by Allan Woodrow ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 29, 2017
An amusing road map to bad behavior but also a fairly subtle reminder of the culpability of mere bystanders to nastiness....
BFFs George Martinez and Lilly Bloch get themselves into a difficult position when they become the captains for opposing fifth-grade teams during their school’s spirit week.
Lilly is way too competitive, whereas George has always preferred the path of least resistance. Lilly’s spirit seems to fuel in her teammates the fire to win, no matter how. Meanwhile, George is too passive to rein in his fervent classmates, who are equally willing to do whatever it takes to get the prize. Speculation on the mystery prize at stake gets wilder and more improbable as the week passes. Both teams cheat, engaging in a series of dirty tricks that drive a wedge between George and Lilly but that neither does much to control. It’s only after a series of funny, messy disasters that the pair finally realizes that standing by and letting their teammates cheat without intervening makes them guilty too. For the last day’s event, a field day, Lilly and George work together, trying to derail any planned misbehavior—of which there is plenty—each eventually confronting the worst of the bad kids and their own demons as well. Related in distinctive alternating voices, the tale features ample over-the-top situations with character development taking second place to high jinks. George has light brown skin, like his evidently Latino dad, and Lilly is white.
An amusing road map to bad behavior but also a fairly subtle reminder of the culpability of mere bystanders to nastiness. (Fiction. 9-12)Pub Date: Aug. 29, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-338-11688-5
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Scholastic
Review Posted Online: May 16, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2017
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by Allan Woodrow ; illustrated by Scott Brown
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by Laurel Snyder ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 16, 2023
Authentically uncomfortable, a well-done modern attempt to explore self and community.
A 13-year-old witch just wants things to stay the way they are, so who needs a bat mitzvah?
Zippy—Zipporah Chava McConnell—doesn’t feel very Jewish. Her parents take her to synagogue for the High Holidays and halfheartedly follow Passover, but mostly they’re just an everyday, White, American family living in Atlanta. What’s special about Zippy is that she’s a witch. She collects items that make her feel witchy: black candles, birds’ eggs, a blue penny. She makes up spells, mantras that settle her anxiety or vanish pimples. Maybe Judaism itself is a little witchy, too. Sure, Zippy’s bat mitzvah parsha—the Torah reading she will recite—says “Thou shalt not tolerate a sorceress to live,” but even so, the Hebrew letters feel so…magical. And has Zippy somehow summoned a Jewish angel? Or maybe a dybbuk? How has she learned Hebrew overnight, and why does she suddenly know how to play the piano? Zippy dips her toe into the Jewish esoteric, finding parts that seem comfortably familiar to her homegrown occult witchcraft. But the creature Zippy has summoned is hurting her. Zippy’s awkwardness, from her fights with her best friend to the way she dabbles in both Judaism and witchcraft, is painfully, believably genuine. And as the rabbi teaches her, her struggles with Judaism and her attempts to make it fit into her witchiness are exemplars of Jewish learning.
Authentically uncomfortable, a well-done modern attempt to explore self and community. (Fantasy. 9-12)Pub Date: May 16, 2023
ISBN: 9780062836656
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Walden Pond Press/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: April 11, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2023
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by Laurel Snyder ; illustrated by Dan Santat
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by Jenn Reese ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 10, 2022
A timely middle-grade fantasy grounded in themes of friendship and truth.
Recruited by a magical bird to thwart encroaching creatures, an insecure teen explores her sexual identity.
Seventh grader Eren Evers likes escaping on her bike into the woods near her Oregon home, “away from school, her mom, and even her friends.” Ambivalent about boys and dating, Eren reluctantly accepts an invitation to a dance with classmate Alex Ruiz because her best friends expect it rather than considering what she really wants. After Eren rescues a small, frost-covered bird named Oriti-ti, it speaks, pronouncing her its champion in the war its nongendered bird community is waging against villainous frostfangs—icy, wolflike creatures who exploit self-doubt to undermine their prey. When Oriti-ti saves Eren and Alex from an attacking frostfang, Alex also commits to the fight. Eren’s friendship with Alex grows, and she develops clarity about her feelings through her friendship with his older sister, Luisa, who is asexual and panromantic. With a frostfang attack on the school dance looming, Eren must accept her true self: Asserting her aromantic identity helps her be strong and brave enough to stop the frostfangs. Using frostfangs as a metaphor for the debilitating effects of self-doubt, this contemporary fantasy realistically examines Eren’s confusion, fear of alienation, and suffocation as she grapples with her true sexuality. Multidimensional supporting characters with their own identity issues and vulnerabilities add veracity and depth. Eren reads as White; Alex is Latinx.
A timely middle-grade fantasy grounded in themes of friendship and truth. (Fantasy. 9-12)Pub Date: May 10, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-250-78344-8
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Henry Holt
Review Posted Online: March 1, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2022
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