Who's Been Here: A Tale in Tracks

Who’s Been Here? : a tale in tracks by Fran Hodgkins, illustrated by Karel Hayes.

Take a walk through a wintry setting and find out what three children and their dog discover has been there before them.  Each illustration is framed with branches (as you can see on the cover too) and outside that frame readers will see the tracks close up.  Animals range from cats to turkeys to bears!  It is an exciting walk in the woods indeed.

The illustrations are charming in their rustic style framed by the woodsy branches.  The book is a winning combination of information and guessing game.  It will work well for units on animals and their tracks.  Plus it will be equally at home in story times about the winter.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.

Bones of Faerie

Bones of Faerie by Janni Lee Simner

15-year-old Liza lives in a world that recently survived a war between the human world and the world of Faerie.  Now the things in the human world have become strange, vines and trees have a taste for blood, corn and potatoes fight back when harvested.  Liza’s father has kept the entire village safe after the war, stamping out any sign of magic in the people who live there.  When Liza’s baby sister is born with the clear hair that is a sign of magic, her father takes the baby into the wild and leaves her to die.  After the baby’s death, Liza’s mother leaves the village, her death in the forest a certainty.  Now Liza is starting to notice signs of magic in herself.  She has visions in water and mirrors.  Fearing for her life and following her visions that show her mother alive, Liza flees into the wild.  She is joined by a boy from her village who has a magical secret of his own.  Liza must now learn the truth about the War and her magic for herself.

A stunning blend of apocalyptic fiction and faerie tale fantasy, this book is unique and fascinating.  The two divergent subjects work well together, blending to form a world that is strange yet familiar.  Because it is about Faerie and the real world, the book is able to talk frankly about the horrors and aftermath of all war. 

The characters are just as intriguing as the setting itself.  Liza is a contradiction both fearing magic and being able to wield it herself.  The  supporting characters have that same blend of the familiar and the surprising. 

I found this book nearly impossible to put down, caught up in Liza’s story and in the world itself.  Recommended to readers of Melissa Marr’s and Holly Black’s books.  Appropriate for ages 13-16.

Jerk, California

Jerk, California by Jonathan Friesen

Sam Carter has been bullied throughout his high school days because of his tics and outbursts that come from his Tourette’s Syndrome.  Unable to control his movements, except for very short periods, Sam is shunned by his stepfather, Bill.  Bill has told Sam many stories about his neglectful real father who womanized and drank and gave Sam his disorder through his faulty genes.  Now Sam is about to graduate from high school.  He has no prospects, no college dreams, nothing to look forward to.  It all starts to change when he agrees to work for George the Coot who used to be best friends with his real father.  As Sam learns the truth about his father, he discovers the truth about himself too.

There is much to appreciate in this novel about identity, fathers, nature and nurture.  Friesen has created a protagonist who is a wonderful combination of damaged and heroic.  Sam is abused by life but unbroken.  He himself cannot see beyond his disorder, but others can show him the way.  He rises above over and over again, but doesn’t quite realize that he has done it.  Sam is a wonderful metaphor for life.

The Tourette’s Syndrome is not played up to TV talk show proportions.  It is an important and pivotal feature of the story and of Sam, but it is written honestly and plainly.  I also appreciated the thread of religion that runs through the book, becoming part of Sam’s journey as well.  It too is not overly done, just a subtle part of the quest Sam is on.

Highly recommended, this book well deserves the ALA Schneider Award which consistently awards books that are very special and worth finding.  A complex tale of self and family, this book will be enjoyed by teen readers who want deep reading without the darkness.  Appropriate for ages 14-17.

Wish: Wishing Traditions Around the World

Wish: Wishing Traditions around the World by Roseanne Thong, illustrated by Elisa Kleven.

Readers get the joy of moving from country to country and seeing how children make wishes in various cultures.  Each country gets a two-page spread with an explanation of the way to wish and the culture lovingly depicted in Kleven’s illustrations.  Though we move from country to country and each is seen as unique, there is also a strong sense of global community here all based on the common thread of the wish.  What a powerful symbol for everyone’s desire for a positive future in the world.

Thong’s paragraphs on how to make wishes are each accompanied by a four line poem.  One could read the book to smaller children and just share the short poems in each one, but most children will want all of the interesting details.  Thong has edited her paragraphs with great skill, harboring no repetition from country to country and being factual but fascinating at the same time.

Recommended for nonfiction collections in libraries that are looking for books that are friendly entry points to multiculturalism.  This makes a great book to cuddle up with and start a discussion on how we make wishes ourselves.  Appropriate for ages 4-7. 

Tsunami!

Tsunami! by Kimiko Kajikawa, illustrated by Ed Young.

Ojiisan is the wealthiest person in his small village.  His wisdom has people walking the crooked track up the mountain to ask for his advice.  Ojiisan decides not to go to the rice harvest celebration in the village because something does not feel right to him.  So he watches the celebration from high above on the mountain.  When the first earthquake comes it doesn’t stop the celebration below.  Then Ojiisan sees the sea moving away from the shore, he realizes what is happening – tsunami!  But how can he warn the villagers celebrating below him?

This simple, strong story about one man’s sacrifice to save others in danger is breathtaking.  Young’s paper illustrations are gripping and fully capture the incredible strength of the disaster and the wonder of survival.  Kajikawa’s text is short, simple and even more effective for those reasons.  There is enough drama to carry the story forward without flowery language.

Highly recommended and timely, this book will not sit still on the shelf.  The cover alone will sell it and just wait until people take a peek inside!  Wonderful storytelling combined with great illustrations.  Appropriate for ages 4-8.

Eon: Dragoneye Reborn

Eon: Dragoneye Reborn by Alison Goodman

Eon is a candidate to become the next Rat Dragoneye, one of the highest ranking positions in the Empire.  Eon is an unlikely candidate with his deformed hip which marks him as an untouchable.  Despite this, his ability to see all of the dragons is unique and makes him worthy to be a candidate.  Eon has learned all he can to prepare himself for the bonding with the dragon, memorizing complicated combat moves to be done in a pattern when approaching the dragon.  But on the day of the selection the rules are changed and Eon faces a cruel teacher who is out to set an example for who should be allowed to be a candidate.  Eon’s amazing adventure continues from there but I wouldn’t want to spoil a second of it for you.

Goodman has created a wonderful world built from both the Chinese and Japanese traditions with just enough of her own personal spin.  Eon is a wonderfully complex character: broken, lonely, trapped but brave and skilled.  Eon reminds me of the wonderful Miles Vorkosigan created by Lois McMaster Bujold, one of the greatest compliments I could give. 

Goodman also excels at pacing, wonderfully playing intense battles against tense moments of anticipation.  There is plenty of action and adventure here that improves the world building rather than detracting from it.

I consider this one of the best fantasy novels of 2008.  The cover is vivid and colorful, only hinting at the delights that wait inside.  Highly recommended for fantasy readers, this one will have you breathlessly awaiting the second in the series.

Harry Hungry!

Harry Hungry! by Steven Salerno

Harry’s tummy begins to rumble and he starts to howl with hunger.  His mother rushes to him with a snack but he calls for more!  Blueberries, cookies, and he still wants more.  He toddles to the fridge – tips it on its side and gobbles it all right down.  He heads outside, eats the flowers, the hose and the mailbox.  And he is still hungry!  What will it take to get this baby to stop eating everything in sight?

Expect delighted expressions when Harry tips the refrigerator on its side.  The book moves from what seems to be a conventional story about a hungry toddler to a wonderful wild ride with a toddler eating ever more spectacular things.  The tone switches with ease from a funny toddler story to almost a Godzilla-style rampage. 

Salerno’s illustrations are a delight with their thick lines and bright colors that will project well to a group of children.   Read this one last at a story time about snacks and you will have them eating out of your hand!

Appropriate for ages 3-6 with older children appreciating the humor most of all.

Same Difference

Same Difference by Siobhan Vivian

Emily feels like a third wheel now that her best friend Meg has a boyfriend.  So when Emily gets the chance to attend a summer art program in Philadelphia, she decides to go even though she has never considered herself a real artist.  Emily’s summer is split between the big city and her suburban home.  She discovers new things about herself and makes a new best friend, Fiona, who is also an artist.  Emily’s friendship with Meg and her relationship with her family suffer as she realizes that she is changing while everyone at home is staying the same.  This is a book about finding who you really are when you don’t know who in the world that is.

Vivian’s tone here is perfection.  Readers see the world through Emily’s eyes and by the end of the book are understanding that Emily is not seeing things as clearly as she first thought.  The book could easily have been one of an artist fleeing their suburban roots, but Vivian makes it much more than that as Emily realizes that home and the past are vital pieces of her too. 

The book has just enough tension to keep things interesting but never moves into melodrama or excess.  There is a natural rhythm to the book, making it all ring true.  Vivian’s characterizations are also nicely done, with even secondary characters shown as complex and surprising.

Highly recommended, this novel will appeal to many teens who see themselves as not fitting in with their background or family or friends.  It is a classic dilemma faced by adolescents that is captured in a wonderfully drawn novel.  Appropriate for ages 13-17.

Wintergirls

Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson

Lia finds out at breakfast that her ex-friend Cassie died alone in a motel room.  Now Lia is left with the question of why she didn’t bother to answer her cell phone when Cassie called.  33 times.  There are rumors that it was drugs or alcohol that killed her, alone in that room.  Lia is fighting her own demons, unable to handle what is happening to her and what happened to Cassie.  Lia has been hospitalized twice for eating disorders and is not on the road to recovery, but instead heading deeper and deeper into the mental maze of weight loss, lies and self abuse. 

What a perfect author for this book!  I have read many books about eating disorders for teens, but none have led me this deeply into the psychological torment.  Lia’s world is filled with obsession, counting calories, avoiding food, lying about it and covering up.  Her world is strange, foreign, but through the skillful writing also amazingly familiar and real.  The book is a slow torture of a novel, building in soft, painful crescendos to what is inevitable. 

Through this haze of pain and self-hate, Halse Anderson offers delectable prose that shines and sings.  Here is just one of the passages that had me gasping with the amazing writing:

This girl shivers and crawls under the covers with all her clothes on and falls into an overdue library book, a faerie story with rats and marrow and burning curses.  The sentences build a fence around her, a Times Roman 10-point barricade, to keep the thorny voices in her head from getting too close.

That is one of many places where Halse Anderson creates such beauty out of what is normal, juxtaposing it with a gentle touch against the agony that is Lia’s existence. 

Highly recommended and perfect for book discussions, this is one of those novels that girls will share, keep overlong from libraries, and want their own copies of.  Destined to be one of the best of the year, I just may hear Printz bells chiming for this a year from now.  Appropriate for ages 13-16.