Cybil Challenge

Two Cybils for #Readathon

First, Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000 – loved it. Loved it a lot more than the last Frankie Pickle I read. I especially loved Frankie’s thoughts on the hobby shop.  Great fun for people who love hobby shops and anyone who has ever experienced a “Pinewood Derby”.

Next, Dragonbreath: Attack of the Ninja Frogs. It was cute, in places, but a little slow. I’d have probably liked it more if it was pure graphic novel. One problem – now I’m trying to decide whether it would be better to be a Ninja Queen or a Veterinarian.

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Three of the Best Books I’ll Read This Year

I’ve already read some really great books and I know I’m going to read more but these three from the Cybils shortlist are going to hold their own in my favorites for the year list – I think they are probably going to hold their own for a lot longer than that. These three books were that good. You should read them, even if you don’t normally read  kids lit.

First, The Shadows: The Books of Elsewhere, we listened to this one on audio and I, for one, was sorry to see it end. Thankfully, book two will be released in a few months.

Olive is a little girl who doesn’t really fit in – she’s never fit in with the other kids at any of the schools she’s lived in. She doesn’t really fit in with her parents, who are math teachers. Olive can’t count to 100 – she gets lost somewhere in the 80s. Or 70s. Or somewhere.

She and her parents move into a very old house, with all of its belongings – after the previous owner died without any heirs. The house is interesting but something about it makes Olive feel uneasy. One of the things that makes her uneasy is the paintings that are hanging throughout the house. The first night, she tells her mom about this and her mom says they’ll just take the painting down that is outside of Olive’s bedroom – but it won’t come off the wall.

Olive plays with some of the things in a dresser in one of the bedrooms – scarves and gloves and such… and then she finds some glasses, on a chain. She puts them off and is playing when she notices movement inside of a painting – she presses her nose to the painting and… she’s inside of it.

Crazy things happen. Scary, creepy, crazy things and Olive has to piece together clues and figure out what in the heck is going on… with the help of some of the people inside of the paintings and the three cats who are guarding the house.

OK that’s enough – go read it for yourself.

Next, the best zombie book I’ve ever read (and I’ve read a lot)… Rot & Ruin. I did not expect this book to be this good. I did not expect to find myself tearing up in places throughout the story – but I did. The zombies don’t talk, they aren’t “good”, they are just zombies. It’s what the humans do that’s what gets to you. The really horrible things humans can do to each other, and to those who are weaker or somehow less than.

Benny goes from hating his older half-brother, who is a Zombie bounty hunter but not the kind who wanders around bragging about his kills and showing off his fighting skills, to respecting his brother for the job he does. Benny learns that those big, tough bounty hunters might not be what he thought they were either.

Great post-apocolyptic fiction – zombies or no zombies. Kids are going to love this book.

Last, but definitely not least, The Strange Case of Origami Yoda. Hahaha. This book should be made into a movie. I’m not sure I want a sequel but if one arrives, I’ll definitely read it.

Is the origami Yoda on Dwight’s finger real? I mean he’s definitely real in the way that you can see him and stuff – but is he really giving advice to the kids in school or is the extra weird Dwight being even weirder than normal? And if it is Dwight – how is that even possible? The kid is so clueless and not so smart, except in math, how could he come up with this stuff? That’s the question…

I’m leaning toward Yoda is totally real – the force was using Dwight and the Origami Yoda to help the kids sort out their issues.

Totally real. Also.

Purple.

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Dirt Road Home

I didn’t expect to like Dirt Road Home, particularly once I realized it was a sequel to a book I had not read. I shrugged and decided to give it a try. It was short. It was YA. How bad could it be?

Not bad at all. In fact, very good. And, I liked the ending. I’d like there to be a third book – this one featuring “Caboose” and then a fourth book about “Paco”. Now I need to go back and read the original – I’m a little afraid I might not like it as much as I liked this one…

Good choice for the Cybils shortlist!

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Three More Cybils

I’m still dealing with this virus or whatever the hell it is that sent me to the ER on Thursday. So reading – not easy. Also, work is really busy (I’m sneaking a five minute break at 9:15pm to write this before I forget… that’s how busy it is…) so having these light and easy Cybil’s to turn to was a real joy. Well, mostly a joy.

The least joy-bringing, The Unsinkable Walker Bean. Elly read this one last week and said it was ok (great art) but it was kind of hard to follow and she didn’t love it. I read it last night and… it was ok (great art) but it felt muddy at the end – which is why I think Elly said it was hard to follow. I think also, at least at first, it wasn’t always easy to tell who people were because they were drawn healthy and then sick so there was a bit of confusion until you got comfortable with that. I liked Walker and his grandfather and the other “kids” he met along the way. I’m guessing there’s a part two, where we learn why Gen was able to look at the skull…

Next, Princess Posey and the First Grade Parade was a very cute book that those going to first grade will appreciate. Heck, I think the idea of a first day of school parade like Posey’s teacher did is a terrific idea – I’m glad Posey thought of it. Very cute.

My favorite of these three was Anna Hibiscus and I didn’t expect that to be the case. But, there’s something about Anna and her family that sucked me in and by the end of the book I was yelling (out loud) “NO! It can’t end there! Children’s books should not have cliffhangers! What happens NEXT?” Seriously. TW was not amused with me. I’m dying to find out what happens when Anna visits Granny Canada and sees snow for the first time. Which reminds me, I need to go reserve that book right now. MUST read.

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The Dark Game

The Dark Game: True Spy Stories is on the Cybils Shortlist for YA/Middle Grade non-fiction. I had high hopes for it but… it was a little too dry. I can’t imagine a kid getting excited about this book. Maybe if she was doing a report about spies and wanted something besides Wikipedia and text books. But a kid who was really into spies? I don’t know.

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Ghostopolis

Elly and I are big graphic novel fans, so we really look forward to the Cybils shortlist recommendations – Ghostopolis is one of those books and it was excellent. Both Elly and I agree – EXCELLENT.

A boy gets stuck in the afterlife, by accident. And the ghost hunter and his ex-girlfriend, a ghost, head there to bring him back. There’s a cool guy who built the afterlife community, named Tuskegee Joe, and an evil villain and lots of action.

I know some of you lurking are looking for graphic novel recommendations for your kids – this one is good. No sex. No drugs.

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Double Dipping Challenges

The only thing I knew about Betti on the High Wire was that it was a middle grade fiction book from the Cybils Shortlist. Bonus! It’s also about adoption, which means it is the first book I’ve read in Jenna’s Adoption Reading Challenge. Extra Bonus! It was good.

I reserved this one on audio and Prince J listened to it first. He wasn’t overly impressed but then again, his taste runs more toward Dexter. Elly listened to it and she liked it – except she didn’t like Lucy. Elly has very little time or patience for first graders.

Betti was Babo when she lived in a burned out circus camp with “Auntie Moo” and a bunch of “leftover kids” in a war torn country that Railsback never names. She was found wandering around the burned out camp when she was a toddler. Nobody really knows how old she is or exactly what happened to her circus parents but… odds are high, they were casualties of the war that’s raged in her country for years.

Americans come to the camp to meet the orphan children – and they generally adopt babies. Or pretty children. Not broken children like Babo, who has a broken eye and missing toes. They also don’t adopt broken children like Babo’s friend George, who is missing an arm. This is fine with Babo because she does not want to be adopted. She wants to stay in her circus camp and wait for her mother, the tallest woman in the world with a tail, and her father, the green alligator man with bumpy skin, to come back for her.

But Babo is adopted – and so is George. And they travel to the same city in the US, together but without an adult. George adapts pretty happily. Babo, who becomes Betti, does not. She wants to go home. She tries to be “bad” so the Buckworth’s will realize they made a mistake. But of course, she isn’t bad at all – and the Buckworth’s are a good family who work very hard to help her make her way.

There are the normal rough moments when Betti, whose English is good, gets confused about things like “free food at the grocery store” – or when the kids at day camp make fun of Betti (and George) —  or when both Betti and George are terrified by the fireworks on Fourth of July. And the moment when Betti realizes that her parents are dead… that’s hard.

Excellent storytelling. Excellent character development. So many children without families – in war torn countries and our own.

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Brain Jack

Brain Jack is a creepy, cool book. Creepy because who wants a computer taking over your head or super hackers taking over your computer? Cool because computers can take over your head and hackers can do really amazing things.

The best part was when “Ursula” killed all of the spam in the world. I cheered out loud.  It would almost be worth it… almost.

Great book from the Cybils YA SciFi/Fantasy shortlist.

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The Magnificent 12: The Call

The Magnificent 12: The Call might have been the perfect book to read after Stolen. Another Cybils shortlister, it’s a middle grade scifi/fantasy that’s pretty darn funny. The only rough moment in the book was when Mack and Stefan found themselves in the Australian Outback (not the restaurant) – there was a little post-traumatic stress syndrome or something (from reading Stolen the night before.)

I cannot wait for the next book – and I’d really love a book just from The Golem’s point of view. Now that would be funny. I’m a little concerned by just how long it might take to get through this entire series. Are we going to meet one new member of the Magnifica in each book? Two? Or are we going to move a little faster now that we’ve got the basic elements of the story down?  If we’ve got to have 12 or 13 or 14 books to defeat The Evil Foe… that’s not going to work, middle schoolers won’t stick with the series through college. It’s good but it’s not that good.

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Stolen

Figures the first Cyblis Shorlist book from the YA category I read would be Stolen. It just figures. I should have known better. I had plenty of warning. I should have read Liz B’s post before I reserved this one. Or maybe it’s good that I didn’t, I might have decided not to read it at all – even though that would mean totally blowing my own challenge. It’s that kind of book.

Liz B. sums it up nicely, it’s a Printz Honor book (and on the Cybil’s shortlist, I assume) for three reasons, — writing, setting, characterization. Both Gemma and Ty are very real, in both their strengths and weaknesses.

But is that enough? I don’t know. It’s a terrifying book because the reader, even one as old as I am, falls into the trap of if not liking Ty – at least recognizing the beauty of him and of what he wants to do out there in the middle of nowhere. The painting. His connection to the land. And that passion extends to Gemma, which is where it all goes wrong. A teen girl (or boy) reading this book might just be lulled into believing Ty’s passion towards Gemma are good – they must be because of his overwhelmingly good passionate feelings about the land.

I worry about this book, for teen readers, because I don’t believe that most of them have the maturity to see Ty for what he was – a very dangerous, abusive, criminal. And that is enough for me to warn readers away from this. I wouldn’t hand it to my teens. I’m very sure that some of them would get sucked into feeling sorry for Ty – feeling attraction for Ty – believing what he felt was LOVE and so it must be ok.

It’s not. It’s not ok.

As troubling as “Romantic Hero: Edward Cullen” is, this book goes so much further. It makes the entire “Marry me/Change me” plot seem like a happy lark through the park for women.

Please don’t let there be a sequel. I am terrified of what that might look like.

I don’t think I will ever forget these characters or this story. Sign of a great book – certainly. Without a doubt. It deserves its awards. Read it at your own risk – but definitely read it before your teenagers do.

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