Review: A Boy and a Jaguar by Alan Rabinowitz

boy and a jaguar

A Boy and a Jaguar by Alan Rabinowitz, illustrated by CaTia Chien

This is a stellar autobiographical picture book written by and about a wildlife conservationist.  Alan was a boy who could not speak clearly.  He battled stuttering all of the time except when he talked with animals.  When he visited the great cat house at the Bronx Zoo, he could whisper fluently into the ears of the cats.  He also spent a lot of time with his pets at home, speaking to them and telling them that if he ever found his own voice, he would serve as their voice since they had none and would keep them from harm.  Alan became the first person to study jaguars.  In Belize he felt at home in the jungle.  He worked to protect the jaguars and eventually had to speak for them in front of the President of Belize, hoping to save their habitat from destruction.  But can he speak clearly in the short 15 minutes he’s been given?

This book is made all the more compelling by the fact that it is true.  It gives readers a glimpse into the world of a child struggling with a disability, one that mars every verbal interaction he has.  And thanks to his ability with animals, readers quickly see beyond the stutter to the boy himself and to the gifts that he has to offer.  Even better, once Alan becomes an adult, readers get to see a man who is taking advantage of his uniqueness to make a difference in the world and for the animals he cares for so much.

Chien’s art is rich and varied.  She moves from backgrounds of wine red to brilliant yellow to the deep greens of the Belize jungles.  She shows an isolated boy, alone that contrasts beautifully with the man working happily alone in the jungle – so similar and yet so very different.

An extraordinary autobiography, this book shows readers not to judge anyone by how they speak but rather by what they do.  Appropriate for ages 4-7.

Reviewed from library copy.

Review: The Glass Sentence by S. E. Grove

glass sentence

The Glass Sentence by S. E. Grove

Released June 12, 2014.

The first book in a new fantasy trilogy by a debut author, this novel features incredible world-building and an amazing young heroine.  The world changed when the Great Disruption happened in 1799.  When the Disruption occurred different points of time were merged together into a single world.  Now almost 100 years after the Disruption, Sophia lives in Boston which is part of New Occident.  She lives with her uncle after her parents disappeared while exploring other eras when she was a child.  Her uncle is one of the best map makers and map readers in the world, a skill that become necessary when the world changed.  But then her uncle is kidnapped and their home ransacked.  Sophia finds herself journeying to Nochtland with a boy she just met following a clue her uncle left her before he was taken.  Her journey will lead her to different times and different places in the company of many different characters.  Little does she know, but it’s a journey to save the world.

Grove’s novel brims with details about this new world she has envisioned.  The world is a unique one, unlike anything I have ever read before.  It’s a mix of historical fiction, fantasy, science fiction and adventure.  The addition of the different eras in time makes for a book that is surprising and great fun to read.  It also offers all sorts of new and varied adventures for the subsequent books in the trilogy. 

I must admit to not being a huge fan of books with lots of traveling and quests, but Grove maintains the brisk pace of the novel throughout and the travel is an important part of the story itself.  Grove brings her world fully to life, making sure to fill it with characters that readers will embrace and enjoy spending time with.  Sophia is a girl with lots of brains and plenty of bravery, but one who has been sheltered much of her life.  My favorite character though is the villain of the story, Blanca, who steals memories from people using sand.  She is incredibly creepy and frightening, yet has her own motivation and goals beyond just stealing memories.

Get this into the hands of fans of complex fantasy like The Golden Compass, they will find a whole new world to love here.  Appropriate for ages 11-14.

Reviewed from copy received from Viking.

This Week’s Tweets, Pins and Tumbls

Here are the links I shared on my Twitter, Pinterest, and Tumblr accounts this week that I think are cool:

Thomas Jefferson

BOOKS

A BBQ Book That You Can LITERALLY Barbecue With «TwistedSifter http://buff.ly/1swVogh

The reason every book about Africa has the same cover—and it’s not pretty – Quartz http://buff.ly/1iGhQhs

Why Books Stink: A GIF Response | BOOK RIOT http://buff.ly/1swXMUl

Wonderful books for a day at the beach or lake!

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

An Expanded Cultural Diversity Booklist: SLJ Readers Respond | School Library Journal http://buff.ly/1ojmTw3

Fifty Great Books to Read With Kids http://buff.ly/1jfL2Se

Jen Robinson’s Book Page: Announcing the 8th Annual Kidlitosphere Conference! http://buff.ly/1stDB9B

Top Ten Books to Get Kids Moving by Annie Orsini and Kendra Limback | Nerdy Book Club http://buff.ly/1jCYcIo

What Are Kids Reading in School? See the Most-Read Books in Each Grade – US News http://buff.ly/1uV443T

Women in STEM – The Horn Book http://buff.ly/1jH2y14

EBOOKS

Much at Stake in Amazon-HBG Fight http://buff.ly/1nJwpWS

LIBRARIES

Chicago public library offers robot rentals | Northwest Herald http://buff.ly/1jCXpXJ

College libraries should keep their books in the stacks. http://buff.ly/1uVWy96

Missoula Public Library opens new bike station http://buff.ly/1uV0zKT

“Stack attack”? The NYPL controversy and the future of public libraries | Pew Internet Libraries http://buff.ly/1stGxmE

YA LIT

John Green and his Nerdfighters Are Upending the Summer Blockbuster Model http://buff.ly/1swVmVB

Stacked: Get Genrefied: Historical Fantasy http://buff.ly/1jGV26g

What are the best LGBT books for children, teenagers and YAs? | Children’s books http://buff.ly/1jIN10S

YA books on death: is young adult fiction becoming too dark? | Children’s books http://buff.ly/1jCY9vZ

Review: Rules of Summer by Shaun Tan

rules of summer

Rules of Summer by Shaun Tan

Enter the surreal world of two brothers with a picture told in few words and many pictures.  The book takes place in the previous summer and explains what one of the brothers learned that summer.  The lessons are strange, but the images are even wilder.  The first lesson is “Never leave a red sock on the clothesline.”  It is accompanied by a wonderful and magnificently creepy image of a huge rabbit the size of a house with a red eye staring over the wall as the two brothers cower on the other side.  As the pages turn, the world gets odder and odder, forming a cohesive world but one that surprises, horrifies and delights.

As Tan blends humor with his frightening images, one starts to see a world that is beyond our own and yet strangely parallel.  These brothers live in a different world, one with its own rules and laws but one that is hauntingly familiar to our own.  Perhaps my favorite series of images is the series of pictures for “Never wait for an apology” where the younger brother is padlocked in a small steam engine with smoke pouring from the smokestack.  Black birds fly past.  Since all of the other images were done as single picture, I didn’t expect to turn the page and see the image continue from farther away.  It all evoked so brilliantly the loneliness, the trapped feeling, the isolation of waiting for an apology. 

Tan continues to surprise and delight in this new picture book.  While not for everyone, there are some children who will adore this skewed world that speaks to our own.  Appropriate for ages 6-10.

Reviewed from copy received from Arthur A. Levine Books.

Review: Chandra’s Magic Light by Theresa Heine

chandras magic light

Chandra’s Magic Light: A Story in Nepal by Theresa Heine and Judith Gueyfier

Chandra and her sister Deena were at the market when they saw a man selling a strange lamp.  There was a large crowd around him as he explained that the lamp gathered energy from the sun.  It would cost less money than a kerosene lamp over time, and it was much healthier too.  Chandra’s baby brother had a bad cough, and she knew that this lamp would help him.  But the lamp was too expensive for them so they headed home quickly to tell their father of the lamp.  But their father didn’t understand the need for a magic lamp or have the funds to spend on one.  The girls even showed their father a solar lamp that their neighbor had purchased, but still the cost was too high.  So the sisters decided that they would work to get the down payment for a lamp.  They picked rhododendrons in the hills and sold them at the market.  But even then, they did not have enough money.  This story focuses on the efforts of two girls to change the lives of their family members through one act of kindness and hard work.

This book draws the reader into the world of Nepal, evoking the sights, smells and sounds of the busy market before launching into an explanation of the importance of the solar lamps.  The authors make sure that readers understand the poverty of the family, the hardships they face and their inability to purchase the lamp they need.  The final pages of the book contain facts about Nepal and the way people live there. 

The illustrations are bright colored, filled with the colors of Nepal and with the bright colors of the clothing.  When the girls head to pick rhododendrons, the pages fill with the blossoms.  Those deep pinks and reds are also echoed throughout the home of the family and the clothes that the girls wear.  The colors are rich and saturated.

A strong female protagonist, a just cause, a glimpse of Nepalese culture, and a message of sustainability make this a strong addition to any library.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from library copy.

Fantastic Beasts–The Movie

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Harry Potter Companion Books, #1) 

Warner Bros. has announced that JK Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts will be released on November 18, 2016.  This is the first film in a new trilogy based on Rowling’s textbook that is 54 pages long.  It’s going to be fascinating to see how they pull a movie out of that book! 

Review: Eye to Eye by Steve Jenkins

eye to eye

Eye to Eye: How Animals See the World by Steve Jenkins

Explore different types of animal eyes in this gorgeous nonfiction picture book by the amazing Steve Jenkins.  In this book, Jenkins not only talks about the different kinds of animals eyes, explaining them in just the right amount of detail, but also looks at specific animals and their unique eyes.  Jenkins shares lots of facts, carefully chosen to be fascinating and fun.  One never knows what will be found on the next page and whether it will be looking right at you.

Jenkins makes sure that children will learn about evolution in this picture book.  His emphasis throughout is on the evolution from simple light-sensitive eyespots to the complex camera eyes of humans and hawks.  As always, his information is well-chosen and interesting.  It is accompanied by large-format images that are paired with smaller images that show the animals entire body.  This is science information at its best.

The eyes have it!  This is a book that belongs in all public libraries.  Appropriate for ages 6-9.

Reviewed from library copy.

Review: Elizabeth, Queen of the Seas by Lynne Cox

elizabeth queen of the seas

Elizabeth, Queen of the Seas by Lynne Cox, illustrated by Brian Floca

This is the true story of Elizabeth, an elephant seal, who decided she wanted to live in the warm waters of the Avon River near the city of Christchurch in New Zealand.  People are happy to have Elizabeth in the river, often spending time watching her swim.  Then Elizabeth decides that her favorite place to sun is the middle of a two-lane road.  It is flat and warm and perfect, except for the dangers of the cars to both Elizabeth and the people.  So Elizabeth is towed out to sea, to live with the other elephant seals.  But Elizabeth returns.  She is removed to the sea over and over again, each time taking her farther away from Christchurch.  But she still finds her way back to those warm river waters. 

Cox, a famous long-distance, open-water swimmer, has written her first children’s book here.  One would never know that it is her first.  She writes with a grace and simplicity that make her book entirely readable but also poetic too.  She incorporates imagery that will help children understand Elizabeth better: “Moving up the soft shore like a giant inchworm.”  She also uses descriptive language to draw contrasts between the waters in the river and those in the cold sea. 

Floca, winner of the 2014 Caldecott Medal, uses his fine-line drawings to show the merry spirit of Elizabeth both when she is in the warm river waters and upon her amazing returns after being towed away.  Floca’s illustrations of Elizabeth on the warm road and her surprise but lack of alarm when the cars approach are beautifully done. 

A winning story that tells the story of one unique elephant seal and the town that she decided was her home.  Appropriate for ages 5-7.

Reviewed from copy received from Random House Children’s Books.

2014 YALSA Teens’ Top Ten Nominees

YALSA has announced the 25 titles nominated for the Teens’ Top Ten.  Teens are encouraged to read the nominees before they vote, which starts on August 15 and goes through Teen Read Week ending on October 18. 

Here are the 25 nominees:

The 5th Wave (The Fifth Wave, #1) Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea (Between, #1) The Clockwork Scarab (Stoker & Holmes, #1)

The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea by April Tucholke

The Clockwork Scarab by Colleen Gleason

Earth Girl (Earth Girl, #1) Eleanor & Park The Eye of Minds (The Mortality Doctrine, #1)

Earth Girl by Janet Edwards

Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell

The Eye of Minds by James Dashner

The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die In the Shadow of Blackbirds Love in the Time of Global Warming (Love in the Time of Global Warming, #1)

The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die by April Henry

In the Shadow of Blackbirds by Cat Winters

Love in the Time of Global Warming by Francesca Lia Block

Maybe I Will A Midsummer Night's Scream Sky on Fire (Monument 14, #2) 

Maybe I Will by Laurie Gray

A Midsummer Night’s Scream by R. L. Stine

Monument 14: Sky on Fire by Emmy Laybourne

The Nightmare Affair (The Arkwell Academy, #1) Of Triton (The Syrena Legacy, #2) Openly Straight 

The Nightmare Affair by Mindee Arnett

Of Triton by Anna Banks

Openly Straight by Bill Konigsberg

The Rithmatist (Rithmatist, #1) Siege and Storm (The Grisha, #2) Six Months Later 

The Rithmatist by Brandon Sanderson

Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo

Six Months Later by Natalie D. Richards

Splintered (Splintered, #1) Steelheart (Reckoners, #1) Teardrop (Teardrop, #1)

Splintered by A. G. Howard

Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson

Teardrop by Lauren Kate

The Testing (The Testing, #1) This is What Happy Looks Like

The Testing by Joelle Charbonneau

This Is What Happy Looks Like by Jennifer E. Smith

This Song Will Save Your Life Winger (Winger, #1)

This Song Will Save Your Life by Leila Sales

Winger by Andrew Smith