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MABEL JONES AND THE DOOMSDAY BOOK

From the Mabel Jones series , Vol. 3

Top-notch, cutthroat, silly, strange stuff.

The name’s Jones. Mabel Jones.

Can a pirate change her stripes and become a spy? She can when the fate of the “hooman” race is at stake. It’s the future, and all the humans were wiped out long ago, but that’s nothing time-traveling Mabel Jones can’t fix. Having bested pirates and evil rats (Mabel Jones and the Forbidden City, 2016), Mabel returns to track down the titular Doomsday Book, which may hold a clue to whatever it was that wiped out her species so long ago. Blackmailed by a spy network to recover the book from the land of the evil Grand Zhool of Otom, Mabel and her anthropomorphic mammal friends must best a master of disguise, navigate a sewage tunnel, raise the sarcophagus of St. Statham, and worse before this latest adventure is over. Endlessly funny and gleefully gross, the intrusive narrator of this series reaches new heights of looniness as Mabel and friends battle an even wider array of nefarious animals. Granted, the hidden villain of the piece may be obvious to readers, but it’s a small price to pay for this much fun. Suffused with an unapologetically British tone and peppered with Ross Collins' art, the adventure will leave fans hungry for more and new readers distinctly intrigued.

Top-notch, cutthroat, silly, strange stuff. (Fantasy. 9-12)

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-101-99962-2

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2016

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STAY

Entrancing and uplifting.

A small dog, the elderly woman who owns him, and a homeless girl come together to create a tale of serendipity.

Piper, almost 12, her parents, and her younger brother are at the bottom of a long slide toward homelessness. Finally in a family shelter, Piper finds that her newfound safety gives her the opportunity to reach out to someone who needs help even more. Jewel, mentally ill, lives in the park with her dog, Baby. Unwilling to leave her pet, and forbidden to enter the shelter with him, she struggles with the winter weather. Ree, also homeless and with a large dog, helps when she can, but after Jewel gets sick and is hospitalized, Baby’s taken to the animal shelter, and Ree can’t manage the complex issues alone. It’s Piper, using her best investigative skills, who figures out Jewel’s backstory. Still, she needs all the help of the shelter Firefly Girls troop that she joins to achieve her accomplishment: to raise enough money to provide Jewel and Baby with a secure, hopeful future and, maybe, with their kindness, to inspire a happier story for Ree. Told in the authentic alternating voices of loving child and loyal dog, this tale could easily slump into a syrupy melodrama, but Pyron lets her well-drawn characters earn their believable happy ending, step by challenging step, by reaching out and working together. Piper, her family, and Jewel present white; Pyron uses hair and naming convention, respectively, to cue Ree as black and Piper’s friend Gabriela as Latinx.

Entrancing and uplifting. (Fiction. 9-12)

Pub Date: Aug. 13, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-06-283922-0

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: April 9, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2019

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ESCAPE

Thrills galore for gamers willing to go along for the ride.

A new virtual-reality theme park goes haywire on a crowd of young ­­victims, er, visitors in Alexander’s latest screamfest.

Having scored one of just 100 coveted preview tickets to a cutting-edge, kids-only venue dubbed ESCAPE, budding amusement park fan and designer Cody Baxter is looking forward to a life-changing experience. What he gets is more of a life-threatening one, as games and rides with names like Triassic Terror and Haunted Hillside not only pit him against a monster and then zombies—or sometimes a monster and zombies—as well as ruthless competing players, but seem tailored to play on individual personal terrors. And, in some never explained way, the VR quickly turns into real battles that inflict real wounds even as the real settings shift with sudden, dizzying unpredictability. Teaming up with loyal new friends Jayson Torn and Inga Andersdottir, the former described as being Japanese and White and the latter as Norwegian, Cody (who seems to default to White) struggles for survival, learning ultimately that ESCAPE was created by an evil genius with an ulterior motive who is convinced that he can teach children a salutary lesson. The plot’s no more logical in its twists and contrivances than the premise, but the author’s knack for spinning out nightmarish situations is definitely on display here as the tale careens toward a properly lurid outcome.

Thrills galore for gamers willing to go along for the ride. (Light horror. 9-12)

Pub Date: June 7, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-338-26047-2

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: March 15, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2022

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