Hereville: How Mirka Met a Meteorite

I really loved Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword when it first came out, so I don’t know why I hadn’t read this one, or even shared the first with my son. Still, it was the most familiar title I hadn’t read on the Cybils Middle Grade Graphic Novel shortlist, and one I was sure he would enjoy, so it’s the first one I turned to when we needed a new book to read together.

Hereville: How Mirka Met a MeteoriteHereville: How Mirka Met a Meteorite by Barry Deutsch Amulet Books, 2012.
11-year-old Mirka is a child somewhere in the middle of a large, blended Orthodox Jewish family located somewhere in the United States. In the first book, she defeated a troll and won a sword for herself, though the troll is still keeping it for her as she doesn’t have a place to store a sword in her shared bedroom. And she’s spending way more time in that bedroom than an active girl can really stomach, as she’s still grounded from her stepmother finding out that she was talking to the local witch. Knitting is growing old, her stepmother can beat her at chess way too easily… when she’s finally allowed to go outside, the first thing Mirka does is run to the troll to get her sword so she can wave it around in the air dramatically.

Trolls are tricky creatures, though, and this visit ends with a meteorite hurtling straight towards Hereville. I especially admired Deutsch’s use of panels as Mirka is running as fast as she can to the witch, the only person she can think of who might be able to stop the meteorite in time. Rows of tiny panels, each frame filled with her running and her frantic thoughts, are covered over by a bigger drawing of her still running. Spoiler alert: Mirka makes it in time. Hereville is saved. But the result is still a mess that completely derails Mirka’s life and forces her to take a very close look at who she really is and what’s important to her in her life. Like, maybe looking neater and prettier and being better at school and sports aren’t really as important as she’s always thought they were.

This reflection comes out of a very funny, action-filled story, though, and never feels preachy. Mirka is still completely lovably headstrong, prone to getting herself into scrapes that take a good deal of effort to get herself out of. In addition to the fun story with heart, I loved that Mirka (despite how much she loves her sword) actually manages once again to solve her problems without violence. I haven’t seen too many children’s books starring Orthodox Jews, and fantasy books featuring conservative religious people of any mainstream, real Earth religion are pretty thin on the ground, so this is welcome for its diversity on top on being just a plain good story. Deutsch, as I mentioned, does great things with the deceptively simple-looking art. The boy pushed me to finish reading this to him in just two sessions, because it was too exciting to stop. For Cybils consideration, though – now that I’ve read this and March – how do you choose between a brave and inspiring fantasy girl and a brave and inspiring real-life Civil Rights activist turned senator?

Posted in books | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

January Armchair Cybils Round-Up

armchaircybilsI’ve had slightly more than two weeks in which to track down and read all the shortlisted Cybils titles that I hadn’t read, 25 books in the categories I was most focused on. I had grand plans, and thought I’d at least be able to read all the picture books by today.

Yeah, right. All the picture books on the shortlist were already checked out at the library, so while I’ve put them on hold (and requested the one title we didn’t yet have), none of them have come in for me yet. My library shelf at home is still crowded with the nominated titles I’d checked out before Christmas, most of which sound interesting even if they didn’t make it to the shortlist, and a few adult titles I requested have started coming in, too. Clearly, I need to give up everything in my life that isn’t reading or writing reviews for the next couple of weeks so that I can catch up. That will work, right?

Anyway, here’s what I’ve read since December 15:
Short-listed titles:
Rose by Holly Webb (middle grade speculative)
Hereville: How Mirka Met a Meteorite by Barry Deutsch (mg graphic novel)
Sidekicked by John David Anderson (halfway through, mg speculative)

Nominated

Middle Grade Speculative Fiction
Fortunately, the Milk by Neil Gaiman. Illustrated by Skottie Young.
Summerkin by Sarah Prineas.
Magic Marks the Spot. The Very Nearly Honorable League of Pirates Book 1. by Caroline Carlson. Illustrations by Dave Phillips.
Doll Bones by Holly Black. Illustrations by Eliza Wheeler.
How to Catch a Bogle. by Catherine Jinks. Illustrated by Sarah Watts.
hokey pokey by Jerry Spinelli.

Middle Grade Graphic Novels
Astronaut Academy: Re-Entry by Dave Roman.
Battling Boy Vol. 1 by Paul Pope.

Picture Books
Alphabet Trucks by Samantha R. Vamos. Illustrated by Ryan O’Rourke.

So far, all of the shortlisted titles I’ve read have been fantastic, which is really what I expect. You want to read a fantastic kids’ or teen book in any given category – just go find the Cybils shortlists. I’ve already passed these lists on to the appropriate librarians at work, so they can fill in the few titles on the lists they hadn’t already bought.

In the nominated sff books, Hokey Pokey was the most disappointing – it was an interesting if trippy idea, but then he pulled the classically horrible “and it was all just a dream” thing at the end and ruined it. Fortunately, the Milk is cool, but all about the dad, and really, I want the kids to have more agency in a kids’ story. I really enjoyed all the other books in that category, and hope to have full reviews of them soon so I can discuss them in more depth.

I’ve already mentioned that my son and I both loved Astronaut Academy (both this year’s Re-Entry and last year’s Zero Gravity. The boy liked Battling Boy just fine, but my love and I couldn’t really see what all the fuss was about. And Alphabet Trucks is a fabulous book for truck-loving preschooler, with a truck for each letter of the alphabet that never felt like it was a stretch – but as neither of my kids were into trucks, it wasn’t a hit at my house.

For the next month, I have Monster on a Hill checked out to read with my son, as the shortlisted middle grade graphic novel I think he’d be most interested in. I’m in the middle of reading Sidekicked (and listening to Eleanor and Park, reading Save the Dragons and re-reading Shadows, though none of these are Cybils related). At this point, though, given the amount of book back-up at my house, I think I’m going to focus first on the middle grade speculative fiction for reading to me, the mg graphic novels for my reading to the boy, and the picture books (whenever they get in) for reading to the girl. After I’m caught up with those and the other books currently on my shelf, I’ll move on to the teen categories I’m interested in, even if that’s after February 15. But if you have any favorites among those that you’d like to particularly recommend, please let me know!

Posted in books | Tagged | 2 Comments

Rose

TomorrowToday is January Armchair Cybils day, so I’m skipping over 16 (gulp!) books that are patiently waiting for me to share them with you, in the interests of having something to say about books that made it to the Cybils shortlists. armchaircybils

The girl and I had another unexpected hospital getaway this weekend (she’s bounced back just fine). My new book of short stories (Queen Victoria’s Book of Spells, with thanks to Colleen at Chasing Ray for the recommendation and my mother for giving it to me) sadly fell out of the hospital bag in the closet and didn’t make it. Happily, I tucked this one from the library in. It made perfect distraction reading!

RoseRose by Holly Webb. Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, 2013.
London, early 20th century. Rose is an orphan, poetically named for the rose bush in the garden of St. Bridget’s Home for Abandoned Girls under which she was found. She’s happy enough there, but dreams of the chance to earn her own living, and so is thrilled when she’s hired as an under-maid at the house of alchemist Mr. Fountain. There was no magic at St. Bridget’s, so living in a household that deals with magic is an education. The staff is all very respectful of Mr. Fountain, whose ability to make gold pays very well indeed. But they are also terrified and distrustful of magic, and terrorized by Mr. Fountain’s seven-year-old daughter, Isabella, who loves to use her budding magical abilities to play practical jokes.

Just as Rose so desperately wants to try to fit in below stairs, she finds that she has magical skills of her own. And when her best friend from the orphanage is just one of a string of missing children, it’s up to Rose, with help from Mr. Fountain’s apprentice and talking cat, to find a way to save them.

I’d heard lots about this book, and it lives up to expectations. Rose is such a perfectly likeable character, so focused on her modest goals, plucky and loyal – I found her irresistible. I always like a good historical fantasy, too, and the trip below stairs reminded me of the “Upstairs, Downstairs” novels I used to read as a child. I know “Downton Abbey” is more popular these days, but I’ve yet to see it – and in any case, this is much more suitable for children. There are tense moments and close calls with moderate violence – one child almost dies, though we see her afterwards – but nothing else questionable. I’d say it’s perfect for younger middle grade readers and up. Even though Rose is a girl, there’s nothing overtly girly in her struggle to find her way in the world, so that it should work equally well for boys and girls.

This is up against some stiff competition in the Middle Grade Speculative Fiction (formerly known as Middle Grade Science Fiction and Fantasy) category. It’s probably a good thing that I’m not one of the final-round judges, as I find it very hard to pick the better book between this, The Rithmatist and Jinx.

Posted in books | Tagged , , | 12 Comments

2013 in Review

I guess January is just always busy at the library, because I just spent some time putting together some statistics of the books I reviewed last year, and noticed that I had only six posts last January, too.

But for right now, I will say that I reviewed 188 books last year, up from 122 in 2012, with 159 posts. I don’t know how many books I read, as I didn’t count the books I read but didn’t review. And some year maybe I’ll be coordinated to track diversity in my reading (by gender and ethnicity of author and such), but this was not the year.
Here’s a look at the kinds of books I reviewed:
blogpie2013
I’d wanted to do more middle grade, and I think I did. The Armchair Cybils, I think, pushed my picture book reviewing way up.
I also participated in lots of new things this year: the Kid Lit Blog Hop, the 48-Hour Book Challenge, Audiobook Week, the Armchair Cybils, and Top Ten Tuesdays. I hosted my first author interviews, and participated in giveaways and blog tours for the first time. It’s been fun getting to know so many great authors and fellow bloggers!

I want to put in parts about Favorite Books of 2013 and Goals for 2014 – but I think that will have to wait for another day.

Posted in Blog | 5 Comments

Shadows

Finally, a post! And even though I want to do a nice 2013 retrospective post, I feel that it’s been long enough since I’ve posted an actual review that I should do so. Skipping over many other books, I’ll turn to the book on the Cybils Young Adult Speculative Fiction shortlist that I’ve read and not yet reviewed.

ShadowsShadows by Robin McKinley. Nancy Paulsen-Penguin Books, 2013.

Robin McKinley is one of my very top, all-time favorite authors [link to an old post about her, from when I was still posting on LiveJournal]. I was feeling impatient when I didn’t get this for my birthday, so I borrowed it from the library and read it. I was a little sad, thinking that maybe nobody would since my little brother is no longer around to give them to me. But my love gave it to me for Christmas and I started reading it again right away. I’m not sure I can be totally rational an author whose books I’ve been in love with since I was 8 or 10, but I will try.

Maggie has pulled life together after her father’s death, relying on her mother and brother, her best friends Jill and Takahiro, as well as her dog, Mongo, and her job at the local animal shelter. But now, going into her senior year in high school, things are falling apart. Takahiro hasn’t been quite the same for a while, often too busy with his gizmohead friends to pay attention to her. But worst of all, her mother has married Val. And not only does Val have a complete lack of fashion sense and a dorky Old World accent, he has too many shadows. Lots of shadows. Shadows that move when he doesn’t, and that have too many arms and legs. She can’t stand to be around him, but her mother is in love and Maggie doesn’t have anywhere else to go.

New World and Old World are basically the United States and Europe, but in this world, the most important difference is how they deal with cohesion breaks, or cobeys, when reality just starts to break apart. New World has dealt with it with increasing levels of science: anti-cobey boxes on the corners, programs on pocket phones so anyone who sees something aberrant can send in the coordinates automatically. Also, they’ve tried to genetically erase magic, so that there should be none left in all of New World. Maggie’s never really bought into the whole “you don’t need to know anything about it, just report it and leave it to the experts” mentality, but she’s also deeply uncomfortable with magic. So when things start to go strange around her, she has to re-evaluate the belief system she’s grown up with, including her relationship with her new stepfather.

McKinley uses some popular YA tropes in this book, ones which she hasn’t really used before and which I was quite surprised to see: insta-love, a love triangle, and a prophecy. But not to worry (I was a little at first). McKinley is a pro, turning all of these on their heads. The romance is sweet and genuine, without annoying dithering, and the prophecy is left amorphous and ignored enough that it doesn’t get in the way.

I loved Maggie – and her dog, and her algebra book so much. I love that she has an actual hobby in addition to the shelter job. I approve of crafting hobbies, even if origami is one I’ve never gotten into myself. I like that she’s taught herself Japanese, and mixes in little words in Japanese. There’s interesting adult-teen interplay here: Maggie is stepping into something that the adults have been keeping from her, with very good reason, but I never got the sense either that Maggie and her friends were going to fix everything that the adults hadn’t been able to do right, or that they were just background players to whom the adults would delegate a few tasks.

McKinley has made up her own slang, so while there might be some language that’s foul in that world, there’s nothing that reads as offensive. There’s some kissing and some accidental nudity (not at the same time), and some minor violence. I’d say perfectly safe for teens on up – though many middle grade books have much worse in the way of violence, it has more teen appeal.

I found myself contemplating that McKinley style. Even though Maggie isn’t any of McKinley’s other characters, and this is contemporary setting unlike her high fantasy stories (this last is probably why I’ve been hearing people say fans of Sunshine [link to my first ever blog post, where I did a mini-review] will like it – but it’s much less dark than Sunshine. There’s that way she has where the character is telling her story, a little of now, a little of the past, setting up the world without ever acknowledging that the reader isn’t in the same world. Things are going along interestingly but not necessarily heavy on the action when something small shifts and we’re right in the thick of things and the casual details that were mentioned before turn out to be significant and the character who’s seemed ordinary turns out to have depths and skills and figures out how to use them in time.

It feels like there could be a sequel, but once again, it’s McKinley, so I’m not expecting one. At any rate, it was highly satisfying.

Posted in books | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Cybils Shortlist Reactions

Here, later than expected due to running a long program at the library on Saturday, and epic cold and snow here at home.

armchaircybilsThe Cybils shortlists were announced January first. To be honest, my first reaction looking at the lists that so many panelists worked so hard on was disappointment at how few I’d read. Here’s what I’ve read of Cybils-nominated books for the Armchair Cybils so far:

26 Picture Books
19 MG Speculative Fiction
10 YA Speculative Fiction
9.5 Graphics
1 YA Fiction
1 Easy Reader
1 Poetry
Total: 68.5

Deep breaths – and then I realized that the chances of my picking the right 6 or 7 books from each list out of the hundreds of nominations was pretty slim, especially when I hadn’t volunteered to be a panelist because I knew I couldn’t read that much this year. I read and loved a couple of books that ended up on the shortlists in each of the categories I was looking at. And now I have lists of really great books to turn to for reading in the next couple of weeks (or maybe months, to be a bit more realistic!)

Here’s the category breakdown:
Middle Grade Speculative Fiction Shortlist:
JinxJinx by Sage Blackwood – read and loved. I’m very happy it got so far!
Lockwood & Co.: the Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud – on hold for, and not surprised it’s on the shortlist.
Rose by Holly Webb – currently checked out, but not yet read – I’d had to request that my library purchase it so I could read it. Also not a surprise.
Sidekicked by John David Anderson – Heard of, but hadn’t quite made it to my own reading list until now.
The Rithmatist by Brian Sanderson – I read and loved this one, too!
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp by Kathi Appelt – the title was familiar, but it’s only now that it’s on the shortlist that I’m reading enough about it to want to read it, even though it’s an animal fantasy, which isn’t usually my thing.
The Water Castle by Megan Frazer Blakemore – I’d remembered this as a rare fantasy with a person of color on the cover, but I’m sorry to say that’s as far as I’d gotten with it. Will have to fix this!

Fiction Picture Books
Count the Monkeys by Mac Barnett – I’d just brought this home. My daughter is loving it, and especially wants my son to read it to her (when she’s not reading through it herself. Clever and funny and a big hit here!

This was the only one I’d read with my kids, though I read Sophie’s Squash to myself in the bookstore. All the other books sound great – I think I’d heard most about If You Want to See a Whale and Mr. Tiger Goes Wild. But at least picture books are easy to catch up with!

March. Book One.Middle Grade Graphic Novels
This category went slowly for me, even though there weren’t that many nominated titles, because I was trying to read them all aloud to my son. That makes otherwise quick-reading books go very slowly! So, the only one I’d read was March – definitely well worth the nomination! I was also happy to see the latest volume of Hereville on the list – I loved the first one, and should take this as a nudge to catch up with the series.

I’m sorry, though, that Astronaut Academy: Re-Entry didn’t make the list – we’re in the middle of this right now, and loving it. I’d been seeing Battling Boy on a lot of Best of 2013 lists, and while my son enjoyed it, I have to say that I was underwhelmed. Kudos to the committee for not falling for all the hype around it!

Delilah Dirk and the Turkish LieutenantYoung Adult Graphic Novels
Delilah Dirk and the Turkish Lieutenant by Tony Cliff was great! And I would have been shocked if Boxers and Saints hadn’t made the list, even though I haven’t read it yet. The others look pretty evenly split between fun and depressing to horrific– I’d be most interested to read Bad Machinery and Captain Marvel.

Young Adult Speculative Fiction
Dark Triumph by Robin LaFevers – I’ve been loving this series, and this one was even better than the first one. I’m very glad to see it on this list!
shadowsShadows by Robin McKinley – I’m not sure I’m rational about McKinley, but she’s been a favorite for years. I started reading my Christmas copy of this right away, even though I’d just read it from the library – and re-reading when I’ve got so many new books waiting to be read is a very good sign. I’m glad other people are loving it, too!
William Shakespeare’s Star Wars by Ian Doescher – We have this in adult fiction and I’d bought it for the adult humor collection at my library, so I was a little surprised to see it here. I read just a little of it over my lunch break when it first came in, and have to agree that it’s really well done. Probably even worth checking out properly to finish it!

Those were the only three that I had read at all, leaving me to catch up with Conjured, Pantomime, and The Summer Prince. I think I’ll skip The Waking Dark even if it is fabulous, because horror is just not my thing.

Random Other Categories
Well, ok, I found several books in other categories that I want to read – but I think this post has gone on long enough now, so maybe I’ll save talking about them for a later date.

Posted in books | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Books are the Best Gifts

I’ve been snowbound with squirrelly kids the last few days, so I haven’t had a chance to write up my reactions to the Cybils Shortlist announcements yet… hopefully tomorrow. But go check them out in the meantime – lots and lots of very good books!

Our family Christmas celebrations are (almost) over now, so it’s safe to share what books were given and received here this year. I have a very large number f people to shop for (at least it feels like it), so I like to buy everyone I can books, place an order at my local bookstore, and then go pick it up after they’ve pulled everything for me.

Here’s what the kids got:
holidaybooks131

And here’s what I was given (both for Christmas and my December birthday.)

holidaybooks132

And books given:
My father (not yet given.)
My mother: Spider Woman’s Daughter by Anne Hillerman
3-year-old nephew: Scholastic library builder, including Knuffle Bunny and some other favorites I can’t remember.
1-year-old nephew: Lick by Matthew Van Fleet.

My mother-in-law: the annual Tolkien calendar. (not a book, but from the book store.)
Brother-in-law 2: a recent Robert Ludlum/Eric Van Lustbader book and a Tom Clancy, both on audio as he has a lengthy commute.
His wife: The Longest Ride by Nicholas Sparks.
Sister-in-law: triathalon training book, from her wishlist.
Brother-in-law 3: Feed Zone Portables by Biju K. Thomas, etc.
Niece 1: The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater.
Niece 2: Clockwork Angel by Cassandra Clare.
Niece 3: Ancillary Justice by Anne Leckie.
Nephew 1: V for Vendetta by Alan Moore.
Nephew 2: Freshman in the Kitchen by Max and Eli Sussman.

Goddaughter 1: The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater.
Goddaughter 2: Tuesdays in the Castle by Jessica Day George.

There was some mix-up at the bookstore with a delayed truck and them thinking all of the order had been picked up when it hadn’t… but they were very kind about tracking everything mislaid down for me and finding a couple of substitutions for books that just hadn’t made it in time. And as an extra bonus, they gave me a whole stack of wrapped ARCs, which we then passed out to the people who ran out of gifts first at my love’s family celebration. Yay, books!

What were your favorite books given or received this season?

Posted in books, Personal | Tagged , | 2 Comments

The Bitter Kingdom

And back to reviewing for the Armchair Cybils, as well as following up with my own series reading, with this much-anticipated book.

The Bitter Kingdom
The Bitter Kingdom. Girl of Fire and Thorns Book 3. by Rae Carson. Greenwillow Books, 2013.
At the end of the last book, Crown of Embers, Elisa watched her beloved Hector, captain of her guard, taken hostage by the enemy Inviernes. Now, she sets off with a very small party of unlikely supporters to rescue him: former traitor Belén, Mara, the Invierne underground leader Storm, and a young mixed-race slave girl called Mule.

The journey there is hazardous. Once she gets there, she must get as far as negotiating without her own Godstone betraying her presence. And if she can find and rescue Hector still alive, they must still get back to their own kingdom and wrest it back from the traitors there. All the while, as always, Elisa wonders what her special mission in life is, the one for which she was given the Godstone.

There is so much going on in this book, from various harsh environments, the relationships in the little travel party, Elisa’s still budding romance with Hector, and her coming to terms with her role as queen. Did I say role? Maybe “power” would be a better word, as Elisa reaches for more, out of a desperate need to stabilize the region. And while things aren’t easy by any means, it’s nice to see things working out a little better for Elisa after all the trauma of the previous books.

Notes for gatekeepers: as with the series in general, people die violent deaths in this book, and there is also some sex, described in moderate detail.

I really enjoyed this series as a whole, and I appreciate that Elisa is allowed to fall in love and still be both extra-curvy and in charge. This book felt a little bit choppy, with different missions in different parts of the book, and retrospectively, might go a tiny bit overboard with the Empowering Elisa message. I still believed in Elisa, though, and would recommend this series wholeheartedly to anyone looking for a good coming-of-age political fantasy series on the very specific side, and people looking for powerful stories with strong characters in an interesting setting and compelling action in general.

Posted in books | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Five Favorite Fantasies for Christmas

Merry Christmas, for those who celebrate it! Here, in no particular order, are some old, beloved middle-grade fantasy books for Christmas. All except for Wintersmith are ones that I reread every year as a child.

childrenofgreenknoweChildren of Green Knowe by L.M. Boston. A young boy is sent off to his grandmother’s old manor for Christmas, where he finds the ghosts of children who help him to unravel a gypsy curse.

Father Christmas LettersFather Christmas Letters by J.R.R. Tolkien. These are the letters that Tolkien’s children got from Father Christmas, complete with colored illustrations of Father Christmas, his assistant the North Polar Bear, and the elves and goblins they have adventures with.

darkisrisingThe Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper. The creepily atmospheric story of Will Stanton, who comes into his power as an Old One on his eleventh birthday.

lionThe Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis. Well, all right, spring comes along – but the Father Christmas that the Pevensie children and the Beavers meet here is iconic.

wintersmithWintersmith by Terry Pratchett. It’s maybe not a classic quite yet, and maybe also not properly Christmas… but it certainly suits the season. Young Tiffany Aching, witch in training, accidentally attracts the attention of the Spirit of Winter and has to put things right again.

Posted in books | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

The Planet Thieves

This is one for my Armchair Cybils reading, nominated in the Middle Grade Speculative Fiction category. I picked it up specifically as a boy-oriented book, to keep my reading balanced.

The Planet Thieves The Planet Thieves by Dan Krokos. Tom Doherty Associates, 2013.
Mason is a space cadet, doing some peaceful required space time along with a bunch of other cadets on board the large SS Egypt. His older sister (and only surviving family member) is a junior officer on board, as well. He’s just gotten in trouble for pulling a prank that went a little farther than he’d meant it when the ship is attacked by the Tremist, the aliens whom humans have been fighting for the last 60 years.

In short order, the ship is under Tremist control. They have killed the captain, who is the mother of one of the cadets. Only the cadets and one gravely injured senior officer remain, leaving Mason in command. He is able to wrest control of the ship back from the Tremist – but then things get worse, worse again, and even worse. Then the plot takes a twist that puts a whole new spin on who the Tremist really are.

Planet Earth is in Danger, and it’s Up to the Kids to Save the Day – two rather clichéd starting points. However, it’s not going to be clichéd for kids, and Krokos does a great job even for more experienced readers of taking relatively common plot points and using them in a new way. This is action-packed military sci-fi – I was glad that I was reading it over lunch breaks at work rather than at bedtime at home, as it left me literally heart pounding and shaking with adrenaline. While this is really so not my thing, there are many people (boys included) for whom this would be great. Krokos also has interesting commentary on what it means to be human and environmentalism.

(As Charlotte noted in her review, there are Tremist techno-mages called Rhadgasts, whom my eyes also wanted to read as “Radagast”, the wizard of Middle Earth.)

It’s really clear from the first chapter that this is a book with a high body count, so not great for more sensitive readers. I don’t think they’re likely to get past the cover, though, which is fine. I would have liked more in the way of character development – I felt like I never really got to know anyone but Mason – but that, too, often goes with the military sci-fi territory and shouldn’t deter the target audience. However, if you have lovers of military sci-fi aged about 10 or 11 and up (depending on the reader), looking for a thrilling space adventure – this is a fine choice.

Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment