9/5/16

Girl on a Plane, by Miriam Moss

Girl on a Plane, by Miriam Moss (HMH Books for Young Readers, September 13, 2016), is a gripping, fictionalized account of the author's own experience of being on board a hijacked plane in 1970.   It's a compelling, thought-provoking, page-turner.

The time has come for Anna to leave her family in Bahrain to return to her English boarding school, and though she's used to the constant uprooting that comes with life in a military family, she's not used to the sadness of leaving her family.  But there's no choice--she must get on the plane that will take her away from them. 

But then her plane is hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas, and is forced to land in the desert of Jordan.  There it sits, with its engines shut down, fiercely hot in the day, and cold at night, with inadequate supplies of food and water, and mounting (as it were) sanitation issues.  And of course, with the imminent threat of death.  Any wrong move could trigger the hijackers to kill.  Any wrong step in the negotiations outside could trigger the explosives that have been rigged up to the plane.

Anna and her seatmates, boys also on their way back to school in England, cope as best they can, simply getting through each tedious hour, and then each tedious day as their ordeal continues.  The tension of the story bleeds through into the pages, and though its not a page turner in the "what will happen next" sense, it is utterly riveting.

Anna comes through vividly as a character, though the supporting cast less so.  There is less human drama than one might expect; everyone, for the most part, simply endures as best they can, and it is not quite believable. This faint lack of interesting human story was disappointing, although it is Anna's story, and so stays tighltly focused on her experiences and perceptions.  Moss makes an effort to add nuance to her hijackers; though some have lost all humanity, one young man, who Anna talks with on a few occasions, come across as not entirely unsympathetic--he saw his own parents killed during the occupation of Palestine.  Though Anna can't forgive the fact that he now has the power to kill her in turn, she can't quite hate him unequivocally.  As Miriam Moss says in an author's note (which you can read on Amazon):

"I have tried to write a nonjudgmental account of events, to show that the world is not black-anwhite, but an infinitely richer and more complex gray. I have tried to understand what drives desperate people to do desperate things, and to understand the complexities of the Middle East a little better. Those who hijacked me were homeless and disenfranchised. I hope this book might help those of us who have so much understand a little better those who have so little."

Anna's four day ordeal is engrossing, and though it's hard for those of us who were alive back then to think of stories set in the 1970s as "historical fiction," this will be an educating eye-opener to kids today, who have grown up with the even scarier terrorism fueled by religious fanaticism that haunts us today. 

Not one to read on a long airplane trip, but a good one to read on other, less vulnerable forms of transportation.  I read it in a single sitting on a ferry boat, and though I did speculate about what would happen if our boat were hijacked, a boat is a heck of a lot less hellish than a plane.  Especially a plane heating up in the desert when smoking on planes was still standard practice (which is perhaps what truly makes this historical fiction in a visceral way.  Everyone lights up immediately.). 

For fans of teens in peril, this is a must read.  It's also good for those of us who like survival stories of people trapped with food running out etc., with interesting details like going through the food packets not eaten during the in-flight snack service pre-hijacking, and the hostages being taken to their luggage, and having to decide what few things to take from it.

The one thing I would have liked more of would have been a few pages on the actual history of the hijacking.  Anna's plane was one of three out there in the desert--what happened to the other two?  Did the British government give in to the hijackers demands?  I have read that Jewish passengers were segregated from the others, and kept hostage for weeks longer, but the book doesn't mention this.  And a bit of historical background on just what was going on in the Near East in 1970 would have added value.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

9/4/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (9/4/16)

Welcome to this week's worth of my blog-reading gleanings.  Please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

An Author's Odyssey (The Land of Stories book 5), by Chris Colfer, at Say What?

The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at The Book Wars

Curse of the Boggin (The Library, Book 1): D.J. MacHale, at Jen Robinson's Book Page

Eden's Escape, by M. Tara Crowl, at Word Spelunking

Escape from Wolfhaven Castle, by Kate Forsyth, at Kid Lit Reviews

Fairest, by Gail Carson Levine, at Read Till Dawn

Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Book Munchies

Fuzzy, by Tom Angleberger and Paul Dellinger, at Geo Librarian

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Abby the Librarian

The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom, by Christopher Healy, at The Daily Prophecy

The Hollow Boy, by Jonathan Stroud, at Sonderbooks (audiobook review)

Joshua and the Arrow Realm, by Donna Galanti, at The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow

The Littlest Bigfoot, by Jennifer Weiner, at Word Spelunking

Lug: Blast from the North, by David Zeltser, at Kid Lit Reviews

Missy Piggle-Wiggle and the Whatever Cute, by Ann M. Martin with Annie Parnell, at The Book Wars

Not as We Know It, by Tom Avery, at Waking Brain Cells

Nurk, by Ursula Vernon, at Got My Book

The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at Hidden In Pages

A Posse of Princesses, by Sherwood Smith, at Leaf's Reviews

The Rat Prince, by Bridget Hodder, at On Starships and Dragonwings

The Scourge, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Charlotte's Library and Cracking the Cover

Shadow House (The Gathering Book 1), by Dan Poblocki, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Shadow Magic, by Joshua Khan, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Simon Thorn and the Wolf's Den, by Aimée Carter at Jen Robiinson's Book Page

Talking to Dragons, by Patricia C. Wrede, at Lunar Rainbows

When the Sea Turned to Silver, by Grace Lin, at School Library Journal

Withering-by-Sea by Judith Rossell, at Leaf's Reviews

The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence, by Stan Lee, Stuart Moore, and Andie Tong, at The Book Monsters

Giveaways

The Littlest Bigfoot, by Jennifer Weiner, at Word Spelunking

Eden's Escape, by M. Tara Crowl, at Word Spelunking

Furtheremore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Bewitched Bookworms

Other Good Stuff

The Cybils Awards are still seeking panelists (you have until Sept. 14 to apply)!  MG speculative fiction is one of the categories (with me as its organizer)....the gist of it, if you don't already know, is that panels of judges made of people who review books on line read lots and lots of books in their category between October and the end of December, and then hand over a shortlist to a second round of judges to pick the winner.  If you are daunted by the idea of a reading list of 150 books, keep in mind that you will already have read lots of the, you don't have to finish a book that clearly is not working for you, and there are categories with a much easier reading load than the MG and YA Spec. Fic. and regular fiction categories!  Graphic novels, for instance, is relatively easy reading-wise, and they could use some good folks..... It is a lot of fun!  If you have any questions, feel free to ask me.


On reading Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, by Grace Lin, with a third grade class, at Nerdy Book Club

It's time for R.eaders I.mbibing P.eril XI, (RIP) the seasonally appropriate reading challenge....

And speaking of Dark Stuff, here's a Tuesday Ten of it at Views from the Tesseract

Scholasitc releases the cover design for Fantastic Beasts: the Original Screenplay



9/1/16

The Scourge, by Jennifer Nielsen

As anyone whose read Jennifer Nielsen's The False Prince series knows, she's a writer that loves to set up scenarios in which there are many secrets not known to the reader, the sort of secrets that Change Everything once the characters figure things out.  If you like that sort of book, The Scourge (Scholastic, Aug. 30, 2016) is one for you!

Ani and her best friend, a boy named Weevil (and yes, he knows it's not a great name, but as he puts it, it's the only one he's got) belong to the River people, despised by the dominant culture of their country.   But though poor in material goods and often hungry, the River people are the only ones who haven't been affected by the latest outbreak of the Scourge, a horrible disease that spreads like wildfire elsewhere.  The governor has taken steps to control the epidemic, by quarantining the afflicted for life on an island that was once home to convicts.  Basically the colony of the sick is it's own mini dystopia, from which there is (in theory) no escape.

Ani and Weevil fall into the hands of the governor's wardens, and in the series of mischances, betrayals, and foolish (aka brave and motivated by their loyalty to each other) choices, they both find themselves prisoners on the island of the damned.  What follows is an unsnarling of all that has been warped, and a new hope for their country.  Ani and Weevil, the first of the River people to have been taken to the colony, are determined to resist, to question, to look for a cure, and to find what is rotten in the whole set-up.  And because they are fierce and smart and in possession of certain information not known outside their own folk, they succeed.  Ani is the more impetuous of the two, and Weevil's calmer approach balances her nicely.

Ani and Weevil's friendship turns into romance as the story progress, and this, plus the dystopian feel of the whole set up, makes me think The Scourge would be a good one for tweens moving up into YA.  But on the other hand, Jen Robinson, in her review, opines that it tilts young.  Either way, it's a gripping read, and it is great fun to see all the tangles first revealed, and then resolved! 

My only objection (apart from the name Weevil, which is just too awful a name for me) was that one of the characters starts as a really nasty bit of work, and I think Ani forgives her too readily.  But Ani is a generous sort, so it's not too out of character.

just as an aside (not a criticism--there's no magic here, so readers who want all the bells and whistles in their fantasy reading might feel a bit let down...

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher





is a very good one to offer the kid on the higher end of tweendom (13-14) who is just starting to plunge into YA

8/28/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (8/26/16)

Two news items first--

Apply to be a Cybils Judge!  If you are wondering what it's all about (with reference to MG Spec Fic) here's the post I wrote last year.  If you love MG Spec Fic, don't be shy, apply! (and isn't that a nice rhyme....)

Also, Kidlitcon is coming in October in Wichita, and the program (organized by me) is now up!  Please come.

The Reviews

The Adventurers Guide to Successful Escapes, by Wade Albert White, at Book Nut

The Ash Mistry series by Sarwat Chadda, at @Homelibrarian

The Bronze Key, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Ms. Yingling Reads

CJ's Treasure Chase, by Jessica Brody, at B.N. Kids Blog

The Crimson Skew by S. E. Grove, at On Starships and Dragonwings (audiobook review)

Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom, by David Nielsen, at Ms. Yingling Reads and Reader Girls

Escape from Wolfhaven Castle (Impossible Quest Book 1), by Kate Forsyth, at alibrarymama

Fly By Night, by Frances Hardinge, at Leaf's Reviews

The Fog Diver, by Joel Ross, at Skye's Scribblings

Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, at Welcome to my (New) Tweendom

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Great Kid Books

The Green Ember, by S.D. Smith, at Stray Thoughts

In a Blue Velvet Dress, by Cahterine Sefton, at Charlotte's Library

The Left-Handed Fate, by Kate Milford, at Charlotte's Library and B.N. Kids Blog

Legacy of Secrets by Ridley Pearson (The Return #2), at Carstairs Considers

The Night Gardener, by Jonathan Auxier, at Operation Actually Read Bible

The Poe Estate, by Polly Shulman, at Got My Book (audiobook review)

The Shadows (Books of Elsewhere Book 1), by Jacqueline West, at Hidden In Pages

The Skeleth, by Matthew Jobin, at On Starships and Dragonwings

Thornghost, by Tone Almhjell, at This Kid Reviews Books

not exactly a review--Furthermore, by Tahereh Mafi, presented choose your own adventure style at Great Imaginations

Three at alibrarymama--Forest of Wonders, Pax, and Fridays With the Wizards

Authors and Interviews

Kate Milford (The Left-Handed Fate) at Whatever

David Nielsen (Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom) at The Book Wars, Cracking the Cover, and Batch of Books

C. Lee McKenzie (Sign of the Green Dragon), at Literary Rambles

Interview with Hazelwind from The Guaridan Herd #4: Windborn, by Jennifer Lynn Alverez, at Middle Grade Mafioso

Giveaways

The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale, at The O.W.L.

Sign of the Green Dragon, by C. Lee McKenzie, at Literary Rambles

Other Good Stuff

A Tuesday Ten of Fantastic Foxes at Views from the Tesseract

J.K. Rowlings old sketches posted at Pottermore, via Tor

8/27/16

The Left-Handed Fate, by Kate Milford

I am a great admirer of Kate Milford, and I will pretty much follow her anywhere (in terms of reading her books, unless of course she decides to write the economic history of the 1980s or something).  And so despite the fact that The Left-Handed Fate (Henry Holt and Co, August 23, 2016), her most recent upper middle grade book, is in large measure about the titular privateer and her crew (I am not naturally drawn to seafaring tales), and even though the time period (War of 1812) isn't my favorite, I approached the book with keen interest and enthusiasm, untrammeled by personal bias. I was rewarded with an excellent story, characters to care about, and my first visit to the strange wonderful city of Nagspeake (which was nice for me, not just because it is a strange and twisty and magical place, but because I was expecting the whole book to take place at sea so I was glad that it didn't).

The story--Max is continuing his dead father's quest to find the parts of a mysterious mechanism that will be the weapon that will end all wars (in particular, the Napoleonic Wars), and has hired the privateer, The Left-Handed Fate, to take him to Baltimore to find a component that's supposed to be there.  Things go wrong.  They are taken as a prize by the American Navey, with a 12 year old midshipman, Oliver, made commander of the prize crew.  Then a French vessel turns up, seaking the mechanism bits that Max already has, and then the mysterious Black Ship of utter creepiness that has been haunting the Left-Handed Fate turns up, and instead of taking the Fate back to Baltimore, Oliver enlists its crew, led by the captain's daughter Lucy, to make a run to the south to the strange city of Nagspeake.  There Max and Lucy, assisted by her little brother Liao, find the other parts of the mechanism...but is building it really going to solve all their problems?  What of the French? And what of the Black Ship and its crew?   

But most importantly, what will the machine become?

And of additional interest, will Lucy get her ship/home back?  Will she and Max get to the point where they get to kiss? 

So all in all, a very good read indeed!  Highly recommended to readers of all ages who like immersive experiences of strangeness and adventure, with puzzles to solve and old stories coming true.

other comments--

You can read Kate's thoughts about the book in her Big Idea post at Whatever.

Nagspeake has a life of its own (although its website is currently not working for me), and there's another story set there--Bluecrowne, which is also about Lucy and Liao and which I have not read and which I clearly must read immediately!

The ending drove me mad trying to remember two other books it reminded me of.  I was able to come up with one of them--The Owl Service, by Alan Garner, with its tension between the owl pattern (bringing darkness and discord) and the flower pattern (bringing peace), but the other is still eluding me, and all my brain is coming up with is a snatch of poorly remembered rhyme-

Shall we something something [birth?]
Shall we sing for death or mirth? 

or something like that.  I feel it is a not very good fantasy book of Celticness from the 1980s.  I could be wrong.

Update--I am very pleased with my brain, and shall keep it--I remembered that I was thinking of the awful Celtic eugenics part of A Swiftly Tilting planet

Now we leave our tears for mirth,
Now we sing, not death, but birth

I can see why I thought of it, because it is thematically about the delicate balance between something turning evil and something turning good...

And then I added to my mental laurels by remembering where I had recently reshelved the L'Engle books and was able to find it! 
(Lory cleverly recognized it too before I wrote this update--thanks Lory!)


final comment--I appreciated the somewhat random inclusion of an albatross.  I feel that albatross inclusions add value to almost any situation.

disclaimer--review copy pounced on/received from the publisher at ALA midwinter.

8/23/16

In a Blue Velvet Dress, by Catherine Sefton, for Timeslip Tuesday

Today's timeslip book, In a Blue Velvet Dress, by Catherine Sefton (1973),  is an older one from my shelves...and at first I though I misremembered it had time travel in it, because it seemed like a ghost story.  But happily I enjoyed the re-reading of it enough to keep going, and indeed, there are time slip elements toward the end.

Jane's parents have gone off on a sailing trip to Scotland, leaving her in the care of a middle aged couple who love children and have none of her own, in a one horse town in Northern Ireland.  Jane, somewhat disgruntled about being dumped, has fortified herself with a whole suitcase of her favorite books (she is an inveterate bookworm).  But when she unpacks, she realizes to her horror that she has her father's suitcase instead (and he has all her Chalet School books etc., which is doubtless dismaying him too....).  The house where she's staying has only the telephone book, and even Jane can't read that, and there is no bookstore.  Horror!

But then every night a new book appears on Jane's bedside table, only to vanish the next day.  Some are old favorites (E. Nesbit), others are old book's she's never heard of.  And then Jane realizes that her mysterious benefactor is the ghost of a young girl, a friendly ghost, Mary, who also loved to read, whose father had drowned at sea.  One night she slips though time to the bookroom of Mary and her father, and a lovely room it is! 

When Jane's parents sail back from Scotland into a fierce storm, and the lightboats are called out to rescue them, Jane is of course horribly afraid for them, but Mary comes to comfort her, and time slips again, so that Jane sees the night long ago when Mary's father drowned.  Jane's parents are more fortunate, and Jane realizes that far from Mary wanting to be helped, Mary came to help her, because she is really just about the nicest bookworm ghost anyone could ever want.

There's more to the story--Jane makes a real life friend as well, and they go exploring and have a few minor misadventures  (which is good for Jane, because reader though I am reading isn't everything!), and there are many bits of humor.  But mostly the appeal of the story is Jane's hunger for reading matter!  The time slipping is minor, and doesn't exactly Advance the Plot, but it makes the book more magical.  I'm glad that I held on to it--it was a very nice re-read.

Happily it was reprinted in 2002 (the edition shown above), and so there are cheap copies around if you want to try it!


8/22/16

Bera the One-Headed Troll, by Eric Orchard

Bera the One-Headed Troll, by Eric Orchard, is another charming graphic novel for the young (nine to elevenish) from First Second Books (August 2016).

Bera is content with her simple life on an isolated island, growing pumpkins for the king, with Winslowe, her owl friend, for conversational company.  But her peaceful existence is upended when a human baby is washed up to the island.  Bera saves the baby from unpleasant mermaids, and then has to figure out what to do with it.  When the malignant witch Cloote arrives looking for the lost child, with definitely evil intentions toward it, Bera decides the baby needs a hero to save it.  So she and Winslowe set out to find a legendary hero....braving many magical dangers during their journey.  When the first hero fails, they try another...and then another....fortunately they have a band of hedgehog mages on their side to help them through the magical perils.  And fortunately at the end, Bera realizes the baby doesn't necessarily need a hero to save it, just someone to look after it lovingly, and it just so happens that Bera's island is under the king's own protection.

It's a vivid and engrossing story, and the illustrations bring the dangerous adventures and the strange magical creatures to life most beautifully!  The details of all the characters and the fantastical landscape might well inspire young artists, and the moral of the story (that passing the buck to heroes is often more trouble than simply taking on responsibility oneself), though understated (the book isn't didactic) is one that all young readers will have to learn eventually....

 Though Bera might be somewhat monstrous in appearance, she's a loveable protagonist whose determination and warm heart maker her a heroine to cheer for.  Winslowe is a great owl sidekick, and of course magical hedghogs add value to any story. 

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.

8/21/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (8/21/16)

Here's what I found; enjoy and let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Dr. Fell and the Playgroud of Doom, by David Nielsen, at Kid Lit Reviews and Word Spelunking

A Dragon's Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, by Laurence Yep and Joanne Ryder, at Mister K Reads

Fuzzy, by Tom Angleberger and Paul Dellinger, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Grimjinx Rebellion, by Brian Farrey, at Leaf's Reviews

Has Anyone Seen Jessica Jenkins? by Liz Kessler, at The Book Monsters

The Haunting of Falcon House by Eugene Yelchin, at Waking Brain Cells

The Inquisitor's Tale, by Adam Gidwitz, at The Booklist Reader

Invisible Inc. by Steve Cole, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

The Last Kids on Earth, by Max Brallier, at The Book Monsters

The Left-Handed Fate, by Kate Milford, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

The Ministry of Ghosts, by Alex Shearer, at The Write Path

The Poe Estate, by Polly Shulman, at Got My Book (audiobook review)

The Secret of the Ruby Ring, by Yvonne MacGrory, at Charlotte's Library

The Secret Sea, by Barry Lyga, at School Library Journal and The Reading Nook Reviews

The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Finding Wonderland

The Stolen Chapters by James Riley, at Carstairs Considers

Worlds Explode (Darkmouth 2), by Shane Hegarty, at Say What?

Zoe in Wonderland, by Brenda Woods, at Ms. Yingling Reads


Authors and Interviews

Kate Milford (The Left-Handed Fate) at On Starships and Dragonwings and  School Library Journal

Kelly Barnhill (The Girl Who Drank the Moon) at Teen Librarian Toolbox

Claire Fayers (The Voyage to Magical North) at The Children's Book Review

David Nielsen (Dr. Fell and the Playgroud of Doom) at Word Spelunking

Bruce Hale (The Curse of the Were-Hyena) at This Kid Reviews Books


Giveaways

The Curse of the Were-Hyena, at This Kid Reviews Books

Dr. Fell and the Playgroud of Doom, by David Nielsen, at Word Spelunking

Joshua and the Lightning Road, at Nayu's Reading Corner, Middle Grade Mafioso, and Log Cabin Library (all with bonus swag)

Furthermore, at The Book Smugglers, with Tahereh Mafi’s favorite things

The Secret Sea, at Reading Nook Reviews


Other Good Stuff

A nice article on Diana Wynne Jones at Tor

Favorite fantasy boats at Tor


8/16/16

The Secret of the Ruby Ring, by Yvonne MacGrory, for Timeslip Tuesday

The Secret of the Ruby Ring, by Yvonne MacGrory (1994) is not a bad book.  If I had read it when I was 9 or so, I might have loved it.  As an adult, though, I found it boring both the first time I read it ten years ago and when reading it again the last few days.

It's the story of an Irish girl named Lucy who wishes on a magic ring that she could live in a bigger house.  Lucy is a spoiled brat of a 12 year old who's not happy with her comfy life and always wants to win and know all the answers at school, so not very appealing.  The ring grants her wish...by taking her back in time to a 19th century grand Irish country home, where she is a servant.  Lucy and the reader learn a lot about historic cooking and cleaning and gardening and clothes etc.  (lots and lots of descriptions) and we also all learn about Irish politics of the time and the hardships the Irish people suffered at the hands of the English landowners. 

We learn lots, unleavened by much in the way of interesting story.  Some tension is provided by Lucy's loss of her magic ring, and her efforts to find it, but it wasn't all that much tension.  Lucy just doesn't seem to me to have any character to speak of. And though Roger and Elizabeth, the two English children of the house, are almost in tears when she leaves, it beats me why they would care all that much because there wasn't much to speak of that bonded them beyond a teensy bit of ring-recovering adventure, and one brief "Elizabeth and Lucy talk as though they are equals" scene, which was abrupt enough that it just felt awkward to me and not narratively meaningful.

I think that 10 or 11 year old fans of Downton Abbey might like it because of the upstairs/downstairs set up of the story, and the historical details might be more interesting if they are already predisposed to care about them.  And inveterate time travel readers that age might also find it satisfying because the premise is wonderfully magical.  Though actually it's not very interesting time travel--no language issues, almost no slip ups in which Lucy betrays knowledge of the future, easy slipping into a routine of hard and unfamiliar work. The adult reader (aka me) might be unconvinced that Lucy's ignorance is overlooked as much as it is.

I think most young readers would find it heavy going and too didactic.  But if you like valuable life lesson and historical detail spread thickly, give it a try. It did win the Irish Children's Book of the Year Award when it came out...





8/15/16

Learning to Swear in America, by Katie Kennedy

Learning to Swear in America, by Katie Kennedy (Bloomsbury July 2016), is one of my favorite books of the year so far, even though it has none of my usual favorite fictional accoutrements (no orphans, big old houses, English gardens, or magical cats...). What it does have is a cool story of Science Danger, and a protagonist I found very loveable (although from a somewhat maternal slant, so not applicable to the YA target audience who presumably aren't in my position of having teenaged sons learning to navigate a difficult world).

Yuri's world is more than a bit difficult.  He is a 17-year-old Russian math genius, raised primarily by Russian math professors (dead father, preoccupied and distant cardiologist mother).  His math genius is such that he is called in by NASA to help them math their way out of disaster--an asteroid is headed toward earth, and Yuri's mathematical brilliance will perhaps tilt the balance toward success, and perhaps his work with antimatter, though unpublished, will be useful.

So there is Yuri, whisked to California at the drop of a hat to do math with NASA's best and brightest, with the fate of the planet hanging over his head.  It's a difficult situation--he's a kid, and so it's hard for the others to take him as seriously as they should be doing, he's a foreigner, and so the social nuances of American life are tricksy (although lord knows cafeteria skills rank right up there with insurmountable in terms of challenge), and he's an odd duck because of not having a normal childhood.  (NB--what he's not is a mathematical savant on the autism spectrum.  I am rather glad that the author didn't automatically equate genius and no social skills with Asbergers, which would have been easy for her to do, because that would have been a different book, and I liked this one just fine as it was, and because Asperger's doesn't automatically equal genius, and is a whole nother issue with it's own trajectory, not just a handy label for the socially challenged).

So anyway, there is Yuri, and there is the asteroid, and there is all his work on antimatter, and then there is Dovie, the daughter of a NASA janitor. Yuri and Dovie meet when she sneaks into the break room on a doughnut pilfering mission (which of course made me sympathetic to her from the get go), and suddenly Yuri must shake himself into the awareness that there is an American girl who Likes him.  Dovie is great; she's an artist and rebel and her parents are ex (ish) hippies, and she is altogether a New Thing for Yuri.  And so Yuri finds that he's on his way to Prom, when he should be at NASA saving the world....and sexy thoughts intrude on the pure math that he's used to having in his head.  Yuri's awakening as a sexual person was very nicely done...he doesn't objectify Dovie, or de-person her, but she is a catalyst who makes him a different person.  And her family are great too--her parents and older brother, Lennon, who uses a wheelchair, all recognize that Yuri never had a childhood as part of a family, and in their own ways encourage him to be a person who can think outside of the math, without trying to change the fact that math is his native language.  Though Dovie also introduces him to color, and Lennon give him a lesson in swearing.

So there are Yuri and Dovie and the asteroid, and back in Russia Yuri's unpublished work is being stolen (and he can't do anything about it from America, which is killing him) and he finds out he might never be allowed back to Russia again (state secrets).   And there are the NASA scientists, not believing his antimatter approach will work, when he knows it is the only chance... and so the weight of the world rests heavily on him. 

And I found it all rather tense and very moving. And funny--even though English is a foreign language, Yuri uses the words he has to excellent effect, both as the point of view character and in dialogue.  His style of humor minded me of Russians I know, which made him seem particularly convincing.

So then I check the Kirkus review....(me checking).....and no, Kirkus, you are wrong.  What do you mean "Though the relationship between Dovie and Yuri is ostensibly a romantic one, the chemistry between them never quite gains momentum or achieves maximum impact...."?  Maybe there is no passionate sex scene, but heck, they are teenagers who have known each other only a few days, and so we get things like Yuri's toes fizzing when Dovie's dress brushes over them and I found it believable as all get out, and nicely sex-positive.  And nice too that Dovie gets to make the first move, deciding that kissing is what she wants.  And then Kirkus goes on to say "...much like the threat of the asteroid threatening to lay waste to the region" and I thought the asteroid did just fine on impact and Yuri sweated blood about the decisions he made and it was very tense. So.

Anyway, I'm keeping this one on my own shelves because I can imaging re-reading it, which is getting to be a higher and higher compliment every year as I run out of shelf space.  The SLJ is correct--"This work is thought provoking, heartwarming, and unforgettable and is recommended for readers who enjoy science-based fiction. A superb addition to any library collection serving teens."

Other thoughts--

There are hero programmers, who take Yuri's pure math and make it functional.  You don't often see hero programmers at work.  This was very nicely geeky. 

The NASA folks and the programmers are mostly male, but I don't think Katie Kennedy can be held responsible for this.  There are enough women playing important roles to make it clear that they are possible.

Lennon's difficulties with handicapped accessibility and his frustrations felt realistic without making him an object of pity, and the fact of his wheelchair use ended up being relevant to the plot and so not just window-dressing.  He also works in a library, making him naturally appealing, and a bit of a gender-stereotype breaker.

Teenagers will appreciate that one of Yuri's superpowers (math being the first) is that he can stay up several nights in a row doing frantic math and still function.  Unlike the NASA grown-ups.

Final thought--this didn't feel like "Science Fiction."  But in the course of my thinking, I decided that using antimatter technology that doesn't exist to destroy an asteroid that doesn't exist is pretty speculative, so I am comfy labeling it Sci Fi.

Final final thought--I thought about giving this one to my 13 year old, who enjoyed The Martian lots (geek hero-ness), but he's not yet at the point of appreciating toes having zingy feelings of lust. Maybe next year.  Or maybe like ten years from now.

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher

8/14/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction (8/14/16)

Here's what I have this week; please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Beastkeeper, by Kat Hellisen, at The Daily Prophecy

The Boy at the End of the World, by Greg Van Eekhout, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Breadcrumbs, by Anne Ursu, at Big Hair and Books

Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom, by David Nielsen, at Always in the Middle and Project Mayhem

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Kid Lit Reviews, For the Love of All Things Wordy, and The Bookshelf Gargoyle

The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman, at Fantasy Literature

Hotel Valhalla Guide to the Norse Worlds, by Rick Riordan, at B. and N. Kids Blog

The Key to Extraordinary, by Natalie Lloyd, at Pages Unbound

The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at Jen Robinson's Book Page

Pilfer Academy, by Lauren Magaziner, at A Backwards Story (though I'm not sure this is spec. fic.; thoughts?)

Rump, by Liesl Shurtliff, at Leaf's Reviews

The Secret Keepers, by Trenton Lee Stewart, at Say What?

The Seventh Element (Voyagers #6) by Wendy Mass, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Space Hostages, by Sophia McDougall, at Whispering Stories

Sword in the Stacks (Ninja Librarians 2) by Jen Swann Downey, at Mom Read It

When You Reach Me, by Rebecca Stead,, at Completely Full Bookshelf

The Wild Robot, by Peter Brown, at The Booklist Reader

and at the B. and N. Kids Blog I have a nice list of boarding school books, including lots of mg spec. fic. ones.


Authors and Interviews

Kelly Barnhill (The Girl Who Drank the Moon) at From the Mixed Up Files

Bridget Hodder (The Rat Prince) at Literary Rambles

Tone Almhjell (Thornghost)  at Nerdy Book Club

David Nielsen (Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom) at Middle Grade Ninja


Other Good Stuff

In which a shipwreck expert weighs in on the Little Mermaid, at Atlas Obscura

At Tor, a discussion of one of the great mysterious of middle grade fantasy--why Turkish Delight? 

"Why Kids Need Monsters and Magic" at The Washington Post

8/12/16

The Infamous Ratsos, by Kara LaReau

https://www.amazon.com/Infamous-Ratsos-Ratso-Brothers/dp/0763676365
The Infamous Ratsos, by Kara LaReaua (Candlewick August 2016) is a lovely early reader/first chapter book that is both funny in its words and pictures, and sweet in a valuable life lesson offering way.

Two young rats, Louie and Ralphie, want to be Tough, like their dad, Big Lou.  Their mama is no longer with them, and Big Lou is Tough, and encourages his boys to be too.  They walk to school (buses are for softies), they spend recess leaning against that wall, glaring and spitting (playing is for softies).  But then they decide the time has come to prove to the world how tough they are, by setting out to do bad things.  Each chapter tells of a new effort to be rotten, and how every time they try to be unkind, it backfires and they find they have done something good and made someone happy.

Their father finds out...but instead of being disappointed that his boys weren't tough, Big Lou shows his own soft side.  "Being tough all the time is so...so....tough," he says, and pulls them in for a hug.  And the Ratso family figures that life is tough enough without making it harder on folks, so you might as well do what you can to make things easier for them  (just on the off chance you're missing the point, that's the life lesson mentioned above, and I really do like it, but the Ratso family don't all become goody two shoes, so don't worry about it getting too much).

The illustrations by Matt Myers add the humor of the story, with lots of nice details for the observant child to appreciate it (the beaver teacher's dress is decorated with logs, the "hug someone" on their mugs has been changed to "slug someone" and "bug someone", etc.).  So the whole package is very nicely age appropriate and diverting for the 5 -7 year old emerging reader.

Which is basically what Kirkus said too "A nicely inventive little morality “tail” for newly independent readers" but Kara LaReau and Matt Myers manage to be amusing without forced puns (although thinking about it Harder and Deeper, Matt Myers dances on the edge at times--like the graffiti reading "I am a Bad Ger." But Myers is working within the story, and Kirkus is just being cute for no good reason.....)

(nb--I don't know anyone who is actually counting the dead mothers in this year's crop of children's books, but here's another one; there are almost enough of them to constitute an army of the undead! In this case, a dead and much missed Mama Ratso, who was the sweet softness in the Ratso home, is much more powerful than a live one, preaching at her family, would have been....but still, dead is dead for the purposes of counting).

disclaimer:  Kara is one of the masterminds of Providence's own Kidlit Drink night, which I have been enjoying very much (thank you Kara!) which is the reason why I have now read and posted about The Infamous Ratsos, but I think I would have said much the same sort of thing regardless of my favorable bias.

Also thanks to Kara's book launch, I find myself in a picture at Publishers Weekly (I am fourth from the left), which doesn't happen every day...



8/7/16

This Week's Round Up of Middle Grade Sci fi and Fantasy from around the blogs (8/7/16)

Here's what I found this week.  Let me know if I missed your post; bloglovin turned ugly on me, so if you posted something on Monday or Tuesday, I might not have seen it....

The Reviews

Alistair Grim's Odditorium, by Gregory Funaro, at The Book Monsters

The Candymakers and the Great Chocolate Chase, by Wendy Mass, at Read Till Dawn

The Carpet People, by Terry Pratchett, at Back to Books

Crown of Earth, by Hilari Bell, at Leaf's Reviews

Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom, by David Nielsen, at The Book Monsters, The Reading Nook Reviews, Literary Hoots, and My Brain on Books

The Girl Who Drank the Moon, by Kelly Barnhill, at Pages Unbound, Book Nut, Nerdy Book Club, and Word Spelunking

The Haunter, by R.L. Stine, at Ms. Yingling Reads

The Land of Stories: An Author's Odyssey, by Chris Colfer, at This Kid Reviews Books and by me at the B. and N. Kids Blog

The Littlest Bigfoot, by Jennifer Weiner, at Jean Little Library

Loki's Wolves, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at Good Books and Good Wine

The Lost Coloney (Artemis Fowl Book 5), by Eoin Colfer, at Say What?

The Mage of Trelian, by Michelle Knudsen, at Say What?

The Magic Mirror, by Zetta Elliott, at @HomeLibrarian

A Most Magical Girl, by Karen Foxlee, at Word Spelunking

Odin's Ravens, by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, at The Haunting of Orchid Forsythia

The Other Alice by Michelle Harrison, at Nayu's Reading Corner

The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart, by Lauren DeStefano, at Welcome to My Tweendom

The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Always in the Middle

Authors and Interviews

David Neilsen (Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom) at books4yourkids.com and The Book Monsters

Jennifer A. Nielsen (The Scourge) at Teens Read Too

Michelle Harrison (The Other Alice) at Nayu's Reading Corner and Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

Natalie Lloyd (The Key to Extraordinary) at the B. and N. Kids Blog

Kelly Barnhill (The Girl Who Drank the Moon) at The Horn Book


Giveaways

A Most Magical Girl, by Karen Foxlee, at Word Spelunking

Other Good Stuff

Tolkien's St. Bernard interviewed sixty years ago, at Project Mayhem

A thoughtful post from Tanita Davis about "clean" reads and young teens who aren't quite wanting to read full on YA.

At B. and N. Kids, I have a list of books that aren't sad or scary that includes several MG Spec Fic books


7/31/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and sci fi from around the blogs (7/31/16)

So this is of course the week where Harry Potter and the Cursed Child came out; I haven't bought it yet, and am unsure--how is it? But in any event, here's this week's round-up!  Let me know if I missed your post.

The Reviews

The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale, at Charlotte's Library

Darkmouth: the Legend Beings, by Shane Hegarty, at Say What?

The Dragon of Trelian (Trelian Book 1),by Michelle Knudsen, at Say What?

The Dragonfly Effect, by Gordon Korman, at Always in the Middle

Herobrine’s Message, by Sean Fay Wolfe, at This Kid Reviews Books

Max Helsing and the Thirteenth Curse, by Curtis Jobling, at Jean Little Library

The Monkey King's Daughter, by T. A. DeBonis, at At Home Librarian

A Most Magical Girl, by Karen Foxlee, at Book Swoon

The Nocturnals: The Ominous Eye (Nocturnals #2), by Tracey Hecht, at Mom Read It

Once Was a Time, by Leila Sales, at Time Travel Times Two

The Princess and the Goblin, by George MacDonald, at Pages Unbound

The Princess of Trelian (Trelian Book 2) by Michelle Knudsen, at Say What?

Race to the South Pole (Ranger in Time, #4), by Kate Messner, at Time Travel Times Two

The Scourge, by Jennifer Nielsen, at Jen Robinson's Book Page

The Secret of Dreadwillow Carse, by Brian Farrey, at Leaf's Reviews

Serafina and the Twisted Staff, by Robert Beatty, at Geo Librarian

The Serpent's Curse, by Tony Abbott at Boys Rule Boys Read (audiobook recommendation)

The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Randomly Reading

The Shadow Cadets of Pennyroyal Academy (Pennyroyal Academy #2) by M.A. Larson, at Fantasy of the Silver Dragaon

Space Hostages, by Sophia McDougall, at Charlotte's Library

The Sword in the Stacks (Ninja Librarians Book 2), by Jen Swann Downey, at The Book Wars

Teddycats, by Mike Storey, at Mom Read It

Time Cat, by Lloyd Alexander, at Becky's Book Reviews

Through the Mirror Door, by Sarah Baker, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

Two at Log Cabin Library-The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, and The Lost Compass, by Joel Ross

Authors and Interviews

Kit Grindstaff (The Flame in the Mist) at The Reading Nook

Other Good Stuff

Dwarfs, Pixies and the “Little Dark People”  at Seven Miles of Steel Thistles

7/30/16

Space Hostages, by Sophia McDougall

https://www.amazon.com/Space-Hostages-Evacuees-Sophia-McDougall/dp/0062294024/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1469926093&sr=8-1&keywords=space+hostages
Space Hostages, by Sophia McDougall (HarperCollins, February 2016), is the sequel to Mars Evacuees, one of my favorites of last year (here's my review), and of course I had been meaning to get to it for ages, and am very glad I finally did! And though the echoes of English children's books about WW II evacuations, one of the things that made me warm right up to Mars Evacuee.,  aren't in this one, it is very good indeed on its own terms, and really hits the notes I look for in good sci fi for young readers.

Alice and the other "plucky kids" (as the media has dubbed them) from the first book, Josephine ( whose a supersmart black girl, adding diversity to the ensemble), Carl, Noel, and Thsaaa (the alien Morror the human kids befriended on Mars, stopping a war between their species in the process, who also adds non-binary gender diversity), are headed off into space again.  This time it's to celebrate the completion of a new home world for the Morror.  The most advanced spaceship on Earth, the almost sentient Helen, is going to take them there, and it will be a fun trip and a chance to enjoy each other's company in civilized circumstances.

But this isn't what happens.  An alien race, the Krakkiluks, already had plans in place to make the new home of the Morrors part of their great expansion--a colonizing sweep through vast reaches of space.  And so they capture the Earth space ship, and hold its occupants hostage in exchange for the un-terraforming of the contested world.  The kids, however, turn out to be bad hostages.  Two get thrown out of an airlock, and one leaps out to save them (along with the robot goldfish teacher readers of the first book will remember fondly); the other two engage in a desperate effort (made less desperate by Morror technology) to reach the space ship Helen, free all the other humans, and escape.

The kids who left the Krakkiluk ship in abrupt and potentially fatal circumstances live, and end up crash-landing on an alien planet. The planet has already been subsumed by the great expanse of the Krakkiluk, and its people are de facto slaves, controlled by pain.   The kids hook up with the resistance movement, and more things go wrong....but then they go right and it all works out (this was me feeling that the book should just be read, and not synopsized, but I wanted to get the political/social dynamic into the synopsis somehow, because it leads to a Point).

The Point--one of the great things about science fiction is that it can make you think in new ways about your own society, causing genuine growth in the reader without triggering defensive reactions because after all it isn't real.  The great expanse of the Krakkiluk and their oppression of colonized peoples is oh so familiar, but it's not presented as a didactic moral lesson; instead it's part of a really fun and exciting sci fi adventure in space with aliens and cool creature and landscapes and space ships and all the good stuff. (The alien planet is really fun sci fi exploration, and fortunately the Goldfish is able to help with the communication issues).

So basically Mars Evacuees and Space Hostages are my go to books if anyone asks me for a sci fi recommendation for an 11-13 year old.  They are fun and thought-provoking, and what more can one ask? (I wouldn't read Space Hostages without having read M.E. though.  It's possible, but not very pointful).

Note on 13 year olds--13 is technically over the age limit for middle grade.  But now that I have a 13 year old of my own, he is not showing any signs of wanting to move toward YA.  He still identifies as a kid, and so I am upping my own MG age limit to 13 in his honor......and getting Mars Evacuees out of the library for him. 

So the Kirkus reviewer liked Space Hostages too, and gave it a curious piece of praise I've never seen before--"The surprise plot twists are genuinely surprising, and there are moments when it really seems possible the main characters won’t survive."    So there you go-if you like worrying about people in really serious danger in space, this one's for you!

7/26/16

Dino-Mike and the T. Rex Attack for Timeslip Tuesday

If you have a six to eight year old who loves dinosaurs and is reading at the Early Chapter Book level of large font and generous spacing and who really thinks it would be cool to have a Dino Jacket full of dino special effects and neat gadgets, by all means try Dino-Mike and the T. Rex Attack (Stone Arch Books, March 2015) , written and illustrated by Franco. It's the first in a series of dino-filled adventures staring Mike, who has just such a jacket, and who meets lots of dinosaurs over the course of his adventures.

For reasons never made convincing (in this first book at least), some people think they should bring back the dinosaurs, using time travel to do so, resulting in a rouge T. Rex rampaging around the dig where Mike is hanging with his paleontologist dad.  For reasons that do not require explanation, there are other people working to stop the dinosaur lovers, and in this case a oprative named Shannon, a girl a bit older than Mike, has been given the task of capturing the T. Rex.  

T Rexs are hard to capture, especially so if there's an enemy agent working against you.  Mike and Shannon have lots of close calls and there are lots of exciting dinosaur chases (some dinosaur chasing kid, some kid chasing dinosaur).  The time travel part, though not explored in great detail, added interest, and leaves lots of room for further books.  Generously sprinkled illustrations of big eyed kids (and big toothed T. Rex)  add to the young-reader friendly-ness of the mix.

This book, however, made a mistake that annoys me no end. A paleontological excavation for fossils is not an "archaeological dig" and Mike's dad had no business saying so.

There are other books about Dino-Mike, one of which, Dino-Mike and the Jurassic Portal, sounds more time-travel focused than The T. Rex attack, which serves more as an introduction to the scenario, and so I will probably look out for it, though I'm not sure I feel the need to read all eight books in the series (six currently out, plus two more coming August 1, 2016)
 
So if you are the target audience, enjoy them!  I'm not, but still they seem to me the sort of books that are a good gateway to a life of geeky spec fic reading....



7/25/16

The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale

If you are looking for a book to offer a third to fifth grader who likes supernatural mayhem mixed with the real world, The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale is a good one!

What do you do when your favorite teacher starts acting very strangely indeed, chasing chickens around the classroom and suddenly sprouting hair on his very bald head?  Best friends Carlos and Benny decide to figure out what's going on, with the help of the owner of their favorite comic book store (a former wrestling star, now using a wheelchair).  She's a font of information on the supernatural, as well as running a great store!  But then what do you do when you realize that he's turning into a were-hyena, a curse that will be permanent by the time the next full moon arrives (in just a few days) and that (as is the normal way of were-creatures) there must be at least one other were-hyena in town who bit him?

Carlos and Benny are determined to find a cure for Mr. Chu, even if it involves breaking into the town museum, being trapped in a tree by an angry were-hyena, and hanging out in a cemetery at night with hyena bait on hand.  They get almost more than they bargained for, but happily all goes well...though the story ends with the promise of more monster hunting to come.

It's a fast read, with lots to chuckle at, and the descriptions are very vivid. Young readers who like monster stories will eat it up.  The supernatural escapades are leavened by real life threads of friend and family issues, and those looking for diversity in their reading will appreciate Mexican-American Carlos (and the wheelchair-using comic store owner).

disclaimer: review copy received from the publisher.

7/24/16

This week's round-up of middle grade fantasy and science fiction from around the blogs (7/24/16)

The letter C (my favorite letter, naturally) did rather well in this week's round-up, although perennial frontrunner S still won.  Please let me know if I missed your post!

The Reviews

Calling on Dragons, by Patricia Wrede, at Lunar Rainbows

A Clatter of Jars, by Lisa Graff, at My Brain On Books

Cogheart, by Peter Bunzl, at Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books

The Copper Gauntlet, by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare, at Got My Book (audiobook review_

The Copper Gauntlet by Holly Black & Cassandra Clare

The Curse of the Were-Hyena, by Bruce Hale, at Prose and Kahn

The Drake Equation, by Bart King, at Always in the Middle

Dr. Fell and the Playground of Doom, by David Neilsen, at Random Musings of a Bibliophile

Fire Bringer, by David Clement-Davies, at Leaf's Reviews

Fuzzy, by Tom Angleberger and Paul Dillinger, at Sharon the Librarian

The Girl Who Raced Fairyland All the Way Home, by Cahterynne M. Valente, at Falling Letters

Goblin Secrets, by William Alexander, at Nerdy Book Club

Hitty: Her First Hundred Years by Rachel Field, at Kidlitgeek

The Might Odds, by Amy Ignatow, at Fuse #8

The Ministry of Ghosts, by Alex Shearer, at Ms. Yingling Reads

Once Was a Time, by Leila Sales, at The Book Wars

The Peculiar Haunting of Thelma Bee, by Erin Petti, at Middle Grade Mafioso

Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes, by Jonathan Auxier, at Semicolon

The Rumpelstiltskin Problem, by Vivian Vande Velde, at Leaf's Reviews

Serafina and the Black Cloak, by Robert Beatty, at BooksForKidsBlog

The Seventh Wish, by Kate Messner, at Michelle I. Mason

Shadows of the Dark Crystal (#1), by J. M. Lee, at Mom Read It

The Shattered Lens (Alcatraz vs the Evil Librarians #4) by Brandon Sanderson, at Geo Librarian

Space Hostages, by Sophia McDougall, at Bibliobrit

Summons (Fable Rangers #1) by A.L. Brown, at Sharon the Librarian

The Thief's Apprentice, by Bryan Methods, at This Kid Reviews Books

Authors and Interviews

Sarah Beth Durst (The Girl Who Could Not Dream) at Finding Wonderland

N. Cauldron (Anya and the Secrets of Cupola) at Carpinello's Writing Pages

Other Good Stuff

Ursula Le Guin announces "the Big Book of Earthsea," illustrated by Charles Vass, at Book View Café, and talks about how they are working together to make her dragons just right.

NASA sends Groot and Rocket into space, on a mission patch! Via io9

Via 100 Scope Notes, here's a Moomin documentary

Covering the Dark Is Rising at The Booklist Reader

A Toothless couch for all the How to Train Your Dragon fans, via Tor

The latest trailer for Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them can be seen at Tor

And finally, I am the program organizer for Kidlitcon 2016, and I need programs to organize!  Here's a post I wrote with information and ideas.


7/23/16

Kidliton 2016--looking for panelists!

For the third year in a row, I find myself in charge of organizing the panels for Kidlitcon, which this year takes place in Wichita this October.  Kidlitcon is an annual conference primarily of children's book bloggers, although authors, librarians, teachers, readers, and publishers are all part of the mix.

The theme this year is  Gatekeepers and Keymasters: Connecting bloggers, librarians, teachers, authors, and parents to promote literacy.  Adults are the ones with the money (though not necessarily enough money!) who buy children's books, and we want to talk about how this role plays out in real life--the challenges we face, the opportunities available, the ways to be the best Gatekeepers we can be (or even how we can subvert the gatekeeping process, to let kids play a role in their own choices).

So there's lots to talk about, and we need people to come to Wichita to talk about it!  You can email me directly with ideas (charlotteslibrary at gmail dot com), or fill out the submission form found here. (but please don't delay too long--I want to have a solid program by the second week of August).

We've gotten some good proposals already, but we need more.  Here are some ideas for panels that I'd personally be interested in (though please come up with your own ideas too!).  There's redundancy in the ideas I share here, but with different slants.  I would really really really like diversity  to be part of the conference, but because we are small (aka we have no money) we can't invite speakers and waive the registration fee, so I can't make that happen by myself.

Checking Privilege and Bias--big issues, useful tips (gender, race, religion, disability, sexuality, politics, economic inequalities)

Beyond the book review--using your blog to talk about what matters to you (having built an audience for your blog, you have the opportunity to shape discourse on other book/literacy issues--I'd love to hear other bloggers talk about how they've done this!)

What is "middle grade?"  How do gatekeepers judge/evaluate/promote books for this age group (9-12)

Who is the audience?  reviewing (and writing books, for any interested authors) with an eye toward the "right" reader

Finding hidden gems- reviewing and promoting great books from small publishers and self-published books

How do we judge is "good."  Critical reviewing, going beyond our own preferences, acknowledging bias, being mindful.  How can we be critical outside our own areas of experience and expertise?

Who is the reader-- Identifying readers for whom a book might truly resonate

Being part of a community, in real life and in the Kidlitosphere

One from last year that I wasn't able to go to that could serve as a springboard for another panel-- Authentic Voices Pam Margolis and Liz Burns
"The importance of diverse representation in children’s fiction and nonfiction is becoming more widely recognized in the children’s book community. But as important as it is to have diverse books, it’s just as important that they be authentic. As bloggers, how can we do our part? Evaluating diverse representations can be difficult if we don’t have any direct experience or knowledge of the represented group. This panel will look at the issues of authentic representation in children’s literature and important considerations for bloggers, with a particular focus on books featuring LGBTQA+ and differently-abled people"


Making the most of alternate platforms and social media (podcasts, book tube, and all the other things social media)

Author and bloggers and publishers working together.  Such a panel was presented in 2011, and could be revisited)
"Bloggers and Writers and Pubs! Oh My!
Presented and facilitated by Pam Coughlan and Liz Burns, with Kirby Larson and Zoe Luderitz
In Bloggers and Writers and Pubs! Oh My! the panel will explore the relationships of the various members of the children’s literature industry. The age of social media is blurring the already indistinct boundaries between reviewer and author, blogger and publisher, author and publicist. The opportunities of this new communication and collaboration are extraordinary, but the questions are also increasing in terms of disclosure, standards, and professionalism. This panel hopes to address these issues with input and questions from the attendees."

another from 2011 I'd like to hear more about--
"The Future of Transmedia Storytelling: Angel Punk, Pottermore, and Skeleton Creek
Presented by Amber Keyser, Devon Lyon, Matthew Wilson, and Jake Rossman
Transmedia storytelling refers to the delivery of story through a variety of media.  These forms can include film, graphic novels, traditional books, flash fiction, iPhone/iPad delivery of content, and various forms of audio.  Typically, story lines are interwoven and connected but not strictly repetitive.  Often, fan engagement and participation in the creative process are facilitated by social media.  J.K. Rowling’s new venture, Pottermore, is an excellent example that promises to extend and enhance the experience of the Harry Potter series. Increasingly, all media forms - books, movies, games and TV shows - are looking for transmedia opportunities. During this session, the AngelPunk.co team discusses their approach to transmedia storytelling and gives an inside look into the complex structure necessary to delivery story via novels, feature film, comic books, and an interactive fan site."

Beyond fiction--Looking at STEM books and non-fiction

and a few other perennial favorites--

Balancing the Personal and Professional on your blog (for authors and bloggers), blogging the backlist, boy books/girl books, group blogging....

So once again, please come be part of the conversation at Kidlitcon 2016!  You can email me directly with ideas (charlotteslibrary at gmail dot com), or fill out the submission form found here. (please don't delay too long--I want to have a solid program by the second week of August!)




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