September 2010

Sacred Scars

Book two in the A Resurrection of Magic series was better than the first book. Much, much longer  which scared me at first. Sometimes book two isn’t so great, particularly when it’s more than twice as long as book one. But Sacred Scars was excellent. I couldn’t put it down and of course I’m dying to find out what happens in the third book. I love how it ended. (Sassymonkey is in shock right now…)

Huh. I just went to peek to see if I could find out when the third book will be out and there’s a note from the author on her Amazon page saying someone complained about the language in this series… there isn’t much profanity at all. In fact, almost none particularly if you compare it to most other YA books published now. I will say that on the rare occasion that a Damn or a Shit appears – it’s glaring because there’s so little of it. And… I like that. It felt real, not like gratuitous profanity.

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Four Fiction Picture Books from the Cybils Shortlist

I sat down with these four books, from the Cybils shortlist, and was prepared to smile. Well. That didn’t quite happen. The first book I read ticked me off. The second, I liked better but was left wishing for a slightly different story. The last two, no complaints.

Jeremy Draws A Monster is the one that ticked me off. Jeremy is a little boy who lives in the top floor of an apartment building. He doesn’t ever go outside. In his room, you see that there are drawings around the room. Obviously, he prefers to stay inside and draw, as some children do prefer. One day he draws a very large monster – and that monster comes to life. The monster begins to demand he draw other things for him and the monster never says please or thank you. After a day of Jeremy drawing things for the monster, the monster decides to go out. And this makes Jeremy happy. He goes to bed… only to be woken by the monster banging on the door to come in. Jeremy lets him in, the monster takes his bed, and Jeremy draws him a one way bus ticket out of here. The next day, Jeremy walks the monster to the bus and sees him off… and on his way home, the children ask him to play soccer… and he does. The end.

So the moral is what? If you are one of those weird kids who doesn’t like sports or isn’t good at them and would rather stay inside and draw because you are good at that… then your art turns into a monster and takes over your life and that’s bad? And if you just went outside like a normal kid, nothing like that could ever happen? And if you’re one of those kids who doesn’t understand art or artists, then this story tells you that those kids are weird and it’s better to play outside than it is to be an artist?  (the illustrations were excellent though… in case you were wondering.)

Then there was Silly Tilly – a silly goose who drives the rest of the barnyard insane with her antics. She’s always goofing off and the other animals got sick of it and told her to cut it out. This made Tilly sad… and eventually the other animals realized that she was fun to be around and they missed her sillyness. So they apologized and Tilly went back to being an annoying clown. Well ok I added that annoying part… but that’s what it felt like, nobody learned moderation here. Because it’s true that people who are silly all of the time are fun some of the time but they are also annoying some of the time. That’s what the message should have been, not an all or nothing thing. Kind of similar to Jeremy and his monster, don’t you think?

Next, All the World – nice rhyming picture book showing kids and adults doing lots of different things. Even a storm that sends folks running for their cars is part of the world and how the world works. Nice. I like this one.

The Lion & the Mouse is a retelling of Aesop’s Fable. Lion could eat the mouse but decides not to. Later, lion is snared by a trap and the mouse comes and frees him. Nice illustrations, no words. I liked it.

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The Demon’s Lexicon

Now I’m not sure I want it to be a trilogy, isn’t that weird? I have been looking forward to reading The Demon’s Lexicon since long before it made it to the Cybil’s shortlist and now that I finally made time to read it… I’m not sure what I think. I like that it’s darker than most books about magic.  I like that there was a happy unhappy ending. I almost always wish that stories with characters I’m interested in would come back for round two but this time… I just don’t feel it.  I’d like to just leave Nick and Steven where they ended right here. Maybe if book two was just about Mae and Jaime and left Nick and Alan where the landed…. But from what I can tell, all four characters return to Book two.

Go read it and tell me if you agree, please. Maybe it’s just me?

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Skin Hunger

The second book in the A Resurrection of Magic series is a Cybils shortlister. TW and I had been looking at it for awhile in the library, without realizing it was on the shortlist. Thankfully, I reserved the first book to start with because the second would have been crazy to read without having this background story. And what a background story it is.

Skin Hunger tells two different stories, one of Somiss and Franklin and Sadima as they were trying to rediscover magic – and one of Hahp, Gerard and eight other boys trying to become wizards — and Somiss and Franklin are the wizards who run the school. Evil place it is, obviously since it’s run by Somiss who is… horrible. I kept waiting for there to be something good, something redeeming about him. There wasn’t. Maybe in the next book we’ll learn more… I hope. Because otherwise, I just hate the guy. It will be awhile before I find out – TW just picked up Sacred Scars, and it’s much longer than this one. Maybe I’ll get to it next week.

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I’m tired

Since I can’t nap, due to incessant dog barking, I’m mindlessly surfing and finding all sorts of things incredibly funny or ridiculous or interesting. In no particular order:

          I want to go to KidLitCon. It’s cheap. We could drive. And stay in a cheap Holiday Inn. All things I’m good at.

          TW: “I need to set up a call with Ms Dopp.” ME: “That’s Mr. to you.” (I crack myself up.)

          Is there a difference between infidelity chicken and lay-off chicken? I am tempted to ask Click Michelle.

          Do I really need to be any more self-confident? I mean really.

          MPB apparently doesn’t stand for Minnesota Public Broadcasting. Or Misssissippi Public Broadcasting. Or Male Pattern Baldness. (And you folks who are tempted to spam me with MPB ideas – don’t bother, you’re really wasting your time.)

          TW insists we cannot have latkes for Rosh Hashanah which led her to sing the dumb dip the honey song which made me regret ever mentioning food. At least she doesn’t know an infedility/lay-off chicken song.

          The Posterous Moblizer idea is pretty brilliant.

          Big Pharma news makes me queasy.

          I would really like the Betty White Comic Book.

          The iPad bacon cover is really not awesome. The Dexter coasters are awesome.

And with that, I’ll go answer some email. Inbox zero is within sight. Again.

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Two Nancy Drews

Yesterday was… a day… so I figured the easiest books to read would be some Nancy Drews for my challenge list. And I was right. The Clue in the Jewel Box and The Secret in the Old Attic are history. Well duh, of course they’re history – I’m reading my old books. I should probably stick to Nancy Drews for the rest of the week due to the crazy schedule I’m keeping but I’m going to give a YA fantasy a try today. If that doesn’t work, I’ll head back to Nancy.

One question – wasn’t Helen scheduled to get married in the first few books? Suddenly she’s back and there’s no mention of a fiancé. Or a husband. Or maybe it wasn’t Helen – it was someone else??? It’s bugging me, I need to go back and figure it out.

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Blood Song

I don’t read nearly as many vampire novels as TW and RJ – I tend to find them a little bit repetitive and I’m really really not into vampire romance. I think Twilight did me in for that genre. But, a vampire detective/mystery – that’s another story. Which is why I went ahead and read Blood Song. (And also because it’s due back to the library pretty soon and having my library closed for more than a month is just a little bit freaking me out. Heaven forbid I waste a library book…)

It was troubling to read this book because it felt like this was  a sequel. A whole lot of backstory was missing and it was referred to in a way that made me SURE I’d missed book one. But when I look, there is no other book before Blood Song, just the sequel – Siren Song. So now I’m extra confused. I liked the book. I liked the characters. Celia Graves is my kind of female detective character. But what the heck happened before Blood Song? Something is missing and that’s annoying.

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Red Pyramid

I finally got to read Red Pyramid. I didn’t reserve it at the library because Liz owned it in hardback and promised me that I could read it when she finished. Before I had a chance, she loaned it to a teacher (at the end of last school year) and the teacher did not finish it before school was over. So, I had to wait until school started and Liz brought it back. That was a long, long wait.

And it was good but I didn’t like it as much as the Percy Jackson books. TW says that’s because I’d just recently finished the last book in that series, so the characters were all fresh in my mind. That might be true. Or maybe I just don’t like the Egyptian Gods all that much? Or the Godlings either. I think it’s Carter. I just don’t particularly like him very much. And I don’t particularly like Carter and Sadie together. Or maybe I don’t like characters who eat flamingos. I don’t know. We’ll see when I read the next book… spring of 2011. I can wait.

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Candor

Candor is not a book I’d have ever just picked up off of the shelf, which is why I’m especially thankful for the Cybils folks. This was a very very good book. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could feed your kids just a few subliminal messages to help them remember to do their chores, or encourage them to do their homework? Well in Candor, Florida – everyone gets a nice dose of brainwashing and Candor is the perfect community.

One kid, the son of the founder of the community, knows about the subliminal messages – and smuggles kids out (for a price) before they’re so far gone that they would never think of leaving. But then… something happens… and everything changes.

The ending wasn’t happy – but it was the right ending.

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