2013 Teens’ Top Ten

The Teens’ Top Ten is a list created by teens where teens nominate and choose their favorite books of the previous year.  Voting was held earlier in the year and the list was announced in late October.  Here are the top ten for 2013:

9634267 Code Name Verity Crewel (Crewel World, #1)

Butter by Erin Jane Lange

Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

Crewel by Gennifer Albin

Every Day (Every Day, #1) The False Prince (The Ascendance Trilogy, #1) Insurgent (Divergent, #2)

Every Day by David Levithan

The False Prince by Jennifer A. Nielsen

Insurgent by Veronica Roth

Kill Me Softly Poison Princess (The Arcana Chronicles, #1) Pushing the Limits (Pushing the Limits, #1)

Kill Me Softly by Sarah Cross

Poison Princess by Kresley Cole

Pushing the Limits by Katie McGarry

The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle, #1)

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater

Review: Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoff

picture me gone

Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoff

Mila is spending her Easter break traveling from London to the United States with her father.  They plan to visit one of his oldest friends, Matthew, and his family.  But days before they are to set off, they hear that Matthew has gone missing and his wife has no idea where he might be but urges them to come anyway.  Mila has long known that she has exceptional perception skills: she can tell when someone is pregnant before they even know, can read emotions quickly and can easily gather clues from a room.  So when they arrive, she quickly realizes several things about Matthew and his family.  As she gets closer to solving the mystery, it all gets more complicated and soon Mila has to even question whether her father is being honest with her. 

Rosoff writes so beautifully.  She takes time here in the book to create a family dynamic in Mila’s father and mother that is strong and buoyant.  She also carefully builds the background of Mila’s life, so that readers will understand what a different situation Mila finds herself in.  A theme of translation runs through the entire novel.  Mila’s father is a translator of books, Mila has to translate to American English, Mila can understand the language of objects and read nuances into them, and there is also the language of pain and loss that permeates the book.  It is a theme that unites this book from one of a road trip into a quest.

Mila is a very intriguing character.  She is both wildly perceptive and then also unaware at times.  All of the characters in the book are fully developed and well drawn.  Her parents are real people with their own pasts and foibles.  I particularly enjoyed the almost brittle portrayal of Matthew’s abandoned wife who seems very one dimensional at first, but then at the end shows more of herself in a subtle way.

A virtuoso book that is rather quiet, very thoughtful and filled with insights just like Mila herself.  Appropriate for ages 13-15.

Reviewed from library copy.

2013 Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards

The 2013 Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards were announced in early October.  Happily, Independent Publisher has a list of all of the medalists

There are 165 medalists in all, selected from over 1200 entries.  They award in very specific categories and have three medalists in each category.  Additionally, they award e-book awards as well.  The result is a list of books that you will not see on other award lists, making this a fascinating group of books to explore. 

This Week’s Tweets and Pins

Here are the links I shared on my Twitter and Pinterest accounts this week that I hope you find interesting:

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

Baby Horn BOO! – The Horn Book http://buff.ly/1chUBcx #kidlit

The Millions : 5 Series You Probably Missed as a Kid (But Should Read as an Adult) http://buff.ly/1aEtGIu #kidlit

The Most Terrifying Story You’ll Ever Hear (Benjamin Percy reads Goodnight Moon) | Graywolf Press http://buff.ly/1cprmo9 #kidlit

One woman’s quest to get kids reading in the Arab world http://buff.ly/1aEEPct #reading

Purrfect reads – The Horn Book http://buff.ly/1aLMS7t #kidlit #cats

Sandra Greaves’s top 10 ghost stories | Children’s books http://buff.ly/1cpsKqI #kidlit

UAEBBY approves final shortlist for Arabic children’s literature award http://buff.ly/1irv9mn #kidlit

EBOOKS

ALA Moves Forward in Ebook Arena | American Libraries Magazine http://buff.ly/1clEzOO #ebooks #libraries

HarperCollins begins selling ebooks directly to readers – http://buff.ly/1aHSL5B #ebooks

The Official SCBWI Blog: Have You Heard Of The Independent E-Book Stores? http://buff.ly/HteDq4 #ebooks

Why is the Ebook Business So Out of Sync with Consumers? | Publishing Perspectives http://buff.ly/HunXLf #ebooks

LIBRARIES

Community Creativity: Enabling local publishing in libraries | American Libraries Magazine http://buff.ly/1clZX6H #libraries

Internet Librarian 2013 – Web Trends to Watch in 2014 | Librarian in Black Blog – Sarah Houghton http://buff.ly/1ci6ijw #libraries

Make it @ your library website launches, connecting librarians with makerspace projects – http://buff.ly/1aECZZ3 #libraries #make

TECHNOLOGY

Embattled Snowden email provider returns with new Dark Mail encryption service | The Verge http://buff.ly/1aEHwZK

Google Channels Pixar to Change Storytelling as We Know It | Wired Business http://buff.ly/16KbRc6

Online Anonymity Is Not Only for Trolls and Political Dissidents | Electronic Frontier Foundation http://buff.ly/HtdtuI

TEEN READS

Books Against Bullies http://buff.ly/1cpqZKp #yalit

Random House acquires Figment, the teen writing site founded by Condé Nast vets — Tech News and Analysis http://buff.ly/1aEMkzY #yalit

Review: Henry’s Hand by Ross MacDonald

henrys hand

Henry’s Hand by Ross MacDonald

Get ready for a perfect non-Halloween Halloween book!  Henry is a monster who often loses bits and pieces of himself.  So every morning he goes through a little rhyme to make sure that all of his pieces are there.  Henry’s right hand was his favorite body part.  They played games together and traveled everywhere together.  Then Henry got lazy and started using his right hand to do all of the chores that he didn’t want to do himself.  Hand got more and more upset until finally, he just left.  Hand was off to the big city on his own and Henry was left behind, knowing that it was all his fault.  But how do you apologize to someone who has already left?  And how do you know they are OK and not hurt?  Henry had to figure out not only how to live without his right hand, but how to get him back.

MacDonald has written a wonderfully original book that is unafraid of being wildly wacky.  Behind that wild premise though is a book with plenty of heart.  It is a story of real friendship, the loss of a best friend, and finding a way back to reunite.  MacDonald has a nice feel for pacing and drama, peppering his book with plenty of action. 

This is a book set in a world that has a vintage feel about it, the city is filled with early century vehicles and technology.   Henry himself is an homage to the monsters of that time, yet he is also completely friendly and nonthreatening. 

Add this to your Halloween reads, monster story times, and units on body parts and friendship.  It is sure to come in handy!  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from copy received from Abrams Books for Young Readers.

Gorgeous Catching Fire Poster

Huge thanks to BookRiot for sharing the IMAX version of the Catching Fire poster.  It’s spectacular.  What do you think?

catching_fire_imax_large

2013 Best Illustrated Children’s Books

The New York Times has released their picks for the Ten Best Illustrated Children’s Books of the year.  They are:

Romance The Dark Fog Island

Ballad by Blexbolex

The Dark by Lemony Snicket, illustrated by Jon Klassen (my review)

Fog Island by Tomi Ungerer (my review)

Holland Jane, the Fox, and Me Jemmy Button

Holland by Charlotte Dematons

Jane, the Fox and Me by Fanny Britt, illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault

Jemmy Button by Jennifer Uman and Valerio Vidali

Journey Locomotive

Journey by Aaron Becker (my review)

Locomotive by Brian Floca

My Brother's Book Nelson Mandela

My Brother’s Book by Maurice Sendak

Nelson Mandela by Kadir Nelson (my review)

Review: Engines of the Broken World by Jason Vanhee

engines of the broken world

Engines of the Broken World by Jason Vanhee

Merciful’s mother has finally died.  After years of growing more and more confused and cruel, she died as the weather grew colder and colder.  Merciful and her brother Gospel had wanted to bury her properly but the bitter weather had worsened and prevented them from digging a hole.  The snow came too, lashing the windows and keeping them from even venturing out to the barn to check on the animals.  So they put their mother under the table and went to bed.  The Minister, in an animal form, said prayers over her but was also firm in saying that she needed a proper burial.  Merciful is starting breakfast the next morning when she hears it, a voice she thought she would never hear again, singing her childhood song.

This novel is completely unique.  It is the story not of a post-apocalyptic world but of the days leading directly into an apocalypse.  Yet it is also a book that explores religion in a way that will certainly bother many people.  This is a religion beyond decay, heading into the final days, one that is flagging but still powerful.  Even better, it is one that is familiar to many of us.  Now add zombies to this complex world, and you are starting to understand why this book is so difficult to explain.

Against this dire setting, we have two young characters Merciful and Gospel.  The two do not get along, both approaching the world from different places.  Yet given the claustrophobic setting, the two are forced to see the truth about each other and their strengths.  It is this setting of a blizzard at the end of the world that makes this book so haunting.  Vanhee writes in a voice that we haven’t heard before either, he tinkers with perception of the characters, and he has created a book where you can’t trust much at all.  It is a wonderfully slippery book, that changes underneath you and turns into something unexpected.  Yet it is also filled with moments of great beauty and character. 

A horror book for teens, this is also something much more.  It is a beautifully written apocalypse that is harrowing, striking and powerful.  Appropriate for ages 13-15.

Reviewed from copy received from Henry Holt and Co.

Review: Captain Cat by Inga Moore

captain cat

Captain Cat by Inga Moore

Captain Cat is a trader, but he’s not very good at making profitable deals.  You see, instead of trading for riches, he trades for cats.  So his ship is full of them.  All of the other traders make fun of him for this, but Captain Cat is very happy surrounded by the furry creatures.  He decides to head off and see new places, far from the trade routes he usually travels.  On the way, he is caught in a violent storm that blows him off course, right off the map!  There he discovers a small rocky island led by a young queen.  She and the population are very friendly, and have never seen cats before.  When the cats take care of the island’s rat problem, the queen begs Captain Cat to leave them behind.  What is a cat-loving caption to do?

This is a very engaging book.  It was different right off of the bat with a sailor surrounded by cats who hate water.  Throughout the story, it continues to surprise and delight.  It never heads where you expect it to, yet ends up being completely delightful both along the way and in the end.  Unlike many picture books, Moore tells a full story here.  It not only has the structure of a full story, but also has a depth that can be missing in picture books.

The illustrations are finely done with lots of details.  Done in mixed media, they have fine lines and soft colors.  Thanks to their detail, this book would best be used with small groups or individual children.

Take a feline-filled journey with this clever picture book.  Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from library copy.