Review of Orris and Timble: Lost and Found, by Kate DiCamillo, illustrated by Carmen Mok

Orris and Timble

Lost and Found

by Kate DiCamillo
illustrated by Carmen Mok

Candlewick Press, 2025. 76 pages.
Review written June 5, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review

Here’s a second beginning chapter book about an old rat named Orris and a young owl named Timble, who are, surprisingly, friends. Like the first, it’s a sweet and gentle story.

Orris has gotten accustomed to visits from Timble every evening when they talk with each other and enjoy each other’s company. Orris tells a story every night, and Timble loves a line from a story:

“By the light of the stars, by the light of the moon, I will always return.”

But then, one night as the evening gets dark, Timble doesn’t come. And not the next night either.

Now, the subtitle of the book hints at what happened. But this precipitates a crisis for both friends, and ultimately they come to realize how much their friendship means to each of them.

And it’s all done with Carmen Mok’s gentle illustrations and leaves you feeling warm and cozy. Or perhaps adventurous and ready to fly away – but always to come back.

katedicamillo.com
candlewick.com

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Review of Ever Since, by Alena Bruzas

Ever Since

by Alena Bruzas

Rocky Pond Books (Penguin Random House), 2023. 277 pages.
Review written July 13, 2023, from a book sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review

This book isn’t exactly pleasant reading, but it is powerful, and it made me care deeply about characters I didn’t even like at first.

The book has a short Content Note at the front: “Please be advised that this book contains depictions of sexual assault, CSA, and suicidal ideation.” So that gives you an idea of what you’re in for.

But the book begins with five teenage girls, all good friends, who are happily looking forward to the summer. I like the first paragraph:

Once there were five princesses. No, I mean five witches. Actually, they were goddesses. Anyway, whatever they were, they were friends.

This opening foreshadows the senior project Virginia’s going to start thinking about this summer, looking into the story of Medea. Which echoes her own story.

The book begins with a road trip out to the coast. Virginia is our viewpoint character. Poppy and Thalia and Paz and Ro are the friends along with her, and there are plenty to meet them at the coast, including Thalia’s boyfriend Edison and Poppy’s boyfriend Rumi.

But something’s up with Virginia and Edison…. She thinks Thalia doesn’t know yet and maybe she can stop, but Edison calls her over away from the crowd….

And then the next day Poppy disappears. She doesn’t turn up for her job coaching soccer. She doesn’t answer calls or texts. Poppy’s house was the only place where Virginia felt safe at night. And then she starts getting close to Rumi. But she can’t betray Poppy, too. But it feels like Rumi actually sees her.

So by this time, I wasn’t crazy about Virginia. But as we see her go through the summer, we get strong hints that there’s something going on under the surface. And we begin to care deeply. And things build up and something with Rumi’s little sister triggers a whole lot of trauma – and I don’t want to say any more, because the author does a great job of weaving this story together so that the revelations aren’t exactly a surprise for what they are – but they’re definitely a surprise about who is involved. And it’s told in such a way that you come to better understand Virginia’s behavior all along – that since she was deprived of consent as a young child, she no longer really understands that she’s allowed to withhold consent. (And that’s a much more simplistic way of putting it than the book gives.)

Like I said, it’s not a pleasant book. But it has a wonderful, I-wish-it-weren’t-necessary message. And makes you care about this girl you might have condemned. So wow. Just read it already.

alenabruzas.com
PenguinTeen.com

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Review of To Hear the Forest Sing, by Margaret Dulaney

To Hear the Forest Sing

Some Musings on the Divine

by Margaret Dulaney

Listen Well Publishing, 2016. 229 pages.
Review written July 3, 2025, from my own copy, purchased via Amazon.com
Starred Review

I always seem to enjoy “Musings” and put a whole category for them on Sonderbooks. But when I’ve finished a book of musings, it’s usually hard to explain why I enjoyed reading them so much. The title of this book hints that there will be plenty about nature, and the subtitle hints that there will be thoughts about faith and about God.

As usual, I think I’ll fall back on giving you a few quotations to give you the flavor. In this book, the essays were originally broadcast on a spoken word website, so each one is separate. But they do present a unified, thoughtful voice.

Here’s a part from the Prologue explaining the title:

Every early teacher who had me in her class – and most of them were very kind and patient – wrote the same comment on my twice-yearly reports: “Margaret is a well-meaning girl, but her head is always out the window.”

“Oh, but it makes so much more sense out there!” I would answer in retrospect now, if I could, “Trees don’t confuse, birds don’t baffle. Give me simple, clear things to learn like the roll of the hills, the turning of the seasons, and I will be as learned as the rest of them. Give me a field, a patch of woodland to read and I will unlock the wisdom of the ages, break the shackles of ignorance! Of course my head is out the window! You have to be in the woods to hear the forest sing!”

I loved this part about making art (both music and writing):

It’s love that propels us to create, not cynicism.

After many years of wrestling with my own frustrations, I have concluded that our gifts are just that, they are gifts. We might possess the power to postpone their use, try and hide from them, but I suspect we only manage to shade ourselves for a time from the intensity of our passions. This love of ours still shines brightly all around, and waits for us with the focused attention of a beloved dog. When we finally step out from under the protection of our denial, our loves will leap and bark and joyously circle us, too long neglected, racing forward and dashing back to us, hurrying us along on our illuminated path….

Perhaps all that this day really requires of us is to step out from under the cover of our resistance, step out and into the warmth of our loves. To say, today I will do this because I love it. I will write what I love, sing what I love, listen to what I love, read what I love, practice what I love, speak what I love.

I will love what there is to love today, and leave the details to a wiser hand.

And here’s a bit about giving and receiving advice.

As I age, I am more drawn to those who speak honestly to me. No matter how bitter the pill, no matter how long it takes to work, I do want this medicine. Give me your truth and allow me to determine whether it is the right remedy for me. Time will reveal its efficacy.

I would rather hear a truth from a friend, and adjust my behavior accordingly, than meet the reactions of cold consequence which could be much more harsh.

Maybe it’s time to turn that old line from the prayer book around to read, “Speak now and try never to hold your peace.” Speak if you must, absolutely. Speak and then step back. Give room. They are God’s to teach, God’s to hold, God’s to heal.

And yes, God is mentioned in this book. I also love this one:

This has me thinking that I might have discovered my next daily prayer. Dear God, please disabuse me of my calcified notions of how you work in this world. Surprise me, please.

Please don’t ever let me think that I am finished.

That should give you an idea of what you’ll find in this book. I enjoyed musing with Margaret Dulaney.

listenwell.org

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Review of This Book Won’t Burn, by Samira Ahmed

This Book Won’t Burn

by Samira Ahmed
read by Kausar Mohammed

Hachette Audio, 2024. 10 hours, 23 minutes.
Review written July 29, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

I loved this audiobook so much! I’d been meaning to read it pretty much since it came out, so when it accumulated enough NotifyMe tags in Libby to order for the library, I placed a hold – and I was completely charmed. (Yes, it’s gotten to where I am more likely to read audiobooks than print books. This is a drastic change.)

It’s the story of Noor Khan, a senior in high school. She’s just gotten an acceptance to the University of Chicago, close to home. The book begins on the day her life fell apart, when her father left their family – including her mother and younger sister. He left the house and never came back. Later, they found a note in his briefcase saying he couldn’t do this any more. Noor even references Vikki Stark’s work on Runaway Husbands, so I related to that part all too much, but Noor was somewhat resentful that the website focuses on the wives who get left suddenly – when it also includes the children.

A few months later, Noor is facing the last quarter of her senior year at a new school in small-town Illinois, where her mother moved them to give them all a new start. Noor’s not happy about that.

But she does make friends quickly. The one Desi guy in the school volunteered to give her a tour, and she quickly makes friends with his lesbian friend. And then a cute white boy makes overtures.

However, when Noor gets to the library, she sees the librarian pulling books off the shelves because of a new school board policy that one challenge from the public gets books removed until they can be “reviewed.” The next day, Noor wears an “I Read Banned Books” t-shirt, which gets her called into the principal’s office.

When some of the books being banned show up in Noor’s locker, she decides to read them aloud in the park across the street during lunch. But then the principal retaliates by taking the privilege of going off campus for lunch away from juniors and seniors, letting everyone know she’s to blame.

Meanwhile, Noor’s mother, who together with her father taught Noor that silence is defeat, is upset with Noor for making waves in their new town. And she’s confused about her feelings for the two guys in her life. As Noor stands up for the freedom to read, she gets more and more pushback and even violence.

As a librarian, I found this book completely realistic and completely timely. The situations were pulled directly from current headlines. Yay for standing up for free speech and our Constitutional rights! I also appreciated the call-out of many excellent books that are widely banned by groups such as Moms for Liberty. (The book called them “Liberty Moms,” but I know the real-life group.) It showed their hypocrisy in trying to “protect” kids from books by excluding books by diverse authors.

So the cause, of course is wonderful. But the story was wonderful, too. I related to Noor’s pain from being abandoned by her father, her difficulties in her relationship with her mom, and enjoyed reading about her setbacks and triumphs with her new friends. This one doesn’t even have an kisses, but there are a couple of sweet romances going on, and the conflict between Noor’s head and heart at times was portrayed in a completely relatable way. Listening to this book had me smiling all day.

samiraahmed.com

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Review of A Line Can Go Anywhere, written by Caroline McAlister, illustrated by Jamie Green

A Line Can Go Anywhere

The Brilliant, Resilient Life of Artist Ruth Asawa

written by Caroline McAlister
illustrated by Jamie Green

Roaring Brook Press, 2025. 40 pages.
Review written June 6, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review

I love the way my job at the library brings me into contact with beautiful picture book biographies of people I never would have known about otherwise. A Line Can Go Anywhere is about the American sculptor and artist Ruth Asawa. She is best known for her sculptures made from wire looped and intertwined into lovely shapes.

And author Caroline McAlister takes the idea of those long lines of wires turned into form and applies it to the artist’s life.

When Ruth was a child, there was an invisible line between her home life, where she spoke Japanese and had food and customs from Japan, and her school life in an American elementary school. Then Japan attacked Pearl Harbor – and her father was arrested, and Ruth and her mother and six siblings were imprisoned first at a racetrack, and then at a Relocation Center in Arkansas. But some skilled artists taught the children at the racetrack – and Ruth began sketching the lines around her.

She was allowed to leave to attend college to become an art teacher – but they refused to place her in a school. So she went on to a more open college in North Carolina, and learned to truly express herself in art.

I like this page that explains how she began her distinctive art from wires:

Then on a summer trip to Mexico, Ruth watched women carry eggs in woven wire baskets. She liked that the baskets were sturdy, strong, and practical, but also beautiful, patterned, and transparent. This was art made by ordinary people, used in their everyday lives. It didn’t hang on museum walls.

She thought back to the barbed wire that had kept her imprisoned at the Arkansas camp. Now as the world moved on from war, she found freedom in twisting wire into cells that divided and multiplied. A single strand of ordinary wire became a continuous piece with no beginning or end. She demonstrated that a line could go anywhere, be anything. A line could stretch into infinity.

The book goes on to talk about some public art she made and about how she continued to express herself. The back matter gives more details and includes of a photo of the artist with her wire art.

An interesting, informative, and inspirational story.

carolinemcalisterauthor.com
jamiegreenillustration.com

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Review of Daughters of Shandong, by Eve J. Chung

Daughters of Shandong

by Eve J. Chung
read by Yu-Li Alice Shen

Books on Tape, 2024. 11 hours, 7 minutes.
Review written July 3, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

Daughters of Shandong tells the harrowing tale of a mother and her daughters caught in the crossfire of the Communist Revolution in China after World War II.

Hai, the oldest daughter, tells how her mother’s life was difficult even before the Communists. Because she hadn’t borne any daughters to her husband, the honored son of a wealthy land-owning family, her mother-in-law made her life miserable, working her from dawn to dusk and forcing her to kneel for hours as punishment for her many imagined failings. So when they get warning that the Communists are coming, Hai’s mother and sisters are left behind, supposedly to protect the land, but with no way to do so.

Since her father and grandfather are not there for the Communists’ renunciation, Hai must take their punishment and almost dies after the ordeal. So her mother leads them to Qingdao, where they learn their family has already fled to Taiwan. For them to follow is tremendously difficult, needing connections and ingenuity. They live as refugees in Qingdao and then Hong Kong before finding a way to Taiwan, and all along the way, they learn that things can get even worse than they had imagined – and then even worse than that.

So it’s not an easy tale to listen to. But the author based it on the life of her grandmother, doing tremendous research to fill in the gaps, and overall telling a story of rising against incredible odds. In the end, she shows that yes, even daughters are people of incredible worth, capable of amazing accomplishments.

evejchung.com

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Review of Doodles from the Boogie Down, by Stephanie Rodriguez

Doodles from the Boogie Down

by Stephanie Rodriguez

Kokila, 2023. 204 pages.
Review written June 28, 2023, from a library book.

This graphic novel is reportedly not exactly an autobiography, but tells about an eighth-grader named Stephanie who lives in the Bronx and wants to go to a high school for the Arts in Manhattan rather than continuing in Catholic school, as her mother wants her to.

Trying to talk with her mother about it when she got the idea didn’t go far. So Steph does some lying to get to work with the art teacher on her portfolio.

Meanwhile, she’s having adventures learning more about art, enjoying activities with her friends, and navigating middle school. But what will happen when her mother finds out about her schemes?

I still think that graphic novels are the perfect form for middle school memoirs. The author says this isn’t quite a memoir, but it does come with all the emotion of living it.

stephguez.com
Penguin.com/kids

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Review of John the Skeleton, by Triinu Laan, illustrated by Marja-Liisa Plats

John the Skeleton

by Triinu Laan
illustrated by Marja-Liisa Plats
translated from the Estonian by Adam Cullen

Restless Books, 2024. First published in Estonia in 2020. 58 pages.
Review written July 3, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review
2025 Mildred L. Batchelder Award Winner

John the Skeleton is in picture book format, but it was originally published in Estonia, and is for older readers than a typical American picture book. I’d say it’s for Kindergarten to second grade kids having it read to them, though the lucky person reading it to them will be charmed, too.

I’ll be honest – I was completely put off by the cover picture of snails crawling on a skeleton and hadn’t ordered it for our library system until it won the Batchelder Award for a book in translation. I put a note to show it to me and decided to put it with the JFIC books instead of the picture books, since it’s got more words on a page than a typical picture book. But looking at the book convinced me I had to read it more closely, so I placed a hold on it and finally got to give it a proper reading.

And what a delight it is! John is a skeleton used in a classroom (not a real human skeleton, but constructed as a teaching tool). But after John got a few broken bones, the teacher let him retire after long years of service – and he retired to a cottage with Grams and Gramps deep in the woods.

The book simply tells of their adventures together. Gramps dresses John nicely and John helps scare off robbers. He plays with their grandchildren and goes with the family to hear the lake sing, among many other charming stories about John the Skeleton’s simple life with Grams and Gramps. The book ends with a poignant note, but we are assured that John is still bringing Gramps comfort and companionship.

And the note at the back tells us the story is based on a real bone man who retired from a school.

An ordinary Estonian’s dream is to live in a house where their closest neighbors are at least half a kilometer away. When John got the chance to retire and live on a farm in Vörumaa, which is one of the farthest corners of the country, his dream came true.

Trust me. This is another one you should read for yourself. I think you will be charmed.

restlessbooks.org

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Review of Graciela in the Abyss, by Meg Medina

Graciela in the Abyss

by Meg Medina
illustrated by Anna and Elena Balbusso

Candlewick Press, 2025. 236 pages.
Review written July 22, 2025, from my own copy, given to me at ALA Annual Conference and signed to me by the author.
Starred Review

First, I am a huge Meg Medina fan – and am privileged to think of her as a friend. When she saw me in line to get the book signed, she greeted me by name and gave me a big hug! How did this happen? Meg was the winner the year I was on the Newbery Selection Committee, and I was privileged to be part of the group that changed her life – and it couldn’t have happened to a nicer and more deserving person!

So of course there is no surprise that I love this book. Let me tell you what I love about it.

First, it’s in a stunningly beautiful package. It’s a middle-grade novel, but it’s illustrated. There are full-page illustrations periodically throughout the book as well as chapter heading decorations. And underneath the beautiful paper cover is a gorgeous illustration on the case of the book.

The story itself is a unique fantasy tale about water spirits. The book begins in the Prologue with Graciela’s death! (This is a surprise in a children’s book.) She fell into the sea when she ignored her older sister’s cautions. But in chapter one, she wakes up a hundred years later as a sea spirit. And she has a loving guide named Amina who helps her learn the ways of the sea. She becomes a glazier who polishes sea glass, so people find wonderful treasures on the shore.

However, not all sea spirits are good. There are Needlers in the deep who make trouble for everyone. And there are places that are dangerous for a sea spirit who hasn’t mastered her new powers yet. When she died, Graciela didn’t lose her tendency to go where she wants to go despite the warnings of others.

Our other main character is Jorge, a boy who lives in the village on the shore with his family of blacksmiths. He wants to make toys, but his parents say that’s a waste of time. When he finds an eerie harpoon his ancestor fashioned to slay sea spirits and steal the pearls of their teeth – Jorge wants to destroy it, but that’s not easily done, and his parents want to use it as designed.

The two threads end up coming together, and Graciela and Jorge need to work together to protect the sea and make things right.

The undersea world Meg Medina has created is beautiful and mysterious. I love how different this book is from the many other children’s fantasy novels I’ve read. Though there is some death, and Jorge has horrible parents, this is a gentle fantasy that would make a wonderful read-aloud for an upper elementary school classroom.

megmedina.com
candlewick.com

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Review of Catfish Rolling, by Clara Kumagai, read by Susan Momoko-Hingley

Catfish Rolling

by Clara Kumagai
read by Susan Momoko-Hingley

Clipper Audiobooks, 2023. 9 hours, 17 minutes.
Review written October 19, 2023, from a library eaudiobook

Catfish Rolling is an intriguing speculative fiction debut novel set in Japan after a series of earthquakes that also were timequakes.

Sora and her parents were visiting family in Japan from Vancouver when the first timequake hit years ago. They lost her mother in one of the zones where time was faster or slower and stayed in Japan to try to find her. Sora’s father is a scientist and made his career out of studying the time anomalies, but now he often seems confused, and traveling into the time-disrupted zones can’t be good for him.

That doesn’t stop Sora from traveling there herself to keep looking for her mother. Can people survive there? Sometimes she sees shadows. After graduating from high school, she sticks around their village to watch over her father but also to keep searching herself. She’s better than anyone at feeling the difference in the rate of time flow in the zones, and starts a black market business of taking people into the zones.

Now, I got hung up on some of the details occasionally. Seasons are caused by the tilt of the earth’s axis. So how could there be a zone on the same planet where in one place it’s Spring while nearby it’s Winter? They’re all on the same planet.

But Clara Kumagai’s skill was such that most of the time I could suspend my disbelief as Sora and her father took a scientific approach to the zones, trying to learn how they worked. They approached it as a serious scientific phenomenon, so as a reader it was easy to go along with that.

This book was engaging and fascinating, looked at as a dangerous scientific phenomenon that was hard to understand. So it’s a speculative fiction book about dealing with the unknown, but all bound up in grief and risk. I am looking forward to seeing more from this author.

clarakumagai.com

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