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WHISKERELLA

From the Hamster Princess series , Vol. 5

Readers will have a ball with this hilarious, charming story.

Hamster princess Harriet is back in Vernon’s take on “Cinderella.”

Twelve-year-old Harriet has zero interest in marriage, especially when most princes she knows aren’t particularly pleasant, but her optimistic mother has other ideas; the queen thinks that a masked ball would liberate Harriet from her intimidating reputation. But it’s a reputation Harriet is proud of, and the queen’s idea of a masked ball sadly doesn’t allow for Harriet’s costume ideas, like Genghis Prawn, “unstoppable leader of the lobster horde.” Instead, the belle of the ball is a gorgeous, mysterious newcomer wearing glass shoes. While everyone else is enchanted, Harriet, concerned about how easy it was for an uninvited intruder to waltz right in, schemes to learn the mysterious hamster’s secret. She learns that Ella (or Whiskerella) is stuck attending balls until she’s swept off her feet by a prince. Ella finds the princes just as odious as Harriet does—and the shoes are painful—but her wishes are less important than the “happily ever after” that the fairy godmouse insists she have, as “Everry little girrrl drrreams of marrrying a prrrince!” The wild struggle to prevent the unwanted happily-ever-after includes razor-sharp takedowns of Cinderella tropes, stampeding quails, and a running gag about a lizard with bladder troubles. After all the silliness, it ends on a surprisingly beautiful note.

Readers will have a ball with this hilarious, charming story. (Graphic/fantasy hybrid. 7-12)

Pub Date: Jan. 23, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-399-18655-4

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Oct. 9, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2017

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THE RHINO IN RIGHT FIELD

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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BACKCOUNTRY

An adventurous scenario that nearly but doesn’t quite achieve strong disability representation.

Thirteen-year-old Em and her diabetic alert dog face the dangerous Colorado wilderness alone.

While playing in a championship volleyball match, Em starts to feel sick. She pushes through so she won’t disappoint Dad, who only seems interested in her when she’s playing sports. More importantly, Em doesn’t want him canceling their upcoming backcountry cross-country ski trip, her chance to show him that she’s fun to be around outside of sports. But everything changes when she learns that she has Type 1 diabetes. Em’s matched with black lab Molly, a diabetic alert dog, who Dad says can join them on their trip. However, a whiteout separates Em and Molly from Dad, who falls and breaks his leg. They make it to a cabin, and with Dad sheltering, Em risks everything to go find help with Molly by her side—even though her supply of insulin was damaged. The book attempts to walk the fine line between perpetuating the trope of the “inspirational disabled person” and presenting a character who displays intrepid adaptability while honoring her own limitations. Em’s internalized ableism is heartbreaking, however, perhaps because the compressed timeline—a matter of months between her diagnosis and the trip—doesn’t allow for in-depth, nuanced processing on her part. Em eventually realizes she can still live a “normal” life, but ultimately, it feels as though it’s despite her diabetes rather than because disability is normal. Main characters read white.

An adventurous scenario that nearly but doesn’t quite achieve strong disability representation. (Adventure. 8-12)

Pub Date: Dec. 5, 2023

ISBN: 9781338857887

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Sept. 22, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2023

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