Sunday, May 29, 2022

The Girl from the Sea, by Molly Knox Ostertag

     Another graphic novel - that's two in a row! - and another book on next year's OBOB list! The Girl from the Sea is the story of 15-year-old Morgan who lives on an island with her mom and annoying younger brother. Morgan has a small group of girl friends that she doesn't seem super connected to, on the one hand, but who also seem to be her support group (that storyline is a little blurry). Except they don't know that Morgan has a new friend, a girl from the sea named Keltie. Morgan dreams of being rescued from drowning by this beautiful mermaid character, and secretly understands she has desires to be romantic with this girl as well...Morgan is gay.

    Author/illustrator Ostertag creates a good story about teen romance that will appeal to anyone who enjoys YA or teen books with romance as a theme - not just those among the LGBTQ community. The artwork is simple but good, better than the overall storyline I'd say. The story itself isn't bad, it's just...okay. Teen angst, annoying family members and rules, an absent parent, friends who don't quite understand you...this story checks a lot of the boxes. The interest Morgan has in Keltie is a nice twist, but not the only one. Keltie is actually a seal who turns into human form because of true loves kiss - Morgan's. So there's that twist as well.

    It's nice to see OBOB including the graphic novel category in its titles again this year! And nice to have the LGBTQ community a more included part of the program, too (even though OBOB has rocked the boat in the past with other LGBTQ titles, which hasn't always been received well across the state of Oregon).The Girl from the Sea is a nice addition to the season't list of titles, but not an amazing choice. It has enough going for it to make it a 4 paw book, however, and if you'd like a new graphic novel to read, or a new romance book for teens, you could do worse than this one!



Monday, May 23, 2022

Dragon Hoops, by Gene Luan Yang

     I've been wanting to get my paws on this graphic novel for a while now, but it's a popular book and tough to find at the library...a sign of a good book, right? I finally got a copy, and even though I'll end up returning it a little late (but worth the late fees!), I couldn't return it until I finished it! I'm glad I did!

    On the surface, Dragon Hoops is a story about the graphic novelist Yang (American Born Chinese, Avatar, and other good graphic novels) and the boys basketball team at the school he taught at in northern California. But there is so much under the surface if this story! It's the story of several individuals, adults and teens, who are part of the basketball program as well as of the school's storied history - good and bad. It's a story about taking that step, sometimes a first step, but always a defining step, in one's life that changes the path a person seems to be on. I don't think I can describe it as well as Yang does in over 400 pages of really good storytelling and illustration. 

    In this book you'll get a really good, brief history of basketball in the U.S. and around the world (for the sports fan in you), as well as a story about a boy with Chinese heritage living in the U.S., and the stereotypes and expectations that come with that. You also get a story of a group of teens who have come together for one purpose, to play basketball, but who each have unique stories and pasts, showing that you can never tell what stories people carry with them that we don't often get a chance to see or hear. And this is a book about mistakes people make, and how far we do or should go to forgive those mistakes.

    This is a good book, but a long one, yet in graphic novel format it reads quickly. It's worth your time, as I know because I've finished it but can't keep thinking about it...for me a sign of an exceptional book. Yang is a good writer and artist. If you haven't ever read one of his books, this is a great start! 5 paws!




Sunday, May 15, 2022

While I Was Away, by Waka T. Brown

     My second OBOB book from next season's list, and of course I chose a biography, right?! This is the author's story of growing up Japanese American, living with her family in Kansas. As a teenager, her parents decided that she didn't know her native language as well as she should, so they sent her, alone, to live with her grandmother in Japan for 5 months. Those months included summer, when she normally would not be in school in Kansas, but in Japan she was right back in the classroom - only now she was in Japanese school, where Japanese was the language everyone spoke, wrote and expected her to learn and know. She knew a little, of course, as her parents spoke Japanese as well as English. But Waka went from being somewhat of an outsider as an Asian American in Kansas, to being another kind of outsider as an American in Japan. 

    Author Brown tells a compelling story of these five months, ended with some information about some of the people we meet in the story after the book ends. Although it is an autobiography, it often reads like a fiction story. It is easy to read and keeps you turning pages. This book reminded me a bit of A Girl From Yamhill by Oregon's own Beverly Cleary in that the author's voice comes through nicely, although there were a few parts of the story that became a little slow, I thought. Overall, a nice OBOB choice for next season, and if you like books in the 921 section of the library, I think you'll like this, too! 4 paws! 



Friday, April 29, 2022

Slider, by Pete Hautman

     Hautman is an author that has always been at the periphery of my reading radar, but until now I haven't read any of his previous books. Of course, being an OBOB book for next year gives me a reason to try one, finally, and Slider is the book!

    Slider is the story of David, who can eat an entire 16 inch pizza in under 5 minutes. Drawn to eating contests, he finds himself in an expensive situation, one that will take winning an eating contest to get out of...he hopes. But it isn't the overeating that drives this story. It's David, his two best friends, and his family, including brother Mal, who is severely autistic. The deft way that Hautman works his way through David's relationships is truly the highlight of this book. In fact, the eating part is a bit of a turn-off for me, if it were the central theme of the story, as I don't see overeating for "fun" to be a thing worth reading about. But Hautman makes David so likeable, and real, that days after I finished the book I found myself thinking about the characters. And as I've said before, that is a the sign of a good story!

    I didn't think I'd give this 5 full paws because the basis of the story is overeating for fun. But the book has stayed with me, and makes me want to read another book by this author in the future. For that, Slider gets 5 paws!



Sunday, April 24, 2022

Otto: A Palindrama, by Jon Agee

     A newly released graphic novel with simple but eye-catching artwork, Otto is a story told completely in palindromes (words or phrases that are the same frontwards as they are backwards...such as the name Otto). A very clever idea, and in most cases the palindromes work very well throughout the book. There are a few that seem a little too manufactured for the story, but there were equally as many that made me LOL! 

    You know by time you get half way through the story that you are holding something very unique and creative in your hands. And I'll bet you find yourself, more than once, reading a phrase from back to front just to understand the palindrome you just finished! So expect a lot of smiles, some palindrome checking, and a genuine appreciation of what author and illustrator Agee has done with Otto: A Palindrama. It is fun, and it is clever, and although it may be a book many of you want to read again and again, I'll bet it will be a book you finish and quickly want to share with someone else! 4 paws!




Monday, April 11, 2022

Give Me Some Truth, by Eric Gansworth

     A follow-up book to an earlier OBOB title If I Ever Get Out of Here. Native American author Gansworth continues in his conversational writing style with Give Me Some Truth. This isn't a super new release, having come out in 2018, but I really enjoyed If I Ever Get Out of Here and wanted to circle back to this one at some point, and it just worked out that I needed a new book to read and didn't have anything else immediately available! 

    Like the first book, Gansworth's writing style is easy to read, like Catcher in the Rye without all of the language (although there is some). Most of his books are for adults, so he doesn't have a huge collection for teens, but like the first book this one is written in a way where you feel right away that you are dropping in on some friends, and picking life up right where it was before you arrived!

    Gansworth's characters are Native American, so this is an element that he brings that many other teen writers don't. I would compare him to Sherman Alexie, although I think Alexie is a better writer, as writing goes, but Gansworth is just as good writing voice into his characters. You really feel like you are in their heads, especially the main characters. That said, I really liked his OBOB title, but this one seemed tedious. It still flowed well, but the print was pretty small, so even at 400 pages, this probably was meant to be 500 pages or so. Probably too long for the publisher's liking, hence the small text. Older middlers may like this (maybe not as much 6th graders...), and it's pretty realistic, and getting into the lives of modern-day Native Americans is something that will help many of us better understand those perspectives. For those reasons, I give this 3 paws, but I recommend his OBOB book over this one, if you're trying to know where to start with this author.



Kaleidoscope, by Brian Selznick

     From the author of The Invention of Hugo Cabret, among other wonderfully written and illustrated books, comes Kaleidoscope, the new book by Brian Selznick. This book is a collection of short stories - very short, as in 2 or 3 pages each - connected by artwork that goes along with the book's title (a kaleidoscope is a tube that you look through at one end, rotate, and colored pieces tumble inside creating wonderful shapes and patterns and colors). The stories share common images, character names, and themes, but at the same time they are pretty loosely tied together. So much so that once I finished the last story I immediately re-read the first two stories, which made much more sense after finishing the book. The style is hard to explain, and hard to figure out until almost at the end of the book. But once you reach the end, I promise you, too, will re-start at the beginning. 

    I admit I didn't love the book at the start...giants and dragons and such aren't usually my thing (sometimes, but not usually). But after midpoint of this collection of stories I started to see them connected, and in very subtle ways (meaning the connections are not very obvious). And once they began to link together, Selznick's "voice" came through, and I truly hated to see the book end. This could have been 400 pages, instead of 200 pages, and it still may not have been enough.

    Give this book a try, and be patient with it! If it doesn't grab you right away, keep going anyway, because it will, and you'll be very glad you did. 4 paws and a wag for this gem!



Sunday, April 3, 2022

Flight of the Puffin, by Ann Braden

     In Flight of the Puffin, the second book by author Braden, she tells the story of four different teens, living four very different lives, connected by a random idea that one of these young people has to create small index cards with hopeful messages on them and place them around town. One of the main characters, and narrators, Jack, is trying to save his small rural school from being closed down for the school board because the school does not offer gender-neutral bathrooms. Jack takes up the fight to save his school from having to change - out of love for his school and community - but his stand is seen as hatred and is quickly turned to something it isn't in the local press. Thanks to the random cards, and consequent conversations with others, Jack changes his mind. His empathy grows - his ability to put himself in someone else's shoes, so to speak.

    All four of the main characters are searching for their voices in this story, and the card idea is based on a real-life group called the Local Love Brigade. The ideas in this book would, alone, earn it 5 paws from me, but even though this is a truly important story, it wasn't written as strongly as the ideas it is sharing. So a good book, for sure, but the characters didn't stick with me after the final page (the message of empathy did, though, which I wagged at!). This book is getting a lot of good reviews, which it should, and I'm giving it one here, too! But 4 paws, not 5.



Saturday, March 26, 2022

The List of Unspeakable Fears, by J. Kasper Kramer

     Essie O'Neill is afraid of many things - electric lights, cats, and the red door at the end of the hallway in her new home. She keeps a list of her fears under her mattress so she can add to it at any time. Sometimes, adding to her list helps her fears seem less scary...sometimes. And sometimes she can cross things of of her list...sometimes.

    This historical fiction book takes place in New York in the early 1900s in the midst of the typhoid epidemic - not terribly different from our current Covid pandemic -  and during a time of racism and anger towards immigrants. In the story, Essie's new stepfather is German, and in charge of a hospital treating people thought to carry very contagious diseases, such as typhoid fever. One of the characters of the book is Typhoid Mary, a real person who is thought to have spread typhoid as a carrier and a cook in New York City. Essie is also reeling from the death of her biological father, who had gotten sick and died as well, while under the care of Essie, who feels responsible for his death. Her stepfather, meanwhile, is dealing with severe loss of his own, a daughter that Essie "meets" in her new home on the quarantined island where she and her mother move when her mother remarries. Together, Essie's fears, disease, bigotry, a new family, a very strange cat and ghosts make for a pretty good page-turner!

    Some reviewers write that this book is a combination of Coraline and The War That Saved My Life, two very good books that I recommend to you! I don't know if I would go so far as to say this was as good as either of those, but the story and characters have stayed with me, which I always feel is a very good sign! 

    In the author's notes at the end of the book she describes how closely Essie's story resembles her own, especially in light of what we have lived through in the last two years of Covid quarantines, illnesses, deaths and strong feelings about all of it. Having that background information made The List of Unspeakable Fears seem a little like the author's personal therapy session. That isn't a terrible thing all together, but seemed a tad self-serving. In all, this is a good story, somewhat spooky and quirky, which I enjoyed, but also a bit easy to figure out, which I was a little disappointed in. I think 4 paws is a good way to balance those thoughts, so that is what I'll give this one. Worth your time, but I wonder what Kramer will write next.



Monday, March 14, 2022

Linked, by Gordon Korman

     Has anyone written more books for young adults and teens than Korman? If so, I'm not sure who that would be...he has over 70 titles, and so many of them are good it's tough to keep up! In fact, anytime someone asks me for a recommendation of a good book, especially a funny one, Korman is the first writer I recommend! His books aren't usually "literature", in the sense of being classics that will last forever, like The Giver, for example. But titles like Schooled, No More Dead Dogs and Restart are really good, worth reading more than once even. 

    Linked is Korman's latest, and has a really interesting plot. Someone at a middle school in Colorado is painting swastikas around school property, bringing up a racist past that the town either pretends never happened or wants to ignore. At the same time, main character Lincoln discovers his grandparents survived the Holocaust, and he decides he wants to learn more about his Jewish ancestry. Perhaps only Korman can infuse humor into such a story, but he can, and he does. The story is told from multiple points of view, something Korman also does a lot in his writing, and it works pretty well. One of the narrators is even a TikTok star (in the story), which adds to the humor (and the meanness as well). To counter the hateful images appearing at school, the student body decides to make a paper chain link, representing all the Jews who died at the hands of the Nazis - all 6 million of them.

    It's a really good and unique storyline. Korman is a really good writer with a lot of experience. This book is already getting a lot of good reviews. But...I don't think it's his best work. I didn't like the way he decided to end the story. It seemed too easy and not very believable. I think the good reviews are based on the important story line, and I don't disagree with that. If the Holocaust and Nazi Germany appeals to you, give this a try. It's a different take on that world event that still has relevance today. If you just want to read something funny by one of the best humor writers in YA books, choose one of the titles listed above instead. Or at least try one of those after you read this one. 

    I give this 3 paws and a wag, for the important story line. Not bad, by any means, but he's written better.



Lo Simpson Starts a Revolution, by Melanie Florence

      Lauren "Lo" Simpson is in middle school, and as the school year starts she is trying to figure out what in the heck is wrong...