Texting the Underworld

I first heard about this book from Charlotte and was intrigued enough to go reading multiple interviews (and enter giveaways) before I asked my library to buy it so I could read it. I’m glad I did!

Texting the UnderworldTexting the Underworld by Ellen Booraem. Dial Books for Young Readers, 2013.
Conor is a scaredy-cat, so afraid of change that he’s deliberately not-quite-failing pre-algebra, to avoid the risk of leaving his neighborhood school for the prestigious Boston Latin School and asks his little sister, Glennie, for help with spiders. One night he spots a banshee, Ashling, outside his bedroom window. He knows from Grumps’ stories that seeing a banshee means that someone in his family is going to die soon. But Ashling is vivacious and curious – she’s doing work as a banshee to earn a new life for herself after an early death over a thousand years ago. She wants to go to middle school with Conor before settling down to work. This leads to hilarious situations, as Ashling uses the knowledge gained from Conor’s Trivial Pursuit cards to make her way through school.

Conor is pretty sure, though, that Ashling’s there either for Grumps or Glennie, and losing a family member is even more unacceptable than going to Latin School. He’s willing to do whatever it takes to protect his family, even travelling to the Other Land to ask three questions of the Lady (with home back-up from his best friend, Javier.) Everyone is surprised when the Other Land is not just the Irish underworld they were expecting, but a massive clearinghouse for souls operated by the underworld gods of every tradition that has an underworld, including my favorite, the Babylonian god Nergal. The ending is bittersweet, with an unexpected twist.

Conor is a rare fantasy hero, a genuinely ordinary boy dealing with high-level supernatural powers. I loved the way he was able to face his fears to save his family. The humor and the thoughts about loss balance each other nicely, leaving a book that’s both funny and thoughtful without tipping either into heaviness or fluff. I also very much enjoyed Ashling, who stays unapologetic about her 9th century values even as she’s trying to make her way in the 21st. The message about the value of other cultures (in this case, other than Irish) is more subtle, but still there. The focus on death might make this a little difficult for younger middle grade readers – but I’d highly recommend it for older middle grade and up, especially to kids interested in mythology.

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Little Red Writing and No Pirates Allowed

Two more picture books: the first was going around my blogs over the summer, and was popular enough here that I had to wait months to get it. The second was a random book picked off the new book shelf because we like pirates around my house.

Little Red WritingLittle Red Writing by Joan Holub. Pictures by Melissa Sweet. Chronicle Books, 2013.
Little Red is a sharp pencil who decides to write an adventure story for her class writing adventure. She’s both writing and experiencing this clever retelling of Little Red Riding Hood, in a way that’s confusing to tell but makes perfect sense in the book. Each page of her adventure illustrates another common form of bad writing, as she’s first trapped in the forest of too many adjectives, then trapped in situations with fearful run-on sentences and the dangers of straying off the story path. The ending, as Little Red uses one of the red words from her word basket to defeat the Wolf 3000 pencil sharpener, is – dare I say it – more satisfying than the traditional rescue by the woodcutter. This combination of story and writing lesson had the strong possibility of failing on one or both counts, but amazingly succeeds at both. I’d thought my four-year-old, too young for writing assignments, might not get it – but she and my son and his teachers all loved it. For me it’s love at a level where I’m happy checking it out from the library when we want it again, but it’s going in my son’s school library, and possible individual class libraries as well.

No Pirates Allowed! Said Library LouNo Pirates Allowed! Said Library Lou by Rhonda Gowler Greene. Illustrated by Brian Ajhar. Sleeping Bear Press, 2013
Stinky Pirate Pete and his parrot storm into the library with a treasure map showing that there’s treasure in the library. Lou the librarian initially shushes them, but after she’s straightened them out on proper library behavior, she teaches them to read. It turns out the library does have treasure – just not the kind Pirate Pete was expecting! This a fun story in bouncy rhyme. I loved watching the message play out – mostly exciting and only a tiny bit preachy. Tiny Library Lou’s stern facedown of Pirate Pete and her enthusiasm while teaching letters are both priceless!

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Locomotive

Remember there’s still time to enter my Tenth Anniversary Giveaway!

LocomotiveLocomotive by Brian Floca. Simon and Schuster, 2013.

I checked this one out after reading Amy’s review over at Hope is the Word.
Gorgeous layered illustrations with expressive typography and poetic text tell the story of a family traveling west by rail in the 1860s. It was Cybils Middle Grade Nonfiction finalist and – more power to Amy for her prediction skills – won this year’s Caldecott. It is beautiful to look at and very informative with lots about the way the train works and the various people it takes to run it as well as the landscape it travels through. It’s also very long – more of an elementary school length than a preschooler length. I read it through, but couldn’t convince either of my kids to let me read it to them. That has much more to do with neither of them liking trains especially than the book itself. It would do very well for any train or history lover from kid through adult.

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Dewi and the Seeds of Doom

Dewi and the Seeds of DoomDewi and the Seeds of Doom by Maggie Lyons. Halo Publishing, 2013

Dewi is an adorable Welsh red dragon. He’s peacefully going about his business one day when a rat falls out of the sky onto him and starts babbling nonsense. Adults don’t seem to thing anything of it, but Dewi is sure that something is wrong. Soon, Dewi and his pal Jones the toad have turned detective. They find that the evil Baron Doom of Castle Gloomsgor and his assistant dwarf, Peegor, has been running nefarious experiments on caged rats. Can they stop him before it’s too late?

The boy and I both (separately) read this early chapter book. He felt it a little too young for him – probably second graders and advanced first graders would be a better audience for this. Perhaps part of it feeling young was the mixing of characters who were mostly talking animals with some human characters. I felt like the characters were animals mostly to add to the fun factor, something that I think is done a lot in picture books and less often the older the age the book is aimed for. I felt like the characters would have worked just as well (and maybe better in some spots) if they had all been human. That’s a little sad to say when I love the idea of a book set in Wales starring a dragon! As a short chapter book, it would also have been helped a lot by illustrations. Still, with an exciting plot and quirky characters, this could be the perfect book for a mystery-and dragon-loving kid just graduating to chapter books.

This book was kindly sent to me by the author in exchange for an honest review, and will now be headed for the Summer Reading prize cart at my library.

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Ten (with Giveaway)

It’s hard to believe, but today marks the tenth anniversary of this blog.

book10
My children made a 10 out of books to celebrate.

I started posting book reviews to Livejournal as sapphireone on this date in 2004.  The blog has changed some since I first started posting – I’ve changed platforms, my reviews are more detailed, and I’ve tried to join in the larger book blogging community rather than posting just for friends.  This last has really fueled my own reading addiction.  Reading so many other wonderful bloggers has led to longer want-to-read lists and more books out from the library at any given time than I’ve ever had before.  Best of all have been the new relationships with fellow bloggers, authors, and most of all, my readers.  What has stayed the same is my love for good books for all ages of reader.

As a thank-you to my readers, I’m offering a giveaway of one customized reading list – five books (or three books and two multimedia items) personally selected by me to match your mood.  Leave me a comment letting me know you’re interested; I’ll contact the winner and send questions to help me make your list.  You can enter for yourself or for a child in your life. If you like, I can also limit titles to those available from your public library, to make sure you can get them easily.  Leave a comment by midnight on February 28, and I’ll announce the winner on March 1.

Just for fun, here are my top ten posts of the 903 I’ve posted before this one (at least since I moved to WordPress.)  It feels a bit random, and if anyone has any insight on why, for example, my reviews of the poem The Microscope or movies about Mongolia are so popular, I’d love to hear it.  (Though the Mutu System isn’t book-related, I think it’s popular because I seem to be the only person who went all the way through the program and lived to blog about it.)

Thank you again to my readers, fellow bloggers, and to the authors who give us so many wonderful books to read.

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How to Catch a Bogle

I love a good historical fantasy, and I was meaning to read this for a very long time before it actually made its way home from the library with me.

How to Catch a BogleHow to Catch a Bogle. by Catherine Jinks. Illustrated by Sarah Watts. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013
It’s Victorian London, and orphaned Birdie is proud to have a good job as an apprentice to Alfred Bunce, the bogle catcher. Bogles like to hide in dark places, like the insides of chimneys, from whence they will come out to eat unsuspecting children if they are not properly dealt with. Birdie’s job is to be the bait – her sweet, childlike singing voice draws the bogles out of hiding, so that Mr. Bunce can capture them. While well-bred adults are shocked at a child putting her life in danger this way, Birdie is just happy to have an honest job that supports her and that helps keep other children safe. She might not have enough money to buy new clothes, but she works hard to have at least something bright to be part of her otherwise drab outfits (that pink dress on the cover is not at all what she’s described as wearing). Two complications arise in her otherwise simple but satisfying life: Miss Eames, a lady scholar, who thinks that bogles are charming legends, and is willing first to pay to watch bogle-catchers at work, and then to pay to keep Birdie from working. Then, more children than usual start going missing, and the evidence points to it being an unscrupulous human rather than a bogle. Can Birdie solve the mystery and keep her independence?

This was a lot of fun! Thinking back at it, I could see that it did have some flaws. Birdie’s young friends in the street aren’t really developed fully, and maybe the overall plot could have used some smoothing out. I think (trying to get inside the Cybils committee’s heads) that this is why the similar-feeling Rose made it to the shortlist and this didn’t. When I was reading it, though, I didn’t notice any of those flaws. I loved cheeky, self-sufficient Birdie and was entirely caught up in her adventures and seeing if she would make it through to catch another bogle. I wish she wasn’t wearing that pink dress on the cover, because the story is action-oriented with lots of fighting of gruesome monsters as well as tracking down of dastardly criminals and I think that plenty of boys as well as girls would enjoy it. Now I’m pondering if this is a good fit for my Fantasy for Music Lovers list or not, as Birdie’s singing isn’t magical in and of itself, but this is a fantasy with lots of music in it.

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Doll Bones

Doll BonesDoll Bones by Holly Black. Illustrations by Eliza Wheeler. Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2013
Zach, Poppy and Alice are twelve, just at that awkward age when children begin to turn into teens. They are still getting together to stage elaborate adventures with dolls and action figures, even though they hide it from others. When Zach’s father throws away the action figures, he’s too conflicted by everything to tell Poppy and Alice the truth, instead telling them he’s too old to play. So when Poppy wakes them in the middle of the night with a story about the creepy doll – the Queen – in her mother’s china cabinet being full of human ashes that want to be properly buried, neither of the other two know whether she’s telling the truth or making a desperate bid to keep the triumvirate together. All of them have family problems that play into their relationships with each other – Zach’s overly-harsh and only recently present father, Poppy’s neglectful family, and Alice’s overprotective grandmother. Despite not fully believing, and knowing they will all be in terrible trouble, the three set out on a journey across state lines to find a resting place for the Queen’s ashes.

Honestly, my first thought with all of this (as the wife of a gamer) is that somebody needs to teach these kids a nice role-playing game system. I hear Fate is popular these days, and I know a lot of libraries run ongoing rpgs for this age group. That being said, this really isn’t the point of the book. I’d describe it as a coming-of-age story with touches of creepy magical realism. I found it lovely as that – so nice to see the kids figuring out how they can be friends and interact as some things are changing and some are staying the same. But I’m glad I was warned in advance that it wasn’t a straight-up fantasy; magic is much more in the fore in Black’s other books, and I could easily have been disappointed. This is one that I think will do well with kids who don’t normally read fantasy, but like a little spooky, maybe more than hardcore fantasy readers. This was nominated for the Cybils, but didn’t make the shortlist. It won a much more widely recognized Newbery Honor award, which seems a better fit. It’s happy to see an author I’ve loved getting big acclaim like this. I very much enjoyed it while at the same time feeling that it needs the right reader in the right mood for this mix of adventure and introspection with a little ghostiness.

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Armchair Cybils Wrap-Up

armchaircybilsIt’s time for the final Armchair Cybils post for the 2013 Cybils.
I have read two of the thirteen winners. These were:
Forest Has a SongForest Has a Song for Poetry (which I guess I never reviewed) and
Hereville: How Mirka Met a Meteorite for Middle Grade Graphic Novels.

I’d put in a request for Mr. Tiger Goes Wild, the picture book winner, but it’s still not here, though the youth librarian says she loves Peter Brown’s work in general. Here’s the summary of the rest of the picture books I’ve read.

I put off reading the Teen Speculative Fiction until after I’d finished the Middle Grade Speculative Fiction, which I haven’t yet… so, just not reading as fast as I think I ought to be able to. I’m still reading faster than I’m writing reviews, though I’m not sure what to make of that.

Hereville: How Mirka Met a MeteoriteThe one category I was looking at where I actually finished reading all the finalists was the Middle Grade Graphic Novels – in case you missed them, here are my graphic novel summaries: Part 1 and Part 2.

Now there are more books to read! I can look forward to reading the teen graphic novel and speculative fiction winners, and my daughter will be ready for the easy readers in just a year or two. Thank you to the many, many people who worked to make the Cybils the treasure mine it is, and to Amy at Hope is the Word for running the Armchair Cybils!

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Cybils MG Speculatives: 2+2+3

That’s 2 new reviews, 2 I still haven’t read, and 3 links to older reviews. The 2013 Cybils Award winners were announced yesterday! Here’s a run-down of the Middle Grade Speculative Fiction finalists:
Screaming StaircaseJinx by Sage Blackwood. I own this one (a sign of love) and I have Jinx’s Magic checked out right now.

Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud. I’ve had a kind of book avalanche of library books coming in on hold and review copies built up. When I had a gap in which to read it, it was checked out. Now it’s in, but I have about 16 other books in queue. In any case, this is the one that won. It must be great. I hope to get to it soon!

Rose by Holly Webb. I loved this. I think the sequel is due out in the states soon!

SidekickedSidekicked by John David Anderson. Harper Collins Childrens, 2013.
When we first meet Drew Bean, aka the Sensationalist, he’s slowly being lowered closer to a pool of hydrochloric acid. He’s a sidekick in training, hero name “the Sensationalist” for his super-powered senses. He knows what kind of acid it is just by the smell – but that’s not going to help him escape. Next to him is his fellow sidekick-in-training and best friend Jenna, aka the White Lynx, who has more useful superpowers for this situation. Really, though, both of them are bait for their superheroes – and unlike Jenna, whose super, the Fox, is both the hero of Justicia and takes an active interest in Jenna’s training, Drew’s super refuses to have anything to do with him.

So we have Drew, a sweet and geeky boy with powers that, while undeniably out of the ordinary, don’t do much to keep him safe in the life-threatening situations that are coming up all around him. We have his friends (and rivals) in the middle school H.E.R.O. group, getting along in typical middle school fashion. And we have a group of supervillains recently released from prison – the very villains that Drew’s super put behind bars as his last act before retiring as a super. Drew will have to call on all his training and his skills to save the day, even without his super. It’s an exciting plot with a twist I didn’t see coming and good character growth as Drew comes to terms with himself and his nearly nonexistent relationship with his super. No wonder it made the Cybils shortlist! It’s still too dense for my nine-year-old to read to himself, but he’d love having it read to him, and I’d recommend it for superhero-loving kids his age through adults.

True Blue Scouts of Sugarman SwampThe Rithmatist by Brian Sanderson. August feels like a long time ago, but I remember really liking this. Looks like the sequel is expected in 2015 – maybe by then I’ll have caught up with my other reading?

The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp by Kathi Appelt. This one has been checked out at all times, and I have not been able to get it, though in general I trust the Cybils committee and have heard great things about it.

The Water CastleThe Water Castle by Megan Frazer Blakemore. Bloomsbury, 2013.
Ephraim Appledore-Smith, his athletic older brother Price and smart younger sister Brynn are headed to their family’s old castle in Maine. It might be fun, if it wasn’t because their father is still unable to move or talk following a stroke. The Water Castle is named for the water bottling plant that the family ran in the 19th century. Mallory Green has grown up on stories of the Water Castle her whole life – her African-American family helped build it, took care of the Appledores, and kept their secrets for them. (Slavery is never mentioned, though the house is old enough for that to have been a possibility. It’s very clear that Mallory and her ancestors are blazingly clever and have never been subservient types.) She’s never really believed the stories – but now, things are coming to light that make her want to find out just how much truth might be behind the legends. Will Wylie, meanwhile, has been told his whole life that his family’s troubles are all the fault of the Appledores. He’s turned to science to make sense of the world – but will he be able to give Ephraim a chance when they’re assigned a school project together?

Legend says that the Appledore who built the castle did so because he thought that the Fountain of Youth was hidden nearby, and it was claims of the water being at least supernaturally helpful that allowed the family fortune to be built up from selling the water. Now, Ephraim, Mallory and Will search the network of tunnels under the castle for clues. Interwoven with their story are flashbacks to Mallory’s ancestress, Nora, who worked as old Dr. Appledore’s laboratory assistant in the early years of the 20th century. She and the young heir to the Appledore fortune, Henry, bond over the polar exploration going on, even as the kids in the modern time do a project on the same topic.

Wow. There are so many intertwining layers in this book. There’s a lot of focus on the characters, on how families and the people in them can both stay the same and change through the generations, on the boundaries between science and magic, story and history. All of the kids have family problems that regular kids will be able to relate to, while the fun of exploring hidden tunnels, old laboratories, and mysterious blue lights is kid appeal of a different sort. Also, it’s a kid’s genre book with a person of color on the cover, something we can definitely use more of. This is another one to add now to my son’s ever-growing mental stack of books to read to himself when he’s a little older, or to read aloud to him.

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3 More Cybils MG Graphic Novel Finalists

Here are the last of of Cybils Middle Grade Graphic Novel Finalists – at least until next year! I am very curious to see which one wins. There were a couple my son didn’t want to read, but he’s loved all the ones we did read, and neither of us could pick a favorite.

Donner Dinner Party Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales: The Donner Dinner Party by Nathan Hale. Amulet Books, 2013.
Even before this made the Cybils shortlist, my colleague Mrs. M brought this to my attention, saying that her nine-year-old daughter had stayed up late to read it and loved it. My son, however, heard the premise and decided that it sounded too hazardous to read. I’m 2/3 of the way through reading it myself right now. The story of the ill-fated cross-country pioneer journey is told through the framework of the spy Nathan Hale, in 1776 (whose knowledge has merged with that of the modern-day Nathan Hale, born in 1976), postponing his hanging by telling the story to the British guard and the hangman. Hale does a good job of pulling out kid characters for kid readers to latch on to and keeping facts clear while finding the humorous side of a grim tale. The hangman makes frequent interjections, over-reacting to tense moments in the story in a way that effectively breaks the tension. I haven’t yet gotten to the critical gruesome moment, but so far, it looks like it will be handled in a way that’s perfect for horror-loving, but still sensitive kids. Still, given both the subject matter and the density of the text, I’d give this to kids on the older end of elementary and into middle and high school.

squishSquish 5: Game On! by Jennifer Holm and Matt Holm. Random House, 2013.
This is the latest volume in the newer series by the authors of Babymouse. We read our first Babymouse as a Cybils nominee this year, too. It’s not that the Babymouse book that we read was especially girly, but all the Babymouse books are very, very pink. Squish is an adorable amoeba, illustrated in green, still having typical school adventures. In this volume, Squish gets addicted to video games and neglects both his homework and plans to attend a comic convention with his dad. It is adorable (yes, I used the word adorable twice. I needed to.), funny, easy-to-read, and very, very relatable. I have found a series which my son will voluntarily devour, reading through a whole book in a single sitting – this is so rare that it is cause for great celebration. I am not bringing the whole series home at once partly because he needs to do some reading at his level (this is slightly below) and partly because there’s never more than a book or two available in the library at any given time.

Lost Boy The Lost Boy by Greg Ruth. Graphix, 2013.
Moving into a new house, Nate finds an old reel-to-reel tape recorder hidden under the floorboards of his room. When he listens, he finds that it’s the journal of Walt, a boy who went missing decades earlier. But Nate and the neighbor girl, Tabitha, are seeing some of the same things – or rather, people – that Walt described. There’s a large grasshopper riding a tiny horse, a squirrel in a hunting costume, and an old china doll with a giant button on his overalls. It’s a creepy story, illustrated in dark pencil and gray watercolor, where the villain is a terrifying tree man and even the good guys don’t necessarily look reassuring. The story goes back and forth between Walt, on his way to disappearing, and Nate and Tabitha trying to solve the mystery. I’m finding that my boy is not interested in spooky: he was not interested in reading this book even after I pre-read it for him and assured him that no kids came to harm in it. For readers who appreciate their stories on the creepy side, though, this is excellently done.

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