The Maze of Bones

As we were once again stuck waiting for the next book in our series to be returned, I took our teen librarian’s advice on an audiobook for my son and I to listen to.

Maze of BonesThe Maze of Bones. The 39 Clues Book 1. by Rick Riordan. Read by David Pittu. Scholastic Audio, 2008
So, the 39 Clues. I’d heard of it. A Great Big Long Series! With four spin-off series! Each book by a different Famous Children’s Author! Exciting action! Tie-ins! A web site with games! The chance to win real money yourself!!! Honestly, it all seemed like too much hype – with so much activity surrounding the books, would the story itself be any good? The whole series never really registered as one to bother reading.

But there I was, in desperate need of an audio book right then, and I gave it a try. Maybe it would work for my son even if it didn’t work for me. Here are the basics of the plot:
Amy and Dan Cahill, aged 12 and 11, are orphaned and impoverished members of a large, rich family. Their beloved grandmother, Grace, whom they spent every weekend with, has just died. Her will gives every member of the family a choice: either take a million dollars right then, or take the first clue in a series for a chance to win fame and an even bigger fortune. The four branches of the Cahill family have members on every continent, and their deceased members include just about every famous person ever. That means the search will involve learning more about famous people and places in Cahill history, starting here with Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia and Paris. Amy and Dan, deciding that Grandma Grace was counting on them to solve the mystery for even more mysterious reasons, embark on the quest, with the help of their conveniently multilingual au pair, Nellie. There is danger to be avoided at every turn as our heroes must use their wits both to solve the clues and to stay away from the ruthless cousins also on the hunt.

As might have been predicted, the boy very much enjoyed the book. He’s a big fan of Rick Riordan and (unlike me) of high-action plot, and also very interested in history, so even though there wasn’t the fantasy element that’s usually his favorite, he was a happy camper. We looked up pictures of several of the places mentioned in the book to Amy and Dan are Neutral Characters in the age and ethnicity game, but the rest of the family included people of many different countries and skin colors, which the narrator did a fine job of reflecting. Nellie is the only person possibly of color who didn’t betray or try to trap the kids in the first book – I’m going to hope that’s more because everyone but Nellie is out to get our guys than anything else. The black-and-white nature of the characterizations was my least favorite part of the book, but didn’t bother the boy.

With a series like this written by so many authors, it’s hard to know what kind of consistency they’re able to maintain across the books. They do seem to vary widely in length, with book three only 156 pages and some of the later ones on the shelf looking decidedly fat. I’m hoping that since the earlier ones at least are mostly under 200 pages, they’ll be short enough for the boy to feel up to reading them to himself, now that he’s already liked the first one. In any case, if you’re looking for fast-paced bibliocrack for middle grade readers with some underlying educational value, this series is one to try.

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Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate

Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate. KidnappedSam Silver: Undercover Pirate: The Deadly Trap
Kidnapped. Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate Book 3. by Jan Burchett. & Sara Vogler. Trafalgar Square Publishing, 2014
The Deadly Trap. Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate Book 4. by Jan Burchett. & Sara Vogler. Trafalgar Square Publishing, 2014
Sam Silver might look like an ordinary boy, but he has an exciting secret – one of his distant ancestors was a pirate. Now, whenever he rubs the magic gold coin the ancestor left behind, Sam is magically transported back to 1706 aboard the pirate ship Sea Wolf. (The biggest hitch is that Sam can’t control when he gets sent back to his own time.) On board ship, he’s part of the regular crew, and his two best friends cover for his frequent absences – Charlie, a girl disguised as a boy to escape her wicked stepfather, and Fernando, a boy of Afro-Caribbean heritage (I think) – but clearly not white, and beautifully illustrated on the cover of book 3. Once there, it’s an exciting, non-stop adventure until Sam gets pulled back to his own time. This is the third book of the series, but I thought the authors did a good job of catching readers up with the backstory without needing to read the first two books. I received these books from the publisher in exchange for honest reviews.

In Kidnapped, the Sea Wolf is attacked by another ship. When the smoke clears, they realize that Charlie is missing! Together, they realize that it must have been Charlie’s conniving stepfather, who needs Charlie so he can take over her fortune. The captain is willing enough to set sail to rescue her, but once they get to the right island, he’s a little too cautious for Sam and Fernando. They set off on their own in the middle of the night to rescue the third member of their trio!

In Book 4, The Deadly Trap, Sam discovers that there is a traitor on board the Sea Wolf. He’s able to figure out who the culprit is – but the rest of the crew thinks that Sam is making a false accusation to cover up his own guilt. Can Sam prove his innocence before it’s too late???

It’s difficult to find chapter books that work for my boy, who reads at grade level but listens much, much higher. (I’ve noticed myself that many early chapter books have a plot that could be told much more succinctly.) This usually boils down to him being too bored to finish books at his reading level, while his reading pace is too slow to make it through the longer, older middle grade books that he’s actually interested in reading. Even if we find a prose book at his level that he likes enough to finish, he’s never been interested enough to go on to a sequel. So when he finished Kidnapped and went straight on to The Deadly Trap, I was ready to jump up and down, and promptly told our youth fiction librarian that she needed to buy the whole series. (She’s a very good egg about this.) They are already going out quite briskly here.

I can’t give this one a diversity tag, as Sam, white and male, is the only point-of-view character. But as so many books of this type start with an all-white cast, with all of the sympathetic characters matching whichever gender the series is marketed to, I will definitely give this series kudos for including diversity of both ethnicity and gender in the supporting cast.

This is a strong early chapter book series for pirate-lovers. The books are a little longer than most early chapter books, but still with plenty of illustrations. It’s a solid choice for third graders, with lots of appeal for older and younger kids around that age as well. My son and I liked them enough that we decided to give away both of the books – see my Kidlit Giveaway Hop post for details. Enter the giveaway now through May 18!
[Edited to correct U.S. publisher info and link to the giveaway, 5/13/14]

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Kidlit Giveaway Hop 2014: Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate

Children's Book Week 2014 Kidlit Giveaway HopIt’s Children’s Book Week, and once again, I’m proud to be participating in the Kidlit Giveaway Hop hosted by Mother Daughter Books and Youth Literature Reviews. Participants will be giving away books for children and teens, gift cards, cash and more, so hop around and you’re sure to find something interesting to enter to win!

Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate. KidnappedI am giving away two early chapter books in the Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate series by Jan Burchett. & Sara Vogler, Kidnapped and The Deadly Trap to one lucky winner. These were previously released in the U.K. and have been published for the first time in the U.S. this year.

Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate: The Deadly TrapThis fun series stars a modern-day boy who finds a way to travel back in time to a pirate ship. Together with his best friends, a girl in disguise and a boy of African-Caribbean descent, they have one swashbuckling adventure after another. I was sent these two books for review by the publisher. My son read both of them through, when he’s rarely interested in reading more than one book of a series to himself. Since my library has now purchased the entire series (and with my son’s permission), I’m giving away our copies so that some other pirate-loving kid can enjoy Sam Silver and his friends!

This giveaway runs from May 12- midnight May 18 (EST) and is open to the U.S. and Canada.  Please leave a comment about your favorite pirate, literary or otherwise, to enter!

Are you a children’s book or teen literature blogger, an author, a publisher, or a publicist looking to share copies of a fabulous book?  Mother Daughter Book Reviews  and Youth Literature Reviews  are joining forces to provide you with the opportunity to take part in the Children’s Book Week Giveaway Hop 2014, featuring links to giveaways for fabulous children/teen’s books, gift cards, cash, or other prizes.  What better way to celebrate Children’s Book Week?

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Click here to view the complete list of participating bloggers and authors…

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Asian-American Graphic Novels

Every other month or so, I put together an end panel display for my Adult Graphic Novel Collection, with a little bibliography on a bookmark for people to take – things like zombie graphic novels, or books by Will Eisner. This month, I thought I’d do a display of Asian-Pacific American Graphic Novels since May is Asian-Pacific American Month. And then I found that while I could easily find graphic novels from Asia, it was a whole lot harder to find books by or about Asian-Americans. I scanned my whole collection; I Googled. The only list I found was buried in a course syllabus.

I figure that it shouldn’t be so hard to find a list of Asian-American graphic novels, so I emailed the professor, Dr. Stephen Sohn of Standford University, and asked if it would be OK to publish my list, which owes most of his titles to his. (I found a few on my own, and left a few hard-to-find ones off.) He very kindly gave his permission, and asked if I would share this link with you: Standford Provost Petition

I noticed a complete lack of any graphic novels about Pacific Islanders (maybe not surprising given how tiny they are). I also could find only two kids series – if any readers have any titles to fill in these holes, please let me know! Continue reading

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Cruel Beauty

A story that falls somewhere between Beauty and Beast and Cupid and Psyche? How could I resist?

Cruel BeautyCruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge. Balzer & Bray, 2014.
Nyx has been raised her whole life to kill her fiancé as soon as she marries him, not expecting to survive.
The world feels something like a 19th century England, where Greek is the predominant culture. But the parchment-colored sky above makes it clear that the island is no longer part of the rest of the world. They blame the demon carefully called the Gentle Lord for ripping them out of the world. He still lives in the castle at the top of the hill. Desperate people go to him there to make their bargains, knowing they’ll pay with their souls or worse. One such bargain was the one Nyx’s father made before she was born, offering one of his two daughters in payment to the Gentle Lord, even though their mother died in childbirth. He’s a member of the secret organization known as the Resurgandi, dedicated to bringing down the Gentle Lord, and their weapon is Nyx.

Nyx has grown up knowing that her father still resents her for her mother’s death, and has worked hard to learn the magical Hermetic signs as well assassination techniques as the only way to gain his approval. Her sister, Astraia, is left to be the happy, ignorant child. When Nyx arrives at the Gentle Lord’s palace, she is startled that he is pleased to find her different from the sweet and terrified bride he was expecting, so different from the eight dead brides she finds laid out. She never expected to feel anything but loathing towards her husband – so why does she feel like her attraction to Shade, shadow servant by day, handsome man by night, is a betrayal? Of course the Resurgandi didn’t know the whole story – but Nyx must find out the truth before she makes things much, much worse than they already are.

This is not a perfect book for everyone – it was a little too high on the melodrama for my taste, and the solution was a twist that came out of the blue – I think Liviana at In Bed with Books (in a review that shows in Feedly but seems no longer to be on her site) put her finger on the problem, in that it hinges on us believing that Nyx and her sister Astraia have a close, trusting relationship, even though Astraia is in the book only at the very beginning and end, and is at odds with Nyx for most of that time. Still, this is a creative reworking of Greek myths. The atmospheric Beautiful Mansion with Creepy Secrets was a wonderful setting meant for the kind of romance that Hodges creates. Even though neither the Gentle Lord nor Nyx are as bad as they believe themselves to be, they are refreshingly different from the usual “pure girl finds the hidden heart of gold in the bad boy” stereotype, and fans of teen fantasy with lots of swoony romance should enjoy it greatly.

It’s been very popular among the bloggers I read – here are a couple more reviews, and I failed to re-find some I read earlier: at Angieville , Random Musings of a Bibliophile If you’ve read this as well, I’d love to hear your thoughts!

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Frog Trouble

Frog TroubleFrog Trouble: and Eleven Other Pretty Serious Songs for Ages One to Older Than Dirt by Sandra Boynton. Workman, 2013.
I’ve been enjoying Sandra Boynton’s illustrated albums for children since Philadelphia Chickens – her clever humor combined with Michael Ford’s catchy tunes are a brand of musical fun we all enjoy. Most of the albums seem to have a musical theme – Broadway with Philadelphia Chickens, classic rock with Dog Train, 50s and 60s music with Blue Moo. This album is clearly country, and sung by a wide variety of familiar names, including Alison Krauss, Darius Rucker, Fountains of Wayne, Kacey Musgraves and more. I have enjoyed all of them, but I have found in general that many people only really enjoy the Boynton album written in a style they already like.

These are always available either as a plain CD or as a CD inside a picture book, which includes big pictures with most of the lyrics in the front, and all the lyrics with the music in the back. Frog Trouble also includes performer pictures and bios in the very back. In keeping with the country theme, there are perhaps a few more serious tunes than usual, with songs like “When Pigs Fly”, “End of a Summer Storm” and “Beautiful Baby”. Here’s a beautiful line from “End of a Summer Storm”, sung by Alison Krauss:

“There’s a rising wind and a falling rain
beautiful patterns on the windowpane.
Fast and free, then it’s quiet again
at the end of a summer storm.”

Fans of Boynton’s particular brand of humor will be pleased to know that the classic silliness is still there in songs like “Alligator Stroll”, “Broken Piano” and “Frog Trouble”:

“I’ve known about heartache and what it can do
since the Great Frog Rush of Forty-Two
when brave folks traveled from far and wide.
And all of them dreamed. And all of them sighed,
Frog Trouble.”

Her ability to channel kids in a pure country vein shows in “Trucks”, “Heartache Song”, “I’ve Got a Dog” and “Copycat”. We spent several weeks with this playing nonstop in the car, while being asked to perform from the songbook at home.

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Jaran

I note with some shame that this was the Book Smuggler’s Old School Wednesday Readalong from February, which I did not finish it in time.

JaranJaran. Jaran Book 1. by Kate Elliott. DAW Books, 1992.
From the cover copy:

The first book of Kate Elliott’s epic Novels of the Jaran, set in an alien-controlled galaxy where a young woman seeks to find her own life and love, but is tied to her brother’s revolutionary fate

In the future, Earth is just one of the planets ruled by the vast Chapalii empire. The volatility of these alien overlords is something with which Tess Soerensen is all too familiar. Her brother, Charles, rebelled against them at one time and was rewarded by being elevated into their interstellar system—yet there is reason to believe they murdered his and Tess’s parents.

Struggling to find her place in the world and still mending a broken heart, Tess sneaks aboard a shuttle bound for Rhui, one of her brother’s planets. On the ground, she joins up with the native jaran people, becoming immersed in their nomadic society and customs while also attempting to get to the bottom of a smuggling scheme she encountered on her journey there. As she grows ever closer to the charismatic jaran ruler, Ilya—who is inflamed by an urgent mission of his own—Tess must choose between her feelings for him and her loyalty to her brother.

Jaran is the first volume of the Novels of the Jaran, which continues with An Earthly Crown, His Conquering Sword,and The Law of Becoming.

I’m very fond of Kate Elliott, and her Spiritwalker books are some of the most heavily borrowed in my home library. This includes some of the Elliott trademarks that I love, including a mix of politics of very different levels, strong characters, romance, and playing with ideas of gender and race. Here, race is looked at both through Tess’s relationship with the Jaran, the human-like people she meets on the planet Rhui, as well as the much more alien Chapalii. There’s even more focus on the role of gender, as Tess is dropped into a culture where women are the decided head of clan, with the sole power to initiate love affairs, while the men are left in charge of hunting, war, embroidery, and deciding whom to marry. Tess herself has an affinity for languages, picking up the utterly foreign language of the Jaran in a week, that I was able to accept only as a necessity for her exploration of the Jaran culture, where the difference in languages and what you can say in them plays a key role.

We go camping in a the Mongolian-style yurt my love made every summer, so it’s always an extra pleasure to read about similar nomadic cultures – though their physical culture and looks sounded more Russian than Mongolian. Elliott says in the introduction that she was aiming not for a matriarchy but for an equality different from that we’ve imagined. I loved how the culture felt like a traditional culture – one where people did things because that was the way they had always been done, rather than making decisions out of a sense of justice or equality. The balancing act that women have been expected to perform in Earth culture for centuries, making themselves pretty for men and showing just the right level of flirtation while staying modest enough, seems as ridiculous as it is when done by men. I just wasn’t quite sure I could buy that having men marry women by cutting their faces made for any kind of equality – it just didn’t seem to fit in with the rest of their culture. Likewise, the clan matriarchs shrugging their shoulders over men deciding to ride off to war – really? Surely the male contribution to the hard life of the steppes is important enough that they would be expected to consult with the women before risking their lives on something nonessential. However, not necessarily agreeing with her conclusions doesn’t mean failure – I still noticed the things she was bringing up and thought about them, inside the context of a good story.

On the body count level, this book fell in between the Crossroads books (of which I’ve read Spirit Gate and Shadow Gate and the Spiritwalker books, with some battles and some very significant characters killed off.The only things holding me back from reading more of this series is the need to interloan them, their heft, and my feeling that I really ought to read Traitors’ Gate (which I had been planning to read in February) first. As always, though, Kate Elliott provides a satisfying, thought-provoking adventure.

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State of the Book Basket

Once again, here’s what’s going on with my reading at the moment.
I have eighteen books waiting to be reviewed, including 4 picture books, 6 middle grade, 4 teen, and 4 adult. I’m still reading much faster than I’m writing, it seems, even though I’m reading much slower than I’d like to keep up with all the books I want to read!

For myself, I am currently reading The Mark of the Dragonfly by Jaleigh Johnson, The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp by Kathi Appelt, and A Tale of Time City by Diana Wynne Jones in print and listening to Mastiff by Tamora Pierce and Velveteen vs. the Multiverse by Seanan McGuire.

The boy and I just finished reading The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald, and made the unhappy discovery that my library doesn’t own the next one, so I need to borrow it from my parents instead, I think. We’re halfway through The Last Battle by C.S. Lewis in the car. He’s almost done with Sam Silver: Undercover Pirate: The Deadly Plot, having taken breaks for a new Big Nate book, Rapunzel’s Revenge by Shannon Hale and Zeus: King of the Gods by George O’Connor. He’s now distracted by the large pile of comic books we brought home from Free Comic Book Day this year. Last year, he felt too old to dress up, but this year, he happily put on a too-small Star Wars costume to get an extra free comic.

The girl and I have been slowly working our way through Rapunzel’s Revenge as well, which she likes, but she’s still having trouble staying focused on the longer format. She’s still only wanting books in the car over music every few days, but we’ve worked our way up to Night of the Ninjas, book 5 in the Magic Tree House Series (and had A Bear Called Paddington by Michael Bond sadly rejected.) We bought her I am a Frog by Mo Willems, which she’s loving, and a Frozen spin-off picture book, which was more exciting initially but, not surprisingly, doesn’t have the re-read value of the Willems. As far as library picture books, we have Louise: the Adventures of a Chicken by Kate DiCamillo (so far rejected), The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes by DuBose Heyward, Red Knit Cap Girl and Red Knit Cap Girl to the Rescue by Naoko Stoop, Cinderella retold by Max Eisenberg and Cendrillon illustrated by Jerry Pinkney, and Joseph Had a Little Overcoat by Simms Taback. She’d asked for more Cinderella books, so we’ll see if she wants to go through as many versions of that as she did Rapunzel – there are certainly a lot more Cinderella retellings out there.

I still have The Shadow Garden and Nightfall Gardens by Allen Houston and The Thickety: a Path Begins by J.A. White waiting to be read from last month, and made it just partway through one of the Spellbound magazines before getting distracted, though I was very much enjoying it. I also have Please Don’t Tell My Parent’s I’m a Super Villain by Richard Roberts newly sent from the author. I had to return The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison unread to the library, as I just couldn’t get to it, and put my name back on the hold list for it. Also home from the library waiting for me to read are Starling by Sage Stossel and The Cracks in the Kingdom by Jaclyn Moriarty, and I’d like to read Rapunzel’s Revenge and Zeus: King of the Gods myself before taking them back.

Also, I checked out a couple of books for my love at his request: Brick Shakespeare: the Tragedies by Jack Hollan, The Whole-Brain Child by Daniel J. Siegel, and (on CD) All Joy and No Fun by Jennifer Senior, which I am also hoping to listen to when he’s done. Brick Shakespeare: the Tragedies

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Billy the Kid Is Not Crazy

I was planning on doing a whole post about why we need diverse books, because there’s this whole campaign going on right now that you might have heard about.
Then I actually looked at the We Need Diverse Books tumblr and I don’t know that I have a lot to add in words, though we set up a couple of displays at the library. Everyone needs windows into themselves and into other people. Nobody is served if everyone thinks that stories of white, straight people are the only ones that matter – neither the people at the center of those stories, nor those who stories are silenced. As one person aptly put it, no kid ever asked for a box of 64 white crayons. You can also check out the Lee and Low Buzzfeed list of highlights from the Tumbler.

I’m coming in halfway through a three-day event – May 1 devoted to posting pictures, May 2 to a twitter chat on the topic, and May 3 to encouraging people to buy diverse books and/or request them from their library, because book publishing is a business.

I think about diversity in books a lot, though I know my reading isn’t as diverse as I’d like it to be. Most often, I’ve focused on racial differences, but this campaign has clearly been looking representation of diversity in sexual orientation and mental health as well. And by good chance, today I have book for you featuring mental diversity.

billy the kid is not crazyBilly the Kid Is Not Crazy by S.F. Guerra. Illustrations by James Davies. Amazon Children’s Publishing, 2013.
Billy is a nice, well-meaning kid, but his overactive imagination is always getting him into trouble. He means well, he promises to be better – but by the time he realizes he’s getting carried away again, he’s already done something like writing in pen in a school text book that turns out not to be a secret coded message. When playing Clone Wars with shopping carts – aka droids – in a parking lot ends up with a car getting damaged, his parents decide to take him to a shrink. He is horrified! His active imagination amplifies the worries: Will the doctor put him on “drugs”? Will his father get tired enough of him to send him away and look for a better son? And will Billy ever get his dream – a cell phone of his very own? The story is told in the popular text-comic strip hybrid format, with Billy’s imaginary adventures, worries, and the occasional video message to his parents shown in comic form, an excellent choice.

This is clearly an “issue book”, and I was worried about it feeling preachy. But Billy came to life so believably, so full of fun and good intentions gone awry, that I couldn’t help being sucked in. As a mother, I was really distressed at his parents’ failure to reassure him along the way, but even though that aspect felt somewhat overdone, the ending still made me teary. I found myself arguing with his diagnoses and treatment plan – it looked like he had a serious impulse control issue that wasn’t labeled as such. Would labeling it help? If that was the problem, is just finding a really good reward the right solution? But these are technical quibbles that I don’t think would affect the book being enjoyed by the target audience. I also sighed just a little bit because Billy, while on the one hand illustrating mental/behavior issues much more commonly found in real life than in books, on the other hand sticks very closely to the limits of deviations from neutral that Shannon Hale discusses so well : he is white and male (though I know the author is female and am guessing by her name that she’s Latina) and mainstream Christian, and 10 – a good average age for a middle grade book. Though I don’t know that I’m going to argue with the author on her decisions with that, while we’re talking about diversity, I do notice that the issues that the book is about are the only deviations from neutral that our lead is allowed. On the whole, this is a very fun book that’s great for normalizing the idea of people needing mental help from time to time without being over-the-edge crazy, and that will appeal to fans of books like Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Dork Diaries.

This book was kindly sent to me by the author, and has been passed on to the library where I work.

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Dawn

It’s the Old School Wednesday Readalong at the Book Smugglers today.
OldSchool8_Final-450x349
dawnDawn by Octavia Butler. Warner: Aspect Science Fiction, 1987.
Octavia Butler has been on my want-to-read list for about a decade now. When this book was selected as the Old School Wednesday Readalong, I decided to take it as a Sign and finally get around to reading this award-winning African-American science fiction author, whom I’d been recommending to patrons for years.

Here’s the cover blurb on this book:

Lilith lyapo awoke from a centuries-long sleep to find herself aboard the vast spaceship of the Oankali. Creatures covered in writhing tentacles, the Oankali had saved every surviving human from a dying, ruined Earth. They healed the planet, cured cancer, increased strength, and were now ready to help Lilith lead her people back to Earth–but for a price.

Wow. I had such a love-hate relationship with this book. On the one hand, it’s amazing. The characters, the world-building, the many issues Butler is able to look at within the framework of the story – just astounding. On the other hand, this is a book for grown-ups that reminds me why I usually prefer to read books for younger readers. There is so much darkness shown, both in the humans that Lilith awakens to repopulate the Earth, and in the casual force the Oankali use, “trading” genetic material with the humans even against their explicit rejection. Maybe I am just too exhausted to deal with reading a book that makes me think this hard about so many issues – though that makes me sound lazy, and it’s not like the book I was alternating reading this with (Merrie Haskell’s The Castle Behind Thorns) has what you would call a cheerful premise. I will try to be kind to myself and remind myself that I preferred more optimistic books even before I had children and became chronically sleep-deprived. My librarian brain is telling me that this is a classic case of just a bad fit for me at this time, and that’s OK. Continue reading

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