Wednesday, June 28, 2017

FINISHED: 
Wolk, Lauren. (2017). Beyond the Bright Sea. New York: Dutton/Penguin Random House.


[.]

STARTED:
Donoghue, Emma. (2017). The Lotterys Plus One. New York: Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic.

[.]

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Saturday, June 24, 2017

FINISHED: 
Smith, Ronald L. (2017). The Mesmerist. New York: Clarion/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[In Victorian England, 13-year-old, white Jessamine helps her mother in swindling those who wish to contact the dead, and comes to discover that her parents were members of the League of Ravens, a group of folk with special abilities who protected England from an evil necromancer named Mephisto.  When Jess figures out that she, too, has an ability (to read people’s memories) she goes to live with Balthazar, the old head of the League of Ravens, and two other young people with special powers, and the three of them take it upon themselves to banish Mephisto forever when it appears that he has returned and is spreading disease throughout London.  Smith’s follow up to his eerie Hoodoo (Clarion, 2015) is equally creepy, dripping with mood and a heavy sense of foreboding, with tense, claustrophobic battle sequences against ghouls in the newly constructed London Underground, and the repeated use of the rhyme/song “Ring Around the Rosie” that will elicit chills.  When London becomes overrun by a mysterious disease (caused by Mephisto) and townspeople look for a scapegoat, ultimately settling on immigrants (“Foreigners out of our England!”), one can’t help but call to mind Brexit, the “Muslim Ban”, and other similar events in the current tide of nationalism.  This is one that more mature scary story fans should thoroughly enjoy.]

STARTED:
Wolk, Lauren. (2017). Beyond the Bright Sea. New York: Dutton/Penguin Random House.

[Newbery buzz...]

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Monday, June 19, 2017

FINISHED: 
Jamieson, Victoria. (2017). All's Faire in Middle School. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[.]

STARTED:
Smith, Ronald L. (2017). The Mesmerist. New York: Clarion/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[.]

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Saturday, June 17, 2017

FINISHED:
Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. (2017). The War I Finally Won. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[.]

STARTED:
Jamieson, Victoria. (2017). All's Faire in Middle School. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[.]

*

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

FINISHED:
Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. (2015). The War That Saved My Life. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[.]

STARTED:
Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. (2017). The War I Finally Won. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[.]

*

Wednesday, June 7, 2017

FINISHED: 
Mosier, Paul. (2017). Train I Ride. New York: HarperCollins.

[After her grandmother dies and she is without guardianship in Palm Springs, 12 year old Rydr is put on a train from LA to Chicago, where she will eventually live with a great uncle that she doesn’t know.  Along the way, there is an assorted lot of others on the train with whom Rydr interacts to pass the time including Neal, a gay man who works the snack counter and gives Rydr food (she runs out of money early on), a bunch of boy scouts (one of whom introduces her to Allen Ginsberg’s Howl, and her heart to first love), and Dorothea, the Amtrak employee charged with watching over Rydr on her trip.  Mosier crafts for Rydr a personal journey where she not only learns, from befriending bunch of caring strangers, to forgive those who let her down in her past, but also to forgive and accept herself in order to move forward.  The compressed time frame of the slim novel suits the subject well, giving Rydr’s transformation more immediacy and power, as she goes from initially being coy and telling lies, to building relationships and opening up to the truth, a truth that we become privy to as the novel travels along.  Powerful, moving, and perfect for fans of Holly Goldberg Sloan, Lisa Graff, and the like.]

STARTED:
Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. (2015). The War That Saved My Life. New York: Dial/Penguin.

[Rereading one of "my" Newbery Honor books before I read the sequel (due in October) that Penguin graciously sent me an ARC of.]

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Saturday, June 3, 2017