Sunday, June 24, 2012

Tinfoil Sky


Sand-Eveland, Cyndi     Tinfoil Sky        
Tundra Books      2012  216p  $17.95  978-1-77049-277-6     E-BN      ms/hs       Realistic fiction

When Cecily tells her twelve-year-old daughter Mel that they will move in with Mel's grandma, Mel is delighted, picturing the perfect home she has long dreamed of.  Mel begins to dream of security, a comfortable bed, and stability. 

But it is not to be.  Instead, it's back to sleeping in the broken-down car, eating at soup kitchens, and singing on street corners for change.  They have done it before, and it seems to be working, until one day when Cecily doesn’t come back to the car.  Mel fakes it for several days until the police come and she learns that her mom was arrested for shoplifting.  Mel is assigned by the court to the custody of her grandmother, who has placed tinfoil over all the windows in fear of her neighbors.  Mel is barely tolerated, and her sanctuary becomes the library, where she is befriended by the librarian and her son.  As Mel counts the days until her mother’s release, she learns more about her extended family from the neighboring shopkeeper.  She gets a part-time job at the library and her grandmother slowly warms to her.  Will this become the home Mel has dreamed of?

Sand-Eveland has worked with homeless youth and has ca
ptured their dreams, spirit, and resilience with great authenticity.  This is a hard-hitting novel for students who share Mel’s dreams of security, home-baked cookies and loving hugs.      

E-BN               Joan Theal                  Homelessness, Family

 

Puppet


Wiseman, Eva      Puppet      
 Tundra Books      2009  243p  $11.99     
978-1-77049-296-7   E-B    ms/hs       Historical fiction       

In this historical novel, based on a real trial, young readers will learn that atrocities committed against Jews did not only occur during World War II.  What the reader experiences in this novel parallels what he/she might experience reading a novel about the Holocaust, with one exception.  Puppet is set in Hungary in the 1800s, when Jews were feared for their differences as well as their economic prosperity. 

In Tosza-Eszlar, Hungary, a young girl suddenly disappears.  Instead of investigating, town leaders listen to the ramblings of some mourners who immediately blame the Jews for kidnapping her to bleed her for their religious rituals.  The protagonist, a young village girl named Julie, is herself a victim of an abusive and negligent father who, upon the death of his wife, has given his younger daughter Clara to an aunt to raise and farmed Julie out to the local prison to be a maid.  Taught by her mother to judge people fairly, Julie knows in her heart that the Jews did not kill her friend Esther.  Local leaders have tortured young Morris Scharf to wring a confession from him that his father and several others were involved in the kidnapping and murder, and Julie is unable to help Morris because he is being brainwashed by Warden Henter.  Henter manages to procure a confession from Morris in exchange for a promise that Morris’s father will not be put to death. 

The reader will be drawn into the plot, the character development, the internal as well as external conflicts and the injustice that is perpetrated on the Jews of Tosza-Eszlar.  Author Eva Wiseman reaches her readers by pushing and pulling her characters through situations that evoke sympathy one moment and hatred the next.  This is a powerful novel.       

E-BN        Martha Squaresky        Antisemitism, Hungary-History, Murder trials

 

Man Overboard!


Parkinson, Curtis       Man Overboard!   
 Tundra Books      2012  152p  $9.95
978-1-77049-298-1 ms     VG-BN     Historical fiction     

Curtis Parkinson lives on a sailboat and uses his knowledge about sailing as the basis for several of his nautical novels for young adults.  In Man Overboard! 16-year-old Scott and his friend Adam score summer jobs as deckhands on the Rapids Prince, a ship that travels between Montreal and Prescott, a town on the St. Lawrence River. 

When Adam stumbles onto information about a German agent, he decide
s not to tell anybody. He is afraid that if the captain finds out where Adam was when he overheard the conversation, he will lose his job. His silence leads to trouble, including a possible murder and a kidnapping.  The innocent passengers on board the Rapids Prince are in jeopardy unless the boys expose the agent, who may have planted a bomb on board the ship.  Will they do this in time?

Reminiscent of the Hardy Boys mysteries,
this book is a fast-paced, gripping tale that is sure to engage teen readers. Drawing on elements of a true historical event, the plot provides clues at a pace guaranteed to keep young mystery lovers turning the pages.     
     
VG-BN Hilary Welliver   World War II, Mystery, Spies, Canada

 

Pandemonium


Wooding, Chris    Pandemonium        
Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012 158p   $12.99      978-0-439-87759-6  E-BN     ms/hs       Graphic novel    

Seifer Tombehewer comes from a loving home. His dad sometimes can be too strict, and he wants Seifer to focus on the game of skull ball and nothing else.  Seifer wants more!  He wants to study astronomy and other subjects, to be a scholar and travel the world.  Then, one day while he is walking through the forest on his way home from Grandpa’s house, Seifer is knocked over the head and kidnapped. When he wakes up he finds himself in a faraway palace, and he is informed that he must impersonate a prince who happens to look just like him!

This is when h
is real adventures begin.  He is given new clothes and a bedroom worthy of a prince, and he discovers that he must act like the prince at all times, to create an illusion that the prince has never gone missing.  This is not an easy task to fulfill, but along the way he learns a few tricks and has a few harrowing encounters with monsters and enemies who would like nothing better than to kill the prince.

This first book of Pandemonium sets the stage for the series.
 We all want to know how it is possible that Seifer is almost identical to the real prince.  Are they twins who were separated at birth?  Is Seifer a better prince than the real prince?

I can’t wait to see how this story develops
in upcoming sequels!

The colors are on the dark side, illuminated by blues and grays and accentuated by deep red.  Did I fail to mention that all the characters have black wings and can fly? 
The novel is also very humorous and has very likable characters.
           
E-BN  Magna Diaz              Graphic novels, Fantasy, Impersonation

 

The List


Vivian, Siobhan   The List     
Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012 332p   $17.99      978-0-545-16917-2       hs            Realistic fiction

This is a very engaging and well-written book about how wonderful and horrific high-school society can be.  Every year, just before the Mount Washington High School’s homecoming activities commence, "The List" is posted -- the prettiest and ugliest girls in each grade. How does each of the eight girls on The List take the news?  In this story about the classic high-school caste systems, the answers are provided and often surprising, revealing the good, the bad and the ugly about each of them.  The story takes many interesting turns that will leave readers with some insights that they might not have otherwise had.  The author does a very good job addressing the complexities of life that many high-school girls have to cope with.           

E-BN  Lynn Fisher       High school stories, Beauty   

 

Irises


Stork, Francisco X.     Irises       
Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012  288p  $17.99      978-0-545-15135-1       ms/hs   VG-BN    Realistic fiction

This is a multi-layered and nuanced novel dealing with ethical issues, faith, and the bond between two sisters.  Following the death of their father, the denial of his insurance claim, eviction from their parsonage home, and questions about how to deal with their mother, who is in a persistent vegetative state, Kate and Mary must navigate the financial and ethical dilemma in which they find themselves.  Kate has been accepted to Stanford University, but attending will put an undue financial burden on the sisters.  The proposal from her boyfriend and an attraction to the ambitious new minister pose another problem for Kate.  Mary, a talented artist who is wishing for a miracle happen that will save their comatose mother, has not been able to paint since the accident.  But a reluctant gang member with a talent for art provides the spark for Mary to think about art again. 

As they navigate legal, financial and ethical problems, each sister grows in strength and maturity.  Stork has, once again, given readers memorable characters and a thought-provoking plot.  A compelling read for upper middle
- and high-school readers.         

VG-BN Pat Naismith      Sisters, Death of a parent, Grief, Coma, Ethics

 

Curveball: The Year I Lost My Grip


Sonnenblick, Jordan     Curveball: The Year I Lost My Grip  
Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts   2012  285p  17.99 978-0-545-32069-6 ms/hs    E-BN       Realistic fiction

Peter Friedman doesn’t listen to his inner voice telling him not to pitch that one final ball that destroys his pitching arm forever.  After hearing the bad news that he will not be able to play baseball anymore, he tries to hide his disability from his best friend AJ as the two enter high school.  A parallel story involves Peter’s grandfather, a wedding photographer who is trying to hide Alzheimer’s from his family. 

Life leads Peter away from sports, but new doors open for him when he turns a negative into a positive and learns to accept disappointment and change.  With his mom’s encouragement, Peter enrolls in an "Introduction to Photography" class, only to discover that the material is way below him.  He has spent so much time with his grandfather that his photography skills are quite advanced.  When he wonders across the hall to "Advanced Photography", a classmate follows him, and leads to a new partnership taking photographs for the sports section of the yearbook, as well as a new romance.  Peter’s winter is a rough one as he watches his grandfather go downhill.  The action rises with his reluctance to tell his parents about the Alzheimer’s and his inability to tell AJ that he will never be able to pitch again! 

By the time the reader reaches the climax, he/she understands that there is something special about the characters, the story and the writing style of this book.  Author Jordan Sonnenblick is brilliant at taking a simple relationship between friends and making it real.  He captures the emotions of a high-school student as if he were one himself, and that is no easy feat.  He is equally brilliant at taking the simplified themes of friendship, family and truth and  building a story around them that will resound with young readers, both male and female.  With humor, drama, and a great plot, this is an excellent book that will not stay on the shelves of a library.         

E-BN  Martha Squaresky        Sports, Baseball, Alzheimer's disease

 

Eruption (Storm Runners)


Smith, Roland     Eruption (Storm Runners)       
Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012  156p  $16.99  978-0-545-08174-0  E-BN   ms/hs Realistic Fiction

This book can be read in isolation from the previous two books in the series, but the numerous people presented in the first chapters will confuse all but the most careful reader who is experiencing Storm Runners for the first time.  Once the action gets going in this adventure, the six main characters are easy to identify.  

Chase and his father are on the scene of natural disasters to help people rebuild.  An earthquake in Mexico takes them and the other characters to the mountains of Mexico, as they try to rescue a circus family trapped there.  From the cover, which grips the reader much like the hand trying to grip the top of a fissure caused by an earthquake, to the last page of the book, there is no letup in the dangerous situations presented in a realistic manner.  Besides the earthquake and resulting tremors, there is a volcano spewing ash and a tiger on the loose from a circus.  Without gore, but with numerous injuries sustained from falling debris and the lightning strike that cripples Chase’s father, this book is suitable for a read-aloud in upper-elementary and middle school.  

For hi/lo readers in high school, the action will surely keep their attention since the vocabulary is easy to decipher.  All the characters, both male and female, are believable, and their cohesion as a group is much to be admired. This is the last book in a trilogy, and it explains the secrets that Chase’s father has been keeping, as well as an answer to the question of why Chase and his father have been on the move over the last two installments.        

E-BN        Lois McNicol      Earthquakes, Adventure

 

Glory Be


Scattergood, Augusta    Glory Be    
 Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012  202p  $16.99      978-0-545-33180-7   VG-BN    elm/ms      Historical fiction     

In this delightfully written book about friendship, civil rights and segregation in small-town Mississippi in the early 1960s, the first thought that came to my mind was that this was The Help for young readers.  Young Gloriana and her friend Frankie present their view of civil rights workers coming to Hanging Moss, Mississippi, and how desegregation brought about change in their lives and community, as their families approach the "problem" from two very different perspectives. It is well written and engaging, and the author does a super job of making a complex and divisive subject understandable for the young reader.          
VG-BN Lynn Fisher                Race relations, Civil Rights Movement, Prejudice

 

Behind the Masks: The Diary of Angeline Reddy (Dear America)


Patron, Susan   Behind the Masks: The Diary of Angeline Reddy (Dear America) Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts 2012      293p  $12.99      978-0-545-30437-5 ms     VG     Historical fiction     

Part of the Dear America series, this novel incorporates the real history of Bodie, a California mining town of the 1880s, and some of its actual inhabitants into its plot.  Patron tells the story of Angeline Reddy, daughter of the town’s preeminent lawyer, who is informed that her father had been murdered.   Neither she nor her mother believes it.  Angeline is determined to discover what really happened to her father, and she enlists the help of her friends Eleanor and Ling Loi to solve the mystery.  The daily life of a Wild West mining town is carefully depicted in all of its "glory", from ordinary school days to the saloon brawls, the wild miners, the vigilantes and corrupt lawmen, the narrow-minded social mores, the houses of prostitution, and the Chinese community that is relegated to the outskirts of town.  There is also a subplot involving a ghost child.  Well-written and exciting, the book ends with a description of life in the actual town of Bodie during the time of the novel, mini-discussions of the real Reddy family and others, the place of the Chinese people in the West, and black-and-white period photographs of the town and its inhabitants.  It will be a very good supplement to classroom studies.

The Dear America series presents historical fiction that incorporates real people, places, and events into its stories. 
They are very good supplements to the social studies curriculum and classroom studies.   

VG    Susan Ogintz      Frontier and pioneer life

 

Dreamsleeves


Paratore, Coleen Murtagh      Dreamsleeves      
 Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts  2012  273p  $16.99      978-0-545-31020-8     ms/jr       Realistic fiction

For 12-year-old Aislinn, life is rough.  She must care for her younger siblings and deal with the abuse of her alcoholic father.  Having heard of "wearing your dreams on your sleeves", she attaches notes to her clothing in hopes that someone will make her dreams come true.     Some try, but her largest dream, that her abusive alcoholic father will stop drinking, is a tall order.  Bordering precariously on bibliotherapy, this feel-good novel comes with a strong message and a strong heroine.  It is an enjoyable read for younger teens, with enough humor and a little romance, but still tackling tough subjects like abuse, alcoholism, and self realization.

G     Pat Naismith      Dreams, Alcoholism, Family

 

Plunked


Northrop, Michael       Plunked     
 Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts 2012 246p    16.99 978-0-545-29714-1       ms            Realistic fiction, Conflict  

Jack has lived and breathed baseball since he was a young child.  His father and he share an enthusiasm for collecting baseball cards.  Even Jack’s mother shares the family’s passion for baseball.  Jack’s baseball skills are good enough to land him a permanent Little League starter position in left field with a team in contention for a title. There is plenty of play action with the personality quirks of the team members and coaches deftly intertwined in the sports action.  Practice drills, competition for starting positions, favoritism toward a coach’s son and past friendships and rivalries are all present.  When Jack is plunked in the head by a wicked, out of control, inside fastball pitch, his world turns upside down.  Although he is physically okay, Jack now has an aversion, even fear, when up at the plate and when he is fielding a ball hit to him in left field.  The lies he tells to his parents, coaches and teammates to avoid talking about his fears make him feel even worse.  The resolution is believable and may even help readers who face a sudden drop-off in sporting ability or know of someone going through a slump.  Northrop has written a high-quality sports story that deals with a topic not often covered in upper elementary and middle-school fiction. The graphics of pin stripes and "diamond" shapes used at the start of each chapter extend the sports motif.     This is a good one for grades 5-10.

VG-BN       Lois McNicol(3)   Baseball, Sports, Anxiety

 

The False Prince (The Ascendance Trilogy #1)

Nielsen, Jennifer A.    The False Prince (The Ascendance Trilogy #1) Scholastic/Grolier/Childrens Press/Watts     2012  342p      $17.99      978-0-545-36160-6 hs    E-BN      Fantasy    

Civil war is brewing in the country of Carthya.  Conner, a devious nobleman, conceives a cunning plan to unite the divided people.  He will place an impersonator of the kingdom’s long-lost crown prince on the throne.  Four orphans are found to compete for the role, including 15-year-old Sage.

Sage questions Conner’s motives, but is forced to play Conner’s games or be killed.  The other orphans have
their own agendas as well, and as Sage moves from derelict orphanage to sumptuous court, a truth is revealed that may prove more dangerous than all the lies and deceit combined.

This novel will appeal to fans of Game of Thrones and The Hunger Games.
 Readers will find Sage an engaging, clever, witty character with a lively sense of humor.  The plot is well-planned and paced; it’s the type of book that will keep readers turning pages long into the night.  The plot twist may catch even experienced readers by surprise! 

Don’t be fooled by the drab cover art.  This novel is outstanding!
 I am eagerly awaiting the sequel!      

E-BN  Hilary Welliver   Princes, Orphans, Impersonation,  Courts and courtiers, Secrets