Ami lives with her grandparents and aunts and uncles as the only young person in an isolated compound in the future after a devastating pandemic. Modern conveniences are no more and it has become very difficult and rare for women to have babies. Since Ami was born post-pandemic to a woman who was forced to run away, it is assumed that Ami can also conceive. One day a mysterious older man appears and it becomes clear that it is expected that Ami should "breed" with him. Ami is all for doing her duty in the ultra-religious and conservative community that her grandfather rules with an iron fist, but this crosses the line. At the urging of one of her aunts, Ami decides to run away to find the mother that she no longer remembers. The journey is scary and dangerous, but at last Ami stumbles into the community in which her mother is assumed to be living. Once there Ami meets for the first time other young people. She also is exposed to alternate life-styles, short hair on women, and secular music. At first overwhelmed, Ami gradually makes friends and even develops an unexpected love-interest. The meeting with her mother offers some surprises and the truth behind the separation. Will Ami stay in this strange new place or will she return to the compound and the old ways with the only family she has previously known?
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Monday, December 28, 2020
The Ballad of Ami Miles
Ami lives with her grandparents and aunts and uncles as the only young person in an isolated compound in the future after a devastating pandemic. Modern conveniences are no more and it has become very difficult and rare for women to have babies. Since Ami was born post-pandemic to a woman who was forced to run away, it is assumed that Ami can also conceive. One day a mysterious older man appears and it becomes clear that it is expected that Ami should "breed" with him. Ami is all for doing her duty in the ultra-religious and conservative community that her grandfather rules with an iron fist, but this crosses the line. At the urging of one of her aunts, Ami decides to run away to find the mother that she no longer remembers. The journey is scary and dangerous, but at last Ami stumbles into the community in which her mother is assumed to be living. Once there Ami meets for the first time other young people. She also is exposed to alternate life-styles, short hair on women, and secular music. At first overwhelmed, Ami gradually makes friends and even develops an unexpected love-interest. The meeting with her mother offers some surprises and the truth behind the separation. Will Ami stay in this strange new place or will she return to the compound and the old ways with the only family she has previously known?
Monday, December 21, 2020
The Witches: The Graphic Novel
Friday, December 18, 2020
The Super Life of Ben Braver
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Twins
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Who Was Nellie Bly?
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
The Life and (Medieval) Times of Kit Sweetly
Thursday, December 3, 2020
The Retake
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
A Phoenix First Must Burn
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Cinders and Sparrows
Tuesday, November 24, 2020
The Fabled Stables
Thursday, November 19, 2020
The Smartest Kid in the Universe
Chris Grabenstein
Monday, November 16, 2020
Twig and Turtle: Big Move to a Tiny House
Jennifer Richard Jacobson
Paul Franco, Illustrator
Pixel Ink, 2020 100 pages
Grades 2-4
Realistic Fiction
Twig and Turtle series #1
Its only October and Twig and her little sister Turtle are experiencing their third first day of school. The family decided to simplify by building and moving into a tiny house in a small town in Colorado. While the house was being build they had to stay with Grandma, where Twig fell in puppy-love with her uncle's dog, who was also a new resident. Now Grandma must relocate the dog and Twig wants him for her very own. But how do you fit a great dane into a tiny house? Meanwhile, Twig is having a hard time making friends. It seems that some of the other kids are making fun of her and she sits alone at lunch. Turtle is more outgoing and seems to be having an easier time, but is she really? Twig's teacher recommends her for a before-school social skills club, which sounds horrible. Her parents make her attend, where surprises await. Allies emerge for the campaign to "Save Bo" and a brilliant plan is concocted. Can Twig and her team save Bo before it's too late?
Jacobson ventures into chapter book territory with this new series start. Tiny houses are trending and though I know of a picture book, this is the first work of longer fiction featuring characters who reside in one of which I am aware. Readers will be fascinated about life in the tiny house and the accommodations the family must endure to make it work. Kids will also relate to Twig and her anxieties about change and fitting in and the struggle to gain some control over her life. She proves to be a supportive big sister, loyal friend, and terrific brain-stormer. The quest to "Save Bo" doesn't happen exactly the way Twig planned, but is satisfying all the same. The adults in this book are caring and supportive and help Twig to better fit in and solve her problems. The vocabulary in this chapter book for emerging readers and plot arc are right on target for the audience. Black and white illustrations, sometimes full-paged, are captivating and plentiful. This is a fun and loving family with whom young readers will enjoy spending time. Any family that "hurkle-durks", and "snugabugs" is okay in my book. The second installment in the series Toy Store Trouble was released last month with a third projected for release in the near future.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
They Went Left
Monica Hesse
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Throwback
Thursday, November 5, 2020
The Magic Fish
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Armstrong & Charlie
Tuesday, November 3, 2020
Goldie Vance: The Hotel Whodunit
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Which Way is Home?
Monday, October 26, 2020
Ronan Boyle and the Bridge of Riddles
Thomas Lennon
Abrams, 2019
286 pages
Grades 4-7
Fantasy/Adventure
Ronan Boyle series #1
Meet Ronan Boyle the narrowist and youngest recruit of the Irish secret police force (Garda) who keeps the peace within Tir Na Nog (the land of magical creatures). Ronan is an unlikely candidate, selected only because he can fit in a tight space, yet proves his worth by his can-do attitude and unflappable nature. He is, at least, more consistent a cadet than Tim the Medium-Sized Bear (who it is suspected wandered into the training center out of the woods) or Brian Bean, who got himself killed, yet whose ghost still rattles around telling his customary jokes. After completing training Ronan joins the captain on his first mission, armed with only his wooden training shillelagh. They must first answer a riddle to cross the bridge to Tir Na Nog and then they encounter two leprechaun rascals, one of whom if you look at directly, you immediately are his prisoner of love. Laughter and mayhem ensue as Ronan and the captain attempt to put the wold to rights and recover thousands of Euros worth of stolen wine. Meanwhile, Ronan's parents are in prison for a crime they didn't commit. The actual culprit is still at large and connected to the misdeeds currently transpiring in the magical world. Does Ronan have the stuff to save the day?
Get ready to laugh-out-loud while reading this first series installment. Lennon comes from an entertainment background (including working with Weird Al) and is truly funny. Some of the humor might go over the heads of the intended audience, but there is enough gross-gags and low-hanging fruit to satisfy all maturity levels. The format of the book will attract readers. It is written as a discovered file of Ronan's, including diagrams, maps, and his first person account of events. The Irish setting is fully realized in both language, climate, and featured mythical creatures. Ireland has such a rich folkloric tradition that there is no shortage of interesting characters. The leprechauns featured are not the warm and fuzzy guys featured in picture books. These rascals are nasty and gassy--and pretty hilarious. The action never stops and my only complaint is just just that. I felt like I never had a moment to breath while reading this book, which pings along from one episode to the next at a breakneck speed. That said-the target audience will appreciate this and keep turning pages. The book ends with a cliff hanger, encouraging readers to pick up the next installment, The Swamp of Certain Death, which was recently released.
Thursday, October 22, 2020
King and the Dragonflies
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
The Blackbird Girls
Viking, 2020
340 pages
Grades 5-8
Historical Fiction
Anne Blankman
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Honus and Me
Avon, 1997 140 pages
Grades 3-6
Sports/Fantasy