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  • 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
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
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      • 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

Field Notes: Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins

April 9, 2010 |

What would you get if you combined Twilight’s paranormal elements with Harry Potter’s school of magic?

Something close to Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins.

This book — part one of a trilogy — follows Sophie as she is sent to Hectate Hall to confront her witchy side. Quite literally, that is. She’s a witch who has used her powers wrong one too many times, and now her mom has sent her to get herself together.

But what Sophie discovers is that her family may be a lot darker than she first believed. And, quite frankly, she may not be a witch at all.

Hex Hall is not the most original book or premise, but what stands out is a rollicking hilarious main character. I found Sophie a breath of fresh air. She’s sarcastic and drops a good allusion that is worthy of many chuckle.

Hawkins’s book will appeal to paranormal or magic fans, but I think the real appeal will be to people who wonder what the big deal is with those genres. This will make you laugh and will leave you with just enough mystery to keep the story line moving. A couple of deaths — or near death incidents — and a suspect in the only enrolled vampire, who happens to be Sophie’s roommate, propel the plot forward.

The ending gives enough of a twist to make readers seek out the second book. It’s worth the read but it won’t be the next great work, nor will it develop a cult following a la the books from which it lifts elements. Sophisiticated readers will be annoyed, though Sophie will redeem the book for them.

Filed Under: Debut Author Challenge, field notes, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Getting graphic

April 8, 2010 |

I’ve read a few graphic novels, but I’m by no means an expert. Quite frankly, I’m undereducated in the format, so I signed up for a continuing education class through the University of Wisconsin’s SLIS program. As part of the class, we’re to read 5 graphic novels from a provided list; the overachiever I am, I have decided to tackle more than the 5 required (that’s why I paid for the class, right?).

Since many kind readers have been asking what I’m choosing to read, I thought I’d give quick peeks at my reading and my thoughts. Up first: Fun Home by Alison Bechdel and Runaways, volume 1 by Brian Vaughan.

Fun Home is a graphic memoir of Alison Bechdel’s life at home. More specifically, it’s a portrayal of her father. Her father was a master of appearances, keeping an immaculate home and facade built for himself and his family. As Alison grew up, though, she began to learn there were many deep secrets hidden in the family that revolved around her father. He’d been involved in a number of homosexual relationships, often with men younger than himself.

What works so well in the novel, though, is that it is also a telling of Alison’s own story of choosing to come out to her family. A handful of days following her decision to come out, her father was killed by a truck while crossing the street. As readers, we see parallels between her life and his, drawn out for us vividly in a way that text alone just would not render as powerfully.

Fun Home is a dense read. The language and the literary and cultural allusions some times went beyond my understanding, and I’m fairly well read. Whoever claims that graphic novels are a gateway to reading or are not deep has clearly not explored the format well. Bechdel’s work is engaging and requires close reading and analyzing. The art worked well for me here. But clearly, not everyone has felt that way. This book wouldn’t have worked any other way, and it’s a shame that it has faced such backlash. Fun Home is memorable in a pained way, much in the way of David Small’s Stitches. I’d consider them read alikes, though certainly for adults, not teens.

Runaways, volume 1 is the first book in a 10 or 11 book series — I say 10 or 11 because the series keeps growing, and it now isn’t primarily written by Vaughan. This is a series I knew a bit about prior to the class since it circulates so well at my library, and I’m regularly asked for the next volumes (which I, of course, purchase).

Runaways introduces a group of teens who find out one night that their parents are not who they think they are; they’re much more evil. They witness their parents kill a woman, and now, they’re out to get to the bottom of the story. Are they superheroes or evildoers?

Vaughan’s story worked well for me, and it was compelling enough to make me want to pick up the next volume to find out what happens. However, I felt the art wasn’t as strong as the text. It felt a little too juvenile for the story, which I found quite mature (and some of the allusions they make are, I think, beyond today’s teens — but clearly that isn’t deterring them from picking this series up). I kind of feel like this series might be targeted at the 20-somethings, but I’d need to read more to figure that out. Likewise, the colors don’t work so well for me, but they’re pretty standard Marvel style.

Vaughan’s book was a quick read, and as I mentioned, had enough to it to make me seek out the following volume, even though the art wasn’t what did it for me. In Fun Home, I was drawn by both the story and the art, but in Runaways, it was 100% the story.

Have you read either of these or another graphic novel that just worked for you? I’m expanding my knowledge, and I’d love any good recommendations you have for me. At Stacked, we’ve reviewed three and discussed the value of them, but I’ve read a handful more and am always open to more.

Filed Under: Graphic Novels, Uncategorized

Dirty Little Secrets by C. J. Omololu

April 7, 2010 |

Janssen hit something on the head last week in stating that there has been a lot of hype over a number of young adult titles lately that just don’t live up to it. There have been some big budgets on a number of titles — especially debuts — that have left me wondering what the point was. However, one book has slid under the radar for a few months now, and it’s thanks to a colleague across town from me that I picked it up and immediately decided I needed to order it for my library collection.

Dirty Little Secrets by C. J. Omololu, weighing in at just about 200 pages, packs an unbelievable amount in a short book. It is worth every minute of your time.

Lucy keeps secrets. Her best friend doesn’t know them. Her soon-to-be boyfriend doesn’t know them, nor will he. The secrets remain between her and her mother, as well as her distance brother and even more distant sister.

The secrets are the items her mother hoards in their home.

Lucy’s mom keeps everything, from old, rotting food, to Christmas gifts meant to be given years ago. Her mother seems normal from the outside, working in a medical facility, but she is far from okay both inside her house and inside her own head.

Unfortunately, we never get to know Lucy’s mother. She dies immediately in the book. But Lucy ISN’T sad about it. In fact, she’s terrified that the secrets will get out, and she cannot imagine a fate worse than making the news for living in a house of squalor.

Dirty Little Secrets takes place over the course of just over one day. Lucy is a character who you will be unable to forget, as she drags the reader through emotional torment. At once, I feel sorry for her mother and hate her mother, but throughout the book, I was far more concerned about Lucy. I wanted her to be safe and get out, and I wanted her to overcome the troubles she had been keeping without ruining a sweet budding relationship with a boy. She’d never had one before, of course, thanks to keeping the secrets.

We are dragged through this house and the accumulation of things in this book, and in such a manner, we are completely invested in Lucy’s safety. Although it would be easy to label her heartless about the death of her mother, we also see how this is a moment of liberation for Lucy. She covers her mother in a sheet and sets to getting things clean enough at home to make rescue less about the mess and more about the loss of life.

But it is her meddling sister that won’t let this happen as she wants.

I can’t write more about this book because the ending is completely unexpected and utterly fitting. Dirty Little Secrets left me near tears throughout the entire story, though the very end almost made me smile. I felt Lucy’s decision.

Omololu’s story never once feels rushed or overwritten. It was extremely well executed, and the pacing was spot on. When I was 10 pages from the end, I worried there was going to be a sequel to end the story; fortunately, a strong writer pulled off a surprise twist that makes this a stand alone knock-out of a book. It is completely realistic and explores a hidden world that we do indeed only hear about in the news. Although Omololu states she doesn’t write from experience, her work is informed through her work with a hoarder’s organization.

This book was so compelling and so important that I nominated it for ALA’s BFYA consideration. It is my hope that it gets much-deserved attention that way.

Filed Under: Debut Author Challenge, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Patting oneself on the back

April 7, 2010 |

I ran across this while putting together an audiobook order at work this week:

It’s small, so you’ll have to open it up. For those of you who still can’t see, it’s the sales page for the May 2010 publication of The Daughters by Joanna Philbin (yes, it’s the daughter of Regis).

But what’s weird here is what’s under it: the sales spot for the second book, which comes out at the end of 2010. And what does it say?

“Joanna Philbin presents the sequel to her immensely popular novel, The Daughters.”

Apparently, the book has become a smash hit a month before it’s even available. Sure, I’m aware it’s possible, but that kind of advertisement is downright deceptive.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Young Adult

Cover spotlights: Lurlene McDaniel

April 6, 2010 |

One of my favorite authors when I was a teen was Lurlene McDaniel. Yep, the overly sentimental, medical dramas* featuring teens who were dying or near death and, of course, in love. I was a teen during her heyday, though she’s far from slowing down. Like Richard Peck, her covers have changed a lot over the years. What always seemed to work for her, though, was that her series books featured very similar cover styles — and boy was she ever the series writer! I loved them.

I though it’d be fun to take that walk down memory lane:

Six Months to Live 1985

Hold Fast the Dream 1985. Nothing speaks 80s romance like the sepia tones, the big hair, and two dashing men, one clearly good and one clearly evil.


Why Did She Have to Die? 1986. Perhaps this is one of the first covers featuring the “things being held” theme that is so popular now.


A Time to Die 1992


If I Should Die Before I Wake 1992. I’m afraid that still wouldn’t apologize for the shorts…


Reach for Tomorrow 1999 (and book #12 in the “One Last Wish” series, still holding onto the similar cover theme)


Angels Watching Over Me 1996 (book #1 in the series featuring an Amish family – my favorite series of hers)


Angels of Mercy 1999

The Girl Death Left Behind 1999

Journey of Hope 2004. This combines two novels, Angel of Mercy and Angel of Hope. This is the first of her books starting to change direction in cover art.

Angels in Pink: Kathleen’s Story 2004


Angels in Pink: Raina’s Story 2005 (the hair in the face!)


Briana’s Gift 2006. Things in hands again.


Prey 2008. I LOVE this cover. It is so creepy and yet so perfectly gives an idea of what the book will be about.


Breathless 2009. Interestingly, my co-booktalker talked this book in the winter. She didn’t know Lurlene McDaniel was a pretty prolific writer for teens prior to reading this. It’s so different looking from her other titles.


Heart to Heart 2010. Reminds me of an adult romance for sure.

What do you think? Are you a Lurlene McDaniel fan? Any cover favorites?

* This doesn’t mean they’re not good books; they’re definitely of a specific drama that has such appeal to teens. I still like her books, since they’re quick reads with at least one strong and memorable character. And some aren’t even medically-related. Those were the ones that I ate up like crazy, though.

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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