Living Dead Girl

Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott.

This is one of the most gripping and brutal novels for teens I have ever read.  It is the story of Alice, who was abducted as a 10-year-old by Ray, who has sexually and emotionally abused her for five years.  Alice knows that if she tries to escape, her entire family will be killed.  Now Ray has started starving her to try to maintain her childlike body, not allowing her to get over 100 pounds.  His violence is also increasing as are his death threats.  Alice has long wanted to die, but death eludes her time and again though she wishes for it often.  Ray now wants a new little girl to join them, so Alice is allowed to head to a park and start scouting for what she can only hope will be her replacement.

This is a book that makes you want to scream.  It’s depictions of the horrors of Alice’s life are so plainly laid out, unflinchingly documented, and horribly vivid.  Scott’s writing can be poetic at times, underlining the brutality and desperation of the book.  Her pacing is perfection, leaving readers gasping for air as the oppressive nature of the story becomes too much.  This is a book that you will set down, only to return to immediately.  It is a book that will linger in your mind, enter your dreams, and change the way you see.  It is a book that is brutal truth that we often turn away from.  It is suffocating, dreadful, horrific and supremely, magically human all at the same time.

Heart-wrenching in its honesty, this book will appeal to many teens.  Hand it to the fans of A Child Called It.  Appropriate for ages 16-18.

Artie and Julie

Artie and Julie by Chih-Yuan Chen.

The author of the great Guji Guji returns with a very clever picture book that follows the stories of Artie and Julie.  Artie is a lion who is taught by his family to walk without making a sound, roar loudly, and to eat rabbits out on the grasslands.  Julie is a rabbit who is taught by her father to listen carefully, run quickly and jump high to escape from lions.  The book is split in two, literally, with Artie’s story on top and Julie’s below.  Each story can be read on its own until they merge, or readers can read both stories in tandem.  The illustrations bridge the cut pages, turning into complete page illustrations when matching pages are open. 

The playful physical design of the book is far more than just a design trick.  It allows readers to create their own experience in the book, then start again and read it an entirely different way.  This sense of free will is such an integral part of the story itself that the design is really the theme of the book brought into reality.  The book’s themes of family allegiance, stereotypes and prejudice are softened by the use of animals as characters, but still stand strong.

The book is a joy to share with children.  It may take some wrestling with pages to use it with a group of children, but a small group would work very well.  It is a great picture book to start discussions even with young children.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Dead Girl Walking

Dead Girl Walking by Linda Joy Singleton.

Left or right?  Amber’s sense of direction is so bad that she can get lost in her own hometown, finding a cemetery that she never knew existed.  And all in front of the girl she hopes will be her first management client.  Amber’s day goes from bad to even worse. When she finally makes it to the party, she hears a group of girls mocking her.  And to cap off the entire dreadful day, she is hit by a mailtruck.  When she heads toward the light, her grandmother and dog are there to greet her.  Her grandmother tells her that it is not yet her time, and sends her back, but on the way, Amber gets lost.  When she wakes up, she finds herself in the body of the most popular girl at school.  A girl whose flawless life has driven her to suicide.  Now Amber must find out if she can get back into her own body and along the way come to understand what drove this girl to do something so tragic.

This novel is very clever with great touches of humor throughout, the snarkiness of teens and siblings, and yet a serious side which supports the story with its strength.  Amber is a well-written protagonist who offers the perfect perspective on what is happening.  Equally nicely drawn are her friends, though the adults in the book trend toward stereotypes.

An intriguing but not dark look at death and life, this story will be enjoyed by teens who read teen novels, rather than those who read fantasy.  Appropriate for ages 12-15.

Cat & Mouse

Cat & Mouse by Ian Schoenherr.

Cat and Mouse play together, wrestling over a paper umbrella.  The text follows a nursery rhyme, changing into Hickory Dickory Dock, and then returning to the original rhyme.  As Mouse gets the best of Cat time and again, will they end up as enemies or friends?

The lively illustrations bring the old-fashioned text to vibrant life.  Both animals are captured with attention to minute details, but then are made wide-eyed and action filled to great comic effect.  Families who have kittens or cats will recognize Cat’s movements and body postures as being purely feline.  Mouse is much more human than Cat.

Enjoyable, laugh-out-loud nursery rhyme fun.  This book will work well for groups of children, and is ideal for use in story times or classroom units.  Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Mimi

Mimi by Carol Baicker-McKee.

Mimi is a little pig who has two great friends, her stuffed animal Bunny and her roly-poly bug Frank.  When she tries to share some of her breakfast banana with Frank, he isn’t there!  Mimi goes on with her day, heading to the library for story time, playing at the park, taking a nap, waking up cranky, blowing bubbles to improve her mood, and finally heading for bed.  Through all of that, there is no sign of Frank anywhere.  Until Mimi climbs into bed and feels something strange crawling on her!

The illustrations are what got me to pick up this book.  Baicker-McKee combines fabric, clay and paint to create three dimensional tableaus that are eye-catching and interesting.  Her text is equally successful and child-friendly with every-day events at the center of the story.  The quiet tone of the text perfectly suits the style of the illustrations.  Both parents and children will know that they are in a soft, sweet childhood story here.

While the story is sweet, there are no saccharine overtones here.  Just a gentle story that toddlers and preschoolers will enjoy and relate to.  Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Brava Strega Nona!

Brava, Strega Nona! A Heartwarming Pop-up Book by Tomie dePaola, Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhart.

While the subtitle claims to be a heartwarming pop-up book, I would describe it as a heart-stopping pop-up book.  Some of the pages fly open to form such complex and amazing structures that I found myself simply sitting and closing and opening the book again and again to see the pop-up work. 

The combination of dePaola’s simple illustrations and these amazing pop-ups is utterly charming.  Though the pop-ups are complex but stay in tune with the style of the illustrations, embracing the feel of Strega Nona entirely. 

This is a winner of a pop-up book.  My favorite spread is the grape arbor which pops to life before your eyes.  Though I must say that the one that got a gasp out of me is the noodles spilling – literally- right into the reader’s face.  Enjoyable and great fun, this of course will not survive classroom use or public checkouts in a library.  But what a treat to pull out for special storytimes.

Wabi Sabi

Wabi Sabi by Mark Reibstein, illustrated by Ed Young.

Wabi Sabi is a cat who is doesn’t know what her name means.  When her master is asked by another person about it’s meaning, she replies, "That’s hard to explain."  Wabi Sabi heads out to find out what her name means.  But everyone she asks says that it is hard to explain.  Until she herself begins to experience Wabi Sabi, the beauty in the modest and simple and imperfect, she can’t understand it.

The book begins with the definition of Wabi Sabi and then the entire book is dedicated to exemplifying it.  Each double spread page is matched with a haiku poem that immediately connects the mysterious Wabi Sabi feeling with the reader.  Reibstein has created text that tells a story that lives well next to the tiny haiku treasures throughout the book.  Young’s collage art is the perfect example of humble items being beautiful.  He uses pine boughs, hair, dead leaves, and paper to create a world in this book that is pure Wabi Sabi.  Exquisitely done.

For classes studying Japan or those working on haiku units, this book is a gem.  The fact that it is also a work of art will draw in other readers, who will find themselves experiencing something at the heart of Japanese culture.  Appropriate for ages 6-9.

Pearl Barley and Charlie Parsley

Pearl Barley and Charlie Parsley by Aaron Blabey.

Pearl and Charlie are great friends, but they are also almost completely different from one another.  Pearl is loud, vivacious, brave and silly.  Charlie is quiet, shy, reserved and kind.  How can they be friends?  Well, it turns out that they suit each other perfectly.  When one has a need, the other meets it.  Kindly, warmly and in their own unique way. 

All of us have a bit of Pearl and a bit of Charlie in us, so this is a picture book that speaks to everyone.  Blabey’s very short text is perfect to read aloud, often allowing the picture to tell the bulk of the story.  His illustrations are friendly, warm and quite silly at times.  What could have been a saccharine story of perfect friendship is brought to life through humor and the lovely imperfection of the two characters.  The best piece of the book is that these two different individuals did not have to change themselves to be friends, instead they took the parts of themselves that are most special and offer them to the other.  What a great message for children!

Spending time with these two is quite a treat.  Through no lecturing whatsoever, children will see what it is to be a friend without changing yourself at all.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.

Footprints in the Snow

Footprints in the Snow by Mei Matsuoka.

Wolf knows that most books portray wolves to be evil, greedy and cruel. So he sets out to write his own book about a nice wolf.  The book starts with footprints in the freshly-fallen snow that may lead him to a new friend.  Following the trail of footprints, Mr. Nice Wolf discovers that no one trusts him to be a friend, thinking he is tracking breakfast or lunch instead.  When Mr. Nice Wolf reaches the duck who made the tracks he has been following, his natural instincts get the best of him and the duck looks so delicious!  Wolf is torn out of his story as he falls into the bathtub where a rubber ducky is bobbing.  After drying off, Wolf hears a knock on the door and when answering it finds a trail of footprints leading away in the fresh snow.

This book is just as nicely designed as it is written.  Matsuoka has created a book with perfect action and style for children.  His text is light and inviting, though the story is deeply layered, making the book very approachable.  The parts of the book that are Wolf’s story have illustrations that are bordered in wood and often have Wolf’s hand drawing in them.  A delightful and subtle way to keep children understanding that this is a story within a story. 

Matsuoka’s illustrations are filled with small details.  The warmth of Wolf’s house in the beginning of the book is brought to life with the tiny touches of munched cookies, books strewn across the floor, and a roaring fire.  Her illustrations tell the story almost as much as the text does.  The two are inseparable and unite to become a very special picture book.

Capturing the power of imagination, the joy of a hunt across a snowy landscape, the fun of creating your own story, this beautifully designed book is perfect for wolf story times.  Appropriate for ages 3-6.