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The Burning Sky by Sherry Thomas

October 9, 2013 |

I went to the Austin Teen Book Festival several days ago, and Sherry Thomas was one author in attendance. She described her book, The Burning Sky, as “Harry Potter with cross-dressing,” which is certainly pithy, but may actually set up many readers for disappointment.

Nothing is Harry Potter. And that is OK.

The Burning Sky is actually quite different. Yes, there is a boarding school, but the whole story is set in 1883, immediately setting a very different tone. (Historical fantasy! I love historical fantasy!) The boarding school (Eton) is also set in the non-magical world, and our protagonist Iolanthe has to pretend to be non-magical herself (as well as a boy) in order to not give herself away. She’s an elemental mage, you see, and she’s been coerced by Titus, the prince of the Domain – also a magical teen pretending to be a normal, though royal, person in the non-magical boarding school – into training with him at Eton, honing her powers, in order to one day bring down the Bane, a powerful, possibly immortal being who rules Atlantis, which in turn subjugates Titus and Iolanthe’s homeland.

It’s a classic fantasy storyline, but told very well. What I found particularly engaging was the world-building, which is quite creative and left me with a feeling that I really knew the place when I finished the book. Like in Harry Potter, the magical world exists alongside the non-magical one, unbeknownst to non-magical people. That’s pretty much where the similarities end.

In Iolanthe’s world, there’s an Inquisitor who works for the Bane, able to worm her way inside someone’s brain, not precisely reading memories, but getting what she needs nonetheless. There’s also a diary full of visions that only shows certain pages depending upon what the reader needs to know. The spells are interesting – there’s one that Titus casts which makes it impossible for Iolanthe’s image to be reproduced in any way, as well as one called an “otherwise” spell that makes it seem like a person named Archer Fairfax had been attending Eton for several months before Iolanthe arrived, when in fact no such person even existed up until that point. My favorite bit, though, is the Crucible: a book that training mages can go inside in order to train with copies of past rulers and great mages, learning how to fight dragons without any danger to their actual selves…most of the time.

I love reading about cool things like this. It reminds me of the possibilities of fantasy. Creativity needn’t be earth-shaking. Even small-ish details like these lend the book uniqueness amidst its often-trodden storyline.

Over the course of the story, Iolanthe and Titus do fall in love. It’s rather slow-burning, which is nice. There’s deserved and long-lasting bitterness from Iolanthe toward Titus. Titus is wonderfully tortured, and Thomas never makes it seem melodramatic. Her career as a romance author is in evidence – she’s very good at it.

I wish I knew more about what exactly Atlantis is. (I was fascinated by the legends of Atlantis as a teenager and am eager to see if Thomas just liked the name or if there is some connection.) We never learn how Atlantis came to power, what it is exactly they do to the citizens they control, or anything about the Bane other than he’s possibly immortal. There’s also a bit near the end that I hoped was more than a plot convenience, but turned out to be just that. It was lazy writing and seemed out of place with the quality of the rest of the book.

All in all, this is very well-done high fantasy and should please fans of the subgenre. It fits very neatly into the list of books we covered in our high fantasy genre profile – magic, mages, new lands, strange creatures, a fight against evil. I’m eager for the sequels, and I hope to see more like it in the future.

Review copy received from the publisher. The Burning Sky is available now.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Horror Reboots: A Look at New, Revived, and Repackaged Scary Books

October 8, 2013 |

Since October is horror month and we like to get at least a post a week up featuring something horror-related, I wanted to share a few horror-related things I’ve read about lately that didn’t make it into the wrap-up of my SLJ piece but that I think would be of interest. 

Did you know that Scholastic used to have a horror imprint called Point Horror? It started out back in 1991 and it was where some of the better-known scary books for teens were published back in the day, including books by R. L. Stine, Caroline B. Cooney, and Christophe Pike. When the books were doing well, they were doing well — Pike and Stine in particular published a ton of books through Point Horror. I’m pretty sure I read a boat load of them when I was a teen, which makes sense since the imprint itself was aimed at teen girls like me. 

The imprint died out between 2004 and 2005. 

But Scholastic is rebooting their Point Horror series. To me it seems like it’s aimed at exactly the same readership it was back in the 90s and early 00s, and there are three new titles out or coming out shortly to put on your radar. All of them are paperback originals and deal in some capacity with “the internet world.” 

All descriptions come from WorldCat.

Defriended by Ruth Baron: A friend request from beyond the grave … Jason has met the perfect girl. OK, so maybe he hasn’t actually MET Lacey yet, but they talk online all the time. Yet despite spending most nights chatting, Lacey refuses to meet up in person. Suspicious, Jason starts googling, and his cyberstalking leads to a shocking discovery: According to multiple newspapers, Lacey died a year earlier. Soon, Jason finds himself enmeshed in a disturbing mystery. Has he found a way to iChat with the dead? Or is someone playing a dangerous trick? Either way, Jason has to discover the truth before it’s too late. You can’t put up away messages from beyond the grave. 

I have seen both covers as being available, but I think the one on the right is the actual cover, since it fits the style of the others in this relaunch. I don’t know about anyone else, but the one on the left is really speaking to me — it’s perfectly teen scream. But I also really love the tag line for the cover on the right. Defriended is available now. 

Identity Theft by Anna Davies: Someone claiming to be Hayley posts incriminating photographs of her online, jeopardizing her chance at a college scholarship, but when the photographs reveal dark secrets in her family’s past, Hayley learns her very life is at stake.

The red eyes are creepy, and even though it’s a pretty non-memorable cover otherwise, I think the blood-colored eyes make it stand out. There is probably also little question this is a scary book. Identity Theft is available now. 

Wickedpedia by Chris Van Etten: Cole and Greg love playing practical jokes through Wikipedia. They edit key articles and watch their classmates crash and burn giving oral reports on historical figures like Genghis Khan, the first female astronaut on Jupiter. So after the star soccer player steals Cole’s girlfriend, the boys take their revenge by creating a Wikipedia page for him, an entry full of outlandish information including details about his bizarre death on the soccer field. It’s all in good fun, until the soccer player is killed in a freak accident . . . just as Cole and Greg predicted. The uneasy boys vow to leave Wikipedia alone but someone continues to edit articles about classmates dying in gruesome ways . . . and those entries start to come true as well. To his horror, Cole soon discovers that someone has created a Wikipedia page for him, and included a date of death. He has one week to figure out who’s behind the murders, or else he’s set to meet a pretty grisly end. (Description via Goodreads).
This was another Point Horror I found two covers for. Again, I’m pretty sure that the one on the right is the cover that will be available when Wickedpedia goes on sale next June, but the one on the left is too campy/awesome to not share. A bleeding laptop! But that tag line for the other cover is brilliant. 
In addition to what Scholastic’s doing for teen horror, Penguin is doing a couple of neat things for adult horror classics, many of which have excellent crossover appeal for teen readers. 
First, they rereleased a number of older Shirley Jackson titles this year and have plans to release more. The rereleases have new and super appealing covers and are available as paperbacks, with introductions by well-known authors, including Francine Prose. 

Hansaman by Shirley Jackson: Seventeen-year-old Natalie Waite longs to escape home for college. Her father is a domineering and egotistical writer who keeps a tight rein on Natalie and her long-suffering mother. When Natalie finally does get away, however, college life doesn’t bring the happiness she expected. Little by little, Natalie is no longer certain of anything–even where reality ends and her dark imaginings begin. Chilling and suspenseful, Hangsaman is loosely based on the real-life disappearance of a Bennington College sophomore in 1946.
The Road Through the Wall by Shirley Jackson: Pepper Street is a really nice, safe California neighborhood. The houses are tidy and the lawns are neatly mowed. Of course, the country club is close by, and lots of pleasant folks live there. The only problem is they knocked down the wall at the end of the street to make way for a road to a new housing development. Now, that’s not good, it’s just not good at all. Satirically exploring what happens when a smug suburban neighborhood is breached by awful, unavoidable truths, The Road Through the Wall is the tale that launched Shirley Jackson’s heralded career. 

The Bird’s Nest by Shirley Jackson: Elizabeth is a demure twenty-three-year-old wiling her life away at a dull museum job, living with her neurotic aunt, and subsisting off her dead mother’s inheritance. When Elizabeth begins to suffer terrible migraines and backaches, her aunt takes her to the doctor, then to a psychiatrist. But slowly, and with Jackson’s characteristic chill, we learn that Elizabeth is not just one girl—but four separate, self-destructive personalities. The Bird’s Nest, Jackson’s third novel, develops hallmarks of the horror master’s most unsettling work: tormented heroines, riveting familial mysteries, and a disquieting vision inside the human mind.
The Sundial by Shirley Jackson: Aunt Fanny has always been somewhat peculiar. No one is surprised that while the Halloran clan gathers at the crumbling old mansion for a funeral she wanders off to the secret garden. But when she reports the vision she had there, the family is engulfed in fear, violence, and madness. For Aunt Fanny’s long-dead father has given her the precise date of the final cataclysm.
Both The Bird’s Nest and The Sundial will be available in January. 
Penguin also worked with horror master Guillermo del Toro to chose six classic horror novels that were made into gorgeous deluxe hardcover editions. Del Toro wrote the introductions to each of these new editions as well.

American Supernatural Tales edited by S. T. Joshi
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Haunted Castles by Ray Russell
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson
The Thing on the Doorstep by H. P. Lovecraft
The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe
I know I wouldn’t mind having all of those on my shelves because they’re equal parts gorgeous and haunting, as they should be. I think maybe the Jackson cover might edge out the others as my favorite one (the eye through the castle!). 
Any other horror reboots or recovers you’ve seen in the last year or so? I’d love to know of more if there are others. 

Filed Under: Adult, Horror, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Chasing Shadows by Swati Avasthi

October 7, 2013 |

Maybe all I have is my own two feet. And the confidence that they can bear my weight when the world goes sideways. Maybe that’s enough.

Corey, Holly, and Savitri are best friends — Corey and Holly are brother and sister, while Corey and Sav have a relationship. Their bond is tight, and one of the activities that keeps them connected as a threesome is their interest and participation in freerunning through different areas of Chicago. It’s their favorite activity, right up there with being mega invested in comics.

The night the story opens, things look like they’re solid, or about as solid as they could be knowing what’s between them. The three of them are freerunning, and when their fun comes to an end, Corey and Holly hop into one car, while Sav hops into another. Lingering in the back of their minds, though, is the inevitable future. They’re going to be pulled apart because Sav wants to attend school outside Chicago, even though it means leaving behind her best friends and her family. But Sav’s torn about this, too, because she loves the city and she loves her friends and boyfriend.

That night, everything changes when the car Corey and Holly are in is approached by a gunman, shots are fired, Corey dies, and Holly falls into a deep coma.

Chasing Shadows is Swati Avasthi’s sophomore novel, and it’s a hybrid graphic novel, illustrated by Craig Phillips. Together, the pair write an incredibly evocative, engaging, and wholly different type of story about grief and, more interestingly, friendship.

The three friends in this story are well-drawn, and not only are they well-drawn both through the writing and through the illustrations, they’re interesting because they partake in activities and have passion for topics that aren’t always readily seen in YA. But what makes it noteworthy isn’t that they’re different. It’s instead that the story embraces these things about them in a way that makes them your typical, average teenagers. Sure, they engage in freerunning. Sure, they love comic books. Sure, Sav is a main character of color (she’s Indian). But it’s never about the fact these teen do things that are outside the norm of many YA characters. It’s instead that they’re normal.

Avasthi’s story is told through two points of view, and this set up is important to the underlying theme of friendship. Holly, who is in a coma and struggling not only with all-encompassing grief but also an unnamed mental illness — which may or may not have been brought up through the grief and coma — brings us into a really dark world. She wants to give up and die in order to be with her brother. Much of her voice is through the graphic elements, which ties into not just her love for comics, but also ties into her relationship with Sav and Sav’s heritage. As readers, we know there is something really wrong with Holly, too. Her thinking is marred by her grief, but it’s more than that. She truly believes she’s got nothing worth living for, and in her post-coma recovery, it becomes clear that she’s not the person she was just weeks ago. Something is off.

Savitri is the other voice, and she, too, is struggling with immense grief. She’s not only lost her boyfriend in the incident, but her best friend Holly is hurting and is ill. And it’s that illness which pulls Sav into considering the value of friendship. How much does a person give to another in order to make it work? How much do you have to sacrifice of yourself in order to be there for a friend? Does it change or shift depending on the state that that friend is in? Avasthi does a spectacular job of allowing the reader to not only consider Sav’s empathy for Holly’s situation but also forcing the reader to understand that Sav’s life and future can’t be put on hold for the sake of her friend, either. At what point does she make a decision to stay with her friend and help her through her illness and at what point does she have to walk away? The choice Sav makes is — spoiler — the riskier one, but it’s ultimately what made this book not just a good read, but a great one. I think too often there’s a desire to go for the easier, happier ending, especially when it comes to a story about grief and loss and mental illness. But Avasthi doesn’t do that here. She instead serves the characters in the way that they best need to be served.

The struggle and consideration and reconsideration of friendship is what stands out in Chasing Shadows, even more so than the grief element. In that respect, the comic panels are brilliant because they unify the two girls through their shared passions but these panels also divide them because of the stories within them and what those stories mean to them as individuals. For Holly, it’s a coping mechanism. For Sav, it’s part of her heritage. Avasthi never names a mental illness here, either, which gives it almost more weight than had she diagnosed her character’s pain. It’s dealt with with incredible respect and care, and in many ways, it’s that care and honor of the illness (and even more so the girl suffering with it) that makes what Sav chooses to do even more painful  . . .  and more honest.

Chasing Shadows is well-paced, but the writing is never sacrificed. This is a strongly written, gritty book which is only enhanced by the graphic aspect. It never feels like a gimmick; instead, it serves a marked purpose that further develops the characters and adds depth to their relationships. In many ways, this feels like a true YA novel to me. It has great teen appeal to it, and the hybridization enhances that. As noted earlier, too, Phillips’s illustrations are strong. They never felt like an afterthought.

Although this book makes use of the graphic elements and does delve into some mythology, it’s wholly contemporary. There’s nothing fantastical here. In many ways, it’s through those non-straightforward storytelling elements that the book is an excellent example of contemporary realistic YA. Readers who dug Avasthi’s debut novel Split will find this to be an excellent next read, and anyone who wants a gritty, painful story about loss, friendship, and about “what comes next” will want to pick this one up. Because this book delves into mental illness in a really unique manner, I would go so far as to say those readers who loved the way in which Nova Ren Suma explores mental illness in 17 & Gone will want to give this book a read, too. They aren’t at all the same, and the styles are markedly different, but the ways in which both books give an interesting glimpse into mental illness make them a worthwhile pairing.

This is a book that will linger in my mind for a long time, and it’s one that solidifies Avasthi as a must-read author for me. She gets tough contemporary YA so right.

Chasing Shadows is available now from Random House. Review copy picked up at ALA. Swati will be sharing a guest post later this week, too, on the very topic of friendship in YA and in her book. 

Filed Under: review, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Links of Note: October 5, 2013

October 5, 2013 |

One of my recent displays at work — Wisconsin pride.
We’re gearing up for a week-long series on reader’s advisory this month — not next week, but likely the week after — so I thought I’d share one of my own displays above. It doesn’t really look like that anymore because it’s been picked through (an awesome problem to have) but one thing I love about reader’s advisory is how easy it is to pick up on something small and run with it. So here, authors with ties to Wisconsin or books set in Wisconsin. 
Here’s a roundup of interesting reads from the last couple of weeks. Many of these are longer pieces, so sit back, grab a coffee or two, and enjoy. 
  • I kicked off talking about reader’s advisory because I wanted to link to one of my favorite resources for reader’s advisory with adults, which is Becky’s amazing RA for All blog. Becky’s a librarian in the Chicago suburbs and in addition to her incredible blog, she’s the author of a reader’s advisory book to horror. In addition to THAT, she runs a month-long series over at her horror reader’s advisory blog all about horror. Spend some time this month learning about horror novels and resources to RA for horror, and put her RA for All blog on your radar, too. 

  • Over at PW’s ShelfTalker blog, they ask the question of the proper definition of young adult literature, and the answer that they found most satisfying is one I happen to think is really damn good, too. Note it’s not a genre. 

  • When Goodreads did a Friday afternoon policy change and started deleting reviews and book shelves without warning, what actually ended up disappearing? Here’s a little bit of a look. 

  • You’re better able to understand people if you read literary fiction, as opposed to other types of fiction. Not entirely a surprising find — you have to pay more careful attention when you’re reading literary fiction, which ignites a part of your brain that requires stronger attention. But still interesting. 
  • An interesting piece in the New Yorker about female beauty and literature. I hope someone tackles this subject from a YA perspective, as opposed to an adult literary perspective, at some point because it’s fascinating. 
  • What does your favorite Babysitter’s Club character say about you? Not naming mine, but I will say about half of it is right and the other half is not. 
  • Malinda Lo wrote a series of posts on LGBTQ in YA this week which are absolutely necessary reading. I particularly liked this post on “Coming out 2.0.”
  • Are you a book blogger who has been doing this for a while or a former book blogger who has stopped? Kim at Sophisticated Dorkiness has a survey for you to take on blogger burn out and more. 
  • NPR had an interesting piece on what it is that’s terrifying teens today, as seen through YA fiction. I wish it had a little more to it and talked a bit more about realistic fiction, but this is a solid and fascinating read. 
  • So this isn’t book related at all but it’s too neat not to share. Here’s what the Monopoly properties look like in real life. 
  • While this is from a British source, it’s worthwhile reading and thinking. Here’s a discussion and book list for black girls, and why it is we need more books that empower them. 
  • The Belle Jar is one of my favorite blogs. Every post she writes knocks it out of the park, and this one on tips for writers is no different. 
  • I didn’t know how much I needed a post about literary magazines geared for YA fiction until I read this post over at YA Highway. I knew about YARN, but I did not know about many of the others here. Go check it out — and if you’re not in it for the writing angle, be in it for the fact it’s a resource for YA readers to find more to read. 
  • What are the awards and recognitions in librarianship? Here’s a thorough look at it over at In the Library with the Lead Pipe, which refers to the excellent piece Val Forrestal wrote last month. 
  • Don’t forget to nominate books for consideration in this year’s Cybils. The nominating period is open through October 15 — and I’m going to try to write up a post before then with titles that you can nominate if you have not done so by that point. Kim is serving this year on the second round of panels for YA Speculative Fiction. 
For some reason, our blog design isn’t playing nice with our giveaway box any more, so I had to take it down. I haven’t figured out a solution yet, but in the mean time, you have a chance to win Trish Doller’s Where the Stars Still Shine through the end of next week and a chance to win Jason Vanhee’s Engines of the Broken World through the end of the month. 
Also, if you’re a YALSA member and can help me out by signing my petition to get on the Printz ballot, I’d be so grateful. 
In addition to my teasing about a reader’s advisory week, I should also tease that I’ve got a contemporary YA week all set up to run in November and I am so excited about it. I took a long look at the ideas you suggested for topics you’d like to see addressed and merged them with some of the ideas I’ve been thinking about — and the slate of guest writers and topics is, I think, really great. There will be something for everyone. 
If you’ve read anything great in the last couple weeks I may have missed, I’d love to know in the comments. 

Filed Under: Links, Uncategorized

Kid Lit Con 2013: Join Us!

October 4, 2013 |

Did you know this year marks the 7th year for the annual KidLitCon?

As you may know, KidLitCon is my favorite conference. It’s not like other events, where you have loads of panels, exhibits, and other meetings to choose from over the course of many days. KidLitCon is one day or two days long, with a small slate of programs, all focused on blogging and children’s/teen literature. More than that, though, it’s an intimate event: between 100 and 200 people attend, making it the kind of con where you can get to talk to any and everyone you wish to. It’s laid back, and the emphasis is on making connections and conversation on the small — but mighty! — scale.

I’ve gone the last few years, and every time I come home after, I feel reengaged and energized. It gets me excited to blog again, and it gets me excited to reconnect with not just bloggers I have known a long time, but to explore the blogging world and “meet” other people and voices. The impact of this event didn’t really hit me until I went to this year’s book blogger con at BEA and realized that it wasn’t at all like KidLitCon.

KidLitCon is coordinated, developed, and run by bloggers for bloggers. That’s it. But it’s open to bloggers AND non-bloggers alike — the connecting theme among everyone who attends is a love and appreciation for kidlit. So you’ll rub shoulders with those who blog, those who write, and those who share kid lit as teachers, librarians, and more.

This year, Kimberly and I had the opportunity to be a part of the group organizing the event, and we’re excited to share what is in the works. KidLitCon will be held Saturday, November 9, down in beautiful Austin, Texas. We’re in the midst of coordinating a pre-conference event for the day before, as well, and details are coming together as we speak.

KidLitCon will be at St. David’s Episcopal Church right in downtown, and we’ve already got our keynote speaker set up — you’ll get the chance to hear Cynthia Leitich Smith. There is a lunch planned for the conference, and we’ve also got a dinner location post-event at Scholz Garten.

I’m eager to meet up with many of the people I’ve been blogging and talking with for years now (years!). I’m equally excited to meet new faces.

Want to know more about this year’s event and sign up? Registration is open, and through October 11, the cost is $55. After that, the price increases to $65 — and this is an event that is always worth every single penny. You also have a little bit of time left to propose a panel session if you want to speak at the event, as well. Details are here. Continue to keep an eye on the Kidlitosphere website, too, for more information about hotels and things to do in Austin as the event gets closer.

And because I know you want to know more about what a day at KidLitCon really looks like, here’s are my recaps from the 2012 event in New York City, the 2011 event in Seattle, and the 2010 event in Minneapolis.

I can’t wait to see everyone in early November.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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