4/30/23
this week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (4/30/23)
4/28/23
The Lake House, by Sarah Beth Durst
Three young teenaged girls arrive at a house camp on an island in the middle of the Maine woods; none of them wanted to go, but their parents, who had been there themselves long ago, promised them a wonderful, transformative experience.
They have doubts, and these doubts are more than realized. Dropped off by boat and left to make their own way through the woods to house, they are stunned to find the Lake House is a burned shell. The discovery of a fairly fresh corpse who has been shot is not a comfort. They have no way to communicate with the outside world, and no food or clean water, and presumably there's a killer on the loose, possibly still on the island. And then things get worse, when they must survive a horrible evil that makes the island its home....
I loved the growing friendship between the girls, and especially how Claire's anxiety and tendency to catastrophize proves incredibly valuable. The other two girls also emerge as fully three-dimensional characters with much to offer the survival of the group, and the trio works through a lot together, growing in understanding and acceptance of themselves and each other. Though the horror was not exactly to my own personal taste (I had to take it with lots of grains of salt), it offered nicely high stakes and plenty of twists. The friendship and survival elements were totally my jam (I am always up for catching fish with a tennis net, starting a fire with a hair dryer battery, etc.) and so I ended up being both gripped and entertained.
A great one for 12-14 year olds who like friendship stories mixed with supernatural horror. This really falls into the sweet spot of upper middle grade/younger YA!
disclaimer: review copy received from the author
4/25/23
The McNeills at Rathcapple, by Meta Mayne Reid, for Timeslip Tuesday
When we meet Sandy and Richard, they are living in rented rooms in a city in Northern Ireland without their beloved dog and their slightly less beloved cat while their father searches for a new job (he's a historian) and recovers from being ill. They have an uncle, holed up in the family's ancestral home, Rathcapple, but there was family unpleasantness, and they've never met him. But the uncle is getting old, and their mother decides that they shall foist themselves on him, and live in a few rooms of to the side, until their father is better and has a solid job. The uncle is not welcoming, but doesn't forbid this, as long as his work on his book about local history and nature isn't disturbed.
Sandy and Richard are delighted to be in the country, with their pets. The old, ruined fortification, the rath that the house is named for, is a thrilling place, and there they meet a young horseman, Angus, who seems almost magical. They are determined to make their uncle want them to stay by helping him find the last bits of information he needs for the book--the story of the fiddler who played a role in a long-ago Irish rising against the English, and the story of a young nursemaid to the McNeills accused of stealing a family treasure.
And this is where the time travel comes in (if you don't want spoilers, skip to the next paragraph) --Richard visits the fiddler, and inhabits the Mcneill boy his own age fleeing for his life, and Sandy in her turn lives the crucial day of the young nursemaid's life. But though they know what really truly happened, they have to find proof, and their quest to find corroborating evidence through material remains and historical documents was as interesting to me as the time travel itself. They are encouraged in their efforts by the horseman, Angus, who is himself unmoored in time and who I assume is the instigator of their time slipping...
There are more quotidian doings and happenings of the sort you'd expect from two kids moved to an old house in the country, and this was very enjoyable as well. There is, for instance, a lovely pageant that is quite amusing, jam making, exploration of the countryside, and shenanigans with a local boy who becomes their friend (one such episode is shown on the cover, which I find an odd choice, when the illustrator had the big old house and the ruined rath and the heroic figure of Angus on his magnificent horse on hand; perhaps "boy riding cattle, seen from behind" seemed more Exciting and Likely to Appeal to Boys....).
It didn't quite reach the numinous heights I wished it would have, possibly because there wasn't quite enough emotional tension, but it came close, and I am pleased that there is a second book about the family for me to look forward to.
4/23/23
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (4/23/2023)
My reading this week was grown up books for book clubs and work, so nothing from me. But happily there's lots from others! Let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Breath of Mischief, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Cracking the Cover
The Chestnut Roaster, by Eve McDonnell, at Valinora Troy
Come See the Fair, by Gavriel Savit Cracking the Cover
Dylan Dover: Into the Vortex by Lynne Howard - Chick Lit Cafe
Eden’s Everdark, by Karen Strong, at Kiss the Book
Evil Genius (The Smartest Kid in the Universe #3), by Chris Grabenstein, at Mark My Words
Felice and the Wailing Woman, by Diana Lopez, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Finch House, by Ciera Burch, at Mark My Words
Ghosts of Rancho Espanto, by Adrianna Cuevas, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Guardian Test, by Christina Soontornvat, at Pages Unbound
Loki: A Bad God’s Guide to Taking the Blame, by Louie Stowell, at Twirling Book Princess
Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy, by Angie Thomas, at Kiss the Book and Paw Prints in the Sink
Nura and The Immortal Palace, by M. T. Khan, at YA Books Central
The Rage of the Sea Witch, by Roland Chambers, at Scope for Imagination
The Rescue of Ravenwood, by Natasha Farrant, at Book Craic
Serpent of the Sands, by Vashti Hardy, at Scope for Imagination
The Silver Road, by Sinéad O’Hart, at Book Craic
A Storm of Wishes, by Jaqueline West, at Puss Reboots
Tales of the Forgotten Founders (The Falinnheim Chronicles #3), by C.W. Allen, at Mark My Words
Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti, at A Library Mama
The Wherewood, by Gabrielle Prendergast, at Young Adulting
Two at Ms. Yingling Reads-- A Spoonful of Time, by Flora Ahn, and Shinji Takahashi: Into the Heart of the Storm, by Julie Kagawa
Authors and Interviews
Andy Ruffell (Lily Grim and The City of Undone) Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
P. Djèlí Clark (Abeni’s Song) at Fuse #8
Other Good Stuff
Myth and Middle Grade (publishersweekly.com)
4/16/23
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (4/16/2023)
Dead Alley, by S. A. Larsen, at Always in the Middle…
Elf Dog and Owl Head, by M. T. Anderson, at Charlotte's Library, BookPage, YA Books Central
The Enchanted Life of Valentina Mejía, by Alexandra Alessandri, at Pages Unbound
Greenwild: The World Behind The Door, by Pari Thomson, at Scope for Imagination
I Am the Walrus, by Neal Shusterman & Eric Elfman, at The Bookwyrm's Den
The Labyrinth of Doom, by Stuart Gibbs, at Lucy Knows Things
Miracles for the Maharaja, by Aditi Krishnakumar, at Books Teacup and Reviews
Miss Mary-Kate Martin's Guide to Monsters: The Trouble with the Two-Headed Hydra, by Karen Foxlee, at Kids' Book Review
Nura and the Immortal Palace, by M.T. Khan, at Little Bookish Teacher (YouTube)
Once There Was, by Kiyash Monsef, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Piper’s Promise, by Leah Cypess, at Kiss the Book
Stink, written and illustrated by Jenny McLachlan, at Book Craic
Summer in Orcus, by T. Kingfisher, at Tor.com
Tiger Warrior: Rise of the Lion Beast, by M. Chan illustrated by Alan Brown, at Log Cabin Library
The Unforgettable Logan Foster and the Shadow of Doubt, by Shawn Peters, PamelaKramer.com
Unicorn Island – Beyond the Portal, at Always in the Middle… and The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
Wendington Jones and the Missing Tree, by Daniel Dockery, at Book Craic
Winnie Zeng Vanquishes a King (Winnie Zeng #2), by Katie Zhao, ar Courtney Reads Romance
Authors and Interviews
P. Djèlí Clark (Abeni’s Song), at School Library Journal
M.T. Anderson (Elf Dog and Owl Head) at Writer's Digest and Kirkus ReviewsYarrow and Carrie Cheney (Superworld: Save Noah) at Middle Grade Ninja
Other Good Stuff
New in the UK, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books -
4/13/23
Elf Dog and Owl Head, by M. T. Anderson
Elf Dog and Owl Head, by M. T. Anderson, illustrated by Junyi Wu (April 11, 2023, Candlewick), is a truly delightful middle grade fantasy, especially for those who love dogs (but even cat lovers, like me, will still appreciate the titular dog lots!)
4/9/23
This week's round-up of middle grade sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (4/9/23)
Happy Easter, Ramadan Mubarak, Happy Pesach, and Happy Spring! May your daffodils be free from girls' heads, becuase who wants that.
Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Artemis Spark & the Sound Seekers Brigade, by Kimberly Behre Kenna, at Valinora Troy
The Deadlands: Hunted, by Skye Melki-Wegner, at Mark My Words
Elidor, by Alan Garner, at Pages Unbound
The Frights of Fiji (Alyssa McCarthy’s Magical Missions, #1), by Sunayna Prasad, at Boys' Mom Reads!
Ghosts, Toast, and Other Hazards, by Susan Tan, at Mark My Words
The Great Fox Heist, by Justyn Edwards, at Scope for Imagination
Hamra and the Jungle of Memories by Hanna Alkaf, at The Story Sanctuary and The StoryGraph
I Am the Walrus (N.O.A.H. Files #1), by Neal Shusterman and Eric Elfman, at Mark My Words
Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy, by Angie Thomast, at The New York Times, Always in the Middle… , BookPage, glorious reads, and Ms. Yingling Reads
Once There Was, by Kiyash Monsef, at YA Books Central
A Rover’s Story, by Jasmine Warga, at PBC's Book Reviews
The School Between Winter and Fairyland, by Heather Fawcett, at Dead Houseplants
Skyriders (Skyriders #1), by Polly Holyoke, at The Plain-Spoken Pen
The Sister Switch, by Debbie Rigaud and Sarah Mlynowski, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Speculation, by Nisi Shawl, at Charlotte's Library
Spellstone by Ross Montgomery, at Book Craic
Windy City Ruins (Talisman, Book 3) by Brett Salter, at Baroness' Book Trove
Wendington Jones and the Missing Tree, by Daniel Dockery, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Wildsmith: City of Secrets, by Liz Flanagan, illustrated by Joe Todd-Stanton, at Book Craic
Authors and Interviews
Kiyash Monsef (Once There Was), at Fuse #8
Shawn Peters (Logan Foster and the Shadow of Doubt) at MG Book Village
Other Good Stuff
A great LGBTQ+ Middle Grade Fantasy Book List, at alibrarymama
4/8/23
Speculation, by Nisi Shawl
I fell hard for Winna, the young heroine, who when we first meet her is reading Edward Eager, a favorite fantasy author of my own youth, and dreaming of magic. I thought how very nice but odd it was to see a contemporary character reading vintage books, and it wasn't until it was spelled out for the reader that this was 1962 that I realized I was reading a historical fantasy. Indeed I also had been struck by Winna's grandfather using the term "colored" in relation to the family, who are Black, but being engrossed I didn't stop to think about it. But in any event, I knew I'd enjoy spending time with her, and I did.
Winna and her little sister are at their grandparent's house while their mother is in the hospital. When her sister breaks her glasses (by accident), Winna is crushed; new glasses are both expensive and inaccessible. So her grandfather gives her a pair that belonged to her great aunt Estelle. The glasses make her vision even sharper than her old ones, and there's a glimmer to what she sees...and so on the off chance that it's magic, she speculates-what if they show her ghosts? And they do. Generations of ghosts, including Estelle, haunt the family cemetery.
Winna learns from Estelle's ghost about the curse on her family. Winona, Estelle's mother, escaped slavery and while still moving toward freedom, gave birth to a baby boy, Key. But Key vanished, or was taken from her, and Winona's grief stayed with her all her life. So much so that when dying she unintentionally cursed her family, a curse that can only be broken if she and Key can be reunited.
Winna is sure her mother, getting worse in the hospital, is a victim of the curse. So joining forces with a boy cousin she can't stand, she sets out to solve the mystery of what happened to Key.....and if he's still alive, to bring him back to the family.
It's a great story, full of dualities that balance each other beautifully-- past and present, magic and reality, the loving family and the racist world. I loved the historical and genealogical research that Winna and her cousin undertake, I loved how the magic wasn't just seeing ghosts with magical glasses but was aided and abetted by Winna's grandfather's affinity for African infused magic (for lack of a better word) of his own. And of course I hated the racism that Winna and her family face, and hated too that this part of the book didn't read as much like historical fiction as it should.,
4/2/23
This week's roundup of mg sci fi and fantasy from around the blogs (4/2/23)
Happy April to all! Here's what I found this week; please let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Amari and the Great Game, by B.B. Alston, at The Book Nut
Beyond the Portal (Unicorn Island book 3), by Donna Galanti, at Bookworm for Kids and Charlotte's Library
A Breath of Mischief, by MarcyKate Connolly, at Kiss the Book
The Enchanted Bridge, by Zetta Elliott and Cherise Harris, at Puss RebootsHappily Ever After, by James Riley, at Bookworm for Kids
The Raven Heir, by Stephanie Burgis, at Tor
Magestone (Gemfall Book One), by David Burleyson, at Mark My Words
The Magician's Elephant, by Kate DeCamillo, at Rosi Hollinbeck
Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind, by Misa Sugiura, at Little Blog of Library Treasures
The NoWhere Thief, by Alice M. Ross, at Valinora Troy and Scope for Imagination
Pilar Ramirez and the Escape From Zafa, by Julian Randall, at Readgab (YouTube)Winnie Zeng Vanquishes a King, by Katie Zhao, at Mark My Words
Winter’s Keep & the Weather Weaver series by Tamsin Mori, at Scope for Imagination
Woodwitch, by Skye McKenna, at Library Girl and Book Boy and A Cat, A Book, and A Cup of Tea
Authors and Interviews
Joshua Levy (Last Summer In Outer Space) at MG Book Village
Heather Fawcett (The Grace of Wild Things) at OwlCrate
Other Good Stuff
A booklist of MG thrills and chills, at From The Mixed Up Files
I'm not sure if this is actually middle grade, but it is certainly of interest-- And Put Away Childish Things by Adrian Tchaikovsky, at Fantasy Book Critic
Pixar’s Elemental Feature Will Include New Up Short Called “Carl’s Date” | Tor.com
3/30/23
Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti
Discovering Unicorn Island, a sanctuary for magical creatures, and learning the father she'd never met before was its caretaker was just the start of Sam's adventures. In this final book, she's determined to find her biological mom, who vanished through a portal into the land that was the unicorns original home, a place where they were hunted almost to extinction. Her best friends, Tuck, and a young unicorn, Barloc, go with her. They have only a narrow window to find Sam's mother....and when they discover, to their horror, that unicorn hunting is still being practiced, and Barloc is captured, things become very tense indeed! And then Sam finds that her mother is the community unicorn hunter, who takes their horns from them, and all her hopes for bringing this stranger back into her life are upended.
But things aren't black and white. The community needs the magic of the unicorn horns to survive; they aren't just hunting them for fun. She can't let Barloc be robbed of his magic, but she wants to help the townsfolk too....fortunately, with a little luck, lots of determination, and unicorn magic, she and her friends find a way to save not only the town but the de-horned unicorns.
It's not a deeply complex story, as expected, but it is a satisfying and memorable one, full of unicorn goodness, an interesting ethical dilemma, and the mending of a family. The full color illustrations add to the charm.
disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher
3/26/23
This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (3/26/23)
Here's what I found this week, please let me know if I missed your post!
The Reviews
The Dark and Dangerous Gifts of Delores Mackenzie, by Yvonne Banham, at Book Craic
The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic, at Charlotte's LibraryFablehouse, by Emma Norry, at Scope for Imagination
Hide or Seek (The Superpower Protection Program) by Dan DiDio, at Mark My Words
The Last Saxon King, by Andrew Varga, at Karen Werkema on Instagram
Lucha of the Night Forest, by Tehlor Kay Mejia, ar Confessions of a YA Reader and Subjectify Media.
Maggie and the Mountain of Light, by Mark Snoad, at The Children's Book Review
Minecraft Legends: Return of the Piglins, by Matt Forbeck, at Ms. Yingling Reads
Nic Blake and the Remarkables, by Angie Thomas, at Book Page
Olivia and the Gentleman From Outer Space, by Moses Yuriyvich Mikheyev, at Mark My Words
The Rabbit's Gift, by Jessica Vitalis, at Log Cabin Library
SuperQuesters: The Case of the Missing Memory, by Thomas Bernard and Lisa Moss,at Scope for Imagination
The Super Secret Monster Experiment, by Tian En, at Popthebutterfly ReadsThe Superteacher Project, by Gordon Korman, at Geo Librarian.
Thunderbird, Book 1, by Sonia Nimr, at Islamic School LibrarianWhat Stays Buried, by Suzanne Young, at Utopia State of Mind
Two at Feed Your Fiction Addiction--The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, and Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind by Misa Sugiura
Authors and Interviews
Alice M. Ross (The Nowhere Thief) at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Other Good Stuff
I missed this when it was first announced, so here you are-- 2022 Aurealis Awards Shortlist Announcement (lots of enticing Mg!)
"10 Middle Grade Books Featuring a Magic School" at The Story Sanctuary
3/22/23
The Extraordinary Curiosities of Ixworth and Maddox, by J.D. Grolic
Like I said, I enjoyed this. I very much like interesting fantasy shops, and though some readers might find the first half of the book slow, I loved being introduced gently, with lots of details, to what the shop was selling and the workings of the magical city. And then when things got going plot wise, and there was a mystery to solve and bad people and dangerous magic to foil, I enjoyed that too. Chloe has both believable agency and believable emotional reactions.
3/21/23
Llama Rocks the Cradle of Chaos, by Jonathan Stutzman, for Timeslip Tuesday
A fun picture book for today's Timeslip Tuesday, as my brain is somewhat fried. Llama Rocks the Cradle of Chaos, by Jonathan Stutzman, illustrated by Heather Fox (July 22, 2022, Henry Holt). This is the third adventure of the titular llama, but happily I am a strong enough reader that I was able to plunge right in.
Llama is a creature of many interests. Chief among them is eating delicious baked goods, especially donuts. When his birthday donut proves to be the most delicious thing he's ever eaten, the sadness of not being able to eat it again overwhelms him. Fortunately, the time travelling pants he has on hand can solve the problem! And so he sets off to the past to be reunited with the donut....unfortunately, without reading the instructions....
And things go haywire, ending up with Llama, his younger self, and a whole bunch of other creatures brought along by mistake in Llama's house, which is getting wrecked....All ends well though, and more treats are eaten.
It is a bright and cheerful romp, a good introduction for the very young to the central question of time travel--the peril of changing the past! Interestingly, some reviewers on Goodreads seem to have found the time travel confusing, but I do not think children will have this problem, because of course if you have time travel pants (or a time travel diaper, as Baby Llama has), you can travel through time and of course things can get mixed up.....and of course if you are reading, as I have done, time travel books where the time travel gets confusing, the only thing to do is shrug and role with it because otherwise your head hurts. This did not make my head hurt, and Bably Llama was adorable.
3/19/23
This week's round up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (3/19/23)
Sorry I didn't have my act together last Sunday, but here's what I found this past week! Let me know if I missed anything.
The Reviews
The Battle for Verdana (Talisman 4), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words
Carnival Quest (Candy Shop War #3), by Brandon Mull, at Kiss the Book and Ms. Yingling Reads
Dead Alley: A Motley Education Book, by S.A. Larsen, at Log Cabin Library
Desperate Tides, Desperate Measures (Talisman 5), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words
The Guardian of Whispers, by B. E. Padgett, at Literary Potpourri
Illuminations, by T. Kingfisher, at Locus Online and Escape Reality, Read Fiction!
In the Heart of the Linden Wood, by Ekta R. Garg, at Independent Book Review
Kelcie Murphy and the Academy for the Unbreakable Arts, by Erika Lewis, at Pages Unbound
Legends of Lotus Island: The Guardian Test, by Christina Soontornvat, at PBC's Book Reviews and| Children's Books Heal
May's Moon: Fortis Mission, by S.Y. Palmer, at Bookworm for Kids
Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy, by Angie Thomas, at Log Cabin Library
The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Smack Dab in the Middle
Princess of the Wild Sea, by Megan Frazer Blakemore, at Redeemed Reader
Ring of Solomon by Aden Polydoros, at Books and Such
The Shimmer (Kingdom Keepers Inheritance #1), by Ridley Pearson, at Carstairs Considers
Skyriders, by Polly Holyoke, at Cracking the Cover
Ten Percent Magic, by Gina Zapanta-Alder & Michael Alder, at Mark My Words
Thunderbird: Book Two, by Sonia Nimr, at Charlotte's Library
Tourmaline and the Island of Elsewhere, by Ruth Lauren, at Book Craic
Wilder, by Penny Chrimes, at Magic Fiction Since Potter
Two at The Breadcrumb Forest--Spellstone by Ross Montgomery, and Onyeka: Rise of the Rebels by Tolá Okogwu
Authors and Interviews
Anna Brooke (Monster Bogey), at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
Cindy Callaghan (Just Add Magic) at Middle Grade Ninja
Dianne K. Salerni (The Carrefour Curse ) at From The Mixed Up Files
Other Good Stuff
The 2023 Unicorn Report at 100 Scope Notes
35 Incredible Middle Grade Magical Realism Books at Imagination Soup
3/14/23
Thunderbird: Book Two, by Sonia Nimr, for Timeslipe Tuesday
Noor arrives outside of the 12th century Jerusalem dazed and confused. Almost immediately she is captured and taken, blindfolded, to the secret home of the resistance to the Crusaders who have seized the city, who think she might be a spy. Fortunately they believe her story when she finally brings herself to try to tell the truth (made more convincing by her talking cat comrade). Her own quest of the phoenix feather gets slightly derailed when she throws herself into the plans of the resistance to humiliate the crusader overlord, and save the precious library that he plans to burn.
It is a lovely mix of the magical (the boundaries between our world and the supernatural world are starting to slip....) and the historical; very satisfying both as middle grade time travel and as plucky girl adventure! It's a fairly short, tightly written book, with humor alongside of tension and heartfelt emotion, and it's a vivid portrayal of this particular moment in time. Of course "let's save the precious library!" is a plot I am always there for, and fortunately I wasn't kept in too much desperate tension....
I am very much looking forward to volume 3, which sadly isn't out right now.....
3/7/23
The Dollhouse, by Caris Cotter, for Timeslip Tuesday
This week's Timeslip Tuesday is The Dollhouse: A Ghost Story, by Caris Cotter...and I havered a bit about whether this was timeslip or, as the title would suggest, a ghost story, but I decided it counted as the former...
3/5/23
This week's round up of middle grade sci fi and fantsy from around the blogs (3/5/23)
Good morning from Rhode Island, where the sun is melting the winter ick of yesterday! Here's what I found this week; let me know if I missed your post.
The Reviews
Alex Neptune, Pirate Hunter, by David Owen, at Vicky's Never Ending TBR and Book Craic
Amari and the Night Brothers, by B.B. Alston, at The Book Nut
Aviva vs. the Dybbuk, by Mari Lowe, at Kiss the Book
Black Bird, Blue Road, by Sofiya Pasternack, at Kiss the Book
Claire and the Dragons, by Wander Antunes, at Pages Unbound
Disconnected, by Riley Cross, at Bookworm for Kids
Elf Dog & Owl Head, by M.T. Anderson, at Mark My Words
The Frost Fair, by Natasha Hastings, at YA Books Central
The Gathering by Dan Poblocki, at Puss Reboots
Haven: A Small Cat’s Big Adventure, by Megan Wagner Lloyd, at Rosi Hollinbeck
The Last Mapmaker, by Christina Soontornvat, at Kiss the Book
The Magician's Elephant Movie tie-in, by Kate DiCamillo and illustrations by Yoko Tanaka, at Log Cabin Library
The Moth Keeper, by K. O'Neill, ar Sharon the Librarian
The Nowhere Thief, by Alice M. Ross, at Book Craic
Nura and The Immortal Palace, by M. T. Khan, at YA Books Central
The Ogress and the Orphans, by Kelly Barnhill, at Pages Unbound
Riders of Fire and Ice (Talisman 2), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words
The Secrets of the Stormforest, by L D Lapinski, at Rapunzel Reads
Tourney of Terror (D&D: Dungeon Academy #2), by Madeleine Roux, at Mark My Words:
Unicorn Island: Beyond the Portal, by Donna Galanti, illustrations by Bethany Stancliffe. at Log Cabin Library
Two at Dead Houseplants: Fenris and Mott, by Greg Van Eekhout, and Freddie vs the Family Curse, by Tracy Badua
Five mini reviews at A Cat, A Book, and A Cup of Tea: The Nowhere Thief, by Alice M Ross, Yesterday Crumb and the Teapot of Chaos by Andy Sagar, Tourmaline and the Island of Elsewhere, by Ruth Lauren, The Time Tider, by Sinéad O’Hart, and Wildsmith: Into the Dark Forest, by Liz Flanagan
Authors and Interviews
Russell Ginns (1-2-3 SCREAM) at Middle Grade Ninja
Gill Lewis (Moonflight) at Library Girl and Book Boy
Peter Bunzl (Dragonracers) at Scope for Imagination
Other Good Stuff
One of my favorite regular posts to read-Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books - Children's Book Picks UK - March 2023
9 Books Inspired by The Magician's Elephant, at Literacious
The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival Enters Its 12th Year. (slj.com)
Katie (aka alibrarymama), whose recommendations have never failed to please me, shares her 2022 in Review
2/28/23
The Fantastic Dinosaur Adventure, by Gerald Durrell, for Timeslip Tuesday
2/26/23
This week's round-up of Midde Grade Sci Fi and Fantasy from around the blogs (2/26/23)
Happy (almost) end of February! Here's what I found this week; let me know if I missed your post.
Reviews
The Adventures of the Flash Gang: Episode 1: Exploding Experiment, by M.M. Downing & S.J. Waugh, at Mark My Words
The BigWoof Conspiracy, by Dashe Roberts, at Twirling Book Princess
The Carrefour Curse, by Dianne K. Salerni, at Charlotte's Library
Children of the Quicksands, by Efua Tratore, at Dead Houseplants
Deadlands: Hunted, by Skye Melki-Wegner, at Geolibrarian
Desert Creatures, by Kay Chronister, at Mouse Reads
The Edge of the Ocean, by L.D. Lapinski, at Charlotte, Somewhere
Fear Ground, by Jennifer Killick, at Sifa Elizabeth Reads
Field Guide to the Supernatural Universe by Alyson Noel, at Kiss the Book
The Girl from Earth's End, by Tara Dairman, at Log Cabin Library
Into the Faerie Hill, by H S Norup, at Through the Bookshelf
Like a Curse, and Like a Charm, by Elle McNicoll, at Magic Fiction Since Potter:
No One Leaves the Castle, by Christopher Healy, at Pages Unbound
The Nowhere Thief, by Alice M. Ross, at Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books
One Giant Leap, by Ben Gartner, at Ms. Yingling Reads
The Rescue of Ravenwood, by Natasha Farrant, at Book Craic
The Search for Synergy (Talisman 1), by Brett Salter, at Mark My Words:
The Town with No Mirrors, by Christina Collins, Ms. Yingling Reads
The Worlds We Leave Behind, by A.F. Harrold, at Cracking the Cover
Authors and Interviews
"Rick Riordan previews Percy Jackson and Chalice of the Gods" at EW.com
Lindsay Currie ((It Found Us) at Middle Grade Ninja
Payal Doshi (Rea and the Blood of the Nectar) Middle-Grade Craft: Insights -- From The Mixed Up Files
Other Good Stuff
Watch the Trailer for The Magician’s Elephant at 100 Scopenotes
2/21/23
The Carrefour Curse, by Dianne K. Salerni, for Timeslip Tuesday
Take an old family house, full of secrets, most of them disturbing, some downright horrific.
Populate this house with an extended family who have elemental magic gifts, some powerful, some pleasant, and (again) some horrific. (lots of twists and turns to appreciate!)
Send a girl, Garnet, to the house, who has never been there before, as her mother wanted to raise her away from all the trauma she herself had experienced there.
Trap Garnet, along with all the other family members, inside this magic filled house, until the house choses which of them should be the new head of the family.
And then add time travel, and journey along with Garnet through the whole magical, twisted story of the Carrefours past and present as she not only discovers hidden truths, but sets things right that had gone horribly wrong...with the help of time travelling....
The result is a beautifully gripping middle grade fantasy, full of memorable characters, mysteries, and intriguing magic!
The time travelling came as a pleasant surprise, and provided Garnet with key pieces of information that she was able to piece together to figure out how choices made in the past had shaped the confusing and dangerous present she found herself in. She goes both to her own mother's past as a teenager, but further back down her family's history as well. Almost trapped in a hideous magical work of an ancestor a few generations back, she's able, with help from another time travelling ancestor, to break the abominable magical working and set the house and its family on a more wholesome track. It all builds gradually and inexorably up to a final climax that turns into a very satisfactory ending!
Highly recommended--there's enough horror for the young horror fans, enough fantastical detail for the fantasy lovers, and enough non-fantastical family dynamics and mystery for readers who aren't quite either of the above.