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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
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  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
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    • Contemporary YA Series
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      • Contemporary Week 2014
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    • Reviews
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      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

A Few Cybils Reads – Part IV (2015)

December 2, 2015 |

accident season burning nation illusionarium

The Accident Season by Moira Fowley-Doyle

The premise of Fowley-Doyle’s debut novel is intriguing. Each October, Cara’s family becomes accident-prone: “Bones break, skin tears, bruises bloom.” A couple of her relatives have died during previous accident seasons, and it’s become a natural part of their lives to be wary around that time. But no matter how many precautions they take – covering up the hardwood floors with rugs, for example – the accidents always happen. Cara’s first-person narration takes us through this accident season and delves into her family’s past, bringing at least two explosive secrets to light, one of which might explain why the accidents happen each year – or if they’re accidents at all. Magical realism is really hit and miss with me, and this book was a bit of both. The writing is lovely, literary without sacrificing Cara’s teen voice. But the plot meandered and the pace was overly slow. Not perfect, but a good pick for fans of magical realism and literary YA.

 

Burning Nation by Trent Reedy

This is the sequel to a book I read for the Cybils last year, Divided We Fall. The audio production on that one was so good, I opted for the audio for its sequel as well, and I was not disappointed. Burning Nation picks up where its predecessor left off, with the United States growing more and more fractured and Danny caught in the middle of it all. Initially Danny is very pro-Idaho, burning for revenge for his mother’s murder by “the Fed.” As more states follow Idaho’s example, officially seceding from the rest of the country due to the mandatory federal ID law, Danny becomes their emblem – somewhat willingly, somewhat not. This one is more violent than the first, with a prolonged scene of torture by an agent of “the Fed” that may be hard to take for some readers, but is essential to the story.

Reedy does an excellent job painting both sides of the conflict in shades of grey: he brings up the likelihood of racist and other extremist groups supporting the secession (something missing from the first book) and ends the novel with a disturbing scene that demonstrates no one may be truly in the right. The effect of violence – both as victim and perpetrator – on one of Danny’s friends is particularly well-done. Reedy also does a good job portraying more conservative Americans (including teens like Danny and his friends) as not all being raging racists, a stereotype I sometimes find in YA fiction. The focus is on current events (invasion of privacy by the federal government is cited as the reason for the conflict) and the book feels unsettlingly prescient as a result. Like the first book, this audio version includes fully-voiced snippets of radio broadcasts, social media, and blog posts with lifelike sound effects that make the story come alive. Listen to it in your car for a really authentic experience

 

Illusionarium by Heather Dixon

The concept of Dixon’s second YA novel (after the acclaimed Entwined) is fascinating. It’s set in an alternate 19th century England where London has been renamed Arthurise and airships dot the skies, giving it a bit of a steampunk feel. The venen, a terrible disease, has just infected the queen, and the king comes calling on Jonathan’s father, a great scientist, to cure it. As his apprentice, Jonathan feels he can help, especially with a new substance called fantillium that Lady Florel, another scientist working on the cure, has just introduced to him. Fantillium causes group hallucinations that allows Jonathan and his father to try out various cures and speed up time without actually harming anyone. But Jonathan’s father feels that something isn’t right about it, or about Lady Florel, and refuses to use it, even to save his own wife and daughter who have come down with the illness. Jonathan decides otherwise, and it takes him on an adventure to another alternate world where fantillium is a way of life.

Dixon’s novel is heavy-handed with the message – the consequences of fantillium use are horrific and Jonathan’s father’s metaphor of a compass as a way to tell him what is morally correct is woven throughout. It feels a tad preachy as a result, but the ideas are interesting, particularly how fantillium works and what these two alternate worlds look like (and how they got that way). Ideas aren’t good enough for a great story, though, and Illusionarium never completely comes together writing-wise. It’s choppy and feels a little juvenile for its intended age range, with exaggerated dialogue and unsubtle characterizations. Still, fans of parallel worlds and fast-paced adventure stories should find a lot to like here.

Filed Under: cybils, Reviews, Young Adult

Changes at Stacked

November 30, 2015 |

Over the last several years, Kimberly and I have changed a lot in our lives, and over the last several years, blogging itself has changed significantly.

So, we’re taking the opportunity to work with our life changes, as well as the changing tides of blogging, to announce we’re shifting a little bit of our work here at Stacked.

We’ll still be writing as normal, covering the same topics and interests we normally do, but we’ll be cutting back a bit to a guaranteed posting three times a week. I’ll be writing on Mondays, Kimberly on Wednesdays, and then our regular round-up of our work in other spaces on Fridays.

This is for several reasons.

First, both Kim and I have found that traffic patterns and readership here, while still growing, has definitely changed. This is largely in part due to how people interact with blogs now. Without Google Reader, discovery is different and the work involved in daily social promotion on our end takes away from reading and writing. We’re finding that the bulk of our traffic now comes through search — people are looking for reviews of a specific book or a book list and they’re finding us that way. They aren’t clicking through to posts via Twitter, and they click through via places like Tumblr when it’s a book list and often, that comes when the desire for reading comes, rather than immediately (in other words, bookmarking). This is an awesome thing to learn, since it helps us think through what we can write about that’s useful to readers.

Likewise, both Kimberly and I are working hard on projects outside of Stacked relating to books, reading, and writing. We want to be able to give the best of ourselves here, without sacrificing on those other ventures, and to do so, we’d rather cut back a little here, rather than try to create a lot of filler (we’ve seen those blogs and what happens to them — not our thing).

Another small change you may see on my end is a cessation of long form reviews. I’m finding them to not only be tedious to write, but the rewards aren’t particularly high and those posts tend to see the least amount of traffic and roughly zero interaction. I’m sure as soon as I post this, I’ll read the book that begs me to write a lengthy review of, but it’s a thing I plan on stepping back from, with the hopes of doing more thematic round-ups on titles with shorter, more to-the-point reviews.

If you’re curious about peeking behind the curtain a bit, here it is: Kimberly has been working on building a side venture in critiquing. It might be the perfect time to talk with her if you’ve got a manuscript you’re looking for solid, critical feedback on.

As of right now, I’m not taking on new clients for my own critiquing. I will when the new year rolls around. My big projects right now include continued work on Feminism for the Real World, as well as (dun dun DUN) finally working on this novel that’s been in my head and in various forms of notes for a few years now.

We’re still here and we’re still going to be here. It’ll just be a little more substantive and a little less frequently — though really, three times a week is still more regular than many book blogs today. We’ll be taking our normal end-of-year two-week vacation, too, so we’ll have a few more weeks of posts coming in 2015 before another short break and we’re back in high action in 2016. . . which will be heading into our 8th year of blogging here. That is roughly 5.3 times longer than the years I spent in graduate school and twice as long as I spent in college, which is weird to think about.

Thanks as always for being readers. Remember, too, we’re always happy to hear your ideas or interests in features or book lists. Just leave a comment or shoot us an email at stacked.books [[at]] gmail.

For anyone wondering: the winner of the massive feminist YA giveaway has been notified and I’ll be building your amazing book recommendation list soon! There were over 300 entries, so there are a lot of great titles to make sure I get on the list.

Filed Under: blogging, blogs

This Week at Book Riot

November 27, 2015 |

book riot

 

Here’s a look at what I’ve written at Book Riot over the last couple of weeks:

 

  • 3 YA books to read if you’re a fan of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale.

 

  • A round-up of graphic memoirs about foreign places that might help you be a better global citizen — it’s for this week’s “3 On a YA Theme,” but it includes some titles that are of teen crossover appeal and not strictly YA.

 

And finally. . .

 

gift library-card-notebook

 

Great bookish gifts for $20 or less. I wouldn’t mind seeing some of these show up at my house.

 

 

Filed Under: book riot

Dare to Disappoint by Ozge Samanci

November 26, 2015 |

DTD_tourbanner

 

We are taking part in the blog tour for Ozge Samanci’s Dare to Disappoint today. You can and should check out the entire schedule for the tour here and visit those sites for even more peeks into the book and process behind it (it’s neat!).

 

DareToDisappoint
I know very, very little about Turkey. The only history I know is what I learned in my Western Civilization course freshman year of high school and a little bit from European History my senior year. Even in those cases, the bulk of what’s taught is very historical — centuries past — with little or no exploration of more contemporary events.

Ozge Samanci’s Dare to Disappoint was a really worthwhile read for me, since it was and is a reference point for this particular area of history now. This personal memoir looks at what life was like growing up in a country that itself was learning to grow up and find an identity.

Samanci is a second child in a family where her older sister excelled. This was the case in school and in other venues, and her parents were pleased with her. Ozge, on the other hand, was far less interested in her studies. Sure, she completed them — this is a key element of the story, as the Turkish education system is very different than the US system — but she didn’t excel nor quite have the passion for it in the same way her sister did.

The bulk of this story centers around Ozge coming to terms with what it is she wants to be doing with her life. Does she want to become an explorer? An actress? Go on to a good college to make her parents happy at the expense of her own happiness? Can she work to make both her dreams in theater and her parents dreams for her education happen simultaneously? These questions frame the entirety of the story in a way that any reader, no matter where they live, wrestles with. But what makes this stand out beyond that is the historical context. We learn along the way the values and systems that exist in Turkey and how they shift over the course of Ozge’s childhood and adolescence. Where once few choices existed, the growth in consumerism and imports meant that choices one had in every arena from eating to clothing to one’s future shifts and adjusts. It’s in those cultural changes that Ozge further marinates on the questions of what to make of her own life.

This should easily explain the book’s title Dare to Disappoint.

What’s most standout in this particular graphic novel, though, is the art. Samanci utilizes mixed materials to create her story. While the bulk of art is what you’d expect in terms of drawings, there are a lot of unexpected surprises that go in to creating an image:

DTD

 

On the bottom right-hand page, you can see how Samanci weaves polished rocks into the art. There are other examples of this throughout, including found art collages, buttons, and even some unexpected surprises (which you’ll see further down this post!). This design is really friendly and appealing, which makes it a nice contrast to some of the heavy political elements in the text itself. Which isn’t to say those parts are hard to read or unnecessary; instead, what Samanci is able to do is balance those topics with her own personal, singular, teen experience. It’s relatable, rather than above her head — except when it is!

My biggest criticism, though, is that a lot of Ozge’s own experiences post-realization of what it was she wanted to do with her life is given short shrift in the end. It wraps up almost too quickly. I found myself wanting much more than I got, in particular because I saw so much of her growing up process along the way. There were pages and chapters dedicated to her education and her experimentation, but her wake up call that she wanted to be an artist and draw comes very late in the story and the journey through that realization — rather than the journey to that realization — isn’t here. I suspect this might be so there’s room for a second memoir that goes through that journey, but I wouldn’t have minded another chapter here, just to give me more of a taste for how this happened.

Readers who love graphic memoirs will want to pick Dare to Disappoint up. It’s not necessarily a straight read alike to Persepolis, as the angle on this particular book is much more about the journey to finding one’s passion in life, but readers who want to be better global citizens or read stories about real people in other parts of the world will find those elements interesting to think about in comparison. Readers who are fascinated by the art here will want to spend time at the artist’s Tumblr, too, which showcases her unique style of mixed media. This book is perfectly fine for younger teen readers and has great crossover appeal to adults, too. The toughest elements for younger readers may be some of the political elements, but they’ll skip over them to follow Ozge’s personal story and lose nothing for it.

 

***

One of the unique elements of Samanci’s style is she’s not only working in illustrations, but she also creates collages out of various items throughout the book. This adds a whole new layer to the story. Here, she’s sharing a little bit about an unusual — but brilliant — item that found its way into the finished edition of the book.

miniature_Muffin_cups

Miniature Muffin Cup

There was an amazing store where I lived: Tom Thumb Hobby and Crafts. Unfortunately, they moved somewhere far. This store was full of paper, beads, miniature houses, model making materials, sewing and baking supplies, and many more. Tom Thumb was so mind opening for a comics artist like me who combines comics with collage. While wondering in the store I saw the miniature muffin cups. I thought, I can make skirts with these in my collages. As if my editor Margaret Ferguson read my mind, a couple days after I bought the muffin cups she suggested me to put a skirt on the main character in one of the frames. My miniature muffin cups took its place in Dare to Disappoint.

Filed Under: blog tour, book reviews, foreign settings, Graphic Novels, review, Reviews, Young Adult, young adult non-fiction

We’re taking a short break

November 16, 2015 |

Hello readers!

We’re taking a short break on STACKED to meet some deadlines, to sink into some reading for reading’s sake, as well as finish up organizing and arranging our site post-redesign. You can check out the categories and organizational system we’ve been working on when you pop onto our main site page. Drop down menus should be useful and intuitive.

We will be back to our regular scheduled posting on American Thanksgiving.

Here’s to some great reading in the meantime!

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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