The Island

The IslandThe Island by D. A. Graham
Published by Darby Creek (Tm) on January 1st 2019
ISBN: 154154028X
Pages: 112
Goodreads
five-stars

Ethan desperately wants to win the Teen Wilderness Masters reality show challenge — the Grand Prize is $50,000.  He wants to help pay off bills that his parents accrued while his dad was sick. He shouldn’t have any problems — was raised by research biologists, taught how to live off the land, find edible plants, make clean drinking water and to love nature. But, when he and nine other teen contestants are dropped off on an uninhabited island with no technology or other resources available to them — maybe he has bitten off more than he can chew.

A great survival/competition story that all will enjoy — especially those that are fans of reality tv shows like Survivor. Recommended for grades 7 and. up. Well written and easy to follow.

Reviewed by Kristin Taylor, Biddeford High School, Biddeford.

five-stars

Cracking the Bell

Cracking the BellCracking the Bell by Geoff Herbach
Published by Katherine Tegen Books on September 10th 2019
ISBN: 0062453149
Pages: 247
Goodreads
five-stars

Isaiah was saved by football. His life prior to the sport was utter chaos and he was constantly in trouble. His parents gave him an ultimatum — play football or go back to the group home. Football was his savior, but now he has to decide whether to continue playing.

College recruiters are watching him, giving him offers that he can’t resist, but a series of severe concussions has left him struggling to cover up what is happening to him. What should he do — football has been his life, but is it worth the chance of him dying.

Recommended for grade 8 and up. With concussions being a hot topic with student athletes, this novel puts the  dilemma that many have to face in perspective.

Reviewed by Kristin Taylor, Biddeford High School, Biddeford.

five-stars

Shatter City

Shatter CityShatter City (Impostors, #2) by Scott Westerfeld
Published by Scholastic Press on September 17th 2019
ISBN: 1338150413
Pages: 416
Goodreads
five-stars

In the sequel to Westerfeld”s “Imposters”, Frey and Rafi have traded places with the intent of Frey killing their father. Frey, Rafi’s twin sister and body double, is set to marry Col with the intention of bringing peace to their two nations. Things don’t go as plan and Frey along with Col’s help escape to Paz, an app happy city where the citizens use apps to control their emotions. Frey tries to warn the city of Paz (actually an IA) to their upcoming doom, but was too late and the battle continues to eliminate the twin’s evil warlord father.

Action packed, fast paced and lovers of Scott Westerfeld will continue to eat this story up. It helps to have read “Impostors” for the back ground story of Rafi and Frey. Recommended for grades 8 and up.

Reviewed by Kristin Taylor, Biddeford High School, Biddeford.

five-stars

Bug Off! A Story of Fireflies and Friendship

Bug Off! A Story of Fireflies and FriendshipBug Off!: A Story of Fireflies and Friendship by Cari Best, Jennifer Plecas
on June 25th 2019
ISBN: 0374380627
Pages: 32
Goodreads
five-stars

Let’s take a vote. How many of us think fireflies are bugs? Well…they are beetles, and beetles ARE insects, and bugs are insects, but fireflies and bugs are two different classes of insects. Confusing? It is to Maude, a newcomer in the neighborhood. She’s trying to make friends, and when she sees a poster advertising the Bug-of-the-Month Club, she thinks it’s the perfect way to meet other children and share her new passion for fireflies. However, it’s not at all confusing to club leader Louise, who rejects Maude’s bid for membership based on the fact that fireflies are NOT bugs!

The text weaves in basic information about bugs and lots of information about fireflies and how to create a firefly-friendly environment. It’s not preachy or dry – just the right balance to inform and entertain. The cartoonish, full color illustrations show mostly night scenes with the contrasting bright yellow fireflies and proportionately large white eyes of the children.

This book could be used to initiate a study of animal kingdom orders and classifications, but probably more useful as a how-to-be-a-friend’ story. Now, could we have a discussion about the terms firefly vs lightening bug?

Reviewed by Lynn Mayer, Librarian, Old Town Elementary School, Old Town.

five-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

The Pioneer

The PioneerThe Pioneer by Bridget Tyler
Published by HarperTeen on March 5th 2019
ISBN: 0062658069
Pages: 357
Goodreads
five-stars

Jo has trained her whole life to be a rocket-ship pilot and hopes to one day find a new home now that Earth is failing due to all the damage done by humans. An accident before they leave for their new home, kills her brother and permanently injures her leaving her unable to fly. When they arrive at their new home, on planet Tau Ceti e, she is stuck with construction and kitchen duty. After working to construct the school building, she asks the computers to download information on the advance team and discovers that they never left for their next scouting mission. She and her friends set off on a quick exploration and end up meeting the planet’s inhabitants and discover what happened to the advance team. Things are not always what they seem in this stunning sci-fi debut.

Recommended for Cream of the Crop.

Reviewed by Karen Sandlin Silverman, Mt. Ararat Middle School, Topsham

five-stars

Lizzie Flying Solo

Lizzie Flying SoloLizzie Flying Solo by Nanci Turner Steveson
Published by HarperCollins on April 16th 2019
ISBN: 0062673181
Pages: 336
Goodreads
five-stars

Lizzie and her Mom move to a homeless shelter (Good Hope: A Home for Families in Transition) after her father is arrested for embezzlement. Lizzie is embarrassed and not sure if her father is guilty or not and is sad to leave her home behind. At her new school, she avoids making new friends for fear they might not like her because of her family situation — even convincing her teacher to let her work alone on a group project. Despite Lizzie’s reluctance to make connections, she ends up working at the stable, making friends at the stable, helping her friends, and devoting herself to working with a troubled young pony who she dreams of owning. Lizzie eventually does come to understand that she has no reason to feel shame for what her father may have done and the importance of sharing with friends. Author Nanci Turner Steveson discusses homeslessness in America and her own brush at almost-homelessness in the author’s note.

Recommended for Cream of the Crop

Reviewed by Karen Sandlin Silverman, Mt. Ararat Middle School, Topsham

five-stars

The Magnificent Migration: On Safari with Africa’s Last Great Herds

The Magnificent Migration: On Safari with Africa’s Last Great HerdsThe Magnificent Migration: On Safari with Africa’s Last Great Herds by Sy Montgomery
Published by HMH Books for Young Readers on June 11th 2019
ISBN: 0544761138
Pages: 176
Goodreads
five-stars

Sibert medalist, Sy Montgomery takes the reader to the plains of Africa to join a prestigious team of scientists, guides, and photographers on her greatest quest yet- follow the herds of wildebeests that migrate with the rains. Led by her friend and the world’s foremost expert on wildebeests, Dr. Richard Estes, they will follow the wildebeest which according to Montgomery “drive the ecology and evolution of the largest savanna ecosystem in the world.” She goes on to say that wildebeest migration defines wild Africa. Montgomery always excites her readers with an abundance of  facts, supported by  extraordinary photographs, on this trip those of father rand son team Roger and Logan Wood.  Montgomery details her trip as they follow the migration of a quarter of a million beasts along with hundreds of thousands of zebra and gazelles in the largest movement of animals on land. This is a book that takes time to read and reread. Not only does the reader gain information on the herds but there are stories of other animals- lions that climb trees to escape biting insects, Arctic terns that fly from Antarctica to Africa, then to South America and on to the Arctic, hyenas, red crabs, and hippos cover just some of those in the book. This is Montgomery at her best! A must for every library ! Use in grades 5 and up.

Reviewed by Kathy George, Gray Public Library, Gray

five-stars

Looking for Yesterday

Looking for YesterdayLooking for Yesterday by Alison Jay
Published by Candlewick Press on August 20th 2019
ISBN: 1536204218
Pages: 32
Goodreads
five-stars

A young boy is nostalgic for yesterday.  How could he go back in time and do it all again, he wonders.  So he decides to try  – by gazing at stars whose light is from a million yesterdays,  by imagining what might go faster than the speed of light,   to  building a supersonic rocket, and to even  considering that a wormhole just might do the trick. Eventually he decides to ask  his Granddad who asks him “why” he wants to go back to yesterday. Granddad then reminisces about some of his own very best yesterdays.  He then tells the young boy that “everyday brings the chance of a new adventure. Why go looking  for yesterday when you can be happy here . . .TODAY!”

This  picture book  tackles a big and thought provoking question.  In turn, this question has the potential of  leading  to interesting discussions with as may answers as their are children discussing it!   The scope of this book is wide and deep and scientific,  yet whimsical in it’s telling and illustration.  And by including Granddad in the “equation,” the topic is made  personal for children.  After all, doesn’t Granddad, with all his knowledge and experience, know the answer to everything?

The illustrations  by this author-illustrator are captivating, colorful and expressive and nicely enhance the thoughts and ideas  presented  throughout the text.   Could be used at any time,  during a science class or for stimulating the minds of the young and curious.

Reviewed By Connie M. Smith, Breakwater School, Portland, ME

five-stars

Death Eaters: Meet Nature’s Scavengers

Death Eaters: Meet Nature’s ScavengersDeath Eaters: Nature's Decomposers and Scavengers by Kelly Milner Halls
Published by Millbrook Press on August 1st 2018
ISBN: 1512482005
Goodreads
five-stars

There has been life on earth for over 4 billion years- so where are all the bodies? Kelly Milner Halls has given the reader the answer in this non- fiction picture book filled with fact and photographs .The answer is “recycling.” When something or someone dies it is consumed by the “death-eaters”, scavengers and decomposers – the “clean-up crew.” It is in this selection the reader gets to meet them and though it may seem gross to us- it is amazing and fascinating as to how the earth cleans itself. Ms Halls takes the reader through the five stages of death, explaining each one and introducing the bodily function,  insect or animal that is responsible for addressing each stage. In the first stage for instance, an animal freshly dead, the body begins to shut down and self digest. After about three days, animals such as wolves or hyenas eat or store the somewhat fresh corpse. Then  the, birds from crows to seagulls, insects of all sorts take their turn until nothing is left but bones. Now it is the job of the bone eating worms and finally the bacteria and fungi to leave no trace of the dead. With lots of photographs  and a text easy to understand, this is the completion of any book about insects, birds or animals as to what happens to them after they die. Use with units on nature, animals and recycling.

reviewed by Kathy George, Gray Public Library, Gray

five-stars