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THE FIRE KEEPER

From the Storm Runner series , Vol. 2

Diagnosis: middle-book syndrome, but it’ll satisfy hungry readers who are fans of fast-paced stories

Zane Obispo must die in order to save all the other young godborns of the world after he accidentally reveals their existence to the gods.

Since the events of series openerThe Storm Runner(2018), Mexican American Zane has been holed up on an island off Mexico’s Caribbean coast with his mother, uncle Hondo, best-friend-and-maybe-crush Brooks, and Ms. Cab the seer, kept hidden from the other Maya gods’ eyes by a magical barrier drawn by the goddess Ixtab. When another godborn named Ren shows up, she sets off a chain of events that forces them off the island to save both other godborns, who have been kidnapped, and Zane’s father, the disgraced Maya god Hurakan. That journey will take them to the underworld and back to the U.S. in search of a god named the Fire Keeper. As in the first book, the plot is busy, and the conclusion feels unfinished, even for a series entry. Readers without a detailed memory of the first book may find themselves confused for the lack of backstory. The female characters, though full of personality and with major magical powers, feel underused, alas. What gives the book its charm is the many Maya gods and demons, who do not present like stereotypical old, wise beings but come with all the snark and melodrama of any 21st-century character.

Diagnosis: middle-book syndrome, but it’ll satisfy hungry readers who are fans of fast-paced stories (. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 3, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-368-04188-1

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Rick Riordan Presents/Disney

Review Posted Online: May 25, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2019

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THE GIRL WHO BUILT A SPIDER

An action-packed roller coaster of a tale with tongue-in-cheek humor; this is a delight.

Three young science fair contestants encounter a mysterious scientist and his world-changing plans.

Since her mother drowned when she was 3, it’s just been Theresa and her dad. The Charleston, South Carolina, 12-year-old is thrilled when the amazing solar-powered mechanical spider she built wins her first place at the middle school science fair, beating superachiever Ashley’s edible algae and goofy Jon’s bubble maker, which come in second and third, respectively. The three kids are awarded summer internships by reclusive Dr. Neil Flax, who is moving beyond his moneymaking Bionic Baby Bottom Buffer to tackle climate change. Theresa, Ashley, and Jon will be hanging out in the old, abandoned shopping mall in town where Flax Industries’ laboratory is located. But Theresa has a mysterious late-night encounter with a boy calling himself Thomas Edison who claims that Flax is building something that will destroy the world—and he needs her help to stop him. Theresa doesn’t know whom to trust or what to believe as she and her classmates enter Dr. Flax’s bizarre and dangerous world of robots and have the adventure of a lifetime. This fast-paced, well-plotted story features young people who learn to utilize each other’s strengths to get to the bottom of things. Characters are minimally described and racially ambiguous.

An action-packed roller coaster of a tale with tongue-in-cheek humor; this is a delight. (Mystery. 8-12)

Pub Date: March 21, 2023

ISBN: 978-1-250-16580-0

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Godwin Books

Review Posted Online: Jan. 11, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2023

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A WILDER MAGIC

Inconsistent and messy.

A young Appalachian girl uses magic to try and save her home.

Sybaline Shaw’s family has known for years that their magical valley in the Appalachian foothills would be flooded when the nearby Tennessee Valley Authority dam was complete. Her father is off fighting in World War II, but Momma has already packed up their household. Sybaline alone of her family can’t accept this. Everyone in the Lark bloodline can use magic within the valley to shape the natural world, but they risk transforming themselves into plants or trees—a danger Sybaline and her cousins regularly ignore. After lying to their parents shortly before everyone moves away, Sybaline and her cousin Nettle—each claiming to be going to stay with the other—remain behind and create a bubble around Sybaline’s home, which soon turns into a dark, dank prison on the bottom of the newly formed lake. Now Sybaline and Nettle are becoming trees—how will they escape? Told from Sybaline’s point of view with matter-of-factness, the novel blends fantasy and reality with worldbuilding that leaves unanswered questions. Brief mentions of aluminum plants supporting the war effort, riots by White men over Black construction workers, and the Trail of Tears contrast with the Edenlike imagery of the lush, unspoiled valley and its sheltered occupants living off the land in yet another Appalachian story supporting the trope that technology is predominantly bad. Main characters are assumed to be White.

Inconsistent and messy. (Historical fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: May 4, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-72820-964-7

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Sourcebooks Young Readers

Review Posted Online: Feb. 25, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2021

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