Come visit, and tweet at #IMWAYR. Thanks to Jen, Kellee, and Ricki for hosting!
I didn't post last week, traveled to a special zoo with my granddaughters, a wonderful day! So, I've read many books since the last post, labeled them in groups so you can read what you're most interested in.
novels - Middle grade and YA
Took - by Mary Downing Hahn
This next “chiller” story from Mary Downing Hahn will be out
mid-September, and it is filled with goose bumps for those who love them. Noted
for a long time for writing this kind of book for pre-adolescents, Hahn has
written another one that is both scary and sad, too. Daniel, a seventh grade
boy, his little sister, Erica, seven, and his parents have moved to an old farm
house outside of a forlorn town in West Virginia from an upscale neighborhood
in Connecticut. His father has lost his job, they’ve had to give up their home
and private schools, and are surviving the best way they can, by relocating.
The house is in disrepair, and there are some creepy things going on from the
first day. Daniel sees a shadow at the edge of the woods that first evening
when they arrive, and the days and nights don’t improve. They’re the first
family to live in the old Estes place since that family left fifty years
ago. All the community, including the
kids, knows why no one has lived there, but Daniel and his family don’t. And
when they’re told of Auntie and her companion, they scoff at silly folk
stories. Hahn layers on the bad times quickly, starts with someone watching
them, and we read: “They’re ignorant fools, but they have something she wants,
and she aims to get it.” Daniel tells this story of a family pulled apart in a
house and community that does not welcome them. Hahn writes: “The past clung to
them like a stain you couldn’t wash.” One must suspend one’s own beliefs when
reading, and enjoy this roller-coaster ride into dark woods, a conjure or two,
and a boy who won’t stop until he makes things good again. For those kids who
enjoy reading scary tales, this one will suit them well. Thanks to Net Galley for
the chance to read it early.
The Thing About Jellyfish - written by
Ali Benjamin (just made the National Book Award long list
for Young People's Literature!)
I am grateful for the chance to read
this astounding debut novel before it's published, thanks to Net Galley. Suzy,
or Zu, as her mother calls her, is twelve, a seventh grader, who hasn't spoken
since the early summer when she found out her used-to-be best friend Franny has
died, drowned. The story is told by Zu in remembering the friendship with
Franny, flashing to the present when chapters begin with the science teacher
Mrs. Turton's instructions for the coming science project and presentation,
alternating with some of Zu's science report about jellyfish. Zu becomes
immersed in the possibility of Franny being stung by a deadly jellyfish, and
all her thoughts and research focus there.
Benjamin
writes poetically beautiful words of Zu's strange and mixed-up thoughts of her
time with and without her friend. This whole story is not a new one, but of
those challenges of middle-school friendship when Franny starts growing into
liking the fun of having a boyfriend, and Zu can't understand how or why the
friendship is changing. I taught middle school, and the parts Benjamin shows
here are both the heart-breaking experiences of those on the 'outside', and the
sweetness that does show when someone steps outside the group to be a friend.
There is an adventure, yet most of this young adolescent's adventure, and
learning, happens in her reflections. Franny's family and the science teacher
show patience and kindness, loving examples of the good support she needs
during this part of her life. The story of Franny reminds me of the quote that
we must be kind, for we don't know what battles another is fighting. It is a
beautifully satisfying story of growing up. Thanks again to Net Galley