Friday, November 27, 2015

Big Game by Stuart Gibbs

One of my new favorite authors, Stuart Gibbs, has a new book out!  Big Game is the third installment in his "FunJungle" series.

FunJungle, if you're not familiar, is an enormous zoo in Texas.  Actually, it's more than just a zoo, it's a wildlife theme park, and 13-year-old Teddy Fitzroy lives there with his parents.  In the first book in the series, Belly Up, Teddy helped solved the case of a murdered hippo.  Next came Poached, in which Teddy solved the mystery of a stolen Koala.

This time, it's a Rhino that's in trouble.  Early one morning, someone tries to shoot Rhonda Rhino.  Not only is Rhonda an endangered white rhino, she's also pregnant, making the near-killing especially chilling.  Who would do such a thing? 

Once again, Teddy is on the case, looking for clues and following leads with his wealthy and famous friend Summer McCracken (the daughter of J.J. McCracken, who owns FunJungle.)  As they are working on the case, two more attempts are made on Rhonda's life, and the killer seems to be somebody who has inside knowledge of the park.  Can Teddy and Summer stop the killer before it's too late? (And will their friendship grow into something more?)

What I really like about the FunJungle books is that, not only do they contain lots of action and danger, there's also a lot of information about animals and conservation efforts provided.  One possible motive someone might have to kill Rhonda is to take her horn.  In many cultures, people believe rhino horns have medicinal properties (they don't; they're made from the same stuff your fingernails are made from), and are willing to pay HUGE sums of money for them.   In fact, rhino poaching is a big problem that threatens the survival of rhinos today.  Did you know there are currently only five African white rhinos left in the entire world?  And just a few years ago, the northern African black rhino went extinct.  That means if you've never seen one, you never will - they are gone forever.

But don't get the idea that Big Game is depressing!  At its core, it's an action-packed mystery that will keep you guessing until the very end.   Read it for the rhinos!

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Cosmic by Frank Cottrell Boyce

Liam Digby is twelve years old (almost thirteen!), but you wouldn't know it to look at him.  He's had a very unusual growth spurt, and his beard has already started growing.   And that leads to some pretty interesting situations, since most people assume he's a grown-up: there was the time he was introduced to the entire school as the new Media Studies teacher, and the time he almost got to take a new Porsche for a test drive.

But the adventures really begin when Liam hears about very special contest.  A group of very lucky children - and one adult chaperone - will have the opportunity to fly into space aboard an honest-to-goodness rocket ship.  With the help of his friend Florida (who's in it for the fame and glory), Liam intends to go as the adult chaperone!

Liam soon finds out there's more to being a grown-up than being tall and growing a beard.  Consulting an advice book on parenting teenagers, Liam does his best to be "dad" to the odd assortment of children chosen to be the first kids in space.  But when their rocket goes off-course, it's up to him to be the responsible adult and do what dad's do: everything he can do to make things right.

In Cosmic, Frank Cottrell Boyce takes a very unlikely premise and turns it into a book that is both outrageously funny, and genuinely touching.  It's also the January book selection for The Council of Book Readers.  We'll be meeting on January 15 at 4:00pm to talk about it.  Why not grab a copy for yourself and join us?  We'd love to hear what you think about Liam's adventures!!

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

When My Name Was Keoko by Linda Sue Park

This Fall, the Council of Book Readers has been delving into Historical Fiction.  We started with a book that begins in the years just before the US entered WWII to the end of that brutal conflict.

But When My Name Was Keoko isn't about the United States' involvement in WWII, it's a about a little-known period of Korean history, when Korea was ruled by Japan.  So complete was Japanese rule that nearly everything Korean was banned - the Korean language, Korean traditions, Korean hairstyles, and even Korean names.  And so, the title character of the story is a Korean girl names Sun-hee, who has been forced to adopt the Japanese name Keoko.

What makes the book particularly interesting is that it is told from the perspectives of two different characters.  Sun-hee/Keoko and her older brother Tae-yul/Nobuo take turns narrating the story in the first-person.  We follow both of their lives through the ever-increasing dominance of the Japanese occupiers.  As the war drags on, Japan is more and more determined to subjugate their Korean colony.  But Sun-hee's uncle is a member of the underground resistance - a fact that puts the entire family in danger.

Shockingly, as it becomes more and more evident that Japan is destined to lose the war, Tae-yul voluntarily enlists in the Japanese military, to become one of the notorious kamikaze pilots - whose tactic was to crash their planes into enemy targets, sacrificing their own lives in the process.

When My Name Was Keoko is a very powerful story of identity, perseverance, and survival.  The members of the Council all gave it a resounding thumbs-up.  Not only did we enjoy the story, we learned a lot about Korean culture and history as well!

The next work of historical fiction the Council will be reading is The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg, by Rodman Philbrick.  It's a gripping story set during the American Civil War.  Come join us for discussion and friendship on Friday, November 20 at 4:00 p.m. (please sign up at the Ask-Me desk).  Hope to see you then!

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Belly Up by Stuart Gibbs

It's always fun to discover a favorite new author, and this summer I've discovered Stuart Gibbs! (He's not a new author, having been writing screenplays and novels for several years now, but he's new to me.)

My first encounter with his writing was Space Case, a gripping murder mystery set in the near future on the moon.  I followed that up with Spy School, another fast-paced page-turner. 
And now I've just finished Belly Up, which is actually Stuart Gibbs' first novel.

The setting of Belly Up is FunJungle, an enormous combination of a zoo and a theme park.  Owned by multi-millionaire businessman J.J. McCracken, FunJungle boasts animals from all over the world, cared for by the top scientists and animal keepers.  Designed to give both the animals and the park guests an authentic safari experience, FunJungle is unlike any other zoo in the world.

But sadly, the park's mascot - Henry the Hippo - has died.  On its own, this is terrible news for the park - it would be like Disneyland losing Mickey Mouse!  But when Teddy Fitzroy - the son of one of the park scientists - eavesdrops on the hippo's autopsy, he discovers that Henry was murdered.  Who would murder the beloved mascot of FunJungle?

As Teddy soon learns, it turns out Henry wasn't so beloved by many people.  Hippos in general are hornery creatures, but Henry was especially rambunctious.  He had a history of attacking people, and and at FunJungle, he was know for showering guests with his poop as much as anything else!  It's up to Teddy and the daughter of J.J. McCracken to find out who is behind Henry's untimely death.

With loads of great information about animal behavior and zoo management (Stuart Gibbs once worked at the Philadelphia Zoo), Belly Up is another top-notch mystery novel from one my new favorite authors!

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Odd Weird & Little by Patrick Jennings




First, suspend your belief for just a little while.  Toulouse is the new kid at school.  Yes, he's odd, weird and little.  He wears black leather gloves, a gray pinstriped suit, tiny, round wire-rimmed glasses and carries a briefcase. Toulouse is from Quebec and Woodrow can't help but become friends with him, even if this is a risky thing.  Weird kid befriending weird kid is the perfect formula for being a perfect bullying target.  They like so many of the same things, unusual things, like fishing lures and Woodrow can't help but stick up for Toulouse even if what Toulouse has done seems suspicious .  What did happen with that gold fish anyway?!

Odd Weird & Little is an anti-bullying book.  The message is subtle with a light touch.  Who hasn't seen teachers with good intentions let a bully get away with far more than he should.  The resolution is a little too neat and tidy, but the story is still fun with a good message.

Maybe you'll be a little quicker than I was and line up the first letters of each word in the title, but suspend your belief for a while and enjoy the story.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Firstborn by Tor Seidler

When I heard that Tor Seidler - one of my favorite authors - had written a book set in Yellowstone National Park - one of my favorite places - I couldn't wait to read it.  I wasn't disappointed.

Firstborn is the story of a pack of wolves, and their struggles to survive in the beautiful, but often brutal, wilderness.  Told from the vantage point of  a Magpie named Maggie (who is less than impressed with her parents' lack of creativity in naming her), the story follows the magnificent wolf Blue Boy, one of the largest and most powerful wolves in the park.

Forcibly relocated from his original home in Canada, Blue Boy forms alliances with other similarly displaced wolves and forms his own pack.  Together they endure the hardships of life in the untamed wild, and eventually claim their own territory in Yellowstone's Lamar Valley.  In honor of their new-found home, Blue Boy names his firstborn son Lamar.  According to wolf tradition, Lamar is destined to become an alpha-male himself, asserting his dominance over the other wolves.

But Lamar is unlike any other wolf.  Less concerned with leading the hunt, and more concerned with exploring the natural wonders all around him, he is a bit of a disappointment to his father.  Especially of concern to Blue Boy is Lamar's interest in befriending - of all creatures - a coyote.  To the other wolves, coyotes are inferior, and friendship between the species is considered taboo.

When tragedy and treachery befall Blue Boy, Lamar must decide where his loyalties lie, and find the strength to be true to himself.  Through multiple story-arcs, that is the central theme of this moving novel: that becoming who you are and accepting yourself isn't always easy.

Filled with emotion, danger, and excitement, Firstborn is an often excruciating tale of survival, loyalty, treachery, courage, honor, and love.  A beautiful novel set in a beautiful world.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Space Case by Stuart Gibbs

Mystery fans - have I got a book for you!

Science fans - have I got a book for you!

And it's the same book.

Space Case is an exciting murder mystery set on the moon.  Twelve-year-old Dashiell Gibson and his family are among the first families to live on Moon Base Alpha, the world's first human moon colony.  Carefully screened and chosen from thousands of applicants, the first inhabitants of Moon Base Alpha were promised the adventure of a lifetime, along with all the comforts of home.  According to The Official Residents' Guide to Moon Base Alpha, life on the moon might even be better than life back home!

Sounds like a great opportunity, right?  Turns out, the reality is not what the guide promises.  Flying real (i.e. comfortable) furniture to the moon is too expensive and impractical, so most of the furniture is inflatable.  All the food is dehyradted (and disgusting), and the toilets!  Well, you can read the book to find out about the toilets (but eliminating waste in low-gravity requires some interesting technology).

But for Dash, it's the boredom that's the worst part.  There aren't many other kids around, the Base is small, and since the lunar surface can be deadly, children aren't even allowed out of the base for a low-gravity romp on the moon.  What's the point of living on the moon, for goodness sake?

Things change, though, when one of the lunar scientists turns up dead.  Dash suspects foul play, but has a hard time getting anyone - even his own parents - to believe him.  It's up to Dash to investigate the possible murder before the killer strikes again.

The author, Stuart Gibbs, has crafted an excellent murder mystery.  Many residents of the base had both motive and opportunity to kill the scientist, but who would actually do it?  You'll be guessing right up until the very end (I know I was), and the "big reveal" is one of the most satisfying endings I've read in a long time.

Seriously, how much better than a murder mystery on the moon can it get?  Check out Space Case, it's an ingenious, well-paced thriller, that's literally out of this world!

Friday, March 13, 2015

The Neddiad by Daniel Pinkwater

This was another selection read by the Council of Book Readers.*

Everyone on the Council really enjoyed it, but we all agree it's REALLY hard to describe. Set in the years just following World War II,  The Neddiad follows the adventures of Neddie Wentworthstein as he is called upon to save the world.  For Neddie is the guy with the sacred turtle.  And the guy with the sacred turtle always saves the world.

It starts out simply enough: Neddie and his father (who live in Chicago at the outset of the book) both really want to eat at the famous Brown Derby restaurant in Hollywood, California.  Since Mr. Wentworthstein made a fortune during the war selling shoe-laces to the US military, the family simply decides to move to Hollywood, so they can eat at the Brown Derby - a restaurant shaped like a hat!

There are crazy, wacky adventures a-plenty along the way, but it's when Neddie finally arrives in Hollywood that things really start getting weird.  There are ghosts, demons, elephants, mastodons, school bullies, shamans, movie stars and space police, and ... well, too many wacky characters along the way.  There's a circus, a private school, a reproduction of the Roman Colloseum, and - most importantly - the La Brea Tar Pits (which, translated, is actually "the the tar tar pits"!)  I told you it was hard to describe!

If you're looking for humor, surprises, twists and turns, and a cavalcade of interesting characters, you should have a look at The Neddiad.  The Council of Book Readers thought it was "funny," "surprising," "weird," and "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (because such a weird book can only be described with a weird word!)


*the Council of Book Readers will next meet on Friday, May 8th at 4:00pm.  We'll be discussing A Whole Nother Story by Cuthbert Soup.  Give it a read (it's another wacky one) and come join the fun!

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Masterpiece by Elise Broach

Masterpiece is the story of an unlikely friendship between and beetle and a boy.  Marvin, the beetle, lives with his family in the cupboard beneath the kitchen sink of the family of James, the boy.   Although the beetle family is well aware of the humans, the activities of the beetles go largely unnoticed - until James receives a pen-and-ink drawing set for his birthday.

Drawn to the ink and paper, Marvin draws a landscape while James is asleep - and the result is mini-masterpiece!   When James discovers that is was Marvin who was the artist, the two become fast friends.  Of course, James's family think James was the artist, and take great pride in "his" talent.

In fact, Marvin's drawing gets James involved in a mystery at the art museum involving the theft of drawings by famous artist Albrecht Dürer.   What ensues is an adventure into the high-stakes world of stolen masterpieces.  With humor, sensitivity, and insight into the emotional power of art, Masterpiece is a terrifically fun book for anyone with an appreciation for friendship, art and adventure.  And beetles.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

The Chesire Cheese Cat by Carmen Agra Deedy & Randall Wright

It's hard out on the streets of Victorian London, and Skilley the alley cat would like to find a more comfortable living situation.  When word gets out that Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese Inn is looking for a mouser, Skilley launches an outrageous plan to get the job.

But Skilley is a cat with an embarrassing secret.   When that secret is discovered, Skilley forges an unlikely alliance - and friendship - with Pip, the intelligent, literate, leader of the inn's mice.  Just when things are starting to look good for Skilley, intrigue erupts.

For the Inn is also home to a mysterious creature that lives in the attic.  And a tyrannical cook.  And a mouse-hating barmaid.  And - worst of all - the mean alley cat Pinch - Skilley's arch-nemesis who has also been taking in by the innkeeper.  On top of all that, the inn is frequently visited by one of England's most famous writers of the day, Mr. Charles Dickens, who has a serious case of writer's block to deal with.

Rich in humor and historical references, The Cheshire Cheese Cat is a delightful tale of friendship in Merrie Old England.  Skilley and Pip make an unlikely duo as the attempt to right all that is wrong in Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese Inn.