Blended by Sharon Draper

Blended by Sharon M. DraperBlended by Sharon Draper. Simon and Schuster Kids, 2018. 978-1442495005
11-year-old Isabella’s parents divorced when she was 6.  It’s always been hard, but since her dad moved back to Ohio and she’s splitting her time between two houses, it’s even harder.  It feels like she’s being asked to be two separate people. Izzy lives in a small house with her pale blond mother, spending time at the Waffle House where she works and at the bowling alley her mother’s boyfriend manages and plays a Casio keyboard set up on the dining room table. Isabella  lives in a large house with her African-American lawyer father, his girlfriend, and her (super cool!) teenage son. Isabella has music room with a baby grand piano all her own and lessons twice a week.  

If my friend Nakenya hadn’t warned me otherwise, I would have expected this book to be mostly about Isabella’s mixed-race identity.  There is some of that, as people ask her whether she considers herself white or Black (yes), and is treated differently in stores at the mall when she goes in with just her Black best friend Imani, rather than in a group with Imani and their other best friend, who is white, as well as some racial incidents.

But a lot is just about the conflict of two parents who fight over her and don’t realize that they are pressuring her to be different people, and the feelings that come up when she realizes that her parents getting more serious about their new partners meaning that they will never get back together again.  And the musician in me was very happy as Isabella comes to embrace playing both Clementi and more modern, swinging African-American music. This is one for any kid who struggles with multiple identities, and I had to wait several months to read it because it’s been so very popular at my library. 

This would pair well with So Done by Paula Chase or New Kid by Jerry Craft.

Posted in Books, Middle Grade, Print, Realistic, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Riverland by Fran Wilde

Though Fran Wilde apparently didn’t make my list of Top 10 Fantasy Authors I’ve Never Read, she has been on my radar but unread for quite a while. Good thing she came out with a middle grade book, rather than the purely adult books that tend to languish on my TBR lists!  

Riverland by Fran Wilde.Riverland by Fran Wilde. Amulet Books, 2019.
Eleanor and her sister Mike live in a house with lots of rules.  If they follow the rules – things like not “bringing trouble home” by talking to people outside the house about what happens at home – the “house magic” will work, replacing things that their father has broken while they sleep.  These rules have worked to keep them safe so far, even though the girls hide under the bed telling stories to each other when their father starts throwing things. But now, the rules are getting harder and harder to follow, and even following them isn’t working the way it has in the past.  

One part of the change is not unexpected – Eleanor’s neighbor and best friend Pendra begs to visit her house, instead of Eleanor always going to visit Pendra. But even aiming for a visit short enough that the adults won’t notice isn’t enough.  They are decidedly unamused, especially because Pendra’s mother, Mrs. Sartri, is the school guidance counselor.  

The other change is decidedly unexpected – a river appears under the bed as they’re hiding, sweeping them into Riverland, a country beset by nightmares and in need of their help.  They’ll have to figure out the rules of this new country quickly, because the nightmares of Riverland are getting strong and bold, flooding over into the ordinary world.  

There is a lot here about sisters, obviously, as Eleanor tries to protect Mike.  And though their “house magic” may not have been real magic, there is real magic here, both in Riverland and in the real world.  Here again we have a fantasy novel tackling some really tough subjects, including Eleanor recognizing that her father’s behavior is abusive even if it isn’t the kind of abuse she recognizes from TV.  (Read more about this in Fran Wilde’s column at the Book Smugglers.) I loved that the children had choices and agency here, and that they’re shown as middle class white family, wealthy enough to replace all the frequently broken things, showing the truth that abuse is an abuse issue, not a race or class issue, however uncomfortable that is.  And though I’m focusing on that tough issue, there is enough time in the magical world and away from the abuse that the book as a whole didn’t feel weighed down to me. I could write more about the coolness of the magic and of Riverland, but I think I’ll let you discover it for yourself.

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Game of Stars by Sayantani DasGupta

gameofstarsGame of Stars. Kiranmala and the Kingdom Beyond 2 by Sayantani DasGupta. Scholastic, 2019.
New Jersey middle schooler Kiran – aka Princess Kiranmala of the Kingdom Beyond – returns in the second volume of the series that began with The Serpent’s Secret. This is another one that I read first on my own and then listened to with my daughter, who is very much interested in anything with that Rick Riordan, modern-day kids interacting with mythology feel.  

Kiran has been home wondering why her friends from the Kingdom Beyond haven’t been contacting her, and bothered by nightmares of her friend Neel’s mother, the Demon Queen.  Then, she finds out that it isn’t a nightmare – the Demon Queen really wants her help. Neel has been taken captive to be used as target for a new reality TV show, “Who Wants to Be a Demon Slayer,” which also turns out to be using a stylized but recognizable picture of Kiran herself as its mascot.  Of course her parents forbid it – but Kiran still finds herself headed through space in a golf cart-like auto rickshaw, accompanied by an extremely chipper newcomer to her school, Naya, who just might have secrets of her own.

Once there, Kiran finds that things are not as she expects.  Neel’s brother, Prince Lal, isn’t the ally she expects, and her cousin Mati, who spent most of book one transformed into an inanimate sphere alongside Lal, is now the leader of an all-girl protest gang that zips around on skateboards wearing pink saris.  They are protesting the fact that rakkosh of all ages are being rounded up to be slaughtered by would-be demon slayers, whether or not they’ve done anything wrong.  

There are still lots of elements from traditional Bengal folk tales here, including giant messenger birds Bengomi and Bengoma, in a fast-moving plot with both tense and silly moments.  But there are also thoughts on deeper issues here, including colorism (skewered here in ads and explained more fully in the afterward) and a call to judge people by their actions over their exteriors.  

I had first read this series in print on my own and then listened to it (on hoopla) with my daughter.  It’s read by the author, who used extra-animated expression and shorter phrasings that would probably work well reading aloud to a crowd but felt a little over-the-top as an audiobook.  Still, especially when reading for kids, over-expressions is much, much better than the flat reading more often given by authors I’ve heard reading their own work.  

This is a series that both my daughter and I are enjoying and that I’m happy to continue to readers looking for Rick Riordan read-alikes

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

The Lost Girl by Anne Ursu

I am breaking a trend – I just realized my last three books reviewed all had “dragon in the title.  Here’s another book that I was really looking forward to this year.  I first listened to it on my own in April, and am now listening to it with my daughter, who’s going into fifth grade, just like the main characters here. (We had enjoyed listening to Breadcrumbs earlier this year, my third time through the book.)

The Lost Girl by Anne UrsuThe Lost Girl by Anne Ursu. Narrated by Kathleen McInerney. HarperAudio, 2019.
Iris and Lark are twins who are “identical but not the same.”  Their family mythology tells how they have better outcomes together, with preemie baby Lark breathing better next to Iris, and baby Iris crying nonstop until Lark came home from the hospital somewhat later.  They’ve grown up covering for each other since then, with fierce and organized Iris speaking up for Lark and more sensitive, artistic Lark helping Iris regulate her feelings and telling her when to let go of a fight.  

This year – even though their father is working abroad and their mother newly working full time – it’s been decided that the twins will be in separate classrooms and after school activities for the first time ever.  (This seemed a really poor parenting choice to me, but we have all seen worse fictional parents.) Iris is horribly afraid that she won’t be able to protect Lark, and also really unhappy about being made to join a club rather than being allowed to hang out at the library.  

So Lark is in art club at school with a beloved teacher, while Iris has joined the Awesome Girls club at the library, run by a college student.  Though she’s very resistant to it, the girls, a beautifully diverse mix, eventually come to be friends. 

Meanwhile, our unnamed narrator is also telling us about a new store in town Treasure Hunters, and the cryptic messages that appear on its sign board, as well as its creepy owner, and many odd and seemingly unconnected events that happen around town.  

I saw a lot of myself and my daughter in both Iris and Lark, and they seemed like the kind of creative and loyal kids you’d want to be friends with. I loved the descriptions of their doll house, which has been Lark’s ongoing creative project, and changes in which display Lark’s changing moods – especially the attic made to look like the surface of the moon, with a campfire for the dollhouse kids to roast marshmallows over.  I also really enjoyed references to current children’s literature throughout, from Barnhill Elementary and Nurse Baptiste, to the Awesome Girls giving their counselor a lesson in the best recent female superheroes, including Ms. Marvel.  

Like the twins, identical but not the same, this book has two themes that play off of each other. It is, as it appears from the beginning, the story of two sisters who are each others’ best friends being pushed to stand on their own.  But the story that starts off mostly realistic with just a few odd happens gets increasingly darker and creepier, looking at the systemic way girls and women are encouraged to be quiet and pretty and just fit in, until it gets truly terrifying.  This is definitely one of my favorite books of the year so far.

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Dragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee

Science fiction mixes with Korean mythology in this book by acclaimed adult SF writer Yoon Ha Lee.  Of course I had to read it!

dragonpearlDragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee. Read by Kim Mai Guest. Rick Riordan Presents/Listening Library, 2019.
13-year-old Min has grown up on the dusty, backwater planet of Jinju, trained not to use her forbidden fox magic, which gives her the power of transformation.  She idolized her older brother, Jun, who joined the Space Forces and hoped to find something to bring back to improve the planet for its impoverished residents.  So when an investigator shows up at their house claiming that he deserted, Min is shocked enough not only to reveal her powers but to attack the investigator.  

Determined to prove his innocence, Min runs away and joins the Space Forces herself, using the form of a recently deceased ghost she meets on board ship (this is vastly simplifying her getting here!)  The ghost is understandably upset to be dead and wanting answers, so Min has to try to investigate that mystery as well as finding out the truth about what happened to her brother.  

Both answers are bound together with the possibly mythical, possibly real Dragon Pearl, which could make rich worlds richer, save Jinju, or destroy worlds, depending on who’s wielding it.  The adventures and close escapes fill up most of the story, though there’s still some time for introspection and trying to make friends with the best friends of the person she’s impersonating – naturally fraught!  Kim Mai Guest as narrator reads expressively, with fluid pronunciation of both English and Korean. 

This had so many elements that I look for in a book that I should have loved it.  Somehow, it fell a little flat for me – maybe because (spoiler alert) Min’s brother turns out to be dead, but it’s still treated like it should be a happy ending.  Probably partly also the usual problem I have with Riordan-style books, of things just moving too quickly. This is reminding me, though, that I should finish reading Yoon Ha Lee’s adult sci-fi trilogy, whose opening book, Ninefox Gambit, I very much enjoyed.  

Here are some other Korean-American speculative fiction books for kids I’ve enjoyed: 

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Sci-Fi | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Dragonfell by Sarah Prineas

Dragonfell by Sarah Prineas

Sarah Prineas’s Magic Thief series is one I’ve loved enough to listen to multiple times, so I was very excited to read her new book, the pages going quickly and happily by after a period where it felt like I was dragging through every book. 

Dragonfell by Sarah Prineas. HarperCollins Childrens, 2019. 978-0062665553
Red-haired and pale-skinned Rafi Bywater has always considered the small village of Dragonfell, where he lives with his weaver father and their goat, home.  The dragon for which Dragonfell was named collected blue-patterned china, but every dragon collects something different, and no one knows for sure what happened to Dragonfell’s dragon. 

Rafi has a spark in his eyes that sets people on edge, so when the decidedly unfriendly Master Flitch comes to the village blaming Rafi for some local fires, the village matriarch tells him to run away and find out what happened to their dragon.  New books may be saying that dragons are always dangerous, but she remembers their dragon protecting them. The world has been changing, and factories and coal mining are making it less friendly for dragons. So Rafi sets off, making friends with a young dragon scientist named Maud along the way.  

Happily, as Charlotte noted in her review at Charlotte’s Library, while industry that is willing to destroy everything in its path thoughtless is definitely portrayed as bad, it’s also clear that trying to go back to pre-industrial times is not going to happen – what’s needed is a whole new way of approaching the problem, a timely and welcome message.   This is a story of self-discovery and hard-won friendships, as well as the clash of magic and industry, with, yes, plenty of dragons, and also comical goats.

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Middle Grade, Print, Reviews | Tagged , | 2 Comments

City Kids: Thank you, Omu! and Dragons in a Bag

Here are some short takes on books with city settings for kids on the younger end of the spectrum.  Side note: both of these authors were at KidLitCon this year, and I had a lovely conversation with Zetta Elliott.  

Thank You, Omu! by Oge MoraThank You, Omu!  by Oge Mora. Little, Brown Young Readers, 2018.
Omu is Igbo for queen, according to the author’s note, but also what she called her grandmother growing up.  In this story, Omu is making “thick red stew” for dinner, the wonderful smell of which brings one person after another to her door begging for a taste of it, from a little boy to a police officer, a hot dog vendor, and even the mayor.  There’s a nice variety of skin tones and genders across jobs and a feel-good community ending. The art is truly worthy of its Caldecott honor, collage made of printed and painted papers, books and newsprint, and even, especially delighting my mother, vintage sewing patterns.  This is great for reading aloud, and was a hit with everyone I showed it to from kid through teen to adult.  

dragonsinabagDragons in a Bag by Zetta Elliott. Illustrated by Geneva B. Random House, 2018.
Formerly mostly self-published author Zetta Elliott was finally picked up by a major publisher in this not quite middle grade book.  It does, however, continue in the vein of other stories the author has set in the neighborhood. Jax’s mother has left him with “Ma” while going to court to try to keep their house.  He doesn’t quite know who Ma is, but he learns pretty quickly that she has plenty of secrets. When a squirrel tries to open a box that turns out to contain baby dragons, Jax and his friends must set out on a journey through space and time to bring them to a safe place.  More time is spent on the adventure of travel than on the dragons, but the characters are engaging and clearly set up for more books in the series. This is a great book for readers who may not have seen themselves reflected in fantasy before. The core of the story is one that resonates with me – “Magic will find you if you believe.”

Posted in Books, Middle Grade, picture books | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Getting Ready for KidLitCon 2020

Dear friends,

I know I have been writing less than usual here – but I have had some big news that I’ve been waiting to share with you.  Hopefully I’ll be able to squeeze in some more review writing time soon as well!

I will be running KidLitCon 2020 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, with my friends Nakenya Yarbrough (whom you’ve seen mentioned here before, as we’ve presented together at Detroit Allied Media and Michigan Library Association’s Spring Institute in the past), and my friend Maggi Rohde, who, like me, works on the Cybils Awards.

KidLitCon 2020 - Seeing Clearly - Ann Arbor, March 27-28

Take a look at my blog post about it on the KidLitCon website – and please do contact us if you have any session ideas!  Hoping to see you in Ann Arbor in March of 2020!

 

Posted in Books, Conference Notes | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Starring Kids with Hearing Loss: You Don’t Know Everything, Jilly P! and The Collectors

My daughter wears hearing aids, which has shone a light for me on how difficult it is to find mainstream books whose main characters are Deaf or hard of hearing.  There’s El Deafo, which is great, but not a lot else either in picture books (the only one I could find when she was in first grade was told from the point of view of the family dog rather than the child) or in middle grade.  So I was excited to see these two recent books starring children with hearing loss.  

You Don’t Know Everything, Jilly P! by Alex GinoYou Don’t Know Everything, Jilly P! by Alex Gino. Scholastic, 2018.
When Jilly’s new baby sister, Emma, is born with hearing loss, she naturally reaches out to her crush on the boards for her favorite book series, the Magically Mysterious Vidalia trilogy.  “Profoundinoakland” identifies as Deaf, but to Jilly’s surprise, doesn’t enjoy being treated as Jilly’s personal guide to the world of hearing loss. Even so, Jilly and Derek manage to meet and become friends in real life, despite several missteps on Jilly’s part.  Derek is African-American, as is Jilly’s Aunt Joanne’s wife, Aunt Alicia, whom Jilly adores. Just from the cover and title, I was expecting Jilly to learn a lot about hearing loss. But as the book opens with a Black kid being shot on TV, it’s clear from early on that it’s going to be dealing with racism, and how white and hearing people can be effective allies for people of color and those with hearing loss.  

With so many big issues like this packed into a book, I always worry that the characters will feel like puppets in service to the message.  Happily, Jilly and her family and Derek all felt like real people, with issues coinciding messily as they would in real life. Things like Jilly’s realizing that she has a crush, an audiologist who’s prejudiced against sign language, the running word games Jilly’s best friend plays with Jilly’s dad, and the importance Jilly places on being able to teach her baby sister how to make a PB&J the correct Jilly way all made Jilly someone I was happy to get to know, faults and all.  Yes, I did cry. And now I really, really need to go back and read Gino’s first book, George.  

The Collectors by Jacqueline WestThe Collectors by Jacqueline West. HarperCollins, 2018.
Van has always felt a little bit isolated.  His hearing loss makes it difficult to hear people who aren’t looking at him when they talk, and he’s grown up moving frequently because of living with his opera singer mother, who regularly tours famous opera houses.  Then, a birthday party for a boy he barely knows, Peter, turns strange. He sees the smoke from the birthday candle wafting up and being collected by a strange girl with eyes like mossy pennies and her squirrel. The mystery of who they are and what they’re doing leads Van down the path to a secret world, filled with danger and moral dilemmas…

Jacqueline West won the 2010 Middle Grade Speculative Fiction Cybils Award for the first book of her Books of Elsewhere series, The ShadowsThis book, while it had some lovely descriptions of the magical world, felt solid but not outstanding to me as far as the magic goes.  It shines, though, in its depiction of Van and his hearing loss – the difficulty in interacting with people who don’t get it, the relief of being able to take them out at the end of the day and retreat to his own world.  Though the author doesn’t have hearing loss herself, she credits a whole class of DHH children for helping her get the experience right, and it really shows. (She does have opera experience, though!) That in itself lifted this book out of the ordinary and makes it one I’d recommend.  

Other  books I’ve read about kids with hearing loss:

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

2019 Newberys: Merci Suárez Changes Gears and The Night Diary

Here are reviews of this year’s Newbery and Newbery honor books.  I had read just one of these when it first came out, The Book of Boy by Catherine Gilbert Murdock.  And shout-out to my blogging friend Sondy at Sonderbooks, whose Newbery committee journey I’ve been following the past couple of years. 

mercisuarezchangesgearsMerci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina. Candlewick, 2018.
I really enjoyed Meg Medina’s picture book Mango, Abuela and Me, and had heard great things about her teen books as well, so this book had been on my radar even before it won the Newbury Medal.  I had to double-check, too, when I first read it – sure enough, I had already met Merci back in 2017, when she appeared in a short story in the Flying Lessons anthology.  

Merci is just starting sixth grade at a private school, where she’s on scholarship.  Things get off to a bad start when she’s forced to “volunteer” as a Sunshine Buddy to a boy, Michael, from Minnesota.  She’d rather not be stuck with a boy, while her rival Edna Santos immediately develops a crush on him. Her parents, grandparents, and aunt own a trio of pink houses, which makes it easy for Merci to get stuck with child care for her younger twin cousins, though she also has a close relationship with her grandfather, Lolo.  He’s having new difficulties with routine things – falling off his bike, or accidentally picking the wrong twins up from school. But if Merci notices his accidents, should she speak up or do as he asks and keep it a secret?  

I really enjoyed spending time with Merci and her family.  Medina does a great job creating well-rounded characters – Merci does some absolutely cringe-worthy things, but with a lot of effort and some humiliation, finds a balance between standing up for herself and learning how to be friends at school, at the same time as she’s dealing with a family that’s simultaneously supportive and smothering, and her grandfather’s worsening mental state.  And even though these are heavy issues, there’s enough humor and spirit to keep this overall a happy book.  

nightdiaryThe Night Diary by Veera Hiranandani. Narrated by Priya Ayyar. Listening Library, 2018. B079RN5YLT. Print edition by Kokila, 2018, 978-0735228511.
Twelve-year-old Nisha’s mother may have died giving birth to her and her twin brother Amil, but other than that, her life has been relatively calm.  She’s able to go to school, sneaking to the kitchen for cooking lessons after school. Her father and grandmother may not be very affectionate, but life is relatively peaceful.  

But it’s India in 1947.  Nisha learns that her part of India is about to become Pakistan, and only Muslims are allowed to stay.  Though her mother was Muslim, her father is Hindu, and the mixed marriage a secret from the village. They must leave their house, and Nisha’s beloved cook, who is Muslim.  Nisha writes secret letters to her mother in her diary at night to keep her company as they make the grueling journey to safety and a new start. Priya Ayyar reads in slightly accented English – enough to know that Nisha is Indian, but not so much as to make it hard to understand.  Her generally whispery tones suit the secret diary theme.  

There are many things to like about this book.  Nisha is a sweet girl, who understands implicitly that religion shouldn’t be used to divide people.  The journey also helps their emotionally distant father come to value both Nisha and Amil, who has difficulty with reading and schoolwork but excels at drawing.  It was fascinating to learn more about the partition of India, something I knew next to nothing about. At the same time, the central story-telling device of having Nisha write sorrowful letters to her dead mother felt emotionally manipulative to me, especially in a story where just having to leave her home was emotional upheaval enough for poor Nisha, and that makes me more angry than sympathetic.  I’m in the minority on this, though – everyone else seems to love this book. It has won many accolades in addition to the Newbery honor. But both child and adult readers generally know if this kind of device works for them, so readers for whom the description sounds appealing will probably enjoy the book.  

Posted in Books, Historical, Middle Grade, Print, Realistic | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment