6/5/22

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs and a few other places (6/5/22)

Nothing from me this week (family, work, garden, and house all consumed my energy), but plenty of other people posted!  let me know if I missed your post.

But before that, now that it is June I want to encourage anybody reading this, who writes or talks about mg fantasy and sci fi somewhere on line, to consider applying to be a panelist for the upcoming Cybils Awards-here's my post on why you might want to take the plunge.  I'm the category organizer for the Elementary/Middle Grade speculative fiction, and I love welcoming new folks!  (seeing old friends is nice too, but new folks is even better!)

The Reviews

Adam-2, by Alastair Chisholm, at Library Girl and Book Boy

The Alchemyst. by Michael Scott, at proseandkahn

Crazy in Poughkeepsie, by Daniel Pinkwater, at Rosi Hollinbeck

The Dragon and the Stone (Dreamkeeper Saga #1), by Kathryn Butler, at Shine Global Network, Reading, Writing, and Pondering, and Redeemed Reader

The Impossible Destiny of Cutie Grackle, by Shawn K. Stout, at The Bossy Bookworm

The Insiders, by Mark Oshiro, at YA Book Central

Legendarium, by Jennifer Bell, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

Lightning Girl, and Lightning Girl: Superhero Squad, by Alesha Dixon & Katy Birchall, at Mom Read It

The Map of Leaves, by Yarrow Townsend, at Book Craic

The Midnight Guardians, by Ross Montgomery, at Silver Button Books

The Mirrorwood by Deva Fagan, at Say What?

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Sonderbooks

The Problem with Prophecies, by Scott Reintgen, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Raven Heir, by Stephanie Burgis, at The Children's Book Review

Rise of the Sidekicks, by Charity Tober, at Valinora Troy

Secret of the Shadow Beasts, by Diane Magras, at Log Cabin Library

Seed, by Caryl Lewis, at Book Craic

Skander and the Unicorn Thief, by A.F. Steadman, at Geo Librarian

Theo Tan and the Fox Spirit, by Jesse Q Sutanto, at Dear Author

Zo and the Forest of Secrets, by Alake Pilgrim, at Scope for Imagination

Three at Goodreads with Rona--The Ghost of Midnight Lake, by Lucy Strange, Secret of the Storm, by Beth McMullen, and The Mirrorwood, by Deva Fagan


Authors and Interviews

Sylvia Liu (Hana Hsu and the Ghost Crab Nation), at MG Book Village

Alex Foulkes (Rules for Vampires series), at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

David Solomons (A Beginner's Guide to Ruling the Galaxy) at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

Emi Watanabe Cohen and her agent Mary Moore (The Lost Ryū), at Literary Rambles

Kiah Thomas (The Callers) at Booktopia


Other Good Stuff

"Beyond Harry Potter: 50 Fantasy Adventure Series Starring Mighty Girls" at A Mighty Girl

"Why Is Middle Grade Fantasy So Violent?" at Book Explorer (YouTube)

"Samoan teacher and First Nations student come together to write fantasy middle grade series" at National Indigenous Times

"The best new mythology-inspired middle grade fantasy—for kids who loved Percy Jackson" a list compiled by Gabrielle K. Byrne at Shepherd

5/29/22

this week's round-up of mg sci fi/fantasy reviews and more (5/29/22)

Hi all!  here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

11 Birthdays, by Wendy Mass, at Puss Reboots

Amari and the Night Brothers, by B.B. Alston, at Nerdy Book Club

The Call of the Silver Wibbler (Kate on the Case #2) by Hannah Peck, at Twirling Book Princess

Da Vinci's Cat, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock, at Not Acting My Age

Dragon Skin. by Karen Foxlee. at Magic Fiction Since Potter

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson, at A Library Mama

Firesong, by Vashti Hardy, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads  

Freddie vs. the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua, at Charlotte's Library

Let the Monster Out, by Chad Lucas, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Midnight Orchestra (The Mystwick School of Musicraft) by Jessica Khoury, at Sharon the Librarian

The New Enchantress (Alyssa McCarthy's Magical Missions Book 3) by Sunayna Prasad, at Andi's Middle Grade & Chapter Books

The Spitfang Lizard (Leo's Map of Monsters, #2) by Kris Humphrey, at Twirling Book Princess

Straw into Gold: Fairy Tales Re-Spun, by Hilary McKay, at Books YA Love

Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend (Winnie Zheng #1) by Katie Zhao, at Charlotte's Library

Zo and the Forest of Secrets, by Alake Pilgrim, at Just Imagine


Authors and Interviews

Juliana Brandt (Monsters in the Mist), at Geo Librarian

Lindsay Eager (The Patron Thief of Bread), at Middle Grade Ninja

Tracy Badua and Natalie Lakosil, her agent (Freddie vs the Family Curse) at Literary Rambles 


Other Good Stuff

"The Teaser for Willow, the Sequel to Willow, Goes Into the Unknown" at Tor

"Peter S. Beagle Returns to the World of The Last Unicorn With The Way Home" at Tor

5/27/22

Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend, by Katie Zhao


Winnie Zeng Unleashes a Legend (Winnie Zheng #1) by Katie Zhao is an excellent one for the young reader who loves their mythology and demon fighting mixed with tasty cooking!  

Winnie is anxious about starting middle school, and is dismayed when her nemesis, David, shows up in her class.  Nemesis is perhaps too strong a word; David is just utterly obnoxious, has beaten her in recent piano competitions, and is her arch rival at Chinese school.  Winnie's also dealing with a lot of pressure to succeed from her parents, and is sad that her big sister has pulled away from her.  She feels that she's never good enough, and it's eating at her. At least she still has her mother's tasty Chinese food (although the other kids at school don't react kindly to her lunches...).  

When Winnie finds her grandmother's old cook book and follows the recipe for mooncakes, all her other problems fade when her grandmother's spirit shows up and possesses her pet rabbit.  Her grandmother is a spirit hunter, and is about to take Winnie on as an apprentice shaman.  The first malevolent spirit that shows up is easily vanquished with the mooncakes she unwittingly made with magic baked in, but mooncakes aren't a match for more powerful demons.  And then it turns out that David is also a shaman in training too, and is (of course) more advanced than she is, and utterly obnoxious about it all.  But teaming up with him is the only way to keep her town safe.

Of course it's cool to be part of a magical organization, with legends coming to life around you.  Winnie isn't at all sure, though, that this is what she wants her life to be....

It is super fun!  The real world and the magical world balance each other beautifully, and Winnie is such a believable, relatable heroine!  (Especially the part where she questions whether "heroine" is what she really wants to be...).  I liked how the sister relationship played out--communication between the two girls improves, and helps them tighten their bond again. The food was great too--I now want to try red bean paste brownies, which I've never had (Winnie makes them for the class bake sale, and it's touch and go for a while before suspicious kids realize how tasty they are!).

A great "kid discovering she's part of a line of mythological heroes" story that's more firmly tied to the real world and  the day to day challenges of being a middle school kid than the Rick Riordan Presents line of books.  Also weaponized mooncakes ftw!

I'm looking forward to seeing what Winnie (and David) do next!


5/23/22

Freddie vs. the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua

Freddie vs. the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua (middle grade, May 3, 2022, Clarion Books) is a great one for readers who relish the intrusion of fantasy into the real world! Freddie, the titular hero of the story, does not relish this intrusion at all, with good reason.

It was bad enough when he just had to endure the family curse of bad luck; not for nothing is he nicknamed "faceplant Freddie." But when he finds an amulet in the garage that comes with the trapped ghost of his great-great-uncle, Ramon, things get much worse than hideous embarrassment! Ramon "borrowed" the good luck amulet from his best friend, Ingo Agustin, back when they were teenagers fighting in the Philippine army in World War II. Instead of good luck, Ramon got cursed and died, and now that Freddie has the amulet, its angry spirits have turned their attention to him. He has only a few days to get the amulet back to Ingo, and get Ingo's forgiveness for Ramon, or he too will die...

Freddie is in a dreadful pickle. His great grandmother believes him (and enjoys getting the chance to hang out with her brother again), but his parents are deeply opposed to believing any Filipino folklore, and so won't help him find Ingo and get the amulet to him. Fortunately, he has his cousin Sharkey to help; she's related on the maternal side of the family, so isn't cursed with bad luck. And also fortunately, they find that Ingo's in a nursing home near Las Vegas, where Sharkey will be headed with her break dancing team for a competition. When Freddie's luck spills over and Sharkey sprains her angle, the cousins decide that Freddie (whose original audition for the team ended badly) will take her place.

Now Freddie has to overcome his penchant for disaster and learn the dance...and get across town to Ingo with just minutes to spare....

It's a great read, blending Filipino folklore and a nicely integrated bit of history that many kids will be unfamiliar with (I don't recall any mention of the Philippines in my WW II lessons) with real world struggles, making your own luck, and the cultural balancing act of multigenerational immigrant families. It's simultaneously a moving story and a funny, cring-ish one. Freddie is a character to cheer for, and Ingo's forgiveness of what Ramon did, and Freddie's ultimate success in the dance competition, bring the story to a very satisfying close!

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

5/22/22

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs, and a few other places (5/22/22)

As ever, let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Bella Santini in the Land of Everlasting Change, by Angela Legh, at Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers and J.R.'s Book Reviews

Cave in the Rock (Folktellers Excerpts from an Unknown Guidebook #2), by Josef Bastian, at Say What?

Cuckoo Song, by Frances Hardinge, at Pages Unbound

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at Bellis Does Books

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson, at Teachers Who Read

Furthermoor, by Darren Simpson, at fanna for books

The Grave Thief, by Dee Hahn, at Say What?

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

The House with Chicken Legs, by Sophie Anderson, at Kiss the Book

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Redeemed Reader and Fuse #8

Lia Park and the Missing Jewel, by Jenna Yoon, at Cracking the Cover

Let the Monster Out, by Chad Lucas at Teen Librarian Toolbox

The Marvellers, by Dhonielle Clayton, at The Washington Post

The Nightsilver Promise, by Annaliese Avery, at Page Unbound

The Patron Thief of Bread, by Linday Eager, at Cracking the Cover and Charlotte's Library

The Pennymores & the Curse of the Invisible Quill, by Eric Koester, at The Book Review Crew

Rebel Skies, by Ann Sei Lin, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

The Serpent Slayer and the Scroll of Riddles, by Champ Thornton and Andrew Naselli, at Redeemed Reader

The Shadow Prince (Shadow Prince #1), by David Anthony, at Say What?

The Shattered Castle, by Jennifer A. Nielsen, at Of Maria Antonia

Skandar and the Unicorn Thief, by Annabel Steadman, at Bellis Does Books and Crafty Moms Share

The Unfinished Corner, by Dani Colman, at Bookishly Jewish

A Wilder Magic, by Juliana Brandt, at Valinora Troy

Wildseed Witch (Wildseed Witch #1), by Marti Dumas, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Two by Vashti Hardy--The Griffin Gate and The Puffin Portal, at  Sifa Elizabeth Reads 


Authors and Interviews

Dhonielle Clayton (The Marvellers) at Locus

Xiran Jay Zhao (Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor), at From the Mixed Up Files and Middle Grade Ninja

Sunayna Prasad (The New Enchantress) at Lisa Haselton

Donna Galanti (Unicorn Island: Secret Beneath the Sand), at Literary Rambles


Other Good Stuff

"Five Life Lessons From Ella Enchanted on the Novel’s 25th Anniversary," at Tor

A nice roundup of dragon books at Mama Bookworm

5/16/22

The Patron Thief of Bread, by Lindsay Eager

The Patron Thief of Bread, by Lindsay Eager (May 17th 2022, Candlewick) is a heart-warming and heart-wrenching story of a orphan girl's journey towards a safe place in the world.

Atop the unfinished cathedral of the town of Odierne sit its gargoyles, themselves unfinished.  All but one spend the days gossiping about what they see below; the outlier stares out like the others, but has no patience for ideal chatter.  He is full of frustration; gargoyles are supposed to protect, but he is a lump of stone who was unable to save a woman who jumped from his perch long ago to escape arrest.  She and the baby she carried were swept away, leaving the gargoyle to bitter musings.

The baby was fished from the river by a gang of kid thieves, lead by a fiercely intelligent and fiercely lawless boy named Gnat. Little Duck, as they called her, is the youngest of the group, and it's not till the gang's roamings bring them to Odierne, making the cathedral ruins their home, that she's trusted to take on a direct heist on her own.  She must pass a false coin at the baker's, and if she fails to bring back bread, she's sure she'll be cast out.  

And she is successful, winning a more secure place in her young family of thieves.  But then Gnat comes up with his most cunning plan yet--if Duck is apprenticed to the baker, she'll be in a lovely position to syphon off bread and coin to her family....But when Duck is welcomed by the baker, Griselde, and given a room of her own, and given trust as well, she starts down of a path of divided loyalties that almost breaks her.  Over the next year, the pulling on her heart intensifies, and at last she is forced to chose who she will betray...the family of kids who raised her, or the woman who is willing to give her love and safety and a living doing what she loves.  All the while the gargoyle watches, and finally is able to fulfil his destiny as a protector.

I loved all the details of being apprenticed to a baker (I am a big fan of books in which there is lots of making and crafting), and such a lovely baker too! Griselde is really the one of the best mother figures in any middle grade book I've read for ages, and I really liked that she needs Duck in her life to love just as much as Duck needs her. But the overall situation was so tense and discomfiting this was not at all a comfort read...the tension is strung out from beginning to end, tightening to a breaking point where I had to start skimming a bit (reading the end didn't help, because I knew, it being middle grade, things would almost certainly work out, but the process of things working out was very stressful for me the reader!)

It's not action-packed, but more character driven, so don't go into it expecting lots of middle grade fantasy high jinx! It is fantasy, in as much as it's an alternate world, with the sentient gargoyle providing a depressed gargoyle's point of view (in alternate perspectives with Duck's story), but it's not full of magic. Just found family and bread, and worry....lots of love, and, indeed, the happy ending I was hoping for (although it comes with some interesting twists, and a high cost).

Short answer--one I can easily imaging wanting to re-read in a year or so, and I'll enjoy it even more the second time around (this is why I like re-reading....)

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.

5/15/22

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs and a few other places (5/15/22)

 Hi all, here's what I found this week; let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews


The Captive Kingdom, by Jennifer A. Nielsen, at Of Maria Antonia

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson, at  Maria's Melange, Tales Untangled, and Charlotte's Library

Duet, by Elise Broach, at The Bookwyrm's Den

Freddie and the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua, at Ms. Yingling Reads

A Game of Fox and Squirrels, by Jenn Reese, at Magic Fiction Since Potter

The Last Cuentista, by Donna Barba Higuera, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)

Lia Park and the Missing Jewel, by Jenna Yoon, at The Bookwyrm's Den

Little Wanderers: The Everlasting Seasons, by I.K. Silver, at Bookworm for Kids

The Marvellers, by Dhonielle Clayton, at Pages Unbound

The Midnighters, by Hana Tooke, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

Monsters in the Mist by Juliana Brandt, at Log Cabin Library

Secret of the Shadow Beasts, by Diane Magras, at Book Craic

The Secret Benefits of Invisibility by C.W. Allen, at Say What?

The Sheep, the Rooster, and the Duck, by Matt Phelan, at Say What?

Smells Like Treasure, by Suzanne Selfors, at Puss Reboots

Unicorn Island, by Donna Galanti, at Valinora Troy

We Are the Song, by Catherine Bakewell, at Log Cabin Library

Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor, by Xiran Jay Zhao, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Two at alibrarymama--Pilar Ramirez and the Escape from Zafa, by Julian Randall, and A Comb of Wishes, by Lisa Stringellow


Authors and Interviews

Katherine Arden (Small Spaces series) at Page Break (podcast)

Kevin Emerson (Drifters) at Nerdy Book Club

Julie C. Dao (Team Chu and the Battle of Blackwood Arena) at MacKids Spotlight

Jenna Yoon (Lia Park and the Missing Jewel) at Kidlit 411 and Middle Grade Ninja

Bridget Hodder (The Button Box), at Middle Grade Minded


Other Good Stuff

I always enjoy the look at new UK books at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books


5/11/22

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson (for this Wednesday's Timeslip Tuesday)

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson (May 10, 2022, Walden Pond Press), is a long book (592 pages), but the pages turn quickly, and before I knew it, I'd stayed up till 11:30 finishing it in that lovely reading zone where one forgets one is reading....Had I but known when I took this slot on the book's blog tour that there was time slipping involved, I'd have asked for a Tuesday (my day for time travel book) but Wednesday is pretty temporally adjacent, so here we are.

The small town of Far Haven is barely hanging on.  There was a nuclear accident a few years ago, and people who could afford to get out did.  Now a large part of its population is the team from the accident remediation and monitoring company (who are very intrusive and increasingly creepy). And for one girl, Jovie, the town became even smaller when her best friend Micah disappeared.  It's only been a few months, but everyone but Jovie, feeling lost and alone, has forgotten her...

Which they have (except for her parents...who have given up on the search).  

Searching for Micah leads Jovie down a path of every increasing strangeness and mystery.  She meets a very peculaiar boy, Mason, who gives her a spyglass that lets her see the community of lost and forgotten people living on the beach.  They are invisible and untied from ordinary life, drifting toward the pull of a mysterious vortex of light that periodically manifests off the coast, bringing storms and disasters to the town (which like the drifting people, fade from memory....).   When Jovie realizes that Micah has probably become a drifter, she becomes determined to bring her back.

With a new friend Sylvan, a younger and also lonely boy, Jovie starts to uncover the strange and shattering truth about the vortex and its potential to bring disaster not just to her town, but possibly the whole world.  Dodging the workers of the "clean-up" crew, who are determined not to let her get to close to the truth as they know it, trying to figure out what Mason really knows, trying to find clues in the town's history, she presses on, with the town's history, pockmarked with disasters, leading her to the remarkable truth.

Here's where the time slipping-ness comes in--I don't want to spoil all that is learned when Jovie passes through the vortex, as it is pretty clear quite early on that she will do, but time passes differently there, a few hours equating to several months....This happens very near the end of the story, and though the author could have added another couple of hundred pages about what happens when Jovie comes back (which I would have enjoyed), that's not the point of the story, and we only get a fairly short epilogue.

It's a slow build to full on science fiction, but when the sci fi kicks into gear it becomes remarkable! I'd recommend it to  those fans of Margaret Peterson Haddix who have the commitment to read one of her long speculative fiction series to its end.  

I'd also recommend it to those who like stories whose heart is an exploration of what it means to feel lost and drifting through life, especially during adolescence--Jovie and Micah's friendship had actually turned sour a few months before she was lost, with Jovie feeling stuck and alone and Micah seeming to be pushing fast past their shared childhood (a fairly substantial part of the story is Jovie re-examining their relationship)  Sylvan is pretty alone too, living mostly on-line, and for him, the connection made with Jovie is something of a lifeline out of loneliness. And strange, mysterious Mason has his own grief and disconnections to deal with.... lots of lovely friendship and growing up and figuring out who you are along with all the mystery and strangeness.

It links back to Emerson's trilogy that begins with the VERY highly recommended Last Day on Mars (my review), which I will now have to re-read to figure out all the connections...but you don't have to have read those books first. 

Not a book for everyone--like I said, is long, so a bit daunting, and you have to be a fan of slowly unfolding sci fi that keeps stretching further and further from ordinary world.  Which would be me.

About the Author

Kevin Emerson is the author of Last Day on Mars and The Oceans Between Stars, as well as The Fellowship for Alien Detection, the Exile series, the Atlanteans series, the Oliver Nocturne series, and Carlos Is Gonna Get It. Kevin lives with his family in Seattle. You can visit him online at www.kevinemerson.net.

DRIFTERS Blog Tour

5/9/22 Nerdy Book Club @nerdybookclub

5/10/22 Bluestocking Thinking @bluesockgirl

5/11/22 Charlotte's Library @charlotteslibrary

5/13/22 Maria's Mélange @mariaselke

5/16/22 Teachers Who Read @teachers_read








5/8/22

This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs and other places (5/8/22)

As always, let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians, by Brandon Sanderson, at megsbookrack

The Book Smugglers, by Anna James, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

The Callers, by Kiah Thomas, at The Book Muse

The Clackity, by Lora Senf, at Looking for a Good Book

Drifters, by Kevin Emerson, at Say What?

Duet, by Elise Broach, at Say What?

Firesong, by Vashti Hardy, at Book Craic

Glass Slippers, by Leah  Cypess, at Always in the Middle

The Grave Thief, by Dee Hahn, at Nine Bookish Lives

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Library Girl and Book Boy

James’ Ragtag Adventure in Questworld, by M. Doyle, at Literay Titan

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Semicolon

The Maker-Man of Merryville, by Pete Mesling, at Bookworm for Kids

The Marvellers by Dhonielle Clayton, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Influencer News Magazine

Monsters in the Mist, by Juliana Brandt, at Charlotte's Library

The Monsters of Rookhaven, by Pádraig Kenny, at Mom Read It

A Mouse Called Miika, by Matt Haig, at Twirling Book Princess

Of a Feather, by Dayna Lorentz, at Not Acting My Age

The Patron Thief of Bread, by Lindsay Eagar, at Log Cabin Library

A Pinch of Magic, by Michelle Harrison, at Leaf's Reviews

The Root Cellar, by Janet Lunn, at Charlotte's Library

Rumaysa: Ever After, by Radiya Hafiza, at Scope for Imagination

The Secret Wild, by Alex Evelyn, at Book Craic

The Shadow Grave, by Marina Cohen, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Skander and the Unicorn Thief, by AF Steadman, at the NY Times

We are the Song, by Catherine Bakewell, at The Bookwyrm's Den

Witchlings, by Claribel A. Ortega, at Alison in Bookland

Two at The Book Search--The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, and Hunters of the Lost City, by Kali Wallace


Authors and Interviews


Juliana Brandt (Monsters in the Mist) at Charlotte's Library

Xiran Jay Zhao (Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor) at WNDB

AF Steadman (Skandar and the Unicorn Thief) at Fuse #8 and Writer's Digest

 Catherine Bakewell (We are the Song) at Teen Librarian Toolbox

Doreen Berger (The Captain's Daughters), at Carol Baldwin's Blog

Robert Beatty (Serafina series, Willa of the Woods), at Rapunzel Reads


Other Good Stuff

 Sci-Fi for Kids Is a Missed Publishing Opportunity, at Publishers Weekly

Nicki Jay has won Lee and Low's  New Visions Award for her middle grade fantasy-- The Marassa: Birth*Life*Death Book I.  "The Marassa, this year’s winning manuscript, is a middle-grade high fantasy novel about four 12-year-old African-American sorcerers who discover a 500-year-old prophecy that names them as the future destroyers of their sorcerers’ community. The Marassa is destined to stand in their way." Coming in 2024.

and if you want your tbr pile to grow, check out the #22Debuts blog for the May releases!  lot of excellent sound mg sci fi/fantasy

5/7/22

Monsters in the Mist, by Juliana Brandt--review and interview

If you (or other young readers in your life) are looking to make spring spookier, Monsters in the Mist, by Juliana Brandt (May 3, 2022, SourcebooksKids, is just the book you need!  

Whenever Glennon's dad goes away for work, his mom moves him and his little sister out of the house.  They used to go stay with their grandma, but now she has died, and their mom has taken them to stay with a relative they've never met who's a lighthouse keeper on a remote island in Lake Superior.  Glennon counts the days till they get off the island.  

With just a few more days to go, the island is slammed by an early winter storm.  A ship wrecks on the nearby coast, and the three survivors shelter in the lighthouse.  And Glennon becomes convinced that something more than an ordinary Lake Superior tragedy has happened.  One of the survivors seems horribly...not right. 

This is right at the beginning of the book, so there is no build up of suspense--it is right there at the start!  But there is definitely build up of the creepy--things are more and more Wrong, and more impossible to explain away, until Glennon and his sister realize they are in mortal peril from supernatural forces, trapped on an island that will not let them leave.   And the gothic horror ratchets up even further to a tremendous climax with twists I didn't see coming!

As the supernatural horror builds, so does the readers understanding of the verbal abuse and anger Glennon's gotten all his life from his father; it's clear early on that he and his sister have PTSD, and that not all is well with their mother either.  Having to deal with an unbearably awful situation on the island, though, helps Glennon start to untangle himself from years of damaging undermining from his father, and this real-world positive progress is a welcome contrast to the gothic darkness crashing around the cursed island. (There's an author's note at the end, clarifying how Glennon's memories of his father's words that surface during the story are real abuse, discussing how this has affected him and his sister, and encouraging young readers in similar positions to seek help from trusted adults).

In good middle grade fashion, Glennon and his sister are the catalyst for their escape, but they couldn't have done it without grown-ups willing to put themselves at risk to make it happen.  Also as is the case with many good middle grade books, there's an intelligent cat who helps for a given value of cat-help. Both things I liked.  I also liked all the ghost ships (what a wide variety of obsolete vessels there are in the harbor these days! think the kids, more or less,  and yet no transport is available off the island....) and the nods to real maritime misfortunes of Lake Superior.  The awful undead rats swarming around the island, are, however, not likeable....

In short, though I personally would have liked a bit more about life on the island before it became a place of nightmares, to ground the story in reality before the reality explodes, Monsters in the Mist is a powerfully spooky and thought-provoking read, and one I appreciated lots, 

Monsters in the Mist is Juliana Brandt's third book, the first two being The Wolf of Cape Fen (2020) and A Wilder Magic (2021), both from SourcebooksKids.  As well as being an author, she's a kindergarten teacher with a passion for storytelling that guides her in both of her jobs. She lives in her childhood home of Minnesota, and her writing is heavily influenced by travels around the country and decade living in the South.


And now it is my pleasure to welcome her to my blog! (my questions are in bold)

What was the inspiration for Monsters in the Mist? (hopefully not a disastrous boat trip on Lake Superior).

Goodness, the inspiration came from many places, although no, it definitely didn't come from a disastrous boat trip on Lake Superior! I did find a lot of direct inspiration from Lake Superior itself, though, mostly from Split Rock Lighthouse - a lighthouse in Two Harbors, MN. I toured this lighthouse in October on a very blustery day. I knew immediately that I needed to use this setting for a book. I created my own version of that lighthouse and stuck it on an island that is a very real (and yet very fake!) island on Lake Superior. In the 1700s, a mapmaker drew an extra island on Lake Superior. Mapmakers kept inserting the same island on their own maps, even though no such island actually existed on the lake. It took a few decades before cartographers realized it wasn't real. I thought that history was fascinating, and it made me wonder what that island would be like if it were actually real.


What bit of the book do you hope your readers will love most, and/or perhaps be most horrified/scared about?

I hope readers love the spookiness of the story. I tried to create my own monsters for this book, and I hope they're both scary and fascinating. I wanted my monsters to be sympathetic; I wanted people to understand how they'd become so monstrous and why they'd chosen the path they had. And also that while we can be sympathetic toward the monsters, it doesn't mean that their behavior or their choices are excused. I would very much like readers to walk away with the message that the words we choose to use with one another matters deeply.

I appreciated that the town librarian specifically recommends Howl's Moving Castle, by Diana Wynne Jones, to the kids--an excellent choice. Was there a specific reason you picked this book?

Howl's Moving Castle is my absolute favorite book! It's one that's stuffed full of all the things I enjoy most about stories - magic and surprising twists and a wonderful monster. In the scene where the book is mentioned, the librarian is talking about reading what makes you happy, and for me, Howl's is a book that never fails to make me happy. I was so excited to include mention of it in my own book because of how much it's meant to me over the years.

Monsters is your first book since things are moving toward normal again, fingers crossed.... Your first book, The Wolf of Cape Fen, will always have a special place in my mind (Here's my review). Not only did I enjoy it lots, but when it came out, just a few weeks into the pandemic in the spring of 2020, it was the first book I picked to order from my local independent bookstore as a show of support for authors and indies, so I have powerful memories tied to it. What was it like, having your debut book come out at such a fraught time?

It certainly wasn't easy. The shift from planning in person events and making plans for trips and book tours to cancelling everything and switching to online events (before we really knew what online events could look like!) was a difficult transition. It certainly wasn't the experience I thought debuting would be. At the same time though, I was incredibly supported in the book community and by my friends and family. I truly felt like everyone rallied around me. It's also helped me truly appreciate everything I'm able to experience with Monsters in the mist, now that I'm able to schedule in person events again.

With your third book, are you able to get a chance to do more of the author-ish things that the pandemic shut down?

Yes! I have wonderful events planned throughout May and into the summer. This past week when Monsters in the Mist published, I was able to have my first in person book launch. It was everything I wanted to experience the first time around, and I'm so glad to have finally been able to have that! It's truly wonderful to be able to talk with people in person and celebrate books in an actual bookstore, instead of online. I have school visits and writing classes and bookstore events scheduled. It's all an absolute delight to be able to plan.  (here are her upcoming events)

and finally, what are you working on now?

Secret projects! I have a few manuscripts in the works, but as of now, they're all in the "in between" moment. Hopefully they'll become projects that I can announce publicly soon.

and even more finally, is there an interview question that you have a really good answer for that I haven't asked? 

At my bookstore event, I was asked a very good question that I've never been asked before. "How have my books changed me?" We talk about readers being changed by books, but books change authors too! I think that my books have helped me become a braver, more honest person. Writing a book is such an introspective process, for me, and with each one I write, I end up asking deep questions of myself, about who I am and who I want to be. It really can be a transformative experience.

thanks so much, Juliana!  And best of luck with your ongoing projects!  And now I shall go listen to The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald--"The lake it is said, never gives up her dead when the skies of November turn gloomy..."

5/3/22

The Root Cellar, by Janet Lunn, for Timeslip Tuesday

The Root Cellar, by Janet Lunn (1983), is a classic Canadian time travel story....and so by rights it should have been featured here long ago.  Thing was, I had it confused with another story about a root cellar and the underground railroad and time travel that I read years and years ago and hadn't much enjoyed....I don't know what that book or mishmash of other books I was thinking of, but it wasn't this one, which it turns out I'd never read before!   (Possible I was just so turned off the the really unattractive original cover I made up a story in my mind and never read any root cellar time travel books....).

In any event, it was a lovely surprise to find myself reading a really good new to me book!

Rose is an orphaned girl,  raised, for a very paltry value of raised, by her grandmother.  She's never been friends with any children, and has never been shown any affection.  When her grandmother dies, she's sent off to live with her aunt and uncle, and their four boys, in an old house in Canada.  The aunt and uncle are well meaning, but they don't have the time and energy to help Rose start healing from her years of neglect, and Rose doesn't feel wanted, and doesn't want to be there.  Then she finds the old root cellar that turns into a gateway to the past.

Back in the 1860s, Rose feels strangely happy.  She's able to make friends with two kids there--Will, the son of the house, and Susan, a servant girl.  Time in the present doesn't pass while she's in the past, but Will and Susan are older when she next visits them.  The Civil War is raging, and Will decides to go off and fight.  When Rose goes back in time again, Will hasn't come home.  So she persuades Susan that they must go look for him, and so ensues a long and arduous journey to the crowded hospitals of Washington D.C., full of the horrors of war....

And that journey helps Rose grow emotionally, can find a place in her own time, with her own family.

It's an engrossing story, and a fascinating one!  Really quality time travel, and a must read for anyone who enjoys stories of children coming to grips with what it means to be a person amongst other people.  Good Civil War history too.

(Home renovation-wise, I'm a bit appalled by the state of the aunt and uncle's house; I would have been almost as horrified as Rose was and I like old houses!  They need to get the walls fixed before winter comes!)



5/2/22

The Blood Trials, by N.E. Davenport


The Blood Trials, by N.E. Davenport, is a fierce read about a young woman consumed by grief and anger who is determined to bring her grandfather's killer to justice, and who ends up setting herself against a world controlled by rival evil (and incredibly powerful) governments.  Though readers of YA may well appreciate it, it's a book for adults--there is considerable, very detailed, violence, and a graphic sex scene. 

Ikenna was ready to give up on her ambition to become one of the elite Praetorian Guard after her grandfather's death throws her into acute depression.  But when she finds out she was murdered, she becomes fueled by rage and determination to find the killer, and becoming one of the Guard will help her do that.  The trials the would-be guard members, the best and brightest of the military recruits, are put through are brutal, and often fatal (which seemed really wasteful as a military strategy; this thought kept distracting me).   Ikenna gives and gets horrible injuries, the body count is in the hundreds, and things seem pretty hopeless for her at many points in the story.

Ikenna, having inherited the dark skin of her grandfather's family, faces awful racism, is a woman in a misogynist society, and is often self-sabotaged by her lack of emotional control born from anger and grief, but she has a secret advantage--she has a blood gift, from the old gods...one that her country's greatest enemy uses as a terrible weapon.  She can't risk having it discovered, but she can't help but uses it when needed, to ferret out secrets and heal herself from the many injuries the trials inflict on her.

In the course of the trials, surrounded by people she cannot trust, many of whom hate her (even without knowing about her blood gift) more death and guilt add to her burden, and a night of forbidden passion doesn't help.  But she perseveres, leaving a blood-stained wake, until, like opening a series of nesting dolls, she realizes at the end of the book that the fight she's undertaken for justice, and her own right to exist, is much greater than she'd imagined.

Ikenna's strong emotions are perfectly understandable, but don't leave much room in her headspace for the reader to get to know other dimensions of her personality.  (I would have liked more intelligence, and less emotional response....).  And the pretty much non-stop violence of the trials, and the hate she gets thrown, and the betrayals she endures, don't make for easy reading; it was all a bit much for me.  I didn't actually enjoy it much, though I never considered not finishing the book, because of wanting to know what happened.  But having reached the end of the book, with the stakes becoming increasingly higher, Ikenna at last has reached a point where she has people on her side, and no longer has to hide who she is, so I'm pretty willing to give the second book at try.

So not a book for me, but if you look at the Goodreads reviews, plenty of people loved it.....

disclaimer: review copy received from the publicist.



5/1/22

In which I join Wyrd and Wonder

Wyrd and Wonder is a month long celebration of the fantastic (now in its fifth year) and I decided I needed to do something fresh here at my blog, and so I'm joining in with the read a longs and discussion prompts, and some vigorous reading from my tbr pile.

I had a fun time shopping in that huge pile for books to read this month along side my regular middle grade and time travel reading, and here's what I came up with.



Some of these have been on the pile for years-I have a bad habit of buying books I really want to read, and then once I've secured them, somehow the potential to read them takes the place of actually doing so.

Because I can't take good pictures, here are the books--

A Castle of Tangled Magic, by Sophie Anderson

Prophesies, Libels & Dreams, by Ysabeau Wilce

Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City, by K.I. Parker

Nikoles, by Rachel Neumeier

The Bird and the Blade, by Megan Bannon

Empress of Salt and Fortune, by Nghi Vo

The Story of Owen, Dragon Slayer of Trondheim, by E.K, Johnston

A Psalm for the Wild Build, by Becky Chambers

A College of Magics, by Caroline Stevermer

Foxheart, by Claire Legrand

Interworld, by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves

Stealing Death, by Janet Lee Carey

Kingfisher, by Patricia McKillip

The House of Mountfathom, by Nigel McDowell

The Privilege of the Sword, by Ellen Kushner

Look for my wrap-up review post on May 31! (d.v.)


This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (5/1/22)

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

The Reviews

The Art of Magic, by Hannah Voskuil, at Say What?

The Court of the Stone Children, by Eleanor Cameron, at Semicolon

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell, at Charlotte's Library

Eudora Space Kid: The Great Engine Room Takeover, by David Horn, at Valinora Troy

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Book Craic

Immigrant from the Stars, by Gail Kamer, at Mom Read It

Lia Park and the Missing Jewel, by Jenna Yoon, at Crafty Moms Share

The Lion of Mars, by Jennifer L. Holm, at Sonderbooks

The Mermaid and the Unicorns, by L.T. Getty, at Kit 'n Kabookle

The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Redeemed Reader

Once Upon Anther Time, by James Riley, at Cracking the Cover

The Prince of Nowhere, by Rochelle Hassan, at Say What?

Scary Stories for Young Foxes, by Christian McKay Heidicker, at Proseandkahn (audiobook review)

Secret Beneath the Sand (Unicorn Island #2) by Donna Galanti, at alibrarymama and Jean Little Library

The Silk Road (Lucy and Dee #1), by Kirsten Marion, at Say What?

Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos (Theodosia, Book 1) by R. L. LaFevers, at Rapunzel Reads

Unseen Magic, by Emily Lloyd-Jones, at and other tales

Wilder Than Midnight, by Cerrie Burnell, at Book Craic

Wind, by Ellen Dee Davidson, at Dragonfly.eco

Witchlings, by Claribel A. Ortega, at Pages Unbound and YA Books Central


Authors and Interviews

Katie Zhao, (Winnie Zeng Unleashes A Legend) at WNDB

Betsy Uhrig (The Polter-Ghost Problem), at MG Book Village

Kali Wallace (Hunters of the Lost City), at  Whatever 

Rochelle Hassan (The Prince of Nowhere) at Kidlit 411

Bree Barton (Zia Erases The World), at A Novel Mind 

A.F. Steadman (Skandar and the Unicorn Thief) at Booktopia

Stacy Hackney (The Sisters of Luna Island), at Deborah Kalb Books

4/26/22

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell, for Timeslip Tuesday

Elsetime, by Eve McDonnell (June 2020, Everything With Words), is a must read for time travel fans (and a very good read for middle grade fantasy fans, mg historical fiction fans, and so on....). Though it has, to the best of my knowledge, not been published yet here in the US, it's well worth getting your hands on (says one who did so!). I do have a slight caveat though--it's a book that will be most enjoyed by those able to wrap their minds tightly around the sort of twists and turns that so often happen with time travel, and if, like me, you have a tendency to gallop through good stories, you might suddenly find yourself a bit confused...I think I will enjoy it more when I reread it in two or three years!

In London in 1928, 12 year old Glory has lied about here age to get a job in a jewelry shop. She designs beautiful things, but the fact that one of her hands is wooden prosthetic means she can't always bring her creations to fruition. The rather nasty woman she works for is not sympathetic, paying Glory a pittance while profiting off her designs.

In 1864, Needle is desperately trying to keep himself and his mother fed, following in the footsteps of his father who mysteriously disappeared by scrounging in the mud of the Thames for bits and pieces to turn into saleable ornaments. Like his father, Nettle has a magical gift--he can feel the stories of the things he finds. When he finds some metal fragments from 1928, with the names of victims of a horrible flood, he travels in time to that year, determined to give a warning.

There he meets Glory, and their stories intersect. The clock is ticking, and Glory herself might be one of those who will drown...but the two kids are up against villainous characters, and the problems that come with time travel. Fortunately, a very clever crow named Magpie, Nettle's helper from his own time, is a fellow time-traveler, and gives them just the assistance they need to add to their own determination and cleverness. And though Nettle, in the end, returns to his own time, he's changed both his life and Glory's for the better, in a lovely way (and not just by saving Glory's life...).

It's a truly engrossing story of friendship and hardship and creativity, given great tension by the threat of the devastating flood to come (a real event). McDonnell paints vivid pictures and brings her characters beautifully to life. And though the twist at the end didn't quite work for me (see caveat above), because I though one of the characters was perfectly capable of being more helpful earlier on, it was still one I enjoyed lots. Since I love to read about making things, I especially loved the crafting parts of the story, of which there were a generous plenty!


4/24/22

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (4/24/22)

Sadly (for me) I have nothing to contribute this week, because life, but here's what other people wrote about.  Let me know if I missed your post!

Aru Shah and the Nectar of Immortality, by Roshani Chokshi, at a backwards story

Bibi Blundermuss and the Tree Across the Cosmos, by Andrew Durkin, at Independent Book Review

The Children of Green Knowe by L.M. Boston, at Staircase Wit

Curse of the Night Witch, by Alex Aster, at Pages Unbound

Dragon Legend (Dragon Realm #2) by Katie Tsang and  Kevin Tsang, at Rajiv's Reviews

Dragon Mountain (Dragon Realm #1) by Katie Tsang and Kevin Tsang, at Rajiv's Reviews

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at A Tale of Two Pages, The Book Dutchesses, And On She Reads, Rebbie Reviews, ForBooksSake, Book Craic, Herding Cats, Sifa Elizabeth Reads, and Gina Rae Mitchell

Freddie vs. The Family Curse, by Tracy Badua, at Say What?

Healer and Witch, by Nancy Werlin, at Bookends

The Horse and his Boy, by C.S. Lewis, at Staircase Wit

Hunters of the Lost City, by Kali Wallace, at Bookworm for Kids

The Lucky Diamond, by Valinora Troy, at Book Craic

Magicborn, by Peter Bunzl, at Scope for Imagination

The Marvellers by Dhonielle Clayton, at Log Cabin Library

Pony, by R.J. Palacio, at proseandkahn (audiobook review)

The Rainbow Weaver's Apprentice (The Fairy Tunnels Book 1), by  Elena Jagar, at N.N. Light's Book Heaven

Tiger Honor by Yoon Ha Lee, at Children's Books Heal

We Are the Song, by Catherine Bakewell, at nerds of a feather, flock together

Willodeen, by Katherine Applegate, at Not Acting My Age

Witchlings, by Claribel Ortega, at PR Review

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking, by T. Kingfisher, at Sonderbooks (audiobook review)

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, by Eleanor Cameron, at Staircase Wit

Two by Deva Fagan--The Mirrorwood and Nightingale, at Feed Your Fiction Addiction

Two at Paper Fury--The Astronaughties by Andrew Cranna, and Loki: A Bad God’s Guide to Being Good by Louie Stowell


Authors and Interviews

Jodi Lynn Anderson (Thirteen Witches series), at Middle Grade Ninja (podcast)


Other Good Stuff

"Next Level Middle Grade Fandom, or, What Erin Hunter’s Warriors Series Hath Wrought" at Fuse #8

"‘Nevermoor’ Musical Adaptation in the Works at Paramount" at The Hollywood Reporter

4/17/22

this week's round-up of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs 4/17/22

Happy Easter to those celebrating today. I always enjoy picking a Victorian card to share....



as always, please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Aru Shah and the Nectar of Immortality, by Roshani Chokshi, at Log Cabin Library

Aviva vs. the Dybbuk by Mari Low, at YA Book Central

The Dragon Realm Series, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at The Bookwyrm's Den

Dragon Rising, by Katie and Kevin Tsang, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads

A Dragon Used to Live Here, by Annette LeBlanc Cate, at Charlotte's Library

Dread Wood, by Jennifer Killick, at Book Craic

The Frights of Fiji, by Sunayna Prasad, at paper fury 

Hedgewitch, by Skye McKenna, at Book Craic

The Impossible Girl, by Ashley White, at Bookworm for Kids

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Charlotte's Library

The Midnight Unicorn, by Alice Hemming, at Log Cabin Library

The Mirrorwood, by Deva Fagan, at Charlotte's Library

The Revelry by Katherine Webber, at Whispering Stories 

Rules for Vampires, by Alex Foulkes, at Twirling Book Princess

The Sisters of Straygarden Place by Hayley Chewins, at Rapunzel Reads

Skandar and the Unicorn Thief, by A.F. Steadman, at Say What?

Troubletwisters, by Garth Nix and Sean Williams, at Amy Rosenfeldt

Wildseed Witch, by Marti Dumas, at WOC Read

Two at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, and The Button Box, by Bridget Hodder and Fawzia Gilani-Williams


Authors and Interviews

Dhonielle Clayton (The Marvellers) at WNDB

Deva Fagan (The Mirrorwood) at What Angela Reads (podcast)

Stacy Hackney (Sisters of Luna Island) at Book Briefs

Payal Doshi (Rea and the Blood of the Nectar), at Queries, Qualms, and Quirks (podcast)

Xiran Jay Zhao (Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor) at MG Book Village 

Stephanie Kate Strohm (Once Upon A Tide: A Mermaid’s Tale) at Pop Goes the Reader

Nancy Werlin (Healer and Witch) at Whatever


Other Good Stuff

At Book Riot, 20 of the best middle grade fantasy books

4/15/22

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat

The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat (middle grade, April 12, 2022, Candlewick), tells of a fascinating voyage of discovery, with pleasing twists, a great heroine, lots of lovely mapmaking for those of us who like to read about work being done, and even dragons!

In a Thai-inspired reimaging of South East Asia, twelve-year-old Sai is determined to escape the poverty and miserable living conditions of the Fens.  She only has a year to save up enough money to make a new life for herself the kingdom of Mangkon, because only those who are given golden lineal beads (that show off their ancestry) when they turn thirteen are respected members of society.  She's managed to get work as an assistant to Paivoon, a famous mapmaker, and allows herself to hope she can make a future for herself, despite her lack of ancestors..

Then the Queen of Mangkon and all of its conquered territories decides to launch expeditions in all directions seeking new lands to add to the empire's glory.  Paivoon is chosen to be the mapmaker on board the ship headed south under the command of the woman who is one of the most famous war heroes in the kingdom.  But Paivoon has started to suffer from tremors, and can no longer trust his hands to write and draw clearly, so he offers Sai a place on the voyage to serve as his scribe.

After miserable sea sickness, Sai takes a keen interest in the voyage that takes her past new islands that are new to her and then off into uncharted waters.  The crew hopes to find the fabled southern continent of Sunderland (there's a lucrative prize if they do),  and Sai certainly would like that too.  But she can't convince Paivoon to take Sunderland's existence seriously.

Her life on the ship is somewhat complicated by a stowaway, an island boy named Bo, who proves important to the story both plot-wise and addition of character interest-wise.  And then her life becomes truly complicated by treachery that leads to her and Bo being castaway on their own, and then finding Sunderland.  And meeting dragons....(although to those who want lots of DRAGON, it's not a great feast of dragon-ness; its more like a soupçon of  dragon, that adds welcome fantasy spice and contributes to the central tension of the book very nicely).

What I liked lots--
The mapmaking.  Paivoon doesn't rely on the corpus of official maps, but takes seriously scraps of knowledge from fishermen, conveyed in their tales and rough drawings on scraps of cloth.  

Related to mapmaking, Paivonn teaches Sai that "discovering unknown lands" is a somewhat meaningless concept, because official voyages of discovery are by no means the first time people have ever reached place.  I especially appreciated how he leads her to understand that official claims to "newly discovered" places often leads to their exploitation (though it's not stated nearly so baldly in the book, so no need to worry about heavy-handed Messaging), and how at the end of the story the final map we see Sai make uses names to try to keep the Sunderland, and its dragon family, safe (at least for a little while).  I love it when words have power!

I loved Sai and Paivoon's teacher/student relationship more generally, and how Sai ends the story by passing on the opportunity she was given to another poor kid. 

I liked the pacing of the story...the time taken to establish the context, the ocean voyage in which very little that's Exciting happens, but much is learned.  (I have reservations about this in terms of young readers liking the book though--it won't be for every kid. I think the cover does a great job conveying the feel of the story--any reader drawn to that image will probably enjoy the book.)

And being a sucker for survival stories, I like the bit where Sai and Bo are stranded on a miserable island, and struggle to survive and escape.

To summarize:  I liked the book lots!  

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

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