Nary a “grownup book” in sight this month
Picture books: Stay: A girl, a dog, a bucket list
Middle grade: All’s Faire in Middle School
Young adult: Jane, Unlimited
Young nonfiction: How to be an elephant
Stay: A Girl, a Dog, a Bucket List
Klise/Klise
Read for Librarian Book Group
For everyone who has had an old dog in their life.
I love you like a pig
Barnett/Pizzoli
Read for Librarian Book Group
Neither the writing, nor the art spoke to me in this book.
Rain
Sam Usher
Read for Librarian Book Group
It’s raining. Will Sam get to go outside?
Bertolt
Jaques Goldstyn
Read for Librarian Book Group
A boy in a town hangs out with a tree.
The Only Road
Alexandra Diaz
Read for Family Book Group
Just as gripping the second time around.
It All Comes Down to This
Karen English
Read for Librarian Book Group
Once you get past the forgettable title, you will find a nice little gem of a historical fiction book. 1960s Los Angeles is our setting, and Sophie is getting used to her new neighborhood. Her family is black, and there aren’t many other black kids in the neighborhood. It’s summer and Sophie busies herself with writing a book, making a friend or two, keeping track of her sister’s antics and trying out for a play. It’s not the most plot-driven novel, but it’s a good glimpse into a specific experience of the past.
All’s Faire in Middle School
Victoria Jameson
Read for Librarian Book Group
Renaissance Faires and middle school come together in this story of Impy (Imogene,) who has been home schooled by her parents. They are active in the yearly Renaissance Faire, and it’s a second home for Imogene.
Jameson perfectly captures all of the middle school feelings. Aside from that particular pot of angst, this book is also funny.
Swing it, Sunny
Holm & Holm
Read for Librarian Book Group
Accurately captures an awkward time, both in growing up, but also the everyday life of when one member of the family is going through some troubled times.
Jane, Unlimited
Kristen Cashore
There were many things to love about this book, which is currently in the running for best book of 2017. First thing to love? The structure, which is a brilliant fun surprise once you figure out what is happening. I loved that Jane, the main character, was a bit prickly and on the far side of likable. Books with maps in the the front? Win! Books set in huge mansions? Win! Learning random stuff about umbrellas? Win! Overall, a quality book from an author I already appreciate. (Graceling!)
ps: You might not catch the excellent structure thing if you listen to this book, rather than read it.
That Inevitable Victorian Thing
E.K. Johnston.
Ah, E.K. Johnston, how your thought-process-turned-book delights me. What if, instead of marrying her many children off to European princes and princesses, Queen Victoria had married them off to royal families within the empire? In Johnston’s world this would have resulted in an incredibly diverse–and much stronger and peaceful–empire.
That past leads us to the nearby present and Canada, where Victoria-Margaret, heir to the throne, has gone incognito for her debut. There are parties and new friends to make, and even some traveling to a summer house.
I loved this book for a few reasons. It was such a fun premise. E.K. Johnston is Canadian, and her books are so firmly Canadian, which is fun. I love future-set stories where the kids are all right. I also watched the movie “The Reluctant Debutante” at an impressionable age, which made me very interested in the whole debutante thing. Plus, there’s a great and complex love story in these pages.
How to be an elephant
Katherine Ron
Read for Librarian Book Group
Very well done nonfiction text about elephants. The drawings are beautiful and every kid will enjoy discovering what baby elephants eat.
Dazzle Ships
Barton/Nagi
Read for Librarian Book Group
Random facts about history! Score! From World War I comes a story of an attempt to confuse enemy torpedoes by painting the ships in a crazy fashion. The illustrations were not to my taste, but fit nicely with the period.