by Eileen Schnabel ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 22, 2019
Rambunctious YA educational entertainment that reimagines the American Revolution as a time-travel escapade.
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In Schnabel’s YA debut, four kids go on an amazing time-travel adventure to foil a saboteur who’s trying to make sure that the United States never comes to be.
In the present day, four youngsters are enrolled in a peculiar Wisconsin “Revolutionary War reenactment camp,” where they’re forced to endure authentic re-creations of hardships that people faced during the American Revolution. Thirteen-year-old Kep Westguard and his younger brother, Max, are mainly there to win a monetary prize for “best historical skirmishing” so that Kep can attend a swim camp instead. Adolescent animal rights firebrand Tela has more enthusiasm for the Revolutionary War camp—and skill with firearms—but she refuses to wear fur or leather or eat meat. T.J., who’s African American, doesn’t like that the reenactors, like Kep, Max, and Tela, are disproportionately white, as many free people of color took part in the historical fighting. He’s also sure that the place is actually a hidden-camera reality TV production. Then camp authorities tell the four kids that they’re being groomed to be time voyagers to head off an incredible crisis. A rogue, adult time traveler named Fox, they say, aims to sabotage events on the key night of April 18, 1775, when the famed “midnight ride” of Paul Revere took place (as well as a similar ride by the lesser-known William Dawes). Without foreknowledge of approaching British troops, the Colonial uprising in New England will be crushed—and the United States will never be conceived. The four kids possess the proper DNA for time travel, so they’re America’s best hope to go back in time and carry out the crucial warnings themselves. A short particle-accelerator–assisted trip later, the kids are outside Boston in 1775, bewildered and facing a seemingly impossible challenge.
In this hybrid of YA historical classic Johnny Tremain (1943) and Michael Crichton’s popcorn-SF tale Timeline (1999), Schnabel sacrifices gee-whiz science-fictional awe in favor of semicomic bickering over whether time travel is real or not. She follows this with cliffhanger after cliffhanger as the kids eventually realize that their anachronistic adventure is actually happening. The author particularly scores points by focusing on some somewhat lesser-known players of the Revolutionary War, such as British Army Gen. Thomas Gage, the poet Phillis Wheatley, and black Freemason Prince Hall. More familiar figures, such as George Washington and Revere, barely have walk-ons, but John Hancock and John Adams do take part, with the former amusingly portrayed as a brave but rather clueless figure. Perhaps most strikingly, the novel has its young characters argue over whether the United States is worth saving given that its birth guarantees a continuation of slavery—as well as animal abuse, Tela points out. This move certainly takes the story out of Esther Forbes territory, and young readers may find that this discussion makes the American Revolution more relatable. There are a few loose ends at the story’s conclusion, especially regarding the rather weakly defined villains, which leaves open the possibility of a sequel.
Rambunctious YA educational entertainment that reimagines the American Revolution as a time-travel escapade.Pub Date: Oct. 22, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-73386-810-5
Page Count: 296
Publisher: Wonder Jumps Press
Review Posted Online: Feb. 20, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2020
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Nadia Aguiar ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 5, 2011
Like Simon, Maya and Penny, readers will find it hard to leave the magical world of Tamarind.
After rescuing their marine-biologist parents from a mysterious island in The Lost Island of Tamarind (2008), feisty siblings Maya, Simon and Penny encounter more amazing adventures as they return to prevent Tamarind’s destruction in this hair-raising sequel.
Since leaving Tamarind four years ago, Maya, Simon and Penny (16, 13 and 5, respectively) have lived quietly in Bermuda with their preoccupied parents, who worry about the Red Coral Project, a phony scientific study intent on ravaging Tamarind to extract the precious mineral ophalla. When Helix, their orphan pal from Tamarind, asks them to sail the Pamela Jane back to the island, Simon, Maya and Penny can’t refuse. Shocked to discover the Red Coral systematically destroying the island, they embark on an arduous quest. Eventually Simon assumes the hero’s role, following obscure clues hidden in three ophallagraphs, leading relentlessly to the Neglected Provinces, the Little Blue Door, the Mumbagua Falls, the Moraine of Lost Loved Ones and, ultimately, to Faustina’s Gate. Here, with Tamarind’s fate in his hands, Simon comes of age, “knowing his purpose is important and clear.” Replete with ecological warnings applicable to real as well as fantasy worlds and glossed with lush descriptions of imaginary flora and fauna, the rapid-fire plot bristles with danger.
Like Simon, Maya and Penny, readers will find it hard to leave the magical world of Tamarind. (map) (Fantasy. 10-12)Pub Date: July 5, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-312-38030-4
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Review Posted Online: June 20, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2011
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by Nadia Aguiar
BOOK REVIEW
by Nadia Aguiar
by Jenna Burtenshaw ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 1, 2011
Mediocre, but flashes of inspiration indicate Burtenshaw’s potential, as yet untapped. (Fantasy. 10-14)
This lackluster debut combines familiar elements into a tale neither rare nor wonderful, despite some acclaim in its native Britain.
The formula is simple: war-torn country, power-mad leader (one of 13, technically), young person with unexpected powers who might be the answer to everything. But heroine Kate Winters never shows much pluck: She may wield significant power, though generally with little sense of how, and spends most of her time listening to other characters spout lengthy exposition. There is no purpose to power-mad leader Da’ru beyond her hunger for control. And although graveyard/city Fume is fascinating and the magic of Fume (bonemen, magical locks powered by spirits) hints at great powers of invention, Albion as a whole remains unknowable. What is the war, and why? How, in this pre-industrialized world with no commercial ties to “the continent,” does a bookstore make for a viable living? Enigmatic, deathless Silas Dane comes across as the most nuanced of the characters, and his cold alliance with Kate is the heart of the novel, but Kate’s narrative perspective keeps him at a distance.
Mediocre, but flashes of inspiration indicate Burtenshaw’s potential, as yet untapped. (Fantasy. 10-14)Pub Date: July 1, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-06-202642-2
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Greenwillow Books
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2011
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