(I never thought I would read a YA book that opens with Olga's Revenge. This colorful anecdote from Russia's foundation legend forms an uneasy parable for this fictionalized account of the Women's Death Battalions of WWI.)
In Petrograd in the spring of 1917, it is obvious that things are falling apart. The Tsar has stepped aside to allow the liberals and socialists to form an ill-fated attempt to keep Russia in the War. Nonetheless, Russia is losing. On the sidelines, Lenin and his Bolsheviks are set to strike when the opportunity presents. For a young woman like seventeen year-old Katya, there is an itch to do more than work in a munitions factory. So when an announcement goes out that healthy young women are being recruited to serve in combat roles and form a batallion made up entirely of women, she and her friend Masha answer the call. Training is brutal and rushed and soon enough the young women find themselves on the front line.
Given how desperate the Russian position was in the Summer of 1917, it's hard to read this story with anything but dread. The Revolution is still months away (and the book doesn't venture beyond July) but like a grenade with a pulled pin, all signs indicate that an explosion is inevitable. That a group of young women trained and fought with exceptional valor not only against an overwhelming foe, but also against sexism and discrimination from their own comrades makes for a thrilling ride. It is an amazing story and well researched.
Be forewarned that the novel features graphic and intense violence.
Monday, May 11, 2020
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Havenfall, by Sara Holland
At an isolated inn the Colorado Rockies called Havenfall, lies a place where portals join our world to the Adjacent Realms. Every summer, delegates from those worlds gather for an inter-dimensional Davos summit. Maddie, the niece of the Innkeeper, is trying to avoid her family this summer and comes to Havenfall to work for her uncle and see her old friend Brekken. She's grown up at Havenfall and has always enjoyed spending time with the delegates. Some day, she wants to take over as Innkeeper when her uncle is ready to retire. Spending the summer will give her an opportunity to start learning the ropes.
But the first night, while Maddie and Brekken are off reigniting the fire between them, an incident occurs. The result is a dead body, a missing bodyguard, and the Innkeeper fallen into some sort of coma. Someone is trying to sabotage the Summit and perhaps much worse. With the Innkeeper incapacitated, Maddie has to step in and take over her uncle's role. Furthermore, she needs to find the killer and determine what they are up to. This leads her into a series of evolving and expanding mysteries. Full of twists and turns, the mystery builds to a stirring climax.
Surprisingly entertaining. As the first of a series, Havenfall is mostly about establishing the stage. A lot of energy is put into exposition and explaining the complicated politics of the various realms, but the story is far from dull. There's near constant suspense as characters cross and double cross each other in ever more creative ways. The story is not always as organic or as smooth as one might like, but it delivers the goods in the end. Characters also suffer a bit to the action, so that tantalizing views of Maddie's relationship with her family or the romantic sparks with Brekken are never fully developed. Hopefully, that will be forthcoming in the next installments.
Tuesday, May 05, 2020
Sweeping Up the Heart, by Kevin Henkes
Amelia wants to do something different than just hanging around the house during spring break. For once, her father has his break at the same time and she tries to convince him that they should go to Florida. After all, lots of people go to Florida! But he rejects the idea as being too "adventurous," and she ends up being stuck at home.
So instead she discovers a pottery studio, a love for working for clay, and a boy named Casey. Casey in turn convinces her that the strange woman who has been loitering nearby is actually Amelia's long lost mother. That isn't true, but she turns out to be someone just as special.
A very short and quick read, it didn't leave much of an impression on me. Obviously, there's a story (as I summarized above) but there isn't much of a plot and certainly not much of a point. The relationship between Amelia and Casey might have become something, but the mystery woman thread takes off before it can develop. The mystery lady in turn is a bit of a fizzle. I found it dull and full of nice but forgettable characters.
So instead she discovers a pottery studio, a love for working for clay, and a boy named Casey. Casey in turn convinces her that the strange woman who has been loitering nearby is actually Amelia's long lost mother. That isn't true, but she turns out to be someone just as special.
A very short and quick read, it didn't leave much of an impression on me. Obviously, there's a story (as I summarized above) but there isn't much of a plot and certainly not much of a point. The relationship between Amelia and Casey might have become something, but the mystery woman thread takes off before it can develop. The mystery lady in turn is a bit of a fizzle. I found it dull and full of nice but forgettable characters.
Sunday, May 03, 2020
Prairie Lotus, by Linda Sue Park
Hanna and her father have come all the way to LaForge, Dakota Territory from California to make a new life. Carrying only what they can haul in a wagon, Papa wants to set up a store and make a home. Hanna dreams of finishing her schooling and sewing dresses in Papa's store, just like her mother did before she died. But For Hanna, her modest dreams are beset with barriers because she is half-Chinese. In the 1880s, in the Midwest, Asians are rarely seen and never tolerated. Even the marriage of Papa and her late mother would be considered illegal. Attending school is potentially also illegal. With immense fortitude and drawing on her memories of her mother for strength, Hanna faces the prejudice of the community and struggles to realize her dreams.
Hanna is an inspirational heroine. She has grit and determination and the insight to realize that many conflicts cannot be resolved through direct confrontation. Yet, she doesn't back down either and shows little fear of being outspoken even in front of grownups. In this respect, she is more like Anne Shirley than Laura Ingalls. She's the kind of literary heroine that parents want their children to read about.
Her dedication and work ethic are admirable, and she shows many talents including strong aesthetic sense and business acumen (to Papa's benefit). And even though Papa is thick headed in a way common to literary fathers, he is a kind figure. In truth, the good guys (in which we'll include Hanna's friend Bess, the teacher Miss Walters, and Mr Harris) are all nicely drawn characters. The bad guys don't fare as well, but they are there largely as symbols of greater evil (racism, sexism, and prejudice).
The novel has received a lot of attention for being an attempt to "correct the errors" of Laura Ingalls Wilder. As for myself, I am less interested in the politics of the book and more interested in evaluating the novel as a story. That's a little difficult in this case because Park keeps a laser focus on the social injustices that Hanna has to endure. Along with that, Hanna's responses are almost certainly anachronistic. As a result, the political message really becomes the book for better or for worse. That seems like a lost opportunity, as I'm convinced that a story about a Chinese-American girl on the range is intrinsically interesting enough that the heavy stress on the social injustices that she endures, while realistic, is hardly necessary -- a little goes a long way. All that said, I enjoyed the book and recommend it.
Hanna is an inspirational heroine. She has grit and determination and the insight to realize that many conflicts cannot be resolved through direct confrontation. Yet, she doesn't back down either and shows little fear of being outspoken even in front of grownups. In this respect, she is more like Anne Shirley than Laura Ingalls. She's the kind of literary heroine that parents want their children to read about.
Her dedication and work ethic are admirable, and she shows many talents including strong aesthetic sense and business acumen (to Papa's benefit). And even though Papa is thick headed in a way common to literary fathers, he is a kind figure. In truth, the good guys (in which we'll include Hanna's friend Bess, the teacher Miss Walters, and Mr Harris) are all nicely drawn characters. The bad guys don't fare as well, but they are there largely as symbols of greater evil (racism, sexism, and prejudice).
The novel has received a lot of attention for being an attempt to "correct the errors" of Laura Ingalls Wilder. As for myself, I am less interested in the politics of the book and more interested in evaluating the novel as a story. That's a little difficult in this case because Park keeps a laser focus on the social injustices that Hanna has to endure. Along with that, Hanna's responses are almost certainly anachronistic. As a result, the political message really becomes the book for better or for worse. That seems like a lost opportunity, as I'm convinced that a story about a Chinese-American girl on the range is intrinsically interesting enough that the heavy stress on the social injustices that she endures, while realistic, is hardly necessary -- a little goes a long way. All that said, I enjoyed the book and recommend it.
Monday, April 27, 2020
The Boy and Girl Who Broke the World, by Amy Reed
Billy lives with his grandmother. His Mom was a junkie and his uncle's a famous rock star recovering from being pretty much the same. Given grandma's penchant for smacking Billy around, it isn't too hard to see how she messed up her children. Billy is your typical shy loser who gets alternately beaten up by the bullies at school and his grandmother.
Rome and Carthage are dead-end, washed-out western Washington town, whose glory days lay in lumber. Aside from the uncle, the only notable thing about them now are being the setting for a popular series of YA fantasy books. Dying industry has left behind a bunch of drug-addled losers who worship president King (a mildly incoherent and majorly narcissistic leader with a habit of threatening to bomb people).
Lydia dreams of dancing professionally. Before her mother died, she loved her dance lessons, but afterwards there was no money for lessons. All of that starts to change when Billy's uncle disappears from the public eye and reappears in Billy's attic. And that isn't the only weird thing that happens. There's a freak tornado that leaves behind a giant pit in the earth, growing evidence that Sasquatch is loose in the woods, and plenty of signs that Billy's house intends to eat him. And, of course, the end of the world is coming very soon.
Wry and biting story that, despite its rather loony plot, has a great deal of fun along the way. The style is very much in the Libba Bray tradition and anyone who enjoy the absurd humor of Going Bovine will love this novel. I don't know if I needed the end of the world to shake things up at the end, but it did conveniently ties up a lot of disparate ideas.
Rome and Carthage are dead-end, washed-out western Washington town, whose glory days lay in lumber. Aside from the uncle, the only notable thing about them now are being the setting for a popular series of YA fantasy books. Dying industry has left behind a bunch of drug-addled losers who worship president King (a mildly incoherent and majorly narcissistic leader with a habit of threatening to bomb people).
Lydia dreams of dancing professionally. Before her mother died, she loved her dance lessons, but afterwards there was no money for lessons. All of that starts to change when Billy's uncle disappears from the public eye and reappears in Billy's attic. And that isn't the only weird thing that happens. There's a freak tornado that leaves behind a giant pit in the earth, growing evidence that Sasquatch is loose in the woods, and plenty of signs that Billy's house intends to eat him. And, of course, the end of the world is coming very soon.
Wry and biting story that, despite its rather loony plot, has a great deal of fun along the way. The style is very much in the Libba Bray tradition and anyone who enjoy the absurd humor of Going Bovine will love this novel. I don't know if I needed the end of the world to shake things up at the end, but it did conveniently ties up a lot of disparate ideas.
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Stay, by Bobbie Pyron
Piper and her family arrive in town with little to their name. Her father is searching for a job, their car has died, and her family is stuck in a shelter. When Piper reflects on the previous months and how they've lost nearly everything in that time, it's hard to find anything worth hoping for.
Two things change her view. The first is the local Firefly troop at the shelter. In the old days, she was an active Firefly and even held a sales record for Firefly brownies. The idea that she can have that piece of normalcy again provides comfort. The second thing is a cause: a homeless woman named Angel and her little dog Baby. When Angel gets sick and taken to a hospital and Angel ends up in the pound, Piper and her Firefly friends try to figure out a way to help. In a series of brave acts, the girls find that they can make a difference. For no matter how much these girls have lost, there are people with greater needs.
If you like getting sucker punched with a story of a cute dog, a brave and kind young girl, and some kind adults, you can't really go wrong. Piper's generosity makes a nice role model and her intelligence and people skills are inspirational. It's all heartwarming and tear jerking (as one would expect), albeit far too traumatic for sensitive readers (my wife won't touch the book). Still, this is a really sweet story with a message, covering issues of homelessness, mental health, and discrimination in an age appropriate way. The story will give young readers something to ask good questions about.
Two things change her view. The first is the local Firefly troop at the shelter. In the old days, she was an active Firefly and even held a sales record for Firefly brownies. The idea that she can have that piece of normalcy again provides comfort. The second thing is a cause: a homeless woman named Angel and her little dog Baby. When Angel gets sick and taken to a hospital and Angel ends up in the pound, Piper and her Firefly friends try to figure out a way to help. In a series of brave acts, the girls find that they can make a difference. For no matter how much these girls have lost, there are people with greater needs.
If you like getting sucker punched with a story of a cute dog, a brave and kind young girl, and some kind adults, you can't really go wrong. Piper's generosity makes a nice role model and her intelligence and people skills are inspirational. It's all heartwarming and tear jerking (as one would expect), albeit far too traumatic for sensitive readers (my wife won't touch the book). Still, this is a really sweet story with a message, covering issues of homelessness, mental health, and discrimination in an age appropriate way. The story will give young readers something to ask good questions about.
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Here in the Real World, by Sara Pennypacker
Ware doesn't like playing with other kids. They make far too much noise. He'd be happiest spending the summer at home alone, but his parents have other ideas. They want him to make "meaningful social interactions" with kids his own edge at the Rec (a local summer program), a place which Ware can't stand.
But he's found a way to make things work. There's an abandoned half-demolished church next door where Ware can escape to and explore. Imagining himself as a knight, he transforms the ruined building into his castle, complete with a throne and a moat. But he's not alone. There's a girl named Jolene there who is trying to plant a garden of papayas, with dreams of making money by doing so. In her mind, Ware is full of silly ideas and he should start living in the real world as she does. In time, Ware learns enough about Jolene to understand from where her cynicism comes.
The resulting tale is a gentle story of two outcast middle schoolers spending a summer together at their own speed. There's a world of discovery and adventure here, all placed in a single abandoned lot. For Ware, the summer is about learning to embrace his quiet introverted nature. For Jolene, it is about finding that even the real world can have some happiness within it.
As rooted as this story is in reality, it has all of the whimsical magic of Pennypacker's animal adventure Pax. Like that novel, Ware and Jolene innocently explore a world full of greater evils than they can really imagine, safe by fate and good fortune. Sweet and magical.
But he's found a way to make things work. There's an abandoned half-demolished church next door where Ware can escape to and explore. Imagining himself as a knight, he transforms the ruined building into his castle, complete with a throne and a moat. But he's not alone. There's a girl named Jolene there who is trying to plant a garden of papayas, with dreams of making money by doing so. In her mind, Ware is full of silly ideas and he should start living in the real world as she does. In time, Ware learns enough about Jolene to understand from where her cynicism comes.
The resulting tale is a gentle story of two outcast middle schoolers spending a summer together at their own speed. There's a world of discovery and adventure here, all placed in a single abandoned lot. For Ware, the summer is about learning to embrace his quiet introverted nature. For Jolene, it is about finding that even the real world can have some happiness within it.
As rooted as this story is in reality, it has all of the whimsical magic of Pennypacker's animal adventure Pax. Like that novel, Ware and Jolene innocently explore a world full of greater evils than they can really imagine, safe by fate and good fortune. Sweet and magical.
Monday, April 20, 2020
Sick Kids in Love, by Hannah Moskowitz
During one of her infusions, Isabel meets Sasha, who's getting his own treatment. Isabel has rheumatoid arthritis, Sasha Gaucher Disease (a rare genetic disorder). They'd hit it off right away, but Isabel decided long ago that she wasn't going to date. Dating is complicated. Trying to explain herself, her disease, and maintain a relationship is simply too hard. But with Sasha, it should be easier: He also has a chronic disease. He totally gets the paradox that they are both more than their disease, but also defined by it.
Isabel finds that she can relax in his presence. She even finds herself opening up more to others as a result of the relationship she is forming with Sasha. He's good for her.
But Sasha also opens Isabel to the realization that her control issues, her fear of making decisions, and her aversion to conflict are not actually related to having a chronic disease, but are in fact unrelated. She has conveniently looked past and ignored them because she could blame everything on the arthritis. When Sasha asks her to commit to their relationship, she finds to her own horror that she doesn't know how. And that is just the start of a series of emotional challenges!
One of the greatest parts of this book is the subtitle ("they don't die in the end") because it completely throws off the trope of these books. A death would have been convenient. Once Sasha died, we'd have a teary funeral and Isabel would pick herself up and move on, always keeping the memory of her fleeting romance with Sasha in her heart! We all would have cried. Instead, Moskowitz presents us with a much harder ending: everyone lives and they are both still sick. That's what a chronic disease is about. It doesn't ever go away. Somehow life goes on and when you have a chronic disease and you're young, you have many years before you. You know that what awaits you are good days and bad days. Sometimes you will be well, sometimes you'll be in the hospital. It's not particularly dramatic but it's a hell of a lot more scary. Watching Isabel come to accept that she wants Sasha in her life and embrace all that that entails makes for some pretty heady romantic stuff!
I loved the growth of Isabel's character, her strength in confronting her demons, and the hugeness of her heart. This is a really lovely story about two young people in a very difficult place, doing what needs to be done to grasp on to their piece of happiness. It's an affirming and inspirational story. Highly recommended.
Saturday, April 18, 2020
The Lie Tree, by Frances Hardinge
In Victorian England, young women do not pursue careers in the sciences. Faith's interest in her father's studies in natural science is thus discouraged. But for every time her mother tried to keep her close to the hearth, Faith doggedly tagged along with her father. It was she as a little girl, after all, who found her father's most famous fossil discovery.
Now a young woman, Faith is concerned as her father (and the family by extension) falls into disgrace because of evidence that her father's work is fabricated. A fortuitous summons to the small island of Vane to participate in a dig is just the tonic for escaping scandal. But the scandal and worse follows the family and Faith becomes aware that father is hiding a much larger secret: a rare plant that survives in pitch darkness, lives on lies, and produces a fruit that can allegedly provide True Knowledge. Confronting her father, she is taken into his confidence and helps to secure the tree in a safe place. The next morning, her father is dead, allegedly from suicide. With time running out, Faith must unravel the mystery of her father's death, the identity of the killer, and the mystery of the tree itself.
A dark Victorian mystery with some wonderful creep factor and macabre images. Lots of twists and surprises and a stellar well-written cast of characters. I'm not a big mystery fan, but this was enjoyable on several levels. A story with depth, competing motives for doing both great good and dark evil. And, of course, the tree itself which is everything one wants from a diabolical plant. Without introducing any jarring anachronisms, Hardinge does a great job of introducing an empowering and empowered heroine who exposes and challenges gender inequality while being equally and fatally blind to it in the story's most clever twist. It adds just another dimension to this satisfying story of dark deeds and tragedy.
Now a young woman, Faith is concerned as her father (and the family by extension) falls into disgrace because of evidence that her father's work is fabricated. A fortuitous summons to the small island of Vane to participate in a dig is just the tonic for escaping scandal. But the scandal and worse follows the family and Faith becomes aware that father is hiding a much larger secret: a rare plant that survives in pitch darkness, lives on lies, and produces a fruit that can allegedly provide True Knowledge. Confronting her father, she is taken into his confidence and helps to secure the tree in a safe place. The next morning, her father is dead, allegedly from suicide. With time running out, Faith must unravel the mystery of her father's death, the identity of the killer, and the mystery of the tree itself.
A dark Victorian mystery with some wonderful creep factor and macabre images. Lots of twists and surprises and a stellar well-written cast of characters. I'm not a big mystery fan, but this was enjoyable on several levels. A story with depth, competing motives for doing both great good and dark evil. And, of course, the tree itself which is everything one wants from a diabolical plant. Without introducing any jarring anachronisms, Hardinge does a great job of introducing an empowering and empowered heroine who exposes and challenges gender inequality while being equally and fatally blind to it in the story's most clever twist. It adds just another dimension to this satisfying story of dark deeds and tragedy.
Sunday, April 12, 2020
Out of Place, by Jennifer Blecher
Cove is crushed when she learns that her best friend Nina is moving away to New York City. Cove has lived her whole life on Martha's Vineyard and never left the island. Her mother, for reasons never fully explained, refuses to leave. As a result, it is unlikely that Cove will ever be able to visit Nina.
Without Nina, there will be no one to defend her at school and no one to be her friend. And while Cove has to endure some fairly intense bullying at school, she finds there are plenty of new friends to make and things to learn. One of those friends helps Cove learn of an audacious way that she might earn a free trip to New York City. She knows that she has to take the leap, even if it means risking everything she believes in.
A surprisingly sophisticated middle reader that covers bullying, PTSD, and socioeconomics, as well as a familiar story of friends being separated. My favorite part was a subplot about a retired seamstress teaching Cove how to use a sewing machine (I'm a sucker for the forgotten-master-teaching-the-young-acolyte tale). Vivid characters and lively writing make this complex story surprisingly enjoyable. Blecher knows how to make her points economically and the result is an enjoyable book that delivers a big punch in minimal pages.
Without Nina, there will be no one to defend her at school and no one to be her friend. And while Cove has to endure some fairly intense bullying at school, she finds there are plenty of new friends to make and things to learn. One of those friends helps Cove learn of an audacious way that she might earn a free trip to New York City. She knows that she has to take the leap, even if it means risking everything she believes in.
A surprisingly sophisticated middle reader that covers bullying, PTSD, and socioeconomics, as well as a familiar story of friends being separated. My favorite part was a subplot about a retired seamstress teaching Cove how to use a sewing machine (I'm a sucker for the forgotten-master-teaching-the-young-acolyte tale). Vivid characters and lively writing make this complex story surprisingly enjoyable. Blecher knows how to make her points economically and the result is an enjoyable book that delivers a big punch in minimal pages.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Where the Heart Is, by Jo Knowles
Thirteen year-old Rachel is tired of being teased about her alleged romance with Micah. Yes, when they were six, they pledged their undying love, but people grow up, right? For Rachel, it certainly seems that way! But Micah obviously still likes Rachel and grows jealous when she starts to explore relationships with other boys (and even dabbles with a flirtation with a girl).
Rachel meanwhile is learning to take care of her neighbor's animals and coming to terms with the fact that those animals are slated for the dinner table. And along with everything else, Rachel's family is struggling financially and on the verge of losing their home.
While a pleasant read, this book suffers from a pacing problem. The build up to the supposedly central issue of the book (coping with the loss of the family home) is introduced very late in the book. And, once introduced, Knowles does not have much to say about it and rushes it along. The real story is probably Rachel and Micah, but this gets buried in the rest at the end. The end result is a bunch of loose ends.
Rachel meanwhile is learning to take care of her neighbor's animals and coming to terms with the fact that those animals are slated for the dinner table. And along with everything else, Rachel's family is struggling financially and on the verge of losing their home.
While a pleasant read, this book suffers from a pacing problem. The build up to the supposedly central issue of the book (coping with the loss of the family home) is introduced very late in the book. And, once introduced, Knowles does not have much to say about it and rushes it along. The real story is probably Rachel and Micah, but this gets buried in the rest at the end. The end result is a bunch of loose ends.
Wednesday, April 08, 2020
Start Here, by Trish Doller
Willa, Taylor, and Finley were supposed to take a grand boat trip together from Ohio to Key West after high school graduation, but then Finley succumbed to her leukemia and didn't make it. But they still have the boat and a list of clues Finley created for them to solve on the route.
Neither one of them is truly enthusiastic about taking the trip. Finley was the glue that bonded the three of them together. In her absence, Willa and Taylor aren't really close enough to survive close quarters and 2000 nautical miles. But their loyalty to their late friend and a shared desire to honor her drive them on. And during their coastal road trip they survive threats both emotional and physical, find love, discover themselves, and come to terms with life after Finley.
No literary masterpiece, but a nice solid road trip story with an unusual setting. Knowing just about nothing about sailboats, there was just enough detail here to entertain me. Great characters and some fun lighthearted romances gave me something to enjoy. Finally, just enough adventure to explain the transformations and growth that I basically was craving for.
Neither one of them is truly enthusiastic about taking the trip. Finley was the glue that bonded the three of them together. In her absence, Willa and Taylor aren't really close enough to survive close quarters and 2000 nautical miles. But their loyalty to their late friend and a shared desire to honor her drive them on. And during their coastal road trip they survive threats both emotional and physical, find love, discover themselves, and come to terms with life after Finley.
No literary masterpiece, but a nice solid road trip story with an unusual setting. Knowing just about nothing about sailboats, there was just enough detail here to entertain me. Great characters and some fun lighthearted romances gave me something to enjoy. Finally, just enough adventure to explain the transformations and growth that I basically was craving for.
Sunday, April 05, 2020
Lalani of the Distant Sea, by Erin Estrada Kelly
Inspired by Philippine mythology, this fable tells the story of a little girl named Lalani who must save her dying people by crossing from her island to the next door one where Mount Isa lies. There, a golden flower will bring everything you wish. Countless great warriors in the best ships have tried to make the trip before and none have succeeded. How possibly could twelve year-old Lalani in a tiny boat make it?
A complex story involving a series of mysteries that gradually come together. The narrative itself is a bit of magic, combining not just Lalani's story, but also the tales of dozens of other characters. Kelly continues through to the end to introduce more and more characters, often in a second-person voice that feels quite immediate, like a campfire story. The quantity of names and beasts gets overwhelming, but the story's richness is the payoff.
While individual moments can get quite dark (there's a lot of death), general themes about self-discovery and standing up for what is right give this some heft. I enjoyed the richness and the internal consistency of the story. I'm not sure that I've truly appreciated it from only one reading.
A complex story involving a series of mysteries that gradually come together. The narrative itself is a bit of magic, combining not just Lalani's story, but also the tales of dozens of other characters. Kelly continues through to the end to introduce more and more characters, often in a second-person voice that feels quite immediate, like a campfire story. The quantity of names and beasts gets overwhelming, but the story's richness is the payoff.
While individual moments can get quite dark (there's a lot of death), general themes about self-discovery and standing up for what is right give this some heft. I enjoyed the richness and the internal consistency of the story. I'm not sure that I've truly appreciated it from only one reading.
Wednesday, April 01, 2020
The Good Luck Girls, by Charlotte Nicole Davis
Sold to a bordello when she was little, Clementine has turned sixteen and is about to have her "Lucky Night" (when she is sold to the highest bidder for her first working evening). When the John ends up dead, Clem has to make a run for it. With the help of four friends, they make a daring escape that sets up a desperate race for freedom. But the world they live in -- called the Scab -- isn't just populated with corrupt lawmen and people willing to give you away for the right amount of Shine. Raveners, who were once men, but have now become something truly evil, that can enter your mind and destroy you from within. And there vengeful spirits come out at night and tear you apart. Against all these forces, what chance do five young women have to survive? Yet the drive to survive and be free is strong and the resulting adventure is a wild one in this fantasy/Western hybrid.
As the story starts out, I was reminded of the "Heart of Gold" episode of Firefly because of its combination of Western and fantasy/sci-fi tropes. Aside from the fact that they both begin at a brothel, the stories aren't similar, but the feeling of this novel owes a debt to Joss Whedon -- not just Firefly but also a good dose of Buffy. Davis has woven a complex and immersive landscape for this book. The Wild West stuff mixed up with this crazy paranormal stuff could have been a colossal train wreck, but she's made it effortlessly fit together.
The plotting of this story is relentless. We never really get a break as we careen from one moment of peril to the next. That pace is hard to maintain and at some point it starts to feel contrived. Just how many near-death situations can these girls escape? The ending fizzles out as Davis can't one-up herself enough to create a true climax. All of which leads us to the other issue: character building. I'm not going to say that she didn't put a lot of effort into these characters, but they are fuzzy and amidst all of the action I sometimes had trouble keeping straight who was doing what. Five (six if you count the boy) characters are a lot to sort through and build up to be sufficiently distinct (I never did quite figure out Tansy and Mallow in particular). Major kudos for creativity and an excellent setting, high marks for a story I got fully engrossed in, but maybe do less and make more of it by building up those characters and throttling back on the mayhem?
As the story starts out, I was reminded of the "Heart of Gold" episode of Firefly because of its combination of Western and fantasy/sci-fi tropes. Aside from the fact that they both begin at a brothel, the stories aren't similar, but the feeling of this novel owes a debt to Joss Whedon -- not just Firefly but also a good dose of Buffy. Davis has woven a complex and immersive landscape for this book. The Wild West stuff mixed up with this crazy paranormal stuff could have been a colossal train wreck, but she's made it effortlessly fit together.
The plotting of this story is relentless. We never really get a break as we careen from one moment of peril to the next. That pace is hard to maintain and at some point it starts to feel contrived. Just how many near-death situations can these girls escape? The ending fizzles out as Davis can't one-up herself enough to create a true climax. All of which leads us to the other issue: character building. I'm not going to say that she didn't put a lot of effort into these characters, but they are fuzzy and amidst all of the action I sometimes had trouble keeping straight who was doing what. Five (six if you count the boy) characters are a lot to sort through and build up to be sufficiently distinct (I never did quite figure out Tansy and Mallow in particular). Major kudos for creativity and an excellent setting, high marks for a story I got fully engrossed in, but maybe do less and make more of it by building up those characters and throttling back on the mayhem?
Sunday, March 29, 2020
My Jasper June, by Laurel Snyder
At the start of the summer, Leah feels lost. Her town and her family have so many traditions and none of them feel right anymore. Since her little brother died last summer at camp, Leah and her family have simply drifted. School kept Leah busy, but with a long empty summer ahead of her, there is nothing to do and nothing to which to look forward.
Then Leah meets Jaspar, a mysterious girl living in an abandoned house in the woods. Jaspar is fun and exciting, and most important of all Jaspar doesn't look at her with the pity that everyone else does. Through the friendship that develops between them, Leah finds the will to move beyond her grief and see with a clear eye how encumbered it has made her and her family. But Jaspar's situation is dire. Can Leah help her in return or are some problems simply too big to take care of?
A lot of loss and pain in this book but in the end a lot of hope as well. Snyder avoids easy solutions and no one person saves the others. Instead it becomes a team effort where adults and children come together and teach and learn from each other at the same time. The end result is a moving story about taking risks and committing to others in order to break through unhealthy coping mechanisms. While elements of the plot are tired and familiar, the strength of this novel comes in its affirming and inspirational message, well written and effectively delivered.
Then Leah meets Jaspar, a mysterious girl living in an abandoned house in the woods. Jaspar is fun and exciting, and most important of all Jaspar doesn't look at her with the pity that everyone else does. Through the friendship that develops between them, Leah finds the will to move beyond her grief and see with a clear eye how encumbered it has made her and her family. But Jaspar's situation is dire. Can Leah help her in return or are some problems simply too big to take care of?
A lot of loss and pain in this book but in the end a lot of hope as well. Snyder avoids easy solutions and no one person saves the others. Instead it becomes a team effort where adults and children come together and teach and learn from each other at the same time. The end result is a moving story about taking risks and committing to others in order to break through unhealthy coping mechanisms. While elements of the plot are tired and familiar, the strength of this novel comes in its affirming and inspirational message, well written and effectively delivered.
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Zenobia July, by Lisa Bunker
While her father's hunting accident has left middleschooler Zen an orphan, the decision for her to come live with her Aunts provides an opportunity to finally become the girl she has always known herself to be. With a new town and anew school, Zen has decided that she'll present as female and not even tell anyone that she's trans.
Being a girl proves harder than she expected. There's the natural worries of passing, but Zen also find that being a girl involves tricky social skills with which she is not familiar. She knows that being a girl feels right, but doing it right does not always come to her. She doesn't know to be wary around queen bee Natalie. While prim Margaret seems like she would make a good buddy, her conservative religious family proves to be a no-go. For safety and comfort, Zen is drawn to a group of misfits, made up of racial and sexual minorities trying to fit in.
Zen is far more than a trans girl. She has major computer skills. When a hacker defaces the school's website with racist and transphobic graffiti, Zen leaps into action, helping the school track down the perpetrator. All along the way she worries about finding out that the person who did this is likely someone she knows, someone who may not even realize that they have attacked her.
A complicated collection of ideas that surprisingly works. The major plot line of Zen learning how to be a girl is handled quite well. Zen both addresses her frustrations with the boy parts of her (she's well aware that as she enters puberty that things will get harder) and with learning the skills to reinforce and validate her femininity. Related to this, there's a lovely series of interludes where various characters describe how Zen appears to them, with even the most reluctant observer agreeing that Zen is a girl. Subplots about tolerance of cultural pluralism (Muslims in one instance and homosexuals in the other) neatly intertwine. Zen's two aunts, their marriage, and the overall non-traditional family they form is another component.
I also appreciate the things that the story doesn't do. No traumatic outing scene. No widespread bullying at school (mean girl Natalie aside!). No family screaming match. No grand gestures or speeches. It all ends on a high note and, while little external has actually changed, we get the sense that Zen is just a bit closer to her happy place. That opens us to a sequel or just a nice slice of Zen's growth.
Sunday, March 22, 2020
A Long Walk to Water, by Linda Sue Park
A story of two young Africans. Nya and her family live in a parched desert. For half of the year, she spends her entire day making two round trips to fetch water for her family. For the other half, she digs in mud for water that is frequently disease-ridden.
Salva is a young South Sudanese boy who is forced to flee for his life when soldiers attack while he is at school. Separated from his family, he struggles to survive, crossing inhospitable terrain and ending up in a series of refugee camps and dreaming of a better life. Told in alternating voices, the stories of Nya and Salva eventually connect in a surprising and dramatically appealing way.
Almost certainly, this book is read more often for a classroom assignment than for leisure, but it is easy and quick to read. Largely based on the real-life experiences of Salva Dut, one of the "lost boys" of Sudan who were rescued from Kenyan refugee camps and resettled in the United States, the book is pretty intense reading. People get killed and die horrible deaths. While retold in an entertaining way, the mood is factual and it reads like non-fiction.
Salva is a young South Sudanese boy who is forced to flee for his life when soldiers attack while he is at school. Separated from his family, he struggles to survive, crossing inhospitable terrain and ending up in a series of refugee camps and dreaming of a better life. Told in alternating voices, the stories of Nya and Salva eventually connect in a surprising and dramatically appealing way.
Almost certainly, this book is read more often for a classroom assignment than for leisure, but it is easy and quick to read. Largely based on the real-life experiences of Salva Dut, one of the "lost boys" of Sudan who were rescued from Kenyan refugee camps and resettled in the United States, the book is pretty intense reading. People get killed and die horrible deaths. While retold in an entertaining way, the mood is factual and it reads like non-fiction.
There's Something About Sweetie, by Sandhya Menon
Sweetie is a fat girl and she doesn't mind if you think that of her. After all, her body size is an established fact. But if you try to tell her that being fat is somehow a bad thing, she'll point out that she can outrun any girl or boy on the school's track team. Far from being a slur, Sweetie has embraced her bigness as a source of pride and a sign of beauty. Now, if she could only get her mother to agree and stop acting so embarrassed of her daughter's appearance.
Ashish is a formidable basketball player. Popular and friendly, he has a way with girls. They love him and he has flitted from one relationship to another. When he is cruelly dumped by Celia, however, things are different. He really liked her and the rejection sends him into a funk. He simply can't get over her. With his charm failing him, he throws himself at his parents for help. They are convinced that they can find him the perfect girl and Ashish is just desperate enough to take them up on the offer. They find Sweetie.
Ashish and Sweetie actually have chemistry, but Sweetie's mother puts the kibosh on the whole idea. Afraid that her daughter will become the butt of jokes and be humiliated because no one as handsome as Ashish could possibly want her overweight daughter, she forbids them from being together. But they end up going behind her back. Ashish's parents, less than thrilled at the idea, force them to go on a series of unusual dates (the first of which is to the temple) that surprisingly solidify the respectful relationship that develops between Ashish and Sweetie.
The result is a sexy romance that strikes all the right notes: a couple of kids with a very mature perspective on what makes a relationship work; a healthy respect for tradition, family, and (gasp!) even religion; and a heartwarming story about people who truly don't let bodyshaming control their lives. As with When Dimple Met Rishi, Menon has created a joyful story filled with contemporary Desi characters that transcend stereotypes, while remaining true and respectful of those cultures. This is an all-round winner!
Ashish is a formidable basketball player. Popular and friendly, he has a way with girls. They love him and he has flitted from one relationship to another. When he is cruelly dumped by Celia, however, things are different. He really liked her and the rejection sends him into a funk. He simply can't get over her. With his charm failing him, he throws himself at his parents for help. They are convinced that they can find him the perfect girl and Ashish is just desperate enough to take them up on the offer. They find Sweetie.
Ashish and Sweetie actually have chemistry, but Sweetie's mother puts the kibosh on the whole idea. Afraid that her daughter will become the butt of jokes and be humiliated because no one as handsome as Ashish could possibly want her overweight daughter, she forbids them from being together. But they end up going behind her back. Ashish's parents, less than thrilled at the idea, force them to go on a series of unusual dates (the first of which is to the temple) that surprisingly solidify the respectful relationship that develops between Ashish and Sweetie.
The result is a sexy romance that strikes all the right notes: a couple of kids with a very mature perspective on what makes a relationship work; a healthy respect for tradition, family, and (gasp!) even religion; and a heartwarming story about people who truly don't let bodyshaming control their lives. As with When Dimple Met Rishi, Menon has created a joyful story filled with contemporary Desi characters that transcend stereotypes, while remaining true and respectful of those cultures. This is an all-round winner!
Friday, March 20, 2020
Playing Atari with Saddam Hussein, by Jennifer Roy (with Ali Fadhill)
In this slightly fictionalized autobiography, Ali Fadhill recalls his life in Basra Iraq during the forty-two days of Operation Desert Storm in 1991. Only eleven years old at the time, the war was a period when his family worried about his father on the front and tried to adjust to living life under siege.
And for a child, the things that mattered most were often trivial. Ali's strongest memory of the day the bombs started to drop was of knocking his brother off the top score on their favorite video game. And while he would witness atrocities like summary executions, his mother's decision to burn his comic books when they ran out of fuel made a bigger impact at the time.
The book is more of a memoir than a children's story. Reading it, I tried to picture whether a modern child could even relate to this moment in history. It's too recent to be considered history and too long ago for even their parents to remember. Admittedly it's fascinating to read the first-hand account. I'm always interested in seeing how children process the horrors of war. Overall, though, the writing is stark and functional and there's not much of a story.
And for a child, the things that mattered most were often trivial. Ali's strongest memory of the day the bombs started to drop was of knocking his brother off the top score on their favorite video game. And while he would witness atrocities like summary executions, his mother's decision to burn his comic books when they ran out of fuel made a bigger impact at the time.
The book is more of a memoir than a children's story. Reading it, I tried to picture whether a modern child could even relate to this moment in history. It's too recent to be considered history and too long ago for even their parents to remember. Admittedly it's fascinating to read the first-hand account. I'm always interested in seeing how children process the horrors of war. Overall, though, the writing is stark and functional and there's not much of a story.
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Her Royal Highness, by Rachel Hawkins
Running from an unfaithful girlfriend, Millie decides that she needs to make a big break and applies to go to an exclusive boarding school in Scotland. With students that include the Scottish royal family, she's about as far from Texas as she can get. And when she is accepted and her roommate turns out to be the actual Princess of Scotland, Millie knows she is in the deep end. At first, she can't stand her roomie, but over time they warm to each other until the inevitable romance develops. But the course of love never runs smooth when royalty are involved!
Silly princess fantasy stuff for fans of The Princess Diaries. We'll keep on hold the non-existence of the Scottish royal family or any of the far-too-easy way that Millie manages to become chummy with them. Instead, we'll just enjoy this funny rom-com about two pretty girls in the Highlands. The dialogue is smart, the story briskly paced, and Millie makes a perfect doe-in-the-headlights for this make believe fairy tale.
Silly princess fantasy stuff for fans of The Princess Diaries. We'll keep on hold the non-existence of the Scottish royal family or any of the far-too-easy way that Millie manages to become chummy with them. Instead, we'll just enjoy this funny rom-com about two pretty girls in the Highlands. The dialogue is smart, the story briskly paced, and Millie makes a perfect doe-in-the-headlights for this make believe fairy tale.
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