Saturday, June 26, 2010

McCormick's: Sold

McCormick's Sold is a gripping tribute to the millions of children who have been sold into the sex-slave trade throughout the world. This heart-wrenching tale pulls readers into a wretched world where young girls are sold by their families, tortured for years, and then tossed away into the filthy gutters of Calcutta. A poetic and entrancing voice leads us on a journey from hopefulness to despair and misery where each daily survival is a triumph of spirit over circumstance. This truly remarkable work, funded through a fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts will likely make our more sophisticated teen readers thankful for everything they have in their lives.

Friday, June 25, 2010

McKinley's: Spindle's End

This nap inducing retelling of the fairy tale Sleeping Beauty takes us through 21 long years of the well-known cursed princess' life. The original, very simple, tale is drawn out here with long explanations of repeated foreshadowings and roundabout recollections in very long convoluted paragraphs filled with never-ending sentences. Lengthy chapters sprinkled with uncommon words seem to end randomly at times. Characters are often plagued by foggy memories and extended dreamlike experiences sometimes clouding what little action there is. For those who like magic, McKinley's Spindle's End certainly is crammed with it, but "magic can't do everything." It did however help McKinley give us an uncommon but expected ending to the classic tale.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Vande Velde's: All Hallows' Eve: 13 Stories

If not exactly scary, these 13 short offerings by award winning young adult writer Vivian Vande Velde are at least fun and always well written as one would expect from this writer. Some blood, a bit of violence, a few surprises are all there in this Halloween bowl of treats along with some predictable but enjoyable endings. Definitely written with the young teen set in mind.

Friday, June 11, 2010

13

James Howe presents a collection of 13 writings on being 13 by 13 authors/writing teams of teen fiction, perhaps for anyone who is 13, is almost 13, or was ever fortunate or unfortunate enough to have been 13 in 13: Thirteen Stories that Capture the Agony and Ecstasy of Being Thirteen. This brilliant requiem for childhood may cause a bit of laughter and misty eyes as poignant moments are shared in quality prose and one short poem on a wide array of themes and styles. Each author shares brief recollections of turning 13 at the end of their piece. Particularly notable in style and substance is Howe's own offering about a bar mitzvah which suddenly goes wonderfully and meaningfully awry.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Martin's: The Doll People

Auntie Sarah doll has been missing for 45 years so it's about time that the other dolls set out to find her and bring her home. This title is obviously intended for a young, immature, or unquestioning audience. Sophisticated readers will probably be put off by the inconsistencies which arise from trying to create circumstances where living dolls can believably inhabit a human world. There seem to be a lot of rules about being a living doll which are never really made clear to the reader. A few funny moments occur when the indestructable modern dolls are compared with the century old victorian style dolls but they do not outweigh the creep factor when Martin unsuccessfully climbs out of her human head to write from a doll's perspective.