African Superheroes: Shuri by Nic Stone and Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor

Cybils nominations close October 15!  Have you made your nominations yet?  Ikenga, reviewed below, is eligible and not yet nominated, while Shuri happily has been nominated.  My category chair Charlotte has also posted a list of diverse elementary/middle grade speculative fiction books that are eligible and not yet nominated, if you are still looking for ideas. 

Shuri by Nic Stone
Shuri: A Black Panther Novel by Nic Stone. Read by Anika Noni Rose. Scholastic, 2020. ISBN 978-1338585476. Listened to audiobook on Hoopla. 

If you, like me, loved T’Challa’s younger sister Shuri in the Black Panther movie, then you should absolutely try this book. 

It’s not easy being a princess, especially when you’re more interested in technology than in fashion and diplomacy.  And why is it that only men are Black Panthers, even though the all-female Dora Milaje are the most fearsome guards ever?  Set just before the Black Panther’s challenge, Shuri is trying to get out of lengthy dress fittings to spend more time working on a new habit for her adored older brother when she discovers that something is causing the heart-shaped herb to die.  Now she needs to rescue the heart-shaped herb at the same time as all the other jobs, sneaking out of the country with the girl her mother assigned as her best friend and guard to save the country in time to finish the habit before the challenge. She’s wondering if K’Marah really her friend if their mothers told them to be friends even as their travels bring the big disparity in living standards between Wakanda and its African neighbors.

This is a welcome, if bittersweet, return to Wakanda.  Nic Stone is the perfect choice for this book, and I’d definitely recommend the audiobook as Anika Noni Rose is able to bring all the beautiful East African accents to life.  

Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor
Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor. Viking, 2020. ISBN 978-0593113523. Read from library copy.

As the story opens, young Nnamdi and his mother are reeling from the unexpected shooting death of his father, the chief of police in a tiny but very corrupt town in rural Nigeria.  One year later, there has been no progress made in identifying a suspect, and the crime rates have risen dramatically while Nnamdi is having a hard time relating with his friends, and his mother is also struggling with trying to support the family on one low-skilled income. When a frustrated Nnamdi steps out of the party to officially end the mourning period, he meets his father’s spirit, who gives him a special carving, an ikenga.  

The ikenga transforms Nnamdi into a large, super-powered man, like an Incredible Hulk made of shadows, who is able to sense and stop crime.  But the Man, as Nnamdi calls this form, is so full of anger that he is much more violent than he’d need to be to stop crimes.  Both Nnamdi and the newspapers are upset about this, and Nnamdi’s unwillingness to talk about this with his best friend Chiomi causes a rift between them.

As you might guess from the cover, this is a darker superhero story, as even Nnamdi’s superpowers amplify his overall feelings of powerlessness.  Still, over time, he finds ways to reconnect with Chiomi, so that together, they can solve the mystery of his father’s murder.  The vivid Nigerian village setting adds a lot to the story.

Readers looking for more superhero stories could try:

Black Panther: the Young Prince by Ronald L. Smith 

The League of Secret Heroes series by Kate Hannigan

I am still looking for books in both categories of nonfiction and realistic YA, so if you have any ideas or links to lists for me, please share in the comments!

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print | Tagged , , , , , , | 4 Comments

New Looks at the Past: The Forgotten Girl and Thunder Run

Here are closer looks at two books that are eligible for the Cybils award in my middle grade speculative fiction category, but not yet nominated.  They are both stories of friendship that ask the reader to take a new look at the past. I first read about The Forgotten Girl on Charlotte’s Library, and have been following the Dactyl Hill Squad from the beginning. 

forgottengirlThe Forgotten Girl by India Hill Brown. Scholastic, 2019. ISBN 9781338317244. Read from library copy.
Iris suffers from nightmares that neither her mother’s practical suggestions nor her best friend’s grandmother Suga’s folkloric ones have any effect on.  So when it starts snowing at bedtime one night, sneaking out with her best friend Daniel to play in it seems like a logical solution. 

But while they are making snow angels in a clearing in the nearby woods, they discover the grave of a girl their own age, Avery.  And what starts as easily explainable shadows or night-lights flickering out gets more sinister as Iris hears her little sister Vashti talking when there shouldn’t be anyone in her room and she starts seeing a girl in a blue dress with blank black eyes.  Avery didn’t like being forgotten, and Avery is willing to do whatever it takes to have a playmate…. Continue reading

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Historical, Middle Grade, Print, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Top 24 Books that want to be nominated for the Cybils

It’s Tuesday again!I am very grateful to Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl for planning and hosting Top Ten Tuesday.  Some day, I will get around to posting a list on the official theme again, but the public nomination period for the Cybils Awards is already nearly half over, and can’t really think about anything else. Head over to the link-up, though, for lots of lists of books with great fall covers!

TTT-Big2

One of the things I love about the Cybils Awards is that anyone can nominate their favorite book in each category, whether or not they are book professionals.  (My own daughter was extremely excited to be old enough to nominate a few of her personal favorites for the first time this year.)  One of the scary things about the Cybils Awards is that if no one nominates a book, it can’t be considered, no matter how good it is. 

Cybils Awards 2020 logo

I’ve listed below some books that I’ve read and feel deserve to be nominated.  But – especially in the category where I’m a panelist, Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction (which means fantasy, science fiction, alternate history, dystopia, etc.) – there are four times as many books that I haven’t read yet and hope that you will nominate so that I can read them. If you also have more books that you love than you can nominate, please share your favorites in the comments!

[Updated 10/12 to reflect the current status of nominations and my own reading.]

Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction

Middle Grade

Teen Speculative Fiction

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Daring Darleen, Queen of the Screen by Anne Nesbet

Cybils nominations are open! And there are so, so many good titles waiting to be nominated! I am putting together a list of books I hope will be nominated, but in the meantime, please take a look at this list from Charlotte of Charlotte’s Library for Middle Grade Speculative Fiction suggestions and this padlet from the Reading Tub for crowd-sourced ideas in all categories. And here is a book that I recently read that is also hoping to be nominated.

Daring Darleen, Queen of the Screen by Anne Nesbet

Daring Darleen, Queen of the Screen by Anne Nesbet. Candlewick, 2020 ISBN 978-1536206197. Read from library copy.

It’s 1914, and Darleen Darling is tied up, dangling from a cliff.  “Safe as houses” her uncle said before lowering her down and starting the cameras rolling. Darleen is a little skeptical of this – after all, the cliff and the river at the bottom are very real – but since she’s grown too old to be charming in films of her making messes while wearing ruffled dresses, she’s played the starring role in the weekly adventure serials her family’s film company puts on.  But despite their best efforts, the film company is still losing money, so they come up with a publicity stunt – staging a fake kidnapping at a real public event.  

Then things go horribly wrong, and Darleen finds herself mixed up in the real kidnapping of twelve-year-old heiress Miss Victorine Berryman.  Darleen tries to reassure Victorine that she just plays a heroine in the movies – but she’s going to have to become one for real if the girls are going to escape.  

This is first and foremost an adventure story, retelling that serial style of old for a modern audience.  But Darleen is also figuring out who she is as a person, relishing the thrills of her new freedom even as she tries to keep her father’s advice to “keep her feet on the ground” in mind.  And she and Victorine, though from very different backgrounds, have never really had friends their own age before and are thrown into a position where friendship will save them. Yes, the villains are cartoonish, but this bothers me not at all.  All the characters appear to be white, which feels a little unnatural to me – but it’s also true that it would probably have been challenging to add them into a story where our two main characters would most definitely have been white.  I was also charmed by the book design, with the spine looking like old-fashioned film title credits, and the chapter titles made to look like the caption screens from the silent movies.  This is a very fun take on a little-discussed period of history – Bluffton by Matt Phelan is the only other middle grade book about silent movies that comes to mind.  

Posted in Books, Historical, Middle Grade, Print, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Top 13 Books I Missed Reviewing in the Past Year for Top 10 Tuesday

It’s Tuesday! and high time I made a list for Top 10 Tuesday.  The theme this week is Bookish Quotes, but I am going back to an older theme to list books I loved but never reviewed.  It’s been quite a year, dear readers, and so without further ado, I will give you some of the books I’ve read over the past year and wanted to share with you.

Top Ten Tuesday

Mr. Penguin and the Lost Treasure by Alex T. Smith. Peachtree, 2019. 978-1682631201. Read from library copy.
Would-be adventurer Mr. Penguin and his friend Colin the Spider take on their first case on behalf of Boudicca Bones, director of the local Museum of Extraordinary Objects, to find a missing treasure. They are racing thieves all the way – will Mr. Penguin have enough fish-finger packed lunches?  This chapter book has lots of action and British humor, and the glossy pages and color pictures add to the charm.      Continue reading

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Early Chapter Books, Fantasy, Graphic Novel, Lists, Middle Grade, Mystery, Print, Realistic, Sci-Fi | Tagged , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Magical Black Girls: A Song Below Water and Snapdragon

Here are two tales of girls coming to terms with their own magic, one for teens and one for a middle grade audience.

A Song Below Water by Bethany C. MorrowA Song Below Water by Bethany C. Morrow. Tor Teen, 2020. ISBN 978-1250315328. Purchased from my local Black-owned bookstore. Ebook and eaudio on Libby.

In modern-day Portland, magical-human beings of all kinds mix with ordinary humans, but some – elokos in particular – are revered and can be public about their magical sides.  High school junior Tavia, though, is a siren, and sirens – all Black women – are only accepted if they wear collars to mute the magical power of their voices.  So Tavia keeps her identity a deep secret.  But her upset when a Black woman who might have been a siren is murdered without consequence threatens to expose her.  Her father also is frightened of her power, so Tavia is desperately trying to connect with the spirit of her grandmother for advice.  

Meanwhile, her sister by love, not blood, Effie, is having struggles of her own.  Her mother, one of the few Black performers at the local Renaissance Faire, is dead, her father unknown, and her adopted grandparents unwilling to answer her questions.  Effie continues her mother’s legacy by performing at the Faire as Euphemia the Mer, who has an elaborate backstory and character that inspires fan fiction.  (As a former Renaissance Faire/Mittelalter Markt performer myself, I really loved this part and desperately hoped through the book that Effie would be able to keep the Faire as a place of refuge and delight.) But she’s still haunted by her own history as Park Girl, whose four friends turned to stone when they were playing at the park 10 years ago.  

Just to add to all the mysteries, a living gargoyle has been perching on their roof for the last three years. And in a world much like our own that doesn’t like Black girls much to begin with and likes magical Black girls even less, it won’t be easy for Tavia and Effie to stand up for each other and themselves. 

So, this is highly political fantasy,  magic as a lens for our current situation, not escapism.  This is an important and powerful use for fantasy, but something to be aware of if you see the lovely cover and think it’s going to be all swirling water magic. The book got off to a slow start, but picked up speed as it went on and ultimately became a very satisfying story. 

This pairs well with books like Ibi Zoboi’s American Street.  For more watery fantasies, try The Golden City by J. Kathleen Cheney for adults or Rise of the Jumbies by Tracey Baptiste for middle grade.  

snapdragonSnapdragon by Kat Leyh. First Second, 2020.  ISBN 978-1250171115. Read from library copy. 

Snapdragon – named for her mother’s favorite flower – has never believed that the old woman who lives in the woods is really a witch.  But when she finds a dead mother opossum with babies, she decides to take a chance on the old woman’s being able to save them.  The woman, Jacks (shown as white)  agrees only to keep them at her house and teach Snap how to care for them.  Snap discovers that some of the rumors are kind of true – Jacks does take roadkill animals and bury them, then puts their skeletons back together to sell.  Snapdragon, who appears to be mixed race, is used to having a lot of time on her own as her African-American single mother is training to be a firefighter.  She’s not expecting her time with Jacks to grow into a kind of friendship, and she also makes friends with Louis, a kid who’s as comfortable with traditional girly things as Snap is uncomfortable.  

Lots of discoveries are forthcoming, including magic, adventure, and an unexpected connection between Jacks and Snapdragon’s family.  This is slightly spooky with focus on looking beyond the surface, with messages of body- and LGBTQ+ positivity (the author appears white and her bio says she lives with her wife).  The energetic and friendly illustrations add to the charm.  I really enjoyed this, though I wasn’t able to get my daughter to try it.  This one would work well with Witch Boy by Molly Ostertag and The Okay Witch by Emma Steinkellner.  

Posted in Fantasy, Graphic Novel, Middle Grade, Print, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Thinky Thoughts: Four Nonfiction Books for Adults and Teens

Here are short takes on some of the nonfiction I’ve been reading lately.  My daughter is doing band class over Zoom as I’m trying to type this, so concentrating is… interesting.

Cover of The Dark Fantastic: Race and the Imagination from Harry Potter to the Hunger Games by Ebony Elizabeth Thomas.The Dark Fantastic: Race and the Imagination from Harry Potter to the Hunger Games by Ebony Elizabeth Thomas. Read by Janina Edwards. NYU Press, 2019. ISBN 978-1479800650. Listened on Hoopla. 

I’d bought this book in print for the library last year, but was very excited to see the audio on Hoopla.  Noted literary critic Dr. Ebony Elizabeth Thomas blends stories of herself growing up and her involvement in various fandoms with analysis of the treatment of Black girls in four key recent recent popular works – Rue in The Hunger Games book and movie, Hermione and Angelina Johnson in Harry Potter, Gwyn in the BBC’s Merlin, and Bonnie Bennett from CW’s Vampire Diaries. She has identified what she calls “the Dark Fantastic Cycle”which nearly all dark-skinned characters in fantasy and science fiction are subject to, which requires an unhappy end.  Sadly, all of the characters here – with the possible exception of Angelina, who didn’t get discussed in quite the same way – are treated this way.  I’ve been aware of the poor treatment of characters of color, especially in media created by white people for a long time, but the failure of white imagination to allow a true space for people of color is much more fully described here. I’ve been thinking about it lots, and was able to identify the Black Fantastic cycle both in a recent middle grade fantasy I read and in a random movie I pulled for a library patron.  Naming is power!  Also, I recommend the audiobook, as Janina Edwards’ rich, smooth tones made even the most academic passages compelling.  

Cover of Do Nothing by Celeste Headlee
Do Nothing
by Celeste Headlee. Harmony, 2020. ISBN 978-1984824738. Read ebook via Libby.
This book calling for people to step back from the culture of working all the time came out just before quarantine and went on to be a bestseller.  In it, Headlee, herself a recovering workaholic, talks about how we came to no longer have time for friends and hobbies even as we’ve developed more and more tools to make both paid and house work easier and less time-consuming.  Her argument – and it’s very convincing – is that we now consider busy-ness a status symbol, and we’re also afraid that we’ll be replaced at work if we don’t stay late at work and keep answering emails at all hours.  This last part doesn’t ring true to my experience, and I also wanted to call her out for ableism as she urged professors and teachers to require students to take notes on paper rather than on computers.  Paper is my preferred method, but for my son with dysgraphia, it just doesn’t work, and other scholars have debunked the study that claimed a clear victory for hand-written notes. (Thanks to Dr. C for pointing that out to me!)

After looking at the history, the second part talks about how to reclaim your life.  Again, some of the advice was a little off-kilter to me, but I liked the general message – what are you spending your time on, and why?  Keep asking why until we get to what’s really important, and then make changes so that you’re mindful about your choices.  This isn’t straightforward and not everyone will be able to do the kinds of things she suggests, but it still made me think a lot, and that in itself is worthwhile.  

Cover of Stamped: Racism, Anti-Racism and You by Ibram X. Kendi and Jason Reynolds.Stamped: Racism, Anti-Racism and You by Ibram X. Kendi and Jason Reynolds. Little, Brown 2020. ISBN 978-0316453691. Read ebook on Libby and listened to audiobook purchased from Libro.fm.

This was on so many of the anti-racism book lists out in June, and of course I’d already been hearing about the book and seen both the authors at the SLJ Day of Dialogue.  Even though this topic is obviously one  I’ve been learning about for far longer than just this summer, the authors do a great job of synthesizing things I’d known about but not put together with a few things I hadn’t really known to make a devastating picture.  And though the topic is of course heavy, Reynolds’ writing in particular makes it feel like we’re in this together, with the ability to shake our heads at the ridiculousness of all this determination not to see Black people as people, and then move on to trying to change things.  I first read it on my own, and then my husband and son and I listened to it together; even though my son’s education in particular has skewed heavily towards social justice and including non-white viewpoints, so that he wasn’t sure how much he would learn, we all still found it engaging and found things to learn.  And Reynolds narrating the book himself just makes the whole thing more real.  

Cover of Unrig: How to Fix our Broken Democracy by Daniel G. Newman with art by George O'Connor.Unrig: How to Fix our Broken Democracy by Daniel G. Newman with art by George O’Connor. First Second, 2020.  ISBN 978-1250295309. Read from library copy.
The founder of maplight.org and the artist behind the Olympians comic books pair up to create a work graphic nonfiction that pulls apart exactly how and why American democracy is failing – being deliberately pulled apart – who is doing and why, as well as those who are fighting back.  It is simultaneously very depressing, enlightening, and contains clear and commonsense actions that could fix many of the problems faced by voters and elected officials, things that have worked in states and large cities and could work on a national scale as well.  As Newman explains the policies, O’Connor’s pictures clarify even the driest of policy ideas, as well as providing vivid visual metaphors.  This is well worth reading. 

Have you been reading any books that make you think lately?

Posted in Adult, Audiobook, Books, Graphic Novel, nonfiction, Print, Reviews, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , | 7 Comments

Superman Smashes the Klan and Dragon Hoops by Gene Luen Yang

Hooray!  I’m going to be a Round 1 Panelist for the Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction Panel on the Cybils again!  Now is the time to look through what you’ve read and want to read this year so you can nominate some good titles for us once nominations open to the public on October 1.  And, take a look at the blogs of my fellow panelists, listed in the link above!

Here’s me catching up with the latest from perennial favorite Gene Luen Yang, author of American Born Chinese  and The Shadow Hero, among many others, including many of the Avatar: the Last Airbender graphic novels which I haven’t read, but my daughter rereads every couple of months.  

supermansmashestheklanSuperman Smashes the Klan by Gene Luen Yang and Gurihiro. DC, 2020. ISBN 9781779504210. Read from purchased copy. 

Bestselling author and lifelong Superman fan Yang retells a 1946 radio serial called the Clan of the Fiery Cross.  It’s 1946 and young teens Roberta and Tommy Lee are being welcomed to their new home in Metropolis after living their lives up until then in Chinatown.  Their father, a scientist, has a new job working for the city’s health department.  But while Tommy’s baseball skills quickly win him friends at the local youth center, Roberta has more trouble fitting in.  

Then one night, they wake up to men in white robes and a burning cross in their front yard.  Fortunately, the next morning, Clark Kent and Lois Lane come to investigate.  And as the Lees decide whether they should stay or move back to Chinatown, Superman remembers times in his own life when he felt like he didn’t belong.  

The story somehow manages to feel like a good superhero story, a snapshot of history, and still have personal development for the Lee kids and Superman.  Gurihiu’s artwork also feels modern while being strongly reminiscent of classic comics.   I really enjoyed this, and my daughter has gone on to read it multiple times.  

Dragon Hoops by Gene Luen YangDragon Hoops by Gene Luen Yang. First Second, 2020. ISBN 9781626720794. Read from library copy. 

The story opens with Yang himself explaining how even though he’s always hated sports, he was in such desperate need of a new story to tell that he stepped out of his comfort zone to talk to the basketball coach, Coach Lou, at the school where they both teach.  Coach Lou has led his team to the state championships multiple times, only to lose at the last minute.  This year, though, with a pair of star players who are also best friends, he’s convinced they’ll make it all the way. 

And so Yang follows the team through the whole year, with the books going through each major game and going into the background of each player.  I often have difficulty with movies all about men or boys, as they all start to blend together for me – but here, where all the kids wearing uniforms could make this extra confusing, Yang gives each character a distinct look, even showing a discussion with one character where he disagrees with Yang about the way his hairline is shown, and it changes three times in the panels as they find something that will work for both of them.  

This could be plenty for a book on its own, but they also go into the history of basketball – both men’s and women’s – as well as Yang’s thoughts on how to write the book, his worries that it won’t turn out well, and discussions with his agent about starting to write Superman comics for DC. All of this is told with clean and deceptively simple-looking art that packs tons of nuance into the frames.  I’d like to give a shout-out to the colorist, Lark Pien, as well, for her excellent work here, and to whatever book designer decided to put a nubbly basketball texture on the cover.  I found myself wanting to take it to the local basketball court and talk it up to all the teens there, and will certainly be recommending it to people at my library.  This is a sports book for both sports fans and general readers. 

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3 Tales of Kids Countering Prejudice with New Passions

Here are three stories of kids working against prejudice to find pride in who they are, as well as learning new skills along the way.  

Garvey's Choice by Nikki GrimesGarvey’s Choice by Nikki Grimes. Wordsong, 2016. ISBN 978-1629797403. Read Ebook on Libby.
This slim novel-in-verse, told in the Japanese Tanka form, tells the story of chubby Garvey, who feels rejected because his father only wants to relate to him through sports.  When he takes a chance on a new friend at school who encourages him to try out for choir, Garvey finds a new passion, one that gives him enough confidence for his family to see him in a new light.  I could really relate both to Garvey’s horror at the idea of athletics and his joy in music, and the words are beautiful.  I just wished that the book had shown him and his family becoming comfortable with his weight rather than his new passion helping him lose weight.  But fat positivity is still new enough culturally that I think it will take a while to start showing up in middle grade books.  

MartinMcLeanMartin Mclean, Middle School Queen by Alyssa Zaczek. Sterling, 2020. ISBN 978-1454935704. Read from library copy. 

Being good at Mathletes isn’t exactly social capital in middle school, and Martin is terrified of losing the little he has when a school bully threatens to out him, even though Martin himself isn’t sure he’s gay.  His single mother, sensing something is wrong, calls in help from Tío Billy.  Martin’s always known that Tío Billy worked in theater and has a husband, but when Martin sees him performing drag, he’s found a new passion.  But can he combine the rigorous schedules of both drag and Mathletes?  Featuring great relationships with his mother, two best friends, and his Mathletes teammates as well as the obvious one with Tío Billy.  I’m guessing that Martin has the absentee Irish-American father only for the rhyming last name – his mother is Cuban-American, and he’s described as having brown skin. (The author describes herself as white and queer.)  This is a joyful, feel-good book.  This would pair well with Maulik Pancholy’s The Best at It.  

Black Brother, Black Brother by Jewell Parker RhodesBlack Brother, Black Brother by Jewell Parker Rhodes. Little, Brown, 2020. ISBN 978-0316493819. Read from library copy. 

Brothers Donte and Trey have the same Black mother and white father, and their features look similar if anyone ever bothered to look.  But mostly people just see Donte as Black and Trey as white.  And at their mostly white private school, Trey fits in just fine while Donte is constantly the victim of bullying that he’s then framed for.  When he’s wrongly blamed for a classroom incident and gets frustrated about it, the principal calls the police.  Donte has never been athletic before, and his main purpose in starting fencing at the local Boys and Girls Club is to get even with the bully Allan, who’s captain of the school fencing team.

But the Boys and Girls Club is coached by a former Olympic fencer, Mr. Jones, who together with twins Zarra and Zion, help Donte find a better reason to fence than simple vengeance.  Meanwhile, Donte’s mother is an attorney who’s been looking for a local case to start challenging the routine criminalization of Black schoolchildren.  

The opening scenes were so painful that I almost couldn’t read on – I am very tenderhearted and also the mother of a brown-skinned boy, so I doubt most kids would have this problem.  But once past the opening, as Donte’s family rallies around him and he begins to find his way, I fell in love with it.  This is great both for people wanting to learn more about being a Black kid in modern American schools as well as those interested in fencing.

Posted in Middle Grade, Print, Realistic, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Adventures with Charlie Hernández

I am always looking out for more books to give to kids looking for high-action, funny, and culturally relevant books.  This recent series fits the bill perfectly. 

Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows by Ryan Calejo

Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows by Ryan Calejo. Aladdin/Simon and Schuster, 2018. 9781534426580 Read from library copy.  

Charlie has been living with a not-so-great foster mother, Mrs. Wilson, since his parents disappeared not that long ago.  Her most notable quirk is having a very large, very creepy doll collection. He and his friends Alvin and Sam are preparing to compete with their rock band.  But when Charlie starts to grow horns and feathers, his life is thrown into even more disarray.  He and his crush, cheerleader and budding journalist Violet Rey, set out to discover if the stories his deceased Abuela told him about the Morphling and other Hispanic myths, have any real bearing on what’s happening to him.

Soon, they’re swept up into an epic clash between the evil El Mano Peluda and la Liga de Sombras or League of Shadows.  Their adventure roam all over the globe (with the help of magic portals), and we’re introduced to creatures from the stories of many Spanish-speaking countries, including La Llorona, calacas, and more, making clear the breadth and variety of these cultures while still being based in Charlie’s hometown of contemporary Miami. His first language was Spanish, and there is plenty of that mixed in, usually clear from context and defined only when it’s not. 

Charlie Hernández & the Castle of Bones by Ryan Calejo

Charlie Hernández & the Castle of Bones by Ryan Calejo. Aladdin, 2019. ISBN 978-1534426610. Read from library copy.  

In the second book of the series, Violet and Charlie find themselves with the mostly good witch queen Joanna (introduced in book 1)  at the Concurs de Castell celebration in Spain, where people entertain themselves by making human pyramids or castles.  But, while there, they find a disgusting castle made out of cow bones, a sign that a dangerous necromancer is trying to rise from the dead. Just being close to it visibly weakens Joanna, and when they return to Miami, she is soon kidnapped.  It’s clear she doesn’t have long, so Violet encourages Charlie to sneak out to find and rescue Joanna.  They know they only have a few days, and to make matters worse, Charlie’s morphling powers aren’t under control at all, only showing up at all when his life is in danger and not working smoothly even then.  They are followed by werewolves and hordes of zombies and forced to work with Brazilian trickster legend Saci Pererê.

The pace and the humor definitely keep up here, and there are also increasing numbers of meaningful looks and blushes exchanged between Violet and Charlie.  I was starting to get that Wyld Style feeling, though, that Violet is just cooler than Charlie and stuck being his sidekick because he’s destined to be the hero, but she does have plenty of chances to shine.  

Where the first book was around 350 pages, this book is 588 pages and could turn off less confident readers.  Once they get started, though, the action is so non-stop and the chapters short enough that it’s hard to stop. (I found myself turning to nonfiction at bedtime.)   This series is an excellent choice for Rick Riordan fans.  

(I’m trying the new block editor here, in which having an image next to text works quite differently. Let me know if it looks okay!)

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments