Paper Towns

Paper Towns by John Green

Released October 2008.

Green has created another winner for teens, and it just might be his best book yet!

Quentin is a high school senior who lives a quiet but not horrible life.  He has two best friends, Ben and Radar, two loving and still-married therapist parents, and a natural abhorrence of the prom.  His quiet life is changed when his life-long crush, Margo Roth Spiegelman, comes to his window wearing black face paint and inviting him on an all-night revenge spree.  It is the longest and most amazing night of Quentin’s life, but when he heads back to school to see Margo she has disappeared.  Now all he has are baffling clues that she left behind to help him find her.

The characters here are so amazing it is hard to put it into words.  Green has captured what it is to be a nerd or geek in school.  It isn’t lonely or harsh, just unique.  Quentin and his friends are intelligent, esoteric and hysterically funny guys.  They are well-developed characters that readers will love spending time with.  Other characters are equally interesting. Green has created a living, breathing high school here with a deft tone with dialogue and humor.

Green’s inclusion of Whitman, Moby Dick and other works of literature does more than invite teens to pick those books up.  He makes these tomes and others come to life, intertwine with the modern world and be relevant and meaningful.  A masterful accomplishment.

This book will fly off the shelves with the great dual cover, but make sure that it gets into the hands of well-adjusted, bright and unique kids.  They are the ones who will love the jokes, the characters, the literature, and the quest.

A Printz contender to be sure.  Appropriate for ages 15-18.

It's Not Fair!

 

It’s Not Fair! by Amy Krouse Rosenthal and Tom Lichtenheld.

With a rhythm and rhymes that add to the fun, this book about the unfair part of life is a pleasure to share with children.  My only warning is that you don’t start a conversation about what hasn’t been fair in their lives because it would be impossible to end.  All children have a catalog of the wrongs that have been done them by siblings, parents, teachers, and even people in the grocery store. 

The book has charming illustrations that capture childhood with thick black lines and bright colors set on white backgrounds.  The list of unfair scenarios is silly but with some truth behind it.  This is a light, fun read for preschoolers and their parents.  My favorite touch is the back of the book which I  won’t spoil for you, but the final page inside the book is a winner too.  It has a book on a bookshelf thinking how unfair it is:

Why can’t books go on and on?

No more endings only Once Upons…

It’s not fair.

And the readers will feel the same way as the book ends.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Astronaut Handbook

Astronaut Handbook by Meghan McCarthy.

One look at the googly-eyed astronauts on the cover of this book and you will be charmed.  So will children, guaranteed.  This book is a picture book handbook for future astronauts, covering the various types of astronauts, fitness tests, working well with others, practicing with machines used in space, weightlessness, food, and even space toilets.  Children will have many of their basic questions answered and some will be inspired to seek out more detailed books.  This is a friendly introduction to what being an astronaut is all about.

Written at exactly the right approachable level, the book offers details only when they will intrigue children.  For example, McCarthy wisely has a very detailed page on both the spacesuit and the space toilet.  At other times, McCarthy focuses on the variety of backgrounds and projects that astronauts are part of, opening children’s ideas about what an astronaut really does.  The illustrations are cartoony and friendly.  McCarthy has plenty of women and people of color throughout.

Recommended for all public libraries and for any 4-6 year old who thinks they want to be an astronaut when they grow up.

In a Blue Room

In a Blue Room by Jim Averbeck, illustrated by Tricia Tusa.

Alice is unable to sleep because her room isn’t fully blue.  Her mother tries to help, bringing in flowers with a sweet scent, a steaming cup of tea, a snuggly warm quilt, and a string of bells to ring in the breeze.  None of the items are blue, but they all help to greet the blue of the evening.  Finally, with the light off, Alice is in her blue filled room and all of the gentle motherly touches are tinted to a blue too.

This is a gentle bedtime book that is soothing, loving and beautiful.  Tusa’s art is whimsical and magical.  I love the details of all of the items in the bedroom, all adding together to warmth and home.  The warm yellow of the walls, will get children thinking immediately about how in the world this room is going to become blue.  The detail of each item being a different non-blue color is also a great part of the story.  Averbeck’s text has a flow that adds to the soothing gentleness of the entire book.  Until we are all washed away like Alice with the tide of deep blue.

One of the most evocative and charming bedtime tales I have seen in recent time, this book is a great bedtime read aloud.  The pictures are large enough to use it with a group, so this should become one of your standards for bedtime pajama story times at the library too.

Snoring Beauty

Snoring Beauty by Bruce Hale, illustrated by Howard Fine.

Sleeping Beauty with a twist, this story still has a fuming fairy and curse.  But there the resemblance ends.  When the princess is grown, the curse goes into effect, turning her into a sleeping dragon.  This curse comes with a quince connection, making it all the harder to break.  Princes from all across the land come to try, each with a quince of some sort, but nothing works.  Until one day a young man enters the castle and manages to break the curse with just a kiss alone.  You’ll have to read the book to find out why it worked.

Hale has created a book that is very, very funny.  Each name of a royal figure is designed to make you giggle:  Queen Esophagus is married to King Gluteus.  Lovely.  The princess in her dragon form snores with a hysterical Squonnnnk-sheeeooo, a noise I dare you to do without drawing laughter from children.  The illustrations just add to the fun, with the lipstick endowed purple dragon and the wide range of fairies.  Many of the jokes will be too much for very small children, older elementary children will enjoy it most.

A great romp of fun.  Appropriate for ages 6-9.

The Umbrella Queen

The Umbrella Queen by Shirin Yim Bridges, illustrations by Taeeun Yoo.

Noot grew up in a Thai village that specializes in making and painting umbrellas.  Her mother and the other women of the village decorated the umbrellas with paintings of flowers and butterflies.  Noot helped her father and grandmother make the umbrellas, but wanted most to help her mother paint them.  Noot’s mother let her help, having her copy her own design exactly.  Noot did so well that she was allowed to have her own workspace to decorate umbrellas.  She started out painting flowers and butterflies following her mother’s pattern, but then started painting playful elephants on the umbrellas.  When her parents discovered her changes, Noot was scolded.  The shop in town only sold the conventional designs. So Noot painted the butterflies and flowers, but in the evenings painted her own designs on small toy umbrellas that she used to decorate her windowsill.  Then one day it was announced that the King would be coming to select the Umbrella Queen.  All of the umbrellas were displayed for his consideration, but the ones that caught his eye were small and on a windowsill.

Offering a lovely glimpse of Thai village life intertwined with art, this book is a gentle look at duty and creativity.  The illustrations have a feeling of timelessness with their gold, red, turquoise and black colors that have a certain handmade aspect.  The text reads aloud easily and well, explaining for American children with just enough detail why Noot cannot choose what she paints on the umbrellas.  There is a flow between the illustrations and the text that makes it perfect for reading aloud as well.

Recommended for story times about rain, this umbrella story will bring a multicultural aspect to your next story time.  It’s bright colors will also be welcome next to the stormy clouds of gray and blue in most rain books. 

Beware of the Frog

Beware of the Frog by William Bee.

Just the cover alone warns you that this is no ordinary picture book, so don’t be reading this to kids who freak out easily.  But kids who are a little older than most picture book readers and others who enjoy a good twist will completely adore this book.

Sweet Mrs. Collywobbles lives on the edge of a dark woods.  Luckily, she has something to protect her from the odd things that may live in the woods.  She has her pet frog.  What will happen when the Greedy Goblin who loves to steal things comes out of the woods and heads for Mrs. Collywobbles house?  Will he heed the Beware of the Frog sign on the gate? 

I couldn’t spoil this book for you.  You must head out and get a copy to see what happens next.  The illustrations have a vintage style to them with modern pops.  The voice of the book switches between near saccharine when talking about Mrs. Collywobbles to darkly sinister when creatures come out of the woods.  It is a delight to read aloud and work with those voices as well as the twists of the book. 

Highly recommended, this is the read-aloud of the year for me.  This is the book I would hand to those worried parents who have to read in front of second and third grade classrooms.  It will delight kids of that age, guaranteed.  Younger children will a taste for the strange will also enjoy it.

Doctor Ted

Doctor Ted by Andrea Beaty and Pascal Lemaitre.

Ted, a young bear, bumped his knee as he got up and realized that he needed a doctor.  Not seeing one anywhere, Ted decided instead to become a doctor himself.  Now he is ready to deal with his mother’s possible case of the measles, his teacher’s probable mumps, and the many issues his principal faces.  Somehow no one appreciates his help, until an incident at the playground shows exactly why every school has room for another doctor.

This book is a treat.  The illustrations are boldly done with their bright colors and thick black outlines.  Ted is a charming main character whose embodiment of his new role is believable and very funny.  The writing in the book is frank and simple, adding to the humor.  It is perfect for reading aloud, especially for a smaller group where the pictures can be enjoyed more fully.

Let’s hope that Doctor Ted will be making housecalls all across your neighborhood.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Ivy

Ivy by Julie Hearn.

Ivy is an orphan being looked after by her aunt, uncle and counsins in Victorian England.  She is sent to school, but lasts less than one day.  In running from school, her life is turned upside down when she is snatched by Carroty Kate, a con artist who steals clothes right off of children’s backs.  Kate sees potential in Ivy, who catches her eye because of her startlingly red hair.  Ivy is pushed into the con-artist business and because she has nightmares is heavily dosed with laudanum to keep her quiet.  Even as a teen, returned to her relatives, she is an addict, who struggles to make money to help support their family.  Ivy is glimpsed by a young painter, who decides that she is his muse, and once again Ivy’s life takes a sharp turn into danger.

I enjoyed The Minister’s Daughter by Hearn and this second novel is equally as successful.  Here Hearn has created a real historical fiction piece that doesn’t have the fantasy elements of her first novel.  The grinding nature of poverty in Victorian England is successfully explored as is the nature of theft and conning people.  Ivy is a vivid creation of a character who even to the reader remains aloof and distant, until she is ready to reveal herself.  It creates a beguiling novel of subterfuge and intrigue that is nearly impossible to put down.

Highly recommended for readers of historical fiction.  Appropriate for readers age 14-17.