Girl Crushed

Girl CrushedGirl Crushed by Katie Heaney
on April 7, 2020
ISBN: 1984897349
Genres: Realistic Fiction, Romance
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

Quinn and Jamie are the only out queer kids in school and have been best friends and together for years.  Right before senior year, Jamie dumps Quinn.  Quinn goes into her senior year distraught and questioning her plan of being with Jamie, playing soccer for UNC, and becoming a professional soccer player.  As Jamie starts befriending someone else, Quinn decides to make a play for Ruby, their common crush who is believed to be straight.  Quinn continues to navigate her senior year as she doesn’t get into her dream college and her favorite coffee shop is in danger of going out of business.  Author Heaney has created an authentic #ownvoices novel of a teen struggling with hopes and expectations and how to move forward after life doesn’t go how you planned.  Recommend to fans of Nina Lacour and Becky Albertalli. Best for grades 7+.

Reviewed by Kara Reiman, Maine State Library

four-stars

How to Disappear Completely

How to Disappear CompletelyHow to Disappear Completely by Ali Standish
Published by HarperCollins on April 28, 2020
ISBN: 0062893289
Pages: 384
Genres: Fantasy, Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

Emma notices white spots on her skin soon after her beloved grandmother dies. On top of being the new kid at school, she is diagnosed with vitiligo — a loss of color in the skin. As she learns to live with her new condition and the bullying that results, she learns more about her grandmother and the fantastical stories she shared with Emma. Emma and her grandmother spent lots of time in the nearby spinney (a small forest) and wrote stories together in a journal hidden in a tree hollow. After her grandmother dies, someone keeps writing with Emma. With the help of her new friend Fina, Emma tries to identify the mysterious writer. Readers will enjoy the fairy tale that unfolds in the journal. This is a beautifully written gentle middle grade book about family, family secrets, and resilience.

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

four-stars

A Galaxy of Sea Stars

A Galaxy of Sea StarsA Galaxy of Sea Stars by Jeanne Zulick Ferruolo
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) on February 4, 2020
ISBN: 0374309094
Pages: 208
Genres: Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

“Being brave is when you are scared of something — but you do it anyway.” (p. 206)

Izzy is experiencing a lot of anxiety-inducing change in her life — her father came back injured after serving in Afghanistan and they’ve had to move because he can no longer run his fishing boat. They’ve moved to an apartment over the marina her dad now runs but her mother has left for Block Island (RI) for the summer to help at a family restaurant. Izzy misses her old house and her Mom and because she’s in so much turmoil, she risks her friendship with her two best friends, the “Sea Stars.” Just after Izzy starts at her new, bigger regional middle school, her father invites the Haidary family — her father’s interpreter in Afghanistan — to live in their 3rd floor apartment. The Haidarys’ daughter Satira will be joining Izzy at school and they’ve been assigned to the daily news class with the “Sea Stars.” Tensions build as some students harass Satira for wearing her hijab and Izzy must face her fears and learn to be brave and learn how to be a friend and an upstander. Although readers will be disappointed that the bully is not punished or reconciled, this is an authentic book about middle school that shares the experience of immigrants and discrimination against immigrants and the struggles of soldiers returning from war with oft-hidden injuries like PTSD.

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

four-stars

A High Five for Glenn Burke

A High Five for Glenn BurkeA High Five for Glenn Burke by Phil Bildner
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) on February 25, 2020
ISBN: 0374312737
Pages: 288
Genres: Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

A coming out/coming of age story told by middle-schooler, baseball-obsessed Silas. Silas does a report for school on Glenn Burke, famous for inventing the high five as an LA Dodgers star player in the 70s. Burke was also the first openly gay major league ballplayer and sadly it basically ended his career. Silas comes out to his best friend and his baseball coach but encounters a few bumps on the way. This is a book that will resonate with many readers — those navigating middle school and middle school friendships and those grappling with their sexuality. Baseball lovers will also enjoy the authentic depiction of a team and their interactions. 

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

four-stars

From the Desk of Zoe Washington

From the Desk of Zoe WashingtonFrom the Desk of Zoe Washington by Janae Marks
Published by Katherine Tegen Books on January 14, 2020
ISBN: 006287585X
Pages: 304
Genres: Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

On Zoe’s 12th birthday, she finds a letter from her biological father who she has never met because he was sent to prison before she was born. She begins corresponding with him although she knows that her mother and stepfather would not approve. Her grandmother discovers the letters and ends up helping Zoe but promises that they will have to tell her Mom soon. As Zoe learns about her father, she also learns that African-American men are not always treated fairly by our legal system. She begins to investigate his role in the crime. Could he be innocent? This is also a story about dreams — Zoe loves to bake and wants to be a professional baker — and a good school/friendship story. Zoe is navigating the new world of middle school and changing friendships while getting to know her father. While this book covers challenging and timely topics, Marks writes with a lightness that makes this a great book for young people to start learning about these issues.  Now I need to find a cupcake and I wish I could eat it with my new friend Zoe!

Recommended for Cream of the Crop.

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

five-stars

Three Things I Know are True

Three Things I Know are TrueThree Things I Know Are True by Betty Culley
Published by HarperTeen on January 7, 2020
ISBN: 0062908022
Pages: 469
Genres: Fiction in Verse/Poetry, Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

This is a beautiful YA (for middle/high school age readers) novel-in-verse about loss and hope set in a former mill town on the Kennebec River in rural Maine. Soon to be 16-year-old Liv tells the story of caring for her brain-damaged brother Jonah after a shooting accident at his best friend’s house across the street. Liv’s mother is suing Clay’s father, a gun advocate who “always says What good is a gun if it isn’t loaded?” (pp. 266-267). Liv has trouble focusing in school and spends most of her time helping the home nurses care for Jonah and trying to connect with Jonah’s best friend and his mother.  Debut author Culley perfectly captures life in rural Maine and gives readers much fodder for discussion, from changing communities to gun ownership.

Recommended for Cream of the Crop.

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

five-stars

Notorious

NotoriousNotorious by Gordon Korman
Published by Balzer + Bray on January 7, 2020
ISBN: 0062798863
Pages: 307
Genres: Mystery
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

Gordon Korman has written another middle school mystery/adventure that students will love. Keenan finds himself recuperating from tuberculosis at his Dad’s house on Centerlight Island which is half in Canada and half in the US between Ontario and Michigan. Normally, he’d be globetrotting with his Mom and stepdad who teach in international schools. Although he yearns to return to China, he finds himself drawn into a mystery by his (Canadian) neighbor Zarabeth who is convinced that the gangster who used to live in her home has left treasure behind and that someone murdered her unpopular dog. Very unpopular dog. Libraries will want to add this title to their Korman collection for upper elementary/middle school readers.

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

five-stars

Arlo Finch in the Kingdom of Shadows

Arlo Finch in the Kingdom of ShadowsArlo Finch in the Kingdom of Shadows by John August
Published by Roaring Brook Press on February 4, 2020
ISBN: 1626728186
Pages: 320
Genres: Adventure, Fantasy
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
five-stars

“Loyal, brave, kind, and true — Keeper of the old and new — I guard the wild, defend the weak, mark the path, and virtue seek. Forest spirits hear me now as I speak my Ranger’s vow.”

August has written a very satisfying conclusion to the Arlo Finch trilogy. Readers should read the books in order as #3 starts out with a bang and will be confusing to those starting here. Arlo Finch lives with his mother, sister, and uncle in a remote area in the mountains of Colorado. His father is hiding from the government in China. Arlo and his sister set out through the magical Long Woods to rescue their father and bring him to Colorado but then everyone from the FBI, to the mysterious Eldritch of the Realm beyond the Long Woods, to the sociopathic former Ranger Scout Hadryn seem to want something from Arlo. Middle school aged kids will be clamoring to finish reading the trilogy.

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

five-stars

No True Believers

No True BelieversNo True Believers by Rabiah York Lumbard
Published by Crown Books for Young Readers on February 11, 2020
ISBN: 0525644253
Genres: Realistic Fiction
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

A mystery set as the backdrop for exploring the realities of Islamaphobia and white supremacy. This book moves fast and has a great main character in Selma. A mature, self-aware Muslin-America teen. The mystery of the book was pretty obvious. The cast of characters and the care used while exploring the subject of Islamaphobia was done so well that you can ignore the drawback of an obvious outcome. I would recommend this for any young adult collection.

Reviewed by Sophie Gagnon, Skidompha Library

four-stars

Jasmine Green Rescues: A Duckling Called Button

Jasmine Green Rescues: A Duckling Called ButtonJasmine Green Rescues: A Duckling Called Button by Ellie Snowdon, Helen Peters
ISBN: 1536210250
Genres: Animals
Format: Chapter Book Fiction
Goodreads
four-stars

Jasmine Green is back for the second installment of in this series on Oak Tree Farm. After a dog kills a mallard sitting on a nest, Jasmine and her best friend, Tom, find the now orphaned eggs and decide to raise them in an incubator. When only one duckling, Button, survives, Jasmine is determined to give him the best life she can.

This is a great follow-up to the first book, but it is completely fine as a stand alone. Jasmine lives on a farm, and there are parts of this book that don’t sugar coat this life — there is animal death so super sensitive kids should probably avoid this one. The story is engaging, easy to follow, and keeps you interested throughout. Black-and-white pencil drawings throughout minimally add to the story, but help to break up the text a bit. Recommended for kids 3rd grade and up, give this one to the animal lover in your family.

Reviewed by Jessie Trafton, Skidompha Library, Damariscotta, ME

four-stars