Thursday, June 1, 2023

Listen with me

 

The Chaperone by M Hendrix

It felt like, in the wake of The Hunger Games, everyone got a little burnt out on dystopian fiction. Enough time has passed, though, that we are primed for a renaissance and authors have begun to oblige with more innovative stories. Take, for instance, this novel that promises a future world where girls are "protected" by constant supervision. I'm ready for explorations of safety, gender roles, and authority.

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Book review - The Labors of Hercules Beal

 

Title: The Labors of Hercules Beal

Author: Gary D. Schmidt

Genre: realistic fiction

Similar books: The Hurricanes of Weakerville by Chris Rylander

                     A Duet for Home by Karina Yan Glaser

Rating:

Schmidt at his best

Summary (provided by publisher): Herc Beal knows who he's named after—a mythical hero—but he's no superhero. He's the smallest kid in his class. So when his homeroom teacher at his new middle school gives him the assignment of duplicating the mythical Hercules's amazing feats in real life, he's skeptical. After all, there are no Nemean Lions on Cape Cod—and not a single Hydra in sight.
Missing his parents terribly and wishing his older brother wasn't working all the time, Herc figures out how to take his first steps along the road that the great Hercules himself once walked. Soon, new friends, human and animal, are helping him. And though his mythical role model performed his twelve labors by himself, Herc begins to see that he may not have to go it alone.

My opinion: If you know me, you know of my admiration for Gary D Schmidt. I count The Wednesday Wars and Okay For Now among my top ten favorites. So it is no small praise for me to say that this volume approaches them in excellence. In this book Schmidt has recaptured the magic of The Wednesday Wars - a run of the mill kid who is forced by a teacher to have encounters with classic literature and in the process learns about the world and himself. The lessons he learns from classics helps him decide the kind of person he is going to become, what it means to be brave and honorable. Along the way he begins to see the people around him in a new light and to accept change no matter how much it hurts. These are big ideas and the plot does not attempt to simplify the world. This is one kid finding his own ways forward, not the easy answer that fixes everything. This is a book you can reread and appreciate every time.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Friday, May 26, 2023

Book review - The Do-Over

 

Title: The Do-Over

Author: Rodrigo Vargas and Coni Yovaniniz

Genre: realistic fiction/graphic novel

Similar books: Zebrafish by Sharon Emerson

                      Shark Summer by Ira Marcks

Rating:

a cute twist on a standard set-up

Summary (provided by publisher): Shy Mariana is looking for her chance to shine. She's having trouble making friends after a cross-country move to Ohio, plus, her dad refuses to let her help out at his hair salon, despite the fact that she's a social media expert!
So when she meets science whiz Zoe and creative maven Everly, and the three decide to start their own hair styling studio, she finally finds the friends—and the calling—she’s been searching for. The trio's studio, True Colors, is a smash hit, and the girls are having a blast. Not to mention, Mariana loves helping her fellow middle-school clients express themselves.
But with the town Harvest Fest on the horizon and a line of customers always at the door, the friends have to scale up quickly, and they don't always agree on how. Can Mariana find the courage to speak up for what she wants? And does True Colors have what it takes to succeed in business and friendship?

My opinion: Middle grade fiction is full of stories about kids moving to a new town and finding "their people". This narrative skews a little young but doesn't suffer for that fact. Instead it provides us with a fairly straightforward example of being true to yourself while also learning to care about the concerns of other people. The messaging alone makes it worth a read but it's presented with appealing illustrations and quirky characters. A solid choice for young middle graders.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Thursday, May 25, 2023

Graphic novel spotligh

 

Squire & Knight by Scott Chantler

The plot of this book doesn't bring a lot of surprises based on the set up: a braggart knight and his bookish squire arrive in a town troubled by a dragon. It's classic brains versus brawn as the knight charges into a fight and the squire questions the stories he hears from the villagers. The power of this book is in the artwork. Each panel contributes to the narrative, lending action, details, and dynamic facial expressions. The limited color palate keeps the page from becoming chaotic. It's a book you can read repeatedly and be entertained every time. 


 Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Book review - Ruby Lost and Found

 

Title: Ruby Lost and Found

Author: Christina Li

Genre: realistic fiction

Similar books: The Half-True Lies of Cricket Cohen by Catherine Lloyd Burns

                      Friendship Over by Julie Sternberg

Rating:

great characters

Summary (provided by publisher): Thanks to her Ye-Ye’s epic scavenger hunts, Ruby Chu knows San Francisco like the back of her hand. But when he dies, she feels lost. It seems like everyone, from her best friends to her older sister, is abandoning her—and after Ruby gets caught skipping lunch to avoid sitting alone, she’s staring down a summer spent at her Nai-Nai’s senior center. When a new boy from Ruby’s class, Liam Yeung, starts showing up too, Ruby’s humiliation is complete.
But Nai-Nai, her friends, and Liam all surprise Ruby. She finds herself working with Liam, who might not be as annoying as he seems, to help save a historic Chinatown bakery that’s being priced out of the neighborhood. Alongside Nai-Nai, who is keeping a secret that threatens to change everything, Ruby retraces Ye-Ye’s scavenger hunt maps in an attempt to find a way out of her grief—and maybe even find herself.

My opinion:  Dealing with grief and major life changes are, individually, enough to carry a middle grade novel. Li combines the two deftly. This books hits all the major themes of a middle grade novel - changing friendships, feeling like your life is out of control, parental disapproval, unexpected relationships. Each flows naturally into the next. It doesn't offer simple solutions, more of the reassurance that any issue is manageable with help and taken one small step at a time.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Monday, May 22, 2023

Hat hanger

 What do you do when you have a couple of nice structured hats and no good place to hang them? You could buy a hat-rack, of course, but if you're me you look for a solution you can make for yourself. Preferably something not too expensive and relatively space saving. I took my inspiration from this pin. I did a much simpler design and used cord made from an old jersey knit sheet. 



Friday, May 19, 2023

Book review - The Takeout

 

Title: The Takeout

Author: Tracy Badua

Genre: realistic fiction

Similar books: Happily for Now by Kelly Murpy

                     Measuring Up by Lily LaMotte

Rating:

well plotted

Summary (provided by publisher): When a celebrity chef’s new restaurant threatens Mila’s family’s food truck, she plans to expose them for the recipe thieves they are—even if that means dabbling in the Filipino folk magic she’s tried to avoid. Fans of Tae Keller and Lily LaMotte will cheer for this charming story about food, family, and finding the place you belong.
Mila may have moved to Coral Beach months ago, but it still doesn’t feel like home. She wants to belong, but a few awkward incidents with her new friends make her wonder if she’ll ever neatly fit into the super-samey small town.
Mila feels the only place she can be herself is at her dad’s Filipino-Indian food truck, The Banana Leaf. But when celebrity chef twins the Fab Foodie Brothers open a restaurant nearby, it turns out the food they are serving is exactly the same as The Banana Leaf's--right down to the recipes!
Suspicious of the similarities, Mila teams up with family friend Ajay to investigate. She soon realizes that she needs to take the beloved Fab Foodie Brothers down before they run her family's tiny truck out of town. But that means dabbling in the Filipino folk healing and magical traditions that she has shied away from her whole life . . . as well as alienating her new friends.  
Does Mila have to choose between her family and fitting in? Or, like the best recipes, will a blend of the traditional and the unexpected mix into something truly special?

My opinion: This book could easily have fallen into an easy good vs evil dichotomy. Consider the set up: a food truck accuses a celebrity restaurant of stealing their recipes. The little guy goes against seemingly impossible odds to take down the big guy who is lying and cheating. Basic stuff. But Badua elevates the plot by adding in more complexity. The powerful restaurant promises to bring more traffic to all of the businesses in their struggling town, so fighting will harm all of their friends. And side elements include the exploration of colorism, the complexities of cultural identity, and folk magic. None of the elements are explored in deep ways but with likeable characters and engaging writing this is a solid read for middle graders.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley