In the Dakotas: Apple in the Middle and Prairie Lotus

Here are two stories of girls growing up in the Dakotas – one modern and one in the past.
Apple in the Middle by Dawn QuigleyApple in the Middle by Dawn Quigley. NDSU, 2018. 9781946163073. Read from library copy.

Dawn Quigley would have been one of our keynote speakers at KidLitCon, and I am finally reviewing her book that I read in the midst of planning for it.  

Apple is a lonely rich girl with designer clothes but no friends who tries to stay out of the sun to keep her skin pale so that she doesn’t stick out so much at her mostly white school.  She dislikes her stepbrother and is afraid to go to cemeteries, blaming herself for her mother’s death at her birth. And she talks way too much, in the way of a kid who hasn’t been listened to enough.  (I found this immensely appealing, probably because it reminded me of myself at that age.)   Continue reading

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Magical Quests in YA Books

Buckle up, friends – my teen librarian Ms. D. asked for help coming up with more specific lists for teen speculative fiction.  We’ve been brainstorming book titles together and came up with four lists worth.  This one has a fair amount of overlap with my last list, which is why it’s coming first.  Meanwhile, if you have any ideas of books to fit the themes “Modern Magic” or “Magical History” where I want books set in real earth history but with magic by own voices authors, please let me know!

Magical Quests

Magical Quests

Avatar: the Last Airbender: the Rise of Kyoshi by F.C. Yee – ebook on Hoopla and Libby

Beasts Made of Night by Tochi Onyebuchi. Ebook and audiobook on Libby.

The Bone Witch by Rin Chupeco. Ebook and audiobook on Libby; ebook on Hoopla, audiobook also for later books in the series. 

Carry On by Rainbow Rowell. Read by Euan Morton. 2 book series. Ebook and audiobook on Libby; audiobook on Hoopla. 

Ember in the Ashes by Saaba Tahir. Ebook and audiobook on Libby.

Graceling by Kristin Cashore.  Ebook and audiobook on Libby and Hoopla; later books in trilogy only on Libby. 

Kingdom of Souls by Rena Barron. Ebook and audiobook on Hoopla; can recommend for Libby. 

Legacy of Orïsha by Tomi Adeyemi. First book Children of Blood and Bone. Ebook and audiobook on Libby, audiobook on Hoopla. 

Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko (out in August)

Serpentine by Cindy Pon. Ebook on Hoopla.

Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo. Ebook on Libby. Audiobook in German on Hoopla (really??)  

The Star-Touched Queen by Roshani Chokshi. Ebook on Libby.

We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal.  Ebook and audiobook on Libby; audiobook on Hoopla.

The Wrath and the Dawn by Renée Adieh. Ebook and audiobook on Libby.

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , | 10 Comments

3 for Teens: American Road Trip, You’d Be Mine, and Finding Yvonne

Three realistic teen books today, all with musical characters – two from authors who would have been on the YA panel at KidLitCon, as well as the teen book from the Black Music Month section of the Generations Book Club from the Brown Bookshelf.  (They’ve now announced the new theme, Community and Culture.

I often encounter parents at the library who don’t want their teens reading books with sex or drinking in them.  All of these books have drinking and talk of sex to sex.  These behaviors have consequences that the characters have to deal with. I’ll stand by my opinion that I’d rather have my teen learn from books like this than learn from his peers.  But, if it’s something you and/or your teen are uncomfortable with, be aware. 

American Road Trip by Patrick Flores-ScottAmerican Road Trip by Patrick Flores-Scott. Christy Ottaviani/Henry Holt, 2018. 978-1627797412. Read from library copy. 

It’s 2008. High school junior Teodoro “T” Avila and his best friend Caleb Ta’amu have been living in video games and coasting through the rest of life.  T’s parents haven’t gotten along so well since his older brother, Manny joined the military.  Their finances suffered during the Great Recession, and they’re now living in a tiny dump of a house.  The only bright spot is his older sister Xochitl and her beautiful voice.  T hopes that when Manny comes home, everything wrong with his family will be right again. 

Then multiple events pull T back into the real world, with a vengeance.  Not so good: Manny comes home, and the military has changed his once-happy brother into a sullen, hard-drinking wreck of a person.  Running an errand with his mother, he meets a childhood friend, Wendy Martinez, whose college dreams make him want to go to college, too, just to be with her.  But he’s never believed college was meant for people like him, and he’s got a long way to go to earn grades that could get him into any kind of college, let alone the best state university where Wendy wants to go. He’s in the middle of a frantic effort to turn his grades around when Xochitl decides that what Manny needs is a road trip with just his siblings.   Continue reading

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Quarantine Book Buys and State of the TBR

TBRJune2020

The #CybilsReadDown is done!  I have a few more books to review, but I read a lot.

Here are the books that have come into my life since my initial post – mostly purchased from local bookstores, but a couple sent from authors.  The stack on the lower left is the one of books I haven’t read yet. Continue reading

Posted in Adult, Books, Lists, Middle Grade, picture books, Print, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Graphic Novels: This Place, Guts, Best Friends

Today is the last day of the #CybilsReadDown!  I will have to wait until tomorrow to post my current TBR pile – but I did pretty well over all, reviewing 11 of the 13 books I had read but not reviewed when this started, reading and reviewing 11 out of 12 books from my primary TBR pile. I read and reviewed 4 and read without reviewing 3 of the 9 books that were on my Libby hold list.  (I still have several months on my hold for The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemison.)  And I read and reviewed the only book by a POC on my back-up list, as well as purchasing several new books… but we’ll talk about those tomorrow.  All told, I reviewed 27 books from my original list, not counting a few that got added to my pile and reviewed also.  I think this was the right challenge for me! 

This Place: 150 Years Retold by Alicia ElliottThis Place: 150 Years Retold by Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm,  Sonny Assu, and Brandon Mitchell et al. Highwater, 2019. ISBN 978-1553797586. Read from library copy.
I first heard of this book because it was a Cybils teen graphic novel  finalist, and then bought a copy for my library.  Ten stories – all with different authors and illustrators follow the history of Indigenous people in Canada, beginning with Annie of Red River, set in 1850. The stories range from uplifting to heartbreaking to horror, and the art from very realistic to sketchy and stylized.   In the final story, an Plains Cree girl from the far future is sent back in time through ritual to see the past history of Indigenous Canada in hopes that she will be able to help the Returners, who fled a broken Earth three centuries earlier, to be able to live gently with the planet, as she and the other Indigenous people who stayed do.  Too often, if we think about Native or Indigenous cultures at all, we view them as monolithic and dead.  This range of voices show it to be the lie it is. I read and enjoyed all of this, while my son (15) read up to the last story, though he wasn’t able  to articulate why he’d lost interest.  There is a lot of violence and some sexual references, so it may be better for teens and up.  Still highly recommended.  Continue reading

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3 Atmospheric Middle Grade Fantasies

The clock is ticking on the #CybilsReadDown, so as I’ve once again been reading faster than I can review, I’m going to jump back to try to finish up some of the books that I read early on in quarantine.  

The Little Grey Girl by Celine KiernanThe Little Grey Girl. Wild Magic Book 2 by Celine Kiernan. Candlewick, 2019. ISBN 978-1536201512. Read from library copy.
At the end of book one, Begone the Raggedy Witches,  Mup and her family and friends defeated the evil queen of Faerie.  Life should be better now, right?  But no one in the Glittering World really believes that she’s gone – driven into hiding, perhaps, but not really gone.  That means that the atmosphere of fear hanging over the kingdom is still there.  Mup’s mother decides that her family – including Mup’s little brother and non-magical father – need to move into the dark, cold castle.  Mup’s friend Crow is too afraid to talk to her any more, and Mam’s best friend tells her that she needs to be a strong leader- not try to transition immediately to democracy as she wants.   Continue reading

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12 Magical Teen Fantasy Books on Hoopla

School is almost out around here, which means more time for pleasure reading.  Here are some great fantasy books for teens to download from libraries whether or not their library is open to the public yet. Most of them are books I’ve personally enjoyed, with a few top of the TBR pile books thrown in as well.

YA Fantasy Hoopla Continue reading

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The Thief Knot by Kate Milford

In case you missed it the Brown Bookshelf held a KidLit Rally on Facebook Live last night.  I only got to watch part of it (which was excellent), but the good news it is archived now so I can go back and watch all of it.

Back to my #CybilsReadDown list – I have finished all but one of the physical books from my main list, and am now trying to work through the ebooks.  These and the new books I bought – newer and mostly by authors of color – are feeling a lot more interesting and relevant than  older books by white authors that were on my backup pile.  So, those books may just stay in my emergency book reserve for now.  

The Thief Knot by Kate MilfordThe Thief Knot by Kate Milford. HMH Kids, 2020. ISBN 978-132846689. Read from ARC. Ebook through Libby but not at my library. 

Here is a welcome return to the world of Greenglass House.  This book is told from the point of view of Marzana, a girl a little bit older than Milo whom we met in Ghosts of Greenglass House. (There will be spoilers if you haven’t read those first two yet!)  Marzana’s mother (light skinned) was once a famous player in the Nagespeake underground, while her father (dark skinned) is in law enforcement.  But because her mother is officially retired, Marzie knows almost none of the stories of her mother’s daring escapades, something that has always been a sore point.

Marzie and her best friend Nialla (who reads white) are bored, spending their time hoping for something interesting to happen.  They’re regulars at the local bookstore, where they’re huge fans of a choose-your-own-adventure series whose choices sometimes require cutting up the book.  

Then, law enforcement visits her house, asking for help.  A girl has been kidnapped, with an impossibly large ransom demanded in just a few days.  Could Marzana’s mother track down a few suspects, and see if there’s any chance the child is being held in the Liberty of Gammerbund, the independent and fiercely secretive neighborhood where they live?  The ransom note – with only the child’s fingerprints on it – is cut out of a comic book series that Nialla loves.  Surely, if they put their heads together, they could figure something out that the adults might miss.

Soon they are building a crew (diverse in both ethnicity and skills) to help them solve the mystery.  Marzana finds herself leading – and that’s challenging for a girl who doesn’t know how to make small talk and has Nialla go over her conversations with other people to make sure that she, Marzana, did okay.  I had a deep, deep sympathy for this level of social anxiety!  

The plot is twistier than it seems at first glance, and I was pleasantly surprised by the twist! As always in these books, the place is as important as the people and the events.  The building on the cover is Marzana and Nialla’s school, a converted mansion filled with secrets, some beautiful and some hilarious.  Expect some ghostly interactions, as in the first two books.  While the first two Greenglass House books are both set during the Christmas holidays, this book is set just as schools are getting ready to release for the summer, making this the perfect time of year to read it.

For more twisty mysteries with a diverse cast in an almost our world with a magical twist, try the York books by Laura Ruby.  Are there other books like these, especially by authors of color?  Please let me know in the comments!

 

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

Malamander and Gargantis

Continuing on with important topics, Rosemary at Mom Read it put together a great list of anti-racism resources from multiple places, while author Shanna Miles put together list of Black Kids Living books, saying on Twitter “Buy a book about racism, but also buy books about black kids falling in love, vanquishing evil, worrying about college, & making mistakes.” I think that Twins by Varian Johnson and Shannon Wright is the book on this list most likely to appeal to my daughter, who can’t get enough graphic novels, especially about girls – I got all hopeful when I saw it on this list, but it’s not out until October.  

And now to try to write the next review on my list while said daughter is having her trumpet lesson over Zoom… this is one book from my #CybilsReadDown pile, which is the sequel to a book I had previously read and not reviewed. 

Malamander by Thomas Taylor. Illustrated by Tom Booth.Malamander by Thomas Taylor. Illustrated by Tom Booth. Walker Books, 2019. 9781536207224
Our twelve-year-old hero, Herbert Lemon, or Herbie for short, is the Lost-and-Founder at the Grand Nautilus Hotel at Eerie-on-the-Sea – a cheery tourist town in the summer that turns eerie in the winter.  He is shown as pale skinned and haired in the illustrations, and is of a timid nature. He’s very surprised when a girl his own age, Violet Parma, arrives, looking for her parents, who were last seen at the hotel 12 years ago.  Surely Herbie, as the Lost and Founder, can help her find them?  Violet is shown as mixed race; interviewing various colorful town characters reveal that her author father and scientist mother were researching mythical (or perhaps not-so-mythical) monsters of Eerie, such as the Malamander and its supposedly wish-granting egg. A bookstore called the Book Dispensary, where a mermonkey automaton makes book recommendations.  Violet, full of courage and curiosity, is often found pushing Herbie into situations he would rather avoid.  There is also a large and fluffy white cat, who talks on the rare occasions that call for it.  

Gargantis by Thomas Taylor. Illustrated by Tom Booth.Gargantis by Thomas Taylor. Illustrated by Tom Booth. Walker Books US, 2020. ISBN 978-1536208597. Read from ARC (thanks, Charlotte!) Ebook on Libby.
In this second book, Violet is still in her new home at Eerie-on-the-Sea and still friends with Herbie and Erwin the cat.  Herbie’s evening sheltering from a bad storm is interrupted when a person wearing a hood covering their features delivers a mysterious wind-up shell to the Lost and Found.  Shortly after that, a large green glass bottle with a light inside and mysterious writing on the side turns up at the hotel.  Everyone from the finder to the museum owner and all the fisherman in town claim that the bottle is rightfully theirs, minus one teenage fisherman who claims it as his uncle’s, so naturally, the elderly and autocratic owner of the Grand Nautilus Hotel puts Herbie in charge of determining who the rightful owner is.  

In addition to this mystery, we are still curious about what happened to both Herbie and Violet’s parents.  Though most people go to the Book Dispensary to have the mermonkey pick books for them on a regular basis, Herbie has been too frightened to open the one book the mermonkey gave him – as a baby – and certainly doesn’t want another one.  Will Violet ever be able to persuade him to change his mind? And meanwhile, the storms are getting worse…

We definitely have to hope for more books in this series, because while there are new mysterious monsters in each book, we get information about Herbie and Violet’s parents in tiny amounts, mysteries that feel a long way from being solved.  They have a nice blend of danger and the eeriness you’d expect of a story set in Eerie-by-the-Sea, and it feels set in the modern era in a backwater town, rather than a distant past that some kids might struggle to relate to.  While there are dastardly villains and Herbie’s direct boss is less than caring, there are adults (moderate on diversity, high on quirkiness) who care and try to help, even if they are usually a step or several behind the kids in solving the mystery. This keeps it from having the utterly hopeless kids-against-the-world feel of the Series of Unfortunate Events, a good thing in my book.    Violet herself is insistent that she is no sidekick, which I appreciated – and she does direct the action a lot.  There are plenty of puns, and of course, giant monsters.  Just the thing for the budding goth in your life.  

 

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Middle School beyond the Margins: Song for a Whale and Keep it Together, Keiko Carter

These days, my work of trying to get books celebrating marginalized voices into kids’ hands seems too little, too slow.  I’m trying to find meaningful ways to support more current and active anti-racism work, while still keeping on with sharing these books in hopes that the next generation will continue this work.  I know the problem isn’t new, and it’s always upsetting, but this newest outbreak is hitting hard.  

Today’s books are both middle grade that I listened to on audio, featuring very different girls, but both from minority or marginalized communities.  Song for a Whale was on my official #CybilsReadDown list.  I discovered Keep it Together, Keiko Carter while researching my Asian-Pacific-American Heritage books on Hoopla list and listened while waiting for more of my holds on Libby to come in.  

I’m also giving a shout-out to the Generations Book Club from the Brown Bookshelf.  The theme for the first two weeks is Black Music Month, and you know I am always up for reading music-themed books.  

Finally, if you missed it earlier, there are still four days to enter my giveaway for a signed hardcover copy of One Last Shot by John David Anderson.  

Song for a Whale by Lynne KellySong for a Whale by Lynne Kelly.  Read by Abigail Revasch.  Audiobook from Listening Library, ASIN B07M959KWM. Print from Delacorte Books for Young Readers, 2019. ISBN 978-1524770235. Listened to audiobook on Libby; ebook also on Libby.  

12-year-old Iris was named for a whale that beached in her town shortly before she was born. Her best friend at school is her sign language interpreter, since most of the other Deaf kids in the area go to the Deaf school, and she can’t talk to the kids at her school. (Iris has always wanted to go to the Deaf school, where her best friend Wendell goes, but her mother thinks she’ll be able to make friends with the neighborhood friends better if she goes to the local school.) This, plus a teacher who seems to delight in getting her in trouble, have led to a lot of behavior issues at school. Continue reading

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