by James C. Paavola ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
Another eventful, often thoughtful addition to an enjoyable paranormal series.
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Two eighth grade mystery solvers with paranormal abilities get caught up in ghostly adventures in this middle-grade novel.
Breanne is a White girl nearly 6 feet tall; math and science whiz Sonny is Black and barely over 5 feet tall. The sole occupants of the nerd table in their middle school lunchroom, they may be eighth grade social outcasts, but they’re not only loaded with smarts, they also have secret, paranormal gifts. Breanne can talk to spirits, and Sonny can see them. The best friends teamed up for ghostly escapades in the first two volumes of Paavola’s fantasy/mystery series (Jack and the Beanpole, 2019; Call Me Firefly, 2019). Book No. 3 (Astrobia, 2020) added Sonny’s abduction by aliens into the spectral mix. This fourth installment offers the pair new mysteries to solve that include possible arson on campus, another cold case (courtesy of Breanne’s grandfather, a retired police detective), fresh bullies to cope with, and new ghosts to help cross over. All of this as Sonny battles the nightmarish trauma of a claustrophobic experience during his forced stay on the planet Astrobia. (Readers may become a bit lost if they aren’t familiar with events in the third novel.) Bullying is front and center here, as it was in Call Me Firefly. But even as Sonny, in particular, is threatened with physical harm by a dangerous troublemaker and a former mean-girl nemesis reignites rumors that Breanne, whose abilities are expanding, is a witch, the pair’s supportive social circle increases—and so does the number of people seated at the nerd table. The distinctive first-person narrators switch among Sonny, Breanne, and ghost girl Hadley. Breanne’s grandpa, Sonny’s grandmother, and a teacher are sympathetic, in-the-know adult characters. The author makes deafness a major, informative plot point involving one living young woman and two touchingly depicted, helpful ghost children. Paavola deftly addresses misunderstandings some have about people who are deaf and weaves in facts about sign language and service dogs. An unfortunate stumble in the author’s laudatory ability to combine storytelling with healthy, age-appropriate messages—about logical thinking and problem-solving, friendship, diversity, acceptance, and empathy—occurs when Sonny uses the word spaz to castigate himself for being clumsy.
Another eventful, often thoughtful addition to an enjoyable paranormal series.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: -
Publisher: Manuscript
Review Posted Online: July 22, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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More In The Series
by Varian Johnson ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 27, 2018
A candid and powerful reckoning of history.
Summer is off to a terrible start for 12-year old African-American Candice Miller.
Six months after her parents’ divorce, Candice and her mother leave Atlanta to spend the summer in Lambert, South Carolina, at her grandmother’s old house. When her grandmother Abigail passed two years ago, in 2015, Candice and her mother struggled to move on. Now, without any friends, a computer, cellphone, or her grandmother, Candice suffers immense loneliness and boredom. When she starts rummaging through the attic and stumbles upon a box of her grandmother’s belongings, she discovers an old letter that details a mysterious fortune buried in Lambert and that asks Abigail to find the treasure. After Candice befriends the shy, bookish African-American kid next door, 11-year-old Brandon Jones, the pair set off investigating the clues. Each new revelation uncovers a long history of racism and tension in the small town and how one family threatened the black/white status quo. Johnson’s latest novel holds racism firmly in the light. Candice and Brandon discover the joys and terrors of the reality of being African-American in the 1950s. Without sugarcoating facts or dousing it in post-racial varnish, the narrative lets the children absorb and reflect on their shared history. The town of Lambert brims with intrigue, keeping readers entranced until the very last page.
A candid and powerful reckoning of history. (Historical mystery. 8-12)Pub Date: March 27, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-545-94617-9
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Levine/Scholastic
Review Posted Online: Dec. 2, 2017
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2018
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by Varian Johnson ; illustrated by Reggie Brown
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PROFILES
by Doug Cornett ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 14, 2020
Delightful fun for budding mystery fans.
Only children, rejoice! A cozy mystery just for you! (People with siblings will probably enjoy it too.)
Debut novelist Cornett introduces the One and Onlys, a trio of mystery-solving only kids: Gloria Longshanks “Shanks” Hill, Alexander “Peephole” Calloway, and narrator Paul (alas, no nickname) Marconi. The trio has a knack for finding and solving low-level mysteries, but they come up against a true head-scratcher when the yard of a resident of their small town is covered in rubber ducks overnight. Working ahead of Officer Portnoy, who’s a little on the slow side, can Paul, Shanks, and Peephole solve the mystery? Cornett has a lot of fun with this adventure, dropping additional side mysteries, a subplot about small businesses, big corporations, and economics, and a town’s love of bratwurst into the mix. Most importantly, he plays fair with the clues throughout, allowing astute readers to potentially solve the case ahead of the trio. The tone and mystery are perfect for younger readers who want to test their detective skills but are put off by anything scary or gory. The pacing would serve well for chapter-by-chapter read-alouds. If there are any quibbles, it’s the lack of diversity of the cast, as it defaults white. Diversity exists in small towns, and this one is crying out for more. Hopefully a sequel will introduce additional faces.
Delightful fun for budding mystery fans. (Mystery. 8-12)Pub Date: April 14, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-9848-3003-6
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Dec. 21, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020
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by Doug Cornett
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