Diversity Update

I was full of optimism at the beginning of the year, when I posted about participating in a diversity read-along.  I haven’t linked a single review, nor am I sure that I’m reading the right topic in the right month. But if I keep up my pace, I am still on track to reach my personal goal of reading 60 books by authors of color – so far I’m at 32 books by authors of color, plus 9 with LGBTQ main characters.  

African-American

Picture Book

Thank You, Omu! by Oge Mora

  • Thank You, Omu! by Oge Mora

Middle Grade

Dragons in a Bag by Zetta Elliott. Illustrated by Geneva B.

  • So Done by Paula Chase
  • Last Last-Day-of-Summer by Lamar Giles, illustrated by Dapo Adeola
  • Harbor Me by Jacqueline Woodson
  • Journey of Little Charlie by Christopher Paul Curtis
  • New Kid by Jerry Craft

Teen

On the Come Up by Angie Thomas 

Asian

Picture Book

Big Mooncake for Little Star by Grace Lin

  • Big Mooncake for Little Star by Grace Lin

Middle Grade

Dragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee

Teen

The Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang

  • Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang

Latinx

Early Chapter

Zapato Power: Freddie Ramos Hears it All by Jacqueline Jules and Miguel Benitez

  • Juana & Lucas: Big Problemas by Juana Medina

Middle Grade

Sal and Gabi Break the Universe by Carlos Hernandez

Teen

Undead Girl Gang by Lily Anderso

Middle East

Teen

Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

Native

Teen

The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline

  • Hearts Unbroken by Cynthia Leitich Smith

South Asian

Middle Grade

The Bridge Home by Padma Venkatraman

LGBTQ

Middle Grade

Cardboard Kingdom by Chad Sell et al

Teen

Lady’s Guide to Petticoats and Piracy by Mackenzi Lee

Adult

witchmark

  • Witchmark by C.L. Polk

Looking at this list, I see some missions for myself: finish writing reviews for many of the books here, and keep reading, including filling in gaps, like middle grade from Middle Eastern authors, and trans books.  Any suggestions for middle grade or teen fiction – preferable fantasy or science fiction with trans protagonists?  or any other diverse books you want to share with me?

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Asian-American Graphic Novels 2019

A few years back, I went to put together a simple end panel display for my graphic novels for Asian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month. There was not much in the way of easily available bibliographies on-line, so I started with a list put together by Dr. Stephen Hong Sohn (with his permission).  I have done two version of this (first version, second version) adding new titles as they come out, and trying to stick to books that are readily available from libraries.  Titles out this year are in bold, and links go to my reviews when available.  This year it’s felt particularly hard to find new titles, so I would be thrilled if you, Dear Reader, have some more suggestions of books from this year or last that would fit on this list.

Adult

Ascender vol. 1 by Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen

Ascender by Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen (2019-)

The Best We Could Do by Thi BuiThe Best We Could Do by Thi Bui (2017)

blamethisontheboogieBlame This on the Boogie by Rina Ayuyang (2018)

Boundless by Jillian TamakiBoundless by Jillian Tamaki (2017)

Cook Korean by Robin HaCook Korean by Robin Ha (2016)

Dear Scarlet by Teresa Wong

Dear Scarlet by Teresa Wong (2019)

Descender Vol % by Lemire and NguyenDescender by Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen (2015-2018)

Empire StateEmpire State by Jason Shiga (2011)

4immigrantsFour Immigrants Manga by Henry Yoshitaka Kiyama (1999)

getjiroGet Jiro! By Anthony Bourdain (2012)

IWasTheirAmericanDream

I Was Their American Dream by Malaka Gharib (2019)

Killing and Dying by Adrian TomineKilling and Dying by Adrian Tomine (2016)

Monstress by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda (2016)

Nanjing: the Burning City by Ethan YoungNanjing: the Burning City by Ethan Young (2015)

100demonsOne! Hundred! Demons! By Lynda Barry (2002)

samedifferenceSame Difference by Derek Kirk Kim (2011)

secretidentitiesSecret Identities by Jeff Yang et al (2009)

shortcomingsShortcomings by Adrian Tomine (2007)

summerblondeSummer Blonde by Adrian Tomine (2003)

vietnamericaVietnamerica by G.B. Tran (2007)

Teen

American Born ChineseAmerican Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang (2006)

arrivalThe Arrival by Shaun Tan (2006)

Brain Camp by Susan KimBrain Camp by Susan Kim (2010)

Diary of a Tokyo Teen by Christine Mari InzerDiary of a Tokyo Teen by Christine Mari Inzer (2016)

eternalsmileEternal Smile by Gene Luen Yang and Derek Kirk Kim (2009)

johnnyhiroJohnny Hiro! By Fred Chao (2012)

kokobegoodKoko Be Good by Jen Wang (2010)

LauraDeanKeepsBreakingUpWithMeLaura Dean Keeps Breaking up with Me by Mariko Tamaki (2019)

levelupLevel Up by Gene Luen Yang (2011)

Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker and Wendy XuMooncakes by Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu (Fall 2019)

The Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen WangThe Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang (2018)

regiftersRe-Gifters by Mike Carey (2007)

Scott PilgrimScott Pilgrim series by Bryan Lee O’Malley (2004 and on)

The Shadow Hero

Shadow Hero by Gene Luen Yang and Sonny Liew (2014)

skimSkim by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki (2008)

Snotgirl by Bryan Lee O’MalleySnotgirl by Bryan Lee O’Malley (2017)

sumoSumo by Thien Pham (2012)

SuperMutant Magic Academy by Jillian TamakiSuperMutant Magic Academy by Jillian Tamaki (2015)

tinasmouthTina’s Mouth by Keshni Kashyap (2011)

TheyCalledUsEnemyThey Called Us Enemy by George Takei et al (2019)

This One SummerThis One Summer by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki (2014)

whatitisWhat It Is by Lynda Barry (2008)

Youth

amuletAmulet series by Kazu Kibuishi (2008 and on)

avatarpromise1Avatar: the Last Airbender series by Gene Luen Yang (2012 and on)

Bigfoot Boy: Into the Woods by J. Torres and Faith Erin HicksBigfoot Boy series by J. Torres and Faith Erin Hicks (2012-2014)

Lola by J. Torres and Elbert OrLola by J. Torres and Elbert Or (2009)

 

Newsprints (2017) and Endgames (2019) by Ru Xu

Pashmina by Nidhi ChananiPashmina by Nidhi Chanani (2017)

Secret Coders series by Gene Luen YangSecret Coders series by Gene Luen Yang (2015 and on)

SeaSirensSea Sirens by Amy Chu (June 2019)

[Edited 7/9/19 to add some more youth titles.]

[Edited 7/15/19 to add Ascender.]

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A Week of Reading

Today I looked at the pages of review notes I have and decided to just give you shorter reviews of the books I read this week.  It’s a big mix of styles – two realistic fiction (one teen and one middle grade), one adult memoir, and one middle grade fantasy.  Enjoy!

Kid Gloves by Lucy KnisleyKid Gloves by Lucy Knisley. First Second, 2019.
I got to meet Lucy Knisley at A2CAF this year!  And though I’ve been buying her graphic memoirs for my adult graphic novel collection at the library all these years, I entertained my daughter during longer panel discussions by showing her Lucy’s Instagram account, so that she now really wants to read this book.  This is not really a book for children, though it might be good for teens and up. Knisley follows her journey from trying not to get pregnant as a young adult to the miscarriages she had after she and her husband decided to try for a baby, as well as her difficult pregnancy and nearly fatal birth.  Every chapter of the journey is interspersed with relevant background information, from the “wandering uterus” theories held from the Greeks through the Victorian era, to the many failures in the modern birthing experience, both medicalized and natural. Though a lot of this information is quite frankly horrifying, she keeps a sense of humor about most things, especially with illustrations of women through the ages rolling their eyes at the idiotic theories that have come up.  Content warning: miscarriages, and near death from medical incompetence. Still recommended.  

York Book 2: The Clockwork Ghost by Laura RubyYork Book 2: The Clockwork Ghost by Laura Ruby. HarperCollins Children’s, 2019.
The story begun in York: the Shadow Cipher continues!  The Biedermann twins, Tess and Theo, are now living with their super-cool and adventurous aunt, while Jaime and his grandmother are living in a soulless new apartment in New Jersey.  They’re still trying to get together to make progress with the cipher, finding a cute little robot made by Ada Lovelace who helps them along the way. Cricket, the fierce and perceptive younger girl, makes a reappearance, with her pet raccoon Karl.  We also meet a new villain, Duke Goodson, a fixer who has a crew of former cheerleaders in identically dyed blond hair and red dresses working for him. This is such a great combination of puzzles, adventure and characters, and had a twist at the end that I did not see coming.  I’m going to limit how much I say here because of spoilers, but I’m enjoying this series a lot and very much hope that the final book will be out soon.  

pieintheskyPie in the Sky by Remy Lai. Henry Holt, 2019.
Jingwen and his little brother Yanghao have immigrated to Australia with their mother following their father’s death.  Yanghao is young enough to pick up English easily, but Jingwen is floundering and still feeling extremely guilty for his father’s death, though he wasn’t actually at fault.  He decides to bake all the cakes that his father was going to make at the fancy bakery they dreamed of opening in Australia with Yanghao. But since their mother is working an evening shift and they’re forbidden to use the oven on their own, they have to do it all in secret.  This is a hybrid novel, with cartoon panels beautifully illustrating how out-of-place Jingwen feels. Sometimes he feels like they’re on Mars, with all the people around him shown as aliens with strange characters coming out of their mouths. Other times, he’s more self-conscious, and shows himself as the alien surrounded by confused on-lookers.  I was not super impressed with the mother here, who kept just forbidding Jingwen to do the only thing that helped him feel competent and grounded in a strange place, and it took Jingwen such a long time to find a place of acceptance. Still, I think we often forget how very hard it is for both kids and adults to adapt to a new culture, and this is a very good portrayal of that, with bonus yummy cakes.  

Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib KhorramDarius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram. Read by Michael Levi Harris. Penguin Random House, 2018.
Teenage Darius considers himself a fractional Persian – his mother grew up in Iran, but his father is a blond American – Darius calls him a “Teutonic Ubermensch” and feels he’ll never live up to his standards. Unlike little sister Laleh, Darius doesn’t speak Farsi, so when they make their first trip to Iran to visit his dying grandfather, Darius is adrift.  It’s hard to explain his depression to people who think he should just think happier thoughts instead of taking medication. But he makes his first friend, Sohrab, also mostly friendless because of being a minority Baha’i, and learns a lot about himself and his mother’s culture. It looks like the book has gotten LGBT kudos, but there’s only the tiniest hint of this – mostly it’s a portrait of two boys, both outcasts, learning how to be friends.   There’s also a love of good tea and so, so many great Tolkein and Star Trek references – things like “Laleh saw the silent tension between us like a cloaked Klingon battleship.” (paraphrasing from my memory of the audio here.) And on the subject of the audio – I also don’t speak Farsi, but I couldn’t detect any American or random other accents in Michael Levi Harris’s reading, and he was able to give good and mostly distinct voices to the many characters, making it a good audiobook.  I cried multiple times, and am trying to convince my son to listen to it, even if it isn’t actual science fiction.  

Posted in Adult, Audiobook, Books, Graphic Novel, Middle Grade, nonfiction, Print, Realistic, Reviews, Sci-Fi, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Everything I Know about You and Halfway Normal by Barbara Dee

Here are some more books I read for my KidLitCon panel on taboo topics in middle grade this year.  I’d previously read and very much enjoyed her Star Crossed, but she has written a lot of books, all with very real-feeling kids facing serious issues.  I was also privileged to read a very early version of her upcoming book, Maybe He Just Likes You, which she was talking about at KidLitCon.  It was such an early version, though, that I’m not going to review it here.  I’ll refer you to her column about it at the Nerdy Book Club, and say that E-ARCs are now available from Edelweiss if reading ARCs is your thing.  

Everything I Know about You by Barbara DeeEverything I Know about You by Barbara Dee. Aladdin/Simon & Schuster, 2018.
Tally and her 7th grade class are going on their big trip to DC.  It should be exciting – but things aren’t going the way Tally had thought.  She’d wanted to room with her two best friends, Spider (a boy) and Sonnet. But she’s assigned to room with Ava, the lead “clonegirl” and Tally’s enemy.  Spider is assigned to room with Marcus, a boy who bullied him a few years ago. Tally is horribly worried that Spider will be victimized again, and, like Tai in So Done, hurt that he feels he’s outgrown the nickname she gave him.  Who is she if she isn’t her friends’ protector?  

Tally herself is the opposite of fashion- and body-conscious, enjoying her strength, her squishy belly, and not-fashionable fashion statements, such as decorative cat-eye glasses with bowling shirts.  But rooming with Ava makes it clear that Ava isn’t the perfect person she always appeared to be, struggling with her mother, one of the chaperones, and not eating at meals, going so far as to take uneaten food back to her room to throw away.  What can or should Tally do for her, especially when there’s such a long history of dislike?  

Halfway Normal by Barbara DeeHalfway Normal by Barbara Dee. Aladdin/Simon & Schuster, 2017.
Norah is returning to seventh grade after 2 years of leukemia treatments.  She’s ahead in school from her years of nothing but tutoring, but her physical growth and social development are behind. (The flat chest and short post-chemo hair lead to some unwelcome misgendering.)  It’s hard for people to figure out if she’s broken and needs to be treated with extreme care, or so well that she shouldn’t be asking for special treatment, when the truth lies somewhere in the middle. Her former best friend Silas won’t talk to her, while her other best friend, Harper, tries and fails to understand her, and has new friends at school.  When Norah herself makes a new friend, Griffin, in her 8th grade math class, she struggles with how much and what to tell him.  

My own daughter has spent enough time in the hospital for me to recognize the details of children’s hospitals depicted here – solidarity with hospital kids and their families!  Norah’s separated parents and her step-mother all try their best to work together to take care of Norah as she moves between needing lots of hands-on care and more independence.  Norah’s drawing and doodling help her to understand herself better, and a project on Greek myths leads her to the central metaphor of the book, as Norah, like Persephone, moves between two very different worlds.  It is so very welcome and needed to read a book about a kid with serious health issues that avoids both the tragic and unwarranted rainbows.  

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Midsummer’s Mayhem by Rajani LaRocca

Here’s a magical midsummer book for the summer solstice!  I was lucky enough to get an ARC of this book at KidLitCon, and waited to read it until closer to its release date.

Midsummer's Mayhem by Rajani LaRoccaMidsummer’s Mayhem by Rajani LaRocca. Yellow Jacket, 2019.

Mimi is the youngest in her family, and feels that the major talents of her three older siblings – good at sports and drama, and all able to effortlessly play music together –  have all passed over her. We as readers, of course, can tell that this isn’t really true as she is an excellent and dedicated baker, whipping up different favorite treats for each of her family members for different occasions.  But she’s still missing her best friend, who recently moved away.

Many more changes come all at once – she hears a mysterious flute playing in the woods near her house and sees a strange, colorful bird.  A new bakery, the While Away, run by the glamorous Mrs. T. has opened up in town, advertising a contest for young bakers with the prize of a lesson with former hometown celebrity baker and Mimi’s personal idol Puffy Fay. It’s pretty obvious from early on that Mrs. T is Titania, especially as the cafe is staffed by Peaseblossom and Cobweb, and Mimi’s brother is involved in a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.  ( I’d wondered whether or not kids would recognize the Shakespeare connection, but my nine-year-old looked at the cover and commented right away that it looked like A Midsummer Night’s Dream.) Much as in Star-Crossed, the plot here echoes that of the play, with a crazily enchanted person – in this case, Mimi’s food writer dad, who just starts eating everything in sight and is no longer able to distinguish the tastes – as well as some young love and a contest between Oberon and Titania.

There’s depth, though, along with the hilarity of magically induced crushes, as Mimi tries to figure out what’s wrong, makes friends with a mysterious boy, and pushes herself to excel and to learn from failures. Mimi’s mixed Indian-American heritage is even tied nicely into the plot, without it being a story focused just on that aspect of who she is.  What with the magic, the relationships, the humor, and the delicious-sounding treats, this has lots to appeal to a wide range of readers.

For more delicious treats paired with magic, try The Dragon with the Chocolate Heart by Stephanie Burgis, the Love Sugar Magic books by Anna Meriano, or Baking Magic by Diane Zahler.  Those more interested in Indian-inspired fantasy could also read The Serpent’s Secret by Sayantani DasGupta or Aru Shah and the End of Time by Roshani Chokshiboth with sequels out this year.

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Sequels: Fated Sky, Exit Strategy, The Lady’s Guide to Petticoats and Piracy

Sometimes I read the first book in a series and never go on.  Other times I keep up in fits and starts. Here’s me trying to keep up.  All of these deserve longer reviews, but here’s to living with reality.

fatedskyThe Fated Sky by Mary Robinette Kowal. Tor, 2018.
The sequel to The Calculating Stars, as mentioned in Books I Missed in 2018 for Top Ten Tuesday.  It’s 1961. The moon base has been established. Elma is flying shuttles on the moon in three month rotations and missing her husband Nathaniel.  Complete climate collapse on Earth is still in the near future, but as progress towards establishing a colony on Mars slows down, so does government and popular support.  Elma’s shuttle, returning to Earth, is held up by angry Earth First people who are convinced that Mars will be just for wealthy white people. Elma’s response puts her in the headlights she hates so much and leads the way for another alternate history science fiction adventure.  It’s filled with authentically disgusting space details, personality clashes, confronting racism, tragedy – and still includes plenty of math, science, and headlines lifted and barely altered from real history. Continue reading

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A Baker’s Half Dozen of Gluten Free Cookbooks

I was diagnosed with celiac disease just before Christmas last year, so as a break from my usual fiction, here are some of the cookbooks I’ve been reading. The first one arrived in the mail as a gift, and all the rest are from the library.

Gluten Free Cookbook for Families by Pamela Ellgen. Rockridge Press, 2016. – This book turned up on my doorstep a few days after I was diagnosed.  So much good stuff here! Ellgen has her own mostly whole grain blend of gluten-free flour – a rarity in a field where most blends focus on replicating white flour.  We’ve made her coffee cake and beef and broccoli stir-fry multiple times. I appreciate having many dinner recipes that are naturally gluten free, not trying to replicate wheat-based recipes. The only flaw is that she gives the prep time as 10 minutes for everything, even things like chicken pot pie that took my love and I two hours to prep working together.  Still, we use this every week.

Cooking for your Gluten-Free Teen by Carlyn Berghof. Andrews McMeel, 2013. Berghof is a chef whose recipes are written for her daughter.  She also worked with a pediatric gastroenterologist to find out the foods teens missed most – which is why you’ll find a “recipe” for a grilled cheese sandwich, along with recipes for donuts, pizza, and hot dog buns.  A downside is a reliance on powdered egg whites, which I have a hard time finding and am not too excited about using in the first place. I did take her suggestion of investing in a bread machine with a gluten-free cycle, for easy, delicious and cost-saving bread.

Gluten-Free and Vegan Bread by Jennifer Katzinger. Sasquatch Books, 2012.
I have friends who’ve given up baking because they can’t do gluten, dairy, or eggs.  Katzinger to the rescue – this is one of three books of hers my library has. I made two recipes from here, the millet sandwich bread and the fougasse.  Most recipes rely entirely on oven spring for their rise, which means you can just mix the bread up and pop it in the oven . I didn’t try her sourdough recipes, though I was pleased to see them.  It’s not the perfect cookbook for me, because like most vegan cooking, it uses a lot of tree nuts (here in the form of almond or hazelnut flour), to which I am allergic. But if you can’t do gluten, dairy, or eggs and can do nuts, this could be a great cookbook for you.  

Gluten-Free Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day by Jeff Hertzberg and Zoë François. Thomas Dunn Books, 2014.
This is great in concept, but the execution fell a little flat for me.  The recipes aren’t engineered for nutrition, first of all, and secondly, we don’t eat enough bread or have the refrigerator space to store the large amounts of dough the recipes make to be baked up a loaf at a time.  Still, if you’re a bread lover with lots of refrigerator space, this might be the book for you.

The How Can It Be Gluten Free Cookbook by America’s Test Kitchen. America’s Test Kitchen, 2014.
My love is a big fan of Cook’s Illustrated.  If you know the magazine, you already know that the Test Kitchen will walk you through all the mistakes they made in getting to the perfect version of a recipe.  They’ve discovered, for instance, that gluten-free muffins and cookies will turn out much better if you let the batter rest for a half hour before baking. Well, that makes it much harder to make muffins for Sunday breakfast – but at least we know they’ll turn out well.  We made several of the baking recipes from here, but left the dinner recipes alone as we just don’t have the time most nights.

The How Can It Be Gluten Free Cookbook Volume 2 by America’s Test Kitchen. America’s Test Kitchen, 2015.
The big addition here is a whole grain flour blend based on teff.  We made the whole grain sandwich bread, both by hand and adapted for the new bread machine, and it was delicious both times.  I also made the brown sugar cookies based on the whole grain flour blend – a hit with everyone in my house.

No-Fail Gluten-Free Bread Baking by Pamela Ellgen. Rockridge Press, 2018.
This cookbook looks good, though I have yet to try any of the recipes.  After a discussion of ingredients and techniques, they move to easy basic breads and proceed on through more advanced baking, including yeasted, quick, and sourdough breads, as well as muffins, scones, and even croissants and pain au chocolat.  Yum!

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Miss Buncle’s Book for Old School Wednesday

I’m going to borrow a feature title from the Book Smugglers again and call this Old School Wednesday – taking a break from trying to keep up with the latest hot releases by reading an older book.  This one first came out in 1936, but I had never heard of it until this year.

Miss Buncle’s Book by D. E. StevensonMiss Buncle’s Book by D. E. Stevenson. Sourcebooks Landmark. Originally published in 1936 by Herbert Jenkins Ltd.

It’s 1930s England, and Barbara Buncle, a single woman, needs a way to support herself, since her investments are no longer producing enough money.  She hits upon the idea of writing a book, but since she feels she has no imagination, she writes a novel set in her own village, populated by the people who really live there.  She changes their names, of course, but they are still quite recognizable. The first half pretty much follows real life, but she finds she has some imagination in the second half after all, writing of an almost magical Golden Boy who appears and brings change to the village. As the story opens, she is just finding a publisher for her book.

Miss Buncle hadn’t worried much about the reaction to her book because she really didn’t think anyone she knew would read it. But the book becomes a bestseller and her neighbors do read it.  They recognize themselves. They are not happy – at least the ones who are pictured unflatteringly – are not happy. Miss Buncle, though happy with the income, is under some pressure. There is pressure from people in the village to unpublish her book (how?) and from the publisher to write another, though she is not feeling inspired.  Then, an older teen girl, Sally, comes to visit her aunt in the village, and she and Miss Buncle become friends. Suddenly, parts of the book that were most definitely Miss Buncle’s imagination to begin with start to come true…

This was filled with well-drawn characters and wry reflections, especially on the limitations gender roles put on Miss Buncle and many of the other women in the village. While of course a product of its time, Miss Buncle still has a satisfying character arc. It is also just hilarious, and the plot went some directions that I was not expecting. It’s written for adults, but there is nothing inappropriate for advanced younger readers. My sister recommended this to me, saying that the following books in the series are even better.  I really should get around to reading them, too.

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4 Kids’ Fantasies from Outside the US

Here are four middle grade fantasy books from the English-speaking world outside of the US – South Africa, Australia, Ireland, and the UK.  (Shorter reviews as part of my trying to catch up with my reading.)

The Turnaway Girls by Hayley ChewinsThe Turnaway Girls by Hayley Chewins. Candlewick, 2018.
In the world of this book from South African author Hayley Chewins, cloistered girls turn music into gold for the benefit of the wealthy Master that own the music.  But one of the girls, Delphernia, has songs of her own that turn into birds and is full of forbidden questions. With the help of a rejected prince with brown skin and black eyes like hers, and a girl who dares to be a song master herself, Delphernia might find a way to freedom for herself and the other girls.  This story is told in poetic language, but with graphic depictions of abuse that were difficult for me to read. It still resonated with deep honesty. Thanks to the publisher for a review copy.

Wundersmith: the Calling of Morrigan Crow by Jessica TownsendWundersmith: the Calling of Morrigan Crow by Jessica Townsend. Little, Brown 2018.
Morrigan’s story from the Cybils award winning Nevermoor: the Trials of Morrigan Crow continues.  Morrigan thought her troubles would be over once she was accepted to the Wundrous Society – but the promise of friendship seems fragile even among the nine members of her new school.  Her supposed mentor, Jupiter North, continues being mostly useless as he is constantly gone investing a rash of missing people. The only person who seems interested in teaching her to use her powers (or knack, as it’s called here) is the evil Wundersmith, who keeps finding his way to her despite boundaries that are supposed to keep him out.  But the series continues to balance darkness with whimsy with magical places, unique people, and things like the door that appears in Morrigan’s bedroom that leads only to the train to take her unit to daily classes. This is still such a charming series. Jessica Townsend is an Australian author.

Begone the Raggedy Witches. The Wild Magic Trilogy Book 1 by Celine Kiernan.Begone the Raggedy Witches. The Wild Magic Trilogy Book 1 by Celine Kiernan. Candlewick, 2018.
As Mup is being driven home from the hospital after the death of her aunt, she she clouds of ragged dark figures – both men and women – following the car.  She calls them the Raggedy Witches. She learns that her family was in hiding, and the magic that protected them has collapsed with her aunt’s death. The “witches” are folk from the Other Side come to take her mother back over the border, with news that they’ve taken Mup’s (African-Irish) father hostage.  As they all cross the border, Mup’s little brother Tipper turns into a talking dog (though their real dog, Badger, still doesn’t talk.) Mup meets a boy her own age, Crow, who can change between boy and crow shapes and is looking for his mother. We never learn Mup’s age, but she felt about 9 or so to me – quite a bit younger than most fantasy heroines.  Even though both her parents are alive, she, Tipper, and Crow – with some help from Aunty’s spirit – are own their own for much of the book. And though Aunty tries to help, it’s also clear that she was keeping Mup and her mother away from a world where they have powerful magic without their knowledge or consent, making for some interesting ethical debates along with the rescue-the-parents adventure.  This is the first book I’ve read by Irish author Kiernan, but I look forward to reading more. Thanks to the publisher for a review copy.  

Straw into Gold: Fairy Tales Respun by Hilary McKay. Illustrated by Sarah Gibb.Straw into Gold: Fairy Tales Respun by Hilary McKay. Illustrated by Sarah Gibb. Margaret K. McElderry Books/ Simon & Schuster.
British author Hilary McKay is a personal favorite of mine, though her other books – the Casson Family series, the Exiles, the Lulu books – are all realistic.  Here, she retells classic fairy tales with named characters and real motivations, often from different points of view, and all with lovely Scherenschnitte-style illustrations by Sarah Gibb. Rapunzel, for example, is told from her children’s perspective, watching their mother work through her PTSD and agoraphobia.  Rumpelstiltskin is a hob who really, really wanted a baby to love, where Petal the miller’s daughter just wants to be rich so she doesn’t have to do work. Cinderella’s prince breeds roses, and really wants a not-blue-blooded girl to marry, while Cinderella charms with her cheerfulness and her friendship with the king’s book boy.  Chicken Pox and Crystal or Snow White and the Seven Dwarves tells a story of the evil magic mirror’s effect in future generations, as a much older Snow White nurses her granddaughter through the chicken pox with soup and stories. This story had some of my favorite quotes reflecting on beauty and its usefulness or lack thereof :

“Most witches are (or were) beautiful. That’s how they got away with so much… All little girls are pretty,” said her grandmother. “I’ve never seen one that wasn’t. Yes, Snow White was pretty, but it didn’t help her.”

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

Recent Teen Reading: My Lady Jane, Summer of Salt, On the Come Up

My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows. Read by Katherine KellgrenMy Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows. Read by Katherine Kellgren.  HarperCollins, 2016.
Many people whose taste I trust said they enjoyed this book, plus it’s narrated by one of the best narrators ever, Katherine Kellgren, and set in Tudor England – kind of.  This is an alternate England, with conflicts between Eðians, who turn into animals, and Verities, who think this is wickedness itself. Edward is king, and dying. At the request of his advisor, Lord Dudley, he orders his best friend and cousin Jane to marry Dudley’s son, Gifford Dudley, who prefers to be called G.  G has a secret – a rather large one. It took a little bit to take off, but was great fun once it did, filled with snarkiness and quotes from Monty Python and the Quest for the Holy Grail, the Princess Bride, Shakespeare, and more.  There were some historical inaccuracies that bothered me, such as blackberries being available year-round and a running joke about characters hunting for “pants” in an era when hose and slops with stockings would have been worn instead – but I could tell that accuracy wasn’t the goal here. Jane and G have a delightfully slow-building romance, while Edward’s sister Bess and Mary are wonderfully awesome and treacherous, respectively. Katherine Kellgren was just as amazing as I expected, though I am still sad that she is no longer around.  

summerofsaltSummer of Salt by Katrina Leno. Harper Teen, 2018.
This was a Cybils finalist in the young adult speculative fiction category, and also recommended by Charlotte at Charlotte’s Library.  Spoiler/trigger alert: sexual assault. Georgina Fernweh and her sister Mary are almost 18, living on the tiny island of By-the-Sea.  Its economy is sustained by the annual influx of tourists coming to look for Annabella’s bird, a distant Fernweh ancestor if the old stories are true.  It’s the last summer before college. Mary (who can float) has dated almost every boy on the island. Georgina, our POV character, is still waiting for her own power to show up, and has had much less dating success (it’s harder to find girls to date with such a small population), though she does develop a crush on cute tourist Prue.  But something is happening to Mary, and Georgina can’t quite figure out what it is. Colorful characters populate this story, told in dreamy language punctuated by realistic teen cursing. It’s a hard look at toxic masculinity set against the magic of women working together. So beautiful. The dreamy magic paired with horribly real issues is reminding of Fran Wilde’s new book, Riverland (review to come.) 

onthecomeupOn the Come Up by Angie Thomas. Narrated by Bahni Turpin. Balzer + Bray, 2019.
Like the rest of the world, I loved The Hate U Give, so of course I had to read Angie Thomas’s second book.  But as Maureen at By Singing Light said, I am a Nice White Lady without a lot of direct personal experiences relating to the book. On the Come Up is set in the same neighborhood of Garden Heights.  Our heroine, Bri, wants to be a rap star like her father, who was murdered when she was very young.  Now her mother and older brother, Trey, struggle to keep the family afloat. Even though they both tell her to focus on getting to college, Bri feels that the system is rigged against young black people like her and that making it as a rap star would offer her family a better chance of success.  Family bonds are tested by the pressures of the gangs around them, and life at a majority white public school that wants its minority students to conform rather than trying to make them comfortable. This book was really difficult for me to listen to, as Bri’s impulsive nature led her to make choices that had me saying, “Oh, honey! Listen to your mama!” even as I knew that she wouldn’t and couldn’t while staying to true to herself.  Her lyrics and struggles were real, and the tough scenes balanced with ones filled humor, affection, or a bit of romance. Bahni Turpin is an extremely talented narrator, bringing all the characters here to life. Another great book, and one that will be easy to sell to teens.

Posted in Audiobook, Books, Fantasy, Print, Realistic, Teen/Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments