Next book

WHERE THE WOODS END

Deliciously shivery.

“The endless forest was as dark as the back of a wolf’s throat.” So begins this terrifying tale of bravery, magic, and lies.

Within this infinite forest sits a village. Kestrel, 12, is the most hated person in this village, but the stalwart young hunter is the community’s only hope against the deadly grabbers, grotesque creatures that appear as their victims’ worst fears before devouring them. No one survives a grabber attack, not even Kestrel’s grandmother, the most fearsome hunter in the history of the forest, who trained Kestrel to push aside her fear and “deal with it later.” Kestrel dreams of escape; there must be a better life beyond the woods. However, her mother keeps Kestrel trapped with dark magic. She has the baby teeth of every villager, and when Kestrel disobeys, she punishes her daughter by magical proxy, grievously injuring someone else, but she’ll release Kestrel if she kills her grandmother’s grabber. Armed with a sharpened spoon (a brilliantly subverted symbol of submissive female domesticity) and accompanied by Pippit, a talking weasel, Kestrel braves the carnivorous Marrow Orchard, where body parts grow on bloody trees; makes a deal with the omniscient Briny Witch (who is male); and struggles with guilt over her role in her grandmother’s death. Kestrel’s earthy determination grounds readers as they navigate the myriad spooky details, braving even what makes her “guts shrivel.” The book adheres to the white default.

Deliciously shivery. (Fantasy. 8-13)

Pub Date: Aug. 14, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-7352-2923-5

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: May 13, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2018

Next book

MUCH ADO ABOUT BASEBALL

A moving tale of baseball, magic, and former rivals who come together to solve a problem.

A middle schooler struggles to adjust after moving to an idyllic Massachusetts town.

Trish Das is at a crossroads. Not only is the 12-year-old unhappy that her family has moved yet again due to her mother’s cardiology career, she also has to try out for a new baseball team. The fact that one of her new teammates is a former archrival further complicates matters. Math prodigy Ben Messina went head-to-head against fellow math whiz Trish at last spring’s Math Puzzlers Championship. When Trish emerged victorious, Ben was stunned. The two get closer when the team’s mysterious pregame snacks start making everyone play better while also causing magical side effects during games. Equally surprising are the cryptic puzzle booklets Trish and Ben receive in the mail that lead them to even more wins. But as the puzzles get harder to solve, the risk of failing to do so increases. Alternating between Trish’s and Ben’s perspectives, LaRocca’s novel—a companion to 2019’s Midsummer’s Mayhem—is a Much Ado About Nothing homage that explores parental expectations, complicated friendships, and teamwork. The protagonists’ love of problem-solving shines through, and the puzzles themselves are clearly explained. As a third-generation Indian American, Trish also has moving conversations about the circumstances that led her grandparents to emigrate and how those decisions still impact their lives. Ben is implied White. Final illustrations not seen.

A moving tale of baseball, magic, and former rivals who come together to solve a problem. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: June 15, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-4998-1101-8

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Yellow Jacket

Review Posted Online: March 30, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2021

Next book

A ROVER'S STORY

The intelligences here may be (mostly) artificial, but the feelings are genuine and deep.

A Mars rover discovers that it has a heart to go with its two brains.

Warga follows her cybernetic narrator from first awareness to final resting place—and stony indeed will be any readers who remain unmoved by the journey. Though unable to ask questions of the hazmats (named for their suits) assembling it in a NASA lab, the rover, dubbed Resilience by an Ohio sixth grader, gets its first inklings of human feelings from two workers who talk to it, play it music, and write its pleasingly bug-free code. Other machines (even chatty cellphones) reject the notion that there’s any real value to emotions. But the longer those conversations go, the more human many start sounding, particularly after Res lands in Mars’ Jezero Crater and, with help from Fly, a comically excitable drone, and bossy satellite Guardian, sets off on twin missions to look for evidence of life and see if an older, silenced rover can be brought back online. Along with giving her characters, human and otherwise, distinct voices and engaging personalities, the author quietly builds solid relationships (it’s hardly a surprise when, after Fly is downed in a dust storm, Res trundles heroically to the rescue in defiance of orders) on the way to rest and joyful reunions years later. A subplot involving brown-skinned, Arabic-speaking NASA coder Rania unfolds through her daughter Sophia’s letters to Res.

The intelligences here may be (mostly) artificial, but the feelings are genuine and deep. (afterword, resources) (Science fiction. 9-13)

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-06-311392-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: July 12, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2022

Close Quickview