FINISHED:
Barnhill, Kelly. (2016). The Girl Who Drank the Moon. Chapel Hill, NC: Algonquin Young Readers.
[It is the annual practice of the Protectorate to leave the
youngest child of the village in the woods as a sacrifice to appease a rumored
witch who lives there, but that witch, Xan, actually rescues these children and
delivers them to be raised in another town.
One year it is Luna whom she saves, and in doing so accidentally lets
the young girl drink so much moonlight that it imbues her with magical powers,
powers that Xan suppresses in Luna until her 13th birthday when she
may be more ready to deal with them.
Barnhill’s tight, thoroughly-realized fairy tale features a number of
strong and determined characters including Luna, whose mission it is to find
out who she is and where she came from; Antain, a young man whose mission is to
find and expose the truth about the Protectorate; and a woman, deemed mad,
whose mission is to prove her sanity and find the daughter that was taken from
her. Side characters Glerk, a bog
creature, and Fyrian, a minute dragon, ground the story and provide much needed
comic relief, respectively, and though the second quarter of the book stalls a
bit, at midpoint it picks up steam again when a number of the seemingly
disparate stories begin to intertwine and then doesn’t let up until the last
page. There’s a cautionary message to be
gleaned here about discovering what – or who – the real evil is when one is
kept in the dark with regard to the truth, especially when it is used as a
means of control. As Antain’s wife,
Ethyne, says, “Knowledge is powerful, but it is a terrible power when it is
hoarded and hidden. Today, knowledge is
for everyone.”]
STARTED:
Bayard, Louis. (2016). Lucky Strikes. New York: Henry Holt.
[.]
*
Saturday, October 29, 2016
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