Review of The Door of No Return, by Kwame Alexander

The Door of No Return

by Kwame Alexander

Little, Brown and Company, 2022. 397 pages.
Review written January 31, 2023, based on an advance reader copy I got at ALA Annual Conference
Starred Review

Poet and Newbery Medalist Kwame Alexander tackles a historical novel-in-verse with this book. He takes us into the life of Offin, a kid from the 1860 Asante Kingdom, in the part of West Africa now known as Ghana.

We get pulled into Offin’s life and family. We hear stories from his grandfather, Nana Mosi. We learn about the girl who makes him smile and his rivalry with his cousin and desire to prove himself.

But then at a wrestling match with Lower Kwanta, Offin’s brother fatally injures the wrong person. Now they have enemies.

And yes, Offin’s story takes him to the Door of No Return — a door that leads to a slave ship. He doesn’t understand until he’s on the ship.

But what’s wonderful about this book is the way it features Offin’s life in Africa, a rich and full life among his family and friends. Of course, that makes the abduction hit all the harder.

Because it’s in verse, this novel is a quick read. It doesn’t take us all the way to America, and I am wondering what happens next, so I was happy to hear that sequels are planned.

This book won a Mock Newbery vote I was part of, though not any of the official awards. But pick up this book to read a master poet at work, shedding light on a time and place you may not have “visited” before.

kwamealexander.com
lbyr.com

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Review of Every Monday Mabel, by Jashar Awan

Every Monday Mabel

by Jashar Awan

Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2025. 44 pages.
Review written March 17, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review

I have discovered a new-to-me picture book author whose work I love! After reading Geisel Honor-winning Towed by Toad, I discovered the author has a new book published in 2025, and placed a hold. This one, too, is great fun – with simple language (though not quite as beginning-reader friendly as Towed by Toad), simple lines, and bright colors.

The first half of the book is anticipation.

It’s Monday, and Mabel wakes up early and drags her chair out of her room down the hallway. She grabs a bowl of dry cereal and sets up outside in front of the garage. Her sister thinks the thing she does every morning is the most boring thing in the world, her mother thinks it’s the cutest, and her father thinks it’s the funniest. One thing the reader is sure of is her absolute determination.

And then…

The Garbage Truck comes!

The best thing in the world is finally here!

From there, the backgrounds change from plain white to a bright, happy yellow. The pages are full of onomatopoeia, echoing the noises of the truck. We see Mabel joyfully jumping and dancing with each wondrous movement of the giant truck.

And the book pulls off a satisfying ending by showing us that, despite Mabel’s indifferent family, there are other garbage-truck watchers throughout the town.

I know a Storytime hit when I see one! The anticipation plus all the sound effects make this a winner for sure. And small garbage-truck lovers throughout the country will find a kindred spirit in Mabel.

JasharAwan.com

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Review of Library Girl, by Karen Henry Clark, illustrated by Sheryl Murray

Library Girl

How Nancy Pearl Became America’s Most Celebrated Librarian

by Karen Henry Clark
illustrated by Sheryl Murray

Little Bigfoot (Sasquatch Books), 2022. 32 pages.
Review written January 25, 2023, from a library book.
Starred Review

I’m a librarian — it’s no surprise I love this picture book biography of Nancy Pearl, the most famous librarian in America (with an action figure!).

This colorful picture book doesn’t give a traditional biography, but does tell a story about Nancy’s life — how she wished she could go to the school library on the weekend, and was told about the public library.

Nancy loved books and loved horses. She’d ride to the library on her bicycle, which she pretended was a horse. The librarians there loaded her up with horse books. But because kids at school teased her about liking books so much, she’d read under a table and try to hide her passion.

But then the librarians asked her to talk with other kids about her favorite horse books. This book tells us how scary that was for her — but ultimately was her first book talk, and the one that turned her into a librarian.

I love this book in every way — with the one tiny exception that the list of her awards at the back does not mention the 2001 Allie Beth Martin Award from the Public Library Association for excellence in sharing her knowledge of books with others. It’s the same award I won in 2019, so I feel a special kinship with Nancy Pearl after I found out we both won the same award.

KarenHenryClark.com
sasquatchbooks.com

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Review of The Legendary Scarlett & Browne, by Jonathan Stroud

The Legendary Scarlett & Browne

by Jonathan Stroud
read by Sophie Aldred

Listening Library, 2025. 13 hours, 13 minutes.
Review written April 8, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

The Legendary Scarlett & Browne is the conclusion to the trilogy about the teen outlaws Scarlett McCain and Albert Browne, living in post-apocalyptic Britain.

We’ve got the books in the juvenile section of the library, probably because there’s no sexual innuendo whatsoever, but fair warning is that it’s more for the 10-to-14-age crowd, and there’s lots of violence, death, and enslavement.

But oh my goodness, I love these books so much! And Sophie Aldred makes the characters come alive.

I won’t give a lot of details, because of it being the conclusion of a trilogy, but Scarlett and Albert are outlaws, because they defy the evil powers that run the surviving towns after the cataclysm. I do hate that the most evil forces are the Faith Houses – they have a menu of religious options to suit everyone. But I’m afraid that feels realistic, because religion always attracts those who want to control others. Those powers support slavery and leaving “deviant” children to die – anyone with any “defect” or special powers developed after the cataclysm, like Albert’s telekinesis.

In this book, there’s a new threat, with the Faith Houses discovering powerful ancient weapons and using slaves to recover them. They will then raise up an army to find and defeat outlaws like Scarlett and Albert and the friends they’ve gathered around them in the first two books.

Both Scarlett and Albert have a further quest. Albert’s is to find out more about where he came from before he got to Stonemoor. And Scarlett’s is always to find her little brother Thomas, who was left out to be eaten by creatures, but may have been sold into slavery instead. As the end of the trilogy, both quests get some resolution.

And it’s hard to explain how good these books are. There are narrow escapes throughout the books, highlighting Scarlett’s cleverness and physical prowess, and Albert’s special powers. It’s also gratifying how they fight the forces of evil and stand up for enslaved children, outsmarting evil people along the way. But most of all, the characters’ personalities and interactions make you love spending time with them.

jonathanstroud.com

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Review of The Adventures of Dr. Sloth, by Suzi Eszterhas

The Adventures of Dr. Sloth

Rebecca Cliffe and Her Quest to Protect Sloths

by Suzi Eszterhas

Millbrook Press, 2022. 40 pages.
Review written January 25, 2023, from a library book
Starred Review

Here’s another adorable photo-illustrated book packed with the science of cute creatures by Suzi Eszterhas.

This time, the cute creatures in question are sloths. The Dr. Sloth of the title is a young scientist, Rebecca Cliffe, who has become an expert on the lives of sloths.

The book simply tells about her journey to become a specialist on sloths, which began by finding a dead squirrel when she was seven years old and wanting to find out about it. But mostly, the book tells all about sloths — where they live, the different types, how they live, what they eat, what endangers them, and definitely some pictures of sloth babies.

The book tells about Dr. Sloth’s discoveries and innovative ways she’s learning more, including a picture of her in climbing gear headed to the tree canopy in the rain forest. It ends with ways the readers can help sloths continue to survive.

There are multiple large photographs on every page, and the text is clear, interesting, and compelling. A lovely book about an animal that’s much more interesting than I’d realized.

suzieszterhas.com
slothconservation.org
lernerbooks.com

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Review of Much Ado About Numbers, by Rob Eastaway

Much Ado About Numbers

Shakespeare’s Mathematical Life and Times

by Rob Eastaway

The Experiment, 2024. Originally published in the United Kingdom by Allen & Unwin, 2024. 215 pages.
Review written January 13, 2025, from a book sent to me by the publisher.
2025 Mathical Book Prize Honor Book, High School

This is a book about math in Shakespeare’s life and writings, with all its interesting trivia.

I perhaps read the book too quickly. Trying to get through it, some of the facts seemed indeed trivial – but read as interesting tidbits, it’s quite a collection that makes you realize how much mathematics has changed in over three hundred years. I do think that folks obsessed with Shakespeare would get a bit more out of it than someone like me who’s obsessed with math – but at the same time, I hadn’t realized how Shakespeare lived just when the use of Arabic numerals – and the number zero – were becoming popular.

And math in the time of Shakespeare ended up having many side topics – words used for counting and measuring (“full fathom five,” “threescore and ten,” etc), games popular at the time, a list of how English shillings and crowns and other coins worked, navigation and maps, music, musical scales, and meter, astronomy, the colors of the rainbow, and even the Francis Bacon code which people try to use to show that he was the actual author of Shakespeare’s works.

I’ll confess, the book goes into a bit more detail than I really cared about. But this would be a fantastic reference for an author trying to write about Elizabethan times or fun for any Shakespearean enthusiast. Who knew that there was so much math in Shakespeare’s writings?

robeastaway.com
theexperimentpublishing.com

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Review of Kings of B’More, by R. Eric Thomas

Kings of B’More

by R. Eric Thomas
read by Torian Brackett

Listening Library, 2022. 9 hours, 58 minutes.
Review written January 25, 2023, from a library eaudiobook.
2023 Stonewall Honor Book

Kings of B’More is a story of two friends on an adventure. Harrison and Linus are two black gay boys, who’ve just spent every day together in the summer before their junior year of high school. And then Linus tells Harrison that he and his dad are moving from Baltimore to North Carolina on the very next weekend.

Harrison is devastated. It’s not a friendship he wants to lose. When his father chooses “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” for Family Movie Night, Harrison gets an idea. He’ll plan a Ferris Day for Linus! They’ll take off from their jobs and go off and have an adventure, doing things that scare them and things they’ve always wanted to do. It will be a grand gesture that will make sure Linus doesn’t forget him and cement their friendship forever.

Of course, there’s a catch. Both Harrison’s and Linus’s parents use an app that tracks their movements. So they’re going to need someone to take their phones as a decoy to the places where they’d normally spend the day. They find an app and an old ipad to use in place of phones.

Harrison makes elaborate plans and sets his heart on making Ferris Day a grand success. Of course, it turns out that his plans start going awry from the very beginning. But could it be that the adventure turns out even better than he’d planned?

This is a refreshingly lovely story of friendship. Oh, and it made me resurrect my intention of visiting the Museum of African American History in Washington, DC, which I’d put aside when the pandemic started. I did enjoy the way the book is grounded in real places, even if I only recognized the DC ones.

rericthomas.com
PenguinTeen.com

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Review of Girls Like Her, by Melanie Sumrow

Girls Like Her

by Melanie Sumrow
read by January LaVoy

Clarion Books, 2024. 9 hours, 4 minutes.
Review written April 2, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review
2025 Odyssey Award Honor Audiobook

Wow. Odyssey Award Honorees are always worth listening to. Every time. This one had me riveted from the moment it started.

It starts off telling about a prominent citizen who’s been murdered. And that police have arrested a suspect. Then we meet the 15-year-old girl who killed him, already in juvenile hall for months, meeting with a new social worker before a hearing where the prosecution wants to have her tried as an adult.

The prosecution gets its way in that hearing, so Ruby is moved to a women’s jail. And she knows that if she doesn’t win her case, she will be in prison for life. The book uses multiple formats to tell the story – some news clippings (with a news show sound effect), some court transcripts from her trial, some notes from the social worker, some letters Ruby writes to a friend on the outside, but the bulk of the book is Ruby’s meetings with Cadence, the social worker, as she tries to get Ruby to open up and tell her story.

And it’s a hard story. Ruby was kicked out by her mother when she was 13. She fell in with someone she thought loved her (still thinking that in prison), but was sex trafficked by him. (I don’t think I’m giving too much away here. The reader/listener has the idea much sooner than Ruby does.) But we don’t find out what happened the day of the murder until the end of the book.

The production quality of this audiobook is excellent, with plenty of sound effects to give you cues about the different types of material used. The narrator’s voice adjusts to the different materials and speakers so much I thought there was more than one person reading until I looked it up at the end.

It’s a powerful story, but sad. The author has worked as a lawyer, so it all has the ring of truth, and she has listed some resources at the back. May our justice system do better for girls like her.

melaniesumrow.com

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Review of Scattered Showers, by Rainbow Rowell

Scattered Showers

by Rainbow Rowell

Wednesday Books, 2022. 282 pages.
Review written January 15, 2023, from a library book

Rainbow Rowell is exceptionally good at quirky romances.

And that’s what this book is full of — short stories featuring quirky romances. The stories are indeed short, but they pull you in and make you root for the couple, each with their own obstacles to romance.

My favorites were the ones at the beginning of the book, self-contained sweet stories. Later, she included characters from her books Fangirl, Attachments, and the Simon Snow trilogy. I probably would have enjoyed those more if I’d read the books.

The first story is about friends who are always together at midnight on New Year’s Eve — and simply tells what happens each successive midnight. Another story I enjoyed takes place in a college dorm, with a girl listening to breakup music over and over. The guy who lives underneath her starts giving her mixtapes of music he likes better, and it turns out she does, too.

What they all have in common is the stories are quirky and feel so individual they seem like there must be real people like this.

These stories made me smile.

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Sonderbooks25: Looking Back at Caravan, by Dorothy Gilman

Caravan

by Dorothy Gilman

Doubleday, 1992. 263 pages.
New Review written March 31, 2025, from my own copy.
Original review written January 19, 2002.

Oh dear. I am now embarrassed that Caravan, by Dorothy Gilman, has long been one of my all-time favorite books. It’s not that it didn’t hold up; it’s that my eyes have been opened to cultural stereotypes. And I’m a little bummed! Shout out, though, to Pam Margolis and the Cultural Competency Training that everyone involved with the Cybils Awards takes.
They opened my eyes.

Here’s the background. I’m running a series of posts I’m calling Sonderbooks25, celebrating my 25th year of posting Sonderbooks. As part of the celebration, I’m choosing one book from each year’s Sonderbooks Stand-outs to reread. In the case of my 2001 choice, The Sand-Reckoner, by Gillian Bradshaw, I wrote a new review and posted it in the newer format. (The first five years of Sonderbooks were posted in a different format and you won’t find them listed in the current indexes.)

I’m afraid I’m not going to do that for Caravan, because although I still love the book, and, wow, it stirs up all kinds of memories from who I was when I read it (I’d read it more than once before reviewing it in 2002.), I’m afraid with opened eyes, I’m not going to recommend it so heartily. So I will add this explanation to the top of the old review and leave it there for those who dig deeply into my website. And on this blog post.

The book is the story of Caressa Horvath, who’s sixteen years old when the story opens in 1911. No, let me revise that – the Caressa telling the story is old, at the end of her life, and revealing secrets especially for her granddaughter, but the tale she tells begins when she was sixteen.

Caressa grew up in a carnival, but her mother wanted her to be a lady, so she saved money and sent her to a school for young ladies in New England. But while she was a student, she picked the pocket of a rich gentleman who was well-traveled – and he caught her. He kept quiet about it, but took her under his wing and eventually married her, despite being twenty years older – to “protect” her. And he took her with him on an expedition to Africa, beginning in Tripoli.

After some time in Tripoli, where her husband made arrangements for their caravan and Caressa befriended her Muslim guide, who showed her around the city, they set off across the desert. They’ve paid off the Tuareg to cross. But before long, they’re confronted by a different group of Tuareg, and Caressa’s husband gets very indignant when they want payment – and the entire caravan ends up getting slaughtered – except for Caressa, who had been playing with her finger puppets to calm herself (one of which is named “Mr. Jappy”) – and they think she is doing magic, so they spare her life and take her with them.

So that’s where the cultural sensitivity becomes questionable. Caressa is much, much more culturally sensitive than her husband, seeing everyone she encounters as actual people. She goes on to live in the desert, among different desert peoples, facing different dangers, for three years. For most of that time, she has a friend and companion in a boy named Bakuli who learned basic English from Christian missionaries and calls himself a Jesus-boy. He was a slave of the Tuareg, but he is the one who warned Caressa that when one of the villagers is on their deathbed, that will be enough to convince them that her magic – which saved her from slaughter – is actually bad and she should be killed.

So Caressa and Bakuli escape together and have more adventures, with time living among different desert people. Later, they’re in a caravan again, and Caressa witnesses a man getting assassinated. She’s afraid the assassin will kill her, but instead when she’s sick from lack of water and the long road – he sells her into slavery. She convinces Bakuli to escape while she is still too sick to leave, and now she’s ready for a major part of the story.

All of that is far, far more riveting than it sounds in my brief summary. And the author makes individuals with names and personalities out of the people Caressa encounters and lives with. However, there are strong shades of the “Magical Negro” trope in the many spiritual encounters Caressa has along the way, finding there’s something behind the villagers’ beliefs. They are also portrayed as superstitious and sensitive to spirits – but Caressa senses the spirits, too, so maybe it’s not superstition? And the slaughtering, enslaving, and assassinating give the feeling that the “savages” stereotype isn’t too far under the surface.

Okay, but that’s a little vague and general. I don’t know what life was actually like at that time in Africa, and at least the author did enough research to know about the different people groups and languages and where they lived, and Caressa sees and names individual people.

But then came the part that made me blanch after “Me Too”:

Caressa had been enslaved, and they were taking her to a harem in Constantinople, when a stranger buys her. And the first thing he does is order her to take off her clothes (in Hausa), and he rapes her.

But Caressa’s mind is blown by the sex. “I was played on like an instrument, reaching sensations never dreamed of.”

Really? She’s just been sold as a slave, raped by the guy who bought her, she’s scared and alone, and you want me to believe that he’s so good at it that she enjoyed it?

When she says “Good heavens” after sex, he discovers that she speaks English and is shocked – her skin was dark by all the time in the sun. He is a Scotsman – who has the Sight, which is what led him to Caressa, though we don’t find that out right away.

She does confront him when he exclaims over her speaking English and asks who she is:

What does it matter to you who I am? You bought me for four gold pieces and now you’ve raped me and you’d have done it whether I was Tuareg, Hausa, Fulani or Arab, so why should it make any difference who I am, and I hope you speak enough English to understand that I think you a vulture – an ungulu – a monster and a bastard.

His answer comes in a hard even voice:

I speak and understand English and I paid four gold pieces for you for reasons I don’t care to mention just now, and I took you fast to put my brand on you because if you were a Tuargia you’d think ill of me if I didn’t, and be out of here by morning.

So, hold on, he’s saying that if she were Black it would have been okay???!

The next day, although she “could not help but dislike the manner of his ‘taking’ me,” she realizes that as a slave, she could have had it happen with a Targui or by the Turkish sultan. (Again, it’s okay, because he’s white???) And then she starts remembering those new sensations she’d experienced – and they have sex again, and from then on, he’s basically her one true love.

And now I am embarrassed how much I’ve loved this book.

Mind you, the twist in the ending is fantastic, and that’s what I’m left thinking about. I am a romantic at heart, so I did love their undying love once it got started – pulled together by the Sight! By Destiny! (Not simply the Magical Negro stereotype, but also the Magical Scotsman.) Caressa’s not in a traditional marriage, and it felt subversive to me as a young married evangelical to love this book anyway. But reading it this time, the manner of their meeting takes my concerns about cultural insensitivity and multiplies them.

And I still enjoyed rereading this book! But when I finished it, I had a bout of insomnia because I kept thinking about young newlywed Sondy who first read it and how that worked out (or rather, didn’t).

So – I still love the book, but that love is dampened in my skeptical old age, and I no longer feel I can wholeheartedly recommend it. But reading it was still a trip down memory lane and I’m excited about the rest of the revisiting I’m going to do for Sonderbooks25.