by Kathleen Troy ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 25, 2023
An entertaining and upbeat tale with an ethnically diverse cast and a delightful, perceptive dog.
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This fourth installment of a middle-grade adventure series offers the continuing escapades of an intrepid cocker spaniel and his squad of 12-year-old humans.
Dylan, an American cocker spaniel extraordinaire, is at the farmers market in Brea, California, with his favorite human, Casey Donovan, and the boy’s best friend, Sumo Modragon. Dylan has come a long way since he first arrived in the United States less than a year ago. He was adopted in South Korea by Aiden Donavan, an American teaching abroad. But Aiden had no interest in training the rambunctious, increasingly destructive pooch. He shipped him off to his kid brother, Casey, and their mother, Colleen, in California, where he is not only loved, but has been given the opportunity to shine as well. As Casey explains, “Dylan knows American Sign Language. He can count to ten. He does Agility and he passed his America Kennel Club Canine Good Citizen test.” Dylan also understands both English and Korean. Now, the dog is having his portrait drawn by a local street artist. Accustomed to posing for pictures—his celebrity as a search-and-rescue dog has been popularized through Sumo’s social media posts—he holds still while watching a woman with blond hair moving in a strange pattern throughout the crowd. When he sees her stealing an older woman’s wallet, he’s off the chair in a flash, chasing after her and catching hold of the hem of her hoodie. Add “crime fighter” to his impressive resume. But the big excitement is yet to come. Colleen, who is in the book business, has billionaire Cranston Pantswick, aka Cranky Pants, as a client. He has arranged for Dylan, Colleen, Casey, and Sumo to fly to Oahu, Hawaii, for a photo shoot for his upcoming book. Dylan will get to surf, take a helicopter ride, go zip lining, and help catch the bad guy who is stealing the water from Oahu’s Sacred Falls. And in the process, Dylan’s Squad will add a new, albeit reluctant, member, Oahu local Kekoa Ailana, a 12-year-old boy still mourning the recent death of his grandfather.
Troy limits Dylan’s actions to only those things that are physically possible for a real dog to accomplish. The canine’s vocalizations are restricted to whines, arfs, and the occasional “grrrr.” But through the magic of fiction, readers are treated to his thoughts (printed in italics), and these reveal his sensitivity, enthusiasm, curiosity, and charming, childlike innocence. The author also strategically integrates tidbits of information into the story for her middle-grade readers, such as primers on surfing and zip lining, plus pieces of Hawaiian culture and traditions. There are also two glossaries at the end, one for Hawaiian terminology and the other an introduction to ASL. The simply composed text is a gentle, easy read, with constant action and plenty of chuckles to keep young readers engaged. And woven throughout the enjoyable narrative are implicit messages of kindness and compassion. When Kekoa, who has been consistently rude to the canine’s squad, reveals his fear of zip lining, it is Casey and Dylan who lend an encouraging hand (and paw), breaking the tension—and beginning a new friendship. An entertaining and upbeat tale with an ethnically diverse cast and a delightful, perceptive dog.Pub Date: April 25, 2023
ISBN: 9781959215134
Page Count: 270
Publisher: Dylan and Friends Publishing Company
Review Posted Online: March 16, 2023
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Stacy DeKeyser ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 10, 2018
Laugh-out-loud fun with a wonderful cast of characters. A winner in every way.
Tank is a 2,580-pound rhinoceros living in the city zoo.
Unfortunately, his domicile is just on the other side of the right-field fence at the park where 12-year-old Nick Spirakis and his friends play their own variation of baseball. When Nick misses a ball that his nemesis, Pete, drives into Tank’s territory, Nick jumps in, grabs the ball, and makes it out just in time to avoid Tank’s charge. Nick narrates the tale, set in 1948 in a Midwestern city patterned after Milwaukee, describing his friends and activities as if he is in direct conversation with readers. Every Saturday is spent working in his father’s shop, wishing he could be playing ball instead. His father, a Greek immigrant, prizes hard work and ambition and is determined that Nick will own the shop someday. Everything changes when the new owner of the city’s minor league baseball team shakes everything up. There are promotions to lure everyone into the ballpark. Nick and his pals join a batboy-for-a-day contest that takes place on Saturdays, causing him to invent some rather convoluted lies to explain his absences from the shop. Themes (rivalries, family dynamics, feminism) and historical details (radio announcers, frozen custard) combine with lots of mishaps and misadventures, including another very public encounter with Tank. The story assumes a white default.
Laugh-out-loud fun with a wonderful cast of characters. A winner in every way. (acknowledgments, author’s note) (Historical fiction. 8-12)Pub Date: July 10, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-5344-0626-1
Page Count: 272
Publisher: McElderry
Review Posted Online: April 15, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2018
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by Stacy DeKeyser & illustrated by John Nickle
by Emma Otheguy ; illustrated by Poly Bernatene ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 25, 2025
A high-stakes story that provides historical facts and intriguing magic wrapped up in one exciting quest.
Three cousins from Miami are magically transported back in time.
Siggy, Camila, and Jorge couldn’t be more different—Siggy is an aspiring influencer, Camila is a daydreaming bookworm, and Jorge is a bold adventurer. But they share Tía Xía, their history-loving aunt. When Jorge spots Tía Xía with a “diamond-encrusted sword,” he wants answers, but he, Siggy, and Camila just have more questions when they stumble through a portal in Tía Xía’s front yard. They’re transported back to 1862 Virginia, just before the Battle of Puebla, the reason Cinco de Mayo is celebrated today. To find their way home, the kids and their aunt must travel south to Mexico to deliver the magical sword to General Ignacio Zaragoza before May fifth. Heading south, they traverse their way through the ongoing U.S. Civil War and encounter Alfonso, a Cuban American drummer boy in the Union Army, Oscar, an enslaved boy, and Pascuala, an Indigenous girl who speaks Nahuatl and is supporting the Mexican Army. The original plot, historical setting, and fantasy elements are compelling, and the themes about understanding your heritage and taking pride in who you are will resonate with Latine readers especially. Otheguy also thoughtfully explores politics, ethics, family, and morality. Bernatene’s accomplished illustrations scattered throughout provide readers with visuals that will help guide their imaginations.
A high-stakes story that provides historical facts and intriguing magic wrapped up in one exciting quest. (historical notes, glossary, further reading, bibliography) (Adventure. 8-12)Pub Date: Feb. 25, 2025
ISBN: 9781665915182
Page Count: 240
Publisher: Atheneum
Review Posted Online: Nov. 9, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2024
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by Emma Otheguy ; illustrated by Andrés Landazábal
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by Emma Otheguy ; illustrated by Sara Palacios
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by Emma Otheguy ; illustrated by Andrés Landazábal
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