Serpentine

This week I’m reviewing the books I’ve made it to from my Top 10 2015 Releases I Didn’t Get to post.

serpentineSerpentine by Cindy Pon. Month9Books, 2015
Skybright has never known any life but that of servant companion to the noble Zhen Ni.  Zhen Ni views Skybright more as a sister than a servant, but Skybright can never forget that she’ll be Zhen Ni’s servant forever, never allowed to, say, marry and start her own household.  As the story opens, Skybright is climbing up a tree at Zhen Ni’s request, to see over the wall of the local monastery.  There she spies a handsome young man not wearing a monk’s robe, though he’s participating in their exercises.  Things change between the girls when a young lady, Lan, comes to visit, but this must be pushed to the side as Skybright starts seeing ghosts wandering around, shortly followed by demons. And Skybright soon learns that there’s rather horrifying more to herself and her past than she’s ever known.  Can she keep her secret from Zhen Ni and keep her safe from the demons?

I haven’t seen this book being talked about nearly as much as it deserves!  This is just a delightful balance of a great twist on the teen-with-hidden-powers trope with a kicky plot and great characters.  The friendship between Skybright and Zhen Ni is beautifully done, with Lan and Zhen Ni’s Nanny Bai playing good supporting roles. I was afraid of instalove with the way Kai Sen and Skybright first met, but their relationship develops slowly enough and with enough focus on interest in each other as people that these fears proved ungrounded. The villain, a demon by the name of Stone who knows more of Skybright’s past than she does herself, is that combination of sexy and dangerous most commonly reserved for villainesses – I quite enjoyed seeing that trope turned around. All in all, this is deeply satisfying reading.

The ending is shockingly abrupt.  I had to take a quick break from writing this to make sure that I wouldn’t have to wait another five years to find out what happens next.  Happiness!  Book 2, Sacrifice, is scheduled to come out in September.

In the meantime, go back to Cindy Pon’s Silver Phoenix and Fury of the Phoenix if you haven’t already read them, or try Malinda Lo’s Huntress.  Cindy Pon also had a great What’s the Big Idea post about Serpentine on John Scalzi’s blog.

Here are the other books from the books-I-missed post that I’ve reviewed already:

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The Shepherd’s Crown

This week I’m reviewing the books I’ve made it to from my Top 10 2015 Releases I Didn’t Get to post.

I almost didn’t want to listen to this last-ever Tiffany Aching book by Terry Pratchett.  And yet, as saving it won’t bring him back, I did anyway.

shepherdscrownThe Shepherd’s Crown by Terry Pratchett. Read by Stephen Briggs. Harper Audio, 2015.
Things have changed since Tiffany was a nine-year-old rescuing her baby brother from fairy land in The Wee Free Men.  Now she’s a fully-fledged witch with her own steading, trying to decide if she can keep up with her responsibilities there and have a love life as well – her sweetheart, Preston, is working at the hospital in Ankh Morpokh.  But as always, the reward for doing well is more work, and Granny Weatherwax, knowing her own end is near, calls Tiffany in to help.  There’s also rebellion in the elf world, goblins on the railroad fighting for their rights, and a boy named Jeffrey with a companion goat called Mephistopheles who wants to be a witch.  The stakes are higher than ever, but at least Tiffany still has the help of the tiny, fierce and hard-drinking Nac Mac Feegle, who are determined not to let their “big wee hag” come to any harm.

I went into this book wondering if it would hold up to the others in the series that I love so very much. (Although I get most of my reading from the library, including this, we own half the series on audiobook and are working on collecting it all, as three out of four of us love them.) I came out too happy to be spending more time with these characters to be certain I can be objective about it.  Here are some thoughts anyway: Granny Weatherwax!  Fabulous to the very end!  Stephen Briggs does a wonderful job of bringing the story to life. My love pointed out, quite accurately, that this book ties into the rest of Discworld much more than the rest of the Tiffany Aching sub-series, many of which (happily for those coming in without having read the rest of this very long series) don’t really feel connected to it.  Strands from many other Discworld sub-series are woven together here, which gives us a little less time with Tiffany but a nice closure for the larger series.  One of the things that I’ve always loved about Pratchett is his ability to say deep things about life in the midst of a hilarious, high-action plot.  This plot, with Tiffany spending nights on her broomstick so that she can spend her days to far-flung people in need of her help, seems to me to be saying that having it all is over-rated, having friends to help is good, and you need to find your own way to make it work.

Thank you, Sir Terry!

Here are the other books from the post that I’ve reviewed already:

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Fish in a Tree

This book came recommended to me by my good friend and colleague Mrs. M., who told me that it would make me cry, but that it would be worth it.  I have lots of thoughts about it!

fishinatreeFish in a Tree by Lynda Mullaly Hunt. Nancy Paulsen Books, 2015
Fifth-grader Ally Nickerson is taunted and friendless at school.  All of the kids, including herself, think that she’s stupid.  She’s very good, though, at hiding that she can’t read, and getting in trouble to avoid assignments she can’t do.  So when she accidentally gives her pregnant teacher a sympathy card instead of a baby card, all the adult in her life assume that she’s suddenly and inexplicably deliberately trying to hurt her teacher.  Her mother, while well-meaning, is working overtime to make ends meet while Ally’s father is deployed overseas.  She’s not around to see how hard Ally works at those messy, half-done assignments, so she, too, thinks that Ally would be fine if she just applied herself.  Continue reading

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State of the Book Basket March 2016

For once, the library basket is not overflowing with books.  I have only 20 items checked out, as opposed to my usual 30-40.  But as no one seems to be feeling deprived of reading material, we’ll go with it.  This reminds me of Jen Robinson talking about a school that gave kids ereaders preloaded with 18 books for the entire year, which was supposed to be all their reading.  Apparently I consider 18 books a substandard selection for three weeks.

mousescoutsMy daughter (age 6) is not quite reading chapter books to herself yet, but seems to have lost interest in reading books that are actually her level to herself.  She’s bringing home lots of early chapter books from the school library, mostly the Rainbow Fairies books. She flips through them pretty rapidly, so that I think she’s catching the occasional word and mostly looking at the pictures.  She’s also enjoying looking at Knightnapped, the latest in the Dragonbreath series by Ursula Vernon, which I still have on hand from the Cybils.  We’ll try Mercy Watson Fights Crime by Kate DiCamillo, illustrated by Chris Van Dusen this week for something that might be closer to her reading level while still scratching that chapter book itch.  I’m reading Mouse Scouts by Sarah Dillard to her – just adorable – and we’re listening to the first two Alvin Ho books by Lenore Look in the car.  (I was feeling that our car listening was getting overwhelmingly white, and this is one of the few diverse early chapter book series that my library has available on audio. Perhaps more importantly, Alvin Ho is hilarious.)  I also brought home Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer by Megan McDonald on Playaway for her.  I’d thought we might do it in the car, but she was just thrilled to have it to listen to on headphones over the weekend.

Geeks, Girls and Secret IdentitiesMy son, (age 11) having finished and very much enjoying The Dungeoneers is now reading another fantasy book picked for him by the youth librarian at the local public library. I think this may be a first!  It’s The Inquisitor’s Apprentice by Chris Moriarty, and he seems to be enjoying it even though it looks like a mystery, and he has told me on numerous occasions that he doesn’t like mysteries.  There’s also a Big Nate book on hand for when he needs something light.  I am reading Geeks, Girls and Secret Identities by Mike Jung to him.  He’s a strong enough reader now that he could read it to himself, as he couldn’t when I first read it, but it makes a pretty good read-aloud.  The language is what I’d call middle school foul, with a fair amount of scatological cursing – not horrible, but not what we use at home, and I haven’t asked him if he’d prefer me to censor it or leave it as is.  What’s great is that the story is moving along at a fairly rapid clip – helpful when we’re reading one chapter at a time a few times a week – and the chapters are the perfect length, taking 15-20 minutes to read aloud.  He is listening to The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp by Kathi Appelt on his iPod.  We are working through Diana Wynne Jones’ Chrestomanci books in the car, slowly and out of order, currently listening to The Pinhoe Egg. Sadly, the daughter isn’t enjoying it as much, and alternates between telling us how much she hates it and asking why some desired event in the book hasn’t happened yet.  The challenge to find a book that works both for an easily frightened six-year-old and an adventurous fantasy-loving eleven-year-old continues!

parentingwithoutpowerstrugglesMy love is listening to Parenting without Power Struggles by Susan Stiffelman, which was recommended to us by our good friend Dr. M., and which I had just finished listening to myself.  He’s been doing Tamora Pierce’s Circle of Magic books when driving the kids around.  And I recently brought him another homemade soda cookbook, per his request – Homemade Root Beer, Soda and Pop by Stephen Edward Cresswell – as he enjoys experimenting with these.

For myself, I have whole stacks of books, though I realize I might be in the middle of slightly fewer than usual.  I’m listening to A Plague of Bogles by Catherine Jinks in the car, reading Winter by Marissa Meyer in print at home and Under a Painted Sky by Stacey Lee at work.  I’m actually reading books from my list that I put together in January and feeling all proud of myself!  That doesn’t mean I’ve been able to resist the siren call of other books that have come across my radar.  ultrafabulousglitterI have The Ultra Fabulous Glitter Squadron Saves the World Again by A.C. Wise up next in print – I just couldn’t resist that title.  (Note that it is most definitely an adult book, just based on the first page.) After that will come Something like Love by Beverly Jenkins, as I’d been feeling like a romance and just discovered that she is a Detroit area author who specializes in heavily researched African-American historical romances.  Color me sheepish but intrigued.  I checked out her next oldest title, to give the latest one a chance to get a little more exposure on the new shelf. [Edited 3/20/16 to add:] Forgotten the first time around, as I actually bought it and so it didn’t show on my list of library checkouts, is Pure Magic by Rachel Neumeier, the sequel to Black Dog I think I read just one review of Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton, where it might have been compared to The Blue Sword by Robin McKinley, one of my all-time favorites, and that was enough to convince me to check it out on the spot.  I’m continuing my reading of Hilary McKay’s older books with The Exiles at Home.  And in reserve on audio is The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula LeGuin, which I haven’t read since childhood but which R. J. Anderson (geeky thrills! Conversations with authors I admire!) encouraged me to give a second chance to over at By Singing Light.

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Cybils Teen Graphic Novel Finalists

The last of my series reading selections from the 2015 Cybils finalists – here are the others:

I read four of the seven teen graphic novel finalists – I had already read the winner, Nimona, and very much enjoyed it.  Here are the additional three that I read:

honorgirlHonor Girl by Maggie Thrash. Candlewick, 2015.
This based-on-real life follows teen Maggie as she goes back to the old-fashioned Southern sleepaway camp that her mother and grandmother went to before her (even the one Jewish girl is blond and blue-eyed.)  It’s not the first time Maggie’s been, but this year is a turning point for her: instead of joining the other girls in crushing on the few male staff members, she finds herself falling for one of the college-aged female counselors.  The story of Maggie’s coming to terms with herself is told inside the camp setting that could be timeless except for the Maggie’s obsession with the Backstreet Boys.  Despite and because of its particularity, it comes out as a universal story of first love and its repercussions.  It’s done in beautiful, softly colored watercolor-and-ink illustrations.

msmarvel1Ms. Marvel vol. 1: No Normal by G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona. Marvel, 2014.
I’d been hearing about Ms. Marvel since it first came out in late 2014 – my love even made me read some individual issues he’d brought home from the comic book store – but somehow, I hadn’t gotten around to this whip-smart story of America’s first Muslim (Pakistani-American) superhero.  It is totally smart, funny, and on-point with the challenges of growing up between cultures.  The art is perfect – managing to be crisp and polished and completely expressive, whether Kamala is doing battle or making a face at something she’s discovered.  I went right on to reading volumes 2 and 3.  Sometimes books are hyped so much that it’s disappointing to read them, but not this time.  There’s some high school romance here, but this is one I’d be happy giving to my fifth-grade son.

marchbook2March Book 2 by John Lewis with Andrew Aydin. Art by Nate Powell. Top Shelf, 2015.
I’d read Book 1 last year – why did I put off reading Book 2 so long?  Well, OK, there are neither dragons nor spaceships here, which might explain it.  Senator John Lewis continues with the story of his personal involvement in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, now moving on to the Freedom Rides and the March on Washington.  I know I paid attention in history in high school, but there is so much here that just didn’t make it to my text book.  (I guess I’m not really surprised.)  The story is riveting, though the violence is such that I’d give it to teens and up.  Kudos, too, to Nate Powell for keeping the very large cast of characters recognizable and distinguishable, even with black-and-white art. I feel that textbook writers sometimes skimp on eras that they lived through themselves, whether it’s due to a lack of consensus on the period or feeling that it’s too recent to need writing about.  Whatever the reason, this is a great choice for making sure that even readers born well after the Civil Rights movement feel connected to this important time and the brave but human people who made it happen.

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Top 10 Tuesday: Spring TBR Lit

Top 10 Tuesday is a weekly meme put out by the good folks at the Broke and the Bookish.  (Here’s their Spring TBR post) I put a lot of thought into this one, trying to make sure I’m catching new books by favorite authors and feeling like I’m ending up with a well-rounded list.  It’s a little late as a result, but so it goes.  I was aiming for 10 but wound up with a baker’s dozen.Top Ten Tuesday This isn’t counting the half dozen others I already have on my shelf at home, and of course another half dozen still unread from my Top 10 Books I missed in 2015.

Middle Grade

Fridays with the Wizards by Jessica Day George (out now) – This is the most recent in the series beginning with Tuesdays at the Castle – such fun!  Perfect for when I’m in the mood for something lighthearted.

Space Hostages by Sophia McDougall (out now) – the sequel to Mars Evacuees, which I enjoyed so much last year.

Wing and Claw: Forest of Wonders by Linda Sue Park (out now) – I confess, I haven’t read any of Linda Sue Park’s fantasy, but A Single Shard was of course great and I’mm excited to see her starting a new fantasy series.

Booked by Kwame Alexander (April 5)the lone realistic title on my list, because of The Crossover love. I’m also excited about his new picture book, Surf’s Up.

Poison is not Polite by Robin Stevens (April 26) – another entry in the Wells and Wong series which began (in the US) with Murder is Bad Manners, a ripping 1930s British boarding school mystery.

The Lost Compass by Joel Ross (May 24, 2016) – the sequel to this year’s MG Spec Fic Cybils winner (say that three times fast!) The Fog Diver. More steampunk fun with a great team.

Teen

A Thousand Nights by E.K. Johnston (out now) – Johnston does have a book coming out today,  Exit, Pursued by a Bear – but though I will want to read it, I want to read this one from last year more.

The Keeper of the Mist by Rachel Neumeier (March 8) – I’ve enjoyed Rachel Neumeier in general, and this one has already been enjoyed by two bloggers I trust, Maureen at By Singing Light and Charlotte of Charlotte’s Library.

A Tangle of Gold by Jaclyn Moriarty (March 29) – such a quirky, mind-bending, and very much underappreciated series!  Here’s where it started, with A Corner of White. This will hopefully wrap things up. I feel like I’ve been waiting forever for this one!

Winner’s Kiss by Marie Rutkoski (March 29) – Thank you, Cybils, for putting The Winner’s Curse on your teen finalists two years ago.  I am expecting my heart to break into a million pieces, but I’m going to read it anyway.

The Lie Tree by Frances Hardinge (April 19) – For years, I heard people raving about Hardinge.  Last year I finally read her.  Cuckoo Song was amazing. And I have been seeing my UK friends reacting to this book for months now.  Months!

The Raven King by Maggie Stiefvater (April 26) – Can Stiefvater find a way to bring Blue and The Raven Boys through the tangle she’s built without breaking my heart?  I’m pretty sure she can’t.  I’ll be there for the ride anyway, trying to keep my heart from being stomped on.

The Rose and the Dagger by Renee Abdieh (April 26) –I put The Wrath and the Dawn on my want-to-read Pinterest board last year, and I still haven’t read it.  But now I can read two books together, without having to wait so long for a sequel, right?  Also, two different Thousand and One Nights retellings on my list!  I can compare, like I did with 12 Dancing Princesses retellings.

What are you looking forward to reading this spring?  Bonus points if it’s on audio, as I find I have a harder time finding the books that I want on audio.

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Temple of Doubt

This is a teen fantasy that came out during Cybils season, so I had to wait to read it.  It is by Cybils founder Anne Boles Levy, whom I was lucky enough to meet in person at Kidlitcon, but it isn’t hard to sell me a teen fantasy with a cover this gorgeous anyway.

templeofdoubtTemple of Doubt by Anne Boles Levy. Sky Pony Press, 2015.
Hadara is the oldest of three daughters in a patriarchal society that (me knowing that Levy is Jewish herself) felt Jewish-inspired to me, with its commitment to the strict rules set down by the Temple and female modesty.  Here, though, doubt and nothingness are part of the religion.  Their god Nihil thrives on uncertainty and takes sacrificial maiden “wives”.  Hadara’s island has done pretty well being isolated from the main Temple, and Hadara has a  careful balance between trying fit in and learning how to make and use her mother’s forbidden herbal medicine. Then, a star falls and lands on the island, followed by swarms of high-up temple officials and soldiers afraid it’s a demon.  Hadara’s inability to keep her mouth shut keeps getting her into trouble as she feels compelled to point out where the officials are going wrong.

Having been raised in a very religious (but fantasy-loving) family myself, I’m always interested to see different fantasy takes on religion, and this was a very interesting one.  Hadara herself makes an ideal teen heroine, always teetering on the knife-edge of using her considerable talents to save others while unable to stay out of trouble herself.  Hadara’s relationships with all of her family members are quite well developed – both parents and two sisters – and there’s also a touch of romance that didn’t go at all where I was expecting it to.  There are some realistic scenes of soldiers going rough-shod through villages here, nice inter-cultural and inter-species relationship, but nothing explicit in the romance.  The story wrapped up nicely while leaving plenty of room for more stories set in this world, which I’d be very happy to read.  Recommended for those who enjoy stories of girls swimming upstream to find their way, as well as for those who enjoy religious-inspired fantasy.

Other teen fantasies I’ve enjoyed where religion played an important role include Shannon Hale’s Book of a Thousand Days, Nancy Farmer’s Sea of Trolls and Gail Carson Levine’s EverI also can’t resist mentioning Barry Deutsch’s Hereville graphic novels, which are appropriate for a much younger audience but delightfully and explicitly Orthodox Jewish.

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Reading the World Challenge- February

I’m feeling quite behind on my poor blog – last week was pretty much entirely give over to running my second-ever Crafts for Hogwarts Grads at the library, and this week to catching up. We had close to 50 people come to make Harry Potter-inspired wands, t-shirts, light switch plate covers, and more. It was lots of fun! Perhaps this time I’ll have pictures so that I can pull together a post about it on its own… And after that I ran my regular game day, and then an ESL conversation group, had a meeting wrote reports… such are the perils of trying to maintain a blog in spare time between patrons.

 

But on to my reading. I read 27 books in February, though I didn’t finish one of them. Here’s the breakdown:

Picture Books

I’m sure I actually read more, but these especially are the ones I want to write about especially for the Girl Scout project. All of these feature some kind of diversity in the characters if not always the author/illustrators.

 

Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson and E. B. Lewis
Janine
by Maryann Cocca-Leffler
Butterfly Park
by Elly Mackay
Elana’s Ears
by Gloria Roth Lowell. Illustrated by Karen Stormer Brooks

Early Chapter Books

These are all for my daughter. We are listening to all the Judy Moody books my library has on CD during the drive to or from school. We’re still reading Lulu and the Hamster in the Night together, but it’s slow going as we have four chapter books and some picture books that we’re rotating through.

Judy Moody Declares Independence, Judy Moody Goes to College, and Judy Moody, Girl Detective by Megan McDonald
Princess Posey and the Next-Door Dog by Stephanie Greene.

 

Middle Grade

The Marvels by Brian Selznick
Secret Coders
by Gene Luen Yang and Mike Holmes
The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder

Goblin Secrets by William Alexander
Ghoulish Song by William Alexander
The Grimm Legacy by Polly Shulman

Gone Crazy in Alabama by Rita Williams-Garcia
The Blue Sword
by Robin McKinley
Secrets of the Dragon Tomb by Patrick Samphire

Teen

Carry On by Rainbow Rowell
Serpentine
by Cindy Pon
Ms. Marvel vol. 2: Generation Why
and Ms. Marvel vol. 3: Crushed by G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona

Inheritance of Ashes by Leah Bobet
Walls Around Us by Nova Ren Suma
Newt’s Emerald by Garth Nix
The Six by Mark Alpert

Adult

You’re Never Weird on the internet (Almost) by Felicia Day
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up
by Marie Kondo
Masks and Shadows by Stephanie Burgis

Reading my World Challenge

I should design some spiffy graphics for these, since they’re just my own personal challenges. For Reading My World – 9 of my 27 authors were ethnically diverse – 30%. I read one Japanese, one Canadian and one Australian author and two British authors, so that only 11% of my reading was neither American nor British. Should I make myself feel better about that by counting the British authors?   11 of the books (40%) had main characters of color, and four of them had main characters with other diversity, including LGBT (The Marvels and Carry On), being non-neurotypical (Janine) or having a disability (The Six, Elana’s Ears).

Anyway, together with the 7 diverse authors I read last month, that makes 18 books towards my goal of 60 books by diverse authors for the year. I might make it!

Looking back for reference to my list of top 10 books I missed in 2015, I have (perhaps unsurprisingly) read all five of the books that I had on hand waiting to be read when I wrote the post, but only two of the books that I didn’t. Must get on that now! Or, you know, when I’m feeling that my shelf has a little space on it again…

In the meantime, while I’m having no trouble filling my print book shelf, I’ve been having a little more trouble finding audiobooks.  Any suggestions?

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The Gaither Sisters Series

My friends have been raving about this series since the first book came out, but I waited until the whole series was out to dive in.

onecrazysummerOne Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia. Amistad/HarperCollins, 2010.
It’s 1968, and 10-year-old Delphine is in charge of flying her two younger sisters, Vonetta and Fern, to California for the summer, to meet their mother, Cecile, who left shortly after Fern was born. Delphine is under strict instructions from Big Ma, who’s helped their father take care of the girls since then, not to let them be a “grand Negro spectacle”. She’s disappointed but not surprised when Cecile tells them to call her Nzila, and rather than taking them to Disneyland, sends the off to the Black Panthers for breakfast and summer camp so that she can continue her work of printmaking and poetry writing undisturbed.  There they learn about the Black Rights movement for the first time, so different from Big Ma’s trying to fit in and be especially respectful to whites. The tension ratchets up as the Black Panthers get in trouble with the police and people start to go missing.

This won four awards when it came out, including Scott O’Dell, Coretta Scott King, Newbery Honor, and National Book Award Finalist. I am not surprised. You’d think, when dealing with heavy topics like civil rights and a neglectful mother, that this would be a depressing book, one that adults would want kids to read but that kids might not necessarily enjoy. But Williams-Garcia handles it with such a deft touch that this is also a completely relatable book of funny sibling squabbles, first crushes, and out-of-control go-kart rides. There are Symbols, Layers and Character Growth to this book, folks, found in things like Fern’s beloved baby doll and Delphine’s changing attitudes towards the neighborhood Safeway. I’d recommend this to fans of realistic and funny family fiction as well as to fans of historical fiction, and can’t wait to read it with my daughter.

psbeelevenP.S. Be Eleven by Rita Williams-Garcia. Amistad/HarperCollins, 2013.
Back in Brooklyn, Delphine, Vonetta and Fern are trying to fit back into their old life – so hard when Big Ma hasn’t changed and they have. Their beloved Uncle Darnell is back from Vietnam, but instead of being the cheerful man they remember, always ready to play with them, he’s sullen and withdrawn and wants to sleep all the time. Even more momentous: their father has started whistling, and while it’s great that he’s happy again, all the girls are very suspicious about the cause. In the outside world, the Jackson Five are making waves, and the girls are determined to earn enough money to go see them when they come to New York. Delphine keeps writing Cecile back in California, even though the advice she gets back is hard to understand: “Be eleven.”

gonecrazyinalabamaGone Crazy in Alabama by Rita Williams-Garcia. Amistad/HarperCollins, 2015.
First it was the plane, and now the girls are taking the Greyhound to visit family in rural Alabama. Delphine is almost 12 now, but even little Fern remembers their last visit to the tiny cabin where their grandmother Big Ma lives with her mother, Ma Charles. Just across the creek is their cousin JimmyTrotter and his great-grandmother, Ma Charles’ half-sister Miss Trotter. There’s Vonetta’s shock and being expected to drink milk that doesn’t come from a carton and and Fern’s at discovering where meat comes from. Delphine, meanwhile, is feeling oppressed by the mere idea of starching and ironing Ma Charles’s sheets in the Alabama heat. This book, besides bringing all the relationship problems in the immediate family to a head, delves deep into a tangled family history.  It’s full of just as much heart and humor as the previous books.

 

I’ll now join my friends in loving this series, which would pair well with Christopher Paul Curtis’s The Watsons Go to Birmingham – 1963. Now I’m eagerly waiting for my daughter to be old enough to read it together.

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A Pocket Full of Murder

pocketfullofmurderA Pocket Full of Murder by R.J. Anderson. Simon and Schuster, 2015.
Isaveth is trying her hand at baking spells from her mother’s old recipe. If she gets them right, they’ll be better quality than the factory-made spells, and she can earn some much-needed extra money for her family. Her father’s been having a hard time finding work recently, due to prejudice against their minory Moshite beliefs. But as she’s out selling them, she gets knocked over by a boy (with an eyepatch!) on a bicycle. Life goes from bad to worse as her father is wrongfully accused of murder and jailed. Her older sister wants to just try to keep things going and trust to justice, but Isaveth, though younger, is inspired by her radio drama heroine, Lady Justice Auradia. She and Quiz, the friendly if mysterious bicycle boy, set out to prove her father’s innocence. Isaveth’s initial optimism hits the ground hard as she uncovers deeper and deeper levels of corruption. Has she just opened up herself and the rest of her family to danger instead of helping?

I came a little late to the party on this book, which Brandy at Random Musings of a Bibliophile and Maureen at By Singing Light both adored. It was worth the wait, though! This is a detailed not-quite Earth world in what felt like Eastern Europe in the early 20th century. The invented religions echo Judaism and Christianity while allowing freedom to talk about prejudices from outside that framework, a touch which I appreciated. I really enjoyed the magic system, which divided the Common Magic, only grudgingly admitted to be real magic by the elite, from the Sagery that the wealthy can use. I’ve rarely if ever read about magic being part of industrial revolutions, so the talk of magic that can be reproduced in factories, if not quite as well, was fascinating. But really, all of that is background for the characters and plot, and both of these aspects are quite strong. Isaveth and Quiz both strike just the right balance of brave and vulnerable, so enthusiastically setting off to do the right thing. The plot felt like Isaveth riding downhill with Quiz on his bicycle: starting off at a moderate pace, but picking up speed, with lots of bumps and the characters clinging ever more tightly together to stay on the bicycle. This is an exciting story with characters that pull at the heart-strings and enough depth to leave readers with something to think about afterwards. This was my first time reading R. J. Anderson, and it certainly won’t be my last.

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