The premise, as well as the hook in The Sinister Secrets of Singe, is very difficult to resist. There is a house that continues to grow, it literally gets larger and larger every night. There’s an 11-year-old kid, Noah, who lives there with his mother and their robot, who is size-wise the same age and stature as him. Noah’s job is to build things for the nearby city of Liberty, which he’s not allowed to visit. His mother keeps him under lock and key, under the watchful eye of Elijah, the robot. There’s so much to potentially love about The Sinister Secrets of Singe that it makes the fact that it didn’t pull it all together all the more frustrating.
Here’s hoping that the next one is betterCategory: mglit
Quest Kids and the Dark Prophecy of Doug doesn’t disappoint
An entertaining first book does not automatically ensure a series. Quest Kids and the Dragon Pants of Gold was a great book that sure looked like it had legs. Quest Kids and the Dark Prophecy of Doug is mglit that runs with fun. It’s a book that lives somewhere between the graphic novel and chapter book world that incorporates the illustrated manic fun of the former while building upon the text-based latter that kids need to know.
The Bellwoods Game, spooky, age-OK scary for mid-elementary and up
The heel is what drives the narrative. It’s why you watch wrestling and a stronger heel will always make a book worth reading. The heel, or bad guy, can make a decent book highly enjoyable or transform a movie that’s just ok to one that is a waste of your time. The Bellwoods Game lays down the heel in short order and does so in a way that any kid who’s ever grown up in any neighborhood will relate to. It will bring back memories of their childhood in an upper-elementary, mglit package that delivers the chills without skimping on the relationships.
The Fall of the House of Tatterly, mglit that almost nails it
I saw a football game the other day that reminded me of The Fall of the House of Tatterly, but more about that in a moment. The Fall of the House of Tatterly is an mglit book about ghosts, mediums, exorcisms, family tradition, teen angst and the low country in South Carolina. That’s a place that we vacation yearly and this book jams the aesthetics to that area so well you’ll be checking the spine of the book for Spanish Moss. As a book, it does so many things right that it’s reminiscent of a football game where most of it is so one-sided, with such a dominant level of play that it’s unbelievable how far it fell when the final page is turned.
City Spies: Mission Manhattan, almost measures up to its predecessors
The great thing about a franchise is that it’s dependable. City Spies by New York Times Bestselling author James Ponti is one of the go-to mglit book series for upper-elementary through middle school readers who know. The first four books, and about half of Mission Manhattan, read like a screenplay that is primed and ready to become the next movie franchise that you didn’t know you needed. They’re loaded with enough action, teen-centric humor, and intrigue to keep ages 8-12 entertained and invested in the group’s progress. The group goes on supervised missions where adult spies would look too out of place and each spy is named after the mega city from which they’re from, like Rio, London, Cairo, etc. City Spies: Mission Manhattan finds the group of teenage spies-in-training in Italy and New York embroiled in a plot to save a fellow teenager from danger within her camp.
Alterations, a graphic novel channeling middle school in all the right ways
Heartfelt is a dicey adjective to describe something because it could easily be misconstrued as soft, boring or too emotional; all of which are the death knell for graphic novels that are trying to be interesting to middle school audiences. In this case heartfelt, humorous, clever familial, and more could also be appropriate to describe Alterations. Change is hard. Middle school is harder. That’s the tagline for Alterations, a graphic novel written and illustrated by Ray Xu. The conflict in Alterations is one that any middle school student, or even those upper-elementary ages will latch onto.
Juniper’s Christmas fills the holiday book void you didn’t know existed
I’m wary of a potentially smaltzy book that my wife abandons. When we received Juniper’s Christmas by Eoin Colfer my wife read it for two nights and then put it aside, and not because she’s finished it. Normally she’s a sucker for any novel that exudes happiness or romantic retribution, and this book looks like it fits that bill, so I asked her what was up. She said something along the lines of “I just wasn’t feeling it”, and anybody knows that when your wife gives you a short answer like that to a potentially long question, you’re thankful and just move on. Fast forward a couple of weeks and I have COVID, or the flu, or some otherwise cursed virus that makes your body feel as if it’s been hit by a truck driven by a teenager who is busy watching TikTok, instead of commanding the three-ton vehicle that’s about to hit your torso. Juniper’s Christmas is delivered to the basement where I was thankful to read anything beyond the packaging for the cold medicine that I was taking, and lo and behold, what a surprising novel that is ready for its cinematic close-up.
Mile Morales Suspended: A Spider-Man novel like no other-for the better
In a very simple overstatement in the world of books, there are books for the genre fans, books for the general audience, and those that target the niche. Miles Morales Suspended: A Spider-Man novel, yet it’s unlike any web-slinger book, graphic novel or story that you’ve read before. “You” could be a Spider-Man fan who thinks that they’ve seen every vehicle that the character can entertain from. Miles Morales: Suspended is the most unlikely of superhero novels. We often point out to educators, parents or students the merits of reading graphic novels or comic book. This book takes that, turns it on its head, and literarily invites Spidey fans to go someplace that they’ve never been before.
Spidey has many forms and this one is just as engaging