The Bolds in Trouble

The Bolds in TroubleThe Bolds in Trouble by Julian Clary, David Roberts
Published by Carolrhoda Books (R) on May 7th 2019
ISBN: 1541500458
Pages: 304
Goodreads
four-stars

This addition to The Bolds series is silly and fun while being somewhat edgy.  The theme of this title centers on a fox who is stealing food from neighborhood homes.  In their humorous and caring nature the Bolds invite the fox into their home and learn that he is both a bully and rude guest.   Although a fun read this series edition does not present a good role model for family or interpersonal relationships.

Readers will love Mr. Bold’s constant jokes which are bound to bring about some adult snickers as they read aloud at bedtime.   When read with an adult, the behavior issues can be discussed with second and third grade readers.  Clary’s illustrations provide half the fun as he dresses the characters and allows them to stand upright like humans.  Young fans of the series are sure to go  looking for this title on their library and local bookstore shelves.  Add to libraries who are collecting the series.

Submitted by Jan Hamilton, retired youth service librarian in Scarborough, ME

four-stars

The Birds, the Bees, and You and Me

The Birds, the Bees, and You and MeThe Birds, The Bees, and You and Me by Olivia Hinebaugh
Published by Swoon Reads on January 22nd 2019
ISBN: 125019265X
Pages: 304
Goodreads
two-stars

As the title suggests, this is a sex positive, activist laden story that covers all areas of safe sex practices including issues for the LGBTQIA teen.   Lacey Burke, seventeen-year- old violist, budding composer, and volunteer doula finds that the constraints of her abstinence-only sex education class at her high school demands her response.   Armed with a brochure she has created and the support of her mom who is a nurse, she provides complete sex education to girls who meet her in the bathroom with their questions.  As unexpected feelings among Lacey and her two best friends, Theo and Evita, start creating uncertainty, the school takes clear suspension action to her distribution of condoms and sex education brochures which jeopardizes the group’s college plans and friendships.   Unfortunately, the amount of safe sex discussions becomes information overload and hijacks the storyline.   The dialog between friends seemed unrealistically “sexually” educated at times and Lacey delivering her teen friends baby was over the top, with more information than necessary for an entertaining story.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

two-stars

The Secret of Zoone

The Secret of ZooneThe Secret of Zoone by Lee Edward Fodi
Published by HarperCollins on April 9th 2019
ISBN: 0062845268
Pages: 352
Goodreads
four-stars

This is a Fantasy for 3-6 grader readers who are fans of different creatures, different worlds and magic.  Ozzie, who feels neglected by his parents and lashes out at his guardian Aunt Temperance, finds himself in the fantastical and magically dangerous world of Zoone.  Zoone is the multiverse or connecting point, visualize a train station,  that allows magical creatures or citizens of different worlds to travel through doors to other worlds.   Ozzie finds himself befriended by a loveable blue Skyger named Tug and given the responsibility of being a porter at the busy transfer station on the eve of the important Wizard Council.   The fate of Ozzie’s Earth, known as Eridea in Zoone, hangs in the balance as the greedy and dangerous Crogus has been let out of isolation and with the help of a secret assistant plans to destroy Zoone.  Ozzie after many missteps and catastrophes finds his purpose in Zoone and is able to equate that awareness to his earth existence.  Most of the world building happens through an action driven plot.  The doors play a major role in the landscape, reminiscent of the many doors of Monsters, Inc.  The ending, although satisfying, sets itself up for a potential sequel.  Libraries will want to check their copies ordered.  The review copy and the copy owned by the reviewer’s library had various pages in the 200’s misplaced incorrectly.  A new copy was received in Aug 2019 and the mistakes were corrected.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

four-stars

The Meaning of Birds

The Meaning of BirdsThe Meaning of Birds by Jaye Robin Brown
Published by HarperTeen on April 16th 2019
ISBN: 0062824449
Pages: 368
Goodreads
four-stars

The Meaning of Birds

 

Jess and Vivi had been in love for almost two years and meant everything to each other.  But Vivi passes away from complications of flu and asthma and Jess is stricken with grief.  In a before and after of Vivi’s death readers learn how the girls met, the impact of birds on their relationship, and how Jess pulls her life back together after Vivi’s death through being sent to an alternative school and working at a forge as a blacksmith.  She had been artistic but now sees how she can channel her artistic ability in another direction.  The relationship between the girls was so very positive with the parents being very accepting.  There are also other types of relationships between questioning teens, straight ones, and those who try to bully Jess and Vivi, as well as the methods that Jess uses to quell her anger.  This book is recommended for grades 9-12.

 

Reviewed by Ellen Spring, Oceanside High School, Rockland

four-stars

The Giver

The GiverThe Giver: Graphic Novel by Lois Lowry, P. Craig Russell
Published by HMH Books for Young Readers on February 5th 2019
ISBN: 0544157885
Pages: 185
Goodreads
five-stars

This graphic novel adaptation of Lowry’s award-winning The Giver tackles themes of uniformity, sameness, change, and identity in a powerful and visually gripping way.  The back matter includes interviews with Lowry and Russell in which they explain their thinking about this retelling.  Russell shares the process he used to create this version, which might create fascinating lesson plans for cross-curricular work in graphic novel design.

Recommended for grades 7 and up due to some mature scenes and troubling content.

Reviewed by Noelle Gallant, Saco Middle School

five-stars

Epic Athletes Alex Morgan

Epic Athletes Alex MorganEpic Athletes: Alex Morgan by Dan Wetzel, Cory Thomas
Published by Henry Holt & Company on May 14th 2019
ISBN: 1250295777
Pages: 160
Goodreads
two-stars

Soccer fans, male and female, will find Olympic medalist and World Cup winner Alex Morgan a leader who will inspire for her determination and hard work on the soccer field.  Alex became an elite soccer player in her early teens and was highly sought after by Division One universities. While handling a full academic course load, Alex started for the University of California Berkeley’s soccer team and played internationally for the US National Women’s Soccer League.  Alex is also tenacious about women’s soccer players receiving comparable pay to their high level of success (it is well known that US men’s soccer players make considerably more money with far fewer accolades). A smart, well-spoken and talented women, Epic Athletes Alex Morgan, shines a light on a modern day athlete and activist.  Black and white cartoon illustrations appear in each chapter.  A glossary of soccer terms would have been helpful for the non-soccer aficionado.  It also seems a glaring oversight to have published this biography prior to the 2019 World Cup which brought the US Team another championship.  Rushing to get this out seems to have instantly dated this book’s shelf life and appeal.  An optional purchase for collections simply in need of more biographies.

Reviewed by Suzanne Dix, Westbrook Middle School, Westbrook

two-stars

Cog

CogCog by Greg Van Eekhout
Published by HarperCollins on October 1, 2019
ISBN: 0062686070
Pages: 208
Genres: Science Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

Cog looks like a normal twelve-year-old boy but he is actually a highly advanced robot, programmed to learn and share his knowledge with others. Cog lives with his creator and teacher, a well-meaning engineer named Gina, who unwittingly tells Cog that sometimes we learn by making mistakes. Cog decides to purposefully make mistakes to increase his learning and ends up getting damaged. When Cog wakes after being repaired, he learns that he has been taken away from Gina and locked in a room at the uniMIND Technology Corporation. Uncomfortable with the way he is being treated, Cog decides to escape. Along the way, Cog enlists the help of four more robots: ADA, his newly found sister, Proto, a dog, Trashbot, and Car. The five robots go on a funny and fast-paced adventure to find Gina and escape the evil uniMIND, all the while making a lot of mistakes and learning to work together. A clever and heartwarming science fiction early middle grade novel.

Reviewed by Kathy George, Gray Public Library

five-stars

Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story

Fry Bread: A Native American Family StoryFry Bread: A Native American Family Story by Juana Martinez-Neal, Kevin Noble Maillard
Published by Roaring Brook Press on October 22, 2019
ISBN: 1626727465
Pages: 42
Genres: Realistic Fiction
Format: Picture Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

Starting with the senses, author Maillard brings the reader into the experience of making fry bread. He then expands to the meaning of it from art to history to place, widening the definition to the world before bringing it back to the child who eats the bread. Martinez-Neal’s soft illustrations rendered in color pencils and graphite in a palate of blues and browns with pops of orange and red are stunning.  Her diverse characters offer many expressions and body types and bring Maillard’s spare and lovely words to life. This own voices book should be on the shelf of every public and school library with a picture book collection. Recommend for cream of the crop.

Reviewed by Jill O’Connor, Merrill Memorial Library, Yarmouth

five-stars

Emily Windsnap and the Pirate Prince

Emily Windsnap and the Pirate PrinceEmily Windsnap and the Pirate Prince (Emily Windsnap, #8) by Liz Kessler, Erin Farley
Published by Candlewick Press on March 12th 2019
ISBN: 1536202991
Pages: 288
Goodreads
three-stars

The latest adventure of Emily Windsnap can be found here in book eight . After the cruise ship she and her family and boyfriend are on are overtaken by pirates Emily becomes entangled with the pirates (bad ones and good ones) in an effort to save Aaron. After bonding with the younger son of the Pirate King in their efforts to save Aaron Emily begins to question if she wants to cast aside her mermaid life to join her new pirate friends, especially the Pirate Kings youngest son Sam, or will she find a way to follow her own path and be true to herself.

Reviewed by Melissa Madigan – retired Youth Services Librarian

three-stars

Mary Wears What She Wants

Mary Wears What She WantsMary Wears What She Wants by Keith Negley
Published by Balzer + Bray on January 15th 2019
ISBN: 0062846795
Pages: 42
Goodreads
five-stars

Inspired by an episode from the podcast The Memory Palace titled “Mary Walker Would Wear What She Wanted,” Negley created this picture book to share with the world Walker’s story and her message of wearing the clothes that make you feel the most comfortable. Walker was born in the 1830s when women were expected to wear dresses. She fought this construct, choosing a much more comfortable style of dress – pants!  Using spare text and a palate of pinks and grays in cut-paper collage, Negley focuses on Mary’s childhood when she first chooses to make the switch. She is supported by her father, shunned and chased by other children, and picketed by the townspeople. But Mary persists and by the end of the book things change for the better as more girls choose to wear what is comfortable instead of what is prescribed by society (this message could apply to any gender as it wasn’t about gender at all for Mary, but about comfort). The reader learns in an author note that Mary continued to fight convention by attending medical school and becoming a surgeon and then by fighting for women’s right to vote and wear what they wanted. Readers/listeners will cheer for Mary as they recognize the power struggle that getting dressed can represent but also as they struggle to understand that, once upon a time, girls couldn’t wear what they wanted and she persevered. The book deserves a place on the shelf along with the other books about forgotten women who took a stand and wrought change on an unforgiving and narrow-minded society thereby paving the way for women and girls today to use their voices to cast a ballot or wear the pants.

Reviewed by Jill O’Connor, Merrill Memorial Library, Yarmouth

five-stars