Sunday, October 17, 2021

Deep Water, by Watt Key


     Another of this season's OBOB books, and a really riveting adventure story that takes place almost entirely in the water! You know what that means...sharks, for one, right?! This is not the first novel for author Key, but the first I've read, and I confess that I will look to read more. One in particular, titled Alabama Moon, has gotten really good reviews, and would probably be the next one of his I would "dive into"...get it? 

    Deep Water is a story about Julie Simms, who helps her dad run a scuba business off the coast of Alabama. They take a father and son out for a very special, expensive dive, and things do not go as planned. This is a page-turner, with action right from the start! Fans of Anthony Horowitz (Alex Rider series) would love this, as might fans of the late Gary Paulsen, perhaps, as their is plenty of surviving that goes on this book!

    My only criticism of Deep Water, and it's only a minor one, is that it seems to get a little stuck about 2/3 of the way through. The adventure continues, but it takes a turn and in my opinion loses a little steam at the bend. But a strong story altogether, and another strong OBOB book for this season (which is turning out to be really good)! 4 paws!



Thursday, October 14, 2021

The Blackbird Girls, by Anne Blankman

 The fourth novel by author Blankman, and a story about an event I have read about in newspapers but never in a book. That makes this book good already, right? The event is the nuclear disaster at the Russian Chernobyl Nuclear Plant in 1986. This real event was the first time a nuclear power plant had suffered such an extreme event, anywhere in the world, and the Russian government covered it up for a period of time. This cover up only made the effects of nuclear material floating in the air worse for the real people who lived near the plant, people like the two main characters of this story.

Oksana and Valentina attended school together but were not friends. Valentina is Jewish, and Oksana has been raised to think all Jews are cheaters, liars and thieves. The explosion of the power plant affects their immediate families, and they end up together, being sent out of their town, to a faraway place where the adults hope the nuclear toxins will not reach them. It becomes a story of survival, family, prejudice and friendship, and of trying to outrun and outwit a very real threat to all of us, then and now. 

The Blackbird Girls is written with a bit of coldness to it, much like the part of the world where the story takes place. I couldn't decide if this was on purpose, or because the author was new at this writing business and wasn't sure how else to make the story warmer (I since discovered that she has written three other books). But the basis of the story, the real event of the Chernobyl disaster, written into a historical fiction book, made it worth finishing. Normally I would give the writing and story 3 paws - decent but not great.  The added element of taking on this topic where no one else has before (to my knowledge), gives it another paw.   4 paws. An important story to read and know.



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 ...