by Margaret Meacham ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 31, 2007
This sequel to A Mid-Semester Night’s Dream (2004) takes a humorous yet recognizable look at young teens’ trials, tribulations and friendships. Morgan Yates, a 14-year-old human, is the (un)lucky recipient of a visit from her fairy-godmother-in-training, the eternally oblivious Gretta. The teen fairy visits Morgan for two reasons: She’s mad at her boyfriend and she’s doing a research paper on human behavior (certain to achieve a very low grade). She finds humans incomprehensible, making well-meaning but disastrous attempts to help the increasingly fed-up Morgan, who is a pretty together teen with the usual problems with boys and making friends at her new school. Alternating chapters in an extremely ornate font are excerpted from the totally clueless Gretta’s diary. Her version of events reveals a staggering lack of understanding of the events she creates via failed spells. Despite Gretta’s well-meaning attempts to help her charge, it is sensible Morgan who prevails. A much-needed glossary at the back defines some of the colorful and consistently used fairy slang. (Fantasy. 8-11)
Pub Date: Dec. 31, 2007
ISBN: 978-0-8234-2078-0
Page Count: 160
Publisher: Holiday House
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2007
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 29, 2020
This kid-friendly satire ably sets claws into a certain real-life franchise.
A trip to the Love Love Angel Kitty World theme park (“The Most Super Incredibly Happy Place on Earth!”) turns out to be an exercise in lowered expectations…to say the least.
When Uncle Murray wins a pair of free passes it seems at first like a dream come true—at least for Kitty, whose collection of Love Love Kitty merch ranges from branded underwear to a pink chainsaw. But the whole trip turns into a series of crises beginning with the (as it turns out) insuperable challenge of getting a cat onto an airplane, followed by the twin discoveries that the hotel room doesn’t come with a litter box and that the park doesn’t allow cats. Even kindhearted Uncle Murray finds his patience, not to say sanity, tested by extreme sticker shock in the park’s gift shop and repeated exposures to Kitty World’s literally nauseating theme song (notation included). He is not happy. Fortunately, the whole cloying enterprise being a fiendish plot to make people so sick of cats that they’ll pick poultry as favorite pets instead, the revelation of Kitty’s feline identity puts the all-chicken staff to flight and leaves the financial coffers plucked. Uncle Murray’s White, dumpy, middle-aged figure is virtually the only human one among an otherwise all-animal cast in Bruel’s big, rapidly sequenced, and properly comical cartoon panels.
This kid-friendly satire ably sets claws into a certain real-life franchise. (Graphic satire. 8-11)Pub Date: Dec. 29, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-250-20808-8
Page Count: 160
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
Review Posted Online: Sept. 28, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2020
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel
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by Nick Bruel ; illustrated by Nick Bruel
by Dan Gutman ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 2, 2021
Funny, scary in the right moments, and offering plenty of historical facts.
Catfished…by a ghost!
Harry Mancini, an 11-year-old White boy, was born and lives in Harry Houdini’s house in New York City. It’s no surprise, then, that he’s obsessed with Houdini and his escapology. Harry and his best friend, Zeke, are goofing around in some particularly stupid ways (“Because we’re idiots,” Zeke explains later) when Harry hits his head. In the aftermath of a weeklong coma, Harry finds a mysterious gift: an ancient flip phone that has no normal phone service but receives all-caps text messages from someone who identifies himself as “HOUDINI.” Harry is wary of this unseen stranger, like any intelligently skeptical 21st-century kid, but he’s eventually convinced: His phone friend is the real deal. So when Houdini asks Harry to try one of his greatest tricks, Harry agrees. Harry—so full of facts about Houdini that he litters his storytelling with infodumps, making him an enthusiastic tour guide to Houdini’s life—is easily tricked by his supportive-seeming hero. Harry, Zeke, and Houdini are all just the right amount of snarky, and while Harry’s terrifying adventure has an occasionally inconsistent voice, the humor and tension make this an appealing page-turner. Archival photographs of Harry Houdini make the ghostly visitation feel closer. Zeke is Black, and Harry Houdini, as he was in life, is a White Jewish immigrant.
Funny, scary in the right moments, and offering plenty of historical facts. (historical note, bibliography) (Supernatural adventure. 9-11)Pub Date: March 2, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-8234-4515-8
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Holiday House
Review Posted Online: Jan. 26, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2021
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by Dan Gutman ; illustrated by Kelley McMorris
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by Dan Gutman ; illustrated by Allison Steinfeld
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