Wednesday, September 27, 2017

ABANDONED:
Milford, Kate. (2017). The Ghosts of Greenglass House. New York: Clarion/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[Over a week and a half... and I still couldn't finish it...  I LOVED the first book, but this one was just too dense and obtuse (see: review of first book) for my taste.  I'll freely admit that when I recently read The Westing Game, I found it completely confounding - just no idea what I was supposed to get from it.  And that book is the closest I can think of to this series.  She's a fantastic writer, just a tad esoteric for me.]

STARTED:
O'Reilly, Jane. (2017). The Notations of Cooper Cameron. Minneapolis, MN: Carolrhoda/Lerner.

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Wednesday, September 13, 2017

STARTED:
Reynolds, Jason. (2017). Patina [Track: Book 2]. New York: Atheneum/Simon & Schuster.

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Monday, September 11, 2017

FINISHED:
Alexander, Kwame. (2017). Solo. New York: Blink/HarperCollins.

[.]

STARTED:
van Gulden, Holly, and Bartles-Rabb, Lisa M. (1993). Real Parents, Real Children: Parenting the Adopted Child. New York: Crossroad.

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Friday, September 8, 2017

FINISHED:
Pérez, Celia C. (2017). The First Rule of Punk. New York: Viking/Penguin Random House.


[Twelve year old, Mexican American, zine-creating María Luisa – who goes by Malú – must move from Florida to Chicago for two years when her mom gets a temporary job there, sad that she must leave behind her father (her parents are divorced) and his music store.  Always having felt more of a connection to her father’s punk music influence than her mother’s Mexican heritage, Malú feels a bit out of touch with the primarily Latinx neighborhood and school in which she now finds herself, but when the makeshift band that Malú forms with some schoolmates doesn’t get chosen to be in the school talent show because the school wants it to reflect tradition, Malú and the Cocos (the band’s name) decide to have their own Alterna-Fiesta Talent Show and play a punked-up version of the Mexican classic “Cielito Lindo”.  The singularly-focused and uncluttered narrative is briskly paced and thoroughly engaging, featuring Malú’s likeable voice which often sounds like you are reading excerpts directly from her journal.  By the end, Malú has learned the value of her heritage by interacting with her new neighbors and classmates, and is able to integrate both sides/identities of her parents when she begins to connect with her Mexican heritage through its music. Reproductions of Malu’s multi-page zines provide interludes between select chapters, and serve to provide further explanation on topics such as the slur “coconut”, Calaveras, and dyeing your hair.]


STARTED:
Alexander, Kwame. (2017). Solo. New York: Blink/HarperCollins.

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Friday, September 1, 2017

FINISHED:
Cole, Henry. (2017). Bayberry Island [Brambleheart #2]. New York: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins.


[Chipmunk Twig and two friends travel on a boat liberated from a bottle to deliver a baby dragon to its home, wherever that may be.  Eventually becoming shipwrecked on an island where there are other baby dragons, the trio are soon joined on the island by the nefarious Professor Burdock who followed the friends so that he could take all of the dragon babies back home and put them to work in a foundry.  Plus, there may be a traitor in their midst.  The early chapter book reader-friendly design has at least one of Cole’s own soft, pencil-drawn spot art illustrations on the majority of spreads, and the visually descriptive text is ideal for those who want an adventure led by animals, but who might not yet be ready for Avi’s Poppy series (HarperCollins, 1999), or Brian Jacques’ Redwall tales (1987, Philomel).  While it’s not completely necessary to have read the previous book, the task of Twig and friends won’t carry as much weight, though, it should be noted that some details about Book 1 are recalled at the end of this second volume, retroactively cluing in those who may have missed the first book in the series.]


STARTED:
Pérez, Celia C. (2017). The First Rule of Punk. New York: Viking/Penguin Random House.

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