• STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

STACKED

books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

Slasher Girls and Monster Boys edited by April Genevieve Tucholke

October 14, 2015 |

slasher girls monster boys tucholkeI’m not normally someone who seeks out short story collections. Often professional reviews will say of them something like “There’s not a bad story in the bunch,” and then I’ll read the anthology for myself and think “You, ma’am, were incorrect.” But this collection of mostly horror stories? There really isn’t a bad story in it. Each of them is inspired by one or more books or films (Frankenstein, Nosferatu, The Birds, Psycho, etc.), and it’s a lot of fun to spot these influences while reading. There were some stories I didn’t love, but they’re all worth reading, and some of them will make you want to sleep with the lights on. I listened to the audiobook version, which is really well-done, though some of the narrators (there are a handful, each gets 2-3 stories) are frustratingly slow talkers, so I actually sped them up to 1.25 times their normal speed and it sounded much more normal for me.

A few of the standouts for me were:

The Birds of Azalea Street by Nova Ren Suma

This is the first story, and it helps set the tone for the whole collection. It features Nova Ren Suma’s distinctive voice and atmospheric writing while tackling how teen girls are taken advantage of and gaslighted by the adults around them, a theme that will recur in later stories. It’s creepy and character-driven, the latter of which can be really tough to do in short stories and is therefore extra impressive to me when done well.

In the Forest Dark and Deep by Carrie Ryan

Ryan mines Alice in Wonderland, showing that it really should have been a horror story from the start. You won’t think about the white rabbit in the same way ever again. This is one of the creepiest of the lot (not gruesome, but very creepy), which is saying something.

Hide and Seek by Megan Shepherd

Shepherd’s story could be described as being the most “high concept.” A girl is murdered by her stepfather, then makes a deal with Death’s representative to win her life back: she’ll play a game of hide and seek with Death for 24 hours. If she wins, she lives, and all collateral damage is undone. If she loses, she remains dead, and all collateral damage remains. This makes for a really suspenseful tale, and Shepherd manages to infuse it with interesting characters who I’d like to get to know better in longer stories. The ending is perfect, too – clever and satisfying.

Sleepless by Jay Kristoff

Kristoff’s influence of the movie Psycho is obvious right off the bat, and intuitive readers will spot both twists in Kristoff’s tale, but it’s so well-told that it won’t matter. In fact, I expect many readers will race through the pages with bated breath, eager to be proven right and see how it all plays out. Along with Shepherd’s, this may be my favorite story of the whole collection: it plays with a number of pop culture influences in really fun ways, features a strong revenge plotline, and is just the right combination of creepy (we get inside the head of a really twisted individual, but just how twisted he is takes time to learn) and suspenseful. The beginning of the story includes a lot of online conversations, which are a bit odd to hear narrated (“smiley face”) and probably work better on the page.

Stitches by A. G. Howard

Howard gives us the most gruesome story, in my mind. I wasn’t wild about the narrator, who was a little too monotone for my taste, but Howard’s story – heavily influenced by Frankenstein, but in a really different way – still shines. Every few months, a girl slices off a part of her father’s body with his permission – an arm, an ear, and so on – and gives it to a collector, who provides them with an alternate piece from another body to reattach. The reason behind this is teased out over the course of the story, and it’s both shocking and makes perfect sense within the framework Howard has created. Howard doesn’t shy away from describing what it’s like for the girl to dismember her father, making this a story not for the faint of heart. If you can get past the gruesomeness (or seek it out!), this one should be a favorite.

Less impressive to me were Jonathan Maberry’s Fat Girl With a Knife, which was too similar to other zombie stories I’ve read before, and M by Stefan Bachmann, a murder mystery that’s serviceable but pales in comparison to the others in tone and atmosphere. Still, these two weaker stories are better than a great number of other short stories in similar collections, and everything else in the anthology is even better. Truly, there’s not a bad story here.

Audiobook borrowed from my local library.

Filed Under: Horror, Reviews, short stories, Young Adult

Skip This Book: Future Perfect by Jen Larsen

October 5, 2015 |

 via http://www.stylehasnosize.com/2013/home/healthy-doesnt-come-dress-size/

via http://www.stylehasnosize.com/2013/home/healthy-doesnt-come-dress-size/

 

Take a minute to look at the image above. It’ll be useful for how I’m about to talk about Future Perfect by Jen Larsen. My body falls somewhere right between the first two women — I’m about 5’3 and somewhere between a 14 or 16, depending on the way the moon is that particular day. You would be right to call me fat because I am, but I am also muscular and toned. Because bodies are awesome and allow you to be both of those things simultaneously.

What’s worth thinking about isn’t where you fit into the picture or where I do. What’s worth thinking about is how, when you look at these women’s bodies, they are all “average.” Some carry more fat, but not one of these women are particularly obese as we consider it socially. Medically, their BMIs may categorize them as obese or extremely obese, but anyone who knows anything understands that BMIs mean absolutely nothing about your health nor about the shape your body makes. My body is “extremely obese” according to BMI, despite the fact I am healthy, active, and have no medical concerns relating to diseases like diabetes, high blood pressure, or other “fat people” concerns.

Likewise, only one size separates the woman on the far left with the woman who is second from the right. But they have 8 inches of height difference and their body proportions are very different.

With me here? Now let’s talk about why you need to skip Jen Larsen’s disappointing and disingenuous take on the empowered fat girl story with her novel Future Perfect.

future perfect
Ashley Perkins is a senior in high school. She lives in a small town in California, not too far from San Francisco, with her two brothers, her father, and her grandmother. She is, it seems, poor, but that’s never made quite clear enough in the story. And neither does telling the reader a town is a small town does a small town make.

Those two criticisms are the start of the flaws with Future Perfect. There’s not a clear delineation of how economics work in this town, nor is there any sort of world-building to suggest this is a small town, other than a few people in the town seem to be busybodies who “know a lot of things.” It’s interesting what those folks do and don’t know and what secrets can and do end up making a big splash through the story. Why, for example, does the principal of the school Ashley attends know about and encourage her to follow through with her grandmother’s offer (I’m getting there!) but no one in town seems to know the true story of her mother’s disappearance or history?

But like I said, I’m getting ahead of myself.

The entire premise of the book is this: Ashley’s controlling, apparently rich, grandmother has been offering her something every year on her birthday in exchange for her losing weight. A shopping trip for dropping x-number of pounds. A car on her sixteenth birthday if she lost x-amount of weight.

This year’s offer, though, is the thing making Ashley most nervous: what will her grandmother offer this year, knowing that this is the last year she could be living at home? That this year is one of the most important toward her future? Surely grandma’s going to make this one the big one. And she does.

Grandmother is willing to pay for four years of Harvard tuition for Ashley — Harvard being her dream school — in exchange for Ashley getting “weight loss surgery” so that her future is bright, she’s fit for it, and she finally meets socially approved body standards.

At this point, I’ve not yet mentioned Ashley’s size. Clearly, she must be huge if grandma is so fixated on her losing weight. Perhaps her weight has been keeping her back. Though, we can guess, if someone has a shot at getting into Harvard when she’s poor and from a small town, she’s probably not being held back achievement-wise.

Ashley is described as “tall.” She is described as part Latina — a fact that gets completely forgotten and overlooked through the book. And she’s described as “size 18, sometimes 20.”

Is she overweight? Maybe. Is she fat? Maybe.

We never know.

Larsen allows readers to draw conclusions about the size of her main character, but she offers up a numeric size to correspond to her. The problem being that, when Ashley is described as “tall,” we don’t know what that means. When she’s described as “size 18, sometimes 20,” we don’t know what that means, either. Ashley offers very little insight into her own relationship with her body until near the end of the book, but by then, it’s too little, too late. Ashley is confident, and she’s driven, but we don’t ever get to see this through the text. We’re told these things.

There is little to no internal life to this character, and she reads flat through and through. This is, of course, because her entire story is hinged upon her grandmother. Grandmother’s offer renders her as the evil, controlling force in Ashley’s life.

Let’s go back a second. The offer grandma offers Ashley is about “weight loss surgery.” I put that in quotes because that’s what the offer is. We’re never told what kind of weight loss surgery and the details of it, again shoved into the narrative far too late, are left to the reader to imagine. And let me tell you — there’s no need to actually imagine what this means because nearly immediately, readers know this entire set-up is for naught. We know Ashley’s going to walk out on the other side not having had the surgery and overcoming grandma’s insistence.

But more importantly, we know that because we know nothing about Ashley other than a vague description of her height and size and the fact she’s 17-years-old, no doctor in their right mind would consider giving Ashley “weight loss surgery.” (And this makes me wonder, since I cannot recall, if we ever learned how this surgery was going to be paid for — was grandma footing the entire bill, too?).

What could have made me buy this element of the story would be any work on the part of grandma or Ashley in any sort of pre-operative consultation. Things like dieting, meeting with a nutritionist, meeting with any type of medical processional or psych specialist, are completely not in this book. We don’t know anything at all about Ashley’s body composition, and we also don’t know at all what her eating or health habits might be, aside from the fact she’s active.

Anyone with any experience losing weight or, really, having a body, knows that there’s not a straight line from choosing to have “weight loss surgery” to having it done. There are steps to be taken, and you have to meet certain, specific criteria to qualify. Many of those criteria involve making efforts to lose weight on one’s own first — you have to prove that you’re willing to do this. Most medical professionals worth their mettle wouldn’t consider doing something like this on such a young patient, and that goes even more so when the patient is, for all intents and purposes, living a healthy life. Who is only slightly larger than the average American woman in the worse case scenario and perfectly appropriate size-wise in the best case.

The fact nothing is addressed in the interim, that there are no moments when Ashley meets with any sort of professional about her body and “weight loss surgery” is not only problematic, it’s exceptionally dangerous. This is not an okay message for a book to have, even if the outcome of the story is that Ashley chooses not to have the surgery. 

I bold this because once grandma’s voice is in Ashley’s head about this, suddenly, everyone has an opinion and is an expert. This is not unrealistic. What IS unrealistic is that Ashley’s principal would tell her this was a good idea. That she would meet someone on the streets of San Francisco who calls her a “land cow.” That she would fact real, true vitriol day in and day out for being “size 18, sometimes 20.”

The fact there’s no discussion of what “weight loss surgery” means is damaging. 

This goes back to the danger in no discussion about what happens in the time between choosing to do something about one’s weight surgically and having it happen immediately. There is no such thing as “weight loss surgery.” There are different types of medical procedures to remove fat from one’s body, and they are all different, they all have risks, and they are all exceptionally tough decisions for any individual to make. “Weight loss surgery,” defined that way for the bulk of the book, sends the false message that there is a surgery to remove fat from an individual’s body. There are procedures, but there are multiple procedures and they all have very different methods.

Aside from how disturbingly poor this entire thread of the book is — and it is the bulk of the book and what the entire story hinges upon — this is not the only problem with Future Perfect. It’s not well-written, and some of the situations that emerge outside of the big issue make little to no sense at all, and this is because there is no character development or realistic world-building. The inconsistencies in the story, as well as the telling-not-showing, hinder any sort of reader connection with these characters.

There’s a scene in the book that stood out as really disturbing to me on so many levels:  Ashley, as well as her friends Laura and Jolene (who is a transgender girl), skip school one day to meet with Laura’s boyfriend who has an “art show” in San Francisco. We learn the show is in the Tenderloin, and the girls find themselves mingling with a lot of transients, as well as those who appear to have some real substance addiction problems. But rather than have any empathy for the people here, the girls choose to make light of it, and this is, unfortunately, one of the only parts of the books where the girls get to show the readers who they are outside of school/outside of the bounds of Ashley’s grandma’s offer. For characters who live in a “small town” where there are “poor people,” there was zero recognition that these individuals may be struggling.

I also found it bizarre one of those transient individuals would call tall, “size 18, sometimes 20” Ashley a “land cow.” This would be weird in any situation, but it’s weirder given her description and the fact this happens in one of the most liberal areas of one of the most liberal cities in America. It doesn’t make sense.

The scene only gets more outlandish when the girls fall asleep on the BART and are accosted and handled roughly by the police. It was completely unrealistic and ridiculous and made me uncomfortable given that we know these girls are (mostly) not white, upper middle class, straight, and cisgendered. There’s no commentary, no depth. It’s superficial and problematic.

One more thing worth pointing out as a big question mark to this book is in the character and story of Jolene. As mentioned, she’s transgender. We understand that causes some issues at home, but again, Larsen renders is very superficially throughout, until there’s a sudden need for Jolene to leave her home. She’s going to live with Ashley for the time being, and Jolene is welcomed and accepted warmly — including by Ashley’s grandmother. This is surprising not because Jolene is transgender and welcome in the home, but it’s surprising because it tells us a lot about how inconsistent and poorly developed Ashley’s grandmother is. She is merely the evil force in Ashley’s life and she’s absolutely nothing more. It’s convenient how frequently grandma is out of the house when Ashley needs time to think about anything.

Future Perfect tries to do a lot but it ultimately fails to do anything. It feels like a checklist: an “empowered” fat girl, a best friend who is transgender, a romance (I haven’t even touched on how superficial the romance here is — both the one that lasts and the one that buds later on), an evil family member, a deep family secret, a “small town” setting, a part-Latina main character. Not one of these things transcends beyond being a checkmark in a box, and indeed, it makes this book one problem after another, stuffed with underwhelming characters, scenes, and writing. It’s really surprising to me this book got through the editing and fact-checking stage at all.

Though I don’t think this reflects upon the story as told, it was impossible for me not to think about the fact this author wrote a memoir before this book about her own “weight loss surgery.” I don’t have anything to elaborate upon that except to say that it makes me wonder about how message comes out here, rather than story. And I can’t help wonder how much her own experience did or didn’t shade the way this shakes out.

I’m not going to spend words talking about how no other alternatives for paying Harvard tuition were offered, nor the fact that Harvard is free to attend for students coming from families earning under $65,000 a year (a very easily researched fact). We’d have to know anything more about Ashley than her grandma’s offer to understand anything about her financial situation, her real passion for attending the school (and to be fair, we get a LITTLE of this), or, like, any initiative to find a way to pay for education like other students do. There’s a clear lack of research or understanding of how the college admissions and financial aid system works.

Bypass this book. There are so many better ones out there, even in a field where there are virtually no good stories featuring fat main characters in YA. This book may cause damage to young readers — and I don’t say that lightly.

If anything, I hope this review sheds light into why talking about numbers does matter in YA. And I hope it’s clear that choosing sizes, over numbers, in choosing vague descriptions over solid ones, causes more problems than it solves. As someone who was Ashley’s size in high school and as someone who grew much larger in college — up to a size 24 or so — I cannot imagine this book offering me any comfort. It would have further screwed with my ideas of what normal was, of what acceptable was, and about how people view my body. Thinking about how today’s teens, already warped by social norms of body size (the push for “ending obesity” today is much different than when I was younger), would react to this book makes my heart heavy.

We can offer much better.

We can offer actual education.

Filed Under: review, Reviews, Young Adult, young adult fiction

Review and Giveaway: A Thousand Nights by E. K. Johnston

September 22, 2015 |

thousand nights johnstonLo-Melkhiin has killed three hundred wives, and when he visits our unnamed protagonist’s town next, she knows that her sister will be his next pick. Her sister is the loveliest, after all, but she won’t let Lo-Melkhiin take her and put out her fire. So she dresses in her sister’s finest clothing, and Lo-Melkhiin chooses her instead. She expects to die that first night, but she tells Lo-Melkhiin a little of her sister’s fire, and she lives to see the next day. And the next.

As the days pass, she explores the palace and learns more of Lo-Melkhiin from her surroundings as well as the other women who live there. She also begins to develop magic, colors that drift from her fingertips when she’s around him. Her magic grows, and back home, her sister works her own magic. It becomes clear that Lo-Melkhiin was not always a monster, and with the magic that springs from her stories, she may be able to save herself as well as countless other girls who would have been condemned after her.

The beginning of the book reminded me a little of Cruel Beauty: a girl sacrifices herself to save her sister, marrying a monster of a man in hopes of eventually killing him. There’s a strong focus on setting in both, too, with the details of each location – the palaces and courts – playing important roles. The dynamics of the relationship between the sisters are different, and the ultimate plots are different as well, but there’s definitely a similar feel, brought on in part by Johnston’s writing, which is beautiful and slightly unearthly in the same way I feel Rosamund Hodge’s is. It’s writing that creates a mood, and it’s easy to get lost in it.

A Thousand Nights also reminded me a bit of A Creature of Moonlight by Rebecca Hahn stylistically, as much of the book consists of building the characters and the world they inhabit, with action taking a decided backseat. As I was reading, I found myself thinking on the fact that I felt like I was discovering the story rather than being told the story. Johnston – and her protagonist – deliberately leave the reader in the dark for much of the book, but it’s not done in a manipulative way. This method of storytelling provides its own sort of impetus to turn the next page, though it’s certainly a slower book than most. Sprinkled throughout are interstitial chapters that shed light on the mythology behind the monstrous Lo-Melkhiin, tantalizing little hints that made me eager to keep reading despite the slower pace.

If your teens are fans of fairy tales and other folklore retold, this is definitely one to check out (and it’s a great readalike for Cruel Beauty, too). It should be especially interesting read back-to-back with The Wrath and the Dawn, the other prominent Arabian Nights retelling published earlier this year. It’s not for impatient readers; hand it to someone who enjoys taking her time unpacking lovely sentences and getting drawn into a beautiful, dangerous world.

We’re giving away a prize pack provided by Disney-Hyperion which includes a finished copy of the book plus a nail polish set and tea bag dispenser. To enter, fill out the form below. The giveaway is open to US addressees only and closes in one week on September 30. Learn more about the book here.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Giveaway, Reviews, Young Adult

The Detour by S. A. Bodeen

September 16, 2015 |

detour bodeenS. A. Bodeen can usually be relied upon to write a solid thriller. I enjoyed both The Compound and its sequel as well as The Raft. She writes books with great hooks and fast-moving plots that pull you in immediately. Her latest, The Detour, doesn’t quite measure up, I think – but it should still satisfy readers looking for some thrills.

Livvy Flynn is a teenage phenomenon. She published her first book while in high school and it was a huge hit. It’s earned her buckets of money and lots of fame, but she’s totally oblivious to how unusual this is. In fact, she looks down on other aspiring writers – especially those older than her, so basically all of them – and generally thinks they’re total failures. She’s the unlikable protagonist in a nutshell. When she’s invited to a writer’s conference to speak, she accepts and figures it will be a breeze. On her way, though, she’s in a car wreck. And when she wakes up, she’s not in the hospital – she’s in some strange woman’s house, tied to a bed. It quickly becomes clear that this woman has it in for Livvy Flynn.

There’s more than a passing resemblance of Stephen King’s Misery in The Detour, though the woman’s reasons for keeping Livvy captive are somewhat different. Bodeen acknowledges the similarity, since Livvy herself is familiar with King’s book. Like in Misery, the woman in The Detour does all sorts of horrible things to Livvy. She also has a daughter who may be even worse.

So, why is this one not as strong as Bodeen’s others? It’s not the unlikability of the protagonist, which I’m sure some reviewers will point to. In fact, Livvy does experience some growth as a person, and her ordeal brings out some buried insecurities that shed a lot of light on why she is the way she is. Instead, I had problems with the way some of the events played out; it was difficult to understand why Livvy didn’t figure some things out much, much sooner. There’s a secret with a boyfriend that’s glaringly obvious but isn’t revealed to Livvy herself until the last chapter. Bodeen doesn’t seem to expect that her readers can connect the dots unless they’re hinted at quite forcefully, and the plot suffers. Suspension of disbelief is also a problem. At one point, a police officer stumbles into the house but doesn’t do anything about the girl who has clearly been kidnapped and tortured – and Livvy is completely understanding of it in the end (there is no good explanation for his behavior). I don’t know which part of that I had a harder time believing, that he did nothing or that Livvy was fine with it.

Despite the flaws, this may be a good one to hand to teens who just can’t get enough of thrillers, particularly those that don’t veer into mystery territory. It’s also interesting if you don’t know much about the publishing industry, since things like average amounts of advances and sales figures are discussed a bit (and by extension just how unusual Livvy’s situation is).

Review copy received from the publisher. The Detour will be published October 6.

Filed Under: Reviews, Young Adult

Little Robot by Ben Hatke

September 10, 2015 |

lilrobot_BlogTour

 

We’re taking part in the blog tour for Ben Hatke’s brand new graphic novel for kids, Little Robot. You can see the full schedule here and you should visit all of the sites to check out what they have to say about this delightful read.

***

LittleRobot300RGBBen Hatke’s Little Robot is a near-wordless graphic novel suitable for upper elementary, middle grade, and older readers — and more than that, it’s a sweet story about friendship, about girls who do and make things, and about how it’s not always a bad thing to be different. It is a feminist graphic novel for even the youngest of readers.

Our main character is a young black girl, and while she’s unnamed, we know a lot about her. She lives in a poor area, in a trailer home, and she often feels left out by her peers and siblings. During the time other kids are at school, she prefers to sneak through the fence to one of the neighborhood backyards and swing on their swing set. This is an activity that seems to be noticed by the homeowner, but it’s not something he shoos her away from.

One day, though, the main character decides to go on an adventure. When she wanders down to the dump to wander around through the broken and abandoned pieces of other people’s lives, she sees a box floating in the nearby creek. Upon further investigation, she discovers it’s not just a box; inside is a robot.

Using her skills, she builds the robot into a complete creature, and they quickly become close friends.

It becomes apparent quickly, though, that something is odd about the robot being discovered. As readers, we’re privy to it because we’ve seen the beginning of the book, but neither the young girl nor the robot know. The robot had fallen off a truck heading to a plant where he’d be shipped elsewhere, and now, machines are out on the hunt to recover the lost robot. When the robot is discovered and his return to the warehouse seems inevitable, can the little girl use her strengths to keep her friend near her? Or will she lose him?

Little Robot, being as light on text as it is, relies on story telling through its pictures, and those pictures are, without question, the stars of the book. Each little detail is carefully drawn, and emotions and thoughts are depicted clearly through slight changes in character faces, stances, and actions. This is true of both the girl and the robot, and seeing how they interact with one another is sweet without being saccharine or cloying:

hatke4

hatke2

hatke3

But what really makes this graphic novel resonate is the way that the main character is a girl who loves science and technology. She’s clever and she’s industrious, with no fear of trying new things, even if they don’t always work out the way she hopes. There’s curiosity and interest in trying and in making, and seeing that played out in such a fearless manner is memorable. More, that it’s a black girl who isn’t from the best of circumstances makes it even more powerful — STEM is for anyone who wants to explore science and tech, and Hatke does a major service in showing this through his story. Girls will see someone like them tinkering and toying and having fun with it. The gleeful expression in the very last panel above says it all.

Graphic novels like this are so enjoyable to read, and Little Robot is no exception. In many ways, this reminded me of Sara Varon’s work, particularly Robot Dreams. It’s smart, charming, funny, and full of heart without shying away from tackling some big complex issues on a level that young readers just “get.” This is a must-purchase for libraries and school classrooms, though because it’s by Ben Hatke, I probably don’t even need to say that.

Filed Under: feminism, Fiction, Graphic Novels, intersectionality, review, Reviews

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • …
  • 154
  • Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Search

Archives

We dig the CYBILS

STACKED has participated in the annual CYBILS awards since 2009. Click the image to learn more.

© Copyright 2015 STACKED · All Rights Reserved · Site Designed by Designer Blogs