Review of Ferris, by Kate DiCamillo

Ferris

by Kate DiCamillo
read by Cherry Jones

Listening Library, 2024. 4 hours, 6 minutes.
Review written May 22, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.

You can’t go wrong with a Kate DiCamillo book. This one didn’t charm me as much as her recently published beginning chapter book, Orris and Timble, but it would be a wonderful book for a younger kid who’s ready for a true children’s novel.

In classic Kate DiCamillo fashion, we’ve got a set of quirky characters interacting in fun ways, where a small detail from the beginning of the story becomes crucial later in the story, and all the threads weave together by the end.

Of course the featured character is Ferris, a girl who’s just finished fourth grade and who was born under the Ferris wheel at the county fair. Her beloved grandmother is ailing and sees a ghost who wants them to light for the first time the chandelier in the dining room of their old house. Ferris’s uncle Ted lives in the basement, having separated from his wife Shirley, and endeavoring to paint the history of the world without much progress. Ferris’s father reads the encyclopedia for fun and insists there are raccoons in their attic. And Ferris’s sister dreams of getting her picture on a Wanted poster and takes steps to make that happen. Then there’s Ferris’s best friend, a piano player, and their teacher Mrs. Milk, who taught them wonderful vocabulary words, but is now bereft.

All of this adds up to a sweet story with lots of character and lots of heart, proving the wise saying that all good stories are love stories.

katedicamillo.com

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Review of Wingbearer, by Marjorie Liu and Teny Issakhanian

Wingbearer

by Marjorie Liu
illustrated by Teny Issakhanian

Quill Tree Books, 2022. 204 pages.
Review written May 23, 2022, from a library book
Starred Review

This is the first volume in a new graphic novel series. I was captivated, my only disappointment being that the story only begins in this volume, finishing with new questions and no resolution at all.

The book pulls you into a magical world right from the outset. The beautiful paintings are like looking at a skillfully animated movie. (I was not surprised to learn at the back that the illustrator indeed has a background with Disney and Dreamworks.)

Here’s the text on the first page, highlighted to indicate a kind of voiceover effect:

I don’t know how it began. That’s the truth, I promise.

The wings tell me that birds have always been immortal. That their spirits live forever, returning to this tree to be reborn. And I ask them, “Well, what about the rest of us?”

They have no answer.

But I think that if birds have a tree, then so must every other creature. And when we die, our souls travel to that place where we rest, just like birds, until we are reborn.

Unless of course, someone — or something — gets in the way.

Zuli is a little girl who lives in the Great Tree — a tree with roots down to the heart of the earth, where souls of birds come when they die and are soon reborn and sent on. Zuli doesn’t know how she got there.

But then the souls stop coming to the tree, and Zuli decides to go out in the world to find out what’s wrong and save them, accompanied by an owl companion.

The journey out in the big world is perilous. Zuli meets some companions and also seems to be hunted by a witch queen. She does learn that something is happening to the birds in the north, so that’s the direction she wants to travel. She also learns things about herself and that some beings were watching for her. Can she learn who her people are and why she was left as a baby in the Great Tree? And of course, can she save the souls of the birds from whatever is stopping them from being reborn?

None of these questions are answered in this volume, but I love the lavish art and Zuli’s kind spirit. I also love that even though this is some other world not at all like earth with goblins and dragons and griffins, Zuli is portrayed as a beautiful girl with black skin. Why shouldn’t she represent a generic human in this fantasy world?

The book takes less than an hour to read and the story isn’t finished, but the art is so lavish, I can forgive them for not waiting until the entire story is complete to publish part of it. I’m looking forward to reading more.

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*Note* To try to catch up on posting reviews, I’m posting the oldest reviews I’ve written on my blog without making a page on my main website. They’re still good books.

Review of A Journey of Sea and Stone, by Tracy Balzer

A Journey of Sea and Stone

How Holy Places Guide and Renew Us

by Tracy Balzer

Broadleaf Books, 2021. 228 pages.
Review written June 26, 2024, from my own copy purchased via Amazon.com
Starred Review

A Journey of Sea and Stone includes thoughts and meditations on spiritual direction – taken from the author’s experience guiding people on retreats on the Isle of Iona.

Now, I’ve been on Iona, and somehow when a friend proposed an exercise of visualizing where I want to be in ten years, I came up with the thought that future Sondy would be booking her annual personal spiritual retreat on the Isle of Iona. The spiritual retreat part being annual, the Isle of Iona part being special. I still hope it will happen – and meanwhile, this book let me do that in spirit, if not in person.

I read it slowly, a short section at a time. But it’s full of inspirational thoughts about sacred places and how the holy fits into our lives. Each chapter ends with Questions for Spiritual Direction. As an example, here are the questions at the end of the first chapter:

1. Where are the sacred places in your life? How have they changed you?

2. If you were to be honest with God about the deepest longings of your heart, what would they be? What is keeping you from admitting them?

3. When have you experienced kairos? Is there something in your life that creates an obstacle to kairos?

Even though it was a very different place than Iona, I took this book with me on my 60th birthday trip back to Germany and finished it there. I like the author’s way of raising thoughts and asking questions. She gets you thinking about how the holy touches your life.

tracybalzer.com

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Review of Out of the Shadows, by Fiona Robinson

Out of the Shadows

How Lotte Reiniger Made the First Animated Fairytale Movie

by Fiona Robinson

Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2022. 44 pages.
Review written May 4, 2022, from a library book
Starred Review

This exquisitely illustrated book tells a story I’d known nothing about and fascinated me all along the way. It’s a picture book biography of the young woman who pioneered techniques in animation and made the first full length animated movie.

The book starts with Lotte’s love for fairy tales and her discovery of Chinese puppets, jointed puppets controlled with sticks. Next, Lotte learned at school the traditional craft of Scherenschnitte, cutting paper to make intricate character outlines. Then she combined the two techniques, making characters from paper and turning them into jointed puppets. All while she was still a child.

As an older teen, Lotte got to go to acting school where she met a German moviemaker. Movies were still silent in those days, with intertitles between scenes to give dialog and live orchestras playing while the movies played.

I love the spread that describes why she got a chance to try her puppet techniques in animating movies. It was for a movie about the Pied Piper of Hamelin. They brought rats to the street where they were filming and set them loose.

The rats didn’t magically follow Wegener. They disappeared into the town, plaguing the townsfolk.

Next, the crew tried guinea pigs, painted gray with tails attached. A gunshot was fired into the air. The camera whirred. The guinea pigs were released. Wegener turned to see the little creatures in the middle of the street, chewing their fake tales off.

So Lotte got the chance to create her first animation. She used stop motion animation, giving the crew big baskets of wooden rats. They moved them little by little and photographed each step. It took all day, but when they combined the pictures of the rats with the pied piper, it worked perfectly. The movie was a hit!

The book talks more about how Lotte did her work, using a special table to film animations done with cut paper, and then the new improved table she invented herself to give more depth to the animation. It all builds up to a full-length movie they weren’t sure people would be able to sit through — and then had to have police manage the crowds. I like the story included that Lotte noticed smoke that the audience thought was a special effect and successfully stopped a fire by discovering the source.

The Adventures of Prince Achmed took its place in film history as the first full-length fairytale movie. It is also considered the oldest surviving full-length animation. For a young woman in 1926, this is a remarkable, almost unbelievable achievement. But all of this is true, and absolutely not a fairy story!

And if Lotte’s story weren’t fascinating enough, the wonderful illustrations accompany the text in perfect harmony. There’s generous use of silhouettes, mimicking the cut-paper characters from her work, but there’s plenty of variety. Sometimes words show as if on a reel of film and titles between sections look like the intertitles from silent movies. The back matter tells the reader more about Lotte’s amazing life.

This is a truly stellar picture book biography that I didn’t even know I needed.

abramsbooks.com

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ALA Annual Conference 2024 – Day 4

My final day at ALA Annual Conference began by checking out of my hotel and storing my luggage – so I ended up being late to the ALSC Awards and Breakfast and got to the front of the line right after they ran out of food. Oh well! A neighbor did split a bagel with me.

But the ALSC Awards were lovely, as always. The winners gave short speeches, so I only have brief notes, but let me share a little bit of that.

Here are Nicholas Day and illustrator Brett Helquist receiving the Sibert Medal for The Mona Lisa Vanishes:

Brett Helquist talked about getting his artistic education in the library reference section, looking at the art books and a book called Anyone Can Draw. He never did stump the New York Public Library librarians when looking for a picture reference.

Nicholas Day began the book in 2020 and says, “Paris is a good place to visit in your head.” He also commented that “vital” is what people say before they underfund you. And we lead people to fiction through fact.

The wonderful book Houses with a Story, by Seiji Yoshida, won the Batchelder Award for best book in translation. This award is given to the publisher, so a representative of Abrams Books spoke:

This book demonstrates the breadth and depth of translated books. How to describe it? Each house tells its story but invites the reader to fill in the blanks. Imagination and reams are universal. Invites us to travel to places in our imaginations.

Corey R. Tabor was the Geisel Award winner, for Fox Has a Problem.

Beginning Readers deserve great books, too. Early readers are the most joyful.

The program finished off with the award for Excellence in Early Learning Digital Media, with these enthusiastic creators:

After the ALSC awards, I headed to the Exhibit Hall, and attended a couple sessions at the Book Buzz theater to hear about books I’ll surely be ordering for our library system.

Walking around the exhibits, I ran into John Schu, author of Louder Than Hunger.

I’d talked with John the night before, and felt like I’d slighted him by taking a picture with Jason Reynolds, but not with him! Before becoming an author, John was a librarian, and I’d become familiar with him from comments on the Heavy Medal Newbery blog, then served on an ALSC committee with him and got in the habit of talking with him at conferences. He’s a kind person who has that Mr. Rogers quality of talking with and seeing the person in front of him, and I’m happy to be his friend, however peripherally. Just such a kind person.

The next session I took notes about was “Feeling Supernatural: Breathtaking Worlds in Young Adult Literature,” featuring Lamar Giles, Amanda Glaze, Courtney Gould, and Leia Stone. Some highlights:

Q: How do you define supernatural?
LG – Breaking rules of reality.
AG – Past secret having power over us today.
CG – Predominantly based in reality, with speculative elements to increase stakes.
LS – At the start you think she’s human with no power – then magic surprises you.

Q: How do you decide what to keep close to reality?
LG – Like it to follow the rising action of the plot – get more supernatural as action rises.
AG – Love when magic hides in plain sight. If you squint, you might see it.
CG – Hers are close to contemporary with supernatural elements added. Monsters emphasize their underlying fears.
LS – Main character cursed to feel pain when touched – based on fibromyalgia.

Q: What are the rules that bind your antagonists?
LS – Tries not to write herself into a corner, so not too many rules.
CG – Simple but effective: What does the character need to learn? Also must be able to overcome the antagonist.
AG – Also in tandem with what the character needs.
LG – A Faustian element – a businessman who deals in the supernatural. How do you trip up a bad businessman?

Q: All your books include suspense. Do you plan it out in advance?
LG – A lot of it is trial and error and comes out in the rewrite.
AG – First draft is you telling yourself the story. Revision is for the reader. Outside readers help.
CG – Has an idea of the Twist when she starts: it’s a twisting-the-knife moment – but it changes by the time she gets there.
LS – She’s a pantser. She guards her writing time and writes it and it comes to her.

Q: History or legends? Research?
LS – Got into fantasy because you don’t need research. She only writes about places she’s been to.
CG – Did research on wilderness survival. Monster research – different kinds of cryptids.
AG – Her books are inspired by something that happened in history. This book – Winchester Mystery House – houses the spirits of the victims of rifles. Folks who worked there gave her lots of info. When she gets stuck, she goes back to the research.
LG – Based in history – Guy with a deal with the devil for music plus desegregation and a school that closed.

Q: Advice on writing heavy topics for a YA Audience?
LG – When writing about grief, approach it honestly.
AG – She doesn’t hold back. “You can always close a book.”
CG – Never wants to act like she’s teaching teens a lesson. Didn’t pull any punches writing about the troubled teen industry.
LS – Teens go through all the things adults go through. Teens just want to feel normal!

After that event, it was time to head a couple of hotels away to a ticketed event, the Author Gala Tea. This event features adult authors, but you get some nice in-depth speeches from each author. (I didn’t get great pictures in the big hall, but here are some.)

First up was Chloe Gong, with a new book coming out called Vilest Things. She wrote her first adult book when she turned 21, while isolated during Covid. It’s Antony & Cleopatra meets The Hunger Games.

Her protagonists are all on different sides. Not a romantasy, but the original toxic situation. This is the middle book of a trilogy.

Everything she writes is for her younger self – who only read library books.

Next was Tom Ryan, author of The Treasure Hunters Club, set in Nova Scotia.

A librarian pointed him from Lois Duncan to Agatha Christie and hooked him on mysteries. Bring a group of interesting characters together in a great setting and start killing them off.

Another book from the childhood librarian was called Blue Nose Ghosts about ghosts of Nova Scotia. Those tales get in the book, too. This librarian emails him after every book about how proud she is.

The next speaker was Lev A.C. Rosen, author of Rough Pages:

This book is the third in a series. His book Jack of Hearts was the 23rd most challenged book in the U.S.

Books can change us. They help us see the humanity in people. Reclam our identity. They heal us.

Rough Pages talks about when sending gay books through the mail was a federal crime, but there were folks who operated a queer book service. In the early 1950s, these publishers went under. In 1953, the ALA came out with its Freedom to Read statement. People were banning books left and right.

This is a book about stories – who gets to read them and who gets to tell them.

These things come in cycles. We’ve gotten through this before.

Next up was Justinian Huang, author of The Emperor and the Endless Palace

When he first came out to his dad, he was told that Asian people can’t be gay. This romantic thriller defies that, spanning 2000 years. It’s about a couple reincarnating, always destined to be doomed lovers. The true story it’s based on proved that gay Chinese people go back thousands of years.

The next speaker, Anna Montague, had the book with my favorite title: How Does That Make You Feel, Magda Eklund?

When I showed her my nametag in the signing line, she was so excited, she wanted a picture with me!

Her book is about a road trip with an urn of ashes.

It all started because her therapist broke up with her in 2020. Then her elderly friends got her thinking about the golden periods of our lives.

Magda’s best friend dies unexpectedly. She is given her friend’s correspondence and the urn of her ashes. It’s a meditation on female friendship. It’s also about grief – and the absurdity inherent in it.

Chris Whitaker spoke next, author of All the Colors of the Dark

He regaled us with stories of his life. He started going to libraries when he was 8 or 9 and his parents divorced. A man his mother dated broke his arm one night when he was ten. He later got stabbed on the street. Had PTSD and got a self-help book from the library. He told about starting at a stock trading company and owing them a million dollars but not how he managed to pay that off!

He quit his job to become a writer. Then ended up working 3 jobs. But it all changed when one of his books became a bestseller.

The final speaker was Katy Hayes, author of Saltwater.

Libraries are airports where you can fly anywhere for free. She went to her local library because it had air conditioning – but it also offered her a portal to a larger world.

In suspense fiction, the atmosphere sets the tone. This book is set on the island of Capri. In the early 1990s, there was a death. Then 30 years later, it happens again. It’s an island full of illusion, obsessed with appearances. There are three dead bodies in this book, which has to be a win, right?

It’s about a family who has everything and the women who will stop at nothing to escape them.

Can we believe what we see? All mysteries and suspense novels are magic tricks.

And that’s it – the last of my notes from ALA Annual Conference 2024. I hoped you enjoyed this taste of the conference!

Review of Thirsty, by Jas Hammonds

Thirsty

by Jas Hammonds
read by Alaska Jackson

Macmillan Young Listeners, 2024. 8 hours, 10 minutes.
Review written June 25, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

You love to see it when a debut author wins an award for their first novel (in this case, the John Steptoe Award for New Talent for We Deserve Monuments) and then goes on to write a second book that’s even better. For both books, Jas Hammonds has shown great skill in creating characters, but this one found its way deeper into my heart.

In the summer after high school, Blake and her beautiful girlfriend Ella want nothing more than to get into the secret Serena Society for accomplished Black women. Ella’s mother is even still the advisor for undergraduates in the society, so she’s a sure thing. But Blake doesn’t have the connections, the clout, or the money of Ella’s family.

But Blake finds that she can be the life of the party – and impress the president of the Serena Society – when she drinks. She transforms into Big, Bad Bee, and she’s not afraid to be somebody.

When her best friend expresses concern about Blake’s drinking, her reaction is anger and defensiveness. But as the pledging process gets more intense, Blake ends up having a lot to grapple with.

I didn’t see myself in Blake. I went to a Christian high school and college and, believe it or not, we didn’t drink at parties. But Jas Hammonds skillfully pulls us into Blake’s perspective and we’re completely with her, understanding her pull to alcohol and her need to impress the richer kids around her. The author paints a picture of addiction that is sympathetic to Blake’s plight rather than condemning her. And not to give anything away, but I do like the way it resolves, both realistic and hopeful.

jashammonds.com

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Review of Rainbow the Koala, by Remy Lai

Surviving the Wild

Rainbow the Koala

by Remy Lai

Henry Holt and Company, 2022. 108 pages.
Review written May 4, 2022, from a library book

This is part of a new graphic novel series fictionalizing the lives of baby animals in actual situations of environmental danger.

Rainbow the Koala is, no surprise, almost unbearably cute. It features a tiny baby koala still living in his mother’s pouch. (Did you know koalas are marsupials like kangaroos?) As Rainbow grows up, he learns from his mother to always climb trees when in danger.

Before long, she sends him out on his own. He has trouble finding water because the forest is drier than ever. He has some encounters with humans in his efforts to survive.

But then a terrible wildfire strikes. Rainbow does what he was taught and climbs as high as he can. Amazingly, he survives — and this story is based on the story of a little koala found high in a eucalyptus tree after the fires of 2019-20 in Australia.

There’s another book in this series, Star the Elephant that tells about a little elephant whose home is threatened by deforestation. The graphic novels are easy for young readers to understand, and oh my goodness, these books are cute.

remylai.com
mackids.com

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Review of Why Longfellow Lied, by Jeff Lantos

Why Longfellow Lied

The Truth About Paul Revere’s Midnight Ride

by Jeff Lantos

Charlesbridge, 2021. 134 pages.
Review written January 7, 2022, from a library book
Starred Review

My plan was to read this book a little bit at a time, but once I started, it was hard to stop! It takes Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride” stanza by stanza and tells us what really happened on that fateful night that the Revolutionary War began.

But Longfellow made it a poem about one hero, Paul Revere, when actually a long list of people were involved in warning the colonists. So the author also looks at the question of why Longfellow took so much poetic license? What was he trying to accomplish with this poem? (Hint: It was written just before the Civil War began.)

Now, kids today may not be familiar with the famous poem. The author takes care of that by printing it at the front of the book. And the words do have a ring to them. Then he takes the poem a little at a time and tells us what actually happened that night, from revealing the actual mastermind behind the mission to telling us about Paul Revere’s capture before he ever got to Concord.

It turns out that was a momentous and exciting night in American history. The book is filled with plenty of paintings, maps, sidebars, engravings, photographs, and other artefacts. I now have a much better understanding of April 18-19, 1775, than I ever got in History class. Super interesting and informative. And it will help kids think critically about history.

charlesbridge.com

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Review of Abdul’s Story, by Jamilah Thompkins-Bigelow, illustrated by Tiffany Rose

Abdul’s Story

by Jamilah Thompkins-Bigelow

illustrated by Tiffany Rose

Salaam Reads (Simon & Schuster), 2022. 36 pages.
Review written April 20, 2022, from a library book

I usually don’t choose to review picture books that were clearly written to tell a message, but this one came with a story that warmed my heart.

Abdul is a kid who loves to tell stories. But he has trouble trying to write them down. His letters don’t like to stay in straight lines, and sometimes they get turned around. He ends up erasing so much, his pages look like a big smudge. Plus, the stories he reads in books don’t sound much like the stories he tells. He decided his stories aren’t meant to be written down.

But then an author came to his school named Mr. Muhammad. He looked a lot like Abdul. And he read a story about a community that sounds a lot like Abdul’s.

But when Mr. Muhammad encouraged the children to write, Abdul erased so much, trying to make it look right, that he tore a hole in the paper with his eraser.

A moment of truth comes when Mr. Muhammad shows Abdul his own notebook — messy as can be, with nothing in straight lines.

Mr. Mohammed encourages Abdul to fill a messy page without erasing and then look for a story inside it. I like this description of the process:

Over the next few days, Abdul rewrote a less messy mess, then an even less messy mess. He smiled when he read his story to himself.

Abdul still has lots of doubt when it’s time to turn the story in, because he knows there are still mistakes.

But when the writer comes back, he likes Abdul’s story so much, he reads it to the class.

I love the way the book ends, as this is where it won my heart:

When they returned to their writing, Abdul whispered to Mr. Muhammad, “What about my mistakes?”

“Writers make mistakes. We’ll work on them.”

As they worked, Abdul thought:
Some people are writers, and I am one of them.

Yes, it’s a message book. But what a great message to give to kids!

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Review of The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion, Volume 1, by Beth Brower

The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion

Volume 1

by Beth Brower

Rhydon Press, 2019. 110 pages.
Review written July 16, 2024, from my own copy.
Starred Review

First, a great big thank you to my sister Becky for sending me the first three volumes of The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion to me for my birthday. At first I thought it was one story divided into three volumes, so I was going to wait until I finished it all to post a review. But no! There’s more! I went on Amazon and ordered the books through Volume 7, and then checked the back of it and Volume 8 supposedly will be published soon. So it’s an ongoing saga, and I am decisively hooked.

Emma M. Lion is a young lady of twenty years old who arrives in London on March 5th, 1883. She comes to the house that is her inheritance, which she will own outright when she turns twenty-one, but which is now occupied by her odious Cousin Archibald.

Both Archibald and Emma are glad their relationship is not by blood. Archibald had married Emma’s father’s cousin, and that cousin had died not long after – but left the house, Lapis Lazuli House in St. Crispian’s quarter of London, to Emma’s father, but the books in the library to Cousin Archibald. Emma’s father let Cousin Archibald stay there out of compassion, and wished Emma to do the same. But three years after her parents’ deaths, Emma arrives and the relationship between the two of them is strained. He has her stay in the rooms in the garret, and before long Emma discovers more ways he is working against her.

Some of the situations in these journal selections, which cover March 5th through April 30th, are that Emma is going to let the small subsection of the house – Lapis Lazuli Minor, which was long ago sectioned off from the main house – in order to help make ends meet. A tenant has been found, and he is a man of mystery. Also, as the volume ends, her Aunt Eugenia has just learned that Emma has come to London and is poised to begin interfering. But Aunt Eugenia doesn’t know that Emma has not, after all, engaged a chaperone. Meanwhile, speaking of chaperones, Emma’s school friend Mary is also in London and has hired a man named Jack to pose as her cousin to the owner of her boarding house. Emma is convinced he’s a scoundrel, but Mary is happy with her freedom.

Emma is not a very traditional young lady. This first volume pretty much sets up intriguing situations and characters, and I challenge anyone at all to be able to stop without learning more. When I finished this short volume, I dove right into the next one. So much fun!

bethbrower.com

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