Thursday, December 31, 2020

Class Act, by Jerry Craft

 The newest book by Newbery Award winning author Jerry Craft, and a companion to New Kid. I do not read a lot of graphic novels, but I read the "big" ones, like Smile, Lumberjanes, Real Friends, and Brave, to name a few. But Class Act is my favorite graphic novel to date! I LOVE this book! It is laugh-out-loud funny, and not just once, but many times throughout the book! There are so many insightful elements placed within these pages, it will make you laugh, your parents laugh, maybe even your pet dog or cat, too! As soon as I finished I wanted to read it again because I know there are things I missed along the way. It is clear that Craft spent a long time thinking about every aspect of this book and story...it is the best graphic novel I have read! Not the only good one, but I have not enjoyed any other graphic novel any more than I enjoyed this one. You have to read this! 5 paws!



Sunday, December 27, 2020

Before the Ever After, by Jacqueline Woodson

 The latest release by award-winning author Woodson, known for her adult books, picture books (Show Way), and YA/teen books (After Tupac and D Foster, Locomotion, Feathers). Ever After is a story told by narrator ZJ, the young son of an NFL star who has suffered too many concussions throughout his football career and now is becoming a shell of the person he once was, not very long ago. It is a very real look at the other side of stardom, in this case the stardom that comes along with professional sports in the U.S.  The book is written in verse, and like all that Woodson puts her pen to, it is written very well. She gives a very human voice to characters who live realistic lives. Her characters are often African-American, which gives readers a perspective not seen in enough YA books today (although that is slowly changing, thanks to Woodson, Jason Reynolds, Angie Thomas, Christopher Paul Curtis, and the late Walter Dean Myers, among a few others).

Ever After is a good story, and an important one, especially for readers who loves sports, as I do, and dream of one day becoming the next great sport hero. A worthy dream, but not one without possible life-changing risks. 4 paws.



Friday, December 25, 2020

Squint, by Chad Morris and Shelly Brown

 Another of this season's exceptional OBOB list for middle school! Squint is the story of Flint, who has severe eye troubles, and his friend McKell, who is navigating a new school and some severe family issues. Together they challenge each other to be better versions of themselves, someone that the other knows they can be, with a clearer vision (get it?) of themselves and the people and world around them.

Similar in some ways to Wonder, although not quite as eloquent, Squint is the second book by this writing duo, and a decent book. I found myself wanting to keep reading and find out what happens next, and occasionally I also felt like Disney had a role in this story (meaning the outcomes appeared to be too perfect, even though they all did not turn out that way, to the both author's credit). A little slow at times, a little sappy at times, but overall not too much of either, and a nice dose of empathy-building reality. Not great, but good, and worth reading, especially if a book like Wonder or Counting by 7s is what you enjoy! 4 paws!


Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Skyhunter, by Marie Lu

 Here are 5 things you should know about pugs, and me in particular: 

1. I am a loud sleeper - I snore a lot, even when I'm awake...it's a pug thing, and I'm proud of it. 

2. I'm not much for exercise, but as a protector of my humans, I'm top of the breed pile! 

3. I'm smarter than my brother in most ways, but not all - he is pretty cute, but I read and write, so...that's hard to beat. It's like being the sibling of Einstein, right? I mean, not an even playing field. For him, I mean.

4. Will work for food. Almost any food. Almost any work. Almost any time. 

5. Marie Lu is my favorite author of 2020!

Skyhunter is Lu's latest, and as much a page-turner as Legend or Warcross! I also read her historical fiction/fantasy story, Kingdom of Back, earlier this year, which is my all-time fave Lu book so far. So Skyhunter is good, but not Kingdom good...if Skyhunter was written by anyone else it would easily be 5 paws! But because Lu is so exceptional at storytelling, she starts at 4 paws, and only gets 5 when she exceeds even her own standards. 

Skyhunter, a futuristic, dystopian science fiction meets fantasy novel, is really good - a page turner! Not amazing like Kingdom was, but as good as her other really good books. She writes on the same amazing level as Leigh Bardugo, who I need to read more of, and better than Veronica Roth (who's also good, but not this good). Lu is as good as Suzanne Collins. As good as Holly Black. She knows what she's doing with a story!

Skyhunter is clearly the first book in a series, without question, based on its ending. If you haven't read her books before, this is a good one to start with. Or any, for that matter. She is an elite YA/teen author. Only because Kingdom of Back was SO good am I giving this 4 paws instead of 5. But if anyone else had written this, easy 5 paw rating. Read this!



Saturday, December 12, 2020

Refugee, by Alan Gratz

 Another in the OBOB middle level series for this year, and what a strong list of books this year's seems to be! Refugee is no exception...I have seen Gratz's books before, and the covers are all done in the same colors and style, and his work is historical fiction, which I love, but I've never gotten started on one before...until now.

This book is powerful. Heartbreaking. Important. A page-turner! Maddening. Sad. Hopeful. Moving. Motivating. The story of three young people and their families, in three different times in history, all fleeing their homes and countries to survive the brutal conditions that are developing where they live. Escaping the Nazi's was not easy, or even usually successful, but that is what Josef and his family are trying to do. Escaping Castro's Cuba was equally difficult, as was trying to escape a war-torn Syria, but these three world tragedies happened, and in some cases are still happening, and Gratz does a great job of giving each a human face. Many human faces, actually.

This book will give you deeper insight to what is in the newspaper headlines each day. Headlines are easy to ignore...this book is not. I will definitely be reading his other books. 5 paws!




Wednesday, December 2, 2020

The Next Great Paulie Fink, by Ali Benjamin

 Another OBOB book this season, and one I was excited to read ever since seeing Benjamin's other book, The Thing About Jellyfish, on the bookstore shelves. That book looks really good, and I still can't wait to read it! Paulie Fink is decent realistic fiction with some of the usual themes that other YA realistic fiction books have: moving to a new town and school, fitting in, making friends, etc. This one has a few new twists to it, such as Paulie Fink, someone we as readers don't meet until well into the story. And the bullying that Caitlyn, the main character and narrator, did at her previous school. Something she grapples with and unwinds throughout this book.


Paulie Fink isn't a bad book, but it just never got going for me. The themes are mostly the usual, and none of them were dissected like they might have been to make this book really stand out. It's a good read, and a decent OBOB choice, and some of you may really like it. But for me, it was good but not great, decent but not stellar, and not bad but not my favorite OBOB book of this season. I still want to read Jellyfish, though, so apparently it wasn't so bad that I never want to read anything else my this author. If that's a positive, go with it. 3 paws and a wag (for being part of OBOB).




Box: Henry Brown Mails Himself to Freedom, by Carole Boston Weatherford and Michele Wood

     Box , written by Weatherford and illustrated by Wood , won the Newbery Honor Award , given for exceptional children's writing and ...