Have you ever had to move to a new neighborhood, or change schools, or be set in any kind of new environment? I don’t know about you, but I find it scary and stressful. How do you deal with changes? I get a bit on the manic side and hide in bluster. So, I picked three stories that put at least one of the characters in a situation of intense change.
The first book is a bit fanciful, but the protagonist is believable and the story is amusing.
Clayton Stone, Facing Off
Ena Jones
Clayton Stone is a thirteen-year-old orphan living with his grandmother, Gran, who recruits him into the Special Services in Clayton Stone, At Your Service, where he solves a kidnapping. This time he must change his identity and transfer to an elite private school to protect the president’s son. To make matters worse, his new school is playing against his old school in a playoff game to see which team goes to the Lacrosse Championship game. Things don’t go swimmingly for Clayton, who has to remember he is now Max Carrington. He keeps over reacting to circumstances in his new school, but he does finally make friends with First Son, Kyle Hampton. Together, with the help of two other kids, they figure out who is threatening Kyle, though, in the end, it turns out the bad guys are after another student. The story is well-written and has plenty of surprises, in addition to humor, especially all the disguises Gran uses. Resourceful teachers will find several topics of discussions in their classrooms. Loyalty, sportsmanship, patience and thinking through dilemmas are all good discussion topics.
BIBLIO: 2016, Holiday House, Ages 8 to 13, $16.95.
REVIEWER: Sarah Maury Swan
FORMAT: Middle-Reader
ISBN: 9780823436484
The second book is set on the beautiful Hawaiian island of Oahu, but not in Honolulu. The reader gets a sense of the island without the glitz.
Juniors
Kaui Hart Hemmings
In the middle of her junior year of high school, Lea Lane moves from San Francisco
back to Hawaii where her actress mother is in a new TV show. Having spent her early childhood in Kailua, on Oahu Island near Honolulu, she knows the area and has kept in touch with Danny, a neighbor boy. She is enrolled in a posh private school, thanks to her long-absent father, or so she’s been told. The house her mother has rented for them is shoddy and in a not-so-nice neighborhood, but now they’ve been invited to use the guest cottage of an estate owned by long-standing friends of Lea’s mother. In fact, Mr. West was Lea’s mom’s boyfriend for a brief time, before he introduced her to the fellow who got her pregnant. Lea feels awkward about the arrangement until she gets to know the West kids who are about her age. As with all lives, things get complicated and Lea has to sort out what her true desires are. The story is well told and intricate and has a good ending. Lea grows a lot during the story. The down side of the book is the easy acceptance the author has with letting the juvenile characters be promiscuous and happily get drunk and/or high. A little more regret and the parents being a bit less lax in showing their children how to behave would have been nice. Lea, at least, shows some remorse for having succumbed to the booze and drugs.
BIBLIO: 2015, G.P. Putnam’s Sons/Penguin Group, Ages 14 +, $18.99.
REVIEWER: Sarah Maury Swan
FORMAT: Young Adult
ISBN: 978-0-399-17360-8
You must read the third book with the spirit of letting your imagination run wild. There are lots of magical, mythical creatures parading across the pages. If you can’t allow yourself to believe in Unicorns and other such creatures, don’t bother with this book. I loved it, because, at all most 76 years of age, I still believe in Unicorns and Griffins.
Pip Bartlett’s Guide to Unicorn Training
Jackson Pearce and Maggie Stiefvater
Illustrated by Maggie Stiefvater
Pip Bartlett is spending the summer with her Aunt Emma at the Cloverton Clinic for Magical Creatures. She loves talking with the animals, though no-one else realizes she understands what the animals are saying. Aunt Emma and her daughter, Callie, and Pip are going to the Triple Trident magical animal show and their neighbor, Tomas, is going with them. Tomas is allergic to just about everything, but that doesn’t stop him from going places. Callie, being a prissy teenager, is less than thrilled with going. But the fun really ramps up when their friend Mr. Henshaw’s Show Unicorn gets a case of jangling nerves and won’t settle down for anyone. That is until Pip takes the Unicorn, Regent Maximus, into a paddock filled with baby unicorns. He begins to calm down as he tells the young ones all the trials and terrors that await them. They become his adoring entourage. It’s a cute story and will certainly get the reader giggling. Frequently, a page in the book is taken up by a description of some magical creature, with an amusing drawing. The glimmerbeast subspecies called a rockshine, which turns invisible when frightened, is the first illustration. It looks rather like a deranged sheep. The story progresses with lots of mishaps to Regent Maximus and other creatures, but in the end, Regent Maximus wins the Triple Trident championship. Even though the creatures are all mythical, the story can be used as a way discuss animal anatomy and ways to calm scared creatures.
BIBLIO: 2017, Scholastic Press/Scholastic Inc. Ages 8 to 12, $9.99.
REVIEWER: Sarah Maury Swan
FORMAT: Middle-Reader
ISBN: 978-0-545-70929-3
Enjoy the post and let me know what’s going on with you. Thanks, Sarah
Dear Sarah,
You’re right. Moving is stressful. I’ve read that it’s one of the most stressful things you can experience.
Thanks for sharing good books.
Never Give Up
Joan
Hey Joan, My pleasure to share books. As you know, I love books and talking/writing about them.