Aug
24
2008

Administrator
This book is a California Young Reader Medal nominee for 2008-2009. I read this quite a while ago and I can’t believe I never posted a review. So I will be doing this from memory (please excuse me if I get any details wrong).
Daniel and Armin, though from different social classes, are the best of friends. They are excited about the rise of the National Socialist party and its leader, Adolph Hitler. Just as Daniel is ready to become an official member of the Nazi Party his parents tell him he can’t because he is half Jewish, therefore half human. Daniel must keep the family secret or risk dire consequences. As the Nazis consolidate their power and begin the “Final Solution” life becomes increasingly dangerous for Daniel and his parents. Can they survive in their native Germany? Will they have to leave? Or is it already too late?
Chotjewitz puts the reader in the midst of horrifying but true historical events in which the characters must choose between friendship and patriotism, loyalty and justice. He ends the novel with a shocking twist that will leave you stunned.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
24
2008

Administrator
This is a reposting of a previous review. This title is a 2008-2009 California Young Reader Medal nominee.
A direct impact by an asteroid on the moon is big news for scientists but for Miranda, a typical teen growing up in modern day Pennsylvania, it just looks like an excuse for more homework from her teachers. The asteroid turns out to be more massive than expected and the collision alters the moon’s orbit, pushing it closer to the earth with devastating effects. Tide surges, earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions kill untold numbers of people and wipe out most coastal cities. All of which leads to the swift breakdown of society, with schools and stores closing and gas and electrical service disappearing.
Miranda and her family are left to survive on their own. Thanks to Miranda’s mother they have a store of supplies but they can’t last forever. Day by day old, mundane concerns lose their importance and are replaced by more urgent needs like food, heat and water. And as global climate change makes the earth less and less hospitable to life they wonder if there will be any reason to keep on living.
Told through Miranda’s journal entries this is a truly frightening story. Although death and destruction are all around they are not described in any detail. It is the plausible day-by-day disintegration of Miranda’s life that makes the story scary. This is a book that is hard to put down and a it is a story that will stay with you long after you finish it.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
24
2008

Administrator
This is a reposting of a previous review. This title is a 2008-2009 California Young Reader Medal nominee.
McCormick’s book Cut, about the very controversial topic of self-mutilation, is one of the most popular titles is our library. In Sold she takes on another controversial topic– forced prostitution. Lakshmi is a 13-year-old village girl in Nepal. Her family is just barely scraping by, thanks to her gambling step-father. When a monsoon washes away their meager crops the family faces ruin and starvation.
At her step-father’s urging Lakshmi accepts a job working as a maid in the city. She hopes to be able to send money home to her mother, enough for food and maybe even a real roof for the house. She is transported by her new “auntie” who hands her off to an older man. Told to pretend she is his wife, she is transported over the Indian border and taken to Calcutta. She soon discovers that she has been sold into prostitution. At the brothel, Happiness House, she is beaten, starved and drugged until she submits.
This first-person narrative is told in spare, poetic language. The account of her subjugation is agonizing but never gratuitous. Lakshmi’s strength in the face of brutality and humiliation is impressive. How anyone, much less a 13-year-old girl, can endure what Lakshmi experiences is almost beyond imagining. Most heartbreaking of all is the author’s note telling readers that Lakshmi’s life is based on the real life experiences of thousands of Nepalese girls.
McCormick handles a sensitive topic better than almost any other writer could. The story is never sensationalistic and is one that demands telling.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
08
2008

Administrator
(Note: I read this last fall and never blogged it.)
Book 1 in this duet, Dreamhunter, ended seemingly in the middle of the story’s climax. It was one of those endings that makes you want to take the author by the lapels and yell, “why did you do that to me?!” Finally, after more than a year, the second book was released. There was no way I was going to wait for the paperback. Now I can forgive Ms. Knox. Dreamquake is every bit as good as book1, and this time the story has an ending.
This volume begins with the cataclysmic scene that ended the first book. Laura Hame, a young dreamhunter (someone who can catch and share dreams from the mysterious “Place”) overrides her famous aunt as she shares a pleasant holiday dream with thousands of people at the Rainbow Opera. The dream Laura shares is terrifying and it begins to expose insidious government corruption and abuse. Laura’s actions sicken and injure thousands of people and create turmoil. As Laura, her living sandman creation, and her cousin Rose, struggle to remain free and to show people the truth about the government’s plans, Laura must also deal with a larger and more profound mystery. What is “The Place”, where did it come from, and what does it want from her?
While there is a good deal of action and plenty of plot twists, it is the relationships that rule in this story. Knox is a pleasure to read and she creates some great characters, not least of which is Nown, the sandman. If you haven’t read Dreamhunter already you should definitely read that first. Highly recommended for stronger readers grades 9-adult.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
08
2008

Administrator
Morpurgo, recipient of the California Young Reader Medal for Private Peaceful, again gives us a soldier’s eye view of life among the trenches of World War I. This time however the soldier is a horse. Joey, a beautiful and spirited young horse, is sold to the army by the father of his master, Albert. Joey, like Private Thomas Peaceful, vividly conveys the experiences of an innocent thrust into terrifying violence of the “War to End All Wars.” Joey charges machine gun nests, drags artillery, and hauls the injured and the dead. He meets a wide range of soldiers and officers, from the kind and thoughtful to the brutish and cruel. Can Joey survive a world of machine guns, artillery, and tanks, a world in which horse are fast becoming obsolete? And will Joey ever be reunited with his beloved Albert?
As in Private Peaceful, the writing is excellent and Morpurgo brings the sights, sounds and smells of the battle field alive (“Still the guns bellowed out their fury and the ground shook beneath us.”). Joey is, at times, over anthropomorphized but is a protagonist kids will root for. Highly recommended for grades 5-10.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
08
2008

Administrator
My wife has been telling me to read this book for several years. But she’s an English teacher. What would she know about good books?
Seriously, we have very different taste in books and it took me several years to get her to read Ender’s Game, so fair is fair. Of course my wife was right and I loved this book. I can’t wait to read the next one in the series (“Tales of the Otori”).
Tomasu lives in a small isolated village of religious dissidents in a country very much like feudal Japan. He returns from a day spent wandering around in the mountains (his favorite past time) to find his village destroyed by the ruthless Lord Iida. As Iida’s men bear down on him, intent on completing their massacre, Tomasu is rescued by a sword-wielding traveler. The traveler turns out to be Lord Otori Shigeru, the sworn enemy of Iida. Shigeru renames Tomasu and adopts him. Now known as Lord Otori Takeo, he is initiated into the world of the warrior caste and its attendant violence, intrigue, and political machinations. He also learns secrets about his own past and develops skills that will place him at the center of events that will change the history of his country.
This book will appeal to a wide range of readers. It has plenty of action to keep even reluctant readers hooked and it has a great cast of characters, both male and female. Some, like Takeo and Shigeru, are clearly good guys. Some (Iida and Shigeru’s uncles) are clearly bad guys and some are ambiguous so that the reader is never sure how they will act as the story progresses. Prevalent themes include revenge, love, loyalty, duty, honor, sacrifice, and religious persecution. Highly recommended for grades 7-12.
By Mr. Doyle
Aug
05
2008

Administrator
I found this gem at Barnes and Noble in the teen section. I admit that I picked it because the author is Irish and for some reason I was feeling my Irish roots that day. What a great story! I was hooked right away and plowed through the 448 pages in just a few days. I hope the author is planning a sequel because I want to see how Stopmouth and his world evolve.
Stopmouth is a human boy living in a brutal world where humans and other sentient creatures (”beasts”) hunt each other for survival. All of the plant life in their world is poisonous so eating flesh is the only way to survive. The humans and the beasts hunt each other for food. Stopmouth, who has a severe speech impediment, is thought to be dimwitted by his tribe. If he cannot contribute to the tribe then he may become a “volunteer”. The old, the sick, the injured, and other non-contributors “volunteer” to be traded to beast tribes– flesh for flesh. So, to live, Stopmouth must show he can help provide for the tribe.
Events conspire to shake Stopmouth’s world to its very core. First he is betrayed by the brother who has always protected him. Then a beautiful woman falls from the sky into his village. And suddenly several beast tribes, who have never been able to communicate well, begin to cooperate and to hunt other species to extinction. It is only a matter of time before they turn their attention to the humans. Stopmouth learns that things are not what they seem and he embarks on a most unusual hero’s journey.
Because of it’s size the book will intimidate some readers. But it is filled with riveting action and there is enough depth to make the reader think about big ideas (loyalty, duty, honor, morality, etc.). Highly recommended for grades 7 and up.
By Mr. Doyle