Sunday, April 28, 2024

Who's ready for a day at the beach?


Seashell Key
By Lourdes Heuer; illustrated by Lynnor Bontiago
Publisher: Amulet Books (April 30, 2024)
Hardcover: 80 pages
ISBN-10: 1419767410
ISBN-13: 978-1419767418
Reading age: 5 - 8 years
Grade level: Kindergarten - 3
 
Publisher’s Blurb:

Seashell Key is the first in author Lourdes Heuer and award-winning illustrator Lynnor Bontigao’s young chapter book series—perfect for fans of Princess in Black and Mercy Watson, about a diverse community of kids living in a beautiful seaside town!

Welcome to Seashell Key! Summer is here, and the children of this cozy coastal town are ready to welcome visitors to their little oasis. There’s Mateo, who runs his little kite-making business, Sail and Soar, alongside his dad’s Sky and Sea store; Sasha and Sophia, who comb the seashore next to their mother’s sandwich stand; and Eli, Ezra, and Elana, who live in the cozy-but-cramped lighthouse and entertain passing tourists with tall tales.

Filled with a vibrant cast and lots of summery fun, this is the start of an exciting chapter book series.

 My Thoughts:

I requested this book because of the comparisons to Princess in Black, which is much loved at my house. It shares the same whimsical take on life, providing subtle life lessons without taking itself too seriously.

Divided into parts, each of which is a few chapters long, this first book in the projected series introduces all of our characters—six children, a dog, and a turtle. Parents and other adults are peripheral to the action, but not nonexistent.

In this book, it is the first day of the summer tourist season at Seashell Key, and the children are having adventures. Some are creating their own businesses. Others are just enjoying their beautiful seaside town. These are actual children, full of imagination, not over-precocious caricatures.

While my ARC was not yet fully illustrated, there were enough illustrations to see that they are vibrant, active and colorful.

This would be a fun book to bring along on your own beach trip with a child.

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an advanced reader copy in exchange for my opinion. 

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

WWII Books about Books

 

The British Booksellers
Kristy Cambron
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (April 9, 2024)
Paperback: 384 pages
ISBN-10: 0785232249
ISBN-13: 978-0785232247
 
Publisher’s Blurb:

Inspired by real accounts of the Forgotten Blitz bombings, The British Booksellers highlights the courage of those whose lives were forever changed by war—and the stories that bind us in the fight for what matters most.

 A tenant farmer’s son had no business daring to dream of a future with an earl’s daughter, but that couldn’t keep Amos Darby from his secret friendship with Charlotte Terrington…until the reality of the Great War sobered youthful dreams. Now decades later, he bears the brutal scars of battles fought in the trenches and their futures that were stolen away. His return home doesn’t come with tender reunions, but with the hollow fulfillment of opening a bookshop on his own and retreating as a recluse within its walls.

 When the future Earl of Harcourt chose Charlotte to be his wife, she knew she was destined for a loveless match. Though her heart had chosen another long ago, she pledges her future even as her husband goes to war. Twenty-five years later, Charlotte remains a war widow who divides her days between her late husband’s declining estate and operating a quaint Coventry bookshop—Eden Books, lovingly named after her grown daughter. And Amos is nothing more than the rival bookseller across the lane.

 As war with Hitler looms, Eden is determined to preserve her father’s legacy. So when an American solicitor arrives threatening a lawsuit that could destroy everything they’ve worked so hard to preserve, mother and daughter prepare to fight back. But with devastation wrought by the Luftwaffe’s local blitz terrorizing the skies, battling bookshops—and lost loves, Amos and Charlotte—must put aside their differences and fight together to help Coventry survive.

From deep in the trenches of the Great War to the storied English countryside and the devastating Coventry Blitz of World War II, The British Booksellers explores the unbreakable bonds that unite us through love, loss, and the enduring solace that can be found between the pages of a book.

 ·Split timeline: WWI and WWI/Stand-alone novel/Book length: 118,000 words/ Includes discussion questions for book clubs

 My Thoughts:

Honest truth: I was surprised to find that this author has multiple published works. I felt that my advanced reader copy felt much like an early draft. There were odd sentence constructions, weird word choices, and sentences that kind of went nowhere. Also, “thrice” and “trice” are not the same word. I hope all this was cleared up for the final publication.

On to the story. The dual timeline mostly worked, although the jump in years in the past section (when Charlotte and Amos are barely in their teens to when they are young adults) was a bit jarring. The exposition of why Amos never showed up at Gretna Green was anticlimactic. I’d have liked to actually see it, rather than just mention it later. It’s never really explained why William sets up a trust fund for Amos.

 I found Eden, for all her bravery and single-mindedness to save the estate, to be kind of a secondary character. The blurb makes it sound like she’s much more prominent than she is. This story is really about Charlotte and Amos, how the must overcome past actions to move forward. The descriptions of bombing and its aftermath are harrowing. I knew a little bit about the bombing of Coventry—mostly the cathedral there—but didn’t realize it had been so heavily hit, and I appreciated the notes at the end of the book.

 Possible objectionable material:

Descriptions of war, both WWI and WWII. People are injured and die. One character is an alcoholic. Characters smoke and drink. Minor cursing. Kissing.

 Who Might Like This Book:

Those who like stories set during war, those who love books, those who like second chance stories.

 Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an ARC in exchange for my honest opinion.

 

 

The Wartime Book Club
Kate Thompson
Publisher: Forever (April 9, 2024)
Paperback: 512 pages
ISBN-10: 153875701X
ISBN-13: 978-1538757017
 
 
Publisher’s Blurb:

Inspired by true events, The Wartime Book Club is an unforgettable story of everyday bravery and resistance, full of romance, drama, and camaraderie and a tribute to the joy of reading and the power of books in our darkest hour.

The Isle of Jersey was once a warm and neighborly community, but in 1943, German soldiers patrol the cobbled streets, imposing a harsh rule.
 
Nazis have ordered Grace La Mottée, the island's only librarian, to destroy books that threaten the new regime. Instead, she hides the stories away in secret. Along with her headstrong best friend, she wants to fight back. So she forms the Wartime Book Club: a lifeline, offering fearful islanders the joy and escapism of reading.
 
But as the occupation drags on, the women's quiet acts of bravery become more perilous – and more important – than ever before. And when tensions turn to violence, they are forced to face the true, terrible cost of resistance . . .
 
Based on astonishing real events, The Wartime Book Club is a love letter to the power of books in the darkest of times – as well as a moving page-turner that brings to life the remarkable, untold story of an island at war.

 My Thoughts:

I was very excited when I found that Kate Thompson wrote another book about books and WWII. (I raved over her previous book here: https://biblioquacious.blogspot.com/2023/01/upcoming-fiction-releases.html). Her Facebook page is full of fascinating interviews and history, as his her podcast, “From the Library with Love.”

 This time, the book is set in Jersey, one of the Channel Islands. These islands are in an odd geopolitical situation: They aren’t exactly “owned” by England, but they are “Crown Dependencies,” dependent upon Britain, while having their own governing bodies. Local languages are heavily influenced by their proximity to France. These islands were taken over by the Germans during WWII, leading to extreme rationing, and, near the end of the war, near starvation.

 This is the setting for this book. Mild-mannered Grace, the assistant librarian, protects the books the Nazis have banned, subtly fighting the Germans via using the library to keep spirits up. Her best friend, Bea, works for the post office, and lures Grace into warning people who are being reported to the Germans as Grace delivers library books.

 Grace also hides an American soldier, with whom she falls in love, despite the man obstacles they face.

 Eventually, Grace and Bea, and others who have subverted German control, are arrested and imprisoned. They each have their own way of getting out of the clutches of the Germans, and are reunited after the war ends.

 I love Kate Thompson’s storytelling. She writes beautifully, with a great eye for description, character, and dialogue. But just as much attention is given to the narrative. Look at this absolutely gorgeous bit of alliteration: “…the brutal, bloody, beautiful business of birth.” Wow.

 I gave Thompson’s previous book as a Christmas present to my teammates at school last year. I suspect I will end up doing the same with this one.

 There are extensive end notes about the real people and actions this book is based on, as well as book club questions, other reading, and a guide to places to visit in Jersy. And now I really want to go there.

 Possible Objectionable Material:

Unwed sex/pregnancy. Drinking. Smoking. Descriptions of war and its effects. Hunger. Neighbors betraying neighbors. Deception—though in a good cause. Cursing, including a couple of instances of the "f" word.

 Who Might Like this Book:

Those who like books, WWII stories. If you liked The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, you will for sure want to give this one a try.

 Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for allowing me to read an ARC in exchange for my opinion.

 


The Underground Library
Jennifer Ryan
Publisher: Ballantine Books (March 12, 2024)
Hardcover: 368 pages
ISBN-10: 0593500385
ISBN-13: 978-0593500385
 
Publisher’s Blurb:

When the Blitz imperils the heart of a London neighborhood, three young women must use their fighting spirit to save the community’s beloved library in this novel based on true events from the author of The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir.

When the new deputy librarian, Juliet Lansdown, finds that Bethnal Green Library isn’t the bustling hub she is expecting, she becomes determined to breathe life back into it. But can she show the men in charge that a woman is up to the task of running the library, especially when a confrontation with her past threatens to derail her?

Katie Upwood is thrilled to be working at the library, although she is only there until she heads off to university in the fall. But after the death of her beau on the front line and amid tumultuous family strife, she finds herself harboring a life-changing secret with no one to turn to for help.

Sofie Baumann, a young Jewish refugee, came to London on a domestic service visa only to find herself working as a maid for a man who treats her abominably. She escapes to the library every chance she can, finding friendship in the literary community and aid in finding her sister, who is still trying to flee occupied Europe.

When a slew of bombs destroys the library, Juliet relocates the stacks to the local Underground station where the city’s residents shelter nightly, determined to lend out stories that will keep spirits up. But tragedy after tragedy threatens to unmoor the women and sever the ties of their community. Will Juliet, Kate, and Sofie be able to overcome their own troubles to save the library? Or will the beating heart of their neighborhood be lost forever?

 My Thoughts:

I have generally enjoyed Jennifer Ryan’s WWII fiction. It was odd at first to read this one, since Kate Thompson had written about the same topic so very well last year. I was really worried that I wouldn’t be able to like this book, after reading Thompson’s.

 But Ryan’s characters are completely different—though they fight some of the same battles—and Ryan takes a different angle on the Bethnal Green Underground Library.

 As always, Ryan’s characters and their trials feel real. I like how she brings her diverse group of characters together seamlessly, bringing them into a cohesive unit working to a common goal. The character of Mrs. Ottley was delightful, and the secondary characters in this book are well-developed. Some you love, some you hate—as it should be. Dialogue is natural, and the evens believable.

 Like Thompson, Ryan provides historical references and explanation of the real events that she used to inspire her story.

 Would I have liked this book better if I hadn’t read Thompson’s? Yes. But this is still a solid, worthy effort, and holds its place among slice-of-life WWII books.

 Possible Objectionable Material:

Sex/pregnancy outside of marriage. One character considers a back-alley abortion. Parental pressure. One character is mistreated by her employer. Stealing. Lying. The usual issues you get in a book about WWII London.

 Who Might Like This Book:

Again, those who love books, who like WWII stories, and enjoy a little romance.

 Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an early review copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

Neurodivergent Protagonist

 

Paige Not Found
By Jen Wilde
 
Publisher: Scholastic Press (April 16, 2024)
Hardcover: 256 pages
ISBN-10: 133888056X
ISBN-13: 978-1338880564
Reading age: 8 - 12 years
Grade level:
3 - 7
 

Publisher’s Blurb:

A thrilling adventure story that examines consent and privacy in a way that books have not had to before this generation where everything is online.

 Nothing about us, without us.

 When Paige learns that her parents enrolled her in an autism study without telling her, her world turns upside down. Suddenly she isn't sure if she can trust the two people she loves most. A chip was implanted in her brain that sends them information about her mood, brain activity, and location. It can even boost the chemicals that keep her calm or make her happy. So Paige has to wonder... can she even trust her own mind?

 Now the company that created her chip is days away from merging with the most popular social network in the world. And they are known for selling people’s private information to the highest bidder.

Paige knows there is only one thing she can do. Armed with the names and addresses of the other kids involved in the study, she must track them down and tell them the truth, so they can put a stop to the merger and get the chips removed for good.

 My thoughts:

This middle-grade novel focuses on Paige, a girl with autism, her neurotypical best friend Mara, and the people they meet as they try to do battle with an Elon Musk-type baddie who thinks neurodivergent people need to be fixed.

 Along the way, they make friends with other children with autism: Kelsey, who hates that her influencer mom posts Kelsey’s meltdowns for her followers to see. Marcus, who is nonverbal, and his protective big sister Gabby.

 Paige feels like her parents just want her to be “normal”, and when she finds out they had an experimental device implanted in her brain (they told her she was getting her tonsils out), she is angry that they can’t accept her for how she is. Even worse, the company that created the implant is about to enter an agreement with a Facebook-like entity, which means all the information about what goes on in the brains of Paige and other test subjects is about to go public.

 Rather than accept that fate, the kids fight back. And here’s the good thing: the way they do it is actually pretty realistic.

 Of course, there are problems along the way. There is the usual middle school trope of having a best friend become friends with someone else. Here it is further complicated by Paige’s realization that she is nonbinary and is attracted to Mara.

 Things are wrapped up with a pretty satisfying conclusion.

Overall, I found the narrative easy to follow. Paige’s conflicts were realistic, even though the underlying premise was maybe a bit out there. Descriptions of Paige’s personal challenges with autism, emotions, stimming, and anxiety were realistic, but, from the acknowledgements, I gather that the author, to, has autism.

 I loved this representation of the idea that those who are neurodivergent do not need to be “fixed” and that their voices matter in how they treated.

 Possible Objectionable Material:

Anxiety meltdowns, hiding things from parents, lots of videogaming, sneaking around. Paige, while a “girl”, feels nonbinary and is attracted to another girl.

 Who Might Like This Book:

Those who like coming of age, neurodivergent characters, beating big corporations.

 Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing and ARC for my honest review.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

Speaking of colliding worlds...


Dungeons and Drama
By Kristy Boyce
Publisher: Delacorte Press (January 9, 2024)
Paperback: 304 pages
ISBN-10: 0593647017
ISBN-13: 978-0593647011
Reading age: 14+ years, from customers
Lexile measure: 690L
Grade level: 7 - 9

Publisher’s Blurb:

Musical lover Riley has big aspirations to become a director on Broadway. Crucial to this plan is to bring back her high school’s spring musical, but when Riley takes her mom’s car without permission, she's grounded and stuck with the worst punishment: spending her after-school hours working at her dad’s game shop.

Riley can't waste her time working when she has a musical to save, so she convinces Nathan—a nerdy teen employee—to cover her shifts and, in exchange, she’ll flirt with him to make his gamer-girl crush jealous.

But Riley didn’t realize that meant joining Nathan's Dungeons & Dragons game…or that role playing would be so fun. Soon, Riley starts to think that flirting with Nathan doesn't require as much acting as she would've thought...

My Thoughts:

We see a lot of books about girls who hope to make it big as the star of the show. I love that Riley doesn’t want center stage. Her love is behind the scenes.

However, her love for the stage gets her in trouble, and her punishment is, basically, constant parental supervision. Which means afternoons at her dad’s game store. She’s not a fan of the store or, really, her dad, since he split from her mother. She doesn’t think he’s very interested in her life.

There are some of the usual tropes: hate to love, fake dating. We pretty much know what to expect. But the tropes are executed well.

The teenagers act like typical cliquey teens. Riley looks down her nose at the RPG crowd, and Nathan doesn’t seem to have much use for her dramatic flair. One of the things I really loved about this story is how the groups learned to work together. Once Riley realized RPGing was really just acting, she embraced it—and brought in a friend. Both groups are enriched by their ultimate mingling.

Riley finds a whole new support group from the regulars at her dad’s gaming store. And she learns a lot more about her dad. They develop a closeness that had been lacking from their relationship.

Another think I really appreciated is the storyline of kids advocating to keep a program they love in their school—especially an arts-based program. So many programs are cut, and Riley works really hard to remind school administrators of the value of the drama program she loves. But she can’t do it alone—friends from both of her groups come through to help her make it happen.

The adults in this book are not painted as clueless or oppressive, just typical parents and teachers. Another plus!

 Possible objectionable material:

Dungeons and Dragons like RPG and LARPing. Same gender couple. Teenage hijinks—including sneaking behind parents’ backs. Parent/child drama. Divorce. Parental health scare. There might have been some minor cursing, but I didn’t make note of anything in particular.

 Who might like this book:

D&D fans, drama lovers, romance fans, coming-of-age fans. I think either gender can appreciate the story. The lexile level is lower than the suggested grade range, and that's okay--sadly, many teams are not where they should be.

 Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an ARC in exchange for my honest opinion.

A Multiverse of Possibilities


 


The Colliding Worlds of Mina Lee
By Ellen Oh
Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers (January 23, 2024)
Hardcover: 304 pages
ISBN-10: 0593125940
ISBN-13: 978-0593125946
Reading age: 12 - 17 years
Grade level: 7 - 9

 Publisher’s Blurb:

Mina has become the hero of her own story. Literally.

When Mina Lee woke up on Saturday morning for SAT prep, she did NOT expect to:

1. Nearly be fried by a superhero who turned out to be a supervillain.
2. Come face to face with Jin, the handsome boy of her dreams.
3. Discover a conspiracy involving the evil corporation Merco that she created.

And it’s all happening in her 
fictional world. Mina is trapped in the story she created. Now it’s up to her to save everyone. Even if it means losing Jin forever.

 My Thoughts:

Inspired by the groundbreaking A-Ha! Music video for “Take on Me”, this book combines webcomics, art, teen romance, loss, physics, and multiverse theory, simultaneously mocking and embracing the tropes.

 Mina, a Korean-American girl whose mother died a few years ago, is struggling as her senior year begins. Her father doesn’t want her to go into art—her mother’s profession—and seems to be erasing her mother’s memories from their lives. To prove that she has what it takes to be a successful artist, Mina decides to publish a webcomic. Her first attempt is boring. She doesn’t want to embrace the typical tropes—like love triangles—and her friends give her some tough love.

 Her second attempt is…inspired. The characters jump into her mind, including a grown-up version of a childhood friend who died.

 And this is where the multiverse comes in.

 Oh gives us just enough scientific explanation for us to willingly go along for the ride, without sciencing us to death.

 What I really enjoyed about this story is that the alternate universe characters know that they are not who they were before the comic started. They don’t know why they are suddenly compelled to do things that are outside their previous norm. Mina, shocked that she is responsible for their unhappy circumstances, helps them to fight against the compulsions that she created, while trying to fix the problem and allow them to be themselves again. By doing this, she learns the lesson herself—she needs to stand up to her father about her choices for her future.

 The solution to the problem is maybe a little frustrating. Mina is able to bring the tools she needs to fight her bad guys to life just by drawing them. It does make the eventual escape from them a bit too simple. On the other hand, Mina is also called on to make a great sacrifice—an understandable and needed one, but heartbreaking nonetheless.

 The final solution toward getting her back to her own reality was a little to close to The Wizard of Oz for my comfort.

 There were a few continuity errors in my ARC. Mina is lactose intolerant, but she eats cheese sticks and things with butter. On the other hand, when she orders a milkshake, she only dips her French fries in it because “that’s the only way I can have a milkshake.”

 Overall, I felt like the story was engaging, the dialogue and description were solid, and the characters who were supposed to be believable, were believable.

And…did Oh leave the door open for a sequel?

 Possible Objectionable Material:

Some violence of a comic-book nature. An over-the-top villain who does medical procedures on teens. Teenage cursing—mild. Teenage making out, also mild. No sex. A same-gender couple.

 Who Might Like This Book:

Fans of webcomics and comics in general will probably find this an enjoyable read. Although the protagonist is female, I think it will be equally engaging to boys.

 
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an ARC in exchange for my honest opinion.