Strange Nature: The Insect Portraits of Levon Biss by Gregory Mone

Cover image for Strange Nature.

Strange Nature: The Insect Portraits of Levon Biss by Gregory Mone, illustrated by Levon Biss (9781419731662)

Levon Biss is a photographer who usually took pictures of celebrities and politicians. When his son brought him a regular garden beetle, the two of them looked at it under a microscope and were amazed at what they saw. Biss then selected 37 insects from the collection of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History to photograph. He used special lenses, cameras and lights to take thousands of pictures of each insect. Those many images were then combined to create the Microsculpture project. The images were enlarged and shown in museums around the world. This nonfiction picture book explores the images created from the Microsculpture project and offers information on each of the insects.

Mone’s text is limited to explaining how Biss got into photographing insects and then moves into sharing scientific information and fascinating facts about each insect. The book includes a glossary and an encouragement to head to the Microsculpture website to learn even more. Mone’s information is nicely selected offering enticing facts, measurements and also pointing out the most interesting parts of the photograph to the reader.

The portraits are incredibly detailed and beautiful. From the lighting that captures each insects iridescence to the incredible shapes of their bodies and armor. The book offers close ups of various parts of each insect, allowing readers to see eyes, legs, heads and more up close. These images are transformative, letting all of us know that we walk in a world of tiny amazing monsters.

Remarkable photographs that will have you leaning in close to see even more, if you dare! Appropriate for ages 4-8.

Reviewed from copy provided by Abrams.

The People’s Painter: How Ben Shahn Fought for Justice with Art by Cynthia Levinson

Cover image for The People’s Painter.

The People’s Painter: How Ben Shahn Fought for Justice with Art by Cynthia Levinson, illustrated by Evan Turk (9781419741302)

Ben Shahn was born in Lithuania and at age four saw his father taken banished for demanding workers’ rights. From a very young age, Ben drew, even though paper was scarce in Lithuania, so he drew in the margins. When his father ends up in America, he brings Ben, his mother and his brother to join him. Ben goes to school, learning a new alphabet instead of the Hebrew one that he learned in Lithuania. He is soon identified as a promising young artist at school, but his family must send him to work in order to survive. Ben works for a lithographer, hand-lettering signs while going to art school at night. But art school isn’t what he is looking for. They teach landscapes rather than the people and stories that Ben wants to paint. Inspired by stories of injustice, Ben painted about current events, creating series of paintings that while not pretty were inspiring. He went on to document the Great Depression using photography, hired by the government several times as an artist. Ben continued to paint the people who were invisible to others.

Levinson captures the story of Shahn’s life with a focus on what drove him to create art, linking it to tragedies in his homeland and his family. Her writing is full of admiration for his hard work and insistence that he paint what he wanted to rather than what he was being told to do. His belief in sharing the stories of those less fortunate shines in her words, revealed by her stellar writing that is both clear and also evocative.

Turk’s art pays homage to Shahn’s throughout the book. Made with gouache, acrylic, pencil, chalk and linoleum block prints, the illustrations are textured and layered. They include versions of some of Shahn’s most iconic works. Turk’s use of bold color, deep shadow and light create a marvelous background for Shahn’s life story.

A great picture book biography that speaks to the intersection of art and political statement. Appropriate for ages 6-9.

Reviewed from copy provided by Abrams.

2021 Lambda Literary Award Winners

The winners of the Lambda Literary Awards were announced last week. These awards celebrate the best in LGBTQIA+ writing for a variety of ages. The categories include fiction and nonfiction as well. Here are the winners and finalists for the children’s and YA categories:

LGBTQ CHILDREN’S/MIDDLE GRADE

WINNER

King and the Dragonflies by Kacen Callender

FINALISTS

The Deep & Dark Blue by Niki Smith

From Archie to Zack by Vincent X. Kirsch

A High Five for Glenn Burke by Phil Bildner

Our Subway Baby by Peter Mercurio

LGBTQ YOUNG ADULT

WINNER

Flamer by Mike Curato

FINALISTS

Camp by L.C. Rosen

The Magic Fish by Trung Le Nguyen

Sasha Masha by Agnes Borinsky

You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson

All Our Hidden Gifts by Caroline O’Donoghue

Cover image for All Our Hidden Gifts.

All Our Hidden Gifts by Caroline O’Donoghue (9781536213942)

When Maeve finds a deck of tarot cards while clearing out a closet at school during her suspension, she soon realizes that she has a talent for telling people’s fortunes. Maeve isn’t talented in general, not musical or good at school. As she starts to tell everyone’s fortunes secretly at school, she becomes friends with Fiona, perhaps her first real friend after she pushed Lili away. But when she tells Lili’s fortune reluctantly and wishes Lili would disappear, a frightening Housekeeper card appears and soon after, Lili vanishes. Considered a witch by all the students at school, Maeve tries to figure out what happened to Lili and if she is the one who made her leave. Meanwhile, Maeve is growing closer to Lili’s older brother, Roe, who is honest with Lili about being genderqueer. As they try to solve the mystery of Lili’s disappearance, a malevolent force emerges, one who is putting people Maeve loves in direct danger. With growing desperation, Maeve must decide how much she is willing to sacrifice to fix the imbalance she may have created.

Looking for a fantasy book for teens about witches and tarot that is legitimately creepy and not trite in the least? This is the book for you! Free of tropes that plague this sort of teen novel, this Irish read is a dark delight of a novel. Add in the modern issues of women’s rights, racism, hate crimes and the threats against LGBTQ people and this is also a book that looks deeply at our world and insists that Maeve acknowledges her own privilege and bias without scolding.

The three main characters are a marvel. Maeve is the best mixture of lack of self-esteem, witchcraft power and sarcasm. Roe is at first shy and near silent and steadily reveals himself to Maeve and to the reader. The hot kisses are marvelous, particularly as they involve an unapologetic and genderqueer character. Fiona is a talented actress with almost no friends, a huge extended family and a desire to be something more than what society is always assigning to her as a Filipina girl. This is not a cast you see often in teen novels about witchcraft.

Haunting witchcraft with social justice and feminism. Appropriate for ages 14-18.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Walker Books.

2021 Indie Book Awards

The winners of the 2021 Indie Book Awards have been announced. It’s an award that highlights books from independent publishers, university presses, self-published titles, and e-books that are written in English. There are numerous categories in the awards with several focused specifically on books for youth. Here are the winners and the finalists in those categories, many of which are only available via Amazon.

CHILDREN’S EDUCATIONAL PICTURE BOOK (6 Years & Up)

WINNERS

The Boy Who Flies – A Story of Today’s Totonac People by JoAnne DeKeuster

Something Wonderful by Matt Ritter, illustrated by Nayl Gonzalez

FINALISTS

The Big Bad Coronavirus and How We Can Beat It! by Lisa Carroll, illustrated by G. F. Newland

Breathe, Ollie! by Krista Betcher, illustrated by Kevin Cannon

Footsteps in Bay de Verde by Charis Cotter, illustrated by Jenny Dwyer

Light Is Color! The Comic (and Coloring and Activity) Guide to Visible and Invisible Things by Nicole and Kevin Kurtz

Mei Ling in China City: Divided by War, United by a Lifeline of Letters by Icy Smith, illustrated by Gayle Garner Roski

CHILDREN’S ILLUSTRATIVE PICTURE BOOK (6 Years & Up)

WINNER

I Know a Woman: A Song for Mothers by Sharon Gudereit, illustrated by Miranda Pringle

FINALISTS

The Best ME That I Can Be – RESPECT, by Rose Angebrandt, Illustrated by Henrique Rampazzo

The Forgotten Garden by [Basma El khatib]

The Forgotten Garden, by Basma Elkhatib, Illustrated by Omar Lafi, Translated by Ghenwa Yehia

Gratitude the Great, by Pamelyn Rocco, Illustrated by Taylor Barron

The Hyrax in the Mogogos, by Douglas Cochran, Illustrated by S. Alex Percival

Our Folktales: The All-time Favourite Folktales from Asia, by Ruth Wan-Lau

The Tip of the Tale, by Suzanne Alexander, Illustrated by Ashley Teets

CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK #OWNVOICES

WINNER

I Am a Triathlete, by Nia Obotette, Illustrated by Adriel Meka

FINALISTS

Adventures of a Pangopup, by Terri Tatchell, Illustrated by Ivan Sulima

Just Because…: A Story Book About Self-Acceptance, by C.M. Harris, Illustrated by Ashlynn Feather

Salma the Syrian Chef, by Danny Ramadan, Illustrated by Anna Bron

Sassy Sisters vs The Sock Monster, by Jacquese Groves, Illustrated by Karine Makartichan

Who’s Jerry?, by T. M. Jackson, Illustrated by Darwin Marfil 

CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK (0-5 Years)

WINNER

My Monsterpiece, by Amalia Hoffman

FINALISTS

52 – A Tale of Loneliness, by Johnny DePalma, Illustrated by Kyle Brown

The Big Adventures Of A Little Tree: Tree Finds Friendship, by Nadja Springer, Illustrated by Tilia Rand-Bell

A Common Thirst, by Gary Boelhower, Illustrated by Sarah Brokke

Llama Lu, by Julia Da Rocha, Illustrated by M. Judith Da Rocha

The Slumbering Pearl by [Tyler Oliver, Gita Treice]

The Slumbering Pearl, by Tyler Oliver, Illustrated by Gita Treice 

CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK (Non-Fiction – All Ages)

WINNER

Something Wonderful, by Matt Ritter, Illustrated by Nayl Gonzalez

FINALISTS

MOMENT, by Robert Abad

Ni Hao, China!, by Sohan Chunduru, Illustrated by Katarina Stevanovic

Nutaui’s Cap, by Bob Bartel, Illustrated by Mary Ann Penashue, Translated by Sebastian Piwas, Stella Rich, and Mani Katinen Nuna

Under the Stars – Astrophysics For Everyone, by Lisa Harvey-Smith, Illustrated by Mel Matthews

The Wall & the Wind, Written and Illustrated by Veselina Tomova

CHILDREN’S/JUVENILE (Fiction)

WINNER – ALSO THE GRAND PRIZE WINNER OVERALL

Sapphire the Great and the Meaning of Life, by Beverley Brenna, Illustrated by Tara Anderson

FINALISTS

The Mystery of the Portuguese Waltzes, by Richard Simas, Illustrated by Caroline Clarke

The Rabbit Princess: Journeys, by R. Chen, Illustrated by Ed Chen, R. Chen

Should I Say Hi? A Story of Courage That Reads Forward and Backward, by Rose Collins, Illustrated by Nathaly Bonilla

Why the moon travels, by Oein DeBhairduin, Illustrated by Leanne McDonagh

Yara’s Spring, by Jamal Saeed & Sharon E. McKay

CHILDREN’S/JUVENILE (Non-Fiction)

WINNER

Presidents Play!, by Jonathan Pliska, Illustrated by John Hutton

FINALISTS

God Says: My Book of Emotions by [Doreen Homawoo, Jessica Homawoo, Jayden Munnelly, Roseline Fiatuse]

God Says; My Book of Emotions, by Doreen Homawoo, Illustrated by Jayden Munnelly, Jessica Homawoo

Let’s Learn about Chemistry, by Stephanie Ryan, Illustrated by Christine Cagara 

A White House Alphabet, by Arioth Harrison Smirne with Rocco Smirne, Illustrated by John Hutton 

Young Kap, by Kingsley Osei, Illustrated by Elaine Davis

A Young Person’s Field Guide to Finding Lost Shipwrecks, by Laurie Zaleski

YOUNG ADULT (Fiction – 12 Years to 16 Years)

WINNER

The Manticore’s Vow: And Other Stories, by Cassandra Rose Clarke

FINALISTS

Costly Freedom, by Terry Webb

The Dumpster Club, by David L. Craddock, Illustrated by Kristoffer Furacão

Even Goats Need Closure, by Jane Donovan and Holly Trechter 

Half on Tuesdays, by Amy E. Whitman

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The Rabbit Princess: Journeys, by R. Chen, Illustrated by Ed Chen, R. Chen

News to Wake Your Brain Cells – June 4

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

12 joyful children’s books that explore pronouns & gender identity – Romper

30 LGBTQ+ children’s books for Pride Month – Mutually Inclusive

Graphic nonfiction for middle grade readers – Book Riot

Picture books for Pride Month – ALSC Blog

LIBRARIES

Forget art and gems, thieves make discreet millions at the library – Daily Beast

IMLS releases 2019 data on American public libraries – InfoDocket

Pride breaks with Halifax libraries after controversial book kept on shelves – CBC

YA LIT

7 must-read YA Black girl magic books – Tor

10 of the best new June YA books to TBR – Book Riot

26 new LGBTQ+ YA books to add to your 2021 reading list – Pride

From zombies to modern love stories, these are the best YA books of June – PopSugar

Top new young adult books in June 2021 – Den of Geek

18 June YA Books to Wake Your Brain Cells

Here are 18 of the YA books released in June that are garnering a lot of attention and starred reviews. Enjoy!

Ace of Spades by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé

All Our Hidden Gifts by Caroline O’Donoghue

An Emotion of Great Delight by Tahereh Mafi

Blackout by Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D. Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas, Ashley Woodfolk and Nicola Yoon

Blood Like Magic by Liselle Sambury

Darkness Outside Us by Eliot Schrefer

Eat Your Heart Out by Kelly deVos

The Ghosts We Keep by Mason Deaver

The Girl from the Sea by Molly Knox Ostertag

Girls at the Edge of the World by Laura Brooke Robson

Instructions for Dancing by Nicola Yoon

My Contrary Mary by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows

One Great Lie by Deb Caletti

The Passing Playbook by Isaac Fitzsimons

Strange Creatures by Phoebe North

Violet Ghosts by Leah Thomas

We Are Inevitable by Gayle Forman

The Witch King by H. E. Edgmon

2020 Governor General’s Literary Award Winners

The winners of the 2020 Governor General’s Literary Awards have been announced. The awards celebrate the best published books in Canada. There are two categories that celebrate books for youth. Here are the winners and finalists in each of those categories:

YOUNG PEOPLE’S LITERATURE – TEXT

WINNER

The King of Jam Sandwiches by Eric Walters

FINALISTS

The Barren Grounds by David A. Robertson

Harvey Holds His Own by Colleen Nelson

Nevers by Sara Cassidy

Pine Island Home by Polly Horvath

YOUNG PEOPLE’S LITERATURE – ILLUSTRATED BOOKS

WINNER

The Barnabus Project by The Fan Brothers

FINALISTS

I Talk Like a River by Jordan Scott, illustrated by Sydney Smith

Our Little Kitchen by Jillian Tamaki

Swift Fox All Along by Rebecca Lea Thomas, illustrated by Maya McKibbin

Weekend Dad by Naseem Hrab, illustrated by Frank Viva

15 June Children’s Books to Wake Your Brain Cells

Here are 15 of the buzziest books for middle schoolers and elementary ages that are coming out in June. Enjoy!

Ahmed Aziz’s Epic Year by Nina Hamza

Athena: Goddess of Wisdom and War by Imogen Greenberg, illustrated by Isabel Greenberg

Chibi-Usagi: Attack of the Heebie Chibis by Julie and Stan Sakai

Chunky by Yehudi Mercado

Crossing the Stream by Elizabeth-Irene Baitie

A Glasshouse of Stars by Shirley Marr

Harry versus the First 100 Days of School by Emily Jenkins, illustrated by Pete Oswald

Jukebox by Nidhi Chanani

The Legend of Auntie Po by Shing Yin Khor

Matasha by Pamela Erens

Monster Friends by Kaeti Vandorn

The Most Perfect Thing in the Universe by Tricia Springstubb

My Own World by Mike Holmes

Rez Dogs by Joseph Bruchac

To Tell You the Truth by Beth Vrabel