fbpx

By Foundling Friend Celia McGee

 

Almost Super

by Marion Jensen (Harper)

AGES 8-12

 

   Leap years—when April hangs a 29th day on its rear–have a few, frankly corny, traditions attached. Among the rich and famous, Ja Rule has a Leap Year birthday. So did Lord Byron

 

  But it has a whole different meaning for the Bailey and Johnson families of Split Rock, an ordinary town in Middle America, where every April 29, those over 12 (in real years) in both families are granted superpowers. The zany result is that they also have to try very hard to blend in with their non-super-powered neighbors. One way appears to be with dorkiness (unless that’s not intentional), and with dorky names like Verna or Rodney or Rafter (that’s the first name of the teenage Bailey who narrates this tale, and what kind of name is that, anyway?). “Technically,” Rafter’s grandfather says, “we’re a bunch of freaks.”

 

   The problem is that the Baileys and Johnsons are sworn enemies—the Baileys proud they’re the super heroes, and the Johnsons the super villains. They fight all the time  (Rafter has begun to notice that Johnsons always show up in tea, which he suspects is a slick move). Some can fly, some are shape-shifters, others shoot fire or water out of their fingertips, others are just plain super-smart (this comes in handy in this Internet, computer science, and hacking age). Rafter is particularly scared of Juanita Johnson, who goes to his school, has been sending him dirty looks even before they get their superpowers, and, truth be told, strikes Rafter at inopportune moments as rather pretty. They are both about to learn that there are some qualities  in life even better than super powers, and that super powers are, in fact, pretty useless without them.

 

  Dawns April 29, with Rafter, his younger brother, Benny, and, doubtless, Juanita waiting with bated, about to be super-powered breath. But something goes terribly wrong. Their super power gifts are duds. Benny can turn his belly button from an innie to an outie and back again. Rafter can light polyester on fire with the touch of a hand. While Juanita—dud gift, too, and it has to do with spitting. As the three huddle drearily in their duddliness, they become close. To their shock, they learn each family thinks it’s the super heroes, and the other, the super villains. That leaves the dud-scarred threesome with the realization that maybe people, super-powered or not, are meant to get along. And that super powers make you feel better if you use them for good rather battling. Juanita has an uncle,for instance, who, though not of the super ilk, is a painter, and uses his art like a super power to bring out an inner truth in his sitters (his portrait of Juanita is lovely indeed).

 

   Thankfully, these three super-duds have not been robbed of their quick minds—put three heads together and their emerges a notably superior intelligence—or of the sense that something weird is happening in Split Rock. All three glimpsed unprecedented flashes of light, for example, just before they got their non-super powers.  Might someone just have been practicing on them before getting around to the destroying the fully super-powered? With courageous snooping, they encounter some sinister super-whackos bent on just that. Rafter, Benny and Juanita have to get to this scary scoundrel before he gets to the other Baileys and Johnsons.

 

   They’re resourceful, especially when acting as one, and once their families find out about the dastardly fellow—October Jones by name, and the leader of a super criminal clan—they not only strike a permanent truce, but consolidate to hunt down October and his gang before the bad guys get ideas about Baileys and Johnsons in other towns.

 

   Super hero or not, anyone can look into that future and figure there will be a sequel.    

 

 

The Ghost of the Mary Celeste

by Valerie Martin (Doubleday/Nan.A.Talese)

AGES 14 AND UP, AND ADULTS

 

   Hannah Briggs is 13 when the spirits of the dead start manifesting themselves to her, speaking of their loved ones, their passions and hopes for them—some rather creepy. It’s 1872 and the height of the 19th-centry Spiritualist movement. Hannah’s particular spirit visitor is her sister Sarah, who disappeared, under unknown circumstances, along with her young daughter and husband, off the merchant ship the Mary Celeste, which her husband captained. Nor was the crew anywhere to be found when the vessel was sighted, adrift and bereft of any human presence, in the waters off the Azores. It was towed o Gibraltar, to much rumor and speculation. Mutiny? Pirates?

 

 

   In the enthralling novel that Valerie Martin has conjured from this notorious piece of maritime history, we are made witness to what could have happened to the ship instead–horrifying, pitiless, inescapably violent, and beyond control of man. History is never just history. It’s a shifting, variable, subjective record of things past. Martin has extensive knowledge of how this lends itself to perhaps our favorite form of literary expression, fiction–which The Ghost of the Mary Celeste is also about.

 

   Hannah and generations of her seafaring Massachusetts family have lost many to the sea. So many that there is talk of a family “curse.” It is just such losses—traumatizing to those left behind and inexorably longing for the dead’s every familiar touch—that, not so many years after the Mary Celeste incident, sends hundreds flocking to see the famed and beautiful spirit medium and public speaker Violet Petra. They seek her out in private séances to help them communicate with and gain solace from their dear departed. For Violet’s message is this: take joy in the fact that the spirits are among us at all times, for the human and the supernatural world are as one. Spirits are here to announce, through Violet in her trances, that they are waiting patiently and tenderly for us to join them in their transcendently harmonious, picturesque and eternally spring-like beyond.

 

   Violet, then, is all the fashion, taken up by wealthy families whose sadness she has lifted, traveling in style, gracing the attractive campgrounds and vacation communities that have sprung up for the Spiritualist faithful, and mesmerizing all with her strange eyes and flowing hair. But she’s also under the scrutiny of the young female reporter Phoebe Grant, who is determined to prove that, like all so-called mediums, Violet is a fake. What she does find out is that Violet suffers from her own heartbreaks, her own cruelly brief love affair, and the growing fear that her powers are diminishing, her glories along with them. She and Phoebe become friendly, and one day, just by chance—or is it?—she thrusts into her hands the issue of Cornhill, the English magazine, with a version of the story of the Mary Celeste written under a pseudonym by a then unknown Conan Doyle. Doyle really did write and publish such a story, which helped start his career, and he threads through Martin’s novel, under often fictional circumstances, but with his factual racism stupendously intact and only momentarily shaken when he ends up making the acquaintance of an African-American intellectual and civil rights pioneer (also based on an historical figure). Throw in William James and the American Society for Psychical Research, the religious and historical forces that erupted at the height of the, Spiritualist fervor, and, in Martin’s hands, the blend becomes half-shrouded mystery mixed with cunning clues.

 

   I’d also like to note that the novelist Colleen Gleason recently published her first YA novel, the captivating Clockwork Scarab (Chronicle Books), about a detective duo formed by Mina Holmes (Sherlock’s niece) and Evaline Stoker (Bram Stoker is her dad). Sir Conan Doyle would be both shocked and proud.

 

The Tyrant’s Daughter

by J.C. Carleson (Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers)

AGES 12 AND UP

 

   Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, North Korea, Ukraine—over the decades and also in recent weeks we have watched these countries and others like them, at their most unstable and vicious, scroll across our television and computer screens, kick starting our outrage at dictators, totalitarians and self-appointed royal dynasties. Some of the more sickening images involve the mind-blowingly immense, incalculably costly, invariably vulgar palaces and estates built on the backs of the citizens their rulers have impoverished and oppressed, while sending the rest of their untold millions flying off to Swiss bank accounts.

 

   Author J.C. Carleson, a former undercover C.I.A. officer, draws on her experiences—mainly Baghdad, she writes in her Author’s Note—to open the doors on the intrigue, carelessness, frivolities, family bonds and close-bound murders that live within those mighty, well-guarded walls. There the families of the tyrants—unless displaced by coups or revolutionary eruptions —tend to remain, with few exceptions, obliviously cut off from economic and political realities, and also the ugly truths about those who may do evil but genuinely love them. Tyranny has a human face unseen by those kept innocent and ignorant by the very people who would sell out all others, wives, siblings, and trusted associates included.

 

   Such is the world Laila thinks she has left behind when, at 15, she, her mother and her little brother (at 6 already “The Little King”) are forced to flee their unnamed Muslim country after an overthrow orchestrated by her father’s brother, who murders him in front of his wife. Now, escorted there by a shady C.I.A. agent, they live in shabby, lonely togetherness in suburban Washington, D.C. Laila’s beautiful, perfect mother tries to keep up appearances while shopping at J.C.Penney, and beginning to drink. Laila is so desperate to fit into American culture that, about to enter the local high school, she asks for an “interpreter” not of the English language (which she has been taught to speak perfectly, with a British accent) but the customs of American adolescence. She finds that in Emmy, her first sincere friend.

 

   But, like the layers of burka, veils, scarves and formless clothing Laila’s mother used to shed in airplane bathrooms on their trips to Paris and other shopping  and social meccas, Laila begins to catch disturbing incongruities. Strange mountain tribesmen from her country hold meetings with her mother in the family living room. She picks up on unsettling conversations between her mother and Darren, their C.I.A. shadow, and must face not only the atrocious facts about her father and their background but what her mother’s increasingly stealthy and cold-blooded behavior might mean. In Laila’s psychological unraveling and depression, she even suspects Ian, the cool and kind-hearted schoolmate she takes as her boyfriend. She is also forced to change her her mind about Amir, the youngest of the tribesmen, when she hears why he is really in the U.S., and listens to him describe the chemical weapons used against his village back home. Declaring herself “The Invisible Queen,” she decides to plot against the plotters—whomever they may reveal themselves to be. That’s not so easy, more like devastating. But Laila will carry on with the quality most lacking in how she was raised—as her briefly honest mother says, “love.” It’s an informed, open-hearted, lessons-learned love for individuals with a right to her affection, for for those shut out of palaces and denied freedom, everywhere. Whether the people and life choices she encounters along her path are worthy, she will now be able to be the judge. 

 

 

Meeting Cezanne

by Michael Morpurgo, illustrated by Francois Place (Candlewick Press)

AGES 7-10

 

   If Michael Morpurgo’s name rings a bell with American parents, it’s likely they know him as the author of War Horse, which started life as a book for young readers, then morphed into a play that took audiences by storm. He was also the British Children’s Laureate from 2003 to 2005.

 

   That he has a profound understanding of troubled boys War Horse showed us, and Meeting Cezanne, though a far gentler, slimmer, more sunny book, has some of that element. The sunny part especially comes through in the alluring illustrations by Francois Place, Morpurgo’s frequent collaborator, which evoke the 60s of the book’s time period and sharing the glories and details of Provence.   

 

    It’s hard for a youngster to part from a parent, and Yannick really doesn’t get why he must leaves the mother he loves dearly–there seems not to be a father in the picture of their Parisian existence—to stay with relatives in distant Provence when she has to have an unspecified operation and spend a month in bed. Will they all be like his “big and bustling” Aunt Mathilde, who visits from the south on occasion and irritatingly smothers Yannick with hugs and kisses, and pinches his cheek, way to hard. His mother tries to convince him with stories of his Uncle Bruno’s convivial inn, and shows him a book of Cezanne paintings of the countryside near Aunt Mathilde’s house, “and he loved it there,” she says, “and he’s the greatest painter in the world.”

 

  Good to her word, Provence is beautiful and Yannick is picked up in a Deux Chevaux, no less, though his gorgeous, older cousin Amandine is snooty and rude, and he is expected to pitch in like the rest of the family working at the inn. Uncle Bruno takes a fatherly pity on the lonely Yannick, and starts teaching him cookery’s craft. Little does Bruno know that, despite this new education, he’s about to commit a terrible crime when the inn’s “best customer” comes to dine and leaves a doodle in one corner of the paper tablecloth. After dinner, Yannick discards the table cover with all the others, not realizing that this honored guest always leaves a little drawing for Uncle Bruno like this–treasured because “he’s the most famous painter in the world.” Soldiers don’t have a premium on courage, and young Yannick seeks out the great man, identifiable throughout by his striped cotton sweater. He apologizes, and gets a drawing from him (along with another father figure?) in return. But there’s something about that striped sweater…. Hiking back proudly to the inn with his drawing, everyone is impressed that he’s been befriended by…Picasso, Cezanne’s artistic heir.  That earns Bruno respect all around—and a heavenly kiss from Amandine. As for his meeting the great artists, “They’re both wonderful, and I’ve met both of them—if you see what I’m saying.” For his part, Yannick feels called to become a writer. If you see what I’m saying.

 

 

Our friends at Ellary’s Greens are all about healthy eating for kids and adults! They’ve offered these great tips to help you and your family survive the holidays without overindulging (while still enjoying the festivities of course!).

 

1. Feed your kids a light meal or snack before going to the big party.  Things like: whole grain crackers, dried or fresh fruit, nuts, raw veggies, and hummus. 

 

2. When your kids arrive home starving and ready to eat, have healthy snacks sitting out on a counter, desk or table ready to go. 

-Try veggies and hummus on a platter cut up and ready to go when your kids come in the door.  You can buy baby carrots, baby tomatoes, red, yellow, and orange peppers, and cucumbers (only needing to cut the cucumbers and the peppers). 

-Unsalted peanuts and almonds are GREAT in a bowl with raisins for a savory-sweet treat.

-Grapes are nice too!

 

3.    When heading to parties try this philosophy: “Let’s have one here, and take the rest home”.  Delayed gratification means they won’t make impulsive decisions.  Often kids are of the mindset “If I don’t have it now, it will never be here again.”  They may get home and realize they don’t even want the sweets.  Or they may see all of the other healthy eating options at home.  They may get home and see there are too many sweets in their bag to handle.

 

4.    Offer to bring a dish to the party, so you know there will be at least one healthy item available.

 

5.   Teach your kids that it’s okay to say ‘No’.  If they are not hungry, they don’t need to accept the treats being offered to them.  And they can always bring the treats home, so they don’t have the feeling they’re missing out.

 

6. Trading can work: trading in Halloween candy for a toy or money.  The same can hold true for Christmas and Hanukkah candy.  Then bring the treats to your local police or fire station – they always appreciate it!

 

7. Save treats to donate and give to someone in need or who isn’t invited to parties.  Help your child feel good about sharing treats and foregoing gorging in the name of helping someone else and brightening his/her day.

 

Happy and Healthy Holidays to all! 

Here are some wonderful books to give as gifts in the spirit of winter holidays to the children and teens in your life. Courtesy of Foundling friend Celia McGee. Enjoy!    

 

AGES PRE-SCHOOL TO 3

   Pat-a- Cake and All Fall Down, by Mary Brigid Barrett, illustrated by LeUyen Pham (Candlewick Press) are two jolly board books that transform a duo of old-fashioned nursery rhymes into contemporary language and situations that little ones will relate to, with peals of laughter.

Pat A Cake and All Fall Down

   With PANTONE Box of Colour (Abrams Appleseed), the company known worldwide since the 50s for providing the standard language for color communication from designer to manufacturer to retailer to customer, has turned six of its colors into six toddler-size peek-a-boo board books, which will teach tots about colors, shapes and objects, as well as purely delight.

   Emma Dodd’s Forever (Templar Books), which has holiday-glittery bits of foil worked into its illustrations, Sarah L. Thomson’s Cub’s Big World, illustrated by Joe Cepeda (Harcourt Children’s Books), and, also for slightly older children, Naoko Stoop’s Red Knit Cap Girl to the Rescue (Megan Tingley Books/Little, Brown) all center on one of this season’s favorite and cutest animals—polar bears. To little readers these present little polar bear cubs, who sometimes get lost or up to no good, but ultimately find their way home to a mother’s love.

   Toys Galore, by Peter Stein, illustrated by Bob Staake (Candlewick Press) is a veritable toy chest of zany children and zanier toys accompanied by quick-stepping rhymes that tout the playful powers of both.  Last but not least emerges the most special power, but no spoiler here.

 

AGES  4-7

   Two more books that glisten with sparkles, Tallulah’s Nutcracker, by Marilyn Singer, illustrated by Alexandra Boiger (Clarion Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) and The Very Fairy Princess Sparkles in the Snow, by legendary actress Julie Andrews and her daughter Emma Walton Hamilton (their illustrator is Christine Davenier) (Little, Brown), remind us that Christmas isn’t Christmas without “The Nutcracker” while in Geraldine’s (aka The Very Fairy Princess) hometown,  the holiday season isn’t the holiday season without the Winter Wonderland Festival. Both Tallulah and Geraldine are sure they are destined to be stars—and they are, just not as they expected.

The Very Fairy Princess

   In Olivia and the Ice Show: A Lift the Flap Story, adapted from the popular Nickelodeon show by Tina Gallo and illustrated by Shane L. Johnson (Simon Spotlight/Simon & Schuster) we get another performer in the making. Olivia (may we call her the famous young pig?) is determined to be cast front and center in the “Cinderella on Ice” show coming to town. She’s a very good skater, but her friend Julian, who helps her concoct a practice rink, is not. But Olivia is not so stuck up that she doesn’t take time to aid Julian in mastering skating, and the results are fun and rewarding.

   Snowflakes Fall, by Patricia MacLachlan and Steven Kellogg (Random House) is a charming, frolicsome treat of a book with a subtly bittersweet ending featuring a row of snow angels. Behind its message of no two snowflakes or children being alike is a moving backstory. The book commemorates the lost children of Sandy Hook and Newtown, Ct. (where Steven Kellogg lived for 35 years), and in their honor publisher Random House has made a donation to the Sandy Hook School Support Fund and is also donating 25,000 new books to the national literacy organization First Book in support of children everywhere.

   Almost smack in the middle of movie star Julianne Moore’s sweet and inclusive My Mom Is a Foreigner, But Not To Me, illustrated by Meilo So (Chronicle Books) is a colorful two-page spread about different holidays around the world, including wintertime’s Chinese New Year, the Scottish Burns Night, St. Lucia Day, Christmas, Kwanzaa, Hanukkah, and the St. Nicholas Day.  “We celebrate some holidays on a different day or two,” it says there, and, if you’re Dutch, “…sometimes I find PRESENTS stuck inside my SHOE.”

   Believe it or not, in  DragonQuest, by Allan Baillie, illustrated by Wayne Harris (Candlewick Press),  “the last dragon” turns out to live up high above the snowline in mountains few men dare to climb. But not the intrepid young lad who, with an elderly guide full of wisdom about the perils of nature and the supernatural they must brave to attain their chilly goal, grows up quite a bit as he uses courage as his other companion.  For slightly older friends or siblings (8-12), the lavishly designed and informative 10th anniversary edition of Dr. Ernest Drake’s Dragonology: The Complete Book of Dragons (Candlewick Press) will make a nifty gift.

 Dragon Quest

 

AGES 8-12

   Sophie Scott and her Antarctic adventures in Sophie Goes South, by Alison Lester (Houghton Mifflin Books for Children), will appeal to the younger end of this age group, but that doesn’t mean the tantalizing story of a girl and her dad on a trip to the lands bordering the South Pole isn’t also long on real details and the occasional page of photographs from the regions they visit. Does it elude Sophie that she has the same last name as the famous Antarctic explorer? No, it does not.

   Just in under the wire for gift-giving purposes, that weird and wonderful Lemony Snicket has managed to publish  the second book in his new “All the Wrong Questions” series,  “When Did You See Her Last?”  with vintage-meets-mad-scientist type illustrations, again by Seth (Little, Brown). Still living in the bedraggled town of Stain’d-by-the-Sea, Snicket the young P.I. is put onto a case involving the disappearance and possible kidnapping of the town’s debutante. This somehow gets tangled up with his chemistry-loving crush, Ellington Feint, a curious statue of  a local hero,  a laudanum pusher, underground passageways, and Mr. Snicket’s typical who-knew-nothing-and-when-did-they-not-know-it.  Breath will stay bated for the next installment.

   Tom Angleberger’s The Origami Yoda Files, a boxed set of all four “Origami Yoda” novels, illustrated by Angleberger and Jason Rosenstock (Amulet Books), reminds us that few authors do a better job of unfolding (get it?) the trials, tricks, absurdity and whacky victories of middle school. Just look at that adorably bizarre “Star Wars” paper knockoff smiling—or is it glaring?—at you from the front of the box, and you want to dive right into the dramedy of the McQuarrie Middle School’s troop of misfits and dreamers. The ultimate question is: do you believe in magic, or is it the strength imagination?

   A treasure trove of tales about The Mysterious Benedict Society also gets the boxed-set treatment in Trenton Lee Stewart’s The Mysterious Benedict Society Collection, illustrated by Diana Sudyka  (Megan Tingley Books/Little, Brown), with the well-loved prequel, The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict of course coming last. In the first book, young Reynie Muldoon of Stonetown takes the enigmatic series of tests that will land him in the company of three other out-of-the-ordinary geniuses at a rather odd boarding school, and from then on it’s one challenge, dastardly plot, dangerous puzzle, death-defying feat, and lesson about friendship after another in the battle for good to prevail. No clueless reader may apply.

Mysterious

   Animation Studio, by Helen Piercy, with various illustrators (Candlewick Press), comes in a box, and looks like a retro something aimed at toddler siblings. But it is, in fact, a clever kit devised for the very up-to-date, sophisticated middle-school pastime of learning all about animation—to the point that you may even be able to figure out how to send out your own story-boarded, dramatically lit, action-packed animated movies over your cell phone.

 

Ages 12 and up

  Of the exquisitely produced Eragon Collector’s Edition: Inheritance, Book One (Alfred A. Knopf), author Christopher Paolini writes: “When I was a kid”—keep in mind that he wrote this myth-laden best-seller when he was fifteen—“I thought every book ought to be bound in leather. My stance has mellowed over time, but even so, there’s something special about a book clad in leather and adorned with marbled endpapers. Even more so if it’s illustrated.” Some of the fanciful, full-color illustrations are by Paolini himself.  In its intricacies of clans and the mystical, the original saga, published in 2003, about a boy suddenly dealt the fate of defending a well-intentioned folk against an evil dictator and his forces of darkness, foreshadows the ardor now also felt for “Game of Thrones.”

   Before there was a Katniss, a Stephanie Meyer or the many other authors and characters who newly keep us us enthralled by the sanguinary and otherworldly, there was Lois Lowry with The Giver, in 1993. To celebrate its 20th anniversary, Houghton Mifflin has produced a boxed set of The Giver Quartet—The Giver, Gathering Blue, Messenger and Son—and its brilliant evocation of a dystopian world bereft of feeling, real families, and the idea that death as we know it exists. Is escape possible, and what happens then?

   Beware beautiful creatures, or rather the ancient curses and secrets, gore, Southern Gothic, and violent emotions that beset the four books of The Beautiful Creatures Complete Paperback Collection, by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl (Little, Brown). Beware dull, sleepy, smothering towns below the Mason-Dixon Line and the centuries of powerful, supernatural malevolence they may contain, only to be brightened by intense teenage romance. And even that may not be what it seems.  For something completely different, beings called casters and incubi might just show up at the fusty town grocery store.

Beautiful Creatures

   Continuing our gift-giving theme that the only thing better than getting one book is receiving more, Veronica Roth’s phenomenally best-selling Divergent, Insurgent and Allegiant have been boxed together in The Divergent Series (Katherine Tegen Books/HarperCollins). The futuristic setting here is a radically changed, dystopian Chicago, its inhabitants divided into five factions that are supposed to keep society in balance. But when Tris Prior chooses to buck the system, all kinds of surprises, horrors and heartbreak are revealed to her, and they only increase in mysterious behavior and open warfare as her saga progresses. In the mean time, she struggles with a secret of her own. The set comes with a bonus booklet, The World of Veronica Roth’s Divergent Series, which is well worth keeping at hand.  

The 11th issue from Celia McGee is here!

 

Unbreakable: The Legion, Book I, by Kami Garcia (Little, Brown) Ages 12 and up  

Unbreakable

   Evil takes many forms, inhabiting the world around us, but also threatening the good in people from within. When this double whammy takes on supernatural forms, as it does in this first solo novel by Kami Garcia, coauthor of Beautiful Creatures, beware—and be prepared to be sucked into an incredibly suspenseful book. And it’s just the first in an interlocking series Garcia has planned. Kennedy Waters, the teenager at its center, is living a mostly carefree existence blessed by a wonderful mother and a stalwart best friend—though there is that boy who just dumped her, and distant memories of a father who took off when she was little with strange words about wanting “a normal life.”  But then her vital mother dies under puzzling circumstances, and appearing on the bereaved Kennedy’s doorstep—her tear-stained mascara “like fingerprints at the scene of crime”—are two handsome twins, Jared and Lucas Lockhart. They inform her of her ancestral ties to the Legion of the Black Dove, a secret society that must count five members at all times, and her obligation to fight with them against a timeless evil, a demon named Attas. But as Kennedy helps combat supernatural “vengeance spirits” and shiver-inducing ghost (some as innocent -looking as a little girl with a doll) on a trail through haunted mansions, a creepy magician’s shop, down a dank well, and in the bowels of an abandoned orphanage, she is not only torn romantically between Jared and Lucas, but questions the legitimacy of her membership in the legion, which is rounded out by the rich, beautiful black girl Alara (possessed of spells inherited from her Haitian grandmother), and Priest, a youngster with a knack for devising weapons for vaporizing otherworldly attackers.  As signs, symbols and horrifying adventures take them closer to Attas’s realm, Kennedy starts to realize that the photographic memory she’s always taken for granted just might be her special strength. Yet she is still faced with the knowledge that “the only person she belonged to now was herself.” How this will serve her, and if it will change, remains an open question in this cliffhanger of a novel.

 

The Sultan’s Tigers, by Josh Lacey (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) Ages 9-12

The Sultan's Tigers

   From the beginning, young Tom Trelawney declares that he “I come from a long line of liars, cheats, crooks, bandits, thieves and smugglers.” Though you’d never know it from his loving, trusting, strict but kindly family, he has taken that heritage on faith from his Uncle Harvey, a charming scoundrel if ever there was one. Whether this too will prove to be Tom’s case is a quiet question running throughout this book by the author of The Misfitz Mysteries and Grk series, and Island of Thieves, the Tom Trelawney novel that preceded this one. Things are not looking good for the better parts of Tom’s character when he runs away from home to join his uncle on a quest to find a jewel-encrusted, golden tiger figurine looted in a battle in India by an earlier, unscrupulous Trelawney. Originally part of a set of eight surrounding the throne of a grand sultan, seven are now the pride of the collection of the internationally powerful Indian tycoon Jalata Jaragami. He will stop at nothing to get the last tiger, including sending an assassin after the Trelawney pair. The hunt becomes a question of who will find the tiger first. Or does it? Lacey paints a rich, multi-layered portrait of disparate parts of modern-day India, and his sense of plot and the human frailties even among the high and mighty never disappears. Tom is also exposed to his first impressions of freewheeling adult liaisons, crushing poverty, and the pricks of conscience. Safely back home, the call of adventure still sounds for him. What this means for this intrepid young lad will be revealed in Lacey’s next Tom Trelawney book.

 

The Mysterious Traveler, by Mal Peet and Elspeth Graham, illustrated by P.J. Lynch (Candlewick Press) Ages 5-8

   There are times when a snippet of history, the sound of a legendary city’s name, and curiosity about people of a vanished culture, take hold of a writer’s imagination and won’t let go. This happened to Elspeth Graham whenever her thoughts turned to the illustrious, half-mythical metropolis of Timbuktu, in West Africa’s Mali, where once camel caravans carrying traders in salt and gold crossed paths on their way north and south through the treacherous Sahara Desert. Out of this fascination, she and Mal Peet have created a story about an almost preternaturally gifted but aging guide, Issa, whose unmatched foresight and bravery really come from his deep understanding of his natural surroundings, and his ability to judge the human landscape as well. But even he is at a loss when a baby girl, apparently kidnapped in some gruesome blood feud, comes into his life in a basket atop a camel in the aftermath of a deadly sandstorm. He names her Mariama, and teaches her all he knows, from tracking, to hardscrabble survival, the ways of the animal kingdom, and his gentle Islamic faith. These are buoyantly accompanied by P.J. Lynch’s finely-tuned illustrations. Still, the mystery of Mariama’s origins lingers, along with half of a star-shaped pendant she was wearing around her neck when Issa found her. As Issa grows old, though, Mariama must face that he has gone blind, and she becomes his eyes and his guide, and a testament to her own acquired self-reliance and resistance. Those qualities are tested when three strangers appear with unknown intentions, and both danger and another desert storm threaten. Mariama and Issa, though, adhere to their inseparable bonds, and are rewarded in ways they never could have dreamed of.

 

The Tiny King, by Taro Miura (Candlewick Press) Ages 2-5

The Tiny King

   Take a close look at the front cover of The Tiny King, by the acclaimed Japanese writer and illustrator Taro Miura, and you will see a few words reporting that the little ruler is shown at “actual size.” That makes him 10 inches tall (including crown). No wonder he rattles around in his big castle, is dwarfed by the dining table and all its goodies stretched out before him, keeps falling off his large white horse, gets no pleasure out of his bathtub with its own bubbling fountain, and feels especially lonely when he gets into his big, wide, fluffy bed. We’ve all experienced loneliness in one form of another, and we know that making friends or falling in love, no matter what the person’s size or color, is a wonderful solution. The tiny king and his domain, adorably brought to life by illustrations that, through collage and cut-out shapes, give the impression of a saga  charmingly unfolding through building blocks, have a lot to learn on that score, but caring and sharing finally come his way through one very big and a cheerful number of smaller surprises. It is fair to say that everyone and every thing, whether foot soldier, white steed, dining hall table or the tallest tower and steepest staircase in the castle, live happily ever after. 

In honor of the 100th anniversary of Grand Central Station and acknowledging The Foundling’s part in the Orphan Trains of the early 20th century as well as our participation in the Orphan Train Musical taking place in Grand Central this weekend, Foundling friend Celia McGee has curated a whole list of books using the theme “trains” – enjoy!

 

Note- For orphan train riders and their descendants:

Discover your orphan train rider’s journey through the collaborated efforts of rail historians across America. Contact the historians at orphantrainrail@outlook.com The itineraries are free, though a free will donation is accepted.

 

THE LITTLE TRAIN, by Lois Lenski – One of the most beloved and prolific of American children’s book authors, Lois Lenski produced a series in which her cheerful hero Mr. Small becomes an aviator, a sailor, a farmer, a fireman, a cowboy, a policeman, a father, and, yes, a train engineer. Through her simple story and lovable illustrations, Lenski, who wrote this book in 1940, still manages to give a very full and clear explanation of how trains work. (Ages 3-5)

 

 

THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD, by Watty Piper – It’s not the 1930 publishing date that makes this book a classic, but its timeless message of hard work and optimism—and that the big and blustery don’t always finish first. With its colorful, playful pictures by Doris and George Hauman, the tale of the shy Little Blue Engine who commits to pulling a train filled with toys over a steep, high mountain to good girls and boys by puffing the indelible words “I think I can, I think I can” has endeared it to generations. (Ages 3-7)

 

THOMAS THE TANK ENGINE, by Wilbert Awdry, illustrated by C. Reginald Dalby  – The never-ending products and promotions flowing from a veritable Thomas the Tank Engine industry should not detract from the charming 1946 original and the book’s enduring popularity. Trains that behave badly are taught many lessons about how to change their naughty ways. Who can fail to fall in love with the antics of an impish choo-choo who does right in the end? (Ages 3-7)

 

THE LITTLE RED CABOOSE, by Marian Potter and Tibor Gergely – Small wonder that this sweet children’s book has been a top-selling Golden Book since its publication in 1953. A little caboose—red, or course—is sad that children waving at passing trains ignore him as he goes by. But he becomes a hero when his train starts slipping backward in a treacherous mountain tunnel and he saves it from plummeting downward by pushing back with all his might.  Then the children see that the smallest, last car on the train is the real star, and his readers will concede he deserves all the waves he could want. (Ages 3-7)

 

STEAM TRAIN, DREAM TRAIN, by Sherri Duskey Rinker, illustrated by Tom Lichtenfeld – Even if they aren’t acquainted with this duo’s #1 New York Times best seller Good Night, Good Night, Construction Site, this new bedtime title will win over youngsters instantly. After all, the idea of a dream train pulling into a station for freight is fanciful enough. But then comes the loading of the cars: the reefer car has polar bears filling it up with ice cream, it takes elephants to handle the tanker cars that carry paints, race cars count on tortoises to get them on board the auto racks, and kangaroos make like pogo sticks to land balls in the hopper car. Good night, sleep tight, and ride those rails of dreamland. (Ages 4-6)

 

THE POLAR EXPRESS, by Chris Van Allsburg – For the past three decades, Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without this instant classic by a sculptor turned children’s book writer and illustrator. A young boy’s faith in Christmas is restored when a train called the Polar Express stops by and rockets him and other children to Santa’s North Pole. They party with the elves, marvel at the toys, and each is allowed to pick a gift. The sleigh bell the little boy selects disappears and then resurfaces, wrapped under the tree back home. But only children can hear it ring. Here are the famous last lines: “At one time, most of my friends could hear the bell, but as years passed, it fell silent for all of them…. Though I’ve grown old, the bell still rings for me, as it does for all who truly believe.” (Ages 4-8)

 

HOW TO TRAIN A TRAIN, by Jason Carter Eaton, illustrated by John Rocco – This inventive new book, with dynamo illustrations to match, imagines that kids can make pets out of trains—of which there are as many different kinds as there are kids—and, by applying kind, instructive and good-humored parenting skills can not only help the trains make new friends but meet a whole slew of buddies themselves. 

(Ages 5-8)

 

THE CABOOSE WHO GOT LOOSE, by Bill Peet – A young friend of mine recently checked this book out of his school library and really enjoyed it. Bill Peet, the author, was also a sketch artist for Walt Disney, and worked on movies like “Fantasia,” “Peter Pan,” and “101 Dalmatians.” He brings that same whimsical verve to this popular story of Katy the Caboose, who complains that, stuck at her end of the train, she never gets to see beautiful landscapes. But one day she jolts loose, and after a perilous journey downhill lands between two trees, where she gazes out at nature’s beauty happily ever after. (Ages 5-8)

 

THE BOXCAR CHILDREN, by Gertrude Chandler Warner – When four young brothers and sisters are suddenly orphaned, a boxcar abandoned in a forest becomes their new home. This first of a series about the foursome was published in 1924. It’s by making a life for themselves in their unusual new habitat that they learn independence and self-reliance. They think they can’t count on the grandfather they’ve never met, who’s very rich but supposedly quite cruel.  Once they find one another, though, it’s a happy reunion, and the children fondly leave the boxcar behind.  (Ages 7 to 10)

 

FREEDOM TRAIN, by Evelyn Coleman – Inspired by the 1947-1949 tour of the actual Freedom Train (painted red, white and blue) that traveled the country to exhibit historical American artifacts and documents, this story takes place in Atlanta. Young Clyde Thomason, proud of having an older brother who’s guarding the train, which will only stop in cities where the onlookers are racially integrated, is not only being bullied in school but is nervous about having to recite the Freedom Pledge when the train arrives. During one more bully session, an African-American boy comes to Clyde’s aid, which proves just the start of Clyde’s journey toward understanding race relations, the lives of black people, and what the future may hold.  (Ages 8-12)

 

RIDERS ON THE ORPHAN TRAIN, by Alison Moore – With this novel about two Orphan Train children from very different places, Alison Moore tells the part of the trains’ history from 1918 until the Great Depression. Eleven-year-old Ezra Duval has been left in an orphanage by his widowed archaeologist father and Maud Farrell, 12, who has crossed the ocean from Ireland, meets a similar fate. They meet on an Orphan Train, and though their friendship is brief and they end up far away from one another, a bond persists, in part fueled by a mutual sense of abandonment, loneliness, and a yearning for a home.

(Ages 8-11)

 

THE ORPHAN TRAIN, by Christine Baker Kline – About to age out of the foster system, Molly Ayer, whose heritage is Penobscot Indian, just in time takes a job helping an elderly woman named Vivian clean out the house where she has lived so long. It turns out they have a surprising connectedness: as a young girl from Ireland Vivian ended up an Orphan Train rider, with secrets contained in some of the mementoes she is sorting through. Friendship and loss set the tone of this very moving book. (Ages 12 and up)

 

 

TRAIN WHISTLE GUITAR, by Albert Murray – The great African-American essayist and novelist Albert Murray passed away recently, but his legacy lives on in, among other writings,  his novel Train Whistle Guitar. Though the trains and their whistles passing through the small town in the segregated South where the protagonist, Scooter, is a child are largely symbolic, they sound throughout stories about what it means to grow up, leave a place, and remember it vividly and nostalgically as an adult, and how the Great Migration cast its power over America north and south.  (12 and up, and adult)

 

MY NOTORIOUS LIFE, by Kate Manning – The eldest of four close-knit, impoverished Irish immigrant children in the 1860s, Axie Muldoon’s life is torn apart when all four are placed on an Orphan Train and dropped off at different stations along the way. Though Axie makes it back to New York and rises to the heights of wealth and notoriety in Manhattan society, her life is haunted by the loss of her siblings and her devotion to finding and reuniting them once again. Based on a true story. (Ages 14 and up, and adult)

 

RISING FROM THE RAILS: Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class, by Larry Tye – By virtue of income, social sophistication and subsequent high standing in the black community, the porters that railroad magnate George Pullman originally hired from among the ex-slaves and others of the Jim Crow south helped form the underpinnings of a black middle class. Working in the luxurious sleeping cars on the trains, however, they had to absorb how to be both subservient and dignified, serving as everything from waiters to concierges, doctors and nannies, and coming in contact with many celebrities of the era. By the 1920s Pullman was the country’s largest employer of blacks; the porters were the first to form an all-black union. As this book full of wonderful anecdotes explains, this had fruitful implications for the beginnings of the Civil Rights movement, its convictions, and its significance in American history. (Ages 14 and up, and adult)

 

Enjoy the latest review for your family by Foundling friend, Celia McGee!

 

AGES 12 AND UP

The Darkest Path, by Jeff Hirsch.  Scholastic Press

darkest path

   America is at war with itself in bestselling author Jeff Hirsch’s new book. Sometime in the near future, it is split into the Federalist states (mostly north). But for the war raging on its perimeters, is not unlike the country we live in now.  The rest of the country is controlled by the Glorious Path, a rigid, fundamentalist, and violently oppressive sect that has spread insinuated itself into every aspect of its adherents lives. It is reminiscent of many fundamentalist religions encountered today, whether Christian or other, but taken to extremes in such matters, for instance, of conversion. Though this is kept from the general population—where women must wear long white dresses and veil their faces—if captured enemies refuse to make “The Choice,” they are slaughtered on site. Taken prisoner, 15-year-old Cal and his younger brother, James, have reluctantly opted for The Chjoice in the hopes of achieving full citizenship and then escaping, and carefully drone The Path’s war-feeding prayer: “I am a blade in the hand of God….” But the brothers ultimately find themselves in a civil war of their own. After a first, unsuccessful escape attempt, they are re-captured: Cal goes again for escape, but James, brainwashed by The Path, choses to stay. Cal is eventually aided in his terrifying attempts to reach home—in a nod to the Odyssey, his hometown is Ithaca—by a toughened, brave girl named Nat and her band of Federalist guerillas.  The ending to Cal’s tale is complicated, especially because life in the Federalist states is also not perfect—rich people lead decadent, materialistic, empty lives, while the rest must struggle to enjoy a quieter fulfillment. Hirsch captures the ambiguity of well-meaning cults gone wrong and of opposition to them hardened in its own ways.   

 

AGES 8-12

Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library, by Chris Grabstein, Random House

 

  It’s a sad day and a commentary on our fast-paced Internet age when a town’s gorgeous old library has to shut down. What is to be done with an entrancing but empty pile of neo-Gothic beauty?  In Chris Grabenstein’s Escape from Mr Lemoncello’s Library (Grabenstein has also been known to collaborate with James Patterson), a stranger comes to the town of Alexandriaville and, under strict secrecy, pours tens of millions of dollars into refurbishing the library inside and out. He’s not a stranger to Kyle Keeley though. He’s Mr. Lemoncello, the most famous designer of board games ever. With a star jock for an older brother and a big-brained younger one, Kyle has so far been unexceptional except for his love of old-fashioned board games. With the library completed, Mr. Lemoncello issues a challenge to the town’s youngsters, with the winner the recipient of a humongous prize. Twelve contestants are chosen through an essay contest, an assorted lot, including a snobbish rich boy who proves Kyle’s prime contender. The only problem is, the challenge is that everyone has to get locked into the library overnight and see who’ll be the first to figure the way out. Forget the library’s 20-ton front door. But, by following certain clues, valuing the right books, figuring out architectural secrets the building harbors, and, ultimately learning the skills of team-building, an escape route may be in the cards. Then a thirteenth player is revealed–Mr. Lemoncello himself, for the convoluted exit game turns out to be a birthday present from his associate, Dr. Zinchenko. He must decipher anagrams, holograms, and hidden passageways with the others. This book is all the more fun because its readers won’t be able to resist playing the game too. The clock is ticking….

 

AGES 5-8

How to Train a Train, by Jason Carter Eaton, illustrated by John Rocco. Candlewick Press

 how_to_train

   Here comes—chug-chug, toot-toot–the best pet you’ve never heard of. A train! According to this imaginative book, there are about as many different kinds of trains as there are types of kids who can bond with them.  “Freight trains live in the countryside and travel in herds. Monorail trains live in the city and travel alone,” and that’s just for starters. But first you must catch the one your heart desires, and is most in sync with you. The miraculous method cannot be divulged here, just know that when a little girl who favors pink tutus and fairy wings lands her train, for instance, the first step is to name a train—and hers gets fairy wings (big ones), too. Taking care of a pet train is important as well, and somehow, like children, they also need warm, soapy baths. And good habits: they must always wipe their wheels before coming indoors. Children will appreciate that trains have their own doubts and fears, but a good pet owner can help overcome them. The cuddly illustrations in this book make it all the more appealing, and while it’s idea is a new one, the pictures convey a sweet tone of yesteryear. No wonder, thanks to their now thorough upbringing, the pet trains learn to make friends too—pet planes, pet trucks, pet submarines, anyone?

 

AGES 3-5

How Do Dinosaurs Say I’M MAD? By Jane Yolen and Mark Teague. Blue Sky Press/Scholastic.

dinosaurs

  The latest in a series of beloved and award-winning dino-books, this one deals humorously with how dinosaurs act out when they’re mad. Both parents and children will recognize certain situations they have had to work through themselves—after all, kids’ emotions can feel dinosaur scale to them, and moms and dads need to know how to put turmoil in the right perspective. As the book opens there are minor infractions caused by anger—a dinosaur sticking out its tongue usually just finds a young human doing it back to him. Due to his size, though, when he expresses himself vocally (that’s called roaring), acts out physically (will the door he just slammed even stay on its hinges, since it certainly scatters toys everywhere?), or dares to yell at Mom and Dad…. Wouldn’t you know that he can pout and grrrrr-umble with the best of them, and give his parents a very scaly cold shoulder.  But tearing up his books with his giant claws, just because he’s told to take a nap, and acting even worse when it’s time for bed, that’s just going too far. And a  well-brought-up dinosaur knows it, and has a technique for holding his temper as soon as he starts to feel it start to boil up. It’s an easy trick, and will prove valuable to children and their families as they page through this humorous and wise book. 

 

 

We are very lucky to have so many great stories here at The Foundling, from clients, children, alumni, Sisters, staff and volunteers alike. The conversation below is between Foundling Therapist, Heidi Lynch, and her grandmother, Connie Sullivan, who was a social worker for The Foundling in the 1940s. They are pictured in a recent shot above. Both are impressive woman who have used their careers to benefit others, enjoy!

Connie Heide Sullivan 1942

Connie Heide Sullivan 1942

 

 H:  I am Heidi Lynch and I work for The Foundling currently as a therapist.

C: My name is Constance Heide Sullivan and I was born 1921, Heidi is my granddaughter. I grew up in New York City and now I live in Rumson, New Jersey. My family and I went to the shore in New Jersey when I was a child.

H: And your family?

C: I have 7 children, 16 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren and I grew up in a large family as well with 2 brothers and 5 sisters. Interestingly, one of my brothers became a Trappist monk (he’s now 90), one became a priest and later a monsignor and one sister became a nun. My parents had 32 grandchildren!

 

H: Tell us about your how you came to work at The Foundling.

C: Well I went to Manhattanville College and graduated in 1942

The New York Foundling Hospital was my first job after graduation, and I worked as a social worker in the foster home division. My first territory was mostly Queens , Middle Village and that area. I was responsible for 60 children and checked in on them by visiting them once a month. After each visit I would write up a report about what I saw there.

I had to get to know foster parents and most of them were very nice on the whole and they were wonderful to the kids, I can’t remember having any very bad situations to fix.

There were 10 to 12 other women also working there (in my area for The New York Foundling) and it was like a continuation of college, we had a wonderful time together.

The Sisters of Charity ran everything in those days, and occasionally they would ask us social workers to come hold the babies at the hospital who didn’t get enough attention, that was very sad to see.

 

H: How did you decide to go into social work?

C: I knew I didn’t want a desk job, and would hate being cooped up in a moldy office all day! As a social worker, I spent most time out in the field, doing my visits. I loved the freedom of being out and about all the time, and if you can believe it, the subway was 5 cents  and the city buses were 10 cents, so it was easy to get around.

I decided on social work when I was just 10 or 12, because I hated seeing children in other neighborhoods who were unkempt and even then I just wanted to go clean them up and give them some love. My parents were supportive of this decision.

 

H: Were you in dangerous neighborhoods at all?

C: No, the places I worked primarily were not a bit scary; they were nice, middle class areas in Queens.

The only difficulty I had was in finding biological parents, tracking them down was sometimes hard. We tried to ensure that they had some interest in the child’s life, and organize visits for them.

Occasionally I had to work at night to find biological parents and that could be scary, as I would have only an address to go find, though it always turned out fine.

 

I remember one family had 5 children all in one foster home, they had a wonderful foster mother for a year or two who was willing to take all 5. I remember being very impressed with her.

 

H: It can be so hard now too, when you connect with a child to just go about your normal day. Did you feel like you had good support system at NYF?

C: Yes, we really did. Though we all had different territories (the women I worked with), we would meet for lunch or dinner maybe 3 times a week when we were in the office to write our reports, and had a great spirit of camaraderie.

H: I feel that it can be isolating when you’re in the field alone all the time, and it sounds like we have a similar day-to-day with most time spent in the field and only a small portion in the office. It’s very lucky to have such great co-workers.

 

H: Was there a time when you felt shocked by your work? Was it a hard adjustment? I know you had a very different background from those you worked with.

C: Yes, at first it was very traumatic, shocking and difficult to see how other people live and I had some emotional turmoil about the way I lived versus the way they lived.

There were lots of Irish children in foster care then, very different from the demographics today. Most foster families were lower to middle class parents, many with older children, and they felt it was lucrative to take in foster children.

 

H: Now the goal of foster care is to place children back in their biological homes as soon as possible, was this different? Were there more “institutions” or “orphanages”?

C: Yes, but most of these homes were outside of New York City even then.

H: 1942 you were working for The Foundling, correct?

C: Yes, I worked for about 1.5 yrs. here and took courses at night to get my master’s degree in social work at Fordham’s School of Social Work. Then I decided to quit and go full time to get my master’s degree, the hardest part was to write my dissertation (it was on runaway children) while planning my

 wedding! I used cases from my time at NYF to write this dissertation.

 

H: Was it unusual for women to get a Master’s degree at this time?

C: I suppose it was yes, none of my sisters or friends had one, but I always thought it would be good in case I needed to work later in life or needed a career.

H: That was probably an unusual way of thinking back then as well.

C: Well yes, girls were expected to graduate from college maybe and then get married, but I always wanted something to fall back on, it was just part of who I was.

 

H: You were very close to a few of your family’s employees growing up? You learned to connect with people at a young age.

C: Yes, we have several cooks, nurses and “fraulines” who were German, and I would love to spend time with them to have coffee, I even picked up lots of German from them. I had a most exceptional childhood and they were a part of it.

 

H: Where do you think you learned to give back, or where did your sense that you wanted to help people come from?

C: My grandfather I think. He started the Heide Candy Company, where my father and his brothers worked, they were very successful. My grandfather had a great deal of money, but he put it to good use, he was one of the original men who supported Catholic Charities and the American Indian Missions. We learned the importance of charity from him.

 

C: I’m thrilled that Heidi works at The Foundling, I think she loves the work, and it’s a chance for me to “pass the baton” as it were.

H: It is like that! We have shared experiences, similarities in our day-to-day, and it’s a wonderful connection, even with this many years separating our time here. I didn’t even know until after my first interview at The Foundling that grandma worked there too.

 

H: Things, maybe not color of eyes, but other, more important things can be passed down to new generations. In this case, it’s our work.

 

 Do you have a Foundling story you think should be shared with our community? Tell us about it! On social media, or email kathleen.biemer@nyfoundling.org and you could be our next guest blogger.

Hope you’ve all been enjoying the book reviews! If you and your kids have been reading this summer, getting back into the school groove should be no problem. In case you need a few more books to get you through your Labor Day weekend, here are Foundling friend, Celia McGee’s latest picks!

 

Ages 12 and up

A Moment Comes, by Jennifer Bradbury. Atheneum/Simon & Schuster.

A Moment Comes

Drawing new borders on a map is one thing. The human consequences are another. As in multiple distant places under European occupation, India’s imminent independence brought with it the Partition of 1947, declaring a homeland for Sikhs and Hindus in the western part, called India, and a new country for Muslims, Pakistan,.to the east. Formerly peaceful neighbors turned against each other, murderous riots along religious lines erupted. Amidst the turmoil, one of the British cartographers faced with the daunting task of border-making is a Oxford educated man named Darnsley, and into his household in Jalandhar–joining his social-climbing wife and sexually restless daughter–come two new servants, handsome Tariq, a Muslim with aspirations to Oxford, and Anupreet, a beautiful Sikh girl with a vivid, mysterious scar down her face. While Mrs. Darnsley schemes to meet Lady Mountbatten, wife to the Viceroy of India, byzantine tensions, crushes, difficult decisions, jealousies and resentments surface among Margaret, Anupreet, and Tariq, who is also under pressure to join a shady Muslim gang. Jennifer Bradbury draws a roiling yet exquisite picture of both populations and individuals under siege. When Margaret, Tariq and Anupreet finally band together in a daring plan, their bravery is remarkable, and a battle cry for a better, more understanding future.

 

Ages 10 – 14

The Neptune Project, by Polly Holyoke. Disney/Hyperion

The Neptune Project

  “Some say the world will end in fire/Some say in ice,” wrote Robert Frost in one of his most famous poems. In Polly Holyoke’s tense, thrilling The Neptune Project, global warming has definitely wreaked havoc with the future, and the totalitarian government of the “Western Collective” patrols the shores and fishing villages of Pacific California using punitive Marine Guard. The teenage Nere and her friends have grown up by the ocean, but not until her already weak eyes and lungs threaten to give out does her mother, a scientist, reveal that a select number of children were genetically altered at birth to one day live underwater rather than on land, “the best way for humankind to survive.” Under her mother’s guidance, Nere, who already communicates telepathically with dolphins, goes through “the transformation” that enables her to make her home in the ocean—but soon has to watch as her beloved mother is slaughtered.. Holyoke pulls no punches where death, violence and the threat of betrayal are concerned. Nere finds a group of her own, new kind. While they cavort with the dolphins and “telepath” amongst themselves, lethal sea creatures can attack, the Guard is after them, and the “better world” Nere’s father and others are trying to build in a secret location is still many leagues and dangers away. Within Nere’ gang of mutated youngsters, the mix of tough and tender, boy and girl, innocent and corrupted creates a web of romantic attractions and loyalties. Holyoke cross pollinates science fiction with the familiar experiences of being young and in love, a leader or an outcast, a true soul or a lost one.

 

Ages 7-10

Like Bug Juice on a Burger, by Julie Sternberg. Illustrated by Matthew Cordell. Amulet Books/Abrams

Like Bug Juice on a Burger

As summer draws to a close,  lots of kids have camp to look back on—was it a trial or a triumph, or somewhere in between? When Brooklyn youngster Eleanor’s Grandma Sadie makes her a present of ten days away at CampWallumwahpuck, where Eleanor’s mother spent several blissful warm-weather seasons, Eleanor immediately tries to trade this opportunity for the puppy she longs for. No way. And no how do things get off to a good start. Everything bothers Eleanor, from the big silver bus she has to ride in with a bunch of strangers—luckily she makes one, lovably goofy friend—to the woodsy environment, food that grosses her out (she subsists on rolls and salad), the fact that the camp’s special fruit drink is nicknamed “bug juice,” her humiliation at being stuck in the “Guppy” swimming class, and weird night noises that have this city girl shivering in her uncomfortable bunk. Matthew Cordell’s loopy illustrations heighten the tragicomedy. But perspectives have a way of changing, even in such short a time. And it helps that there’s a sweet goat on hand that is almost as cute as a puppy. This is a book about how you live and learn—and that they’re most fun together.

 

Ages 4-6

Unicorn Thinks He’s Pretty Great, by Bob Shea. Disney/Hyperion

There are those who say unicorns don’t exist, that they’re made-up mythical creatures found in ancient legends and fairy-tales. Not so the unicorn in Bob Shea’s giggle-producing book, in which the one-horn wonder is not just real but very, very stuck up. His case of hubris makes the goat he rides magical circles around feel pretty bad—what with making it rain cupcakes, flying through the air, and impressing the whole school with his miraculous tricks. But then he starts to notice things about the humble goat that he doesn’t have—cheese-making abilities, cool and useful cloven hoofs, and the perfect gear for head shots in soccer. Instead of staying jealous of each other, though, the two team up, foiling crimes, inventing righteous dance moves, and enjoying simple pleasures like going to the park. They’re both pretty great—especially together. Look closely at the book’s cover, and also run your hands over it—there’s some unicorn glitter sprinkled around. Or is it fairy dust?

 

Ages 2-4

Bella Loves Bunny. By David McPhail. Abrams Appleseed.

Bella Loves BunnyWhat do you do when a bunny bounces on your bed? Well, if you’re a little girl named Bella, and Bunny is your favorite stuffed animal, you catch her, of course. The deservedly popular and revered David Mc Phail—Pigs Ahoy, The Great Race, The Puddle, Edward in the Jungle, and many more—in this board book turns his gentle, loving, sweetly old-fashioned gaze on a believable make-believe world. There, when Bella eats lunch, “Bunny has carrot cake for dessert,” and when Bella plays piano, “Bunny hops.” Turning to nourishing nature, Bunny smells flowers and then, with a bunny-sized shovel, helps Bella plant a seed. Parents paying close attention will notice that all these activities are spanning a day that must end in bed-time, often a point of resistance from their little ones. But with Bunny the one picking out Bella’s nightgown when it’s time to go to sleep, and the two drifting off in their side-by-side beds holding hands, their parents and caregivers can be certain that their children will want to Bella and Bunny in the land of sweet dreams and the feeling of being loved.

 

 

 

Tiffany, a veteran presence at Camp Felix, discusses how Camp Felix has shaped her life and taught her to be a leader. A former camper and current counselor, Tiffany is about to start her second year at SUNY Albany, and is an excellent role model for the campers she works with. In her video blog, she emphasizes how the family that is created each summer at Camp Felix can be a hugely positive influence on a child’s life: “I need these girls to leave here feeling beautiful, feeling intelligent, and that what they have to say is important.”

 

Click here to learn more about Camp Felix!

 

 

This book review was given childrensbookstore.com’s “Book Review of the Month Award. Big thank you to the blog writer, Celia McGee, who contributes all of The Foundling book reviews. 

 

Ages 2-5

Have You Seen My New Blue Socks? by Eve Bunting, illustrated by Sergio Ruzzier (Houghton Mifflin/Clarion Books)

New Blue Socks

A little green duck has lost his new blue socks, and he is very sad. Eve Bunting recounts his quest in lilting rhyme. He looks everywhere at home, but then remembers that friends are the ones to call on in trouble. He enlists such animal buddies as Mr. Fox (we notice, he’s a reader), Mr.Ox (a painter), and the Peacocks, a family of color-conscious birds if there ever was one. Each has their own ideas, but this book teaches that only if you really look and also put two and two together about your own habits and personality traits that you will you find the right answer. Sometimes what’s lost is hiding in plain sight, other times not quite so much. Small children will get a kick out of this goofy tale and may soon be reciting or reading it on their own.

 

Ages 5-8

Toys in Space, by Mini Grey (Alfred A. Knopf)

Toys in Space

What could be scarier for a group of beloved toys than to be left outside overnight? At least they have each other—which is more than be said for the careless little boy who forgot them there. Each with their own personality and distinctive voice, they express their fears. Yet in that same place, the Wonder Doll, the stuffed rabbit, the play robot, the cuddly wool rabbit, the toy dinosaur, and the tiny cowboy and his horse see something they’ve never seen before: the dark night sky with its fireworks display of stars and planets. And Wonder Doll tells them a story to get them through the night. It involves an alien spacecraft that swoops down to earth and beams them up into the lonely, anxious life of a creature they name the Hoctopize. He’s lonely even though he has a room where keeps all the lost toys collected from gardens on earth. The merry band of visiting toys soon takes care of that (parachutes help). But this still does the Hocotopize no good because he’s lost  his own very special toy, his Cuddles. The toys try to console him, but must return to earth before Dawn. Where is Cuddles? “It will be in the last place” the Hoctopize “looks. Things always are.” Can you guess?

 

Ages 7-11

The Sasquatch Escape, The Imaginary Veterinary: Book I, by Suzanne Selfors (Little, Brown)

Sasquatch

Condemned to spend the summer with his grandfather in the boring burg of Buttonville while his parents “work things out” back in glamorous L.A., Ben Silverstein isn’t just unhappy, he’s mad. Making things worse is the strange local girl Pearl Petal, who works at the 99 Cent store of this once thriving center of button-making and has a reputation as “a bit of a troublemaker.” But they bond over a strange shape they see fly by one night—a bird, a plane, Superman? A dragon. But what is an imaginary creature doing in their all-too-real world, let alone Buttonville? These questions lead them to the abandoned Buttonville Factory, which is no longer as empty as it seems. Secretly taken over by a Dr. Woo, they discover she’s a veterinarian to every sick or wounded imaginary creature ever…imagined, briefly allowing the suffering ones into the Real World for her medical ministrations. But then a Sasquatch escapes and gets up to some very furry mischief. Can Ben and Pearl re-capture him? After all, it was Ben’s fault the giant big foot is on the lam. It turns out there is more than one way to catch a Sasquatch, and many ways to transform a dull summer into a blast. And if you end up the apprentice to a magician, what’s not to like? Summer is only three months long, but a lot of growth can happen.

 

Ages 9-11

Dorko the Magnificent, by Andrea Beaty  (Amulet Books)

A lot of kids dread school talent shows, and make fun of them. Not fifth-grader Donny Darko, unfortunately dubbed Dorko by the cooler, stronger kids in school. He wants to show off the magic skills he has practiced since he was a little kid, and maybe win the attention of a girl he’s developing a crush on. Despite many setbacks, Donny has a great sense of humor and a sharp wit that will have his readers cracking up, even as his life is falling apart. His father’s new job has him constantly away from home, his mother is over-worked, his younger brother is a practiced pest. But what truly spells disaster is when their obnoxious and dour Grandma Melvyn—actually some kind of crotchety distant relative– moves into the already crowded, strained household to await an operation. Will Donny prevail, learn his lessons, and survive the humiliation of flopping on TV quiz show in front of the entire town? The least likely person in his constellation proves his guide. But up on stage he’s all alone. Or is he?

 

Ages 12 and up, and adults

Far, Far Away, by Tom McNeal (Alfred A. Knopf)

Far, Far Away

High-schoolers and their parents may at first scoff at the thought of a book suffused with the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm. Watch out. Award-winning Tom McNeal’s Far, Far Away will soon weave its enchantments around readers almost as strongly as frightening mysteries, tragic disappearances, ancient puzzles, and magical book-learning impose themselves on the citizens of the village of Never Better. Fans of A.S. Byatt will appreciate the almost invisible scholarly touch that applies the history of the famous fairy tales—violent and scary, psychologically prescient and almost unbearably gory—to the lonely life of young Jeremy Jeremy Johnson. Then along comes Ginger, the brave, smart girl he initially fears but comes to love. As sadly often happens in our own world, Jeremy’s mother has left his father and sent him into a housebound depression. Young children keep disappearing. Kindly individuals may not be who they seem. Yet there’s also a pivotal ghost whose identity is key to the plot—and indeed tells the story. Keep guessing. Ultimately a tale of love, self-discovery and liberation, this novel sparkles with the remarkable made real.  

Skip to content