Review of Bibsy Cross and the Bike-a-thon, by Liz Garton Scanlon, illustrated by Dung Ho

Bibsy Cross and the Bike-a-thon

by Liz Garton Scanlon
illustrated by Dung Ho

Alfred A. Knopf, 2024. 112 pages.
Review written October 25, 2024, from a book sent to me by the publisher.

Bibsy Cross and the Bike-a-thon is a new beginning chapter book series about an irrepressible third grader named Bibsy Cross. This is the second one I’ve read.

In this book, Bibsy is excited about taking part in a “Bikes for Bucks for Books” event at the local library – so of course she got a fan here.

Bibsy forms a team with her best friend Natia, and is torn because she very much wants to win a prize for bringing in the most money for the library. Then on the day of the Bike-a-thon, things happen to mess up her plans.

I like Bibsy’s spirit – she has a tendency to raise her hand in class and share so much information that she tries the patience of her teacher. And I like the way her family shares “sweet-and-sours” at the dinner table – sweet things that happened and sour things that happened, and even ways the sour things have something sweet come out of them. And I love the way her parents are sympathetic about everything that happens to Bibsy, sweet or sour.

There are pictures on almost every page of this book, and not a whole lot of words per page, so this book is perfect for a kid building confidence in their reading.

lizgartonscanlon.com
dungho.me
rhcbooks.com

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Review of The Spirit Glass, by Roshani Chokshi

The Spirit Glass

by Roshani Chokshi

Rick Riordan Presents (Disney Hyperion), 2023. 302 pages.
Review written January 3, 2024, from a library book.

Like the other books from the Rick Riordan Presents imprint, The Spirit Glass tells about a kid who discovers that the mythology of her culture is real. In this case, Corazon Lopez has magic powers from her Filipino heritage.

Here’s how the author introduces Corazon’s gift:

Corazon had the blood of a babylan, a rare mortal who guarded the boundaries between the human world and the realm of spirits. Some babaylans whispered to the weather. Others brewed potions that could lure a soul back into a dying body. Some could even sift through dreams to find glimmers of the future. It all depended on each babaylan’s particular gift.

Trouble is, Corazon doesn’t yet know what her particular gift is. She does have her own anito, a gecko companion who thinks he’s a crocodile.

Corazon’s parents have been dead for three years, but their ghosts come visit Corazon at her aunt Tina’s house on every Saturday night. Corazon hopes to get her powers and bring her parents back from the dead.

But when a spirit steals her soul key, she ends up on a quest in the realm of the dead, visiting different mythological spirits. Her guide is a ghost kid named Leo, and they get into one adventure after another.

This book was one of those fantasy adventures where one thing leads to another and the characters follow along — a little less of a driving plot than in my favorites. But by the time it all wrapped up, my heart was warmed, and I had nothing but good thoughts for Corazon and her family and companions.

This is a gentle fantasy with a sweet spirit that will get many kids started on a love of fantasy adventures.

roshanichokshi.com
DisneyBooks.com

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Review of Crimson Twill: Witch in the City, by Kallie George

Crimson Twill

Witch in the City

by Kallie George
illustrated by Birgitta Sif

Candlewick Press, 2022. 54 pages.
Review written February 26, 2023, from a library book
2022 Cybils Winner, Early Chapter Books

Witch in the City begins a new early chapter book series about a young witch named Crimson Twill.

Crimson Twill was a little witch. But you might not know it. She didn’t look like a typical little witch. Instead of wearing pointy shoes, she wore gum boots. Instead of wearing a plain black dress, she wore a polka-dotted one. And instead of wearing a plain black hat, she wore one with a big bow, and the hat was crimson, just like her name.

Crimson Twill is on her way to Broomingdales with her mother, her first trip to the big city. As she looks for ways to spend her money, she finds some other out-of-place things and creatures and people. She has some gentle adventures and makes new friends.

It’s a promising introduction to a new series about a little witch who’s not like all the other witches.

kalliegeorge.com
candlewick.com

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Review of The Probability of Everything, by Sarah Everett

The Probability of Everything

by Sarah Everett

Clarion Books, 2023. 326 pages.
Review written January 13, 2024, from a library book.
Starred Review
2024 Mathical Honor Book, Ages 11-13

Kemi is eleven years old, and the world is ending in four days.

Or at least probably. There’s an asteroid heading toward earth, with an 84.7% chance of hitting us.

Kemi loves math and probability — especially the probability puzzles her Dad gives her. But now there’s an asteroid in the sky making everything purple. They have to leave their house in the “better” part of town and stay with her aunt and cousins. Kemi can’t believe her best friend is still going to school.

Kemi thinks about her family, including her new baby sister who won’t be born before the end of the world. She decides to make a time capsule to remember her family and everything they love most. But to find what her father will put in means doing his favorite things together with him.

And I can’t tell you what happens at the end of the book, but it did surprise me how things turned out. I liked the inclusion of the Monty Hall Problem in probability, the concise explanation, and the application that you should always pay attention to new information.

This book is about a girl coping with the end of the world by remembering what she and her family love most.

saraheverettbooks.com
harpercollinschildrens.com

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Review of Out of My Heart, by Sharon M. Draper, read by Sisi Aisha Johnson

Out of My Heart

by Sharon M. Draper
read by Sisi Aisha Johnson

Simon & Schuster Audio, 2021. 7 hours, 21 minutes.
Review written October 12, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

I’ve long intended to read this sequel to the brilliant Out of My Mind, and finally placed a hold on the audiobook when I heard that a third book is out. Took me long enough! But I’m so glad I finally did listen to this story.

Once again, we’re spending time with Melody, a brilliant girl with cerebral palsy. In the first book, she learned to talk at last with the help of a machine, and instead of being in the class for kids with mental difficulties, got moved to the regular class and won a place on the quiz team. But that book had a sad thing happen at the end.

I’m happy to report that this book is only happy for Melody. She goes to camp! It’s a camp specifically for kids with special needs, and Melody gets to swim, paint, ride on a boat, swing on swings, ride a zipline, ride a horse, and even dance. She makes firm friendships with the three other girls in her cabin and even with a boy in another cabin.

Yes, there are adventures and small setbacks, but this is a happy book, all about Melody getting to do lots of things for the very first time that many would say are a normal part of childhood. It made me happy to read it and also wonder about how many experiences like that are available to kids like Melody. It’s a lovely story, well-told.

sharondraper.com

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Review of May the Best Player Win, by Kyla Zhao

May the Best Player Win

by Kyla Zhao

G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 2024. 225 pages.
Review written October 28, 2024, from a book sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review

May the Best Player Win is about a middle school student named May who loves playing chess. As the book opens, she wins a trophy for being the top girl player at the State Middle School competition.

That gets her lots of attention from her school, and even from the media – but also prompts some jealousy from her competition on her own team. She thought Ralph was her friend, and they tied at the competition, but he tells her she’s not really that good and is only getting the attention because she’s a girl. So that starts a bet between them over which one will be named team captain when they compete at Nationals.

Meanwhile, her school’s doing a publicity campaign, and they pair May up with Mario, a soccer star, who turns out to be nice as well as athletic. But May needs to keep working on her chess game, and her friend Becca (who’s also on the team) wants time with her, and the school schedules picture-taking with Mario. When May starts telling little white lies to keep her schedule straight, Becca feels hurt.

This book does a great job of portraying middle school concerns and middle school pressures. We’re with May in her struggles to prioritize it all. And I like the natural way she gets to thinking about regaining her joy in playing chess that she had when she started playing at six years old, when she wasn’t thinking so much about winning.

The book gives each chapter a title that’s a chess term, with its definition, and they all fit remarkably well. It does a nice job of giving us the feel of what goes into being a serious chess player without getting lost in the details. It also felt like a genuine explanation of the game without hand-waving or magical abilities that just make the player “good” – I suspect because the author reveals at the back that she learned to play chess at six years old, like May – but later dropped out after encountering discrimination and criticism of girls and feeling pressured to win. I love that she’s got May facing those same obstacles and overcoming. May this be true for more and more girls today.

I love her letter to the reader at the back of the book (and the story is strong enough to carry it), which ends like this:

I hope May’s adventures inspire you to hold on to the joy of playing – in chess or in any activity you choose. Don’t let the weight of expectations dim the sparkle of your love for the game. Don’t let others tell you whether you are or aren’t good enough, because the only thing that should matter is your passion and determination. So, keep playing, keep dreaming, and most importantly, enjoy every moment on and off the chessboard.

KylaZhao.com

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Review of The Lost Wonderland Diaries, by J. Scott Savage

The Lost Wonderland Diaries

by J. Scott Savage

Shadow Mountain, 2020. 344 pages.
Review written September 6, 2022, from a library book

The Lost Wonderland Diaries is a wonderful tribute to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as a great-great-niece of Lewis Carroll discovers his lost diaries and gets pulled into Wonderland with her friend.

And it turns out that Wonderland is in trouble! They’ve been expecting an “Alice” to come and put it to rights. Celia is very sure she’s not the one. Her friend Tyrus, though, is an avid reader, and would love to be the hero of a story.

I probably should have remembered that I’m not really a fan of Alice in Wonderland before I picked up this book. The chaotic way the magic works, and Alice’s seemingly random progression through the story never made much sense to me, and this book is similar in that.

Now, there are some fun mathematical puzzles sprinkled through the books. I really liked Celia and Tyrus — even though they represent one of my pet peeves — the idea that “numbers people” and “books people” are wholly separate things.

Though in Celia’s case, she’s dyslexic, so it seemed fair that she’d have trouble with words and reading. (I wonder if she has trouble telling apart 9s and 6s.) I appreciated that she was shown to be intelligent despite her dyslexia. And Tyrus’s love for books and references to great children’s books was a lot of fun. I appreciated that both of them solved some of the puzzles with their own strengths.

But a little more problematic for me was the idea that the Queen of Hearts is all about logic and the King of Hearts all about imagination — as if those two things are opposites. I don’t buy it. Yes, the story showed that you need both, but I just don’t think they’re as fundamentally opposed as this book implies.

I suppose it’s all because two of my biggest passions are math and reading. And I actually think those things go together.

All that said, this was a well-written book and a good story. And yes, we need both imagination and logic! Fans of Lewis Carroll will especially enjoy it.

shadowmountain.com

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Review of Isla to Island, by Alexis Castellanos

Isla to Island

by Alexis Castellanos

Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2022. 192 pages.
Review written September 20, 2022, from a library book
Starred Review

Isla to Island is a historical graphic novel about a young Cuban girl named Marisol who gets sent to New York City as part of Operation Peter Pan in 1960, an operation to rescue children of Cubans who feared they would be imprisoned under Castro for their political beliefs, and their children with them.

The graphic novel story is mostly done with pictures, and it’s beautifully done. Scenes of Marisol in Cuba with her family are bright and colorful. The only text (and there’s not a lot) is in Spanish, including a rooster that crows, “Qui qui ri qui.” Already in Cuba, we see that Marisol loves flowers and books.

When she says a sad good-by to her parents, she lands in a New York City that is cold and gray and in the middle of winter. Her caretakers there are kind, but the colors are gone. At school, people laugh at her, and she doesn’t understand what the teacher is saying and gets failing grades.

But then she discovers the library. Books are the first things that are full of color, so much so that streams of color waft from them. And through the books she chooses, her caretakers discover her love of flowers and bring her to the greenhouse in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, where she sees familiar flowers from Cuba.

The graphic novel is great at visually representing Marisol’s dawning hope. An Author’s Note at the back explains about Operation Peter Pan and the author’s family connections to Marisol’s story.

This is a quick read with so much presented visually, so a short time spent gives you a lovely and uplifting story.

alexiscastellanos.com
simonandschuster.com/kids

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Review of Stella & Marigold, by Annie Barrows and Sophie Blackall

Stella & Marigold

written by Annie Barrows
illustrated by Sophie Blackall

Chronicle Books, 2024. 102 pages.
Review written October 26, 2024, from a library book.
Starred Review

Oh, this book is charming. We’ve got a new classic beginning chapter book duo on our hands here.

Stella and Marigold are sisters. Stella is seven, and Marigold is four. And they have quirky, wonderful, imaginative adventures together. They loved each other, from the moment Stella told the new baby, “I’m Stella. I’m your sister. I’m going to tell you all the secret things I know. I would never tell them to anyone else, but I’ll tell them to you. Forever and ever.”

The adventures are quirky. Like a plumber discovering something Marigold put into bathroom drain, and Stella telling a story that helps Marigold deal with being found out. Or going to the zoo and Marigold getting lost in the Meerkat Mound, and Stella cheering her up by telling a story of when the Vice President came to town and her driver got lost, and Marigold gave them directions.

A lot of the stories are about the girls’ imaginations getting activated together – as truly happens best with sisters.

And it goes without saying that Sophie Blackall’s illustrations bring everything to life and make the book that much more charming. Definitely a treat for reading aloud or for a kid ready to read their own chapter books.

chroniclekids.com

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Review of We Are Big Time, written by Hena Khan, illustrated by Safiya Zerrougui

We Are Big Time

written by Hena Khan
illustrated by Safiya Zerrougui

Alfred A. Knopf, 2024. 233 pages.
Review written October 9, 2024, from a library book.

This graphic novel opens as Aliyah and her family are moving from Tampa to Milwaukee, to be near her grandparents. Aliyah’s not happy about it. She misses the beaches, her school, her friends, her neighborhood, the sunshine, and her basketball team.

In Milwaukee, everything is bigger – bigger house, a bigger job for her dad, and a bigger family with their grandparents and other relatives. But it makes Aliyah feel small.

And it turns out that her school is bigger, too. It’s a private Muslim school, Peace Academy. And they have a girls’ basketball team! Historically, though, they’ve always been pretty bad.

From there, this becomes a classic sports graphic novel. The school has hired a new coach who’s not Muslim but has great basketball skills. Aliyah’s named as co-captain, even though she’s a Freshman new to the school, and she has a lot of self-doubt.

But something interesting about this team is that all the girls wear a hijab. Their uniforms cover their arms and legs. And that seems to be what other people pay attention to.

So when they start turning things around and winning ball games, they get some media attention – and they seem surprised that Muslim families are supportive of their girls playing basketball, and that the girls can play just fine with longer uniforms and head scarves.

This graphic novel gets you cheering for these girls, who learn to work together as a team, represent their community, and have a whole lot of fun.

henakhan.com
safiyaz.com
rhcbooks.com

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