Review: Will & Whit by Laura Lee Gulledge

will whit

Will & Whit by Laura Lee Gulledge

The author of Page by Paige returns with another superb graphic novel.  Will has suffered a tragedy and now fear the dark, since she sees the shadows of those she has lost within them.  Her hobby is to create lamps out of found objects, keeping the dark at bay.  Then Hurricane Whitney roars in and takes away the electricity entirely so that Will is left in a complete blackout.  Happily, she is surrounded by great friends who are just as creative as she is.  There is even an arts carnival being created.  Now Will just has to face her fears, in the darkness.

Done in black-and-white, this graphic novel plays nicely with light and dark.  The entire background of the pages change from the bright white to pure black once the power goes out in the story.  Gulledge’s story embraces creativity and also features female characters who are real and honest.  Gulledge also nicely uses metaphor in the story, showing shadows coming towards Will who are human shaped.  As that part of the story is resolved, readers will notice the changes in the shadows around Will, a visual harbinger of real change. 

Get this into the hands of those who enjoyed Page by Paige as well as other teens who are creative and touch romantic.  Appropriate for ages 13-16.

Reviewed from library copy.

This Week’s Tweets and Pins

Here are the links I shared on my Twitter and Pinterest accounts these last two weeks that you might find interesting:

False

CHILDREN’S LIT

5 Powerful Anti-Bullying Books Students Should Read | Edudemic http://buff.ly/1bHCFpH #kidlit

More calls for books about non-white children | Books | http://guardian.co.uk http://buff.ly/14JFBSs

EBOOKS

New DRM Will Change the Words in Your E-Book | Gadget Lab | http://Wired.com http://buff.ly/11H5bSI #ebooks

Why Borrowing an E-Book from your Library is so Difficult | Digital Trends http://buff.ly/11gyWOV

b987142f543778dc862277fa0a39537a

LIBRARIES

Every Library and Museum in America, Mapped – Emily Badger – The Atlantic Cities http://buff.ly/17tPVRF

We Need a Fixer (Not Just a Maker) Movement | Wired Opinion | http://Wired.com http://buff.ly/16DTemh

“We Will Not Be Shushed” http://buff.ly/11nwFg5 #libraries

SOCIAL MEDIA

Is Your Private Information Safe on Social Media? http://on.mash.to/15iziSH

Using Social Media to Engage Teens in the Library – The Digital Shift http://buff.ly/11rkAXg #libraries

Where Teens Go Instead of Facebook (and Why You Should Too) | Upgrade Your Life – Yahoo! News http://buff.ly/16KYCUH

TEEN LIT

Elizabeth Wein’s top 10 dynamic duos in fiction | Children’s books | http://guardian.co.uk http://buff.ly/1bZAq1i

Honest sex scenes in books will stop teens learning from porn, Malorie Blackman says – Telegraph http://buff.ly/14MwHDI #yalit

‘The Maze Runner’: Patricia Clarkson joins cast of dystopian saga | http://EW.com http://buff.ly/11lNsoy #yalit

Review: Benjamin Bear in Bright Ideas by Philippe Coudray

bright ideas

Benjamin Bear in Bright Ideas! by Philippe Coudray

This is the second Benjamin Bear book and it is just as wonderful and successful as the first!  This graphic novel offers single-page comic spreads that tell very short but very clever stories that are filled with humor.  Sometimes the gag is visual, other times there is a verbal joke.  What Coudray does best though is to vary the stories enough to make the book entirely surprising and great fun to read.  One never knows what the next page will bring, just that it will be funny and a delight. 

As with the first book, Coudray’s illustrations have a crispness to them.  Done in flat color and fine black lines, the illustrations are made for fun.  If there is humor to have, then Coudray does not shrink away from making it wonderfully bold and large. 

This is a great book for reluctant readers and a graphic novel for elementary-aged children that belongs in every public library.  Appropriate for ages 5-8.

Reviewed from library copy.

Review: The Boy and the Airplane by Mark Pett

boy and the airplane

The Boy and the Airplane by Mark Pett

This wordless picture book tells the story of a young boy who is merrily playing with his brand-new red airplane.  He runs with it, runs around it pretending to be a plane himself, and eventually throws it up into the air.  It lands on the roof where the boy where the boy is unable to reach it using a ladder or anything else that he tries.  He sits in discouragement under a tree and then is inspired when a maple seed drifts down and lands in his hand.  He plants the seed, watching it grow through the seasons and the years.  The ending is satisfying and lovely.  This book is about patience and dedication, but is also open to interpretation thanks to its wordless design and flowing storyline.

Pett manages to create a truly timeless book here.  The art is done in sepia tones with just a dash of red for the toy airplane.  The characters are even dressed in clothes that are universal.  The book has a great cyclical quality to it that works particularly well with the timeless feel.  The illustrations also have a contemplative feel to them that permeates the entire work.  This is a book that slows you down and gets you considering other options.

A great gift book for adults, this book will also be appreciated by young children who will see the humor in the boy’s solution.  Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from copy received from Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers.

Review: Robot, Go Bot! by Dana Meachen Rau

robot go bot

Robot, Go Bot! by Dana Meachen Rau, illustrated by Wook Jin Jung

In this most simple of graphic novels, a little girl builds a robot and when she presses the big red button, it comes to life.  The robot happily plays with bubbles with her, plays ball and floats in a boat.  But then, the little girl gets more demanding and has the robot sewing, being a horsie, planting a garden, and mowing the yard.  Finally, the robot has had enough and leaves.  While the girl searches for him, she realizes that she has to be a good friend in order to have a good friend. 

Rau has written a very simple book here with only minimal words that often rhyme for even simpler reading.  It is the pictures that really tell this story completely.  Done in comic style, they have rounded panels.  Yet they also have the feel of picture book illustrations with their bright colors and playful feel.  The softness of the illustrations also invite very young children to read.  I appreciated the choice to have the main character a girl, since so many robot books have male characters.

Simple and playful, this most beginning of graphic novels is inviting to little children and has the appeal of robots as well.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from digital galley received from Random House.

Review: The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey

5W FINAL COVER.indd

The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey

The author of the Monstrumologist series returns with this riveting story of alien invasion.  The planet knew that the aliens had arrived, but the silence for days left them feeling hopeful.  Then the 1st wave took away electricity and cars.  The 2nd wave took out the coasts.  The 3rd wave brought the Red Death.  The 4th wave took away trust.  Cassie is one of the survivors of all four waves and just may be the only remaining human on earth.  She has seen her family die, her mother from the Red Death and her father killed right in front of her, but her little brother may still be alive, since he was taken to safety on a school bus.  But Cassie also knows that it is death to trust anyone at all, so she is not sure whether where Sammy was taken is safe or not.  Now she is alone, just her and her M16, trying to reach him.  Then Evan Walker enters her life, saving her from a gunshot wound.  Cassie knows to trust no one.  So how does she deal with a situation where she was to trust to heal and maybe even to save her brother.

This is one incredible novel.  The pacing is what I have to talk about first.  There are moments where I could not turn the pages fast enough, then others where I had to walk away for a bit to deal with the latest heart-shattering reveal.  This book is a dance of hope and terror, trust and knowing better.  Yancey proves quickly that he is not afraid to shock, to kill, to maim.  This book is filled with death, filled with despair, yet it is also about strength, hope and humanity.  Yancey writes this perfectly, keeping readers on a razorblade of tension throughout. 

A large piece of the success of this book are the characters and the book tells their individual stories.  Cassie is one strong heroine, who is willing to go through hell to get her little brother back.  She is not fearless but is always courageous and willing to do what has to be done.  Readers find out before Cassie herself does what happened to her little brother.  This adds to that tension, especially since one doesn’t trust Yancey not to do horrific things even to the littlest of children.  There is Zombie, a boy that Cassie went to school with, who has been trained to be a child soldier since the aliens came.  And finally, there is Evan, the farmboy heartthrob who is dangerous but delicious too.

Expect this to be one of the big books this summer.  It would be a pleasure to booktalk, since the alien invasion in waves basically sells this.  Perhaps most telling of all is that this is now the only way that I see an alien invasion happening.  It is clever, chilling and deadly.  Appropriate for ages 15-17.

Reviewed from copy received from Putnam.

Carnegie and Greenaway Medal Winners

The winners of the 2013 CILIP Carnegie Medal and Kate Greenaway Medal have been announced:

The Carnegie winner is:

Sally Gardner for Maggot Moon

 

The Kate Greenaway winner is:

Levi Pinfold for Black Dog

2013 Scottish Children’s Book Awards Shortlist

The Scottish Book Trust has announced the shortlist for the 2013 Scottish Children’s Book Awards.  Here are the nominees.

BOOKBUG READERS – 3-7 YEARS

Jumblebum cover Paper Dolls cover What's the Time Mr Wolf cover

Jumblebum by Chae Strathie and Ben Cort

The Paper Dolls by Julia Donaldson, illustrated by Rebecca Cobb

What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf? by Debi Gliori

 

YOUNG READERS – 8-11 YEARS

Accidental Time Traveller cover Black Tide cover Really Weird Removals cover

The Accidental Time Traveller by Janis Mackay

Black Tide by Caroline Clough

Really Weird Removals.com by Daniela Sacerdoti

 

OLDER READERS – 12-16 YEARS

Book of Doom cover Ferryman cover Seeing cover

The Book of Doom by Barry Hutchison

Ferryman by Claire McFall

The Seeing by Diana Hendry

Big Pile of Board Books

Here we go!  I had been waiting with a couple of these to have enough to do a full post of board books and now I have far too many.  Here are six board books worth picking up for the little one in your life or library:

away we go

Away We Go! by Chieu Anh Urban

Filled with bright colored vehicles made out of all sorts of shapes, this die cut board book is engaging and great fun.  The words on the page ask you to find specific shapes, but there is no need to follow their lead.  This is a great pick for librarians looking for a book that will have parents talking to their children about what is on the page.  Perfect for little hands to explore too.

blue bus red balloon

Everything Goes: Blue Bus, Red Balloon: A Book of Colors by Brian Biggs

Another charmer in the Everything Goes series, this board book focuses on colors.  It follows all kinds of vehicles and the pictures tell a complete story while the text names vehicles and colors. 

hide and seek wiggle

Hide and Seek by Taro Gomi

Wiggle by Taro Gomi

Gomi returns with two picture books with very different feels.  Hide and Seek is a book that is clever and subtle, showing several very similar objects or creatures with one small difference.  The humor is clever and the art is sophisticated.  Wiggle is a book with a die cut hole for a small finger to fit through.  Children get to use their finger as an elephant trunk, robot nose, and much more.  This one is less clever and more physical.  The two books should appeal to different children, but both will be appreciated.

my mom is the best circus

My Mom Is the Best Circus by Luciana Navarro Powell

Light and filled with fun, this board book takes mom’s everyday duties and shows them as if she was performing in the circus.  She juggles breakfast, tames wild laundry, can make you laugh like a clown, or be amazed like a magician.  Cute and funny, this is a nice light board book sure to make moms nod along.

pinwheel

Pinwheel by Salina Yoon

Yoon has once again created a visually arresting board book for children.  This book has wheels to turn that set the designs in motion, creating art that moves and changes before your eyes.  It is almost kaleidoscopic at times.  Beautiful and nice for little hands to turn.