Friday, March 30, 2018

The Star Thief by Lindsay Becker

Cover image for The star thiefHonorine is a servant in a manor of the missing Lord Vidalia when she gets whisked away by strange and powerful beings.   She soon finds herself in the middle of a conflict between the Mordants and Nautilus, a pirate set on capturing and enslaving all the Mordants.  As the two forces drift nearer to a catastrophic confrontation, Honorine, and her friend, Francis, work to find a way to reconcile the two groups before their struggle endangers the whole world.

There was a lot to like about the book. The plot is complicated and interesting. The Mordants, who are  personifications of constellations, are an original and fun concept.  I also liked the fact that Honorine is not willing to accept the fatal dichotomy, "it is either us or them." She is always looking for a third option.  Still, I am unlikely to read a sequel.  Plot and concept aside, it is the characters that attach us to a story.  I never felt like Honorine, or any of the characters, were real people.  It seemed clear to me that Becker thought up the story first, and then just stuck a generic "spunky girl" into it to be the protagonist. Honorine didn't have any individuality or personality, and she didn't react to events with any depth of emotion.  The best stories start with well developed characters who are put into interesting situations. The fun is seeing how these characters, whom we know and love, deal with the situations. Maybe kids wouldn't be bothered by it, but I have read enough good fantasy that this one left me feeling underwhelmed. (2017, 408 p.)

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Baby Monkey, Private Eye by Brian Selznick

Cover image for Baby Monkey, private eyeBaby Monkey is a baby, and a monkey, but he is also a private eye.  When the baker has loses his pizza, or the clown has loses his clown nose, Baby Monkey knows just what to do.  Being a PI is hard work and in the end, Baby Monkey is pretty sleepy when his solves his last, and most important, case.

I saw this book with stars in the review journals and at first I thought it might be a novel.  It did, after all, have 190 pages. After I read some reviews, I thought it might be in the intermediate section, but finally I found it in the Easy Reader section along side Dr. Seuss' Cat in the Hat.  Can an Easy Reader really have 190 pages, five chapters, an index, and a bibliography? I guess so.  It really is an easy reader, with only about 100 very simple words total in the whole book.  The reason it is so long is because it was created by Selzinck, the same guy who created the Invention of Hugo Cabret. The book has darling black and white illustrations that tell the story, and the words are just sprinkled about when needed.  It is really cute and will delight even the earliest readers because they will be able to "read" a real chapter book all by themselves.  (191 p. 2018)

Sunday, March 25, 2018

Betty Before X by Ilyasah Shabazz

Cover image for Betty before XWhen Betty Sanders is two, her aunt takes her away from her mother because she feels that Betty is being neglected.  When Betty is six her beloved auntie dies, and she goes to live with her biological mother again.  Her new home is in Detroit in the 1940's and her local church is a center for civil rights activities.  Betty finds herself drawn to the women of the House Wife's League, a women's civil rights group, so when her relationship with her birth mother falls apart again, she goes to live with one of the leaders of the League.

This is a fascinating look at the earliest beginnings of the civil rights movement, and the social status of inner city blacks in the 1940's.  It is written by the daughter of Malcolm X about her mother, Betty, as a way to show how Betty became the resilient and influential leader that she was. Betty X was an interesting historical character and her life was complicated and full of cruel ironies that this book doesn't address.  Still the book is a good look at the early part of her life, and deserves the multiple starred reviews it has already received. (248 p. 2018)  (p.s. I would recommend reading this one instead of listening to it.  The reader of the audio book is not the best I have heard.)

Thursday, March 22, 2018

The Journey of Little Charlie by Christopher Paul Curtis

Cover image for The journey of little CharlieCharlie Bobo's father works as a share-cropper in the deep south in the early 1800's.  When his father dies in a freak accident, Charlie is pressed into service to help the slave catcher from a nearby plantation hunt down three slaves that escaped North ten years earlier.  Charlie is big for his age, but is terrified of Cap'n Buck and goes along at first. When he is faced with the reality of what Buck wants to do, he has to make a decision about who he is and what he wants for his future.

This book is set in the same story line as Elijah of Buxton and the Madman of Piney Wood, but works just fine as a stand-alone as well.  I liked Elijah of Buxton a lot, and I liked The Madman of Piney Wood pretty well. This one was harder to get through.  I almost gave up half way through because the character of Cap'n Buck is so despicable.  I just didn't want to spend that much time reading about how nasty he is.  I stuck it out, and the ending helped me feel better about the book as a whole.  This book already has five starred reviews and is sure to be on all the Newbery lists come Fall. One reason, I believe, is because of Curtis' mastery both the southern and northern cultures and dialects. The reader feels like he/she totally understands what life is like for Charlie and the people he meets. I listened to the book on CD, and the reader also does a fantastic job with both the characterizations and the language.  (234 p. 2018)

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Mrs. Smith's Spy School for Girls by Beth McMullen

Cover image for Mrs. Smith's Spy School for GirlsAbby Hunter is not happy when her mother tells her that she will soon be going to a boarding school.  Once there, however, she makes friends who share her love of sneaking around and trying to solve mysteries.  One day as she is eves dropping on the Head Mistress of the school, Mrs. Smith, she discovers that Mrs. Smith is running a spy school within the boarding school, and that she recruits prospective spies from the boarding school student body.  Abby is recruited and finds herself on her first mission, but can she be sure who are the good guys, and who are the bad guys?

There are really a lot of spy school type books out there.  This one offers the action, drama and suspense one would expect from the genre.  In some spy books, the child comes with a full set of super skills, but that is not the case here.  On her very first stakeout, Abby gets so scared she passes out cold.  In the end, though, she gains enough courage and skill to be successful and to see herself as a real agent.  I think it is Abby's imperfections that will endear her to young readers.  This was a fun read and almost certainly the beginning of a promising series. (2017, 295p.)

Friday, March 16, 2018

Stranger and Stranger by Rob Reger

Image result for stranger and stranger by regerEmily and her mother are moving to a new town, and Emily isn't happy about it.  Once she gets there, she plans to pull a prank on her new neighbors by duplicating them all, and then laughing at the confusion it causes.  However, her plan backfires and the only one she manages to duplicate is herself.  Is the world ready for two Emily Stranges?  Is Emily?

Here is the second book in the quirky series I started because I was tired of the "critically acclaimed" books I had been reading for the last few months.  I rather enjoyed the first one, but this second wasn't as good.  It still had the fun kind of goth/noir feel, and there was a little mystery to solve, but it just got a bit too "out there" for me. There were too many times when even a stretch, a looong stretch, of the imagination wasn't enough to make something work in my mind.  I won't say more because of not wanting to be a spoiler but I will say I am not really planning on reading any more in the series. (2010, 272 p.)

Sunday, March 11, 2018

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle

Meg and her family have been without their father for a number of years.  He is an astrophysicist who disappeared mysteriously while doing one of his experiments.  Now Meg, although very bright, is struggling with school, and unhappy with herself.  Then one day her brilliant, almost clairvoyant, 5-year-old brother, Charles Wallace, introduces her and a friend, Calvin, to three beings who take them on an adventure through the galaxy to find their missing father.

Cover image for A wrinkle in timeThis is, of course, not a recent book.  In fact, it won the Newbery medal the year before I was born.  I read it this month because I was asked to do an after school program about it because of the release of the new movie.  At first I didn't know what to talk about at the program but as I did research about the timing of its publication, I came to find out some interesting things.  Here is what I learned:

It is really the only Sci-Fi book to ever win the Newbery (unless you call, The Giver, and When You Reach Me sci-fi, which they are, kind of, but not in the same way.)

The September before it won the Newbery, Kennedy gave his "Let's go to the Moon" speech that caught the imagination and galvanized the resolve of the nation about the space program.

The very next month was the Cuban Missile Crisis, which was the scariest episode in the cold war, our nation's efforts to "stop the spread of Communism."

 So if you mix the excitement about space travel, and the fear of the spread of Communism together, then you get, "A Wrinkle In Time."

I also found out that is has been one of the most "banned books" of all time.  That is strange to me because it is usually the conservative Christian Right the wants to ban books, and this book quotes the Bible several times.  But I guess that is why they wanted to ban it.  It quotes scripture, but puts it on the level of other famous philosophies. At the same time the three "witches" are acting like God figures. It was seen as setting up "other gods" instead of the Christian God. 

In preparation for my class I watched the 2006 made-for-TV movie of A Wrinkle in Time.  Then on Saturday I went to see the new movie.  If you are looking for a movie that reflects the book, watch the older one.  That said, I liked the new one too.  It didn't follow the plot of the book very closely, but some of the same spirit was there, and many of the scenes were very beautiful.  I liked it (and the other movie, and the book) because Meg is a hero not because she can fight and wield a sword like Wonder Woman, but because she can love her little brother so much that she is willing to overcome her own insecurities and risk everything to save him.  In the end it is precisely that love that has the power to free him from darkness.  (262 p. 1962)

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Mighty Jack and the Goblin King by Ben Hatke

Cover image for Mighty Jack and the Goblin King
This is the second in the series that started with Mighty Jack.  In this one Jack and Lilly go through a magic passage in search of Jack's sister, Maddy, who has been stolen by a plant monster.  They end up in a different world and have to fight giants and Goblins to get themselves and Maddy home. Jack is impulsive and totally focused on saving Maddy. Lilly tells him to be more cautious, and in the end it is she who suffers because of his impulsiveness. Nevertheless, working together they not only save themselves, but also make things better for many others.


This is a well drawn graphic novel with plenty of excitement and feats of heroism. Jack and Lilly have endearing flaws and the relationship between them is interesting and complicated. This book brings the story to a satisfying end, but there is a afterward that suggests we haven't seen the last of Mighty Jack. (205 p. 2017)

This is also the last book on my reading list for 2017.  Whoot!  I read all the children's fiction that got at least 3 starred reviews and all the juvenile graphic novels that got at least 1 starred review in 2017.  That ended up being 41 novels, and 31 graphic novels.  I don't plan on repeating the goal this year, but I do plan on keeping up on the latest and greatest.  I have already put on hold some of the 2018 books that have received 3 stars.  So stay tuned.  There is more to come.

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Emily the Strange: The Lost Days by Rob Reger

Cover image for The Lost DaysA young teen wakes up on a park bench with no memory of who she is or why she is there.  She has a few objects in her pockets, but no real clue to her identity.  She takes on a fake name, Earwig, and works at a coffee shop to earn food.  Once she is sure of a place to sleep and eat, she begins to try to figure out where she came from and how to find her way back home.  Earwig is a quirky character and eventually she begins to find out there are a lot of other quirky things about the small town she is in. 

This was a fun read well suited for a 11-13 year old.  The story is written as entries in Earwig's journal so the reader is discovering Earwig's past at the same rate as she is.  Sometimes  something happens that is totally unusual, but because the point of view character has amnesia, she doesn't know it is strange.  Then the reader gets the delightful feeling of being "in on the joke." This is not a new book, but a new discovery for me.  There is a sequel and I think I will put it on hold right now.  (2009, 264 p)

Sunday, March 4, 2018

Gorilla Dawn by Gill Lewis

Cover image for Gorilla dawnImara lives as the "Spirit Child" of of a group of armed raiders in the forests of the Republic of Congo.  They believe that she has prophetic powers because she survived the bite of their patron animal, the Black Mamba snake.  The leader of their group consults with Imara before a raid, and asks her to "bless" his men before they attack a village.  Imara lives in constant fear that the band will lose faith in her spiritual powers, but she also hates the violent life they live.  One day the group captures a young ape in a nature preserve that they plan to sell to an American.  It bonds with Imara and gives her the courage to make a change in her life.

This book is written from the point of three characters, Imara, the gorilla child, Kitwana, and the son of a ranger, Bobo.  Lewis does a good job winding their stories around each other, showing how fate brings them together to help them all find what they are looking for.  I was particularly impressed with Lewis' portrayal of Kitwana.  She obviously did a lot of research about gorillas and how they interact with each other.  This is another good choice for kids who like to read about how kids from other cultures overcome difficult situations but parents should beware that there are some tough situations that might upset sensitive kids. (2017, 408 p.)

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Bolivar by Sean Rubin

Cover image for BolivarSibyl lives in New York City where most people are just too busy to notice anything.  Sibyl seems to be the only one who has noticed that her next door neighbor is actually a dinosaur.  No one will believe her, so she tries desperately to get a picture of him.  Bolivar (the dinosaur) is not at all eager to be recognized.  He is afraid that if people knew what he really was, he could never go back to his quiet and pleasantly routine life he enjoys so much.

Here is another book that is hard to pigeonhole.  Parts of it are definitely graphic novel style, but other pages are formatted like an illustrated short story.  It is much longer than the Belinda story, and the pictures are more detailed and done in an illustrative style rather than a cartoon style.  The book is a delight to read as the reader gets caught up in looking for Bolivar on each of the pages, just as Sibyl is looking for him everywhere she goes in the city.  There is also a fun social satire going on,that might be lost on the little kids, but will delight more sophisticated older readers. (224 p. 2017)