Review of Pawcasso, by Remy Lai

Pawcasso

by Remy Lai

Henry Holt, 2021. 238 pages.
Review written July 29, 2021, from a library book
Starred Review

Pawcasso is Remy Lai’s third book that involves kids keeping a huge secret from the adults in their lives. I’m getting a little tired of that – but Pawcasso is so adorable, I loved the book anyway.

In this book, it’s the start of summer, and Jo’s been staying in her house all day. When she does go out, she sees a dog carrying a basket. The basket contains money and a shopping list and Jo watches the dog do the shopping for his owners.

But when the dog walks into a bookstore where a children’s art class is happening, the kids think Jo is the dog’s owner, and they want to paint the dog. Jo doesn’t get a chance to correct them – and starts walking with the dog to art class every week. She tells them his name is Pawcasso. And she gets paid with free books.

But then a mean man complains to the City Council about Pawcasso going around town without a leash, and he almost gets taken to the pound. Jo’s new friends are incensed. They start a pawtition that goes viral. And meanwhile, Jo is terrified of getting found out.

This engaging graphic novel is full of pictures of a truly adorable dog, with a story of a kid who falls for the dog and gets herself into a tight spot. It’s got all the ingredients of a book kids will love.

remylai.com
mackids.com

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Review of Over the Moon, by Natalie Lloyd

Over the Moon

by Natalie Lloyd

Scholastic Press, 2019. 291 pages.
Starred Review
Review written December 5, 2019, from a library book

Here’s a delightful fantasy tale of a girl named Mallie Ramble who lives in a village on the mountain with her parents and her little brother. Her father has gone blind and mute from working in the mines, and so Mallie needs to go down the mountain and work as a maid in the valley. Even so, she can’t earn enough to keep the family out of debt. The Guardians say that her little brother Denver is going to have to work in the mines even though he’s only seven.

Older people in her village tell of a time before the Dust came when people of the village rode winged horses, Starbirds, and gathered starlight to weave into beautiful garments. But that was before Mallie was born. Now the Dust is thick over the village, bringing with it despair and anger and sadness.

When Mallie sees a brochure for brave and wiry young boys to volunteer for a dangerous task that will bring them riches – she thinks she’s found a way to pay her family’s debts and save Denver from having to work in the mines. Will it matter that she’s a girl and that one of her arms is shorter than the other?

This, in fact, leads to adventures beyond Mallie’s wildest dreams – but also requires great bravery.

This uplifting tale will help anyone rise above despair. The world-building is imaginative, the obstacles are big, and the triumphant finish is earned.

scholastic.com

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Review of The Size of the Truth, by Andrew Smith

The Size of the Truth

by Andrew Smith

Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2019. 266 pages.
Review written November 6, 2019, from a library book

When he was four years old, Sam Abernathy was trapped in a well for three days. He was playing Spud with his friend Karim, and an older boy, James Jenkins, threw the ball so high, Karim couldn’t catch it, and Sam stepped in the hole and fell. The whole town of Blue Sky, Texas, rallied to save him, and some people still wear their “Pray for Sam” t-shirts.

Now Sam is eleven years old, and his parents just had him skip two grades from sixth grade to eighth grade. As if it weren’t enough to be known in town as “Well Boy,” now he stands out for being the smallest kid in eighth grade. James Jenkins was held back and is also in eighth grade and his locker is next to Sam’s. Sam is convinced he looks like a murderer.

Sam’s father has big plans for Sam. He wants him to go to a magnet high school and get a scholarship to study physics. What Sam wants to do is become a chef. He experiments with dishes at Karim’s house.

The story is told with flashbacks from Sam’s three days in the well interspersed with what’s happening in eighth grade. Sam couldn’t remember what happened for a long time, and now his memories involve a talking armadillo named Bartleby who is very annoying, but shows Sam some interesting things down side tunnels. And at least Sam wasn’t alone!

The story is about truth and perception. And about parental expectations and learning to speak up. You can’t help but liking Sam, but also feeling sorry for him. I’m happy to report that Sam does learn ways to make things better for himself before the book is done. Here’s a bit from early in the book to give you a feel for Sam’s voice:

I have an idea for a reality television show.

The show follows an eleven-year-old boy named Sam Abernathy, who’s been jumped ahead during the first week of the school year, catapulted directly from sixth into eighth grade.

The show is called Figure It Out, Kid!

We are entirely uncertain whether or not the kid makes it out alive.

simonandschuster.com/kids

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Review of A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying, by Kelley Armstrong

A Royal Guide to Monster Slaying

by Kelley Armstrong

Puffin Canada (Penguin Random House), 2019. 280 pages.
Starred Review
Review written October 31, 2019, from a library book

At the beginning of this fantasy adventure, thirteen-year-old Rowan is complaining because she wishes she were destined to be the Royal Monster Hunter instead of the Queen. But because she was born two minutes before her twin brother Rhydd, she gets the throne and he gets the job of monster hunter – even though their aptitude is the opposite.

But when a battle with a gryphon – the same type of monster that killed their father – badly injures Rhydd so he’ll always walk with a limp, they can get the council to agree to a switch. However, if Rowan is to step into the Royal Monster Hunter position, she’s going to need to train quickly, because an uncle has his own children in mind for both positions.

This begins a quest to get training to fight monsters – and ends up being a story of being set upon by one monster after another.

I love the imaginative monsters the author has besetting this kingdom. There are things you’ve heard of like gryphons and firebirds and pegasi, but also warakins, manticores, and a jba-fofi (giant spider). Rowan even stumbles on a baby jackalope who decides to adopt her and thinks he is more ferocious than he is.

There’s also plenty of tension in this story. The gryphon battle at the beginning makes us understand how truly fearsome it is, and further creatures that come after Rowan or her companions have us wondering how she’ll manage to escape in one piece. More than once, the minute she escapes one disaster, a new peril attacks.

I do like the way the Royal Monster Hunters consider it a failure when they have to kill a monster. Their goal is to drive them back into the mountains. If they get a taste for livestock or endanger people, the monsters do need to be killed. But I like the way Rowan and her family consider every other option first.

This is a suspenseful tale about a girl fighting – literally – to prove herself and help her kingdom. And you’ll enjoy the characters and critters you’ll meet along the way.

kelleyarmstrong.com
penguinrandomhouse.ca

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Review of Lalani of the Distant Sea, by Erin Entrada Kelly

Lalani of the Distant Sea

by Erin Entrada Kelly

Greenwillow Books (HarperCollins), 2019. 386 pages.
Starred Review
Review written October 18, 2019, from a library book

Lalani of the Distant Sea is an original fantasy tale with an island theme.

Lalani lives in a small island community tightly ruled by the menyoro. Everybody has their roles. They pray to the Mountain that it will not get angry with them.

Now there is a drought. Plants are drying up and everyone is thirsty.

Years ago, Lalani’s father and her best friend’s father both sailed away, trying to cross the Veiled Sea to reach the mythical island of Isa where good things grow. But their fathers never returned, and now Lalani and her mother live with her brutish Uncle Drum and his son Kul. They tell Lalani over and over that she is useless.

Lalani starts the trouble when she chases a Shek that goes to the mountain looking for grass. She meets a man with horns on his head and no eyes. He says he came from the island of Isa. He gives Lalani a wish.

But things go wrong with her wish, and more troubles come. Eventually, Lalani must decide if she is brave enough to try to go to Isa herself, even though no one has ever done so and returned.

This fantasy world is populated with magical creatures and nonmagical creatures that add to the exotic flavor of the world. I didn’t like how beaten down Lalani was during this story – but that made her adventure and triumph all the greater.

I do like the way some of the creatures are introduced in short second-person well-illustrated chapters. Here’s the beginning of one of those called “You Are a Weeping Loset.”

Imagine you are a weeping loset. You are tall and beautiful, but sorrowful. Your curved branches look like the shoulders of a crying woman, and your moss is gray and coarse. You are unhappy but can’t remember why. Perhaps you suffered a great loss hundreds of years ago, and only a lingering heartache remains.

You see all who pass. You’re a curious tree, because there is so little to do but stand and wait for something to happen. And now, something has! There is a girl. You’ve never seen her before. She smells hot and dry, like dust. She steps lightly, but purposefully, and she is afraid. You know this because your roots plunge into the earth, and everything that touches the ground settles onto them.

erinentradakelly.com
harpercollinschildrens.com

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Review of You Are Here: Connecting Flights, edited by Ellen Oh

You Are Here

Connecting Flights

edited by Ellen Oh
read by David Lee Huynh, Dana Wing Lau, Ramon de Ocampo, and Jeanne Syquia

Allida, 2023. 5 hours, 40 minutes.
Review written March 11, 2024, from a library eaudiobook
Starred Review

You Are Here: Connecting Flights is a collection of well-connected short stories written by various authors: Christina Soontornvat, Linda Sue Park, Meredith Ireland, Mike Chen, Susan Tan, Randy Ribay, Traci Chee, Mike Jung, Erin Entrada Kelly, Grace Lin, Minh Le, and Ellen Oh. All the stories feature an Asian American kid temporarily stranded at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport during a ferocious thunderstorm, some with parents and family, and a few traveling unaccompanied.

The stories are nicely intertwined, with each kid having at least a little interaction with some of the other kids. The book begins with a boy mortified when his grandmother takes his grandfather’s remains through security. Everything works out, but they have to stop the line for a bit, which bothers people in a hurry.

Some of the kids are heading to Asian countries of their forebears, and some of them don’t feel great about that. Pretty much all the kids deal with some negative attitudes toward Asian Americans, and most of them come up with a good way of responding.

The kids, characters, and situations have lots of variety, because the authors have lots of variety. The variety included very different countries in their backgrounds, different appearances, different religions, and different traveling situations. For all the kids, the stories came together to give a sense of belonging, a feeling that they can deal with what life throws at them, and peace with where they’re going and where they’ll come home to.

I wish the audiobook and the book itself had put the author’s name under each chapter title, which instead was the name of the fictional kid featured. But perhaps they wanted to put the emphasis on the kids themselves. And I have to admit that the many authors did a fantastic job of telling a seamless story about many great characters. And it gave readers who are not Asian American a window into the microaggressions that our fellow Americans have to deal with. So besides reading an entertaining story with great characters, I learned a lot about empathy.

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Review of Dragon Pearl, by Yoon Ha Lee

Dragon Pearl

by Yoon Ha Lee

Rick Riordan Presents (Disney Hyperion), 2019. 310 pages.
Starred Review
Review written December 2, 2019, from a library book

I’m finding that I especially like the Rick Riordan Presents books that don’t just fit another culture’s mythology into the formula of Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson series, but instead does something new. Dragon Pearl achieves that beautifully – taking Korean supernatural beings and putting them in space.

Our main character, Min, is a fox spirit, like the other members of her family. Fox spirits are generally not trusted, because they are shape shifters who can Charm the thoughts and emotions of people around them.

When an inspector comes to their planet claiming that her brother Jun was a deserter from the Space Forces and tried to steal the powerful Dragon Pearl, Min knows that couldn’t possibly be true. And she decides to set off looking for him and bring Jun home.

Along the way, Min gets into a lot of danger, makes a bargain with a ghost, and impersonates a cadet from the same ship Jun supposedly deserted from.

I like the way in this book, supernatural beings are taken for granted, not some sort of big secret that only Min knows about. Two of the friends she makes are a goblin and a dragon – both of whom spend most of their time in human form, as she does. I like that the goblin is nonbinary, and Min naturally addresses them with they/them pronouns. Of course, as a shapeshifter, Min thinks nothing of taking either female or male forms at different times.

This adventure combines Korean mythology with outer space and futuristic high-tech gadgetry in a delightful way.

RickRiordan.com
DisneyBooks.com

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Source: This review is based on a library book from Fairfax County Public Library.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but I maintain my website and blogs on my own time. The views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

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Review of The Doughnut King, by Jessie Janowitz

The Doughnut King

by Jessie Janowitz

Sourcebooks, 2019. 330 pages.
Starred Review
Review written June 19, 2019, from a library book

The Doughnut King is the sequel to The Doughnut Fix, which was one of my 2018 Sonderbooks Stand-outs, read during my Newbery year.

In the first book, Tris and his family moved to the small town of Petersville in upstate New York from the big city, and Tris managed to begin a thriving doughnut business, located next to his mother’s new restaurant.

But Tris’s doughnuts are so delicious, so very good, that he can’t keep up with demand. People come to Petersville to buy doughnuts, and they are disappointed.

At the same time, the mayor of Petersville tells them that the town is dying. Tris gets a vision – if he could only make more doughnuts, people could come to Petersville and would not be disappointed. He could even hire people to sell them.

Tris gets his heart set on a doughnut-making machine that could solve their problem of not making doughnuts quickly enough. But the price is far out of range. So Tris’s genius little sister enters him into a cooking show contest, Can You Cut It? — completely against Tris’s will.

But their mother once worked with Chef J. J., the temperamental chef who judges the show. Tris is convinced that got him on the show. But once on the show, he needs to win – for the sake of Petersville.

This book is another fun read with the ins and outs of the cooking competition and the characters from the town. Kids who are interested in cooking will like it all the more, but even if not this is a fun story about using ingenuity to save a town.

jessiejanowitz.com
sourcebookskids.com

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Review of Sisters of the Lost Marsh, by Lucy Strange

Sisters of the Lost Marsh

by Lucy Strange
read by the author

Scholastic Audio Books, 2023. 6 hours, 9 minutes.
Review written March 11, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
2024 Odyssey Honor Book
Starred Review

I put Sisters of the Lost Marsh on my eaudiobook holds list because of its Odyssey Honor win for one of the best audiobooks of the year, and I was not at all disappointed. What a delightfully creepy, wonderful book! The author reads her own book with a wonderful British accent, and I was carried along through the story.

Willa is the third of six sisters, and at twelve years old she’s really the one who runs Grammy’s farm in the middle of the marshlands. As the book opens, her father, who spends most of his time drunk, has made a deal with an old neighbor that the neighbor can marry Willa’s oldest sister Grace in exchange for a fine horse named Flint.

The father is convinced in the truth of a local rhyme declaring that it’s a curse to have six daughters. Marrying one off should break the curse.

Grace does not want to marry the neighbor, and when the three oldest sisters go to the Full Moon Fayre (with Willa sneaking out to join her sisters), a frightening warning from a fortune teller suggests that Grace should run away as soon as possible.

When Grace disappears the next day, things start to fall apart. Nobody wants to give up the horse, but the neighbor insists he’s stolen if he doesn’t get his bride, and has his eyes on the next sister, Freya. Willa’s sure that Grace ran off with the Fayre, which left the same day she did. So she sets off across the marsh with Flint to warn Grace to never come back.

But there are obstacles and eerie things going on, and tales told about the marsh, a dangerous place. Nothing is as it seems at first. Willa must show great courage along the way, and the listener is right there with her. Willa must learn to discern between superstition and actual things to fear. I was rooting for Willa all the way in this satisfying read with a touch of magic and the feel of a folk tale.

lucystrange.org

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Review of Billy Miller Makes a Wish, by Kevin Henkes

Billy Miller Makes a Wish

by Kevin Henkes

Greenwillow Books (HarperCollins), 2021. 179 pages.
Review written April 29, 2021, from a library book
Starred Review

I like it when beginning chapter books feature characters and situations that match the age of the child who will be reading them. Billy Miller Makes a Wish captures second-grade situations and concerns beautifully.

The book opens with the wish from the title:

When Billy Miller blew out the eight candles on his birthday cake, he made a wish. He wished that something exciting would happen.

Not more than ten minutes later – even before the present opening had begun – a police car and an ambulance flew past Billy’s house and raced down the block. The wail of sirens stopped nearby.

When Billy’s old neighbor ends up dying, he feels awfully guilty about his wish. Even when assured that Mr. Tooley was old and sick and was going to die soon anyway and it had nothing to do with Billy’s wish, more exciting-but-bad things start to happen.

Billy’s best friend is on a trip for the summer and so he’s got a lot of time with his family – including his four-year-old sister, Sal. I love the way Sal is portrayed, so lovable but so annoying. She decides to make “Symphony Cards” to give the family of their neighbor who died – using Billy’s new birthday markers. And then she doesn’t actually want to let the family have them. And that’s only the beginning.

This book is a quick read, but it will keep you smiling. I like how creatively Kevin Henkes came up with exciting things to happen to Billy, in answer to his wish.

kevinhenkes.com
harpercollinschildrens.com

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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!