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THE CURSE OF THE RAVEN MOCKER

Adanta fights for her parents’ lives in this ambitious fantasy. A wicked stranger has lured away Adanta’s mother, and Adanta—whose ailing father has vanished—is left alone. After a confusing opening sequence, Adanta resolves to rescue them. She meets an old woman who claims to be her grandmother and who tells Adanta that her kin are the people of Adantis, a hidden mountain folk descended from the Cherokee, the Scotch-Irish settlers of Appalachia, and a few mythical creatures. In fairytale fashion, the grandmother gives Adanta three gifts to aid her on her quest and then mysteriously vanishes. Adanta makes a grueling journey to find her grandmother’s people and rescue her own parents. The semi-magical Adantans and a storytelling boy teach Adanta their history as she prepares for her dangerous confrontation with the life-stealing Raven Mockers. The fusion of Appalachian and Cherokee cultures is compelling—snake-handling moonshiners share bodies with Cherokee mythical beings—though it could be smoother. A good effort at blending novel with folktale and occasionally magical. (Fiction. 10-13)

Pub Date: Sept. 16, 2003

ISBN: 0-374-31667-8

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2003

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A YEAR WITH BUTCH AND SPIKE

A sixth-grade overachiever discovers that there are worse things than being forced to sit between two underachievers in this wickedly barbed tale of a teacher gone bad. Perennial teacher’s pet Jasper Gordon has a ringside seat, between cousins Spike and Butch Couture, the banes of Theodore Ervin Elementary for five years, as they square off against tough, feared Mrs. McNulty. At first, the two sides are nearly equal, but after the Coutures are caught skinny-dipping on a field trip, McNulty stops playing fair, discarding the boys’ contributions to the student literary magazine out of hand, then formally recommending that Spike be left back and Butch be enrolled in remedial classes when he reaches junior high. Meanwhile, she keeps the rest of the class under her thumb with threats, intimidation, and belittlement. Fair-minded Jasper appeals to the sympathetic but powerless principal, then helps Spike and Butch put together a science project, sabotaging his own to give them a better chance of winning. When she finds out, McNulty cracks, attacking Jasper before a crowd of parents and engineering her own downfall. The characters are all slightly larger than life: McNulty is just plausible enough to be scary, the Coutures are driven not so much by malice as by a free-spirited rejection of the idea of structured learning, and Jasper—his performance anxiety well established—makes a meaningful sacrifice. That’s two- for-two for Gauthier (My Life Among the Aliens, 1996); Spike and Butch are the most hilariously annoying classroom cut-ups since Barbara Robinson’s Herdmans in The Best Christmas Pageant Ever (1972) and The Best School Year Ever (1994). (Fiction. 10-13)

Pub Date: April 13, 1998

ISBN: 0-399-23216-8

Page Count: 217

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1998

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SAFE AT HOME!

Tony's father hasn't been home in months; his mother Eileen spends days ``sick'' in bed, leaving four-year-old Christy on her own. Only on the baseball field does Tony feel safe and in control. Gradually, he realizes that his mother's illness is not flu but alcoholism. When she is hospitalized after a fall, Dad returns, admitting that he had fled the problem rather than face it; he patiently bears Tony's hot anger, and by the end they are friends, waiting for Eileen—still at the denial stage—to come home. Tony performs heroically in several games, but the baseball action takes a backseat to his bitter discovery that his parents are imperfect. With insight, Anderson, author of Coming Home: Children's Stories for Adult Children of Alcoholics (1988), explores the effects (though not the causes) of alcoholism on a family, properly offering no easy solutions. (Fiction. 10-13)

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 1992

ISBN: 0-689-31686-0

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Atheneum

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1992

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