The Athena Protocol

The Athena ProtocolThe Athena Protocol by Shamim Sarif
Published by HarperTeen on October 8th 2019
ISBN: 0062849603
Pages: 304
Goodreads
four-stars

The Athena Protocol

 

Jess is a member of an all-female group who provide protection to women who are being assaulted in any part of the world.  But, Jess has gone too far by killing Ahmed, one of the worst offenders and, thus, bringing scrutiny onto the group.  In order to keep the group hidden, Jess is told to leave.  But she knows that she has the high-level skills needed to save the women who are being kidnapped and held so that their physical organs can be harvested and used by wealthy Russians who can afford the price.

It took me a while to connect with Jess as a character.  With all the bravery and abilities that Jess had I didn’t accept that the others would have summarily told her to leave.  She ended up as the one who saved the group members as well as the kidnapped women.  One of the cool technological devices were contact lenses that could zoom in on things far away with the blink of an eye.

This book is recommended for grades 9-12.

 

Reviewed by Ellen Spring, Oceanside High School, Rockland

four-stars

Biscuit’s Snow Day Race

Biscuit’s Snow Day RaceBiscuit’s Snow Day Race by Alyssa Satin Capucilli, Pat Schories
Published by HarperCollins on October 1st 2019
ISBN: 006243621X
Pages: 32
Goodreads
four-stars

The silly puppy Biscuit is back in this Shared First Reader for children in grades preK-1.    Biscuit’s owner has plans to build a snow fort for her friends.  Biscuit looks like a helper with digging, “woof, woof” and finding the sleds “woof, woof”, but really Biscuit wants to go down the hill in a sled.  The layout provides a large font, 2-3 simple sentences and plenty of white space.  New readers will be successful due to the repeated “woof, woof” and the details of the illustrations.  Biscuit’s owner presents as white, but her group of friends represents a mix of cultures.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

four-stars

Pete the Kitty goes to the Doctor

Pete the Kitty goes to the DoctorPete the Kitty Goes to the Doctor by James Dean
Published by HarperCollins on September 24th 2019
ISBN: 0062868330
Pages: 32
Goodreads
two-stars

Pete the Kitty has a bellyache.  He doesn’t have a fever so his Dad has him get some rest.  Pete the Kitty tries to play with his trains and paint a picture until Dad tells him to get dress.  Pete the Kitty is going to the doctor which scares him.  They wait in the waiting room; Pete gets checked out, receives a sticker and is sent home to rest.  The positives of this story are that Pete the Kitty is popular and this offering will support parents in explaining a trip to the doctor.  The doctor is female and Pete the Kitty has overcome his fear of going to the doctor.  Parents may also appreciate that this trip to the doctor did not result in medication being prescribed.  Unfortunately, the layout of the story has a few drawbacks.   The story line meanders in the beginning and Pete the Kitty doesn’t hear about going to the doctor until page 14.  New readers need the main topic of the story at the beginning for comprehension purposes.  For school age children, discussion may need to be made on why he needs to stay home from school and go to the doctor when he doesn’t have a fever, hasn’t thrown up or  broken out in a rash.    Even though it is cartoon logic and similar to the other Easy Reader Pete the Cat books, it seems out of place that the adult cats have clothes and Pete the Kitty is in pjs at home, but when he is told to “get dressed”, he only dons a scarf which is taken off at the doctor’s office.   Children wanting Pete the Cat books will probably think it’s “groovy”.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

 

two-stars

Jorge el Curioso De basura a tesoro/Curious George Tase to Treasure

ISBN: 9781328586469
three-stars

Curious George helps to clean the city and finds many treasures in others’ trash. The Green Light Series has a place in middle school. It’s a level 2 reader. I shared this with the Spanish teachers at my middle school. They loved that it was written in both English and Spanish on the same page. It’s great for having students either break down each page in either language by coving up one language. It’s a lower level so it’s less intimidating.

 

Reviewed BY Jeri Fitzpatrick GNGMS Gray

 

three-stars

Running Wild

ISBN: 9780823443635
four-stars

Willa has grown up with just her dad and twin brothers in the Alaskan wilderness since her mother died from cancer.  Her father took them from Seattle to live in a log cabin they built. They take care of all their needs by living off the land. Things started out okay during the building years. Dad had stopped drinking, but he has again. It’s almost winter, the summer crops were poor, and the game has been hard to find. At 12 Willa knows that she must take her brothers and bring them to the Fort Yukon settlement down river. Dad has left and hidden the paddles to the rowboat. The kids gab a raft they made and start the journey. Willa thinks she may have cancer like her mom because she is bleeding down there. The trip is dangerous and one of the twins befriended a wolf cub and he sneaks him in his backpack. The ice may freeze up at anytime, snows come, food is scarce, and the raft starts to fall apart.

This book is good for upper middle school and older.

Reviewed by Jeri Fitzpatrick GNGMS Gray

four-stars

Moles

MolesMoles by Rachel Poliquin, Nicholas John Frith
Published by HMH Books for Young Readers on June 18th 2019
ISBN: 0544951077
Pages: 96
Goodreads
five-stars

The second in the Superpower Field Guides, Poliquin and Firth once again highlight the adaptations of an animal that are akin to super powers (the first was Beavers). This time the focus is on the mighty mole. Rosalie spends her entire life underground and has developed skills to help her build tunnels, move dirt, find worms, and survive in a world devoid of sunshine or fresh air. Poliquin has a fantastic voice, writing with genuine affection for her subject and joy for her audience (I can imagine her chucking a kid on his arm as the kid reads amazing facts aloud and saying, “I know, right!?!”). She uses scientific terms and a lot of stretch vocabulary; a glossary is included in the back of the book. Firth’s illustrations were created using a mixture of black ink, pencil, and wax crayon in a technique known as “preseparation” – the artwork was then colored digitally and the palette of brown, lime green, and coral captures the soil- and worm-filled world of the common mole.  These books are fantastic for  nonfiction or animal lovers in grades 2-5 and would fly off the shelves in a classroom or public library.  They would benefit from an INDEX!  The supersonic Ostrich is next in the series and then the shape-shifting Eel.

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

five-stars

Grimoire Noir

Grimoire NoirGrimoire Noir by Vera Greentea, Yana Bogatch
Published by First Second on July 23rd 2019
ISBN: 1626725985
Pages: 288
Genres: Fantasy
Format: Graphic Novel
Goodreads
four-stars

“Grimoire Noir” is a young adult graphic novel. The story follows Bucky, a teen whose little sister has gone missing. In the town of Blackwell, all girls are witches, but all boys are non-magical. It’s a bit of an “urban fantasy,” set in the present day, but with lots of dark magic. The dark supernatural mystery keeps you interested, and the world-building done by Greentea makes you want to know more about the history of this town and why only girls are magical.

The art is beautiful and definitely noir-style. There are a few dark scenes that put this in the teen/young adult category. Not necessarily a must-buy for your library unless your YA  graphic novels are popular.

Reviewed by Kate Radke, Walker Memorial Library, Westbrook.

four-stars

Saving Hanno

ISBN: 9780823441656
four-stars

Rudi is nine years old and growing up Jewish in Nazi Germany. School life as he knows is changing right before his eyes. The Nazi boys are bullying Jewish kids and no one is stopping them. Their teacher is replaced by a Nazi and now Rudi just stays home with his parents and an older sister who wants to become a nurse. His only joy is his dachshund. His parents tell him he is going to take the Kindertransport to England. He thinks Hanno won’t be able to go. But at the last minute, someone volunteers to take Hanno to England. He lives with a nice childless couple, and after six months of quarantine, he gets Hannon back. Then the war comes to England and families decide the best way to be humane to their pets is to have them put to sleep before the food runs out. Rudi overhears his host family discussing the plan. Rudi hides Hanno … The author tells more information about the story that this story was based.

Reviewed by Jeri Fitzpatrick GNGMS Gray Good for middles school and up.

four-stars

Symptoms of a Heart Break

Symptoms of a Heart BreakSymptoms of a Heartbreak by Sona Charaipotra
Published by Imprint on July 2nd 2019
ISBN: 1250199107
Pages: 336
Goodreads
four-stars

This romantic, comedy for readers in grades 9-12 will bring on the laughs, the tears and a desire for Indian food to be eaten with a dose of Bollywood movies.  Sixteen year old Saira Sehgal, “Saira with an i”, is publically known as the girl genius.  She is now starting her first rotation in the pediatric oncology unit as Dr. Sehgal and an intern where her mother happens to be on staff.  Falling for Lincoln (Link) the handsome Rock Star Camp show wannabe contestant who happens to be on the ward as a leukemia patient, is not only off limits professionally (so  inevitable), but  it is even worse for Saira because she lets him believe that she is a cancer patient.  Let the medical drama, first romance, Dougie Howser- esque fun begin.  Charaipotra provides a supportive and large busy Indian family that hold to some cultural traditions as the backdrop for this easy romance, providing names of Indian food and endearments without translation (and it works!).  Saira’s potential betrothed, who is secretly gay with Saira’s blessing, provides her with the ability to assist Link with finding a bone marrow donor even when she is restricted from seeing him.   Issues of medical ethics, privacy, and family loss are mixed in with a teen romantic drama and the parental pressures that some teens face.  Perfect for romance lovers and strong female characters.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

 

four-stars

On a Scale of 1 to 10

On a Scale of 1 to 10On a Scale of One to Ten by Ceylan Scott
Published by Chicken House on May 14th 2019
ISBN: 1338323768
Pages: 288
Goodreads
five-stars

Recommending for Cream of the crop consideration.  This debut novel, suggested for grades 9-12, provides an authentic voice of someone with mental illness, as well as, a credible #ownvoices author experience to this first person narrative of a teenage psychiatric hospital stay.  Tamar believes that she killed her friend Iris.  The guilt, fearful perceptions and self-mutilating behavior spirals into an attempted suicide that lands Tamar in Lime Grove psychiatric hospital.  Tamar adjusts to the lack of privacy, learns to relate to other patients and works through her own painful and deteriorating self-talk with a darkly comical narrative that pulls the reader into the whole experience.   There is a spot-on balance between medical/therapy information imparted and Tamar’s story before and after hospitalization that provides some suspense.  Scott’s writing is both rich in description and simply honest in its portrayal of every character and the hospital experience.   Although Tamar’s perceptions may be unreliable, her pain and how she views the staff and persons outside of the facility speak to the fragility and strength of the human spirit. The setting is in Britain and some of the cultural references are British, which is refreshing.  The author’s note shares some of her personal connections to the story and resources are provided for those who are affected in some way by the content or who may be considering suicide.   This is an important book to have in all library collections due to the honesty, lack of stereotypes and the connection that can be made when an author has taken such risks to broaden readers’ understanding of something so personal.

Reviewed by Sheila Dube, Springvale Public Library

five-stars