Written by: Jennifer L. Holm
Thursday, February 29, 2024
The Fourteenth Goldfish
Posted by Dragon at 12:40 AM 0 rave reviews
Labels: adolescents, aging, family, fiction, science, speculative
Monday, February 26, 2024
The Mysteries
Written by: Bill Watterson and John Kascht
First line: Long ago, the forest was dark and deep.
Why you should read this book: With its haunting illustrations and surreal text, it's an allegory about the fear of the unknown, and the respect this fear properly inspires, and the consequences of familiarity replacing that respect with contempt. I think. The main reason to read it is probably the fact that it was written by one of the most popular comic strip artists of the late eighties/early nineties.
Why you shouldn't read this book: Despite appearances, this isn't a kids' book; I'm not really sure what its intended audience is, except for "people who were sad that Bill Watterson stopped drawing Calvin and Hobbes.
The Whole Story of Half a Girl
Written by: Veera Hianandani
First line: I'm in school, sitting with my hair hanging long down the back of my chair, my arm around my best friend, Sam.
Why you should read this book: Sonia's father is Indian and her mother is Jewish, but until her dad lost his job and she had to transfer from her fun, hippie school to a public school, she never even thought about her ethnic identity, let alone questions of class and who to sit with at lunch. Now she's torn between the popular cheerleaders who don't understand her, and the kids who might understand her but aren't cool, while mourning the loss of her old relationships. And all this becomes meaningless when her father's mental health becomes the focus of her entire life.
Why you shouldn't read this book: For a middle grade novel, it tackles numerous difficult issues.
Posted by Dragon at 8:09 PM 0 rave reviews
Labels: education, fiction, health, identity, kids, novel, psychology, school