological order! And oh, the joy of meeting Sir Terry's characters, and the feeling of not just having read deeply entertaining books, but of having been given lovely food for thought of a life-perspective tweaking sort that could lead to better ways of being in the real world. My only real regret about not having started reading him sooner is not just that I could conciveably have already become a better person, but that I missed out on years of excitedly waiting for the next book to come out...
My favorite of his books is Night Watch....and when the lilac blooms this spring, I'll tuck a sprig in my coat and cry some more.
My favorite of his books is Night Watch....and when the lilac blooms this spring, I'll tuck a sprig in my coat and cry some more.
3/10/15
The Queen Must Die (Chronicles of the Tempus, Book 1), by K.A.S. Quinn, for Timeslip Tuesday
Some time travel books are most enjoyable for the fun of the time travel, others are best enjoyed as historical fiction. The Queen Must Die (Chronicles of the Tempus, Book 1), by K.A.S. Quinn (Atlantic Books, 2010, upper middle grade), falls into the later category--it's one I'd recommend more to people who enjoy reading about Queen Victoria and her children than to people who enjoy clever time travel.
It's the story of a modern girl, Katie Berger-Jones-Burg (lots of step-fathers) who one day finds herself transported back to Queen Victoria's palace while reading the letters of her daughter, Princess Alice. Alice is remarkably unfazed by having a time travelling New Yorker show up, and welcomes the diversion, and the friendship that grows between them. Katie is plenty fazed, but it's not the time travel as such that concerns her, but the fact that she's been seeing visions, and the fact that there are sinister plots afoot in the past...Princess Alice and her family are in serious danger from anarchists who have infiltrated the palace. And even more alarming, 19th century London has been infiltrated by sinister supernatural agents who might well want to kill Katie, and the two other time travelling children who have also made their way their, to serve their own purposes.....
It all got kind of complicated, the sort of complicated that happens when the main characters themselves have no clue, and the big revel, when it came, didn't quite make everything clear to me, and seemed to be sort of shoehorned onto the story. And why wasn't more made of the two other time traveling kids who were basically shadows we never met? It also felt that the author had to stretch a bit too much to make her emotional conclusion to the story tidy (Katie realizes that her neglectful mother loves her at the end, despite having no more evidence of this than she ever did....)
But I did enjoy Princess Alice and her family, and Katie and Alice, and Jamie, the son of the palace physician, becoming friends and trying to work things out and foil the anarchists' plots; even though their goings on stretched credulity quite often, I found them believable as individuals. It was also fun seeing Prince Albert caught up in the building of the Crystal Palace, and as a result of google searching inspired by the book I now know a lot more about what happened to Victoria's children, which I guess is good viz me being an educated person....Alice, for instance, was the mother of Alexandra, Tzar Nicholas II's wife, and it was rather sad to know that her own life was not going to be all that happy....
It wasn't a book I loved, but I didn't mind reading it despite my confusion......and in as much as it felt like a book in which ground was being laid for the sequel, and in as much as I liked Alice lots, I will probably seek out book 2.....And like I said, it is one I'd recommend to those seeking fictional visits with Victoria et al.
Here's a longer, and rather more actively favorable, review from the Guardian.
It's the story of a modern girl, Katie Berger-Jones-Burg (lots of step-fathers) who one day finds herself transported back to Queen Victoria's palace while reading the letters of her daughter, Princess Alice. Alice is remarkably unfazed by having a time travelling New Yorker show up, and welcomes the diversion, and the friendship that grows between them. Katie is plenty fazed, but it's not the time travel as such that concerns her, but the fact that she's been seeing visions, and the fact that there are sinister plots afoot in the past...Princess Alice and her family are in serious danger from anarchists who have infiltrated the palace. And even more alarming, 19th century London has been infiltrated by sinister supernatural agents who might well want to kill Katie, and the two other time travelling children who have also made their way their, to serve their own purposes.....
It all got kind of complicated, the sort of complicated that happens when the main characters themselves have no clue, and the big revel, when it came, didn't quite make everything clear to me, and seemed to be sort of shoehorned onto the story. And why wasn't more made of the two other time traveling kids who were basically shadows we never met? It also felt that the author had to stretch a bit too much to make her emotional conclusion to the story tidy (Katie realizes that her neglectful mother loves her at the end, despite having no more evidence of this than she ever did....)
But I did enjoy Princess Alice and her family, and Katie and Alice, and Jamie, the son of the palace physician, becoming friends and trying to work things out and foil the anarchists' plots; even though their goings on stretched credulity quite often, I found them believable as individuals. It was also fun seeing Prince Albert caught up in the building of the Crystal Palace, and as a result of google searching inspired by the book I now know a lot more about what happened to Victoria's children, which I guess is good viz me being an educated person....Alice, for instance, was the mother of Alexandra, Tzar Nicholas II's wife, and it was rather sad to know that her own life was not going to be all that happy....
It wasn't a book I loved, but I didn't mind reading it despite my confusion......and in as much as it felt like a book in which ground was being laid for the sequel, and in as much as I liked Alice lots, I will probably seek out book 2.....And like I said, it is one I'd recommend to those seeking fictional visits with Victoria et al.
Here's a longer, and rather more actively favorable, review from the Guardian.
3/9/15
Wish Girl, by Nikki Loftin--beautiful, sweet, poignant, and really cool!
One of my favorite types of books as a child (and grownup) are those involving a lonely kid (mostly girls) finding peaceful refuges--ala The Velvet Room, in Zilpha Keatly Snyder's book of that name, Mandy's house in the woods, by Julie Edwards, and lots in Elizabeth Goudge's books....Wish Girl, by Nikki Loftin (Razorbill, Feb 2015) is a book of that sort, only in this case the main character isn't a girl; he's a lonely, introverted boy desperately searching for the quiet he badly needs, and he finds his peace in a magical east Texas valley. But regardless of gender and refuge particulars, reading Wish Girl felt familiar and friendly...except for something I've can't recall ever reading before-- here the refuge is not just beautiful and peaceful...it is magical, a character in its own right. I was totally Team Valley from the start.....
Peter's family has moved from the city out into the middle of nowhere, Texas Hill Country--partly because life in the city was not kind to introverted, bullied, Peter and his parents think a fresh start will help. But the small house with all his loud family in it, mentally and emotionally pulling on him, isn't what Peter needs, so when he finds the Valley, a beautiful piece of nature where quiet is the order of the day, his spirit can unclench itself. To his initial dismay, though, he finds a person already at home there--a girl named Annie, who refers to herself as a "wish girl." She is driven to create art in nature, in what time she might have left--she's a wish girl as in "make a wish foundation." And she and Peter become friends, really seeing and appreciating each other in a way that is special for both of them (and, just saying, it's not romance; they are introverted kids who are kindred spirits). The valley is a refuge for both, giving them what they need.
And the valley really does actually and fantastically look after its friends....there are two bad boys, the sort that run around with a gun shooting animals, who are not its friends--instead of clear water and flowers and a cute baby armadillo, the bad boys get attacked by insects....And the two bad boys decide to make Peter their victim...and since his parents aren't listening to him, or hearing what he needs, they think it's nice that there are boys nearby for him to be friends with. And so, when the physical abuse from the bullies and the noise at home drive him to escape, it is of course to the valley that he goes.
And Annie is also trying to escape...her cancer is back, and she's supposed to be starting new treatments that could leave her permanently un-Annie. She can't stand the thought that she might loose her creative spark and love of beauty and art...but her mother isn't listening to her, either. But the valley, try though it may, can't make everything all magically better, or keep all violence out.....
I love the valley. It is so well described that I feel I have been there, and it is beautiful. If, like me, you still have several feet of dirty snow around and an icy driveway, it makes an especially nice change! Annie and Peter's stories were moving without being too much to take; Annie is described in the official blurb as "the dying girl" but she isn't, she's a fiercely living girl and that is the point, and even though Peter's parents are dim, they at least care. And then ending is not heartbreaking, which it so easily could have been.....I am particularly glad that the valley comes through it all unharmed! There's not a ton of Action and Adventure, although there is a bit....it's definitely one for the place and character loving reader.
Give this to any introverted child who loves quiet places, or to a kid who appreciates being part of nature and making beautiful things! Or give it to a kid who doesn't yet know that these things might be just what he or she needs....
Added bonus for those of us on the lookout for diversity--Annie, as shown in the cover, is a brown skinned girl....
Peter's family has moved from the city out into the middle of nowhere, Texas Hill Country--partly because life in the city was not kind to introverted, bullied, Peter and his parents think a fresh start will help. But the small house with all his loud family in it, mentally and emotionally pulling on him, isn't what Peter needs, so when he finds the Valley, a beautiful piece of nature where quiet is the order of the day, his spirit can unclench itself. To his initial dismay, though, he finds a person already at home there--a girl named Annie, who refers to herself as a "wish girl." She is driven to create art in nature, in what time she might have left--she's a wish girl as in "make a wish foundation." And she and Peter become friends, really seeing and appreciating each other in a way that is special for both of them (and, just saying, it's not romance; they are introverted kids who are kindred spirits). The valley is a refuge for both, giving them what they need.
And the valley really does actually and fantastically look after its friends....there are two bad boys, the sort that run around with a gun shooting animals, who are not its friends--instead of clear water and flowers and a cute baby armadillo, the bad boys get attacked by insects....And the two bad boys decide to make Peter their victim...and since his parents aren't listening to him, or hearing what he needs, they think it's nice that there are boys nearby for him to be friends with. And so, when the physical abuse from the bullies and the noise at home drive him to escape, it is of course to the valley that he goes.
And Annie is also trying to escape...her cancer is back, and she's supposed to be starting new treatments that could leave her permanently un-Annie. She can't stand the thought that she might loose her creative spark and love of beauty and art...but her mother isn't listening to her, either. But the valley, try though it may, can't make everything all magically better, or keep all violence out.....
I love the valley. It is so well described that I feel I have been there, and it is beautiful. If, like me, you still have several feet of dirty snow around and an icy driveway, it makes an especially nice change! Annie and Peter's stories were moving without being too much to take; Annie is described in the official blurb as "the dying girl" but she isn't, she's a fiercely living girl and that is the point, and even though Peter's parents are dim, they at least care. And then ending is not heartbreaking, which it so easily could have been.....I am particularly glad that the valley comes through it all unharmed! There's not a ton of Action and Adventure, although there is a bit....it's definitely one for the place and character loving reader.
Give this to any introverted child who loves quiet places, or to a kid who appreciates being part of nature and making beautiful things! Or give it to a kid who doesn't yet know that these things might be just what he or she needs....
Added bonus for those of us on the lookout for diversity--Annie, as shown in the cover, is a brown skinned girl....
3/8/15
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction (3/8/15)
Does anyone actually Like Daylight Savings Time???? I myself want my hour back.....
But in any event, here's what I found of interest to us MG spec. fic. fans this week; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
Anni Moon and the Elemental Artifact, by Melanie Abed, at S.W. Lothian
The Arctic Code, by Matthew J. Kirby, at Hidden in Pages
The Case of the Cused Dodo, by Jake G. Panda, at Read Love and Becky's Book Reviews
The Cottage in the Woods, by Katherine Coville, at Ms. Yingling Reads
A Dragons' Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, by Laurence Yep and Joanne Ryder at From my Bookshelf and My Brain on Books
Dragons at Crumbling Castle, by Terry Pratchett, at Fantasy Literature
Echo, by Pam Munoz Ryan, at The Emerald City
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at The Book Wars
Flunked: Fairy Tale Reform School, by Jen Calonita at Read Love
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at Fantasy Literature and Ms. Yingling Reads
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Dead Houseplants
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle, by Christopher Healy, at Leaf's Reviews
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks, at Leaf's Reviews
The Imaginay, by A.F. Harrold, at Librarian of Snark and Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Jupiter Pirates: Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Bibliobrit
K9--Knightly and Son book 2, by Rohan Gavin, at Charlotte's Library
Little Green Men at the Mercury Inn, by Greg Leitich Smith, at alibrarymama
Mars Evacuees, by Sophia McDougall, at Charlotte's Library
Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Operation Awesome
Nightbird, by Alice Hoffman, at Readatouille
Nuts to You, by Lynn Rae Perkins, at Ms. Yingling Reads
OMG....Am I a Witch? by Talia Aikens-Nunez, at Kid Lit Reviews
Princess in Disguise, by E.D. Baker, at Sharon the Librarian
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Word Spelunking (giveaway)
Rose and the Magician's Mask, by Holly Webb, at Geo Librarian
Rose and the Silver Ghost, by Holly Webb, at In Bed With Books
Shipwreck Island, by S.A. Bodeen, at The Haunting of Orchid Fosythia
Smek for President, by Adam Rex, at Tales of the Marvelous
Which Witch? by Eva Ibbotson, at Views from the Tesseract
Wish Girl, by Nikki Loftin, at Word Spelunking (with giveaway)
The Witch's Boy, by Kelly Barnhill, at Middle Grade Mafia
Witherwood Reform School, by Obert Skye, at GreenBeanTeenQueen
Authors and Interviews
Alice Hoffman (Nightbird) at Publisher's Weekly
Sara Stinson (Finger Bones and Wendy) at Carpinello's Writing Pages
Mary Amato (Good Crooks Book 3: Sniff a Skunk) and Patrick Jennings (Hissy Fitz) at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Matt Myklusch (Seaborn: The Lost Prince) and Jon and Pamela Voelkel (The Lost City) at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Heidi Schulz (Hook's Daughter, aka Hook's Revenge in the US) at Wondrous Reads
Shannon Hale offers five tips for surviving a Princess Academy at Pages Unbound (with giveaway)
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) at The Reading Nook Reviews (with giveaway)
Frank Cotrell Boyce (The Astounding Broccoli Boy) at The Guardian
Other Good Stuff
A Tuesday Ten of Food in Spaaace at Views From the Tesseract
Kid Lit celebrates Women's History Month for the firth year, at The Fourth Musketeer
But in any event, here's what I found of interest to us MG spec. fic. fans this week; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
Anni Moon and the Elemental Artifact, by Melanie Abed, at S.W. Lothian
The Arctic Code, by Matthew J. Kirby, at Hidden in Pages
The Case of the Cused Dodo, by Jake G. Panda, at Read Love and Becky's Book Reviews
The Cottage in the Woods, by Katherine Coville, at Ms. Yingling Reads
A Dragons' Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, by Laurence Yep and Joanne Ryder at From my Bookshelf and My Brain on Books
Dragons at Crumbling Castle, by Terry Pratchett, at Fantasy Literature
Echo, by Pam Munoz Ryan, at The Emerald City
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at The Book Wars
Flunked: Fairy Tale Reform School, by Jen Calonita at Read Love
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at Fantasy Literature and Ms. Yingling Reads
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Dead Houseplants
The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle, by Christopher Healy, at Leaf's Reviews
How to Catch a Bogle, by Catherine Jinks, at Leaf's Reviews
The Imaginay, by A.F. Harrold, at Librarian of Snark and Random Musings of a Bibliophile
Jupiter Pirates: Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Bibliobrit
K9--Knightly and Son book 2, by Rohan Gavin, at Charlotte's Library
Little Green Men at the Mercury Inn, by Greg Leitich Smith, at alibrarymama
Mars Evacuees, by Sophia McDougall, at Charlotte's Library
Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Operation Awesome
Nightbird, by Alice Hoffman, at Readatouille
Nuts to You, by Lynn Rae Perkins, at Ms. Yingling Reads
OMG....Am I a Witch? by Talia Aikens-Nunez, at Kid Lit Reviews
Princess in Disguise, by E.D. Baker, at Sharon the Librarian
The Real Boy, by Anne Ursu, at Word Spelunking (giveaway)
Rose and the Magician's Mask, by Holly Webb, at Geo Librarian
Rose and the Silver Ghost, by Holly Webb, at In Bed With Books
Shipwreck Island, by S.A. Bodeen, at The Haunting of Orchid Fosythia
Smek for President, by Adam Rex, at Tales of the Marvelous
Which Witch? by Eva Ibbotson, at Views from the Tesseract
Wish Girl, by Nikki Loftin, at Word Spelunking (with giveaway)
The Witch's Boy, by Kelly Barnhill, at Middle Grade Mafia
Witherwood Reform School, by Obert Skye, at GreenBeanTeenQueen
Authors and Interviews
Alice Hoffman (Nightbird) at Publisher's Weekly
Sara Stinson (Finger Bones and Wendy) at Carpinello's Writing Pages
Mary Amato (Good Crooks Book 3: Sniff a Skunk) and Patrick Jennings (Hissy Fitz) at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Matt Myklusch (Seaborn: The Lost Prince) and Jon and Pamela Voelkel (The Lost City) at Teen Librarian Toolbox
Heidi Schulz (Hook's Daughter, aka Hook's Revenge in the US) at Wondrous Reads
Shannon Hale offers five tips for surviving a Princess Academy at Pages Unbound (with giveaway)
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) at The Reading Nook Reviews (with giveaway)
Frank Cotrell Boyce (The Astounding Broccoli Boy) at The Guardian
Other Good Stuff
A Tuesday Ten of Food in Spaaace at Views From the Tesseract
Kid Lit celebrates Women's History Month for the firth year, at The Fourth Musketeer
3/6/15
Mars Evacuees, by Sophia McDougall--really cool exoplanet sci fi for the young!
Here are words I don't often type--this book is really cool, engrossing exoplanet middle grade sci fi, and one of the main characters is a super smart black girl (identifiably black on the cover) who includes exo-archaeology in her career plans and one of the other main characters is a robot in the shape of a giant goldfish (love!). So thank you, Mars Evacuees, by Sophia McDougall (Egmont, March 2014 in the UK, Feb 2015 in the US), for giving me that chance!
In a nutshell--aliens (who are invisible) have come to earth, settled at the poles, and reversed global warming with a vengeance, plunging earth into an ice age with the strange net they have cast over our atmosphere, that blocks the sun's light. Earth's forces are fighting back, but it's not going well....and so a group of the best, brightest, and most well-connected kids on earth are evacuated to Mars, which has been terraformed so that there's some oxygen.....just not quite enough for it to be Home. They are going to be trained to be the next generation of soldiers in the war against the aliens being fought over earth. One of these kids is English girl Alice Dare, whose mom is one of the most legendary pilots/fighters of invisible alien spacecraft going! Alice would rather have a life untroubled by aliens with both parents at hand, but Mars it is.....
On the way there she finds herself becoming friends with Josephine--super smart, super unhappy about being forced into the military, weird, black, blunt, and well-equipped with duct tape. And she doesn't make friends with the rascal of the bunch, an Australian boy named Carl, but they become allies regardless.... And on Mars she find herself at the mercy of not just military instructors, but determined robot instructors (including the aforementioned goldfish, which flies around like a helium shark balloon, and also a very creepy Teddy Bear Robot), who take their mission to Educate very seriously indeed (they provide pleasing comic relief).
And even though the whole business of things not going well (which involves encounters with hostile aliens, cliff hanger adventures, malfunctioning robots, and a distinct lack of helpful adults) is all very fun, interesting and exciting, just as interesting to me were the interactions among the main characters, and Alice herself as a character who's not particular smart or gifted, but who manages to keep (more or less) calm, helping everyone carry on.
That being said, and I hope having piqued your interest, I have to warn you all that the rest of this review is somewhat spoliery, and to share my main issue with the book, I have to share the main arc of the plot.
So one day Alice and the other kids wake up to find that all the grownups are gone, and they are left with their robot instructors and enough food and oxygen for a while and no way back to earth, and no way to communicate in any meaningful way with any grownups in the galaxy, and basically Lord of the Flies happens and my credulity was stretched....
So I was glad when Alice and Josephine and Carl and Carl's brother Noel (a sweet child) and the robot goldfish head out into the Martian wilderness to trek to the nearest science base....I find harsh survival journey stories more appealing than kids turning on each other.....and it all got very tense (thank goodness for Joephine's duct tape!) and it got especially tense when they find (really big spoiler alert )
a crashed alien ship with a survivor, who turns out to be an alien about their own age. And although the Earth kids quickly duct tape the alien up, they end up becoming friends and for the first time there is actually real dialogue between earthling and aliens and cross-cultural understanding is assayed not unsuccessfully! And then the real threat happens, the thing that drove the aliens to earth to begin with, and Mars is in great danger not to mention the four kids (five if you count the alien) who seem doomed.....but they aren't doomed because they are smart and because one of their travel companions is a robot goldfish and all ends happily. (The sort of happy where Alice gets her parents back and Josephine doesn't have to join the military and earth is saved and not everyone is happy about the aliens but there they are).
And this leads to my one negative reaction-- it was kind of too easy a happy ending vz alien earth relations--- McDougall doesn't gloss over the fact that aliens killed earthlings and vice versa, but the aliens never seem as sorry as I think they should be for deciding that because they needed earth they were justified in taking it over. It is true that facing a mutual threat that could annihilate everyone is a really good joiner, but it lacks complexity. This is not necessarily an issue in a middle grade book, but it does keep me from urging grown-up readers of sci fi to try this one.
Except, of course, for grown-up readers with tastes similar to mine, who will enjoy this combination military boarding school/alien conflict/character driven story very much indeed!
give this one to kids who liked The Roar, by Emma Clayton, Ambassador by William Alexander, and Space Case, by Stuart Gibbs, and also to any kid who likes reading about other smart kids coping in difficult circs. without grownups! Especially give it to any kid who's interested in terraforming--this part of the book was very satisfying to the science geek in me!
In a nutshell--aliens (who are invisible) have come to earth, settled at the poles, and reversed global warming with a vengeance, plunging earth into an ice age with the strange net they have cast over our atmosphere, that blocks the sun's light. Earth's forces are fighting back, but it's not going well....and so a group of the best, brightest, and most well-connected kids on earth are evacuated to Mars, which has been terraformed so that there's some oxygen.....just not quite enough for it to be Home. They are going to be trained to be the next generation of soldiers in the war against the aliens being fought over earth. One of these kids is English girl Alice Dare, whose mom is one of the most legendary pilots/fighters of invisible alien spacecraft going! Alice would rather have a life untroubled by aliens with both parents at hand, but Mars it is.....
On the way there she finds herself becoming friends with Josephine--super smart, super unhappy about being forced into the military, weird, black, blunt, and well-equipped with duct tape. And she doesn't make friends with the rascal of the bunch, an Australian boy named Carl, but they become allies regardless.... And on Mars she find herself at the mercy of not just military instructors, but determined robot instructors (including the aforementioned goldfish, which flies around like a helium shark balloon, and also a very creepy Teddy Bear Robot), who take their mission to Educate very seriously indeed (they provide pleasing comic relief).
And even though the whole business of things not going well (which involves encounters with hostile aliens, cliff hanger adventures, malfunctioning robots, and a distinct lack of helpful adults) is all very fun, interesting and exciting, just as interesting to me were the interactions among the main characters, and Alice herself as a character who's not particular smart or gifted, but who manages to keep (more or less) calm, helping everyone carry on.
That being said, and I hope having piqued your interest, I have to warn you all that the rest of this review is somewhat spoliery, and to share my main issue with the book, I have to share the main arc of the plot.
So one day Alice and the other kids wake up to find that all the grownups are gone, and they are left with their robot instructors and enough food and oxygen for a while and no way back to earth, and no way to communicate in any meaningful way with any grownups in the galaxy, and basically Lord of the Flies happens and my credulity was stretched....
So I was glad when Alice and Josephine and Carl and Carl's brother Noel (a sweet child) and the robot goldfish head out into the Martian wilderness to trek to the nearest science base....I find harsh survival journey stories more appealing than kids turning on each other.....and it all got very tense (thank goodness for Joephine's duct tape!) and it got especially tense when they find (really big spoiler alert )
a crashed alien ship with a survivor, who turns out to be an alien about their own age. And although the Earth kids quickly duct tape the alien up, they end up becoming friends and for the first time there is actually real dialogue between earthling and aliens and cross-cultural understanding is assayed not unsuccessfully! And then the real threat happens, the thing that drove the aliens to earth to begin with, and Mars is in great danger not to mention the four kids (five if you count the alien) who seem doomed.....but they aren't doomed because they are smart and because one of their travel companions is a robot goldfish and all ends happily. (The sort of happy where Alice gets her parents back and Josephine doesn't have to join the military and earth is saved and not everyone is happy about the aliens but there they are).
And this leads to my one negative reaction-- it was kind of too easy a happy ending vz alien earth relations--- McDougall doesn't gloss over the fact that aliens killed earthlings and vice versa, but the aliens never seem as sorry as I think they should be for deciding that because they needed earth they were justified in taking it over. It is true that facing a mutual threat that could annihilate everyone is a really good joiner, but it lacks complexity. This is not necessarily an issue in a middle grade book, but it does keep me from urging grown-up readers of sci fi to try this one.
Except, of course, for grown-up readers with tastes similar to mine, who will enjoy this combination military boarding school/alien conflict/character driven story very much indeed!
give this one to kids who liked The Roar, by Emma Clayton, Ambassador by William Alexander, and Space Case, by Stuart Gibbs, and also to any kid who likes reading about other smart kids coping in difficult circs. without grownups! Especially give it to any kid who's interested in terraforming--this part of the book was very satisfying to the science geek in me!
3/2/15
K-9 Knightly and Son, book 2, by Rohan Gavin
K-9 Knightly and Son, Book 2, by Rohan Gavin (Bloomsbury USA Childrens, Feb. 2015, upper middle grade/YA)
Young Darkus Knightley is, for the most part, proud to be his father's co-investigator of the criminally weird. But his dad is not the most reliable father or partner; he can't be counted on to be conscious, which is a problem. When K-9, the second book about Knightly and Son begins, Knightly senior is out of commission, having left Darkus with a traumatised ex-bomb-disposal dog, Wibur, and a difficult step-father. When a new investigation starts heating up--with something savagely killing pets in the wilds of London's Hamstead Heath, and policemen being tracked and savaged by aggressive canines, Darkus sets off with Wilbur to investigate. Is a werewolf responsible? as Darkus father, resurfacing and investigating as well, seems to believe, or is it a puzzle that Darkus's more rational brain can unravel?
Those who love junior detectives at work will enjoy this one....there are lots of clues, considerable mystery, and Darkus is a sympathetically intelligent young hero, joined in sleuthing by his stepsister, Tilly, who I actually found more interesting..... It's a good page turner.
Those who are saddened by the deaths of dogs, however, should approach this one cautiously....What Darkus finds hidden on Hampstead Heath is grotesque, and Spoiler Alert (highlight to read), and I think it's an important spoiler, because a lot of readers won't like this bit at all) sadly (very sadly) Wilbur, who's the most endearing character in the whole book, gives his life at the end.
It turns out not to be a fantasy book after all, but there is enough that is fantastical so that those actually expecting bona fide werewolves won't be disappointed. Not to my personal taste, just because young detective and dogs aren't really my favorites), but a solid page-turner. It was gripping and interesting enough so that I am tempted to go back and read book 1 (though this second book stood alone just fine), and I am curious to see what the future holds for young Darkus......
Here's another review at Ms. Yingling Reads; she enjoyed it more than me.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.
Young Darkus Knightley is, for the most part, proud to be his father's co-investigator of the criminally weird. But his dad is not the most reliable father or partner; he can't be counted on to be conscious, which is a problem. When K-9, the second book about Knightly and Son begins, Knightly senior is out of commission, having left Darkus with a traumatised ex-bomb-disposal dog, Wibur, and a difficult step-father. When a new investigation starts heating up--with something savagely killing pets in the wilds of London's Hamstead Heath, and policemen being tracked and savaged by aggressive canines, Darkus sets off with Wilbur to investigate. Is a werewolf responsible? as Darkus father, resurfacing and investigating as well, seems to believe, or is it a puzzle that Darkus's more rational brain can unravel?
Those who love junior detectives at work will enjoy this one....there are lots of clues, considerable mystery, and Darkus is a sympathetically intelligent young hero, joined in sleuthing by his stepsister, Tilly, who I actually found more interesting..... It's a good page turner.
Those who are saddened by the deaths of dogs, however, should approach this one cautiously....What Darkus finds hidden on Hampstead Heath is grotesque, and Spoiler Alert (highlight to read), and I think it's an important spoiler, because a lot of readers won't like this bit at all) sadly (very sadly) Wilbur, who's the most endearing character in the whole book, gives his life at the end.
It turns out not to be a fantasy book after all, but there is enough that is fantastical so that those actually expecting bona fide werewolves won't be disappointed. Not to my personal taste, just because young detective and dogs aren't really my favorites), but a solid page-turner. It was gripping and interesting enough so that I am tempted to go back and read book 1 (though this second book stood alone just fine), and I am curious to see what the future holds for young Darkus......
Here's another review at Ms. Yingling Reads; she enjoyed it more than me.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.
3/1/15
This weeks middle grade sci fi/fantasy round-up (March 1, 2015)
Here's the first MG sff round up of "Sring", typed with freezing fingers and 5 more inches of snow expected....please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
Airborn, by Kenneth Oppell, at Leaf's Reviews
Allistair Grim's Oddituorium, by Gregory Funaro, at Le' Grande Codex
The Arctic Cold, by Matthew Kirby, at The Social Potato
Bayou Magic, by Jewell Parker Rhodes, at @Home Librarian
Beaskeeper, by Cat Hellisen at The Book Smugglers
The Box and the Dragonfly, by Ted Sanders, at Librarian of Snark
The Boy Who Lost Fairyland, by Catherynne M. Valente, at On Starships and Dragonwings (giveaway) and A Reader of Fictions
The Case of the Cursed Dodo, by Jake G. Panda, at Log Cabin Library
The Castle Behind Thorns, by Merrie Haskell, at Book Nut
Chasing the Prophecy, by Brandon Mull, at One Librarians Book Reviews
The Courage of Cat Campbell, by Natasha Lowe, at Charlotte's Library
The Dragon of Rom, by John Seven, at Time Travel Times Two
The Dream Catcher, by Monica Hughes, at Tor
The Everyday Witch, by Sandra Forrester at Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at In Bed With Books, Sonderbooks, and A Reader of Fictions
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Bibliobrit
The Hidden Kingdom (Wings of Fire book 3) by Tui T. Sutherland at Hidden in Pages
The Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Book Nut
Icefall, by Matthew Kirby, at books4yourkids
The Imaginary, by A. F. Harrold, at thenerdypanda, Ms. Yingling Reads, Shae Has Left the Room, A Reader of Fictions, and Great Imaginations
The Incredible Space Raiders from Space, by Wesley King, at Ms. Yingling Reads
James and the Dragon, by Theresa Snyder at Dab of Darkness (audiobook review)
K-9 (Knightly and Son 2), by Rohan Gavin, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Lost Castle Treasure, by Don W. Winn, at This Kid Reviews Books
Lucky Strike, by Bobbie Pyon, at Charlotte's Library
The Mark of the Thief, by Jennifer Nielsen, at In Bed With Books
Monstrous by Marcykate Connoly at The Book Smugglers
The Nethergrim, by Matthew Jobin, at Word Spelunking
The Night Gardener, by Jonathan Auxier, at That's Another Story
Nightbird, by Alice Hoffman, at So Little Time for Books
Ninth Ward, by Jewell Parker Rhodes, at @HomeLibrarian
A Posse of Princesses, by Sherwood Smith, at Here There Be Books
The Rescuers, by Margery SHarp, at @HomeLibrarian
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Guys Lit Wire
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at My Brain on Books
Smek for President, by Adam Rex, at Wands and Worlds
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at Log Cabin Library
Story Thieves, by James Riley, at Read Love
The Swallow, by Charis Cotter, at Book Nut
The True Meaning of Smek Day, by Adam Rex, at Tales of the Marvellous
Witherwood Reform School, by Obert Skye, at The Book Monsters, The Hiding Spot, and Manga Maniac Cafe (both with giveaways)
Five books about "nonsense and disorientation" at Tor
Authors and Interviews
Abi Elphinstone (The Dreamsnatcher) at Wondrous Reads and The Book Zone (for boys)
Stuart Gibbs (Space Case) at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Jerry Craft (The Offenders) at 28 Days Later
Pam Muñoz Ryan (Echo) at School Library Journal
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) and Tracy Holczer (The Secret Hum of a Daisy) talk sad, dark, and twisty MG at Nerdy Book Club
Steve Bryant (Lucas Mackenzie and the London Midnight Ghost Show) at The A.P. Book Club (giveaway)
M. T. Anderson at Boing Boing
Dorinne at shares breaking Fablehaven new straight from the mouth of Brandon Mull at The Write Path
Other Good Stuff
A Tuesday Ten of off world Adventure at Views from the Tesseract, and another Tuesday Ten of Off World Adventure also at V. from the T.
I enjoy it when Sondy takes a look at middle grade fantasy translated into German--this week she took a look at Jinx, by Sage Blackwood
The Shortlistts of the Aurealis Awards (Australian spec. fic.) have been announced; here are the books in the children's category:
Slaves of Socorro: Brotherband #4 by John Flanagan (Random House Australia)
Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy by Karen Foxlee (Hot Key Books)
The Last Viking Returns by Norman Jorgensen and illustrated by James Foley (Fremantle Press)
Withering-by-Sea by Judith Rossell (ABC Books)
Sunker’s Deep: The Hidden #2 by Lian Tanner (Allen & Unwin)
Shadow Sister: Dragon Keeper #5 by Carole Wilkinson (Black Dog Books)
and just in case you need more books to read, here's a look at the must read middle grade books of February at Project Mayhem
The Reviews
Airborn, by Kenneth Oppell, at Leaf's Reviews
Allistair Grim's Oddituorium, by Gregory Funaro, at Le' Grande Codex
The Arctic Cold, by Matthew Kirby, at The Social Potato
Bayou Magic, by Jewell Parker Rhodes, at @Home Librarian
Beaskeeper, by Cat Hellisen at The Book Smugglers
The Box and the Dragonfly, by Ted Sanders, at Librarian of Snark
The Boy Who Lost Fairyland, by Catherynne M. Valente, at On Starships and Dragonwings (giveaway) and A Reader of Fictions
The Case of the Cursed Dodo, by Jake G. Panda, at Log Cabin Library
The Castle Behind Thorns, by Merrie Haskell, at Book Nut
Chasing the Prophecy, by Brandon Mull, at One Librarians Book Reviews
The Courage of Cat Campbell, by Natasha Lowe, at Charlotte's Library
The Dragon of Rom, by John Seven, at Time Travel Times Two
The Dream Catcher, by Monica Hughes, at Tor
The Everyday Witch, by Sandra Forrester at Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at In Bed With Books, Sonderbooks, and A Reader of Fictions
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Bibliobrit
The Hidden Kingdom (Wings of Fire book 3) by Tui T. Sutherland at Hidden in Pages
The Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Book Nut
Icefall, by Matthew Kirby, at books4yourkids
The Imaginary, by A. F. Harrold, at thenerdypanda, Ms. Yingling Reads, Shae Has Left the Room, A Reader of Fictions, and Great Imaginations
The Incredible Space Raiders from Space, by Wesley King, at Ms. Yingling Reads
James and the Dragon, by Theresa Snyder at Dab of Darkness (audiobook review)
K-9 (Knightly and Son 2), by Rohan Gavin, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Lost Castle Treasure, by Don W. Winn, at This Kid Reviews Books
Lucky Strike, by Bobbie Pyon, at Charlotte's Library
The Mark of the Thief, by Jennifer Nielsen, at In Bed With Books
Monstrous by Marcykate Connoly at The Book Smugglers
The Nethergrim, by Matthew Jobin, at Word Spelunking
The Night Gardener, by Jonathan Auxier, at That's Another Story
Nightbird, by Alice Hoffman, at So Little Time for Books
Ninth Ward, by Jewell Parker Rhodes, at @HomeLibrarian
A Posse of Princesses, by Sherwood Smith, at Here There Be Books
The Rescuers, by Margery SHarp, at @HomeLibrarian
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Guys Lit Wire
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at My Brain on Books
Smek for President, by Adam Rex, at Wands and Worlds
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at Log Cabin Library
Story Thieves, by James Riley, at Read Love
The Swallow, by Charis Cotter, at Book Nut
The True Meaning of Smek Day, by Adam Rex, at Tales of the Marvellous
Witherwood Reform School, by Obert Skye, at The Book Monsters, The Hiding Spot, and Manga Maniac Cafe (both with giveaways)
Five books about "nonsense and disorientation" at Tor
Authors and Interviews
Abi Elphinstone (The Dreamsnatcher) at Wondrous Reads and The Book Zone (for boys)
Stuart Gibbs (Space Case) at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Jerry Craft (The Offenders) at 28 Days Later
Pam Muñoz Ryan (Echo) at School Library Journal
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) and Tracy Holczer (The Secret Hum of a Daisy) talk sad, dark, and twisty MG at Nerdy Book Club
Steve Bryant (Lucas Mackenzie and the London Midnight Ghost Show) at The A.P. Book Club (giveaway)
M. T. Anderson at Boing Boing
Dorinne at shares breaking Fablehaven new straight from the mouth of Brandon Mull at The Write Path
Other Good Stuff
A Tuesday Ten of off world Adventure at Views from the Tesseract, and another Tuesday Ten of Off World Adventure also at V. from the T.
I enjoy it when Sondy takes a look at middle grade fantasy translated into German--this week she took a look at Jinx, by Sage Blackwood
The Shortlistts of the Aurealis Awards (Australian spec. fic.) have been announced; here are the books in the children's category:
Slaves of Socorro: Brotherband #4 by John Flanagan (Random House Australia)
and just in case you need more books to read, here's a look at the must read middle grade books of February at Project Mayhem
2/26/15
The Courage of Cat Campbell, by Natasha Lowe
The Courage of Cat Campbell, by Natasha Lowe (Simon and Schuster, January 2015, middle grade)
Cat Campbell's mother, Poppy, was born with a gift for magic. But Poppy (as described in The Power of Poppy Pendle) didn't want magic. She wanted to bake. And eventually her dream came true, and she was allowed to swap magic school for a bakery....where her own daughter, Cat, is growing up amongst the many many tasty snacks.
Cat, however, doesn't want to bake. She wants magic, and her heart is full of passionate longing as she gazes at the broomstick flying girls of Ruthersfield School, where young witches are trained for great things....Even though no sign that she has magic has manifested by the time she's 11 years old, she still dreams.
Then one day, up in her grandparents' attic, she finds her mother's discarded school books and wand. And to her horror, she also finds a large spider. The kickstart of spider-fear fueled adrenaline brings her latent magic to life! Her dream will come true! Except, not so much. Poppy is horrified at the thought, and for the first time, mother and daughter are at odds. But even more dauntingly, for a late bloomer like Cat, magic is difficult and hard to control....and Ruthersfield only takes the magical crème de la crème. Which isn't Cat.
Nothing if not determined, Cat makes a new plan. The most evil witch ever has escaped from prison, and may be heading to Ruthersfield for revenge. If Cat can capture her with magic, maybe that will be her ticket out of the bakery and onto a broomstick...
And it is all wrapped up pleasingly in the end, especially because Cat DOESN'T turn out to have astounding gifts for magic, but achieves a very satisfying magical job at the end through hard work (and a talent for broom riding). So much more realistic than special child of preternatural talent! And although there is a Bat Witch who must be captured, she's not the primary antagonist; instead, it's a much more true to life story of conflict between parental expectations and what the child wants--something lots of the target audience will doubtless relate too! I also appreciate books in which parents love their kid, and the kid loves her parents, even when they are at odds!
On top of all that, is also a very nice story, with engaging secondary characters, pleasing references to the first book, sprinkles of humor, and lots of baked goods. A fast read, and a tasty one; sort of like a roll of Thin Mints....you wouldn't necessarily offer them to the intelligentsia at a black tie dinner party, but they sure are good when curled up in front of the fire at home.
Cat Campbell's mother, Poppy, was born with a gift for magic. But Poppy (as described in The Power of Poppy Pendle) didn't want magic. She wanted to bake. And eventually her dream came true, and she was allowed to swap magic school for a bakery....where her own daughter, Cat, is growing up amongst the many many tasty snacks.
Cat, however, doesn't want to bake. She wants magic, and her heart is full of passionate longing as she gazes at the broomstick flying girls of Ruthersfield School, where young witches are trained for great things....Even though no sign that she has magic has manifested by the time she's 11 years old, she still dreams.
Then one day, up in her grandparents' attic, she finds her mother's discarded school books and wand. And to her horror, she also finds a large spider. The kickstart of spider-fear fueled adrenaline brings her latent magic to life! Her dream will come true! Except, not so much. Poppy is horrified at the thought, and for the first time, mother and daughter are at odds. But even more dauntingly, for a late bloomer like Cat, magic is difficult and hard to control....and Ruthersfield only takes the magical crème de la crème. Which isn't Cat.
Nothing if not determined, Cat makes a new plan. The most evil witch ever has escaped from prison, and may be heading to Ruthersfield for revenge. If Cat can capture her with magic, maybe that will be her ticket out of the bakery and onto a broomstick...
And it is all wrapped up pleasingly in the end, especially because Cat DOESN'T turn out to have astounding gifts for magic, but achieves a very satisfying magical job at the end through hard work (and a talent for broom riding). So much more realistic than special child of preternatural talent! And although there is a Bat Witch who must be captured, she's not the primary antagonist; instead, it's a much more true to life story of conflict between parental expectations and what the child wants--something lots of the target audience will doubtless relate too! I also appreciate books in which parents love their kid, and the kid loves her parents, even when they are at odds!
On top of all that, is also a very nice story, with engaging secondary characters, pleasing references to the first book, sprinkles of humor, and lots of baked goods. A fast read, and a tasty one; sort of like a roll of Thin Mints....you wouldn't necessarily offer them to the intelligentsia at a black tie dinner party, but they sure are good when curled up in front of the fire at home.
2/24/15
The Door to Time (Book 1 of the Ulysses Moore series), by Pierdomenico Baccalario
The Door to Time (Book 1 of the Ulysses Moore series), by Pierdomenico Baccalario (Scholastic, 2006) is essentially a prequel to a series of brave children having time travel adventures. There is no time travel until five pages before the book ends, when we get a teaser glimpse of ancient Egypt, where book 2 takes place. So it's a bit of a moot point to call it a time travel book, and I feel a tad cheated because what with the title I thought we'd actually get to the time travelling....although no promises were made, of course, about going through the door....
In any event, this series of books was translated from the Italian to the American, and, in what is quite possibly a direct result of this, its portrayal of three English children in Cornwall is not exactly convincing (they do not seem English). However, I found them unconvincing in general. For much of the book they were being Introduced in a rather labored way as part of the whole setting up the series thing--here is the girl focused on material things, here is her twin, the sensitive boy, here is their new friend, the one year older more practical boy who clearly is going to end up with the girl--and neither the dialogue, actions, or narration did much to make me believe in them.
In any event, these three young persons are in a huge old house in Cornwall (unconvincingly acquired by the parents of two of them, and once owned by Ulysses Moore, the original time traveler who gives his name to the series) and they go swimming without complaining about how cold the water is/getting dashed on rocks and other things that would make me believe they were swimming in Cornwall. They also find clues of an intricately puzzley sort combined with exploring dark passageways necessitating chasm leaping etc. and ultimately reach the magical time travel part, without me having any idea just why it had to be so complicated. Possibly because there is a Bad Character lurking off to the side who wants the secret to the time travel for herself. Possibly because they are being Tested. Possibly because it is Fate. I dunno. I just don't see the point of the fireflies (still living) encased in the mud balls. This could be my problem, not the book's.
However. I have requested the second book from the library....so next week I will travel with these three children into Ancient Egypt, and I shall see if the actual time travelling works better for me than the set-up did.
And I shall not be adding this first volume to my list of time travel books, because it really isn't.
Maybe back in its day, when young fans of the Spiderwick Chronicles were clamoring for more, this series (clues! black and white drawings of mysterious stuff! lots of books in the series!) was welcomed....I don't think there's much reason to offer it to the kid of today. But I really am curious to know if it works better in the original Italian.....
It probably would have worked better for me personally if I'd read it closer to its original publication date--so many, more subtle, interesting, better written (or possibly better translated) books have come along since then....
In any event, this series of books was translated from the Italian to the American, and, in what is quite possibly a direct result of this, its portrayal of three English children in Cornwall is not exactly convincing (they do not seem English). However, I found them unconvincing in general. For much of the book they were being Introduced in a rather labored way as part of the whole setting up the series thing--here is the girl focused on material things, here is her twin, the sensitive boy, here is their new friend, the one year older more practical boy who clearly is going to end up with the girl--and neither the dialogue, actions, or narration did much to make me believe in them.
In any event, these three young persons are in a huge old house in Cornwall (unconvincingly acquired by the parents of two of them, and once owned by Ulysses Moore, the original time traveler who gives his name to the series) and they go swimming without complaining about how cold the water is/getting dashed on rocks and other things that would make me believe they were swimming in Cornwall. They also find clues of an intricately puzzley sort combined with exploring dark passageways necessitating chasm leaping etc. and ultimately reach the magical time travel part, without me having any idea just why it had to be so complicated. Possibly because there is a Bad Character lurking off to the side who wants the secret to the time travel for herself. Possibly because they are being Tested. Possibly because it is Fate. I dunno. I just don't see the point of the fireflies (still living) encased in the mud balls. This could be my problem, not the book's.
However. I have requested the second book from the library....so next week I will travel with these three children into Ancient Egypt, and I shall see if the actual time travelling works better for me than the set-up did.
And I shall not be adding this first volume to my list of time travel books, because it really isn't.
Maybe back in its day, when young fans of the Spiderwick Chronicles were clamoring for more, this series (clues! black and white drawings of mysterious stuff! lots of books in the series!) was welcomed....I don't think there's much reason to offer it to the kid of today. But I really am curious to know if it works better in the original Italian.....
It probably would have worked better for me personally if I'd read it closer to its original publication date--so many, more subtle, interesting, better written (or possibly better translated) books have come along since then....
2/23/15
Lucky Strike, by Bobbie Pyron
Lucky Strike, by Bobbie Pyron (Scholastic, Feb. 24, 2015, younger middle grade)--magic strikes in small town Florida, and friendship and turtles are both at risk!
Nate isn't lucky....but on his eleventh birthday, he actually blows out the candles on his first try--is his luck changing? Disaster on the links of the miniature golf course suggests otherwise--he gets struck by lightning.
And his luck changes.
Now everything he touches turns lucky. No longer is he a social outcast--the other boys actually want him on their baseball team, his grandpa's luck running fishing trips out of their small Florida town changes dramatically for the better, and on and on go all the ways that fortune smiles on him.
Before he got lucky, Nate had only one friend--a geeky, super-smart, analytical totally not able to fit in girl named Gen. They were a team united by their misfit outside-ness, and by their fierce loyalty to each other. But now that he's in demand, Nate turns away from Gen, leaving her to turtle watch on the beach alone....
It will take another lightning strike to set things right...if Nate is lucky one last time.
Even though the premise of the story--the preternatural luck of the lightning--is fantastical, at its heart this is a story of friendship put to the test. Is popularity (and perfectly done toast) worth giving up your best friend for? Clearly the answer is no, but it's a no that Nate has to figure out for himself (though most readers will realize this a lot sooner than Nate!). The wonders of Nate's long string of luck are in and of themselves fun and fascinating, but it's turtle-dedicated Gen who really caught my heart. And happily it's a happy ending!
It's small town folksy, without being Folksy--there are quirky characters, and humor, but not so much as to set the teeth of those bothered by Folksy on edge. But though it's easy to suggest giving this to fans of books like Sheila Tunage's The Ghosts of Tupelo Landing, or Natalie Lloyd's A Snicker of Magic, the kid I'd give this one too is the nine or ten year old who's passionately devoted to the cause of the underdog, be it kid or sea turtle.
This is the best sort of fantasy for the kid who thinks they only like realistic stories--there's no need to believe the lightning has worked magic unless you want to (although it would be hard not to believe, just a bit....sometimes a lucky streak just can't be explained rationally, though Gen does her best!).
Here's the starred review from Kirkus.
Nate isn't lucky....but on his eleventh birthday, he actually blows out the candles on his first try--is his luck changing? Disaster on the links of the miniature golf course suggests otherwise--he gets struck by lightning.
And his luck changes.
Now everything he touches turns lucky. No longer is he a social outcast--the other boys actually want him on their baseball team, his grandpa's luck running fishing trips out of their small Florida town changes dramatically for the better, and on and on go all the ways that fortune smiles on him.
Before he got lucky, Nate had only one friend--a geeky, super-smart, analytical totally not able to fit in girl named Gen. They were a team united by their misfit outside-ness, and by their fierce loyalty to each other. But now that he's in demand, Nate turns away from Gen, leaving her to turtle watch on the beach alone....
It will take another lightning strike to set things right...if Nate is lucky one last time.
Even though the premise of the story--the preternatural luck of the lightning--is fantastical, at its heart this is a story of friendship put to the test. Is popularity (and perfectly done toast) worth giving up your best friend for? Clearly the answer is no, but it's a no that Nate has to figure out for himself (though most readers will realize this a lot sooner than Nate!). The wonders of Nate's long string of luck are in and of themselves fun and fascinating, but it's turtle-dedicated Gen who really caught my heart. And happily it's a happy ending!
It's small town folksy, without being Folksy--there are quirky characters, and humor, but not so much as to set the teeth of those bothered by Folksy on edge. But though it's easy to suggest giving this to fans of books like Sheila Tunage's The Ghosts of Tupelo Landing, or Natalie Lloyd's A Snicker of Magic, the kid I'd give this one too is the nine or ten year old who's passionately devoted to the cause of the underdog, be it kid or sea turtle.
This is the best sort of fantasy for the kid who thinks they only like realistic stories--there's no need to believe the lightning has worked magic unless you want to (although it would be hard not to believe, just a bit....sometimes a lucky streak just can't be explained rationally, though Gen does her best!).
Here's the starred review from Kirkus.
2/22/15
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (2/22/15)
Another week, another snowfall, another round-up! Please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Alistair Grim's Odditorium, by Gregory Funaro, at My Precious
Beast Keeper, by Lucy Coats, at Charlotte's Library
Beastkeeper, by Cat Hellisen, at The Quite Concert
Billy Bobble Makes a Magic Wand, by R.S. Mellette, at Log Cabin Library
The Blackhope Enigma, by Teresa Flavin, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia
The Boundless, by Kenneth Oppel, at Challenging the Bookworm
The Boy Who Lost Fairyland, by Catherynne M. Valente, at The Book Monsters (with giveaway)
The Boys of Blur, by N.D. Wilson, at Book Nut
The Bravest Princess, by E.D. Baker, at Leaf's Reviews
The Castle Behind Thorns, by Merrie Haskell, at Librarian of Snark
The Chosen Prince, by Diane Stanley, at Shae Has Left the Room
Copper Magic, by Julia Mary Gibson, at The Book Wars
The Dreamsnatcher, by Abi Elphinstone, at So Little Time For Books
Echo, by Pam Munoz Ryan, at The Social Potato and Waking Brain Cells
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Librarian of Snark
Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Librarian of Snark
The Imaginary, by A.F. Harrold, at Fan Girl Nation
The Inquisitor's Mark, by Dianne K. Salerni, at This Kid Reviews Books
The Iron Trial, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at The Flashlight Reader
The Last Wild, and its sequel, The Dark Wild, by Piers Torday, at Wands and Worlds
The Lost City, by J. and P. Voekel, at Charlotte's Library (with giveaway)
The Lost Heir (Wings of Fire book 2), by Tui T. Sutherland, at Hidden In Pages
The Luck Uglies, by Paul Durham, at Bibliobrit, Librarian of Snark, and Book Nut
Nuts to You, by Lynne Rae Perkins, at Book Nut
One Witch at a Time, by Stacy DeKeyser, at Small Review and Word Spelunking
The Orphan and the Mouse, by Martha Freeman, at Hope Is the Word
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Bart's Bookshelf
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Space Case, by Stuart Gibbs, at The Bookworm Blog
The Squire's Tale, by Gerald Morris, at Story Time Secrets
The Swallow, by Charis Cotter, at Librarian of Snark
The Witch's Boy, by Kelly Barnhill, at 3 Boys and a Novel
The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence, by Stan Lee et al., at The Story Goes...
Authors and Interviews
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) at Nerdy Book Club
Natalie Lloyd (A Snicker of Magic) at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Shannon Hale (The Forgotten Sisters) at Publishers Weekly
P. Voekel (The Lost City--Jaguar Stones 4) at Charlotte's Library (with giveaway)
Other Good Stuff
Ten classical elements that sci fi/fantasy is built on, at Tor
The graphic novel version of Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass comes out in the US this September! (via Educating Alice)
At The Guardian: "It’s been 50 years since Ian Fleming’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang spluttered into the world. Now Ian’s nephew Fergus gives us a potted version of the original book – gloriously illustrated by John Burningham."
And for more graphic goodness, here's a look at Gabriel Pacheco's illustrations for a new edition of The Jungle Book at Once Upon a Blog.
The Andre Norton Award for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy shortlisted books are:
Unmade, Sarah Rees Brennan (Random House)
Salvage, Alexandra Duncan (Greenwillow)
Love Is the Drug, Alaya Dawn Johnson (Levine)
Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future, A.S. King (Little, Brown)
Dirty Wings, Sarah McCarry (St. Martin’s Griffin)
Greenglass House, Kate Milford (Clarion)
The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender, Leslye Walton (Candlewick)
all the other lists can be seen here
The Reviews
Alistair Grim's Odditorium, by Gregory Funaro, at My Precious
Beast Keeper, by Lucy Coats, at Charlotte's Library
Beastkeeper, by Cat Hellisen, at The Quite Concert
Billy Bobble Makes a Magic Wand, by R.S. Mellette, at Log Cabin Library
The Blackhope Enigma, by Teresa Flavin, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia
The Boundless, by Kenneth Oppel, at Challenging the Bookworm
The Boy Who Lost Fairyland, by Catherynne M. Valente, at The Book Monsters (with giveaway)
The Boys of Blur, by N.D. Wilson, at Book Nut
The Bravest Princess, by E.D. Baker, at Leaf's Reviews
The Castle Behind Thorns, by Merrie Haskell, at Librarian of Snark
The Chosen Prince, by Diane Stanley, at Shae Has Left the Room
Copper Magic, by Julia Mary Gibson, at The Book Wars
The Dreamsnatcher, by Abi Elphinstone, at So Little Time For Books
Echo, by Pam Munoz Ryan, at The Social Potato and Waking Brain Cells
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Greenglass House, by Kate Milford, at Librarian of Snark
Hunt for the Hydra, by Jason Fry, at Librarian of Snark
The Imaginary, by A.F. Harrold, at Fan Girl Nation
The Inquisitor's Mark, by Dianne K. Salerni, at This Kid Reviews Books
The Iron Trial, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at The Flashlight Reader
The Last Wild, and its sequel, The Dark Wild, by Piers Torday, at Wands and Worlds
The Lost City, by J. and P. Voekel, at Charlotte's Library (with giveaway)
The Lost Heir (Wings of Fire book 2), by Tui T. Sutherland, at Hidden In Pages
The Luck Uglies, by Paul Durham, at Bibliobrit, Librarian of Snark, and Book Nut
Nuts to You, by Lynne Rae Perkins, at Book Nut
One Witch at a Time, by Stacy DeKeyser, at Small Review and Word Spelunking
The Orphan and the Mouse, by Martha Freeman, at Hope Is the Word
The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud, at Bart's Bookshelf
A Snicker of Magic, by Natalie Lloyd, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Space Case, by Stuart Gibbs, at The Bookworm Blog
The Squire's Tale, by Gerald Morris, at Story Time Secrets
The Swallow, by Charis Cotter, at Librarian of Snark
The Witch's Boy, by Kelly Barnhill, at 3 Boys and a Novel
The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence, by Stan Lee et al., at The Story Goes...
Authors and Interviews
Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl) at Nerdy Book Club
Natalie Lloyd (A Snicker of Magic) at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Shannon Hale (The Forgotten Sisters) at Publishers Weekly
P. Voekel (The Lost City--Jaguar Stones 4) at Charlotte's Library (with giveaway)
Other Good Stuff
Ten classical elements that sci fi/fantasy is built on, at Tor
The graphic novel version of Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass comes out in the US this September! (via Educating Alice)
At The Guardian: "It’s been 50 years since Ian Fleming’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang spluttered into the world. Now Ian’s nephew Fergus gives us a potted version of the original book – gloriously illustrated by John Burningham."
And for more graphic goodness, here's a look at Gabriel Pacheco's illustrations for a new edition of The Jungle Book at Once Upon a Blog.
The Andre Norton Award for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy shortlisted books are:
Unmade, Sarah Rees Brennan (Random House)
Salvage, Alexandra Duncan (Greenwillow)
Love Is the Drug, Alaya Dawn Johnson (Levine)
Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future, A.S. King (Little, Brown)
Dirty Wings, Sarah McCarry (St. Martin’s Griffin)
Greenglass House, Kate Milford (Clarion)
The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender, Leslye Walton (Candlewick)
all the other lists can be seen here
2/19/15
Beast Keeper (Beasts of Olympus #1), by Lucy Coats
Beast Keeper (Beasts of Olympus #1), by Lucy Coats, with many illustrations by Brett Bean (Grosset & Dunlap, Jan. 2015) is the story of how an ordinary boy in ancient Greece gets whisked up to Olympus to look after the menagerie of mythological creatures that are kept there (to be sent down to earth as required for hero-proving purposes). 10-year-old Demon (short for Pandemonium) is only normal for a certain value of normal--his dad's Pan, god of wild creatures. And so Demon has a preternatural knack for monster-whispering, that comes in handy when confronted with the wild and wacky beasts of Olympus....but it's not the poo (though there's plenty of it) or even the terrible wounds inflicted by Hercules on his charges, that makes Demon anxious--instead it's that nasty sense that he's only a whisker away from provoking immortal wrath (the Greek Gods and Goddess being the sort of divinities they are).
But it all ends well, and there are more books to come (Hound of Hades is also out now, and Steeds of the Gods comes in May).
Beast Keeper is a perfectly reasonable book to have on the shelves of a second grade class library. It will probably become dog-eared. It's sequels will be asked for. It's a premise with lots of kid appeal (what a dream come true for the animal lover to look after mythological creatures!) and for some of those kids, the poo references will add to the fun. There's no particular reason why anyone who's left elementary school should read it (it doesn't offer anything especially original or beautifully enchanting), but not every book needs to reach beyond its target audience.
It's possible, of course, that I approached this book without an open mind--my own boy, when he was ten, wrote several chapters of a very similar story, called "Hades' Pet Keeper." And I liked it, perhaps even a bit better than this one, in a maternally-biased way devoid of critical thought etc. way.....
I also think I like the UK illustrator's style a bit more (the US Demon looked like a video game character, and I like the more classically Greek UK version better:
But it all ends well, and there are more books to come (Hound of Hades is also out now, and Steeds of the Gods comes in May).
Beast Keeper is a perfectly reasonable book to have on the shelves of a second grade class library. It will probably become dog-eared. It's sequels will be asked for. It's a premise with lots of kid appeal (what a dream come true for the animal lover to look after mythological creatures!) and for some of those kids, the poo references will add to the fun. There's no particular reason why anyone who's left elementary school should read it (it doesn't offer anything especially original or beautifully enchanting), but not every book needs to reach beyond its target audience.
It's possible, of course, that I approached this book without an open mind--my own boy, when he was ten, wrote several chapters of a very similar story, called "Hades' Pet Keeper." And I liked it, perhaps even a bit better than this one, in a maternally-biased way devoid of critical thought etc. way.....
I also think I like the UK illustrator's style a bit more (the US Demon looked like a video game character, and I like the more classically Greek UK version better:
2/17/15
The Lost City, conclusion to the Jaguar Stones series, by J. & P. Voelkel, with giveaway, interview, and bonus list (short) of Middle Grade/YA Mayan inspired spec fic!
The Lost City, by J. & P. Voelkel (EgmontUSA, Feb. 10, 2015), is the action-packed fourth and final book in the Jaguar Stones series. For three previous books, two kids have struggled (without success) to keep the powerful Jaguar Stones from falling into the hands of the Maya Death Lords who want to destroy the world. Max is an ordinary boy from Boston, Lola is an extraordinary Mayan girl, and together they, um, mostly just barely manage to ride the wild waves of mayhem that occur when the Death Lords rise up and start using social media......
The two kids and their unlikely allies (most notably two howler monkeys inhabited by an ancient Mayan king and his mom) set out (via submarine) to try once again to gain control of the Jaguar Stones. It's a journey that takes them to a haunted New Orleans (deadly in that special Mayan Death Lord way) and up the river to the city of Cahokia (the center of the Death Lord's social media campaign).
But the final showdown comes in a truly unexpected place--Fenway Park. And Red Sox fansmight even will get a bit teary as the team of heroes appears who will give the Death Lords the ball game of their lives....(Yankees fans, not so much).
Don't read this one if you haven't read the first three! But if you did enjoy the first books, you'll enjoy this one too. And if you are looking for a series of that mixes mythological madness with ordinary life in a wild and crazy way, The Jaguar Stones is a good choice. Facile though it is, "Mayan Percy Jackson"is not inaccurate. (Caveat: a tolerance for the absurd and the gross is required for true enjoyment! There are maggots, farts, and icky death-ness galore! More so than I myself really enjoy, but I'm not the target audience....)
And now, the bonus (short) list of Speculative Fiction rooted in/based on/inspired by Mayan mythology and culture:
Summer of the Mariposas, by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
Sea of the Dead, by Julia Durango
Starfields, by Carolyn Marsden
Anyone know of any other books to add?
The two kids and their unlikely allies (most notably two howler monkeys inhabited by an ancient Mayan king and his mom) set out (via submarine) to try once again to gain control of the Jaguar Stones. It's a journey that takes them to a haunted New Orleans (deadly in that special Mayan Death Lord way) and up the river to the city of Cahokia (the center of the Death Lord's social media campaign).
But the final showdown comes in a truly unexpected place--Fenway Park. And Red Sox fans
Don't read this one if you haven't read the first three! But if you did enjoy the first books, you'll enjoy this one too. And if you are looking for a series of that mixes mythological madness with ordinary life in a wild and crazy way, The Jaguar Stones is a good choice. Facile though it is, "Mayan Percy Jackson"is not inaccurate. (Caveat: a tolerance for the absurd and the gross is required for true enjoyment! There are maggots, farts, and icky death-ness galore! More so than I myself really enjoy, but I'm not the target audience....)
If you'd like to win the entire series of four books, just leave a comment by midnight on Feb. 24! (US and Canada). One winner will receive soft-covers of Middleworld, The End of the World Club, and The River of No Return (the links go to my reviews), and a hardcover of The Lost City.
And now, the interview, with Pamela Voelkel! (thanks so much, Pamela, for your thoughtful answers!)
When you started writing Middleworld, did you have a map for
whole series, or did it grow and develop as you went? When you were writing The Lost City, was
there anything you wish you'd done differently back at the beginning?
We always
imagined the story as a trilogy, and we had all three books roughly mapped out.
We wrote the final paragraph of the last book early on, so we were always
working to that end point. One thing I'd change about MIDDLEWORLD is that I'd
make us work out the characters and subplots before we started writing the
story. I know it sounds like common sense, but for some reason we really made
things difficult for ourselves back then.
Everyone told us
that writing the second book in a trilogy is the hardest. "It can't just
be a bridge," our local children's librarian sternly warned us. "It
has to be a book in its own right, with a proper beginning, middle and end.
Don't disappoint me." So when THE END OF THE WORLD CLUB - possibly the
only book ever to take a rock 'n' roll angle on the Spanish Conquest - was
completed, I thought we were home and dry.
Book Three had
originally been set in New Orleans, but then Katrina had happened, so we'd
scratched that plot. Instead we invented an underground hotel deep in the
jungle, run by the ancient Maya Death Lords. There was so much ground to cover
for this last volume of the trilogy, so many loose ends to tie up, that the
first draft was thick as a doorstep. Our editor gave us two choices: either cut
it right down or start again and make it two books. She encouraged us to make
it two books because there was so much story left to tell. Characters had
acquired lives and opinions of their own, even the bad guys had been run
through the wringer. And we'd barely scratched the surface of the fun to be had
in an underground hotel run by the Death Lords.
So the
publication of Book Three was delayed while we started again from the very
beginning. The result was THE RIVER OF NO RETURN, which is the most
"Indiana Jones" type adventure of the series. Then there was an
unexpected gap between Book Three and Book Four while I had cancer treatment.
When I got my mojo back and started writing again, it felt right to include New
Orleans in Book Four because we were both survivors!
On the subject
of regrets, it's hard to say. I find it hard to stop editing until the very
last moment, so I always ALWAYS feel that anything I write - including this
piece - could be a million times better. But on the other hand, I'm just so
grateful that the Jaguar Stones series exists and that we were able to put
across so much Maya history and have so much fun with it. If I was writing the
first book, MIDDLEWORLD, again now, I'd try to relax a little and let Lord
6-Dog and Lady Coco reminisce more about the old days in the Maya court. But at
the time, we were overawed by the task. I could see all these kids, our
readers, in my head and I kept thinking that if we didn't move the action along
quickly enough, they'd lose interest and stop reading. That was always my goal:
keep 'em reading for one more page, one more page, one more page...
There isn't much fantasy for kids in the states that's based
in Latin America or draws on Mayan mythology. Did the fact that you were
venturing into new territory for middle grade fantasy affect the researching
and writing of these books? Do you have
any book recommendations for kids who've loved the Jaguar stones and want
more?
There are a few
Maya-themed picture books and some good factual books, but not much for
middle-grade - and nothing that goes where we go. All too often the Maya are
presented as bloodthirsty tyrants or noble savages. In reality, they were more
like the ancient Greeks - cultured, creative, political, and not averse to
waging terrible war on a neighbouring city-state.
Some reviewers
have described the Jaguar Stones as the Maya equivalent of the Percy Jackson
books and we love that idea! Our books set the adventures of two moody modern-day
teens against the zany world of Maya mythology. Of course, the mythology used
to be even zanier, but most of it has been lost. And that's the problem with
writing about the Maya. It's really hard to find the facts. It's only
relatively recently that archaeologists have been able to decipher Maya glyphs,
so most of what you read on the internet is inaccurate.
We didn't set
out to break new ground with the Jaguar Stones. In the beginning, the pyramids
were just a cool background to our adventure story. But there came a point
where we had to make a decision: are we going to do this properly or not? And
doing it properly meant spending family vacations in Central America,
befriending Maya people, attending archaeological conferences, even learning to
read and write Maya glyphs. It's been a huge undertaking and I wouldn't blame
anyone for balking at it. But we try to share our research through free lesson
plan CDs and downloads on our website. Maybe other authors can take advantage
of that!
Assuming they've
read everything by Rick Riordan, I'd advise a Jaguar Stones fan to discover the
work of Alan Garner. His book THE OWL SERVICE, set in the world of Welsh
mythology, is one of my all-time favourites. I might also direct them to
Beowulf, and collections of Icelandic mythology. And I'd definitely whisper
that Rick Riordan has a Norse-inspired series coming out soon...
Back in 2010, you wrote (for a guest post at this blog) that
"My dream is that one day, when our books have been translated into
Spanish, we’ll make school
visits in Guatemala" Has this come
to fruition yet?
No. And it kills
us, but We haven't given up hope. We're still in touch with Jesus Antonio, the
education advocate who inspired us in Guatemala. We have been fortunate
enough to make school visits in Chiapas in Southern Mexico - but without the
books in Spanish. Luckily, Jon is bilingual and I have high school Spanish, so
we manage quite well. We were thrilled to speak at an English language library
in Yucatan, where the patrons are learning English - so that was the best of
both worlds. We often do bilingual presentations in schools in North
America too.
But if I can be
honest, Charlotte, this whole issue confounds me. I feel guilty to be writing about the
Maya, maybe even being part of the #weneeddiversebooks movement, but not being
remotely Maya myself. Our connection is that Jon grew up in South and Central
America. On our travels, I've talked to many Maya girls and women, and I try to
channel their voices. But I have no doubt that any one of them, given my
resources, could write a better book than I. Through Max, a kid from Boston and
one of our main characters, I try to express this angst. If, like Rick Riordan,
we were just concerned with ancient mythology, I wouldn't feel this way. But,
as far as I know, no one else is writing about Maya kids right now. I hope that
we're helping to bridge the gap between North and Central America. Teachers
have told us that students of Maya descent take a new pride in their identity
after reading our books - and that makes me proud.
Now that the story of the Jaguar stones has come to an end,
what's next for you?
Short-term we
have the Tucson Festival of Books in mid-March, followed by a book tour in
California, plus trips to New Orleans, Iowa and Texas. Longer term, another
book is simmering, but I don't like to talk about new projects because somehow
the talking negates the writing. It makes me feel like I've already written it and the hard work is done - which
it isn't, at all!
And finally, in as much as the great final confrontation is a
baseball game at Fenway Park--are you Red Sox fans?
YOU BETCHA! But,
as I I hope you gathered from the game in the book, it's not the sport that
hooks us. It's the atmosphere of Fenway Park and the roller-coaster emotion of
being a Red Sox fan.
And now, the bonus (short) list of Speculative Fiction rooted in/based on/inspired by Mayan mythology and culture:
Summer of the Mariposas, by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
Sea of the Dead, by Julia Durango
Starfields, by Carolyn Marsden
Anyone know of any other books to add?
2/16/15
Knight-napped! (Dragonbreath Book 10), by Ursula Vernon
I love love love the Dragonbreath books, and I thrill to each new installment of the adventures of Danny Dragonbreath and his friends Wendell and Christina and all the other assorted reptile and amphibian characters who fill the pages of this series. If you want a book to offer a seven or eight-year old with a sense of humor, especially an eight-year old who is maybe a bit geeky and who appreciates the snarky absurd, a Dragonbreath book is the Right Answer!!!
In this installment, Knight-napped (Dial Jan. 2015), Danny's annoying cousin Spenser has been kidnapped by knights, and Danny and his friends rush off to the knights' castle to save him. It is the details that make this fun, and happily there are enough details to make it very fun.
Why do I love these books? Because Reasons, as my own boys would say, the reasons being:
1. The books include of lots of graphics--illustrations that continue the action, as well as some that just illustrate, that break up the text and make things reader friendly for elementary school readers.
2. The above-referenced graphics delight me with their charm and personality. So simple, yet so expressive!
3. Christina is a really really cool smart savvy feminist lizard and I love her.
4. I like Wendell too, who is also a smart geek.
5. I like Danny too, who though not book smart has his moments.....
6. But mostly I love these books because I am grinning pretty much the whole time I read one, and that is good, because smiling actually forces the brain to release chemicals that make you happier. So it is total win.
Here are Danny and Wendell climbing a tower; they have reached a gargoyle quite near the top, and
Wendell (terrified) perches desperately on it.
"You can't just stay there," said Danny. "I mean, I suppose you can, but we don't have much time to save Spenser-"
"You go save Spencer," said Wendell, eyes tightly shut. "I will stay with the gargoyle. I will name him Mister Scowly and we will be friends." (page 126)
In this installment, Knight-napped (Dial Jan. 2015), Danny's annoying cousin Spenser has been kidnapped by knights, and Danny and his friends rush off to the knights' castle to save him. It is the details that make this fun, and happily there are enough details to make it very fun.
Why do I love these books? Because Reasons, as my own boys would say, the reasons being:
1. The books include of lots of graphics--illustrations that continue the action, as well as some that just illustrate, that break up the text and make things reader friendly for elementary school readers.
2. The above-referenced graphics delight me with their charm and personality. So simple, yet so expressive!
3. Christina is a really really cool smart savvy feminist lizard and I love her.
4. I like Wendell too, who is also a smart geek.
5. I like Danny too, who though not book smart has his moments.....
6. But mostly I love these books because I am grinning pretty much the whole time I read one, and that is good, because smiling actually forces the brain to release chemicals that make you happier. So it is total win.
Here are Danny and Wendell climbing a tower; they have reached a gargoyle quite near the top, and
Wendell (terrified) perches desperately on it.
"You can't just stay there," said Danny. "I mean, I suppose you can, but we don't have much time to save Spenser-"
"You go save Spencer," said Wendell, eyes tightly shut. "I will stay with the gargoyle. I will name him Mister Scowly and we will be friends." (page 126)
2/15/15
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (2/15/15)
Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews:
Beastkeeper, by Cat Hellisen, at Waking Brain Cells and Writer of Wrongs
Book of the Dead (Tombquest 1), by Michael Northrup, at proseandkahn
The Boundless, by Kenneth Oppel, at Becky's Book Reviews
Boys of Blur, by N.D. Wilson, at Hope is the Word
The Candy Shop War, by Brandon Mull, at Log Cabin Library
The Diamond of Darkhold, by Jeanne DuPrau, at Fantasy Literature
Dragon Steel, by Laurence Yep, at Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at Pop! Goes the Reader
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at Shae Has Left the Room, Pages Unbound, and Book Nut
The Imaginary, by A.F. Harrold, at Bibliobrit, The Social Potato, and The Reading Nook Reviews
The Inquisitor's Mark, by Dianne K. Salerni, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Jaguar Stones, by J. and P. Voekel (series review), at Geo Librarian
The Missing (Troubletwisters 4), by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at A Reader of Fictions
Niels Wormwart: Accidental Villain, by D.M. Cunningham, at Project Mayhem
One Witch at a Time, by Stacy DeKeyser, at The Book Monsters, Charlotte's Library, and The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia (also with interview)
Palace of Stone, by Shannon Hale, at Fantasy Literature
The Return of Skeleton Man, by Joseph Bruchac, at Charlotte's Library
Rose and the Silver Ghost, by Holly Webb, at Sharon the Librarian
Spaceheadz, by Jon Scieszka and Francesco Sedita, at Madigan Reads
Thursdays with the Crown, by Jessica Day George, at Small Reviews
The Whispering Skull, by Jonathan Stroud, at A Reader of Fictions (audiobook)
Zodiac Legacy: Convergence, by Stan Lee, Stuart Moore, and Andie Tong, at The Book Smugglers and Ms. Yingling Reads (giveaway)
And at a librarymama, two sets of three EMG Spec Fic books from her Cybils reading here and here
Authors and Interview
Stacy DeKeyser (Once Witch at a Time) at Green Bean Teen Queen and The Book Monsters (both giveaways)
J. & P. Voekel (The Jaguar Stones series) at The Reading Zone, Cracking the Cover, and at From the Mixed-Up Files (with giveaway)
Abi Elphinstone (The Dreamsnatcher) talks about her favorite fictional animals at The Book Zone (For Boys)
Laurie McKay (Villain Keeper) at Literary Rambles
Patrik Henry Bass (The Zero Degree Zombie Zone) is a featured author at The Brown Bookshelf
Stan Lee, Stuart Moore, and Andie Tong (The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence) at The Book Smugglers (with giveaway)
MarcyKate Connolly (Monstrous) at Pandora's Books
Ian Johnstone (The Bell Between Worlds) at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Matthew Jobin (The Nethergrim) at Charlotte's Library
Other Good Stuff
Congratulations to Paul Durham, author of The Luck Uglies, this year's Cybils Winner in Elementary/Middle Grade Spec Fic! Here's the full list of winners.
The Waterstones children's book prize shortlist has been announced--with Boy in the Tower representing MG Spec. Fic.
Likewise, the longlists for the Carnegie and Greenway medals have been announced.
A Tuesday Ten of fantastical squirrels at Views From the Tesseract, and Ten Otherworld Fantasies, also at Views from the Tesseract
A list of time travel to Egypt books at Time Travel Times Two
International Space Station XLV: The Science Continues (thanks NASA!)
The Reviews:
Beastkeeper, by Cat Hellisen, at Waking Brain Cells and Writer of Wrongs
Book of the Dead (Tombquest 1), by Michael Northrup, at proseandkahn
The Boundless, by Kenneth Oppel, at Becky's Book Reviews
Boys of Blur, by N.D. Wilson, at Hope is the Word
The Candy Shop War, by Brandon Mull, at Log Cabin Library
The Diamond of Darkhold, by Jeanne DuPrau, at Fantasy Literature
Dragon Steel, by Laurence Yep, at Fantasy of the Silver Dragon
Finding Serendipity, by Angelica Banks, at Pop! Goes the Reader
The Forgotten Sisters, by Shannon Hale, at Shae Has Left the Room, Pages Unbound, and Book Nut
The Imaginary, by A.F. Harrold, at Bibliobrit, The Social Potato, and The Reading Nook Reviews
The Inquisitor's Mark, by Dianne K. Salerni, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Jaguar Stones, by J. and P. Voekel (series review), at Geo Librarian
The Missing (Troubletwisters 4), by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Monstrous, by MarcyKate Connolly, at A Reader of Fictions
Niels Wormwart: Accidental Villain, by D.M. Cunningham, at Project Mayhem
One Witch at a Time, by Stacy DeKeyser, at The Book Monsters, Charlotte's Library, and The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia (also with interview)
Palace of Stone, by Shannon Hale, at Fantasy Literature
The Return of Skeleton Man, by Joseph Bruchac, at Charlotte's Library
Rose and the Silver Ghost, by Holly Webb, at Sharon the Librarian
Spaceheadz, by Jon Scieszka and Francesco Sedita, at Madigan Reads
Thursdays with the Crown, by Jessica Day George, at Small Reviews
The Whispering Skull, by Jonathan Stroud, at A Reader of Fictions (audiobook)
Zodiac Legacy: Convergence, by Stan Lee, Stuart Moore, and Andie Tong, at The Book Smugglers and Ms. Yingling Reads (giveaway)
And at a librarymama, two sets of three EMG Spec Fic books from her Cybils reading here and here
Authors and Interview
Stacy DeKeyser (Once Witch at a Time) at Green Bean Teen Queen and The Book Monsters (both giveaways)
J. & P. Voekel (The Jaguar Stones series) at The Reading Zone, Cracking the Cover, and at From the Mixed-Up Files (with giveaway)
Abi Elphinstone (The Dreamsnatcher) talks about her favorite fictional animals at The Book Zone (For Boys)
Laurie McKay (Villain Keeper) at Literary Rambles
Patrik Henry Bass (The Zero Degree Zombie Zone) is a featured author at The Brown Bookshelf
Stan Lee, Stuart Moore, and Andie Tong (The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence) at The Book Smugglers (with giveaway)
MarcyKate Connolly (Monstrous) at Pandora's Books
Ian Johnstone (The Bell Between Worlds) at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Matthew Jobin (The Nethergrim) at Charlotte's Library
Other Good Stuff
Congratulations to Paul Durham, author of The Luck Uglies, this year's Cybils Winner in Elementary/Middle Grade Spec Fic! Here's the full list of winners.
The Waterstones children's book prize shortlist has been announced--with Boy in the Tower representing MG Spec. Fic.
Likewise, the longlists for the Carnegie and Greenway medals have been announced.
A Tuesday Ten of fantastical squirrels at Views From the Tesseract, and Ten Otherworld Fantasies, also at Views from the Tesseract
A list of time travel to Egypt books at Time Travel Times Two
International Space Station XLV: The Science Continues (thanks NASA!)
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