The Second Guard by J.D. Vaughn. Disney Hyperion, 2015.
The Second Guard is an epic fantasy with two cool and unique features: the kingdom of Tequende, where it’s set, is something like a South American kingdom, still under indigenous rule and resisting the invasions of the Far Worlders. Secondly, the Queen (ok, maybe that’s second and third) – the kingdom is always run by a Queen, who is guarded by an army of second-born children who are both male and female. The populace is also divided into three guilds – Sun, Moon and Earth – each one dedicated to one of the three gods and separated from each other by culture, clothing and careers.
Pages from a reference work on Tequende that appear between chapters would make this set-up appear to be perfect, but cracks begin to show at the very beginning. Our heroine, Sun Guilder Talimedra, or Tali for short, is preparing to leave for service in the Guard, just as her mother served before her. She’s leaving behind her twin sister, Nel, who lost her hearing at a young age in the same illness that took their mother. But as Tali is on the roof of her family’s merchant ship, she sees another ship sunk, which the people aboard blame on the Second Guard. Tali is shocked – but will her blind faith in the Second Guard stand up to actually joining it?
In the Guard Training, Tali befriends to other pledges, Moon Guilder Zarif and Earth Guilder Chey. She also very slowly gets to know her assigned roommate, Brindl, an Earth Guilder who decides right away that she’d prefer kitchen to military service. Tali has trouble believing that anyone would choose the longer menial service doing over the glory of the military, and this magnifies the general disregard that other guilds seem to hold Earth Guilders in. Tali is a sympathetic character if impulsive character, given to running off and doing what she thinks needs to be done without regards to advice or thinking through consequences. This maybe caused me scold her out loud once or twice, even if it does make for a believably imperfect character and a more interesting storyline.
So there is intrigue and adventure, both in school and around the kingdom, questioning of social structures and getting to know many of the different kinds of people making up the kingdom. I really appreciated a society where women were integrated in at all levels and career paths, and the society was mostly well thought out. Low points were some hints of romance that seemed more instalove than anything genuine, and routinely having trainees work themselves until they vomited. My invented historical accuracy meter was also piqued by having what felt like a colonial-era story a century or two post-crossing the Atlantic that still had no gunpowder. These points aside, this was still an entertaining series beginning, one I’d be happy to give especially to those older middle graders and teens who come in search new fat epic fantasy series.
This book has been nominated for the Cybils, but this is just my opinion, not that of the committee.
Mark of the Thief by Jennifer Nielsen. Scholastic, 2015.
The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley. Greenwillow Books, 1985. Aeryn is the sol, or princess, but not heir to the throne because her mother was a foreigner distrusted by the kingdom. That combined with her complete lack of the magical talent royalty of Damar are supposed to have has led to her being massively shy and lacking in self-esteem. Instead of mingling with the court, she sneaks off to rehabilitate her father’s old lame warhorse, Talat, as well as doing chemistry experiments to make a working recipe for kenet, a dragon-fire-proof salve. Dragons are dog-sized nuisances, so she’s being useful but not glorious by finding a way she can get good at killing them off single-handedly.
Princess Juniper of the Hourglass by Ammi-Joan Paquette. Philomel, 2015.
My daughter, aged six, is mostly still wanting to be read to, but yesterday morning at breakfast put The Chicken Problem by Jennifer Oxley in a bookstand and proceeded to read it aloud to us, while mostly ignoring her breakfast. She’s also been enjoyed I Really like Slop! by Mo Willems. At bedtime, we’re reading some favorite picture books, some re-reading of El Deafo by Cece Bell and started on The Dragonsitter by Josh Lacey, which I picked up at Kidlitcon. We were partway through reading Fable Comics by Chris Duffy (editor) when we had to take it back to the library, though my son had already read it through. In the car, we’re continuing the Little House books with By the Shores of Silver Lake by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Happily, the necessarily discussions of racism in context are decreasing at this point in the series. It’s still one that both kids are enjoying.
My son, newly 11, has reached an exciting milestone: he is reading a novel in print and not getting bogged down. As I mentioned when I reviewed the book, he’d asked for the audio version of The Copper Gauntlet by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, because we listened to book one in the car together. But it’s far too scary to subject his little sister to in the car, and as he needed a fantasy book for a school assignment, I brought it home from the library for him. Now he’s three-quarters of the way through, and reading happily. He’s listening to Inkdeath by Cornelia Funke on his own, and we’re re-listening to Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin in the car. We’ve finished our reading of The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley and have moved on to Harry Crewe’s adventures in The Blue Sword, also by Robin McKinley.
My love is enjoying some middle grade fantasy himself – Galaxy Pirates: Hunt for the Pyxis by Zoë Ferraris. I think he’s listening to Carry on by Rainbow Rowell on audio, though I could be wrong… [Updated 12/2/15 to say] I was wrong. Carry On is up next, but he’s currently listening to The Aeronaut’s Windlass by Jim Butcher.
Grounded by Megan Morrison. Scholastic, 2015.
Copper Gauntlet. Magisterium Book 2. by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare. Penguin Random House, 2015.
Hollow Boy. Lockwood & Co. 3 by Jonathan Stroud. Read by Emily Bevan. Listening Library, 2015.
Nightborn. Thrones and Bones Book 2 by Lou Anders. Crown Books, 2015.
Escape from Baxters’ Barn by Rebecca Bond. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015.
Brilliant by Roddy Doyle. Illustrated by Emily Hughes. U.S. publication by Harry N. Abrams, 2015.
by Anne Nesbet. HarperCollins, 2015.
School for Sidekicks. The Academy of Metahuman Operatives #1 by Kelly McCullough. Feiwel and Friends, 2015.


