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COLLISION

A timely story that shows the humanity we share and the irrationality of bigotry and hatred.

Two ships collide on the Welland Canal, which connects Lake Erie and Lake Ontario; one of them holds a shipping container with refugees inside—and not all of them survive.

Thirteen-year-old Daniel Sullivan’s mother is an ER nurse and his father is a police detective, so when the accident occurs near his small Ontario town, he spends the night at his grandfather’s while his parents respond to the emergency. The next day, Dad drops Daniel at the hospital to deliver a change of clothes for his exhausted mom. There, Daniel helps one of the survivors, a teenage boy who collapses in a hallway. Bol, a Dinka-speaking Black boy from South Sudan, and Daniel, who’s Irish Canadian, become fast friends, sharing their cultures with one another despite their language barrier. The presence of the refugees, who come from a wide variety of countries, attracts some negative attention, including xenophobic protests. Dad uses information Bol provides to help figure out the story behind the people in the shipping container, and the Sullivans strive to protect Bol and keep the rising tensions in town from boiling over. This heartwarming story is told from the first-person perspective of sensitive and kind Daniel. The accessible text naturally interweaves historical context showing parallels to centuries of migration by people in search of a better life.

A timely story that shows the humanity we share and the irrationality of bigotry and hatred. (Fiction. 9-13)

Pub Date: May 19, 2026

ISBN: 9781459842298

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Orca

Review Posted Online: March 9, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2026

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HOLES

Good Guys and Bad get just deserts in the end, and Stanley gets plenty of opportunities to display pluck and valor in this...

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Sentenced to a brutal juvenile detention camp for a crime he didn't commit, a wimpy teenager turns four generations of bad family luck around in this sunburnt tale of courage, obsession, and buried treasure from Sachar (Wayside School Gets a Little Stranger, 1995, etc.).

Driven mad by the murder of her black beau, a schoolteacher turns on the once-friendly, verdant town of Green Lake, Texas, becomes feared bandit Kissin' Kate Barlow, and dies, laughing, without revealing where she buried her stash. A century of rainless years later, lake and town are memories—but, with the involuntary help of gangs of juvenile offenders, the last descendant of the last residents is still digging. Enter Stanley Yelnats IV, great-grandson of one of Kissin' Kate's victims and the latest to fall to the family curse of being in the wrong place at the wrong time; under the direction of The Warden, a woman with rattlesnake venom polish on her long nails, Stanley and each of his fellow inmates dig a hole a day in the rock-hard lake bed. Weeks of punishing labor later, Stanley digs up a clue, but is canny enough to conceal the information of which hole it came from. Through flashbacks, Sachar weaves a complex net of hidden relationships and well-timed revelations as he puts his slightly larger-than-life characters under a sun so punishing that readers will be reaching for water bottles.

Good Guys and Bad get just deserts in the end, and Stanley gets plenty of opportunities to display pluck and valor in this rugged, engrossing adventure. (Fiction. 9-13)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 1998

ISBN: 978-0-374-33265-5

Page Count: 233

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2000

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THE SCHOOL FOR GOOD AND EVIL

From the School for Good and Evil series , Vol. 1

Rich and strange (and kitted out with an eye-catching cover), but stronger in the set pieces than the internal logic.

Chainani works an elaborate sea change akin to Gregory Maguire’s Wicked (1995), though he leaves the waters muddied.

Every four years, two children, one regarded as particularly nice and the other particularly nasty, are snatched from the village of Gavaldon by the shadowy School Master to attend the divided titular school. Those who survive to graduate become major or minor characters in fairy tales. When it happens to sweet, Disney princess–like Sophie and  her friend Agatha, plain of features, sour of disposition and low of self-esteem, they are both horrified to discover that they’ve been dropped not where they expect but at Evil and at Good respectively. Gradually—too gradually, as the author strings out hundreds of pages of Hogwarts-style pranks, classroom mishaps and competitions both academic and romantic—it becomes clear that the placement wasn’t a mistake at all. Growing into their true natures amid revelations and marked physical changes, the two spark escalating rivalry between the wings of the school. This leads up to a vicious climactic fight that sees Good and Evil repeatedly switching sides. At this point, readers are likely to feel suddenly left behind, as, thanks to summary deus ex machina resolutions, everything turns out swell(ish).

Rich and strange (and kitted out with an eye-catching cover), but stronger in the set pieces than the internal logic. (Fantasy. 11-13)

Pub Date: May 14, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-06-210489-2

Page Count: 496

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 12, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2013

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