Six (mostly) Silly Picture Books

It’s time for the first Kid Lit Blog Hop of September! Take a look at all the great books!

Kid Lit Blog Hop

In honor of my daughter starting kindergarten, here’s the latest large batch of new picture books that got the most reread requests from her.

FroodleFroodle by Antoinette Portis. Roaring Brook Press, 2014.
Four birds – Crow, Dove, Cardinal, and Little Brown Bird – go various places around the neighborhood, but each always sings the same song. “Caw. Coo. Chip. Peep.” This is the story of what happens when Little Brown Bird decides to try singing “froodle” instead of “peep”. Strong outlines and smooth fill round out this silly lesson in individuality, perfect for younger preschoolers and up.

eastercatHere Comes the Easter Cat by Deborah Underwood. Pictures by Claudia Rueda. Dial Books for Young Readers, 2014.
Cat is really jealous of the Easter Bunny – why is he so popular, and why can’t there be an Easter Cat instead? Each spread in this book has one page devoted to a picture of the would-be Easter Cat, one devoted to words from the cat’s invisible friend – maybe the reader? Cat’s communications in picket signs and facial expressions combine with the words on the facing page to form a dialogue. Colored pencil illustrations on white background make it feel like this clever, hilarious story could be happening anywhere.

meanieheadMeaniehead by Bruce Eric Kaplan. Simon and Schuster, 2014.
This time the humor is definitely on the dark side. Siblings Henry and Eve get in a fight over an action figure that, over the course of the book, ends the world. It’s told very matter-of-factly, as if children bulldozing their houses were perfectly normal. Scribbly pictures with heavy black outlines and watercolor fill surrounded by lots of white space add to the surreal feel. The text is short, but the concept might be advanced for toddlers – probably preschoolers and up are the best audience. I was torn between amusement and horror; the kids were just fascinated.

ninjaredNinja Red Riding Hood by Corey Rosen Schwartz. Illustrated by Dan Santat. Penguin, 2014.
In this sequel to The Three Ninja Pigs, the wolf has tried ninja school himself in hopes of finally getting a good meal. He lures Red into her grandmother’s empty house, only to find that she’s been to ninja school too! The illustrations are boldly painted and full of movement, carried further by the bouncy rhyming text. I read this one aloud to the summer camp kids as well, who were very excited about it. I’d say it’s ideal for ages 3-6, though it was a hit with the kids up to age 10 as well.

nonapNo Nap! Yes Nap! by Margie Palatini. Illustrated by Dan Yaccarino. Little, Brown and Co. 2014.
Fun, repetitive text combined with bright, swirling ink and digital illustrations make for a delightful tale of the chase to a toddler’s nap time. Toddler may be full of diversionary tactics, but mother has even more tricks in her bag. The short text and the child’s age make this a good choice for toddlers, but the limited, repeated vocabulary also made it fun for my daughter, almost five, to try reading the part of the child.

Three Bears in a BoatThree Bears in a Boat by David Soman. Dial Books, 2014
From the author team of Ladybug Girl comes this new book. Three bear cubs conspire to sneak the honey jar off the mantelpiece while their mother is out, but accidentally break her special blue shell in the process. Panicked about facing their bear mother, they set out in their sailboat to find a replacement before she notices. They journey past other crafts to a small and spooky island and through rough waters – will they ever find the shell? With beautiful watercolor illustrations, pleasingly symmetrical language, and literary references on other boats, this is a new book that feels like it has what it takes to become a classic.

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Huntress

I really loved Malinda Lo’s Cinderella retelling Ash, which is why I’d originally put this book, set in the same world, on my 48HBC pile. It took me a couple of months to get to it, but here it is!

HuntressHuntress by Malinda Lo. Little, Brown and Co., 2011.
This book says it’s set in the same world as Ash, but as I didn’t recognize any characters in common and it’s a very different time period, it’s just as easy to read this as a standalone. The big thing that is the same is the very cool fusion of Chinese and Celtic mythology. In this world, Kaede is a sage in training there because it’s expected of someone of her rank, not because of any personal vocation or aptitude. She’s just as happy sneaking off for weapons practice and working in the garden. In the same monastery, Taisin is a poor but talented sage in training, one whose visions have earned her a place she can’t really believe in. As the story opens, she is troubled by vivid dreams that show heartbreak resulting from her falling in love with Kaede – whom she knows only by sight.

But the world has been troubled by darkness, cold and dying things, so when an invitation from the Queen of the Xi comes to the king, it can’t be ignored. Taisin’s visions mean that Taisin and Kaede are sent as part of the small entourage accompanying the Prince when he journeys to the Xi’s Midsummer festival. The closer they get to the border, the worse things get, with gruesome monsters attacking the party and babies in the village born part monster.

The story is dark and beautiful. People we care about die and no action, no matter how necessary or well meant, comes without a price. The romance, which could have been another case of wretched instalove, developed gradually and deliciously sweetly despite the heavy foreshadowing. While there is a bedroom scene, it fades to black early enough to keep it appropriate for younger teens – really, the overall darkness and violence pushes it to feeling like a book for high schoolers rather than middle schoolers in my mind. I enjoyed it greatly, and recommend it highly to readers who enjoy darker stories of the Fey.

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The Snow Spider

I remember seeing this book around, but it was Stephanie at Views from the Tesseract writing about it that prompted me to check it out.

Snow SpiderThe Snow Spider, The Magician Trilogy Book 1. by Jenny Nimmo. First published by Methuen Books, 1986. Orchard/Scholastic edition 2006.

In a rural Wales with school buses and electricity but coal stoves, young Gwyn lives in a family shattered since the disappearance of his older sister Bethan. His father wants nothing to do with him anymore, his quiet mother mostly just tries to keep Gwyn out of the way, and he’s not too popular at school, either. But on his birthday, his grandmother Nain gives him five gifts and tells him that they are related to his magical heritage. The first thing he tries is a brooch, which turns into the beautiful snow spider whom he names Arianwen. Arianwen makes beautiful spider web tapestries – and one of them shows a girl who looks just like his sister, the age she would be. But the problem with inheriting magic that skips two or three generations before reappearing is that there’s no one to tell you how to do things right or to help you fix things if your magic starts causing problems.

This is a short, lovely fantasy with a classic feeling – I do have a weakness for Welsh fantasy! The chapters frequently end with exclamation marks to lead the reader on to the next chapter, which I found entertaining but a bit distracting. I’d originally thought that this might be good for my son to read to himself, as it’s much shorter than most of the books he’s interested in. The small type turned him off from the start, though, and I’m honestly glad he did – magic aside, this is a book about a family recovering from the death of a child. While that’s fine for lots of kids, my own son still finds plots that deal with the real emotions of this kind of loss as this one does too painful to deal with since we came so very close to losing his sister. (We were unable to read the very popular Amulet series for that reason.) The issues are handled well, though, and most children hopefully aren’t going to have that kind of reaction to the book. Otherwise, this is a wonderful transitional story for children interested in meatier but still relatively short books.

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Dodger

I’ve mentioned before that Pratchett is a reliable author whose prolific works I don’t try to keep up with. I just know that if there’s a gap in my listening (or, much less often, reading) schedule, there will be a Terry Pratchett book to fill it enjoyably. Such was the situation when I checked out Dodger. Set in our own London in the time of Dickens, it loosely plays off of Dickens himself and some of his characters in a dangerous mystery that crosses between the upper classes and the very lowest of the low.

DodgerDodger by Terry Pratchett. Read by Stephen Briggs. Dreamscape Media, 2012.
Our hero is Dodger, a talented young tosher, whose explores the sewers for lost treasures for a living. He’s been trained by the best, and lives with and helps provide for one Solomon Cohen, who in turn does his best to keep Dodger as honest as possible. As the story opens, Dodger bursts out of the sewers in the middle of a rain storm just in time to save a beautiful blond girl from being beaten to death by two thugs. Dickens and a doctor friend also come on the scene and take the girl to the doctor’s house to recover. But even when she returns to consciousness (not having been saved from a bad beating), she refuses to say who she is. Only to Dodger does she confess that it’s because her husband allowed the beating in the first place. Captivated by her beauty, Dodger agrees to find out who her attackers were and how to get her away from her enemies for good.

This is an exciting exploration of London’s Dark Underbelly. We learn secrets of the tosher’s trade and legends of the Lady of the Sewers, protectress of those who work there. We are introduced to Historical Figures including a certain notorious barber on Fleet Street and Mr. Benjamin Disraeli. All of this immersion in the time and place was heightened by listening to the audiobook, as Stephen Briggs does an admirable job with representing the diverse cast of characters. The book fell a little flat for me in the romance department – Simplicity (as they decide to call the mysterious girl) is never really developed much as a character. We know enough to know that she has Depth and Fortitude, but Dodger’s commitment to her is based on a combination of instant attraction and horror that anyone would treat a woman so. There’s nothing wrong with that as a starting point, and also nothing wrong with (maybe) with the character admitting they will have to get to know each other when things have settled down, but I would have liked to see the relationship build more in the book. Still, Dodger is a likeable character, and there is plenty both in action and atmosphere to keep things going. Recommended for fans of gritty Victorian fiction teen and up.

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Books I Want To Read But Don’t Own Yet for Top 10 Tuesdays

Once again, the lovely folks over at The Broke and Bookish have come up with a list idea that I couldn’t resist.
Top Ten Tuesday

Since the vast majority of books that I read are library books, the concept of not reading a book because I don’t personally own it is rather foreign to me. Following is a list of books that neither I nor my library owns. It would probably be easier for me to do a list of Top 10 books I read from the library and still wish I owned.

Three books that are or were hard to come by:

Beatrice_Cover_FrontThe Secret Journal of Beatrice Hassi Barahal by Kate Elliott. Illustrated by Julie Dillon. This is a very small print run book with official art, based on Elliott’s Spirit Walker trilogy, which I loved. Such a small print run that it looks like it’s out of print now, and I really don’t think an ebook copy of an art book would be quite the same. Available only from Crab Tank

houseofsandHouse of Sand and Secrets by Cat Hellisen.
When I read When the Sea Is Rising Red last year, I thought it was excellent, but this was only available as an ebook, and I usually want to be able to loan out books to friends if I’m going to take the extra step of personal ownership. But hooray, this has since come out in paperback!

facelikeglassA Face Like Glass by Frances Hardinge.
Lots of my blogger friends love this, but the print version is only readily available in the UK.

Three books I can get in print no problem, but want on audio:
froiFroi of the Exiles by Melina Marchetta.

magicthiefThe Magic Thief by Sarah Prineas.

prodigyProdigy by Marie Lu.

And (hoping it’s not cheating too badly), four books I really want to read that aren’t yet published.

bluelilyBlue Lily, Lily Blue by Maggie Stiefvater.

thursdayswiththecrownThursdays with the Crown by Jessica Day George.

Jinx’s Fire by Sage Blackwood.

eyeofzoltarThe Eye of Zoltar by Jasper Fforde.

And one bonus… hopefully in the works Pegasus II by Robin McKinley.
I know there are lots more that are slipping my mind right now… but as I’m limited to ten anyway, this will have to do for now.

What about you?

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Courting Magic

Most often, if I want a book that the library doesn’t have, I’ll either interloan it from another library or ask one of my colleagues to get it for me. Here was a book that I had to buy for myself, because it’s only available as an ebook. (I got it from Smashwords)

Courting MagicCourting Magic by Stephanie Burgis. Five Fathoms Press, 2014.
This novella takes place five years after Kat’s last adventure in Stolen Magic. Having ensured that all of her older siblings found their perfect partners, in spite of a complete lack of cooperation on their parts, it’s now her turn to enter society. Kat is less than enthusiastic about an official society debut, but she’s learned a lot in the past five years – maybe more about socially acceptable ways of getting what she wants than giving up entirely. In any case, she loves her sisters, and they have their hearts set on a debut. In the middle of a dress fitting, though, she’s called away to the Hall of the Guardians. Someone has been robbing people using magic to impersonate high society people. Kat and three young gentlemen posing as her suitors are to track him down, as the kinds of events where he or she would be hunting are the same kind appropriate for Kat to be attending. Kat’s magical control has improved a lot in the last five years, but she doesn’t really have any practice at romance – nothing like what she’ll need when she starts falling for someone completely inappropriate.

My only real complaint about this is that it was too short, and there is no more. Really, though, Burgis crams a lot of wonderful into a very short number of pages without things feeling rushed. Kat is a delight as always, headstrong as ever even if she can show more restraint. It’s wonderful to see Kat’s relationship with her sisters and their partners (brother and sister-in-law aren’t present) – Brandy at Random Musings of a Bibliophile got it just right saying that the story shows how you can grow up but siblings don’t necessarily notice or believe it. They both know her better than anyone else and yet not as well as people who’ve only known her recently. And the romance – well, I don’t want to spoil things, but I’m happy to see Kat set up with someone so perfect for her, and the relationship feels remarkably well-developed for taking place over such a short period of time, both in pages and book-time. (There’s also nothing to make it inappropriate for young fans of the original series.) I’m really, really hoping for more in this world!

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August State of the Book Basket

It’s almost the end of summer – this week is the big back-to-school picnic at the lake, where the children find out what teacher they’ll have next year. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that my daughter gets the same K/1 teacher my son had (though I’ve heard only good things about the other teachers), because she is wonderful and because my daughter has been visiting her class every day she was in the school for four years, including two years when my son wasn’t in the class.

And what are we reading? Continue reading

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Rose and the Lost Princess

I really enjoyed reading Rose, one of the Cybils finalists this year, and I was so happy when I won this copy of the sequel from Liviana at .

Rose and the Lost PrincessRose and the Lost Princess by Holly Webb. Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, 2014.
When Rose was taken on as an apprentice to Mr. Fountain, the king’s chief magician, while keeping her useful and practical job as one of his housemaids, it seemed like the perfect solution. She’d thought, too, that having caught a wicked magician by magic would have made people in general more comfortable around magic. But the reality turns out to be much different. She’s exhausted from trying to do two jobs at once, and overall feelings towards magicians are downright hostile – even from her former friends on Mr. Fountain’s staff. When snow comes and stays in October, she feels sure there must be a magical cause, but not even Mr. Fountain can figure out how anyone could make it happen. Then Princess Jane, beloved of the military despite her three older sisters, is threatened. Rose is assigned to be her undercover guard in the palace – but will even that be enough? Rose will have to get a lot more comfortable with her powers very quickly to stop the kingdom from falling into complete chaos!!!!

Often magic feels the very opposite of practical and down-to-earth, which is maybe partly why Rose, who is all three of those things, is such a delightful character. Rose works to make friends on all levels of society, while disrupting devious and dastardly plots. The kingdom feels very British, but the enemy is the nearby kingdom of Talish, which I found a little distracting – is it alternate history or a completely new fantasy world? Even though the cover is pink and swirly, I’m sure my own boy at least would find this to be action-focused enough to make an enjoyable book, while girls and adult fans of children’s fantasy will eat it up with no difficulty at all. This continues to be a delightful series, and I’m very much looking forward to Rose and the Magician’s Mask coming out in September.

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Bud, Not Buddy and The Mighty Miss Malone

Before I get on to books, I wanted to let all of my blogging friends not already connected with the Cybils know that Cybils season is coming up. If you’re interested in being a Cybils panelist, you can apply now through the end of August! I am trying very hard not to hold my breath until the judges are actually announced. (See my list of bookish goals.)

Towards the end of the school year, we got an email from the 4/5 literature teacher, letting us know that Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry was on the reading list for next year (that would be the one just about to start now), and that any parents who objected should let her know.

I told her that Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry is a great book and brought her a small stack of new books on similar topics. (Revolution by Deborah Wiles, The Girl from the Tar Paper School by Teri Kanefield, and A Dance like Starlight by Kristy Dempsey.) I also decided that it was time for the boy and me to listen to some in a similar vein. I’d read and loved Bud, Not Buddy in library school (dating myself here… it was very new!) but hadn’t yet gotten around to The Mighty Miss Malone, though it was on my pile for the 48 Hour Reading Challenge.

Bud Not BuddyBud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis. Read by James Avery. Random House Listening Library, 2000.
The Great Depression is especially hard on orphans in Flint, Michigan. Bud Caldwell has been bounced around a lot since his mother passed when he was six. The orphanage keeps trying to find foster homes for him, and the homes keep sending him back. When his most recent foster home turns out to be even more cruel than he’d feared, Bud decides to go on the lam. He and his orphanage friend hope to catch the train out west to find work. But while Bud meets a sweet girl, Deza Malone, in the cardboard Hooverville outside of Flint, he doesn’t catch the train. Instead, he decides to walk across the state to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he hopes to find the man he thinks is his father – Herman E. Calloway, the leader of the band The Dusky Devastators of the Depression!!!!! (I really love that name!) On the way, there’s attempted car theft, a small dose of early union organizing, lots of jazz, and things not going according plan.

There are times when I feel like the Newbery committee may have missed the mark, and times when I feel they’re spot-on. This is one of the latter. A book about the Depression certainly has a lot of potential to be depressing, but Bud is anything but. He’s full of humor and pluck and has his entertaining list of rules for having a funner life and being a better liar. James Avery’s rich voice is the perfect accompaniment for the story. My son and I both enjoyed, and he was all about going straight on to the next book.

The Mighty Miss MaloneThe Mighty Miss Malone by Christopher Paul Curtis. Read by Bahni Turpin. Random House Listening Library, 2012.
In Bud, Not Buddy, we met Deza Malone, who was with her mother and brother trying to find her father. In this more recent book, we hear the story of how the family came to be separated. Things are tough in general in Gary, Indiana – Mr. Malone can’t find work, and they don’t have money to get Deza’s cavities filled or to figure out why her older brother Jimmie has stopped growing. But Deza is excelling at her all-black school, with a best friend and a very supportive teacher. After Joe Louis is defeated by the German Max Schmelling, the whole town falls into a depression. Her father is in a boating accident that kills his best friends, and decides that he must leave to find work in his hometown of Flint, Michigan. Months later, with no word from him, Mrs. Malone decides that they need to find Mr. Malone, and they set out with just what they can carry. But there’s no sign of Mr. Malone in Flint, either, which is how they end up in Flint’s Hooverville. Can Deza keep the rest of her family together until they can get back on the path to wonderful?

From the start, it’s clear that much-loved Deza with her long not-quite-understood vocabulary words is a very different character from Bud, left on his own for so many years. She’s brought beautifully to life by Bahni Turpin, who reads the whole varied cast of characters very convincingly. Even though Deza isn’t an orphan and there are still plenty of funny moment, I found The Mighty Miss Malone a harder book to read. There are just so many injustices that burn in the belly, from the Malones being evicted even though the rent is paid ahead, to Deza’s white teachers in Flint giving her Cs on her report card in spite of getting As on all her tests. The story of her father’s boating accident was disturbing and had my son asking if such a thing would really happen. I really like the family dynamic, where the adults always seemed like loving, involved parents, but there was still room for the kids to make serious contributions. Deza finds ways to hold on and works to bring her family together again even when her mother or brother temporarily gives up hope, proving that she is the Mighty Miss Malone. Curtis’s afterword explains more about the Schmelling/Louis fights and highlights the continued income gaps between whites and minorities in the U.S.

Both of these books hook readers with a combination of great characters and excitement, giving an inside view of life for those hardest hit by the Depression of the 1930s along the way. They’re wonderful, entertaining stories in their own right and recommended for everyone middle grade and up.

What are your favorite books for exploring racial injustice and/or the Great Depression?

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Traitors’ Gate

I’ve talked before about the trouble I’ve had finishing series, especially since I became a librarian and book blogger. There are just so many series to try! This book is the last in the series I was feeling most guilty about not finishing, since Kate was kind enough to comment that the last book wasn’t as difficult as the second. It still took over a year to get to it both because the series is heavy and because I knew I’d have to set aside two to three weeks to get through it.

Traitors' GateTraitors’ Gate. Crossroads Trilogy Book 3. by Kate Elliott. Tor, 2009.
This is the third book in the trilogy and therefore, spoilers for the first book are inevitable. In the first book, Spirit Gate the land of the Hundred was regulated between the reeves riding the giant eagles who chose them and the temples of the various gods. Everything used to be overseen by the Guardians, but no one has seen the Guardians in generations. Now they have been sighted again – but instead of bringing increased order, they are laying waste to the kingdom, burning, raping, pillaging, and overturning the temples of the gods. Our large cast of characters from inside and outside the kingdom attempts to bring order to the situation, all for their own reasons and with slightly different end goals. In the second book, <em>Shadow Gate</em>  (very broadly summarizing), there were a few victories and a large number of defeats. Now in the third book, the tide finally seems to be turning in our allies’ favor – but this also serves to highlight the differences in their approaches and the need for a consolidated approach.

Here are just a few of the many things going on: Keshad, the slave who bought himself and his sister out of slavery, travels with Eliar of the minority Ri Amarah, to neighboring Sirniaken to spy for Captain Anji, who needs the Sirniakens to acknowledge his right to a peaceful life in the Hundred. Things do not go as planned. Meanwhile, Keshad’s sister Zubaidit, a trained assassin of the Merciless One, is undercover in the evil Star of Life army, where we meet our first relatively honest Star of Life character, Captain Arras. Captain Anji’s wife Mai (probably my favorite character) continues her work trying to integrate the Qin men into the life of the Hundred. Her life now is woven through with the needs of her nursing baby – a rare and beautiful depiction of this stage of motherhood in a working mother’s life. Mai is shaken to her core by the arrival of her mother-in-law, trained to ruthlessness in the Sirniaken court. We are introduced to some of the non-human intelligent beings of the Hundred: wildlings, firelings, and demons.

Larger themes look at the big picture: if some of the Guardians are corrupt, does that mean they should all be done away with? Can there be a true religion, and what does it mean for its future if religion can be corrupted and used for evil? We also look at the impact of the Qin on the culture of the Hundred, bringing order and peace on the one hand, but also military rule, much more limited roles for women, and intolerance for homosexuality. Overall, this final entry in the series, while not what you’d call easy, gentle reading, is much less violent than the first two. (Warning: still a couple of babies killed in front of us.) There’s so much going on that you really need to read the other two first, but this is more of plus for the fans of deep, complex fantasy that the series is aimed at. The ending is complicated, heartbreaking with a little sweet, but ultimately hopeful. Ultimately, the investment in time and emotional energy that reading the Crossroads Trilogy requires is well worth it.

[edited to include the name of the second book in the series 8/19/14]

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