12 Snuggle-Worthy Picture Books on Hoopla

Here’s a look at some picture books that I love and was thrilled to find on hoopla.  Several of these have attached audio, so kids not yet able to read on their own can enjoy on their own.  But of course, picture books are the perfect excuse to snuggle with your kid!  hooplapicturebooks1

Ada Twist, Scientist by Andrea Beaty

Alma and How She Got Her Name by Juana Maritnez-Neal (readalong) 

Last Stop on Market Street by Matt de la Peña (Readalong)

Planting a Rainbow  by Lois Ehlert 

A Stone Sat Still by Brendan Wenzel

The Ugly Vegetables by Grace Lin
hooplapicturebooks2

The Bad Seed by Jory John, illustrated by Pete Oswald

Jumanji by Chris Van Allsburg

Little Pea by Amy Krause Rosenthal

The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires

The Quiet Book by Deborah Underwood

We Don’t Eat Our Classmates by Ryan T. Higgins

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3 Ground-breaking LGBTQ Graphic Novels for Kids and Teens

I realize that I missed that halfway point of the#CybilsReadDown on May 15, but I thought I’d do a quick check-in while it’s still May. 

I started off with 13 books on my already-read, need to review pile, 12 books on my primary to be read pile, 9 on my ebook/Libby holds list, and 13 books on my backup TBR.  I’ve been trying to review books as I read them and catching up as I can in reverse order, so I still have quite a few from that first pile left to review, even though I’ve been writing lots and lots of reviews.  I have read 10.5 of the books on my primary TBR, leaving just Mask, which I might put off a little longer as it’s not due out until August.  I’ve read 4 of the books on my ebook/audiobook list, and just started The Starless Sea on audio.  I’ve read just one book from my back-up TBR, and I bought a rather large pile of books from local bookshops because I want to support them and also I am feeling deprived of regular library access, though I’ve only read two of them so far. My book log tells me I’ve read 23 books since April 15, so I must have added some in there somehow!  As far as reviews go, I’ve written 22, including 6 of the books from my original need-to-review list.  

Anyway, on to the books to be reviewed today! Um, none of these are from my official lists above.  The first is one that I bought from the bookstore, based on Betsy Bird’s recommendation, while the second two are pre-quarantine reading. I’m pulling them all together because of their LGBTQ themes.  Representation is so important!  I’m especially happy to see books like this being written for middle grade.   Continue reading

Posted in Books, Challenges, Fantasy, Graphic Novel, Middle Grade, Realistic, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

YA Blockbusters: Aurora Rising and Call Down the Hawk

Here are two series-starters by authors of previous hot, hot YA series, both of which my teen and I have enjoyed. Aurora Rising was on my #CybilsReadDown lists, while Call Down the Hawk was the last book I took notes on in February before taking a break from blogging for KidLitCon prep. 

Aurora Rising by Amie Kaufman and Jay KristoffAurora Rising by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff. Read by Kim Mai Guest, Johnathan McClain, Candice Moll, and a full cast. Penguin Random House, 2019. 978-1524720964. Listened to audiobook on Libby.
The year is 2380.  The Aurora Academy (in space!) is graduating a new class of cadets, who will form new squads to Defend the Galaxy.  Our hero, Tyler Jones, is a blond pretty boy with killer dimples who’s worked hard to make it to the top of class to live up to the legacy of his famous father, who died in combat.  But a last-minute practice space flight winds up with him rescuing a girl from a cryo-sleep in a colony ship lost 200 years previously.  Continue reading

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Challenges, Fantasy, Reviews, Sci-Fi, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Beautiful Fantasies: Mulan: Before the Sword and A Wish in the Dark

Here are two recent middle grade fantasies that both feature thoughtful main characters involved in epic adventures.  I’m reviewing them together because of that similarity, but hey, it’s Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month, so if you’re still looking for a book to read to celebrate, both of these are excellent choices. They’re also both from my #CybilsReadDown pile. 

Mulan: Before the Sword by Grace LinMulan: Before the Sword by Grace Lin. Disney, 2020. 978-1368020336.
This is Grace Lin writing a prequel novel for the new live action Mulan movie, which I still hope to see someday. When we meet Hua Mulan, she’s riding her horse, Black Wind, to get a healer for her beloved little sister Xiu, who’s been bitten by a strange white spider.  The healer she meets wears the robes of a lord and has strange amber eyes.  It doesn’t take long for Mulan to learn that the healer is the famed Rabbit of the Moon, wandering about earth in human male form for convenience. Her sister is in grave danger, and the only way to save her is to get ingredients from the ends of the earth.  But that initial spider bite was no accident, and the powers that sent the spider will also do everything they can to prevent Mulan and the Jade Rabbit from reaching their goal… Continue reading

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Modern Life with Gods: Race to the Sun and Maya and the Rising Dark

Here are two books from my #CybilsReadDown pile, both exciting contemporary fantasy in which modern-day kids find that their culture’s traditional Gods are, let’s say, highly relevant to their present lives. 

Race to the Sun by Rebecca RoanhorseRace to the Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse. Read by Kinsale Hueston. Rick Riordan Presents/Listening Library, 2020. ISBN 978-1368024662; ASIN B07ZDKSQ2P.
This book from the Rick Riordan Presents line is controversial – on the one hand, Native fantasy for kids is nearly non-existent, so it definitely fills a need.  On the other hand, the author is writing about Navajo traditions, but is not Navajo herself, and Navajo people are upset that this fantasy book contains secret elements of their real religion, presented as caricatures.  Debbie Reese has many concerns about it, including fearing that children might read these stories and take them as myth, not real religion, though my own daughter’s experience with reading other Rick Riordan books points to just the opposite. I wish that Roanhorse would write about her own culture (I am now not able to find the name of her nation, though she is also Native) rather than her husband’s, but as the white parents in a mixed-race marriage, I’m very sympathetic to her wanting to write for her daughter, as she said in the afterward she was doing.  I debated reading it for myself for a long time before actually doing so, and my daughter was just too busy reading her own thing to give it a try while we had it checked out, though she is a fan of the Rick Riordan Presents books in general.   Continue reading

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8 Realistic Fiction Books for Kids on Hoopla

Once again this week, I’m giving a list of tried-and-true favorites plucked from the vast array of choices available from Hoopla Digital.  This week, I thought I’d focus on realistic fiction, since (as counter-intuitive as it feels to me personally), not every kid wants to read fantasy all the time. (Some of these might qualify as mysteries, but they are all definitely no magic or spaceships books.) These are books that I have previously read in print or listened to on audio, which I found by a mix of wading through about 600 titles on Hoopla and searching for titles pulled from my reading logs. Let me know if you’ve read any of these or have any titles that you’d add to this list.  

Realistic Fiction for Kids on hoopla

Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo (ebook on both, audiobook on Libby)

The Benefits of Being an Octopus by Ann Braden (ebook and audiobook on both)

Mystery on Museum Mile by Marcia Wells (ebook on both, bonus borrow on Hoopla)

One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia (ebook on Hoopla and Libby; audiobook on Libby)

The Parker Inheritance by Varian Johnson (audiobook on Hoopla, both on Libby)

Stef Soto, Taco Queen by Jennifer Torres (audiobook on Hoopla, both on Libby)

So Done by Paula Chase (audiobook on Hoopla, both on Libby)

Year of the Book by Andrea Cheng, illustrated by Abigail Halpin (ebook on both)

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Planet Omar: Accidental Danger Magnet and Year of the Dog

Here are two funny and heartwarming books for the not-quite-middle-grade to middle grade set.  Accidental Danger Magnet by Zanib Mian is from my official #CybilsReadDown pile; The Year of the Dog by Grace Lin was purchased afterwards.  

Planet Omar: Accidental Trouble Magnet by Zanib Mian.Planet Omar: Accidental Danger Magnet by Zanib Mian. Illustrated by Nasaya Mafaradik. UK 2019; US Putman, 2020. 978-0593109212. Ebook on Libby.
I discovered this author through Middle Grade Magic (still free online!). Zanib was so upbeat and engaging that I immediately checked to see if her book was available through my library’s digital collections, and it was!  Continue reading

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Guest Post: Graphic Novels for Adults & Teens on Hoopla

A couple weeks ago, when I shared the list of graphic novels for kids on hoopla that I put together here on Facebook, my friend Adi started commenting with more and more titles of graphic novels that he’d read and loved on hoopla.  It turns out that while I use hoopla mostly for audiobooks, Adi uses it mostly for graphic novels, a lot of graphic novels.  So, I asked him if he’d do a guest post, and here it is!  It’s mostly graphics from the smaller publishers (not DC or Marvel), so I’ll note that two Marvel series we both enjoy, Squirrel Girl and Ms. Marvel, are available on hoopla as well. 

My name is Adi Peshkess, and I love graphic novels. I’ve been a bookworm my whole life, with a special love for the scary and mysterious, as well as the strange and futuristic. While I never read serial comic books, I started getting interested in graphic novels when Watchmen was being released as a movie and I decided to read the novel first. While typical comics always felt difficult to get into because of the myriad overlapping and diverging stories and timelines and reboots, self-contained graphic novels were very approachable and attractive to a long-time novel reader like myself. After that, I started looking for more graphic novel series in my local library.  Continue reading

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Enjoying What Is: Paladin’s Grace and Iron Hearted Violet

It’s so easy to make things harder for ourselves by focusing on the way we think things should be, rather than the way things really are.  Here are two stories (Paladin’s Grace for adults, Iron Hearted Violet for kids) about characters learning to find their own strengths and appreciate the beauty of life just as it is.  

Paladin’s Grace by T. KingfisherPaladin’s Grace by T. Kingfisher. Argyll Productions, 2020. ISBN  978-1614505211. Read on Libby. 

T. Kingfisher is the pen name Ursula Vernon uses when she writes for adults.  Though I adore her Hamster Princess books and also Castle Hangnail, I had never read any of her adult books.  But this pandemic is making me a little more open to reading books I can only get easily in ebook format, and I’m so glad I found this one!  Continue reading

Posted in Adult, Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print, Romance | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

The Chaos Curse by Sayantani DasGupta.

So far (as usual), I’m doing a better job of keeping up with reading than reviewing for my #CybilsReadDown challenge.  I have Charlotte of Charlotte’s Library to thank for the Advanced Reader’s Copy of this again, though it came out at the beginning of March and is now generally available .  

The Chaos Curse by Sayantani DasGuptaThe Chaos Curse. Kiranmala and the Kingdom Beyond Book 3 by Sayantani DasGupta. Scholastic, 2020. 978-1338355895. Audiobook on hoopla; ebook and audiobook on Libby. 

This book picks up right where the last book, Game of Stars, left off.  Kiran hopes she’s going to be celebrated as a hero for freeing Neel and outwitting her father, the serpent king Sesha.  Unfortunately… not so much.  Sesha is trying to take over the world, and Neel’s father the raja has run away. With crown prince Lal trapped in another dimension, that leaves Neel to be crowned raja.  Does he even want that, and will it change his relationship with Kiran? 

There’s not much time to ponder, as Sesha’s megalomania now involves merging all the stories of the world into one unified storyline.  That means that even in the Kingdom Beyond, familiar characters from Bengal legends that Kiran and her team meet keep flickering out and being overwritten by characters from the Brothers Grimm or other Western stories.  And why are there blue butterflies everywhere?

Even as Kiran worries that her friends will soon forget who they are in the face of this, Kiran sets off with the obnoxious and jokey bird Tuntuni and a new companion, an erudite and gender-neutral tiger named Bunty, through an intergalactic clothes dryer of a wormhole to rescue her friend Prince Lal.  But did the wormhole even take her to the right version of reality?  

As in previous books, the action is nonstop, there’s a great edge of humor, but also a lot of underlying deeper thoughts about prejudice and the importance of diversity.  Kiran has to come to terms with her own underlying prejudice against rakkhosh in general and Neel’s mother in particular, even though she has some good friends who are rakkhosh.  Action-driven books are, as I’ve said before, not my thing in general, but Kiranmala has won me over.  There’s enough snarky feminist and diversity-driven values, plus my general interest in world folk tales, to keep this a series I want to follow.  Also, my daughter is a big fan – she listened to it on hoopla as soon as it came out, and got partway through reading again in print – and she loves for us to be able to talk about the series. Give this, still, to fans of the Rick Riordan Presents books.  

 

Posted in Books, Challenges, Fantasy, Format, Genre, Middle Grade, Print | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments