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CHARLIE HERNÁNDEZ & THE CASTLE OF BONES

From the Charlie Hernández series , Vol. 2

Well worth it for ravenous fans of quest stories.

Charlie and his best friend, Violet, return, this time to save the Witch Queen of Toledo—who may not need saving after all.

Since readers left him in Charlie Hernández and the League of Shadows (2018), Charlie has been trying to improve his control over his morphling powers, which allow him to manifest as different animals. His adult handler, Queen Joanna, is supposed to be there to help him, but one day he and Violet find she has been kidnapped, so they take it upon themselves to rescue her. The clues she seems to have left behind lead them to Brazil and beyond; just as in the first installment, they dodge gods, beasts, and monsters of Iberian lore and legend along the way. Mexican-American Charlie is able to identify the creatures they find as they traverse South America (thanks to some magical modes of travel) while white-presenting Violet is the mastermind who figures ways out of tricky situations. Predictably, they get out of all the traps they find themselves in, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t truly gruesome and scary events along the way. Spanish and Portuguese are unitalicized and, thankfully, not translated in line but rather left to context. Oddly, Brazilian trickster god Saci peppers his sentences with a fair bit of Spanish, even at times when it seems more linguistically logical to use Portuguese. Readers who have not read the first volume should not have trouble catching up, but it does require quite an attention span to keep track of people and events.

Well worth it for ravenous fans of quest stories. (Fantasy. 10-14)

Pub Date: Oct. 22, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5344-2661-0

Page Count: 528

Publisher: Aladdin

Review Posted Online: July 23, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2019

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RIGHT BACK AT YOU

An absorbing introduction to the paradoxes and possibilities of time travel.

Two misfit 12-year-olds find friendship via a wormhole.

It’s 2023, and Mason is having a rough time at school and at home, so his parents send him to a therapist. She suggests that he write a letter about his problems to “anybody or nobody.” Although Mason decides to write to Albert Einstein, a quirk of spacetime causes the letter he’s hidden in his closet to instead find its way to a girl named Talia, who’s living in western Pennsylvania in 1987. It takes a while for both kids to believe they’re not the victims of some elaborate prank, but they become close friends and confidants through typical tweenage struggles—separated parents, sibling friction, bullying, and antisemitism from peers. (Talia refers to herself as “half-Jewish,” and while white-presenting Mason isn’t Jewish, as a New Yorker he has Jewish friends and classmates.) Both children in this epistolary novel put an unrealistic amount of detail into their letters, and at many points their voices sound awkwardly adult, especially when they’re discussing Talia’s experience of anti-Jewish bigotry. Readers will quickly become invested in Mason’s and Talia’s lives, however, and the mystery of how, and why, they’re connected is satisfying enough to keep the story moving forward. Readers aware of recent controversies surrounding Alice Walker may be surprised to see her cited positively in a book that addresses the scourge of antisemitism.

An absorbing introduction to the paradoxes and possibilities of time travel. (Fiction. 10-14)

Pub Date: March 4, 2025

ISBN: 9781338734218

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Nov. 23, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2025

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THE HOUSE OF HADES

From the Heroes of Olympus series , Vol. 4

Having plunged into Tartarus at the end of the last book, The Mark of Athena (2013), Percy and Annabeth struggle toward the Doors of Death, while their friends hurry to meet them on the other side at the titular House of Hades.

Riordan is most successful in his evocation of Tartarus and its hellish, monster-infested landscape. Without lightening his heroes’ miseries in any way, the author provides a helper and necessary mood-lifter in the person of Iapetus/Bob, the Titan whose memory Percy had obliterated with the waters of Lethe in a previous adventure. Now Hades’ janitor, Bob, along with a skeletal saber-tooth kitten he names Small Bob, joins Percy and Annabeth on their trek, causing them both to plumb unexpected moral depths. Meanwhile, on board (and off) the Argo II, Jason, Piper, Leo, Hazel and Frank similarly must come to understand themselves better in order to accomplish the tasks set before them (though not to equal extents). Though Riordan doesn’t stint on action or laughs (fart jokes abound, and a tart-tongued Calypso is a special treat), readers may find themselves appreciating these moments of contemplation all the more for the depth of characterization they reveal. The denouement finds the demigods poised for the final battle with Gaea and her minions; they have exactly 14 days to save the world. In this adventure, victories are hard-won and the essence of bravery nuanced, making the journey as satisfying as it is entertaining. (Fantasy. 10-14)

 

Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2013

ISBN: 978-1-4231-4672-8

Page Count: 608

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion

Review Posted Online: Oct. 10, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2013

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