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CHARLIE NUMBERS AND THE WOOLLY MAMMOTH

From the The Charlie Numbers Adventures series , Vol. 3

Formulaic and busy

Two gangs of middle school brainiacs use carbon dating to take down a smuggling ring.

The book begins with a flash-forward: Charlie’s on a cargo ship in Boston Harbor, menaced by a pair of off-the-shelf bad guys, leaping into freezing water to escape. The action cuts back two weeks to when Charlie and his sixth grade Whiz Kids discover a bone on a field trip. They identify it with the help of an excitable white-bearded science professor at Harvard: It’s a woolly mammoth tusk! How did it get to Boston? To find out, they’ll need the help of a new group of budding scientists, led by Janice, a black girl who uses a wheelchair and talks in disability platitudes (“I know I’m different, but we’re all different, right?”). Somehow, every clue in their mystery goes back to “Africa,” though neither specific African countries nor any human residents of the continent are ever referenced. The Whiz Kids are all white except Kentaro, the “little Japanese kid,” and all are male except Crystal; the others are Charlie and two redheaded boys, one gangly and disorganized and the other fat with apparently comical allergies. Their new friends, who attend school in the city—unlike the Whiz Kids, who live in a wealthy suburb—offer racial diversity. What with all these characters, along with (somewhat-accurate, rarely relevant) Boston trivia and science factoids and a mystery involving a wealthy white businessman, there’s no room for character development.

Formulaic and busy . (Adventure. 8-11)

Pub Date: Nov. 5, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5344-4100-2

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Aug. 11, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2019

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RACE FOR THE RUBY TURTLE

A wild romp that champions making space for vulnerable creatures and each other.

A boy with ADHD explores nature and himself.

Eleven-year-old Jake Rizzi just wants to be seen as “normal”; he blames his brain for leading him into trouble and making him do things that annoy his peers and even his own parents. Case in point: He’s stuck spending a week in rural Oregon with an aunt he barely knows while his parents go on vacation. Jake’s reluctance changes as he learns about the town’s annual festival, during which locals search for a fabled turtle. But news of this possibly undiscovered species has spread. Although Aunt Hettle insists to Jake that it’s only folklore, the fame-hungry convene, sure that the Ruby-Backed Turtle is indeed real—just as Jake discovers is the case. Keeping its existence secret is critical to protecting the rare creature from a poacher and others with ill intentions. Readers will keep turning pages to find out how Jake and new friend Mia will foil the caricatured villains. Along the way, Bramucci packs in teachable moments around digital literacy, mindfulness, and ecological interdependence, along with the message that “the only way to protect the natural world is to love it.” Jake’s inner monologue elucidates the challenges and benefits of ADHD as well as practical coping strategies. Whether or not readers share Jake’s diagnosis, they’ll empathize with his insecurities. Jake and his family present white; Mia is Black, and names of secondary characters indicate some ethnic diversity.

A wild romp that champions making space for vulnerable creatures and each other. (Adventure. 8-11)

Pub Date: Oct. 3, 2023

ISBN: 9781547607020

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: Aug. 11, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2023

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DEAD POSSUMS ARE FAIR GAME

Diverting and frequently funny.

A opossum in rigor mortis “catches” a dodgeball and inspires a fifth-grade math project.

Narrator Ella’s aversion to math and desire for order collide in a day of disasters: there’s a dead, rotting opossum on the way to school, an impending visit by an eccentric aunt with her pet dog, and a math-group project that will count for two test grades. Ella’s project buddies are her longtime best friends Lucille and Jolina. Souders has a pretty good feel for middle (or nearly) school academic and social interactions. The girls have an affectionate—or at least tolerant—understanding of one another’s quirks and foibles. They are teamed with a new student whose only fault is his name (Ella’s mother’s therapy for her intense arachnophobia is to think of every spider as “Jonathan,” summoning automatic shudders). The rest of the characters fade to background or are caricatures, like Ella’s French-immigrant classmate, Jean-Pierre, whose clunkily stereotyped exclamations seem time-warped: “Sacre bleu!” “Zut alors!” The several occasions of people—and the dog—spitting up or spitting out are goofily gross but clearly calculated to appeal to the target audience. And the dreadful smell of the opossum seems at odds with its condition of rigor mortis. However, the satisfactory conclusion—a teacher’s recognition of a hurdle cleared—is within readers’ reach.

Diverting and frequently funny. (Fiction. 8-11)

Pub Date: Nov. 3, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-63450-162-0

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Sky Pony Press

Review Posted Online: Aug. 30, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2015

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