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FRANCES FINKEL AND THE PASSENGER PIGEON

An entertaining, well-researched aviation tale that allows its hero to soar.

Awards & Accolades

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A talented young pilot and her homing pigeon join the war effort in this debut YA historical novel set in the 1940s.

The first time Frances Finkel flew a plane, “she knew it was where she belonged.” At the age of 17 in November 1941, she’s already logged 2,500 flight hours and is a skilled mechanic in her father’s maintenance shop at Seal Rock Airport in Oregon. After Fran’s twin brother, Danny, died and her mother left, Joel Finkel has kept a close eye on his daughter and her younger brother, Seamus. But Fran is restless, longing to make her mark as an aviator and join the community of female pilots. Women aren’t allowed to serve in the Army Air Force, but Fran—who believes in following the “laws of attraction” and manifesting your desires—doesn’t give up hope. After turning 18 in September 1942, Fran jumps at the chance to participate in a secret military project recruiting women to ferry planes from factories to air bases. She’s aided by her passenger pigeon, Easter, who can send messages for her. Fran amply proves her worth and embraces the female pilot community while also discovering more about her mother, facing loss, and finding romance. In her book, Mahoney throws light on the neglected contributions of female pilots in World War II. She conveys not just the importance of the work, but also its dangers and, often, its tremendous fun—as when an assignment in Hollywood leads to Fran’s dancing with movie star Gregory Peck. Fran’s character development nicely tracks with her growing responsibilities. Although the Law of Attraction philosophy might seem contemporary, it has roots in the 19th century, so the author’s historicity is sound.

An entertaining, well-researched aviation tale that allows its hero to soar.

Pub Date: April 17, 2022

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 157

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: Feb. 13, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2022

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RUST IN THE ROOT

Insightful, admirable, and well executed.

A queer Black mage with a simple dream learns she is destined for far greater adventures.

Laura Ann Langston just wants to be an influential baker. However, 1937 America cares little about her sweet ambitions or that she traveled from a country town in Pennsylvania to New York City to make it happen. Several months in, Laura is flat broke with nowhere to call home, leading her to join the Bureau of the Arcane’s Conservation Corps. Laura is recruited by the formidable agent Skylark, head of the Colored Auxiliary’s regional Floramancy Division. After other areas’ teams go missing, Laura and Skylark set out on an ominous mission to the Ohio Deep Blight, a zone experiencing unnatural phenomena that have disastrous effects on people and animals. There, they use their capacity to control the Dynamism, an energy field that mages pull from. It’s there that Laura also uncovers a conspiracy and gains insight into the depths of her power. Readers are thrust into complex worldbuilding with familiar parallels to our world. Ireland makes advanced concepts accessible, and old photos, articles, and investigative reports bolster her uncanny ability to weave painful, real history into this new world. The bold narrative, told through Laura’s first-person and Skylark’s third-person perspectives, culminates in a captivating ending that eerily echoes many of the issues that presently plague the country, describing the destructive nature of capitalism and the impact its oppression wreaks on a nation.

Insightful, admirable, and well executed. (author's note, photo credits) (Historical fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 20, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-06-303822-6

Page Count: 448

Publisher: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: July 12, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2022

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EVERYTHING THAT BURNS

From the Enchanteé series , Vol. 2

Fizzles into a pat denouement instead of igniting fiery readerly devotion.

As the French Revolution burns its way through history, Camille Durbonne and her friends must carve their path to survival in this sequel to All That Glitters (2019), originally released as Enchantée.

In a Paris in the throes of social and political change, Camille and her sister, Sophie, now have a safe house and the riches that allow them to live freely. For Camille, that means turning away from the magic that nearly destroyed their lives to become a printer like her father, producing successful pamphlets that give voice to less fortunate girls. Camille still yearns for that magic, but giving in may cost her not only the love of Lazare, the balloonist who has her heart, but her own life when the king, supported by the revolutionaries, declares all magicians traitors to France. Suddenly her beloved Paris is the most dangerous place for Camille and her friends to be. This novel features an enchanting group of characters and a thoughtful thread about Camille’s progressive understanding of how her identity cannot be divorced from her magic. But as the alternate history focuses on the persecution of elite magicians, it undermines the complexities of the French Revolution and both its hopes and horrors. Both the main characters’ laughable plot to save the magicians as well as one-note villains further weaken the story. Most main characters are White; Camille’s beau Lazare is brown-skinned, with French and Indian heritage.

Fizzles into a pat denouement instead of igniting fiery readerly devotion. (glossary, historical note) (Historical fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Feb. 2, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-250-29555-2

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Flatiron Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2021

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