Thursday, January 21, 2016

FINISHED:
Pennypacker, Sara. (2016).  Pax.  New York: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins.

[.]

STARTED:
Kinney, Jeff. (2015). Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Old School. New York: Amulet/Abrams.

[.]

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Friday, January 15, 2016

Well, my Newbery year is over...  and I'm going through a bit of a mourning period...  BUT, this means that I can now keep track of all that I'm reading here again!  MAYBE, in 25 or 50 years, I'll be able to publish my spreadsheet(s) where I kept track of the multitude of books I read in 2015.

STARTED & FINISHED:
Oppel, Kenneth. (2015).  The Nest.  New York: Simon & Schuster.

[.]

STARTED:
Pennypacker, Sara. (2016).  Pax.  New York: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins.

[Got an ARC of this (in a spiffy box) at ALA Midwinter.]

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Saturday, December 20, 2014

FINISHED:
Alexander, Kwame. (2014). The Crossover. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[.]

STARTED:
Sheinkin, Steve. (2014). The Port Chicago 50 : Disaster, mutiny, and the fight for civil rights. New York: Roaring Brook.

[Reading for a mock Newbery...]


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Tuesday, December 16, 2014

FINISHED: 
Balliett, Blue. (2015). Pieces and players. New York: Scholastic.

[.]

STARTED:
Alexander, Kwame. (2014). The Crossover. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[Reading for a mock Newbery...]


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Sunday, December 7, 2014

FINISHED: 
Martin, Ann M., and Laura Godwin. (2014). The Doll people set sail. New York: Disney/Hyperion.

[Review for ACL forthcoming...

And here it is:

The Palmer family is renovating their bedrooms while they are out of town, so all of the girls’ dolls are boxed up for safe storage… but the family also happens to be putting stuff into boxes that will be shipped overseas to an international charity.  It should come as no surprise that the box marked “ATTIC” with the dolls in it gets mistaken for one that should get shipped to the Allied Transatlantic Charities (or “ATC”, as is written on the boxes), and the dolls soon find themselves aboard a cargo ship.  Taking place just a few weeks after the events of their last adventure (The Runaway Dolls, Hyperion, 2008), which is briefly summed up at the beginning, the body of this installment involves the dolls setting out on search parties to find others who fell out of their box as it was being loaded onto the boat.  Plodding at times, with a few more dolls added to mix who really don’t add anything or have much to do (including Johnny-On-the-Spot who looks suspiciously like Woody from the Toy Story films [Disney/Pixar], and some mermaids and mermen who are desperate to “return to the sea”… even though they are plastic dolls…), this fourth installment in the Doll People series feels a bit thin with storylines that come across as forced.  A bright spot, however, is the fact that Brett Helquist has taken over the illustration duties from Brian Selznick, with Helquist adding a touch more texture which gives everything more depth.  Not the best in the series, but those who are invested will find something to enjoy here with characters that they have come to know and love.]


STARTED:
Balliett, Blue. (2015). Pieces and players. New York: Scholastic.

[This may be the end of this blog for the next year...  Newbery Committee rules stipulate that I can't review anything publicly that may be considered for the award.  I'll get clarification...]


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Saturday, November 29, 2014

FINISHED: 
Curtis, Christopher Paul. (2014). The Madman of Piney Woods. New York: Scholastic.

[.]


STARTED:
Martin, Ann M., and Laura Godwin. (2014). The Doll people set sail. New York: Disney/Hyperion.

[.]


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Monday, November 10, 2014

FINISHED:
Lord, Cynthia. (2014). Half a chance. New York: Scholastic.

[Lucy, her mother, and well-known nature photographer father move to a small town where the twelve-year old joins forces with a neighbor boy, Nate, to document loons living on an island in the lake on which they live.  Lucy, an avid photographer herself, begins taking pictures in order to win a photo scavenger hunt contest, but must find a way to enter anonymously as her father will be the judge.  Lord cleverly has her protagonist discover and explore her new surroundings through the lens of a camera, and along the way Lucy has experiences that will be all-too-familiar to tween/young adult readers. Including dealing with subconscious feelings of jealousy when Nate hangs out with another girl, Lucy also ends up pondering the ethics of submitting her photos under Nate’s name and using a photo that he has asked her not to enter; and beginning to get a taste of some of life’s harshest realities like the impermanence of life (unlike photographs which can capture something forever) and dealing with Nate’s grandmother as she begins to display signs of dementia.  With a pace that never lags, a believable and relatable lead character, and a tone that never becomes saccharine, Lord’s coming-of-age novel hits the right notes.]


STARTED:
Curtis, Christopher Paul. (2014). The Madman of Piney Woods. New York: Scholastic.

[.]


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Monday, November 3, 2014

FINISHED:
Milford, Kate. (2014). Greenglass House. New York: Clarion/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

[Took me WAY too long to finish this one...



Certain to ruin his much-needed quiet Christmas break, a number of strangers arrive one by one to stay at Greenglass House, an old smuggler’s inn run by Milo’s parents.  When a number of the mysterious guests’ items disappear, Milo and the daughter of the inn’s cook assume alternate identities, inspired by an old RPG game that Milo’s father used to play, and attempt to solve the mystery.  As an adoptee, Milo’s opportunity to build a “character” for himself from the ground up when investigating the missing items allows him to figure out that although he may not have been a part of the decisions made which affected him in his past, he will get to decide who he will become.  The chilly setting, largely vacant inn, and cast of characters with shadowy intentions who seem to all have a connection to the history of the inn, all add to the tone, while Milo’s attempts to discover the secrets of the inn, his parentage, and… well…  an out-of-leftfield twist toward the end keep the pace.  Despite being a bit dense, though less obtuse than Ellen Raskin’s The Westing Game (Dutton, 1978), this one should please fans of mysteries driven by a solid mood.]



STARTED:
Lord, Cynthia. (2014). Half a chance. New York: Scholastic.

[.]


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