The Elementary Media Center Specialist I work with, Sarah Foit, is my special guest for this post. She's going to give you even more great reading ideas (and sometimes re-emphasize a book is a must read). She’s sharing her top 10s of her 2016 reads, which may have been published in any year, she just read them this year. Books are listed in no particular order. Clicking the title will take you to Sarah’s review of the book, or my review if she doesn’t have a review of the book on GoodReads. Hope you find some more great reads!
This will be the last Brainstorm of 2016. See you back here in 2017 with more reading recommendations. Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Top 10 Juvenile Nonfiction Reads (including Poetry, Fables & Folktales)
The Big Book of Superheroes by Bart King, ill. by Greg Paprocki
Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood (Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales) by Nathan Hale
One Dead Spy (Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales) by Nathan Hale
The Gettysburg Address: a Graphic Adaptation by Jonathan Hennessey, ill. by Aaron McConnell
Some Writer!: the Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet
The Pandas and Their Chopsticks: and other stories by Demi
Alpha by Isabelle Arsenault
My First Book of Korean Words: an ABC Rhyming Book by Kyubyoung Park & Henry J. Amen IV, ill. by Aya Padron
Instructions by Neil Gaiman, ill. by Charles Vess
How to Be a World Explorer (Not-for-Parents) by Joel Levy, ill. by James Gulliver Hancock
Top 10 Fiction Picture Books
Leave Me Alone! by Vera Brosgol
Steve, Raised by Wolves by Jared Chapman
The Snow Rabbit by Camille Garoche
Woolbur by Leslie Helakoski, ill. by Lee Harper
Mother Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins
The Race by Édouard Manceau
The Tea Party in the Woods by Akiko Miyakoshi
If You Plant a Seed by Kadir Nelson
This Is Sadie by Sara O’Leary, ill. by Julie Morstad
Ooko by Esme Shapiro
Top 10 Lower Grade Fiction
Bad Kitty School Daze (Bad Kitty) by Nick Bruel
Rabbit’s Bad Habits (Rabbit & Bear, #1) by Julian Gough, ill. by Jim Field
Hippopotamister by John Patrick Green
The Princess in Black and the Bunny Horde (The Princess in Black, #4) by Shannon Hale & Dean Hale, ill. by LeUyen Pham
Dory and the Real True Friend (Dory, #2) by Abby Hanlon
Dory Dory Black Sheep (Dory, #3) by Abby Hanlon
Bunjitsu Bunny’s Best Move (Bunjitsu Bunny, #2) by John Himmelman
Tales of Bunjitsu Bunny (Bunjitsu Bunny, #1) by John Himmelman
Mrs. Noodlekugel (Mrs. Noodlekugel, #1) by Daniel Pinkwater, ill. by Adam Stower
The Story of Diva and Flea by Mo Willems, ill. by Tony DiTerlizzi
Top 10 Middle Grade Fiction
The Search for WondLa (WondLa, #1) by Tony DiTerlizzi
Gathering Blue (Giver, #2) by Lois Lowry
Booked by Kwame Alexander
The Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba’s Struggle for Freedom by Maragrita Engle
Mighty Jack (Mighty Jack, #1) by Ben Hatke
Roller Girl by Victoria Jamieson
Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhhai Lai
Messenger (Giver, #3) by Lois Lowry
Hilda and the Troll (Hildafolk, #1) by Luke Pearson
The Secret Coders (Secret Coders, #1) by Gene Luen Yang, ill. by Mike Holmes
The Brainstorm Mission: To help readers find books they will love. To get books off the shelves and into reading hands. To make teachers and parents aware of resources. To give teachers an “excuse” to use books by helping them brainstorm ways books will augment current studies. (But teachers, please use activity tie-in ideas wisely, and don’t use every idea for each book; let’s avoid book death by overkill and keep the love for books alive!)
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Brainstorm 97: Top 10s of 2016 (Part 3)
Top 10s of 2016 (Part 3): Nonfiction & Looking Forward to 2017
I hope you've enjoyed these Top 10s of 2016 and found some new things to read. This is my last edition, but stay tuned later this week for a guest post. I've invited our Elementary Media Center Specialist, Sarah Foit, to share her favorite reads of 2016. If you missed the first two Top 10s of 2016, check out Part 1 featuring Picture Books, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Fiction, and Part 2 featuring Young Adult Fiction, Adult Fiction, Graphic Novels & Poetry. As mentioned previously, these blog posts are my top picks from what I read in 2016 to try and help others find books that look enticing. Unless otherwise noted, books may have been published in any year. Some books may appeal to multiple audiences, but I only allowed it in one of those levels' lists. I helped narrow down my choices by only allowing titles currently owned by the school's media centers where I work. (Because the ICS Bangkok community is the first audience I have in mind when I write these, and I want them to be able to snatch up any tempting title immediately.) In general, my absolute favorites appear on the top of the lists, and then somewhat in descending order of favoritism...but often consider everything just tied for second after that first one. In the interest of space, my summaries and reviews are not appearing here. Click on the book titles to see those. Enjoy!
Top 10 of Lower Grade & Middle Grade Biographies (published in 2016)
Some Writer: the Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet
Alamo All-Stars (Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales) by Nathan Hale
Ada’s Violin: the Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay by Susan Hood, ill. by Sally Wern Comport
Dorothea’s Eyes: Dorothea Lange Photographs the Truth by Barb Rosenstock, ill. by Gerard duBois
Solving the Puzzle Under the Sea: Marie Tharp Maps the Ocean Floor by Robert Burleigh, ill. by Raúl Colón
Ada’s Ideas: the Story of Ada Lovelace, the World’s First Computer Programmer by Fiona Robinson
Esquivel!: Space-Age Sound Artist by Susan Wood, ill. by Duncan Tonatiuh
Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook up the National Park Service by Annette Bay Pimentel, ill. by Rich Lo
The Music in George’s Head: George Gershwin Creates Rhapsody in Blue by Suzanne Slade, ill. by Stacy Innerst
The Tree in the Courtyard: Looking through Anne Frank’s Window by Jeff Gottesfeld, ill. by Peter McCarty
Top 10 of Lower Grade & Middle Grade Nonfiction (published in 2015 or 2016)
Yaks Yak: Animal Word Pairs by Linda Sue Park, ill. by Jennifer Black Reinhardt
Flying Frogs and Walking Fish by Steve Jenkins & Robin Page
Head-to-Head Record Breaking Animals by Anna Brett
Animal Groups by Jill Esbaum, photos by Frans Lanting
The Inside-Outside Book of London by Roxie Munroe
My First Book of Indonesian Words: an ABC Rhyming Book of Indonesian Language and Culture by Linda Hibbs, ill. by Julia Laud
Inside Biosphere 2: Earth Science under Glass (Scientists in the Field) by Mary Kay Carson, photos by Tom Uhlman
A Nest Is Noisy by Dianne Hutts Aston, ill. by Sylvia Long
Squirrels Leap, Squirrels Sleep by April Pulley Sayre, ill. by Steve Jenkins
Pink Is for Blobfish: Discovering the World’s Perfectly Pink Animals by Jess Keating
Top 10 of Young Adult/Adult Biographies/Autobiographies
The Penguin Lessons by Tom Michell
The Poisoner’s Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York by Deborah Blum
Walking from East to West: God in the Shadows by Ravi Zacharias, with R.S.B. Sawyer
Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World by Rachel Ignotofsky
March: Book Three (March, #3) by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, ill. by Nate Powell
Samurai Rising: the Epic Life of Minamoto Yoshitsune by Pamela S. Turner, ill. by Gareth Hinds
Enchanted Air: Two Cultures, Two Wings: A Memoir by Margarita Engle, ill. by Edel Rodriguez
Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus: a Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity by Nabeel Qureshi
We Will Not Be Silent: the White Rose Student Resistance Movement That Defied Adolf Hitler by Russell Freedman
Every Falling Star: the True Story of How I Survived and Escaped North Korea by Sungju Lee, with Susan Elizabeth McClelland
Top 10 of Young Adult/Adult Nonfiction
The Elephant Whisperer by Lawrence Anthony, with Graham Spence
The End of Me: Where Real Life in the Upside-Down Ways of Jesus Begins by Kyle Idleman
The Perfect Horse: the Daring U.S. Mission to Rescue the Priceless Stallions Kidnapped by the Nazis by Elizabeth Letts
Dead Wake: the Last Crossing of the Lisutania by Erik Larson
Isaac’s Storm: a Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History by Erik Larson
The Best Yes: Making Wise Decisions in the Midst of Endless Demands by Lysa TerKeurst
Called: the Crisis and Promise of Following Jesus Today by Mark Labberton
Birds of Pandemonium by Michele Raffin
A Is for Arsenic: the Poisons of Agatha Christie by Kathryn Harkup
Creatures of the Night photography & text by Joe McDonald, photography by Mary Ann McDonald
Just a tiny sampling of what's on my to-read list for next year...
10 Fiction Books for Lower Grades & Middle Grades (includes Picture Books & Graphic Novels) I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017 (coming in 2017)
BE QUIET! by Ryan T. Higgins
The Legend of Rock Paper Scissors by Drew Daywalt, ill. by Adam Rex
The Great Art Caper (Pets on the Loose, #2) by Victoria Jamieson
Panda-monium (FunJungle, #4) by Stuart Gibbs
Saturdays at the Sea (Castle Glower, #5) by Jessica Day George
Fish Girl by Donna Jo Napoli, ill. by David Weisner
The Unbreakable Code (Book Scavenger, #2) by Jennifer Chambliss Bertman
The Silver Mask (Magesterium, #4) by Holly Black & Cassandra Clare
Giant Trouble (Hamster Princess, #4) by Ursual Vernon
The Dark Lord’s Daughter by Patricia C. Wrede
10 Young Adult & Adult Fiction Books (includes Graphic Novels) I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017 (published late 2016 or coming in 2017)
Wires and Nerve, Vol. 1 by Marissa Meyer
A Crown of Wishes (The Star-Touched Queen, #2) by Roshani Chokshi
Murder on the Moor (Drew Farthering, #5) by Julianna Deering
The Ship Beyond Time (The Girl from Everywhere, #2) by Heidi Heilig
The Wish Granter (Ravenspire, #2) by C.J. Redwine
Arcanum Unbounded by Brandon Sanderson
Carve the Mark by Veronica Roth
Oathbringer (Stormlight Archive, #3) by Brandon Sanderson
King’s Cage (Red Queen, #3) by Victoria Aveyard
The Pearl Thief by Elizabeth Wein
10 Nonfiction Books I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017
Penguin Day by Nic Bishop
Moto and Me: My Year as a Wildcat’s Foster Mom by Suzi Eszterhas
Kate Warne, Pinkerton Detective by Marissa Moss, ill. by April Chu
Sweet Dreams, Sarah: from Slavery to Inventor by Vivian Kirkfield, ill. by Chris Ewald
Babylon’s Ark: the Incredible Wartime Rescue of the Baghdad Zoo by Anthony Lawrence, with Graham Spence
Bleaker House: Chasing My Novel to the End of the World by Nell Stevens
The Great Penguin Rescue: 40,000 Penguins, a Devastating Oil Spill, and the Inspiring Story of the World’s Largest Animal Rescue by Dyan deNapoli
Uninvited by Lysa TerKeurst
Irena’s Children: the Extraodrinary Story of the Woman Who Saved 2,500 Children from the Warsaw Ghetto by Tilar J. Mazzeo
Thunderstruck by Erik Larson
I hope you've enjoyed these Top 10s of 2016 and found some new things to read. This is my last edition, but stay tuned later this week for a guest post. I've invited our Elementary Media Center Specialist, Sarah Foit, to share her favorite reads of 2016. If you missed the first two Top 10s of 2016, check out Part 1 featuring Picture Books, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Fiction, and Part 2 featuring Young Adult Fiction, Adult Fiction, Graphic Novels & Poetry. As mentioned previously, these blog posts are my top picks from what I read in 2016 to try and help others find books that look enticing. Unless otherwise noted, books may have been published in any year. Some books may appeal to multiple audiences, but I only allowed it in one of those levels' lists. I helped narrow down my choices by only allowing titles currently owned by the school's media centers where I work. (Because the ICS Bangkok community is the first audience I have in mind when I write these, and I want them to be able to snatch up any tempting title immediately.) In general, my absolute favorites appear on the top of the lists, and then somewhat in descending order of favoritism...but often consider everything just tied for second after that first one. In the interest of space, my summaries and reviews are not appearing here. Click on the book titles to see those. Enjoy!
Top 10 of Lower Grade & Middle Grade Biographies (published in 2016)
Some Writer: the Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet
Alamo All-Stars (Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales) by Nathan Hale
Ada’s Violin: the Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay by Susan Hood, ill. by Sally Wern Comport
Dorothea’s Eyes: Dorothea Lange Photographs the Truth by Barb Rosenstock, ill. by Gerard duBois
Solving the Puzzle Under the Sea: Marie Tharp Maps the Ocean Floor by Robert Burleigh, ill. by Raúl Colón
Ada’s Ideas: the Story of Ada Lovelace, the World’s First Computer Programmer by Fiona Robinson
Esquivel!: Space-Age Sound Artist by Susan Wood, ill. by Duncan Tonatiuh
Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook up the National Park Service by Annette Bay Pimentel, ill. by Rich Lo
The Music in George’s Head: George Gershwin Creates Rhapsody in Blue by Suzanne Slade, ill. by Stacy Innerst
The Tree in the Courtyard: Looking through Anne Frank’s Window by Jeff Gottesfeld, ill. by Peter McCarty
Top 10 of Lower Grade & Middle Grade Nonfiction (published in 2015 or 2016)
Yaks Yak: Animal Word Pairs by Linda Sue Park, ill. by Jennifer Black Reinhardt
Flying Frogs and Walking Fish by Steve Jenkins & Robin Page
Head-to-Head Record Breaking Animals by Anna Brett
Animal Groups by Jill Esbaum, photos by Frans Lanting
The Inside-Outside Book of London by Roxie Munroe
My First Book of Indonesian Words: an ABC Rhyming Book of Indonesian Language and Culture by Linda Hibbs, ill. by Julia Laud
Inside Biosphere 2: Earth Science under Glass (Scientists in the Field) by Mary Kay Carson, photos by Tom Uhlman
A Nest Is Noisy by Dianne Hutts Aston, ill. by Sylvia Long
Squirrels Leap, Squirrels Sleep by April Pulley Sayre, ill. by Steve Jenkins
Pink Is for Blobfish: Discovering the World’s Perfectly Pink Animals by Jess Keating
Top 10 of Young Adult/Adult Biographies/Autobiographies
The Penguin Lessons by Tom Michell
The Poisoner’s Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York by Deborah Blum
Walking from East to West: God in the Shadows by Ravi Zacharias, with R.S.B. Sawyer
Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World by Rachel Ignotofsky
March: Book Three (March, #3) by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, ill. by Nate Powell
Samurai Rising: the Epic Life of Minamoto Yoshitsune by Pamela S. Turner, ill. by Gareth Hinds
Enchanted Air: Two Cultures, Two Wings: A Memoir by Margarita Engle, ill. by Edel Rodriguez
Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus: a Devout Muslim Encounters Christianity by Nabeel Qureshi
We Will Not Be Silent: the White Rose Student Resistance Movement That Defied Adolf Hitler by Russell Freedman
Every Falling Star: the True Story of How I Survived and Escaped North Korea by Sungju Lee, with Susan Elizabeth McClelland
Top 10 of Young Adult/Adult Nonfiction
The Elephant Whisperer by Lawrence Anthony, with Graham Spence
The End of Me: Where Real Life in the Upside-Down Ways of Jesus Begins by Kyle Idleman
The Perfect Horse: the Daring U.S. Mission to Rescue the Priceless Stallions Kidnapped by the Nazis by Elizabeth Letts
Dead Wake: the Last Crossing of the Lisutania by Erik Larson
Isaac’s Storm: a Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History by Erik Larson
The Best Yes: Making Wise Decisions in the Midst of Endless Demands by Lysa TerKeurst
Called: the Crisis and Promise of Following Jesus Today by Mark Labberton
Birds of Pandemonium by Michele Raffin
A Is for Arsenic: the Poisons of Agatha Christie by Kathryn Harkup
Creatures of the Night photography & text by Joe McDonald, photography by Mary Ann McDonald
Just a tiny sampling of what's on my to-read list for next year...
10 Fiction Books for Lower Grades & Middle Grades (includes Picture Books & Graphic Novels) I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017 (coming in 2017)
BE QUIET! by Ryan T. Higgins
The Legend of Rock Paper Scissors by Drew Daywalt, ill. by Adam Rex
The Great Art Caper (Pets on the Loose, #2) by Victoria Jamieson
Panda-monium (FunJungle, #4) by Stuart Gibbs
Saturdays at the Sea (Castle Glower, #5) by Jessica Day George
Fish Girl by Donna Jo Napoli, ill. by David Weisner
The Unbreakable Code (Book Scavenger, #2) by Jennifer Chambliss Bertman
The Silver Mask (Magesterium, #4) by Holly Black & Cassandra Clare
Giant Trouble (Hamster Princess, #4) by Ursual Vernon
The Dark Lord’s Daughter by Patricia C. Wrede
10 Young Adult & Adult Fiction Books (includes Graphic Novels) I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017 (published late 2016 or coming in 2017)
Wires and Nerve, Vol. 1 by Marissa Meyer
A Crown of Wishes (The Star-Touched Queen, #2) by Roshani Chokshi
Murder on the Moor (Drew Farthering, #5) by Julianna Deering
The Ship Beyond Time (The Girl from Everywhere, #2) by Heidi Heilig
The Wish Granter (Ravenspire, #2) by C.J. Redwine
Arcanum Unbounded by Brandon Sanderson
Carve the Mark by Veronica Roth
Oathbringer (Stormlight Archive, #3) by Brandon Sanderson
King’s Cage (Red Queen, #3) by Victoria Aveyard
The Pearl Thief by Elizabeth Wein
10 Nonfiction Books I’m Looking Forward to Reading in 2017
Penguin Day by Nic Bishop
Moto and Me: My Year as a Wildcat’s Foster Mom by Suzi Eszterhas
Kate Warne, Pinkerton Detective by Marissa Moss, ill. by April Chu
Sweet Dreams, Sarah: from Slavery to Inventor by Vivian Kirkfield, ill. by Chris Ewald
Babylon’s Ark: the Incredible Wartime Rescue of the Baghdad Zoo by Anthony Lawrence, with Graham Spence
Bleaker House: Chasing My Novel to the End of the World by Nell Stevens
The Great Penguin Rescue: 40,000 Penguins, a Devastating Oil Spill, and the Inspiring Story of the World’s Largest Animal Rescue by Dyan deNapoli
Uninvited by Lysa TerKeurst
Irena’s Children: the Extraodrinary Story of the Woman Who Saved 2,500 Children from the Warsaw Ghetto by Tilar J. Mazzeo
Thunderstruck by Erik Larson
Thursday, December 8, 2016
Brainstorm 96: Top 10s of 2016 (Part 2)
Top 10s of 2016 (Part 2): Young Adult Fiction, Adult Fiction, Graphic Novels & Poetry
As mentioned in Part 1, these are my top picks from what I read in 2016 to try and help others find books that look enticing. Unless otherwise noted, books may have been published in any year. Some books may appeal to multiple audiences, but I only allowed it in one of those levels' lists. I helped narrow down my choices on these lists by only allowing myself to include only one title per a series and only titles currently owned by the school's media centers where I work. (Because the ICS Bangkok community is the first audience I have in mind when I write these, and I want them to be able to snatch up any tempting title immediately.) My absolute favorites appear on the top of the lists, and then somewhat in descending order of favoritism...but often consider everything below the top just tied for second. In the interest of space, my summaries and reviews are not appearing here. Click on the book titles to see those. Enjoy!
Top 10 Young Adult Fiction: Historical Fiction or Contemporary Fiction (Includes Reimagined Histories)
Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys
A Death-Struck Year by Makiia Lucier
The Possibility of NOW by Kim Culbertson
The Lightning Dreamer: Cuba’s Greatest Abolitionist by Margarita Engle
Stalking Jack the Ripper (Stalking Jack the Ripper, #1) by Kerri Maniscalco
Catch a Falling Star by Kim Culbertson
My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, Jodi Meadows
Love, Lies and Spies by Cindy Anstey
Newt’s Emerald by Garth Nix
Wrapped by Jennifer Bradbury
Top 10 Young Adult Fiction: Science Fiction or Fantasy
The Reader (Sea of Ink and Gold, #1) by Traci Chee
Calamity (Reckoners, #3) by Brandon Sanderson
The Story of Owen (The Story of Owen, #1) by E.K. Johnston
Winter (Lunar Chronicles, #4) by Marissa Meyer
The Star-Touched Queen (Star-Touched Queen, #1) by Roshani Choski
The Girl from Everywhere (Girl from Everywhere, #1) by Heidi Heilig
Dark Energy by Robinson Wells
Railhead (Railhead, #1) by Philip Reeve
Shadow Queen (Ravenspire, #1) by C.J. Redwine
Burning Midnight by Will McIntosh
Top 10 Adult Fiction
The Bands of Mourning (Mistborn, #6) by Brandon Sanderson
Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (Harry Potter, #8) by J.K. Rowling, John Tiffany, and Jack Thorne
Dressed for Death (Drew Farthering Mystery, #4) by Julianna Deering
Thief of Time (Discworld, #26/DEATH, #5) by Terry Pratchett
When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Yard (Scotland Yard’s Murder Squad, #1) by Alex Grecian
Smaller and Smaller Circles by F.H. Batacan
Portuguese Irregular Verbs (Portuguese Irregular Verbs, #1) by Alexander McCall Smith
The Masked City (The Invisible Library, #2) by Genevieve Cogman
Top 10 Young Adult & Adult Graphic Novels & Comics
Groot by Jeff Loveness, ill. by Brian Kesinger
White Sand (White Sand, #1) by Brandon Sanderson, Rik Hoskin, ill. by Julius M. Gopez
Invader Zim, Vol 1. by Jhonen Vásquez, Eric Trueheart, ill. by Aaron Alexovich, et. al.
Shadow Hero by Gene Luen Yang, ill. by Sonny Liew
Cook Korean!: a Comic Book with Recipes by Robin Ha
Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 2: Squirrel You Know It’s True by Ryan North, ill. by Erica Henderson
Ms Marvel, Vol. 4: Last Days by G. Willow Wilson, ill. by Adrian Alphona
Rocket Racoon, Vol. 2: Storytailer by Skottie Young, ill. by Filipe Andrade & Jake Parker
Leaf by Daishu Ma
Mooncop by Tom Gauld
Top 10 Lower Grade & Middle Grade Graphic Novels & Comics
Snow White: a Graphic Novel by Matt Phelan
Awkward by Svetlana Chmakova
Dragonslayer (Babymouse, #11) by Jennifer L. Holm, ill. by Matthew Holm
Alamo All-Stars (Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales, #6) by Nathan Hale
Hippopotamister by John Patrick Green
Razzle Dazzle Unicorn (Heavenly Nostrils, #4) by Dana Simpson
Red’s Planet (Red’s Planet, #1) by Eddie Pittman
The Rise of Herk (Nnewts, #2) by Doug TenNapel
The Only Child by Guojing
Firelight (Amulet, #7) by Kazu Kibuishi
Top 10 Poetry Collections/Novels in Verse
City I Love by Lee Bennett Hopkins, ill. by Marcellus Hall
Double Happiness by Nancy Tupper Ling, ill. by Alina Chau
The Lightning Dreamer: Cuba’s Greatest Abolitionist by Margarita Engle
Enchanted Air: Two Cultures, Two Wings: A Memoir by Margarita Engle, ill. by Edel Rodriguez
Booked by Alexander Kwame
A Strange Place to Call Home: the World’s Most Dangerous Habitats & the Animals That Call Them Home by Marilyn Stringer, ill. by Ed Young
Tap Dancing on the Roof: Sijo (Poems) by Linda Sue Park, ill. by Istvan Banyai
The Popcorn Astronauts: and Other Biteable Rhymes by Deborah Ruddell, ill. by Joan Rankin
Echo Echo: Reverso Poems about Greek Myths by Marilyn Singer, ill. by Josée Masse
Grumbles from the Town: Mother-Goose Voices with a Twist by Jane Yolen & Rebecca Kai Dotlich, ill. by Angela Matteson
Check back next week on Tuesday for Part 3 featuring my top 10s of nonfiction, and later next week for a special guest featuring her top 10s for Part 4.
City I Love by Lee Bennett Hopkins, ill. by Marcellus Hall
Double Happiness by Nancy Tupper Ling, ill. by Alina Chau
The Lightning Dreamer: Cuba’s Greatest Abolitionist by Margarita Engle
Enchanted Air: Two Cultures, Two Wings: A Memoir by Margarita Engle, ill. by Edel Rodriguez
Booked by Alexander Kwame
A Strange Place to Call Home: the World’s Most Dangerous Habitats & the Animals That Call Them Home by Marilyn Stringer, ill. by Ed Young
Tap Dancing on the Roof: Sijo (Poems) by Linda Sue Park, ill. by Istvan Banyai
The Popcorn Astronauts: and Other Biteable Rhymes by Deborah Ruddell, ill. by Joan Rankin
Echo Echo: Reverso Poems about Greek Myths by Marilyn Singer, ill. by Josée Masse
Grumbles from the Town: Mother-Goose Voices with a Twist by Jane Yolen & Rebecca Kai Dotlich, ill. by Angela Matteson
Check back next week on Tuesday for Part 3 featuring my top 10s of nonfiction, and later next week for a special guest featuring her top 10s for Part 4.
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Brainstorm 95: Top 10s of 2016 (Part 1)
Top 10s of 2016 (Part 1): Fiction Picture Books, Lower Grade Fiction, and Middle Grade Fiction
It's hard to believe, but it is that time of year again. 2016 is wrapping up and 2017 will be here before we know it. The last three Fridays of school before Christmas break I come up with the top books I've read in the past year. The purpose is to help those looking for reading ideas hear about my top picks of books I've read this year. Sorting through hundreds of books read in the past 12 months is a long, laborious and grueling process. So many hard choices! But if it helps others find good reads, it is worth it.
Here are the Top 10s coming this year: Fiction Picture books, Lower Grade Fiction, Middle Grade Fiction: Science Fiction/Fantasy, Middle Grade Fiction: Historical Fiction or Contemporary, Young Adult Fiction: Science Fiction/Fantasy, Young Adult Fiction: Historical Fiction or Contemporary, Adult Fiction, Poetry/Novels in Verse, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Nonfiction, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Biography/Autobiography, Young Adult/Adult Nonfiction, Young Adult/Adult Biography/Autobiography, and Most Anticipated Reads of 2017.
Unless otherwise stated, the books in the lists could have been published in any year, but I read them in 2016 (or late Dec 2015 after last year's Top 10s). To help myself further in the selection process, I sometimes narrowed down the eligible candidates to just those that came out in 2016. If that's the case, it will be noted in the section heading. The titles are listed with my favorite in each category on top and kinda, sorta going down in favoritism but usually I love them all so much just consider the rest of the list tied for 2nd. In the interest of space, my summaries and reviews of the books are not provided here. Click on the titles to see those. Hope you find some great reads!
Top 10 Fiction Picture Books (published in 2016)
If I Had a Gryphon by Vikki VanSickle, ill. by Cale Atkinson
A Child of Books by Oliver Jeffers & Sam Winston
If You Ever Want to Bring a Piano to the Beach, Don’t! byElsie (oops, typo!) Elise Parsley
The Water Princess by Susan Verde, ill. by Peter H. Reynolds
Leave Me Alone! by Vera Brosgol
There Is a Tribe of Kids by Lane Smith
We Are Growing! by Laurie Keller & Mo Willems
Hotel Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins
ABC Dream by Kim Krans
All Aboard for the Bobo Road by Stephen Davies, ill. by Christopher Corr
Top 10 Fiction Picture Books (published in 2015 or earlier...because those of us overseas sometimes can't get our hands on them 'til a year or two later)
The Snow Rabbit by Camille Garoche
This is Sadie by Sara O’Leary, ill. by Julie Morstad
Sky Color by Peter H. Reynolds
Nerdy Birdy by Aaron Reynolds, ill. by Matt Davies
Look! by Jeff Mack
Double Happiness by Nancy Tupper Ling, ill. by Alina Chau
Mother Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins
I Really Like Slop! by Mo Willems
Take Away the A by Michaël Escoffier, ill. by Kris Di Giacomo
If You Plant a Seed by Kadir Nelson
Top 10 Lower Grade Fiction Books (published in 2016)
Juana & Lucas (Juana & Lucas, #1) by Juana Medina
Bunjitsu Bunny’s Best Move (Bunjitsu Bunny, #3) by John Himmelman
Where are You Going, Baby Lincoln? (Tales from Deckawoo Drive, #3) by Kate DiCamillo, ill. by Chris Van Dusen
The Great Pet Escape (Pets on the Loose, #1) by Victoria Jamieson
Rabbit’s Bad Habits (Rabbit & Bear, #1) by Julian Gough, ill. by Jim Field
The Princess in Black and the Bunny Horde (The Princess in Black, #3) by Shannon Hale & Dean Hale, ill. by LeUyen Pham
Mouse Scouts (Mouse Scouts, #1) by Sarah Dillard
Inspector Flytrap (Inspector Flytrap, #1) by Tom Angleberger, ill. by CeCe Bell
Hippopotamister by John Patrick Green
Stinky Cecil in Terrarium Terror (Stinky Cecil, #2) by Paige Braddock
Top 10 Middle Grade Fiction Books: Science Fiction or Fantasy (published in 2016)
The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill
The Key to Extraordinary by Natalie Lloyd
Ratpunzel (Hamster Princess, #3) by Ursula Vernon
Wild Robot by Peter Brown
How to Capture an Invisible Cat (The Genius Factor, #1) by Paul Tobin, ill. by Thierry Lafontaine
Troll Overboard (Life of Zarf, #3) by Rob Harrell
Red: the True Story of Red Riding Hood by Liesl Shurtliff
The Poet’s Dog by Patricia MacLachlan
The Dark Talent (Alcatraz Smedry, #5) by Brandon Sanderson
When the Sea Turned to Silver by Grace Lin
Top 10 Middle Grade Fiction Books: Historical Fiction or Contemporary (published in 2016)
Spy Ski School (Spy School, #4) by Stuart Gibbs
Ghost (Track, #1) by Jason Reynolds
Click Here to Start by Denis Markell
Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Olympics (Mr. Lemoncello’s Library, #2) by Chris Grabenstein
Booked by Kwame Alexander
Summerlost by Ally Condie
Mark of the Plague (The Blackthorn Key, #2) by Kevin Sands
Outrun the Moon by Stacey Lee
Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo
Six Kids and a Stuffed Cat by Gary Paulsen
Check back next week for Part 2 with Top 10s of Young Adult Fiction, Adult Fiction, and Poetry/Novels in Verse.
It's hard to believe, but it is that time of year again. 2016 is wrapping up and 2017 will be here before we know it. The last three Fridays of school before Christmas break I come up with the top books I've read in the past year. The purpose is to help those looking for reading ideas hear about my top picks of books I've read this year. Sorting through hundreds of books read in the past 12 months is a long, laborious and grueling process. So many hard choices! But if it helps others find good reads, it is worth it.
Here are the Top 10s coming this year: Fiction Picture books, Lower Grade Fiction, Middle Grade Fiction: Science Fiction/Fantasy, Middle Grade Fiction: Historical Fiction or Contemporary, Young Adult Fiction: Science Fiction/Fantasy, Young Adult Fiction: Historical Fiction or Contemporary, Adult Fiction, Poetry/Novels in Verse, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Nonfiction, Lower Grade & Middle Grade Biography/Autobiography, Young Adult/Adult Nonfiction, Young Adult/Adult Biography/Autobiography, and Most Anticipated Reads of 2017.
Unless otherwise stated, the books in the lists could have been published in any year, but I read them in 2016 (or late Dec 2015 after last year's Top 10s). To help myself further in the selection process, I sometimes narrowed down the eligible candidates to just those that came out in 2016. If that's the case, it will be noted in the section heading. The titles are listed with my favorite in each category on top and kinda, sorta going down in favoritism but usually I love them all so much just consider the rest of the list tied for 2nd. In the interest of space, my summaries and reviews of the books are not provided here. Click on the titles to see those. Hope you find some great reads!
Top 10 Fiction Picture Books (published in 2016)
If I Had a Gryphon by Vikki VanSickle, ill. by Cale Atkinson
A Child of Books by Oliver Jeffers & Sam Winston
If You Ever Want to Bring a Piano to the Beach, Don’t! by
The Water Princess by Susan Verde, ill. by Peter H. Reynolds
Leave Me Alone! by Vera Brosgol
There Is a Tribe of Kids by Lane Smith
We Are Growing! by Laurie Keller & Mo Willems
Hotel Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins
ABC Dream by Kim Krans
All Aboard for the Bobo Road by Stephen Davies, ill. by Christopher Corr
Top 10 Fiction Picture Books (published in 2015 or earlier...because those of us overseas sometimes can't get our hands on them 'til a year or two later)
The Snow Rabbit by Camille Garoche
This is Sadie by Sara O’Leary, ill. by Julie Morstad
Sky Color by Peter H. Reynolds
Nerdy Birdy by Aaron Reynolds, ill. by Matt Davies
Look! by Jeff Mack
Double Happiness by Nancy Tupper Ling, ill. by Alina Chau
Mother Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins
I Really Like Slop! by Mo Willems
Take Away the A by Michaël Escoffier, ill. by Kris Di Giacomo
If You Plant a Seed by Kadir Nelson
Top 10 Lower Grade Fiction Books (published in 2016)
Juana & Lucas (Juana & Lucas, #1) by Juana Medina
Bunjitsu Bunny’s Best Move (Bunjitsu Bunny, #3) by John Himmelman
Where are You Going, Baby Lincoln? (Tales from Deckawoo Drive, #3) by Kate DiCamillo, ill. by Chris Van Dusen
The Great Pet Escape (Pets on the Loose, #1) by Victoria Jamieson
Rabbit’s Bad Habits (Rabbit & Bear, #1) by Julian Gough, ill. by Jim Field
The Princess in Black and the Bunny Horde (The Princess in Black, #3) by Shannon Hale & Dean Hale, ill. by LeUyen Pham
Mouse Scouts (Mouse Scouts, #1) by Sarah Dillard
Inspector Flytrap (Inspector Flytrap, #1) by Tom Angleberger, ill. by CeCe Bell
Hippopotamister by John Patrick Green
Stinky Cecil in Terrarium Terror (Stinky Cecil, #2) by Paige Braddock
Top 10 Middle Grade Fiction Books: Science Fiction or Fantasy (published in 2016)
The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill
The Key to Extraordinary by Natalie Lloyd
Ratpunzel (Hamster Princess, #3) by Ursula Vernon
Wild Robot by Peter Brown
How to Capture an Invisible Cat (The Genius Factor, #1) by Paul Tobin, ill. by Thierry Lafontaine
Troll Overboard (Life of Zarf, #3) by Rob Harrell
Red: the True Story of Red Riding Hood by Liesl Shurtliff
The Poet’s Dog by Patricia MacLachlan
The Dark Talent (Alcatraz Smedry, #5) by Brandon Sanderson
When the Sea Turned to Silver by Grace Lin
Top 10 Middle Grade Fiction Books: Historical Fiction or Contemporary (published in 2016)
Spy Ski School (Spy School, #4) by Stuart Gibbs
Ghost (Track, #1) by Jason Reynolds
Click Here to Start by Denis Markell
Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Olympics (Mr. Lemoncello’s Library, #2) by Chris Grabenstein
Booked by Kwame Alexander
Summerlost by Ally Condie
Mark of the Plague (The Blackthorn Key, #2) by Kevin Sands
Outrun the Moon by Stacey Lee
Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo
Six Kids and a Stuffed Cat by Gary Paulsen
Check back next week for Part 2 with Top 10s of Young Adult Fiction, Adult Fiction, and Poetry/Novels in Verse.
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Brainstorm 94: Scifi for Everyone (Part 3)
Scifi for Everyone : Part 3: Young Adult & Adult Scifi
The promised final installment of science fiction books for everyone (not just nerds!). This week features young adult and adult scifi. To try and limit this list, I’m not including books I’d consider classics or modern classics. I personally really enjoy many of Jules Verne’s books, C.S. Lewis’ Space Trilogy, Crichton’s Andromeda Strain, Heinlein’s Starship Troopers, and the ineffable (mostly because you’re laughing too hard) Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Adams. I’m also avoiding dystopia to help keep this list manageable. And I’ll only include target readers in the interest of space. Click on the titles for more info on each book. So without further ado, here’s some of my more recent scifi favorites for young adults and adults.
Young Adult Fiction
Stitching Snow by R.C. Lewis
Once upon a time there was a teenage girl named Essie. She lived on the outskirts of a village on the mining planet of Thanda. Essie makes her way by stitching tech, and fighting in the ring to make some extra dough every once in a while. She has made seven drones who help make the mining in her village much more efficient. They also provide company to her. Essie's life is comfortable, and she's holding her own. But when a stranger crashes near the village and Essie decides to help him get his ship back together, her carefully built walls are threatened. Dane is looking for a treasure. A treasure that will help end the war on Windsong that started when Princess Snow was kidnapped. Essie can't wait to get Dane on the road, because he is bringing up memories she had carefully buried and his presence is threatening to make her dissatisfied with the life she has built on Thanda. ...and to find out more you just have to read the book.
What I liked: It’s a smart scifi retelling of Snow White, but Lewis made the story all her own. It was a geeky girl's perfect fairy tale retelling. There's space travel and thrilling action, and just the right touch of romance. This is one I'll have to reread. And I loved finding out that the author is a high school math teacher. Who said the math/science people can't write too?! (And those daily interactions with teens in the classroom means she knows her audience well.)
Target Readers:
Spinning Starlight by R.C. Lewis
Welcome to Sampati. One of the seven planets that form the Seven Points. The planets all work together to form a society. Transport between them used to rely on things called portals which were temperamental and painful. Thanks to the brilliant Jantzen family, though, conduits are now used to travel between planets. They are less painful and more reliable. Only the Jantzen brothers recently noticed that the conduits were starting to destabilize and quietly began researching a way to fix them. This didn't much concern Liddi Jantzen, their younger sister, until a bunch of armed guys arrived at the family estate. She evaded the strange men and made her way to town only to find out the men were henchmen for Ms. Minali, who currently runs JTI, the Jantzen tech company Liddi is set to inherit once she comes of age. Ms Minali has decided she knows how to fix the conduits, and it requires a biological to be inside. She's trapped all eight of Liddi's brothers in the conduits in her mental instability and is determined she can fix things in the next month or so. Liddi is obviously in the way, so Minali installs a mechanism in her voicebox making the smallest squeak from Liddi set off an explosion that will kill her brothers. With her brothers trapped and parents dead, Liddi has no one else on the planet she can trust. Sure she has loads of "friends" as one of the richest and most followed celebrities on the planet, but Liddi is not blind to why these people hang around her. The Jantzen brothers discover that in moonlight they can appear to Liddi. They help her escape from Sampati via a portal. Liddi expects to find herself on one of the other Seven Points when she recovers from her uncomfortable journey, but it is a planet she doesn't recognize. To further complicate things, Sampati no longer has a written language, so between her inability to talk and unfamiliarity with writing or reading, it is going to be really hard for Liddi to find ways to convey what is going on and figure out how to help save her brothers.
What I liked: The cover of this book gives a big clue as to the original fairy tale it is based on, "The Wild Swans." As in Stitching Snow Lewis has cleverly incorporated some of the key points of the tale in her own unique way to make this story all her own. I really did like the scifi elements Lewis created and the technological/scifi world she imagined. The portals and conduits stuff especially was imaginative and fascinating.
Target Readers:
Railhead by Philip Reeve
Zen Sterling just loves riding the trains of the Network. Such people are called railheads in the empire. The empire is made up of a Network of stations on different planets and moons linked together by K-gates allowing speedy travel across lightyears. Zen is a small-time thief trying to help his sister and delusional ma until the day he is recruited by a strange man named Raven. Raven hires him to get on the Noon's train, the imperial family train, and steal a small object from the art collection. After a little training, Zen is put on the train impersonating one of the lesser nephews in the Noon family with a Motorik named Nova to help. And Zen has no clue as to how this mission will change not only his life, but the lives of everyone in the empire.
What I liked: Reeve has created a fascinating world in the far distant future (so much so that Old Earth is cryptic and somewhat misunderstood...at one point Klingon is mentioned as one of the main Old Earth languages). The whole rail system is fascinating, the sentient tech (the trains and many of the robots have their own personalities and feelings), the imaginary worlds, the Guardians who set up the system and still rule through programs in the datasea that can take on physical manifestations. It's a great job of world building, and I am quite curious to see what will happen in the next book as some of the secrets of the origins of the rail line will be further explored.
Target Readers:
A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan
Rose Fitzroy wakes up from stasis to find that it is 62 years in the future. Her stasis tube was found completely by accident, she evidently missed a horrible time period filled with plague and catastrophe, and everyone she knew and loved is now dead. That doesn’t change the fact that she’s still the heir to UniCorp, her father’s company that is still pretty much running the known universe. Since she’s technically only aged 16 years, she isn’t quite up to inheritance age though, so UniCorp quickly scrambles to find her some guardians and arranges for her to go back to school. Rose has quite the uphill climb ahead. First there’s her body trying to recover from stasis. Then there’s the mental assault of dealing with your parents and your boyfriend now being dead. Add to that the challenge of trying to fit in at a high school with teens using tech and slang decades distant from what you last experienced, and yeah, it is a bit much to handle. Oh, and as if that wasn’t enough, an undead human shell with a computer brain has evidently been sent to assassinate her. This sleeping beauty is in need of some serious help or she’s not going to make it in this strange new future she’s woken up to.
What I liked: There’s a nice mystery as to why she was in stasis for so long, and why one of her friends who can read minds describes her mind as being full of gaps beyond what stasis would cause. And of course, why someone sent an undead assassin after her. Kind of like a Sleeping Beauty told Memento movie style. Once all the pieces fall together in the right order you go, 'Ohh!!!' Quite enjoyable sci-fi fairy tale.
Target Readers:
Burning Midnight by Will McIntosh
Sully's world revolves around spheres. Spheres have made his life a mess, but they are also his best hope. The spheres just appeared on Earth one day - hidden all over the place. The one that ruined Sully's life he found in a drain pipe. They fit in your hand and come in various colors. The color is very important. Because if you have two of the same color you can put them to your temples and give yourself a new power. Some make you smart, some improve your looks, some can make you faster. The less impressive the power, the more common the color. Which means that when an unheard of color is found, you know you've got yourself a gold mine. At least, that's what Sully thought when he found a cherry red. But then Alex Holliday, the up and coming king of the sphere empire in America swindled Sully out of millions. Now Sully is infamous as the kid who got ripped off by Holliday but can't do anything about it. He and his mom are barely scraping by since she lost her job. Sully knows their best chance of survival is to find a really rare sphere. So when Hunter, sphere hunter extraordinaire (and also good looking chick) walks up to his table at the flea market, Sully believes he's found the perfect partner to help him survive. Hunter wants a big find possibly even more than him, she's homeless and a big find would open the doors to a new life. But when Sully and Hunter do make a huge find, it has consequences they never could have dreamed and could spell disaster for the entire solar system.
What I liked: The interesting rewrite of the modern world, the treasure hunt, the big twist at the end and how they figured out to fix it, and the moral that greedy people are not always the happiest in the end.
Target Readers:
Dark Energy by Robinson Wells
The aliens are here. They've landed in Minnesota. Well, they actually crash landed in Iowa and eventually came to a stop in Minnesota. So far they've yet to make a personal appearance, and everyone is wondering if they are the friendly kind or the disease carrying kind or the world dominating kind. Aly's dad works for NASA, so they are temporarily uprooted from their home in Miami, Florida to chilly Minnesota while her dad and the rest of the science world geeks out over the new visitors. Since her mom is dead and her dad will be very distracted, he enrolls her at a prestigious prep school in Minnetonka. Aly soon finds herself surrounded by trust fund babies, congressmen's kids and most likely future Nobel prize winners in biology and calculus. Thankfully, just because they're rich and/or nerdy does not mean there aren't any potential friend-material fellow students. Aly's roommates turn out to be pretty cool. Nerdy geniuses, but cool. And she almost literally runs into Kurt, a poor little rich Indian (as in from India) boy with a nice sarcastic sense of humor whose parents live on different continents and dump him in boarding schools since they're so busy. So Aly's making some friends and figuring out her new school, and then the aliens emerge from the ship and everything gets way, way more exciting for Aly and her friends...and I can't tell you anything more without ruining some of the fun.
What I liked: It's hard to talk about this too much without ruining various things. I did like the aliens and the mystery around them. This definitely satisfied the itch I get for good ol' scifi with some "Ooo, I like what the author did there with that origin story" thrown in. Oh, and excitement, and some mystery, and towards the end some rather seriously tense moments but not too tense. So good. But my favorite part about the whole book was the witty banter between Aly and her father. They're like a dad/daughter version of Gilmore Girls. Loved it. Kurt was able to banter a little bit too, which gave him instant approval if he wanted to get interested in Aly. I also liked that Wells managed to avoid some of the cliches of rich boarding school settings. He managed to convey that Aly's roommates were complete and utter brainiacs and one is a bit of a recluse, but he also managed to make them likeable and cool too. And the majority of the people Aly meets at the school fall in the cool category. There's just one guy and one girl that fall in the spoiled brat/entitled jerk category and they're very minor characters. I also appreciated the lengths Wells went to make the Navajo parts of the book Navajo-approved (Aly's mother was Navajo and she is still in touch with her grandmother), definitely read his notes on this. And there's all the issues brought up because of the aliens' arrival, ethical and philosophical things the characters have to think through that are important things to consider even if aliens aren't in your backyard. So it isn't just a fun and exciting read, it'll make you think a little about real issues if you aren't careful. And that's my favorite kind of book, fun with some hidden depth.
Target Readers:
Fallout (Lois Lane, #1) by Gwenda Bond
Lois Lane is starting yet another new school. This time her military General father is supposedly taking a permanent post in Metropolis and Lois needs to plan on staying for a while. Her plan is to make friends, settle in, and not make waves. No more trouble for Lois. But when the local editor of a newspaper invites her to join the staff of their high school branch, the Scoop, Lois can’t say no. And she never could have predicted that standing up for spelling bee champ Anavi in a story about the champion speller being bullied by gamers and ignored by the principal could mix her up in something way bigger and more dangerous than anyone imagined.
What I liked: I’m not a huge Superman fan, but I still enjoyed reading this. (And he’s hardly in this.) Lois is a spunky, precocious heroine to follow around. That could be annoying, but she channels her spunk and smarts to fight for those who need a hero.
Target Readers:
For the Darkness Shows the Stars (For the Darkness Shows the Stars, #1) by Diana Peterfreund
The world has barely survived a worldwide apocalypse that ravaged the earth and rendered those with genetic modifications mute and barely able to function. If it were not for the small band of Luddites who hid in caves and avoided the unnatural twiddling with genes that everyone was so keen on, there would be no one around with enough intelligence to survive. So now the known realm (which is an island) is ruled by Luddite barons. The workers are the Reduced and their descendants. Some of those descendants have started to show more intelligence and the ability to speak, much like their Luddite owners. Some of these Posts (as these people prefer to be called) are starting to desire more freedom. Elliott North is the younger daughter of the pompous Baron North. After the death of her capable mother, it has fallen to Elliott to try and keep the farm running, the Posts and Reduced workers alive and fed and the books balanced. Her elder sister has taken it upon herself to be the height of Luddite fashion and lady-likeness and her father was never good with managing things. Growing up, Elliott's best friend was a Post boy named Kai. Letters from the past that are interspersed throughout the book give us the back story of Elliott and Kai's relationship and how that became strained when Elliott chose responsibility to the farm and the Reduced and Posts in the North's care over Kai. But when a group of free Posts show up one summer to rent part of Elliott's grandfather's land to build a boat, she finds herself suddenly reunited with an older Kai full of bitterness over the past. Underneath the personal stories of Elliott vs her father and Elliott and Kai, there is Elliott's war within over the traditional Luddite beliefs about the evils of playing God with genetics in any way and her desire to develop a better wheat to help her family (and all therein) to survive. (And those who know how Persuasion ends will easily predict how the book will end, but you aren't exactly sure how all the little details of this future world will work out.)
What I liked: This is a rewrite of Jane Austen’s Persuasion. And Peterfreund managed to pull off a post-apocalyptic scifi that feels incredibly Austenish.
Target Readers:
Across a Star-Swept Sea (For the Darkness Shows the Stars, #2) by Diana Peterfreund
After Earth was all but destroyed in a war, the survivors built the islands of New Pacifica, Albion and Galatea. In Galatea two generations ago, Persistence Helo developed a cure for the Reduced, so that now no one on the islands suffers from the debilitating brain disorder. Well, at least until the Revolution. On Galatea, the regs are tired of the overlording aristos and royalty, so under the leadership of Citizen Aldred they are fighting back and waging a bio-weapons war by giving captured aristos a drug that renders them Reduced. Albion so far has not joined in on the social strife. But not everyone on Albion is comfortable sitting back and watching while their island neighbors suffer. One Albian in particular has become a legendary hope for the Galateans under threat of the new reduction, the Wild Poppy, an Albian man with cunning and amazing skills for rescuing aristos right out from under the noses of the Galatean revolutionary leaders. No one knows who the Wild Poppy is, and Lady Persis Blake is doing everything she can to make sure that remains true. Who would guess that the cunning spy masquerades by day as the flippant and fluffy headed friend of the Albion Princess Regent Isla? But when one of Persis' disguises backfires and she only makes it back to Albion from a Wild Poppy venture thanks to the quick actions of a Galatean medic (who just happens to want to get out of Galatea), she has to put on the show of her life to keep Justen Helo in the dark as to her true identity. Thankfully, he fully buys her light-headed act and has nothing but disdain for the stupid Persis Blake. But things get more complicated when Justen asks Princess Isla for refuge, and to prevent war (since Justen is none other than Citizen Aldred's ward), Persis and Justen are ordered to pretend Justen is on Albion as her new boyfriend. Meanwhile, Citizen Aldred is stepping up the revolution, and is now using the reduction on anyone he thinks doesn't see his way, including regs and children. Justen had been working on a cure for the new reduction, but he hits a road block that ups the stakes for everyone in Galatea (and in the Wild Poppy's circle), and he is also battling his own demons and secrets. As if things weren't crazy enough, in the middle of the spy games and revolution, the impossible happens. New Pacifica was supposed to be the only place with survivors on the planet, but the appearance of strangers in a golden flying ship shakes everything up, and could easily end up tipping the war one way or the other.
What I liked: Peterfreund does a fantastic rewrite of The Scarlet Pimpernel. It bears enough similarity to the original, I felt it was a faithful tip of the hat, but it has enough of its own unique qualities I was kept guessing as to how exactly things were going to work out. Peterfreund has built such an interesting and captivating place (with some similarities, but many differences from Elliot's island), and the perfect setting for this tale. The ability of Persis to use genetic technology for her disguises is genius, and the way the genetic tech plays integrally into the plot is fascinating, and very well done. It takes a while to figure out how this is linked with For the Darkness Shows the Stars, but it is.
Target Readers:
Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyers
This fairy tale mashup in futuristic Earth that stars a cyborg Cinderella who must figure out a way to stop the evil Lunar queen from taking over the Earth with lots of help from other fun fairy tale character rewrites. I've mentioned this series, or the first book Cinder, several times, so I won't go into more detail again.
What I liked: So well written, with plenty of action and fun fairy tale nods. This is hands down the most popular scifi series in our library right now. I love that it gets reluctant readers devouring books over 300 pages long in rapid succession.
Target Readers:
Pivot Point (Pivot Point, #1) by Kasie West
Addie's parents have dropped a huge bombshell on her; they are suddenly and inexplicably getting a divorce in the middle of her junior year of high school. Her dad is not just moving out of the house, he is moving outside of the compound and several hours away. And her parents are making her decide who she will live with, of course they fully expect her to do a Search before making this life changing decision. Addie calls for backup support - in the form of her best friend Laila - and with Laila's help decides to search 6 weeks into the future down either path to see which choice is better. Oh. Did I mention that Addie and her parents and everyone else on the Compound aren't quite normal? Everyone who lives there has some kind of mind power. Addie's dad can tell whenever anyone is lying. Addie's mom can Persuade people really well. Laila can Erase people's memories, and Addie, when faced with an either/or decision, can search and see into her own future down either path. Of course, the Compound is tippy top secret stuff, and it's a huge deal to consider living out in the real world with her Dad. From the time Addie enters the Search, the chapters alternate between each possible future. One in which she stays with her Mom, decides that if her parents are going through a divorce she should try to live true to literature and do some semi-rebellious things to get her opinion about the state of affairs across, continues to get to hang out with Laila all the time, and starts to get noticed by the star quarterback (even though he is definitely not her type). In the other possible future, she moves to Dallas with her Dad, has to adjust to living like Norms (who have decidedly less sophisticated technology) and make sure she doesn't let anything about her extra powers or the Compound slip, has to make all new friends including a cute former quarterback, and try to figure out who she is when not defined by her powers. Both futures seem equally good until close to the end of the 6 week search, when a mystery building in the Compound is going to affect Addie drastically regardless of which future she chooses. The outcomes aren't exactly the same, but neither is good and Addie's choice gets infinitely more difficult.
What I liked: I love that this book and the other book in this duology are constantly checked out. It is not an easy read. Swtiching back and forth between the different timelines takes a lot of concentration to keep straight, but Kasie West has such a huge following now readers will put in the effort required. And I think that’s saying something about her writing. She gets teens reading, even crazy complicated plot filled books!
Target Readers:
Leviathan (Leviathan, #1) by Scott Westerfeld, ill. by Keith Thompson
Leviathan is alternate historical fiction set at the beginning of WWI, but instead of the technology we know, the Germans have different mechanical machines (picture stuff in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow) and the Brits have bio-engineered creatures that compose much of their armory and transportation devices. The story is split between a girl pretending to be a boy in the British airforce, and Prince Aleksander, the son of the assassinated Austrian archduke whose death was used as an excuse to start WWI. Eventually, circumstances bring together these two young people. As might be expected, worlds collide and you'll just have to read it to find out if it works out.
What I liked: I love the imagination of this steampunk version of WWI. I also love that this appeals to such a wide group of readers in age, gender, and normal reading preference. It seems like just about everyone loves the Leviathan trilogy.
Target Readers:
Adult Fiction
Numb by John W. Otte
Crusader is the Ministrix's sword to do God's work, specially anointed for the job by his inability to feel pain or emotion. He eliminates those who deserve punishments, and hopes that his acts will earn him forgiveness from the guilt that plagues him. His latest assignment, to take out a heretic Isolde, should be routine, but Crusader has trouble following his orders. Of course, the fact that another agent gets in the way and seems to have contrary orders makes things a little difficult, the more disturbing thing is the breakdown of his numbness whenever he sees the target. During the temporary glitch in the assignment, Crusader does some digging on why another agent has appeared on what was supposedly a solo mission. What he finds, makes him put the mission on hold, long enough to interrogate Isolde and reevaluate what is really going on. Because something is definitely going on. Both the Ministrix and the opposing Praesidium seem to be very interested in this Isolde, and Crusader can't figure out exactly why nor why there now seems to be a target on his head as well.
What I liked: This was a Christian fiction that was well-written and felt like a good ol’ scifi adventure.
Target Readers:
Those who like Christian fiction, those who like stand alone novels, and those who like classic space adventure with a touch of clean romance.
Offworld by Robin Parrish
The astronauts on board the Ares, first manned mission to Mars, return to Earth only to find it completely deserted. Or at least so it seems. There are no people or animals anywhere, and it is obvious there hasn't been anyone around for a while. Now the termination of communication with Earth two months ago seems to make sense. Command stopped talking to them because they vanished. Chris, Trisha, Terry, and Owen do all they can in Florida to try and figure out what happened. Thanks to a working satellite, they do notice a strange, extremely bright light emanating from somewhere around Houston, Texas, so they grab some vehicles and start working their way to Texas. The road there is peppered with unexpected findings and numerous hazards. And the closer they get, the more they realize that they need to get to the bottom of this.
What I liked: I felt that the mystery was well done while being balanced by character development, and just the right touches of action. It definitely kept me reading till the end.
Target Readers:
Adult Graphic Novel
Mooncop by Tom Gauld
He's got the best crime fighting rate in the universe. He's also possibly the most bored cop in the universe. What if there were a colony on the moon complete with its own police force? When the colony thing starts to go bust and the people get replaced by robots or just decide to go home, how would a moon cop fill his time?
What I liked: This is simple in illustration and concept, but has subtle moments of comedy (like mooncop filling out his report) and moments of bittersweetness (coffee date). A quiet book, but with some subtle depth and it's a super quick read.
Target Readers:
Those looking for a quick read, those who like space colony stories, those who like cop stories, and those looking for light humor.
The promised final installment of science fiction books for everyone (not just nerds!). This week features young adult and adult scifi. To try and limit this list, I’m not including books I’d consider classics or modern classics. I personally really enjoy many of Jules Verne’s books, C.S. Lewis’ Space Trilogy, Crichton’s Andromeda Strain, Heinlein’s Starship Troopers, and the ineffable (mostly because you’re laughing too hard) Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Adams. I’m also avoiding dystopia to help keep this list manageable. And I’ll only include target readers in the interest of space. Click on the titles for more info on each book. So without further ado, here’s some of my more recent scifi favorites for young adults and adults.
Young Adult Fiction
Stitching Snow by R.C. Lewis
Once upon a time there was a teenage girl named Essie. She lived on the outskirts of a village on the mining planet of Thanda. Essie makes her way by stitching tech, and fighting in the ring to make some extra dough every once in a while. She has made seven drones who help make the mining in her village much more efficient. They also provide company to her. Essie's life is comfortable, and she's holding her own. But when a stranger crashes near the village and Essie decides to help him get his ship back together, her carefully built walls are threatened. Dane is looking for a treasure. A treasure that will help end the war on Windsong that started when Princess Snow was kidnapped. Essie can't wait to get Dane on the road, because he is bringing up memories she had carefully buried and his presence is threatening to make her dissatisfied with the life she has built on Thanda. ...and to find out more you just have to read the book.
What I liked: It’s a smart scifi retelling of Snow White, but Lewis made the story all her own. It was a geeky girl's perfect fairy tale retelling. There's space travel and thrilling action, and just the right touch of romance. This is one I'll have to reread. And I loved finding out that the author is a high school math teacher. Who said the math/science people can't write too?! (And those daily interactions with teens in the classroom means she knows her audience well.)
Target Readers:
- Those who like fairy tale retellings, smart scifi fans, action fans, and those who prefer stand alone novels.
Spinning Starlight by R.C. Lewis
Welcome to Sampati. One of the seven planets that form the Seven Points. The planets all work together to form a society. Transport between them used to rely on things called portals which were temperamental and painful. Thanks to the brilliant Jantzen family, though, conduits are now used to travel between planets. They are less painful and more reliable. Only the Jantzen brothers recently noticed that the conduits were starting to destabilize and quietly began researching a way to fix them. This didn't much concern Liddi Jantzen, their younger sister, until a bunch of armed guys arrived at the family estate. She evaded the strange men and made her way to town only to find out the men were henchmen for Ms. Minali, who currently runs JTI, the Jantzen tech company Liddi is set to inherit once she comes of age. Ms Minali has decided she knows how to fix the conduits, and it requires a biological to be inside. She's trapped all eight of Liddi's brothers in the conduits in her mental instability and is determined she can fix things in the next month or so. Liddi is obviously in the way, so Minali installs a mechanism in her voicebox making the smallest squeak from Liddi set off an explosion that will kill her brothers. With her brothers trapped and parents dead, Liddi has no one else on the planet she can trust. Sure she has loads of "friends" as one of the richest and most followed celebrities on the planet, but Liddi is not blind to why these people hang around her. The Jantzen brothers discover that in moonlight they can appear to Liddi. They help her escape from Sampati via a portal. Liddi expects to find herself on one of the other Seven Points when she recovers from her uncomfortable journey, but it is a planet she doesn't recognize. To further complicate things, Sampati no longer has a written language, so between her inability to talk and unfamiliarity with writing or reading, it is going to be really hard for Liddi to find ways to convey what is going on and figure out how to help save her brothers.
What I liked: The cover of this book gives a big clue as to the original fairy tale it is based on, "The Wild Swans." As in Stitching Snow Lewis has cleverly incorporated some of the key points of the tale in her own unique way to make this story all her own. I really did like the scifi elements Lewis created and the technological/scifi world she imagined. The portals and conduits stuff especially was imaginative and fascinating.
Target Readers:
- Those who like fairy tale retellings, smart scifi, and stand alone novels.
Railhead by Philip Reeve
Zen Sterling just loves riding the trains of the Network. Such people are called railheads in the empire. The empire is made up of a Network of stations on different planets and moons linked together by K-gates allowing speedy travel across lightyears. Zen is a small-time thief trying to help his sister and delusional ma until the day he is recruited by a strange man named Raven. Raven hires him to get on the Noon's train, the imperial family train, and steal a small object from the art collection. After a little training, Zen is put on the train impersonating one of the lesser nephews in the Noon family with a Motorik named Nova to help. And Zen has no clue as to how this mission will change not only his life, but the lives of everyone in the empire.
What I liked: Reeve has created a fascinating world in the far distant future (so much so that Old Earth is cryptic and somewhat misunderstood...at one point Klingon is mentioned as one of the main Old Earth languages). The whole rail system is fascinating, the sentient tech (the trains and many of the robots have their own personalities and feelings), the imaginary worlds, the Guardians who set up the system and still rule through programs in the datasea that can take on physical manifestations. It's a great job of world building, and I am quite curious to see what will happen in the next book as some of the secrets of the origins of the rail line will be further explored.
Target Readers:
- Those who like stories of heists, those who like far future scifi, and those who like spectacular world building.
A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan
Rose Fitzroy wakes up from stasis to find that it is 62 years in the future. Her stasis tube was found completely by accident, she evidently missed a horrible time period filled with plague and catastrophe, and everyone she knew and loved is now dead. That doesn’t change the fact that she’s still the heir to UniCorp, her father’s company that is still pretty much running the known universe. Since she’s technically only aged 16 years, she isn’t quite up to inheritance age though, so UniCorp quickly scrambles to find her some guardians and arranges for her to go back to school. Rose has quite the uphill climb ahead. First there’s her body trying to recover from stasis. Then there’s the mental assault of dealing with your parents and your boyfriend now being dead. Add to that the challenge of trying to fit in at a high school with teens using tech and slang decades distant from what you last experienced, and yeah, it is a bit much to handle. Oh, and as if that wasn’t enough, an undead human shell with a computer brain has evidently been sent to assassinate her. This sleeping beauty is in need of some serious help or she’s not going to make it in this strange new future she’s woken up to.
What I liked: There’s a nice mystery as to why she was in stasis for so long, and why one of her friends who can read minds describes her mind as being full of gaps beyond what stasis would cause. And of course, why someone sent an undead assassin after her. Kind of like a Sleeping Beauty told Memento movie style. Once all the pieces fall together in the right order you go, 'Ohh!!!' Quite enjoyable sci-fi fairy tale.
Target Readers:
- Those who like fairy tale retellings, those who like time travel stories (though it isn’t technically time travel, Rose has similar issues), those who like post-dystopia settings, those looking for a lighter scifi, and those who like mysteries.
Burning Midnight by Will McIntosh
Sully's world revolves around spheres. Spheres have made his life a mess, but they are also his best hope. The spheres just appeared on Earth one day - hidden all over the place. The one that ruined Sully's life he found in a drain pipe. They fit in your hand and come in various colors. The color is very important. Because if you have two of the same color you can put them to your temples and give yourself a new power. Some make you smart, some improve your looks, some can make you faster. The less impressive the power, the more common the color. Which means that when an unheard of color is found, you know you've got yourself a gold mine. At least, that's what Sully thought when he found a cherry red. But then Alex Holliday, the up and coming king of the sphere empire in America swindled Sully out of millions. Now Sully is infamous as the kid who got ripped off by Holliday but can't do anything about it. He and his mom are barely scraping by since she lost her job. Sully knows their best chance of survival is to find a really rare sphere. So when Hunter, sphere hunter extraordinaire (and also good looking chick) walks up to his table at the flea market, Sully believes he's found the perfect partner to help him survive. Hunter wants a big find possibly even more than him, she's homeless and a big find would open the doors to a new life. But when Sully and Hunter do make a huge find, it has consequences they never could have dreamed and could spell disaster for the entire solar system.
What I liked: The interesting rewrite of the modern world, the treasure hunt, the big twist at the end and how they figured out to fix it, and the moral that greedy people are not always the happiest in the end.
Target Readers:
- Those who like big twists, those who like treasure hunts, those who like slight changes in the modern world, and those who like epic road trips.
Dark Energy by Robinson Wells
The aliens are here. They've landed in Minnesota. Well, they actually crash landed in Iowa and eventually came to a stop in Minnesota. So far they've yet to make a personal appearance, and everyone is wondering if they are the friendly kind or the disease carrying kind or the world dominating kind. Aly's dad works for NASA, so they are temporarily uprooted from their home in Miami, Florida to chilly Minnesota while her dad and the rest of the science world geeks out over the new visitors. Since her mom is dead and her dad will be very distracted, he enrolls her at a prestigious prep school in Minnetonka. Aly soon finds herself surrounded by trust fund babies, congressmen's kids and most likely future Nobel prize winners in biology and calculus. Thankfully, just because they're rich and/or nerdy does not mean there aren't any potential friend-material fellow students. Aly's roommates turn out to be pretty cool. Nerdy geniuses, but cool. And she almost literally runs into Kurt, a poor little rich Indian (as in from India) boy with a nice sarcastic sense of humor whose parents live on different continents and dump him in boarding schools since they're so busy. So Aly's making some friends and figuring out her new school, and then the aliens emerge from the ship and everything gets way, way more exciting for Aly and her friends...and I can't tell you anything more without ruining some of the fun.
What I liked: It's hard to talk about this too much without ruining various things. I did like the aliens and the mystery around them. This definitely satisfied the itch I get for good ol' scifi with some "Ooo, I like what the author did there with that origin story" thrown in. Oh, and excitement, and some mystery, and towards the end some rather seriously tense moments but not too tense. So good. But my favorite part about the whole book was the witty banter between Aly and her father. They're like a dad/daughter version of Gilmore Girls. Loved it. Kurt was able to banter a little bit too, which gave him instant approval if he wanted to get interested in Aly. I also liked that Wells managed to avoid some of the cliches of rich boarding school settings. He managed to convey that Aly's roommates were complete and utter brainiacs and one is a bit of a recluse, but he also managed to make them likeable and cool too. And the majority of the people Aly meets at the school fall in the cool category. There's just one guy and one girl that fall in the spoiled brat/entitled jerk category and they're very minor characters. I also appreciated the lengths Wells went to make the Navajo parts of the book Navajo-approved (Aly's mother was Navajo and she is still in touch with her grandmother), definitely read his notes on this. And there's all the issues brought up because of the aliens' arrival, ethical and philosophical things the characters have to think through that are important things to consider even if aliens aren't in your backyard. So it isn't just a fun and exciting read, it'll make you think a little about real issues if you aren't careful. And that's my favorite kind of book, fun with some hidden depth.
Target Readers:
- Those who like boarding school stories, those who like alien invasion stories, those who like thrillers, those who like multicultural tales, and of course, those who like some good ol’ witty banter.
Fallout (Lois Lane, #1) by Gwenda Bond
Lois Lane is starting yet another new school. This time her military General father is supposedly taking a permanent post in Metropolis and Lois needs to plan on staying for a while. Her plan is to make friends, settle in, and not make waves. No more trouble for Lois. But when the local editor of a newspaper invites her to join the staff of their high school branch, the Scoop, Lois can’t say no. And she never could have predicted that standing up for spelling bee champ Anavi in a story about the champion speller being bullied by gamers and ignored by the principal could mix her up in something way bigger and more dangerous than anyone imagined.
What I liked: I’m not a huge Superman fan, but I still enjoyed reading this. (And he’s hardly in this.) Lois is a spunky, precocious heroine to follow around. That could be annoying, but she channels her spunk and smarts to fight for those who need a hero.
Target Readers:
- Those who like thrillers, those who like superhero stories, those who identify with moving around a lot, those who want very minimal scifi, and those who like spunky heroines.
For the Darkness Shows the Stars (For the Darkness Shows the Stars, #1) by Diana Peterfreund
The world has barely survived a worldwide apocalypse that ravaged the earth and rendered those with genetic modifications mute and barely able to function. If it were not for the small band of Luddites who hid in caves and avoided the unnatural twiddling with genes that everyone was so keen on, there would be no one around with enough intelligence to survive. So now the known realm (which is an island) is ruled by Luddite barons. The workers are the Reduced and their descendants. Some of those descendants have started to show more intelligence and the ability to speak, much like their Luddite owners. Some of these Posts (as these people prefer to be called) are starting to desire more freedom. Elliott North is the younger daughter of the pompous Baron North. After the death of her capable mother, it has fallen to Elliott to try and keep the farm running, the Posts and Reduced workers alive and fed and the books balanced. Her elder sister has taken it upon herself to be the height of Luddite fashion and lady-likeness and her father was never good with managing things. Growing up, Elliott's best friend was a Post boy named Kai. Letters from the past that are interspersed throughout the book give us the back story of Elliott and Kai's relationship and how that became strained when Elliott chose responsibility to the farm and the Reduced and Posts in the North's care over Kai. But when a group of free Posts show up one summer to rent part of Elliott's grandfather's land to build a boat, she finds herself suddenly reunited with an older Kai full of bitterness over the past. Underneath the personal stories of Elliott vs her father and Elliott and Kai, there is Elliott's war within over the traditional Luddite beliefs about the evils of playing God with genetics in any way and her desire to develop a better wheat to help her family (and all therein) to survive. (And those who know how Persuasion ends will easily predict how the book will end, but you aren't exactly sure how all the little details of this future world will work out.)
What I liked: This is a rewrite of Jane Austen’s Persuasion. And Peterfreund managed to pull off a post-apocalyptic scifi that feels incredibly Austenish.
Target Readers:
- Those who like Austen rewrites, those who like Regency fiction, those who like light scifi in a futuristic world that slid backwards in tech, and those who like scifi that is low on action.
Across a Star-Swept Sea (For the Darkness Shows the Stars, #2) by Diana Peterfreund
After Earth was all but destroyed in a war, the survivors built the islands of New Pacifica, Albion and Galatea. In Galatea two generations ago, Persistence Helo developed a cure for the Reduced, so that now no one on the islands suffers from the debilitating brain disorder. Well, at least until the Revolution. On Galatea, the regs are tired of the overlording aristos and royalty, so under the leadership of Citizen Aldred they are fighting back and waging a bio-weapons war by giving captured aristos a drug that renders them Reduced. Albion so far has not joined in on the social strife. But not everyone on Albion is comfortable sitting back and watching while their island neighbors suffer. One Albian in particular has become a legendary hope for the Galateans under threat of the new reduction, the Wild Poppy, an Albian man with cunning and amazing skills for rescuing aristos right out from under the noses of the Galatean revolutionary leaders. No one knows who the Wild Poppy is, and Lady Persis Blake is doing everything she can to make sure that remains true. Who would guess that the cunning spy masquerades by day as the flippant and fluffy headed friend of the Albion Princess Regent Isla? But when one of Persis' disguises backfires and she only makes it back to Albion from a Wild Poppy venture thanks to the quick actions of a Galatean medic (who just happens to want to get out of Galatea), she has to put on the show of her life to keep Justen Helo in the dark as to her true identity. Thankfully, he fully buys her light-headed act and has nothing but disdain for the stupid Persis Blake. But things get more complicated when Justen asks Princess Isla for refuge, and to prevent war (since Justen is none other than Citizen Aldred's ward), Persis and Justen are ordered to pretend Justen is on Albion as her new boyfriend. Meanwhile, Citizen Aldred is stepping up the revolution, and is now using the reduction on anyone he thinks doesn't see his way, including regs and children. Justen had been working on a cure for the new reduction, but he hits a road block that ups the stakes for everyone in Galatea (and in the Wild Poppy's circle), and he is also battling his own demons and secrets. As if things weren't crazy enough, in the middle of the spy games and revolution, the impossible happens. New Pacifica was supposed to be the only place with survivors on the planet, but the appearance of strangers in a golden flying ship shakes everything up, and could easily end up tipping the war one way or the other.
What I liked: Peterfreund does a fantastic rewrite of The Scarlet Pimpernel. It bears enough similarity to the original, I felt it was a faithful tip of the hat, but it has enough of its own unique qualities I was kept guessing as to how exactly things were going to work out. Peterfreund has built such an interesting and captivating place (with some similarities, but many differences from Elliot's island), and the perfect setting for this tale. The ability of Persis to use genetic technology for her disguises is genius, and the way the genetic tech plays integrally into the plot is fascinating, and very well done. It takes a while to figure out how this is linked with For the Darkness Shows the Stars, but it is.
Target Readers:
- Fans of The Scarlet Pimpernel, those who like spy stories, those who enjoy smart scifi, and those who like thrillers with a dash of clean romance.
Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyers
This fairy tale mashup in futuristic Earth that stars a cyborg Cinderella who must figure out a way to stop the evil Lunar queen from taking over the Earth with lots of help from other fun fairy tale character rewrites. I've mentioned this series, or the first book Cinder, several times, so I won't go into more detail again.
What I liked: So well written, with plenty of action and fun fairy tale nods. This is hands down the most popular scifi series in our library right now. I love that it gets reluctant readers devouring books over 300 pages long in rapid succession.
Target Readers:
- Fairy tale rewrite/mashup fans, those who like thrillers, and those who like to watch heroines and a fun group of friends save the world from evil villains in a future world.
Pivot Point (Pivot Point, #1) by Kasie West
Addie's parents have dropped a huge bombshell on her; they are suddenly and inexplicably getting a divorce in the middle of her junior year of high school. Her dad is not just moving out of the house, he is moving outside of the compound and several hours away. And her parents are making her decide who she will live with, of course they fully expect her to do a Search before making this life changing decision. Addie calls for backup support - in the form of her best friend Laila - and with Laila's help decides to search 6 weeks into the future down either path to see which choice is better. Oh. Did I mention that Addie and her parents and everyone else on the Compound aren't quite normal? Everyone who lives there has some kind of mind power. Addie's dad can tell whenever anyone is lying. Addie's mom can Persuade people really well. Laila can Erase people's memories, and Addie, when faced with an either/or decision, can search and see into her own future down either path. Of course, the Compound is tippy top secret stuff, and it's a huge deal to consider living out in the real world with her Dad. From the time Addie enters the Search, the chapters alternate between each possible future. One in which she stays with her Mom, decides that if her parents are going through a divorce she should try to live true to literature and do some semi-rebellious things to get her opinion about the state of affairs across, continues to get to hang out with Laila all the time, and starts to get noticed by the star quarterback (even though he is definitely not her type). In the other possible future, she moves to Dallas with her Dad, has to adjust to living like Norms (who have decidedly less sophisticated technology) and make sure she doesn't let anything about her extra powers or the Compound slip, has to make all new friends including a cute former quarterback, and try to figure out who she is when not defined by her powers. Both futures seem equally good until close to the end of the 6 week search, when a mystery building in the Compound is going to affect Addie drastically regardless of which future she chooses. The outcomes aren't exactly the same, but neither is good and Addie's choice gets infinitely more difficult.
What I liked: I love that this book and the other book in this duology are constantly checked out. It is not an easy read. Swtiching back and forth between the different timelines takes a lot of concentration to keep straight, but Kasie West has such a huge following now readers will put in the effort required. And I think that’s saying something about her writing. She gets teens reading, even crazy complicated plot filled books!
Target Readers:
- Kasie West fans, those who like superhero books, and those who like books about teen relationships.
Leviathan (Leviathan, #1) by Scott Westerfeld, ill. by Keith Thompson
Leviathan is alternate historical fiction set at the beginning of WWI, but instead of the technology we know, the Germans have different mechanical machines (picture stuff in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow) and the Brits have bio-engineered creatures that compose much of their armory and transportation devices. The story is split between a girl pretending to be a boy in the British airforce, and Prince Aleksander, the son of the assassinated Austrian archduke whose death was used as an excuse to start WWI. Eventually, circumstances bring together these two young people. As might be expected, worlds collide and you'll just have to read it to find out if it works out.
What I liked: I love the imagination of this steampunk version of WWI. I also love that this appeals to such a wide group of readers in age, gender, and normal reading preference. It seems like just about everyone loves the Leviathan trilogy.
Target Readers:
- History has shown you can try handing this to just about anyone. Those who like adventure, those who like history with a bit of thriller, and those who like imaginary worlds especially.
Adult Fiction
Numb by John W. Otte
Crusader is the Ministrix's sword to do God's work, specially anointed for the job by his inability to feel pain or emotion. He eliminates those who deserve punishments, and hopes that his acts will earn him forgiveness from the guilt that plagues him. His latest assignment, to take out a heretic Isolde, should be routine, but Crusader has trouble following his orders. Of course, the fact that another agent gets in the way and seems to have contrary orders makes things a little difficult, the more disturbing thing is the breakdown of his numbness whenever he sees the target. During the temporary glitch in the assignment, Crusader does some digging on why another agent has appeared on what was supposedly a solo mission. What he finds, makes him put the mission on hold, long enough to interrogate Isolde and reevaluate what is really going on. Because something is definitely going on. Both the Ministrix and the opposing Praesidium seem to be very interested in this Isolde, and Crusader can't figure out exactly why nor why there now seems to be a target on his head as well.
What I liked: This was a Christian fiction that was well-written and felt like a good ol’ scifi adventure.
Target Readers:
Those who like Christian fiction, those who like stand alone novels, and those who like classic space adventure with a touch of clean romance.
Offworld by Robin Parrish
The astronauts on board the Ares, first manned mission to Mars, return to Earth only to find it completely deserted. Or at least so it seems. There are no people or animals anywhere, and it is obvious there hasn't been anyone around for a while. Now the termination of communication with Earth two months ago seems to make sense. Command stopped talking to them because they vanished. Chris, Trisha, Terry, and Owen do all they can in Florida to try and figure out what happened. Thanks to a working satellite, they do notice a strange, extremely bright light emanating from somewhere around Houston, Texas, so they grab some vehicles and start working their way to Texas. The road there is peppered with unexpected findings and numerous hazards. And the closer they get, the more they realize that they need to get to the bottom of this.
What I liked: I felt that the mystery was well done while being balanced by character development, and just the right touches of action. It definitely kept me reading till the end.
Target Readers:
- Those who like mysteries and thrillers, those who like scifi that feels inspired by B scifi movies but takes a better twist, or just those looking for clean adult fiction.
Adult Graphic Novel
Mooncop by Tom Gauld
He's got the best crime fighting rate in the universe. He's also possibly the most bored cop in the universe. What if there were a colony on the moon complete with its own police force? When the colony thing starts to go bust and the people get replaced by robots or just decide to go home, how would a moon cop fill his time?
What I liked: This is simple in illustration and concept, but has subtle moments of comedy (like mooncop filling out his report) and moments of bittersweetness (coffee date). A quiet book, but with some subtle depth and it's a super quick read.
Target Readers:
Those looking for a quick read, those who like space colony stories, those who like cop stories, and those looking for light humor.
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