Nuts to You

Look! The new Amelia Bloomer list is out!

Animal fantasy is not normally my thing, but this Cybils finalist avoided many of the usual pitfalls and was unexpectedly charming.

Nuts to YouNuts to You by Lynne Rae Perkins. Harper Collins Childrens, 2014.
Some young squirrel friends are playing together, when their antics unexpectedly result in one friend, Jed, being carried away by a hawk. Watching closely, TsTs and Chai see him fall far away, and decide to try to rescue him. But as they try to follow the “buzzpaths” to find him, they witness a new danger: the loud machines that are destroying the forest around the buzzpaths. Will they find Jed? And will they be able to stay on task long enough to warn the other animals of the coming danger?

So in general (Mouseguard being the big exception), I don’t really care for the epic struggles of anthropomorphized animals. Nuts to You worked largely because the squirrels really feel like squirrels, and their struggles are eminently believable. They are wired to play and to look for nuts, and it’s really hard for them to stay focused on anything else, even things as important as rescuing their friends. (That might make this a very relatable choice especially for kids with ADD!) And while part of the forest being chopped down isn’t the ascent of an evil wizard or the end of the world, it is the perfect scale of danger to be terrifying to a squirrel. I also appreciated the squirrel names, which sound so very much like the noises that squirrels make – especially TsTs and the new friend they make, Tchke. The pencil illustrations complement the story perfectly. It’s a story of drama, adventure, and friendship balanced with squirrel silliness that feels both exotic and familiar.

See also reviews from fellow Cybils panelists Charlotte at Charlotte’s Library
Sondra at Sonderbooks
Sherry at Semicolon

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Dark Lord: School’s Out

Dark Lord: School's OutDark Lord: School’s Out by Jamie Thomson. Walker Books, 2014. First published in the UK by Orchard Books, 2012.
In the first book of this snarky series (which I haven’t read), the Dark Lord was exiled from his domain by the White Wizard Hasdruban, send to live as a middle school student called Dirk Lloyd. Now he lives with a nearly angelic boy, Christopher, and his minister parents, trying to navigate the human world with his Dark Lord instincts. Disaster strikes when his other best friend, Sooz, is accidentally sent over to the Darklands. Dirk and Christopher must work to get her back. Meanwhile, Sooz decides that she must reclaim the Darklands in the name of the Dark Lord, uncovering dirty secrets about the so-called good guys in the process. But while she loves her dark fashions as much as the next goth girl, she turns out to have a social justice streak that is, well, a little shocking for those used to the Dark Lord’s rule. And what will his reaction be when he finds out that his former subjects now expect a living wage and break time? Assuming they can get around the enemies tracking them down in both worlds…

This is silly fun, perfectly combining middle school interpersonal actions with cross-world adventures. It’s very fun to see all the characters adjusting to shifting roles and relationships – Dirk/ the Dark Lord wrestling with the unfamiliar empathy and mushy feelings that being human causes, Christopher figuring out how to remain part of the trio despite his own, despised innocence, Sooz finding the line between appreciation of the dark beauty and real evil. The adventure on both sides of the lines are also entertaining – Dirk is pursued by an evil nanny as well as Sooz’s more obvious peril – and there are fun little dark details, like the cell phone with tiny skeleton arms to grab on to the ear that Dirk adapts to call the Darklands. It’s dark humor that manages to stay on the light side of things, and recommended for those aged about 10 and up.

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Future Flash

This one was kindly donated to me by the publisher for the Cybils, and will be going to my kids’ school library shortly.

Future FlashFuture Flash by Kita Helmetag Murdock. Sky Pony Press, 2014.
Once in a while – usually after she touches someone for the first time – seventh-grade Laney gets a flash of a picture from their future. Sometimes it’s good, sometimes it’s bad – but she’s known since she was little that she can’t tell anyone about it. Now, for the first time ever, there’s a new boy in her small town class. Unfortunately, she’s partnered with him in dance class. Even worse, when they touch, she gets a vision of a fire so horrific that she starts screaming, therefore ruining his chances of ever fitting in. The horrendous embarrassment gets even worse when she’s caught in class drawing a picture of her vision, featuring Lyle on fire. But Laney tries to help Lyle anyway, trying to protect him from the class bully, Axel, and remembering herself how Axel turned from her best friend into a bully. Events race quickly towards the fire that Laney has foreseen – but will knowing what’s coming help?

The bullying was dealt with realistically – so often, books send the message that if kids just fight back or just let it go, the bullying will go away, when neither of those approaches are statistically helpful. Laney’s visions, while clearly supernatural, are the only such element in a taut tale of everyday elements. While it might not be as appealing to people who want their supernaturally talented youngsters to be off saving the world, kids looking for realistic fiction with a twist should really enjoy it. I really appreciated how Murdock was able to keep a thriller pace and excitement going with such a small canvas: few characters, a small town, and a short time period. As it’s short and exciting, it would work especially well for reluctant readers.

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The Cat at the Wall

Trying to catch up on books I read for the Cybils. This is one that was nominated in middle grade, but kept in teen at my library.

The Cat at the WallThe Cat at the Wall by Deborah Ellis. Groundwood Books, 2014.
Clare, a former very bratty middle-schooler from Bethlehem, PA, wakes up in after her death in the body of a cat in Bethlehem, Israel. As she reflects on the perceived injustices of her former life, particularly her English teacher, Ms. Sealand, who made her write the poem Desiderata many times as punishments. In Israel, she starts living in a house occupied by an orphaned Palestinian boy, Omar, and two Israeli soldiers who are observing the neighborhood. Finally, Clare is able to recognize the selfishness of her former existence and do something to help someone else.

This is a fascinating story that would make for a great school or book club discussion. Especially in Israel/Palestine, the people are very real, with good and bad aspects, reason and unreason on both sides. But while it would have been sickly sweet and way too sad to have Clare be an angel of a child, she was so very unpleasant in life that I don’t think this would be appealing pleasure reading for most kids. There is also a small amount of very disturbing violence. It is definitely thoughtful, well written, and worth reading and talking about.

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The Above World Trilogy for Multicultural Children’s Book Day

It is (OK, yesterday was) the second annual Multicultural Children’s Book Day, hosted by Valarie of Jump into a Book and Mia of Pragmatic Mom! mcbd-white

You can go over there to see lots and lots of posts on the topics, both wonderful book lists and thoughts about why diversity in publishing, especially for kids, is so very important.

I’m highlighting one of my very favorite series from 2014, a dystopian series that’s very happily good for older elementary and middle school kids, as well as teens. This answers two needs that I see – one, for genre fiction that’s just as diverse as the world today, and another, for exciting dystopian books for kids of 10 and up who really want to read them but maybe aren’t quite ready for full-on Hunger Games yet.


Above World TrilogyAbove World
by Jenn Reese.
Candlewick, 2012.
I felt a little bit guilty reading this one, as it was the middle of the Cybils judging period, and only the last book of this trilogy was nominated this year. But I’d really been wanting to read this series, and didn’t want to spoil it by starting at the end – so in I jumped!

In the dark and distant future (cue the ominous music), the formerly habitable parts of Earth are no longer so welcoming. With the help of the LegendaryTech company, people undertook drastic measures to survive, genetically altering themselves to live in extreme environments.

Generations later, Aluna is a twelve-year-old Kampii who lives in an underwater colony. She’s clearly described both as having African features and coloring, and as closely resembling the founder of the colony (extra points for pioneering Black women scientists!) The ceremony where she will receive the Ocean Seed that will turn her legs into a tail is fast approaching, but for the first time, Aluna isn’t sure she wants a tail: the breathing necklaces that let the Kampii breathe underwater are failing and people are dying. The Elders won’t take action, feeling that tradition is most important. But Aluna is sure that the situation is more dangerous than the Elders will admit, and rushes off to investigate, followed by her best friend Hoku, a techie tinkerer from the poor side of the reef. As they explore, it’s fortunate that neither of them have their tails yet, as their journey takes them to shore. There Aluna helps a stranded Deepfell, a shark/human hybrid, the traditional enemies of the Kampii. They also gain entry to a legendary all-female Aviar fortress, where Hoku befriends the leader’s daughter, fellow techie Calli. The story builds as our heroes, now including a failed Centaur hybrid boy (failed as in all-human body) find out who is behind the failing technology and stage an initial confrontation…


Mirage
by Jenn Reese.
Candlewick, 2013.
Dash*, our centaur boy, breaks his exile to lead the group to the desert city Mirage, to warn the horse people of the dangers posed by the big bad, Karl Strand, and his clones. Unfortunately, a female clone, Scorch, is already there speaking in the ear of the High Khan. Their quest to gain allies for the fight already had slim chances – but now it looks like they might not even make it out of Mirage alive. Their only chance for survival – and it’s a slim one – is to go with Dash back to his desert clan, and have him face trial for breaking exile.

We meet more types of hybrids, and get to know a different kind in person – an Upgrader, what we would probably call a cyborg, who has technological rather than biological upgrades. You might have guess from my description of the first book that Aluna is a rebel, and she is in more ways than one. Kampii women aren’t supposed to be fighters, but Aluna practiced spear fighting with her one nice older brother, then learned some nifty new tricks from the Aviar in the first book. Now, she has two more martial arts styles to learn from, and it’s clear that the author is herself a practitioner of martial arts. With another big fight at the end, the book has enough excitement to avoid that common middle book slump.

*The third Dash of my Cybils reading this year – see also Dash in Shouldn’t You Be in School? and Dash in Space Case (another good choice for multicultural reading.)


Horizon
by Jenn Reese.
Candlewick, 2014.
I’ll keep this description brief to avoid spoilers. Time is running out to stop Karl Strand’s evil plot of world domination, but there still isn’t enough help, the few allies already gained are under massive attack, and there’s still the little problem of not knowing where the enemy headquarters are. When plans to infiltrate the enemy go wrong, Aluna and Hoku end up going back to the Kampii while Dash joins an Upgrader group. Calli must return to the Aviar fortress, which her mother is too ill to lead. But will the war – even won – stop the fragile efforts at unity?

There was so much to love about these books! I’ll start with the diversity, since that’s what we’re celebrating today: there’s lots of it. The whole series about facing prejudices with such a deep biological basis that it makes our prejudice about skin color seem like the silly thing it is. I have to admit, I’m not sure how comfortable I’d be talking with someone with the body of a shark or a snake. But the cast is diverse in skin color, too, with at least half of the main characters being people of color. We can tell right from the beginning that skin color isn’t related to the other genetic modifications – people of diverse backgrounds chose different modifications, so that Hoku and Aluna, both Kampii, have very different skin colors. There’s a lot of cultural diversity as well, and positive and negative aspects of the different cultures and their governments are highlighted throughout the stories. And just a hint of GLBT issues as well – all of the romances with the kids are hetero, but Cali’s mother is shown as being in a same-sex relationship.

Which brings me to romance: very nicely done, more as people getting to know each other than the insta-love based solely on appearance. They felt genuine, aching, while staying in territory appropriate for younger kids. Overall, while the series has many of the features of the popular teen dystopias, the tension is ratcheted up and the stakes feel appropriately high without the massive body counts that are so common. There’s also good character development for a lot of the major characters, not just Aluna. And it ends on a hopeful note, believing that we can recognize the humanity even in our enemies and work together for a better future.  This series is highly, highly recommended.

And for older teens looking for diverse dystopian books, I also recommend Tankborn by Karen Sandler and Legend by Marie Lu.

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Pathfinder

I nominated this one for the Cybils myself without having read it, because I’d enjoyed Angie Sage’s previous books, and I figured that since it was published the day before the nominating deadline, no one would have a chance to read it and fall in love with it in time to nominate it. pathfinderPathfinder. Todhunter Moon Book 1. by Angie Sage. Katherine Tegen Books, 2014. This is a new series set several years later in the same world as Sage’s Septimus Heap series, which begins with Magyk and which my son and I listened to all the way through on audio. As the story opens, our heroine, Alice Todhunter Moon, is experiencing her Pathfinder Ceremony, where she and the other new 12-year-olds of their village will learn the secrets of their small, outcast society. They turn out to be big and very cool secrets, ones that Tod (as she prefers to be called) never guessed. Unfortunately, her nasty Aunt Mitza, who isn’t a Pathfinder, has overheard the secrets, putting the entire Pathfinder community in jeopardy. Soon the people that Tod loves are vanishing – terrifying white t-Rex type monsters are being seen around the village – and it’s up to Tod and her friend Oskar to save the day. Their path will take them to all the beloved characters from the previous book, while introducing new magykal things and creatures. Tod and her friends were characters that I very much enjoyed getting to know, as with the first series. But, as we also meet pretty much every significant character from the previous seven books, this one is a delight best enjoyed by those who have read the first series. Reading this let me ponder on the charm of these books. I had previously noticed the quirky world with a fusion of modern and medieval culture. This time I noticed that the story manages to feel comfortableeven as a lot of dark things happen. People are kidnapped and killed, the tension is high, but it’s balanced by cozy family or wizard tower scenes, beautiful lapis lazuli tunnels, and carefully drawn character studies. With a little something for lots of different kinds of fantasy fans, it’s no wonder this series has been a hit. It was also my first time reading Angie Sage in print – I’d always listened to the books. There’s a lot to be said for both formats, the audio bringing all the characters to life while the book includes lots of black and white drawings and pays attention to the details of book design. I am looking forward to reading more about Alice Todhunter Moon!

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Cybils Picture Book Finalists

armchaircybilsIn the fall of 2013, when I was not a Cybils judge, I joined the Armchair Cybils hosted by Amy at Hope is the Word, and had a lot of fun trying to read as many nominees as I could in all of four different categories. Unsurprisingly, since over 100 books are nominated in most categories, I hadn’t read many of the finalists when they came out, and started all over again trying to read those. I’m sad to say that I ran out of oomph before I got to the teen speculative fiction – many of the 2013 finalists are still on my want to read list.

This year, I figured that reading the round 1 books just in the category where I was a judge would be enough. Now that that’s done, I’m going to see how many of the Cybils finalists I can read – at least in the categories that my kids and I most enjoy reading. Those would be Fiction Picture Books, Easy Readers, Nonfiction for Early and Middle Grades, Graphic Novels (both age ranges), and Teen Speculative Fiction. If I get through the Easy Readers with my daughter, I’ll maybe move on to the Early Chapter Books… but I might be getting ahead of myself! I’ve checked out some of the teen books and graphic novels, but am just now finishing up reading the last of my new Christmas books.

I have read all of the picture books, though! Here’s a look at them: Continue reading

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”Shouldn’t You Be in School?”

Shouldn't You Be In School?”Shouldn’t You Be in School?” All the Wrong Questions Book 3. by Lemony Snicket. Art by Seth Little, Brown and Company, 2014.
A second Dashiell appears in this book (see Space Case for my first Dashiell of 2014), a librarian friend of our narrator, a pre-teen Lemony Snicket. I haven’t read the first two books in the series, but that didn’t really cause any difficulties. This is noir for the tween set, as Lemony and his fellow friends, mostly all twelve-year-olds with jobs, try to figure out what the right questions are to solve mysteries. The friends include Moxie the reporter, Jake the cook, Cleo the chemist, and the mysterious femme fatale Ellington Feint. Mysteries include many burned buildings, an extremely aggressive truancy department, and a library full of blank books.

I was especially interested to try this because I’d tried the Series of Unfortunate Events at a particularly sad time in life, where I wasn’t in any place to appreciate the humor of orphans trying to escape ill-meaning relatives. This series still pits children against adults in a way that’s likely to disturb adults and satisfy kids, but at least here not all the adults were deliberately malevolent. It still has the trademark snarky humor combined with a deep and genuine love of vocabulary and books. The young Lemony frequently summarizes books which well-read children ought to recognize, in re-telling them to himself or friends in times stress – a shared delight for book lovers. I’m not sure I’ll seek out the other books myself, but I’d definitely recommend it especially to kids who like dark humor and tales of self-reliant, book-loving kids.

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Space Case

Here’s a smart, near-ish future sci-fi mystery. Also, Dash seems to be the new literary it-name – this was the first of three books I read with characters named Dash or some variation thereof.

Space CaseSpace Case by Stuart Gibbs. Simon & Schuster, 2014.
Dash was very excited to be one of the families living on the moon base – but he’s here to tell that it isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. The food is dreadful and the toilets worse. The space tourist family that lives along with the scientists on the base is dreadfully snobby. And of course, he misses his friends and being able to go surfing. Things take a turn for the sinister when, in the middle of wrestling with the toilet tubing following a particularly bad meal choice, Dash overhears the base’s senior doctor talking excitedly about a discovery he plans to share in the morning. But in the morning, he is dead. While it’s officially ruled a suicide, Dash is unconvinced. Together with his best friend Roddy and the new girl, Kira, he goes against the orders of the director to try to figure out who could have murdered the doctor, and why. They are disturbed to find out how many people might have had something against the genial doctor – but the real answer turns out to be something none of them predicted.

Overall, Space Case feels like an old-fashioned “marvels of the future” science fiction novel, with up-to-date marvels and social attitudes. Dash’s family is mixed race, as are nearly all the families on the base. I also appreciated the gender balance in the book: the director of the moon base, while overall an unsympathetic character is a woman, and Dash’s mother is a high-ranking scientist. The pages from the moon base manual inserted between chapters, with their overly-optimistic, yet bland and official attitude are hilarious. The kids are able to fit their adventuring in even as they maneuver around the adults in their lives. But there are a few problems as well. Dash isn’t happy with his situation, and his attitude may come across as pleasantly snarky or unpleasantly whiny, depending on your attitude. As Stephanie at Views from the Tesseract points out, the mystery looks like it’s a closed room mystery that the reader should be able to figure out along with Dash – but it isn’t. There’s no way we can figure it out ahead of time, and that feels like cheating. It might be a bit unbelievable that nearly everyone in the world would be mixed-race by 2040, as this proposes – though I mostly enjoyed reading a world where that’s the case. The final sin is that the cover is boring. This should be a minor sin, but unfortunately, I’ve tried and failed to give this to kids, and put it prominently on display to no avail. Despite my quibbles with the book, it’s a fun story from a much-needed perspective, and deserves more attention than the cover is getting it.

More reviews at Charlotte’s Library and Random Musings of a Bibliophile.

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Thursdays with the Crown

Look! A book review! This was nominated for the Cybils in a series that I was going to read anyway.

Thursdays with the CrownThursdays with the Crown by Jessica Day George. Bloomsbury Children’s Books, 2014.
This is the third book in the series that started with Tuesdays at the Castle, which I really enjoyed. At the end of the second book, Wednesdays in the Tower, our heroine, the young princess Celie and her baby griffin, along with her brother Rolf, sister Lilah, and the visiting Prince Lulath, were all transported in towers from the castle back to the country that it now appears the Castle originally came from. But if they thought that travelling to the other country would resolve everything right away, they are mistaken. There are many hints about the castle’s past – including large griffin stables – but the countryside around seems largely empty. They set out to look for the broken pieces of the Eye of the Castle anyway. In separate places near the castle, they meet two old wizards, each of whom hates the other and claims to be doing his best to save the Castle and its legacy. People used to bond with the royal griffins, but the local lads are now all failing to do so. It will take detective work and getting out of some very sticky situations for our royal siblings and Prince Lulath to save the Castle.  There is adventure, mystery, and riding on griffins!!!

This is a fine fantasy, light enough in tone to work for younger and sensitive readers while exciting enough to engage more kids. Unfortunately, I just didn’t love it as much as I did the first book. The days of the week in the title are now just part of the series name – there’s nothing really related to Thursday happening here – and the living Castle plays a much less active role than it did in the previous books. Both of those changes took some of the sparkle out of the series for me, even though I still enjoyed the other characters’ interactions. Really, as my fellow Cybils panelist Sherry over at Semicolon pointed out, Prince Lulath steals the show here, with his silly, flowery way of talking that nevertheless manages to say deep things. Overall, even though it’s not quite as fun as the first books, fans will want to keep reading, and newcomers really should start at the beginning. I’ll still read the next book myself, and hope that things improve.

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