Me and Marvin Gardens and Ninja Librarians: The Sword in the Stacks

Here are two recent middle grade books that I was inspired to read by Kidlitcon, as both of these authors were there.

Me and Marvin Gardens by Amy Sarig KingMe and Marvin Gardens by Amy Sarig King. Arthur A. Levine Books, January 31, 2017.
I received this as an ARC at Kidlitcon.  Obe is a kid with some problems.  He’s got recurring nosebleeds, for a start, and no one else seems to care as much as he does that the cornfields around his house are being replaced by subdivisions. The creek that runs through a small woods is filling with garbage from the construction workers and from the gang of boys now running through the woods, a gang that includes Obe’s former best friend.  His father’s bonding attempts consist of trying to convince Obe to join a sports team to help him “man up” and cheating at Monopoly. Even his new friendship with a girl known as Putrid Annie is widely mocked.  As Obe is trying to clean up the creek, he finds a strange animal that doesn’t fit any pattern that Obe has seen before and that clearly eats plastic.

The environmental theme is clear here, of course, but Sarig resists easy answers by making the strange animal, Marvin Gardens, its own environmental problem.  She also looks at bullying, what consent means at a middle grade level, the weight of societal expectations, and more.  That’s a lot to fit in, but it’s dealt with matter-of-factly, with characters solid enough to pull it off.  I’d like to cheer here for a book in which telling adults about bullying, rather than the kid trying to tough it out, solves the problem.  It’s an odd story, somewhere between fantasy and realistic fiction, but compelling and hard to put down.

Sword in the Stacks. Ninja Librarians 2 by Jen Swann DowneyNinja Librarians: The Sword in the Stacks by Jenn Swann Downey. Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, 2016.
Dorrie and her big brother Marcus return to the magical Petrarch’s library as official apprentices after some months spent at home in modern-day America, following their adventures in Ninja Librarians. The mission of the Lybrary: to protect threatened literature and authors throughout history.  Dorrie is upset when her master Savi is off on business and can’t tutor her, leaving her to be temporarily apprenticed to the grumpy Archivist.  Marcus finds trouble in ancient Greece. Dorrie and her best friend Ebba, from medieval Africa, sign up to do a training mission together.  They’re especially hoping to help suffragist Ida B. Wells-Barnett – but instead get sent to early 20th century England, not America, and are assigned to protect the writings of a group of anti-suffragists whose newsletters keep getting stolen. All along, they are trying to see if there’s anything they can do – in secret and unofficially, of course – to help the senior Lybrarians recover an artifact currently in the hands of the bad guys.

This has lots of adrenaline-filled adventure elements – chases, secret rooms filled with booby-traps, and fencing – mixed with the historical characters who staff the Lybrary and whom the students are sent to help.  The sticky and often painful nature of censorship and standing up for truly free speech is also shown as Dorrie and Ebba wrestle with their assignment.  I’m grateful that Downey has carefully filled in the backstory to make this accessible to people starting off here – my son is partial to audiobooks and this second book (though I read it in ebook) is available on audio, where the first book is not.  I still had some trouble keeping track of the large cast of characters and wished that I had a physical book where I could easily switch back and forth between the story and the guide to the characters in the back.  That felt like a small price to pay in a book that deals with important issues with such humor and élan.   I look forward to sharing it with my son.

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2016 Review: the Books

Here at last are some of my top favorite books from 2016

First, my standard disclaimer about rating books:

“I have never liked doing a public scale rating of books – the librarian in me would rather describe what’s in the book and let you decide if it sounds good for you. But this year, for the first time since high school, I gave books number ratings on my own private spreadsheet. I shamelessly borrowed the Book Smugglers’ 10-point rating system for this, where 0 is “I want my time and my money back”, 5 is “meh” and so on. For my purposes, 7 is a book I enjoyed, 8 is one I loved and 9 is one I really, really loved. 10 only gets given out retrospectively to books I find myself re-reading and thinking about a lot – a true personal classic.”

A full third of the books I read this year were 9 and above.  In the interests of saving your time, I have ruthlessly and with  suffering cut each category about in half, limiting myself to books that I kept on thinking about after reading went back to, though the shortness of the lists means that many beloved middle grade sequels were cut.  This year, too, I found myself going back to think about books that I hadn’t initially rated a 9 or 10.  I didn’t add them in here, because so many books! 7, for example, is still a really good book. But they do have a habit of turning up in other lists.

Picture Books

Early Chapter Books

Middle Grade

Teen

Adult

Favorite Rereads

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Lou Lou and Pea and the Mural Mystery for Multicultural Children’s Book Day

Today is Multicultural Children’s Book Day, started by Mia Wenjen of Pragmatic Mom and Valarie Budayr of JumpIntoaBook.com. I am super excited to be part of the blogger team supporting this!  I have been watching this great event grow over the last couple of years.  Just a few things to share from them before the book review.

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First, there is a *free* downloadable classroom kindness kit – check it out here!

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Tonight, there will be a big Twitter party where you can win bundles of diverse children’s literature.

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And there is a free downloadable ebook from Amazon about Multicultural Children’s Book Day.

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And now on the review!

Author Jill Diamond

Author Jill Diamond was kind enough to send me a copy of her book, Lou Lou and Pea and the Mural Mystery to review for Multicultural Children’s Book Day.

LouLou & Pea and the Mural Mystery by Jill DiamondLou Lou and Pea and the Mural Mystery by Jill Diamond. Pictures by Lesley Vamos. Farrar Strauss Giroux, 2016.

LouLou Bombay and her best friend Pea Pearl have their Friday afternoon PSPP tea party – Post-School Pre-Parent.  After tea, they walk through their neighborhood and decide whether they’d rather go buy a cupcake or visit the friendly owner of the candle shop.  But their usual weekend routine is interrupted when LouLou finds that her prize camellia has been killed just days before she enters a garden competition.  She is distraught and determined to find the culprit.  Soon, she and Pea find that others in their neighborhood are having things go wrong as well – a missing pet rabbit here, a vandalized craft display there – and all of the disasters are being painted into the many murals around town.  Are they memorials or bragging? The adults don’t seem to notice, and even Pea isn’t as suspicious as LouLou of the oddly behaved boy who’s just appeared in the house next door.  But all the neighborhood preparations for Dia de los Muertos should give them some good cover for figuring out exactly what’s going on.  The neighborhood in general and Pea’s family in particular are Latinix, and there are lots of Spanish phrases used throughout the book, with a glossary and recipe and craft ideas related to Dia de los Muertos in the back.

This is a super-appealing book – everyone who saw it while I was reading it wanted to find out more about it.  I really liked the depiction of a close-knit, happy city neighborhood  with a coziness usually reserved for small towns.  It’s written in a very descriptive style, with lots of adjectives and alliterations, features which I would have loved as a kid.  The cartoon-like illustrations from Lesley Vamos add a lot.  It was a fun mystery, and I liked that LouLou’s first suspicions were absolutely off base.  However, I had some serious reservations about the way things played out.  I think it’s entirely natural that LouLou would be celebrating Dia de los Muertos even though that’s not her heritage because of her best friend and the neighborhood she lives in.  But taking over an altar previously dedicated to Pea’s deceased aunt and using it to remember LouLou’s dead flower seemed downright insensitive, no matter how much LouLou loved her flower.  Adding some camellias to the existing altar would have been more appropriate. I also felt that Pea had some issues, besides the unfortunate name – Pea (short for Peacock) is cute in print, but lends itself too easily to playground cruelty.  She just didn’t feel like as fully developed a character as LouLou, and while we need more diverse characters of all kinds, she felt more like a sidekick than an equal partner here.  All in all, while this book had a few too many problems for me to love it, it’s a start that could be very well developed in future books.

Here are some other multicultural mysteries:

Betsy Bird at a Fuse #8 Production was excited about the Museum Mysteries early chapter book series by Steve Brezenoff, which begins with The Case of the Haunted History Museum, though I still need to track them down.  Mia at Pragmatic Mom has an even longer list!

Be sure to head back to the MCBD site for the big linky of everything else going on today!

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Top Ten Books I’m Looking Forward to for the First Half Of 2017

This week’s Top 10 Tuesday (from the fabulous folks at the Broke and the Bookish) was a freebie theme, which is perfect as I didn’t get to this when it was the official topic back in December.  These books are a mix of me searching for diverse middle grade and teen books – especially fantasy and science fiction – as well as new offerings from favorite authors.

Top Ten Tuesday

Stef Soto, Taco Queen by Jennifer Torres – January 17 – This is realistic fiction that I put on hold at the library after listening to an interview with the author on the PW Kidscast.

Hilo: the Great Big Boom by Judd Winick – February 21 – More epic adventures and hilarity with Hilo, with a nicely multi-ethnic cast.  I’d better read book 2 before this comes out!

Saturdays at Sea by Jessica Day George – February 21 – the latest volume in the charming series I’ve been following since Tuesdays at the Castle.

Star-Crossed by Barbara Dee – March 14 – This was just a random browse through upcoming titles on Amazon – but it’s a rare upbeat romance between two middle school theater girls.  It looks adorable!

White Road of the Moon by Rachel Neumeier – March 14 – It’s Rachel Neumeier.  And while I’m really hoping for more Black Dog books, I will read anything she writes in the meantime.

Miss Ellicott’s School for the Magically Minded by Sage Blackwood – March 21 – How very excited am I for this!  I guess two years isn’t really that long in book time, but it feels like forever since the Jinx series was finished.

The Gauntlet by Karuna Riazi – March 28 – another book I found on Amazon – but I’m very happy to see a middle grade fantasy adventure with a Muslim lead.

First Class Murder by Robin Stevens – April 4 – Book 3 in the Wells and Wong series has been out for over a year in the UK, while the poor US readers are languishing waiting for it.

Always and Forever, Lara Jean by Jenny Han – May 2 – The last book in the To All the Boys I Loved Before series I finally discovered last year and, like everyone else, fell in love with

A Face like Glass by Frances Hardinge – May 9 – Speaking of waiting for books to come out in the US, this is one that many of my blogging friends have been raving about since it first came out in the UK in 2012.  That’s five years of waiting, folks.

Thick as Thieves by Megan Whalen Turner – May 16 – The latest book in the much-beloved Queen’s Thief series.  Even more exciting, my son is now old enough to enjoy these, too.

Dragon with a Chocolate Heart by Stephanie Burgis – May 30 – Dragons and chocolate.  And written by Stephanie Burgis, author of Kat, Incorrigible and many other fabulous books.  It doesn’t get much better than that!

Want by Cindy Pon – June 13 – I’ve really enjoyed Pon’s historic fantasy books, from Silver Phoenix to Sacrifice. I’m curious to see what she does with a futuristic setting.

These two upcoming middle grade fantasies from debut authors look interesting, too:

Siren Sisters by Dana Langer – January 3

Wingsnatchers by Sarah Jean Horowitz – April 25

 

I feel like I had an even harder time this year finding diverse kids or teen sf/f.  If you have any that you know of coming out, please share!

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Rebellion of Thieves

Rebellion of Thieves. Robyn Hoodlum 2 by Kekla MagoonRebellion of Thieves. Robyn Hoodlum Book 2 by Kekla Magoon. Bloomsbury, 2016.
The adventures of Robyn Hoodlum, a Robin Hood for a dystopian future which began in Shadows of Sherwood continue!  Robyn’s done a great job of spreading awareness of her activities both among the Sheriff’s people that she’s trying to annoy and the poor people she’s been working to help.  She and her band are still searching for the last person representing one of the six mystical elements that are part of the traditional Moon Lore to join their band when news is released of an opportunity: the annual Iron Teen competition will still be going on, and Robyn hopes that entering will not only be a way to thumb her nose at the Sheriff but also to give her a way to enter the Castle district.  That’s where she believes her mother is being held, along with other ousted former government representatives.  The stakes are high – will Robyn’s competitiveness put her and her mission at risk?

There is a lot going on here, in a good way.  Many of the events and people are echoes of events in the old Robin Hood stories – the Iron Teen competition with the Sheriff’s archery contest, both traps.  But Robyn is a much more rounded character, dealing with both with doubts about her role as the leader of the Crescent Rebellion at the same time as she must learn to trust her team and that there is much more to the Rebellion than her own leadership.  The spiritual/magical element of the Moon Lore nudges the story away from straight dystopia towards fantasy – I really enjoyed this aspect, as well as the conflicts that Robyn has between her beliefs and the concrete fact that her long hair with its ritual braid is a liability for someone trying to stay under cover.  I’ve talked mostly about Robyn here, but I really enjoyed the other members of her team as well – There was enough character development to keep me invested in the story, worked in between important plot revelations and lots of action.

The Robyn Hoodlum series is another vastly underrated series (it made my top 10 under-rated books list from last year.  Side note: under-rated or underrated?).  With a diverse cast of smart and likeable characters, lots of action, and a world that’s highly relevant to today’s political climate, this is one more people need to be reading.

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Top 10 Underrated/Hidden Gem Books I’ve Read In The Past Year

The Top 10 Tuesday list, inspired by the good folks at the Broke and the Bookish – which would have been out on Tuesday (I’m almost positive) if not for some pesky life events. Perhaps soon life will calm down and I’ll be able to catch up with all the other posts I want to write.

Top Ten Tuesday

Here are 10 of my favorite books for kids and teens, all with under 600 reviews on Goodreads, and all of which I read (or re-read with my kids) in the past year.

Middle Grade

Cupcake Cousins by Kate Hannigan –  I’m just starting to read the third book in this series aloud to my daughter.  With a great blend of realistic life problems and fun, as well as a loving modern-day family, these books are perfect for kids and parents.

Exiles in Love by Hilary McKay –  this was one of my favorite entries in Hilary McKay’s older series.  There is just something about the logic and difficulties of kids that McKay gets so very right.

Makoons by Louise Erdrich –  the most recent entry in Erdrich’s ongoing Birchbark House series, one which every American family needs to read.

Geeks, Girls and Secret Identities by Mike Jung –  Enough with realism!  What superhero-loving kid wouldn’t love to be the very resource that superhero needs in a tight spot?  A great mix of excitement and humor that my son and I both loved.

Space Hostages by Sophia McDougall – The sequel to Cybils-finalists Mars Evacuees, which I also loved, with more high-stakes adventures in space.

Unidentified Suburban Object by Mike Jung – What do you do when you discover that the secret your parents have been keeping from you – isn’t anything at all like you expected?  This one comes with a whole lot of figuring out what it means to have and be friends.

Teen

Mountain of Kept Memory  by Rachel Neumeier –  Ok, it’s still new, and maybe officially marketed towards adults, but with plenty of appeal for teens.  Still, I’ve yet to read a Rachel Neumeier book I didn’t adore.

Peas and Carrots by Tanita S. Davis – This was one of my favorite books last year – such a great depiction of two girls learning to look past the prejudice and see each other.

Pure Magic by Rachel Neumeier –  I am so excited about Neumeier’s Black Dog series.  And while I’m grateful she’s still working on it even after the original publisher went out of business, more people need to read this so she has incentive to make time to write more.

A Tangle of Gold by Jaclyn Moriarty –  This is the most popular of the books in this list, and yet not nearly as popular as it should be.  Reality-bending in a book seems so often to go along with metallic cold, but The Colors of Madeleine series comes with so much warmth and heart at the same time.

What are your favorite underrated books?

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4 Great Diverse Graphic Novels for Kids

Graphic novels are top on my kids’ lists of books they want to read, and I usually struggle to keep up with them.  Here are four we all enjoyed in the past few months – two of which turned out to be Cybils Elementary/Middle Grade Graphic Novel finalists.

Mighty Jack by Ben HatkeMighty Jack by Ben Hatke. First Second, 2016.
This latest from favorite Hatke (Zita the Space Girl, Nobody Likes a Goblin) clearly starts as a take on Jack and the Beanstalk, but goes off in wild directions.  The story opens with a close up on a kitchen counter piled with unpaid bills covered in red ink.  Jack’s mother is working two jobs and still not quite able to make ends meet, while leaving Jack in charge of his nearly wordless younger sister Maddy.  She’s quite persuasive anyway, and, while at a flea market with their mother, convinces Jack to pay for a chest of seeds that the shady-looking merchant claims are magical.  Short on money, Jack ends up paying with their mother’s car.  That’s only the very beginning of trouble, as the seeds grow into a garden of monsters, which Jack and Maddy battle with help from homeschooled and sword-wielding Lilly from down the road.  I’m pretty sure that Lilly, like Zita, is modelled after one of Hatke’s daughters, and there are also cameo appearances from other Hatke characters, including the shady merchant and the mechanically minded girl from Little Robot.  This is a fast, fun ride, with gentle treatment of serious issues like poverty and Maddy’s never-named mental/social issues.  While all the characters are white, I’m feeling OK with showing poverty especially as something that doesn’t only affect people of color. Warning: this story stops right in the middle of an important arc.  Still, it made this year’s Cybils Finalists for a reason!  Continue reading

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2016 by the Numbers

A few years ago now I started trying to count things like how many books I read in a year, what age range I was reading for, and how well I was succeeding at reading more diversely.  This has lead to me keeping ever more detailed spreadsheets of my reading.  This year, I didn’t track pages read.  I started 266 books in 2016, and finished 243 of them – about the same as the last couple of years.

Without further ado, I present my year in reading graphs.

The What

Graph of my 2016 reading by genre - about 50% fantasy.

As usual, most of my reading is fantasy. This is a lot of realistic fiction for me!

Graph of my reading by age range - 50% middle grade, followed by teen and early chapter books.

Yep… I loves me some books for kids and teens.

The How

I'm a library reader. The Cybils Audiobook committee required a lot more help from publishers than usual, though!

A graph of my 2016 reading by format - 50% print plus 20% graphic novels.

How I read – still mostly traditional print. Time-wise, audiobooks might actually be ahead- they take more time!

The Who – Authors

A graph of my 2016 reading by author gender - nearly 75% female authors.

Yes, I admit I’m biased in favor of female authors.

Graph of my 2016 authors read by ethnicity.

OK, so less informative graph – but slightly less than a quarter of my authors are something other than white.

A look at the ethnicity of the authors of color I read.

And breakout – here’s a look at just the authors of color.

A graph of my 2016 authors read by nationality - 75% American.

This year I was focusing more on ethnicity than reading around the world. Not doing so well reading outside the English-speaking world!

The Who – Characters

This is the first year I tracked this, and it was a lot of fun!

A graph of my 2016 characters by ethnicity

Character Ethnicity (not counting 1 green goblin). Excel is not my friend today.

As I thought might be happening, I read more books with diverse characters than is shown when looking at the authors.  I’ve really appreciated the search for #ownvoices authors in 2016, and plan to keep that up, too.

For reference, here’s my reading from 2015 and 2014.

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Top Ten 2016 Releases I Meant to Read but Didn’t Get To (But TOTALLY plan to)

It’s time for another Top 10 Tuesday list – thank you so much again to the dedicated folks at the Broke and the Bookish for organizing this.  I actually managed to read 7 of the 10 books from last year’s Top 10 I Didn’t Get to!

Top Ten Tuesday

Congress of Secrets by Stephanie Burgis

Evil Wizard Smallbone by Delia Sherman

Gemina by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida Cordova

In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse by Joseph Marshall

Rose & Thorn by Sarah Prineas

Roses and Rot by Kat Howard

Spindle by E.K. Johnston

When the Moon was Ours by Anna-Marie McLemore

Winner’s Kiss by Marie Rutkoski – which I even had out from the library & didn’t get to twice

… plus some more Cybils finalists…

 

What books did you miss last year?

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Cybils Finalists!

Happy New Year!

Real life is conspiring to keep me away from blogging – but I’ve been reading lots of great books and hope to be back to share them with you soon.

Cybils 2016

One of my New Year’s traditions now is going to see the lists of Cybils finalists. Go take a look if you missed them last week! This year did not disappoint.  Besides catching up with reviews, I need to go through and put holds on all the great-sounding finalists I haven’t read yet.  I had two checked out already – YA Spec Fic Finalist Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff and The Evil Wizard Smallbone by Delia Sherman.  Illuminae is now finished and it looks like I’m going to have to buy my own copy for my son to read, as he’s excited about it but wouldn’t be able to get through a library copy before it came due.

Here are the books my Audiobooks committee chose:

  • Out of Abaton, Book 1: The Wooden Prince by John Claude Bemis
  • Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo
  • The Best Man by Richard Peck
  • The Inquisitor’s Tale: Or, the Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog by Adam Gidwitz
  • When the Sea Turned to Silver by Grace Lin

I’ll be busy looking up the rest of the books now!

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