September 15, 2022: Volume XC, No. 18

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SMITH TOMMIE REVIEWSKIRKUSVOL.XC,NO.18|15SEPTEMBER2022 Featuring 360 Industry-First Reviews of Fiction, Nonfiction, Children's and YA books A legend for his protest at the ’68 Olympics shares his story of athletics and activism Also in the issue: Yiyun Li, Dahlia Lithwick, Darren Aronofsky & Ari Handel

Editor at Large MEGAN LABRISE mlabrise@kirkus.com

Senior Indie Editor DAVID RAPP drapp@kirkus.com

At the time of the book’s U.S. release, I was just out of college and work ing at Asian Books, a specialty bookshop (now long closed) in Cambridge, Massachusetts. For someone interested in Asian culture and history, as I was, it was a thrilling place to work—we carried a vast range of books, many of them hard to find elsewhere, about East Asia, South and Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. Faculty at local universities sent their students to the store to purchase books for their classes, and the books in the sections on Islam and Middle Eastern religions were among the most sought after. The shop’s owners did not see it as a contradiction that we also stocked—and prominently displayed—The Satanic Verses, though I’m certain there were closed-door discussions to which I was not privy. Threats—and actual attacks—against bookstores did, in fact,Theoccur.fatwa upended Rushdie’s life. In the wake of last month’s attack, I turned to the author’s 2012 memoir, Joseph Anton, a fascinating account of the controversy and his years of living in hiding, under state protection and with the assumed name of the book’s title, a nod to two favorite writers, Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekhov. (The book also offers great insight into Rushdie’s background, how he came to write The Satanic Verses, and what the book meant to him.) Eventually, Rushdie moved to New York and began to live more openly; in 2004, he became president of PEN America, a non profit organization defending freedom of expression. Reading the memoir— already written at a remove from the events of the late ’80s, when The Satanic Verses made global headlines—was an uncanny reminder that the dark human urges to suppress literature and per petrate violence are always with us, even when out of sight.

Chief Executive Officer

Managing/Nonfiction Editor ERIC LIEBETRAU eliebetrau@kirkus.com

But looming over the August assault was another Rushdie novel: 1988’s The Satanic Verses. Like Rushdie’s earlier novels, it was a magical realist tale, dealing, among many other subjects, with the nature of good and evil and the foundation of Islam as filtered through the funhouse mirror of the author’s imagination. Kirkus’ contemporary review called it “an entertainment in the highest sense of that much-exploited word.” The book made international news after inspiring protests and, fatefully, a fatwa—an edict issued by Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini declaring the novel to be a blasphemy against Islam and calling for the author’s death.

FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK | Tom Beer

Salman Rushdie in 1988

Author Consultant JESSICA PACK jpack@kirkus.com

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Cover photo by Jon W. Johnson

salman rushdie, back in the news

Chief Marketing Officer SARAH KALINA skalina@kirkus.com

As we were editing this issue in mid-August, news broke that author Salman Rushdie had been attacked at a lecture in western New York state. The story sent shock waves through the literary community—a stark reminder that violence can lurk in the corners of literary debate. Rushdie is the author of many novels and works of nonfiction and is most celebrated for his 1981 novel, Midnight’s Children, a kaleidoscopic epic of Indian life after independence that won the Booker Prize as well as two subsequent honors, the Booker of Bookers in 1993 and the Best of the Booker in 2008.

President of Kirkus Indie KAREN SCHECHNER kschechner@kirkus.com

Fiction Editor

Young Readers’ Editor MAHNAZ DAR mdar@kirkus.com

GREGORY McNAMEE

BETSY JUDKINS

ImagesLevenson/GettyDavid

Editorial Assistant of Indie PAOLA BENNET pbennet@kirkus.com

Advertising Associate AMY BAIRD abaird@kirkus.com

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Chairman HERBERT SIMON

LAURIE MUCHNICK lmuchnick@kirkus.com

Kirkus Editorial Senior Production Editor ROBIN O’DELL rodell@kirkus.com

Advertising Sales Manager TATIANA ARNOLD tarnold@kirkus.com

Indie Editor MYRA FORSBERG mforsberg@kirkus.com

ParaskevasJohn

Young Readers’ Editor LAURA SIMEON lsimeon@kirkus.com

MARC WINKELMAN #

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The Kirkus Star is awarded to books of remarkable merit, as determined by the impartial editors of Kirkus.

kirkus.com | contents 15 september 2022 | 3 fiction INDEX TO STARRED REVIEWS 4 REVIEWS 4 EDITOR’S NOTE 6 INTERVIEW: YIYUN LI........................................................................ 14 MYSTERY 27 SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY 34 ROMANCE 35 nonfiction INDEX TO STARRED REVIEWS 39 REVIEWS 39 EDITOR’S NOTE................................................................................... 40 INTERVIEW: DAHLIA LITHWICK 48 children’s INDEX TO STARRED REVIEWS 74 REVIEWS 74 EDITOR’S NOTE: PICTURE BOOKS 76 EDITOR’S NOTE: MIDDLE-GRADE 78 INTERVIEW: DARREN ARONOFSKY & ARI HANDEL.....................82 BOARD & NOVELTY BOOKS 122 young adult INDEX TO STARRED REVIEWS 127 REVIEWS 127 ON THE COVER: TOMMIE SMITH 134 indie INDEX TO STARRED REVIEWS 149 REVIEWS 149 EDITOR’S NOTE.................................................................................. 150 INDIE BOOKS OF THE MONTH 169 SEEN & HEARD 170 AUDIOBOOKS...................................................................................... 171

Actor Julie Andrews and daughter Emma Walton Hamilton explain the origins of “do, re, mi” in their picture book The First Notes, illustrated by Chiara Fedele. Read the review on page 75.

contents you can bookspurchasenowonlineatkirkus.com

Nathaniel Hawthorne plays an unexpected role in this lively fictional look at the origins of his masterpiece.

37

NO STRANGERS HERE by Carlene O’Connor

16

TWO WRONGS MAKE A RIGHT by Chloe Liese

DR. NO by Percival Everett

These titles earned the Kirkus Star:

FACTORY GIRLS by Michelle Gallen

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IDOL, BURNING by Rin Usami; trans. by Asa Yoneda 25

WAYWARD by Chuck Wendig 26

TREAD OF ANGELS by Rebecca Roanhorse

HESTER Albanese, Laurie Lico St. Martin’s (336 pp.) $27.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-2502-7855-52022Thisnovelreimagines

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DR. NO Everett, Percival Graywolf (232 pp.) $16.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-64445-208-0

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THE DECOY GIRLFRIEND by Lillie Vale

fiction

The Scarlet Letter from the point of view of a woman who might have inspired Hester Prynne. Isobel Gamble is still a teenager when she emigrates from her native Scotland to Salem, Massachusetts, with her much older husband, Edward. Isobel comes from a long line of women with secret knowledge—her namesake is an ances tor known as Isobel Gowdie, Queen of Witches. But she’s been taught since childhood to mask such knowledge, including her synesthesia, a condition that lets her see colors associated with sounds and letters. She’s bent her energy to her skill at needle work, which has helped her support her family. With Edward, who’s an apothecary, she believed she’d made a good marriage— until they ended up in the poorhouse because of his drug use. Salem is their second chance, but almost as soon as they arrive, he turns around and goes back to sea as a medic, leaving her almost penniless. Isobel gets to work and finds support from some people in the community. She also gets to know a tall and handsome young fellow named Nat Hathorne, a man she saw the day she arrived in town. Isobel is a red-haired beauty, and Nat’s interest in her quickly turns into flirtation and more. The Salem witch trials are more than a century in the past, but Nat, an aspiring poet, is haunted by the role of his great-great-grand father, John Hathorne, one of the most implacable judges in the trials. The trials haunt this book, too, woven through its story of Isobel, a woman who bears the bigotry of the town because she’s an immigrant and a woman whose husband may have deserted her. The author has incorporated plentiful research about the witch trials and, in Isobel’s present, the Underground Railroad. The rich details of life in Salem in the early 19th cen tury, and especially about Isobel’s creative work as a seamstress and designer, enliven the tale.

| kirkus.com | fiction 15 september 2022 | 5

Glasgow woman works to heal her family-based trauma so she can reconnect with the world and the people she loves.

An optimistic, feel-good novel that might just soothe some post-Covid angst.

adultyoung

As of Nov. 14, 2018, Meredith Maggs hasn’t left her house in 1,214 days. She has created a fairly healthy routine to her days—freelance writing, exercise, baking, doing jigsaw puzzles, having ses sions with Diane the counselor—but she rarely interacts with anyone in person other than her best friend, Sadie, and Sadie’s kids. When Tom McDermott, from a “befriending charity” called Holding Hands, shows up on her doorstep one day, her initial instinct is to ghost him to avoid future meetings; to her surprise, he becomes a consistent visitor, a jigsaw partner, an

Grand Central Publishing (320 pp.) $28.00 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5387-0994-82022Anagoraphobic

MEREDITH, ALONE

Alexander, Claire

appreciative audience for her baking, and, eventually, a friend. At the same time, via an online chat room, she meets Celeste, who discloses that she has recently been sexually assaulted. Meredith offers her support online, gradually taking the step to invite Celeste into her home. Meredith knows that in order to truly open herself to these new opportunities, she must reconcile with her sister, Fiona, who was her protector and best friend growing up. However, they fell out and have barely spoken for years. When Fiona reaches out with her own cri sis, Meredith is finally able to begin healing from the trauma at the root of her agoraphobia. Alexander creates a winning heroine in Meredith and likable characters in her kind friends; this type of mental illness is not frequently highlighted or discussed, and while Meredith’s experience predates the pan demic, there are, of course, echoes of sympathy for those who were isolated at home or who continue to be anxious about leaving their homes for this uncertain world.

The Means by Amy Fusselman (Mariner, Sept. 6): Man hattan stay-at-home-mother Shelly Means wants a house in the Hamptons even if it’s made out of used shipping containers. All, of course, will not go smoothly. Our starred review says that with its “deadpan absurdity, pithy prose, and moral je ne sais quoi,” this book is “a trenchant comedy of class and the way we live now.”

narrator—like the author, a Gua temalan Jew—attends a confer ence in Tokyo for Lebanese writ ers. “Another minimasterpiece by a master of the form,” according to our starred review.

Laurie Muchnick is the fiction editor.

There are so many great books com ing out this month—first novels and 60-something novels; books set in Berlin, Texas, and the Hamptons; books rife with horror, romance, and reflection. Here are a few to look out for.

The Furrows by Namwali Ser pell (Hogarth, Sept. 27): Serpell’s first novel, The Old Drift (2019), was a 592-page magical realist epic following four generations in Zambia. Her new book is shorter and more tightly focused on one character, Cassan dra, whose brother drowned—or perhaps disappeared?—from a Delaware beach when she was 12 and he was 7. “If The Old Drift was an epic effort to outdo Marquez and Rushdie, this slippery yet ad mirably controlled novel aspires to outdo Toni Morrison, and it earns the comparison,” says our starred review. “Stylistically refreshing and emotionally intense, cementing Serpell’s place among the best writers going.”

Sojourn by Amit Chaudhuri (New York Review Books, Sept. 6): As in the fiction of Teju Cole, Chaudhuri’s narrator walks and thinks. An Indian writer who’s arrived in Berlin as a visiting professor, he ponders Kenzaburo Oe, who once stayed in the same flat where he’s been put up; he soaks up the city’s history. The book “grips the mind,” according to our starred review, which calls Chaudhuri “a masterful writer in his own sub tle, thoughtful, demanding genre.”

Canción by Eduardo Halfon; translated by Lisa Dill man and Daniel Hahn (Bellevue Literary Press, Sept. 20): Halfon’s last autobiographical novel, Mourning (2018), was a finalist for the Kirkus Prize; in his new book, his

Act of Oblivion by Robert Harris (Harper, Sept. 13): For his latest thriller, Harris heads back to 17th-century Eng land and New England as the fictional Richard Nayler tracks the real-life fugitives Edward Whalley and William Goffe, who helped plot the execution of King Charles I after the English civil war. Our starred review says, “The deeply researched story is the author’s brilliant reimagin ing of real historical events, with sympathetic characters and a compelling plot.”

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The Old Place by Bobby Finger (Putnam, Sept. 20): Finger is the co-host of the witty microceleb rity podcast Who? Weekly, and his first novel couldn’t be more differ ent: Set in the small town of Bill ington, Texas, it tells the story of unhappily retired math teacher Mary Alice Roth as she finds her way back into a friend ship with her next-door neighbor, Ellie; their relationship had been strained since they both lost their sons, one after the other, just af ter the boys graduated from high school. “A surprising page-turner,” says our starred review. “Homey, funny, yet with dark corners of an ger and grief.”

FICTION | Laurie Muchnick

some september highlights

Fairy Tale by Stephen King (Scribner, Sept. 6): Maine teenager Charlie Reade befriends his neigh bor Mr. Bowditch, who warns him away from the shed in his backyard: It’s “Narnia on the Penobscot,” as our starred review says, with “a whole bunch of people—well, sort of people, anyway—who’d like nothing better than to bring their special brand of evil up to our world’s surface.”

Ascher/Straus

influencer living in Atlanta finds herself at the center of a revenge plot—but is it aimed at her or her @UnapologeticallyAlexhusband? is many things: She’s Alex Hutchinson, 39; mother of twin 12-year-olds Penelope and Gigi; a cheerful, supportive Instagram influencer who’s proud of herself, pregnancy stretch marks and all; and wife to Patrick, 46, a “self-made moneyman” and nightly news personality. She is also very, very fake, from her perfect photos to her bleached teeth, false eyelashes, and plas tic surgery. The night she hits a million followers on Instagram, she gets extremely drunk with AC, her personal assistant, and her husband has to put AC into an Uber and pour Alex into bed.

| kirkus.com | fiction 15 september 2022 | 7 adultyoung

McPherson & Company (336 pp.)

THE PERSONAL ASSISTANT Belle, Kimberly Park Row Books (352 pp.) $17.99 paper | Nov. 29, 2022 978-0-778-33325-8AnInstagram

The opening image of this surreal and often baffling novel is an idyllic scene of childhood. There is a lake, children, a grandmotherly figure, and a baby experi menting with the protolanguage of infancy while he bangs his sippy cup against his highchair. The narrative voice, unattached to any of these figures, functions in a kind of a documentarystyle overlay that informs the reader of their position in rela tion to this scene: “Always from the outside, we feel life gather…. The completeness of life, but only from the outside and from a distance.” This position is the one the reader will occupy for the rest of this iconoclastic project in which narrative structure, character development, even the flow of time take a back seat to the pyrotechnics of form. After the brief lakeside prologue, the novel restarts in a diner from which a boy named Junior with no memory or sense of himself is retrieved by a bumbling henchman-type figure named Waldo Bunny, who returns him to his mother, Penny. These figures—Junior, Waldo Bunny, Penny, and various fathers, among others—reoccur, occupying dif ferent relationships to each other and themselves as the book builds a gathering sense of the sinister, the occluded, or the forgotten rather than an accumulation of chronological scenes. The result is confusing. Characters blend into each other or perform seemingly significant actions and then abruptly disap pear. There is a tendency for the narrative voice to branch off into extended similes that obscure the originating object rather than illuminate through comparison. For example, when one of Junior’s father figures is home alone, he feels his house is like “a capsule orbiting and isolated in space—and inside the isolated space capsule himself, small and shriveled as the last raisin stuck to the bottom of a little two ounce raisin box that’s just been emptied into the mouth of an ailing child standing on the side walk and waiting to be driven to a hospital where he’ll spend years isolated in a pod with food tray and television set.” The fact that this image later turns out to provide some situational context for one of the more developed plotlines does not excuse the lengths the reader is expected to go in order to participate in the scene. While there are some moments of real insight, the book as a whole reads like an experiment in process that does not fully congeal into a project—resulting in a frustrating expe rience for even the most patient and open-minded of readers. This book perplexes without provoking more meaningful engagement.

tively written by Sheila Ascher and Den nis Straus under the name Ascher/Straus explores a world in which identity is not only mutable, but in constant flux.

HEADLESS WORLD

novel collabora

$19.99 paper | Nov. 10, 2022 978-1-62054-049-7Themostrecent

BEFORE YOU KNEW MY NAME

A thoughtfully written, suspenseful story of intertwined lives that draws the reader quickly along to an unexpected ending.

Bublitz, Jacqueline Emily Bestler/Atria (320 pp.) $17.99 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-982-19899-2Amurdervictim guides a young woman to a new understanding of her life—and to a killer.

When she wakes up the next morning, she’s unexpectedly gone viral with a post she made while plastered. @Unapologetically Alex has done the opposite of what her fans have come to expect: She’s called out a 16-year-old celebrity for being a “two-bit whore” with the “brains of a dodo bird.” When she starts thinking about damage control, she realizes that AC is missing. And then her life starts to unravel—the death and rape threats against her and her girls begin and then get worse, she is doxxed, and her husband gets more and more evasive as the police look into him in their efforts to find the missing AC. Alex’s and Patrick’s stories parallel another: Anna Claire is a maid in a divey motel, picked up and delivered to work one day by a rich, sunglasses-clad stranger in a BMW when her car is put out of commission by a flat. He wines and dines her, and she ends up pregnant and laundering money for him—moving enormous amounts of cash through the motel where she works. The stories touch on murder, torture, implied rape, and violent threats without glorifying graphic details.

The murder of an attractive young woman is the foundation on which many crime novels are built—a device used too often, some might argue. But in her unique first book, Austra lian writer Bublitz turns that traditional construct on its head with fierce compassion and a welcome dose of feminist outrage. The narrator is 18-year-old Alice Lee, whose troubled past in a small Wisconsin town sent her fleeing to New York City, where she becomes the victim of a terrible crime. But instead of focus ing only on the hunt for her killer, Bublitz puts Alice center stage. Her spirit filled with sorrow and fury, Alice demands the

8 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

traveling tips—a folding toothbrush is best, he advises—will not be disappointed.

$22.99 | Oct. 25, 978-1-9848-1854-62022Inthelatestvolume

“A grimly efficient addition to the Reacher canon.”

no plan b

reader’s attention, assuring us that this is not a story about the man who killed her but about her—and young women every where whose lives have been cruelly reduced to sensational headlines. Before her death, Alice fell in love with the city and discovered a fascination with photography. After her murder, she attaches herself to Australian Ruby, another struggling soul who has also left home for a fresh start only to be derailed by finding Alice’s body. Alice slowly reveals fragments of herself to Ruby, and together they stumble toward bringing the killer to justice and Ruby toward a new understanding of freedom and the need for boundaries, the importance of finding a commu nity to be a part of, and what she needs to do to make her life her own. This is undeniably a crime story, but Bublitz’s creativ ity, affectionate descriptions of a New York City she obviously adores, and strong character development make this novel stand out in a crowded genre.

| kirkus.com | fiction 15 september 2022 | 9 adultyoung

THE DOUBLE AGENT

The death is ruled a suicide, but Reacher saw a man push the woman under a bus and steal her purse. After tracking down and disposing of the culprit, he learns that the woman worked for a private prison in Mississippi and had returned to Colorado to run troubling statistics about the prison’s opera tion past her former boss. He died of a supposed heart attack 12 hours before her death. Teaming up with the man’s toughskinned ex-wife, Reacher heads South to sort things out, “wired to move toward danger.” Fearing Reacher will interfere with their deadly schemes, prison officials set up a network of road blocks outside of town to pick him off. Meanwhile, a vulner able 15-year-old boy, escaping his abusive foster mother in Los Angeles, travels to Mississippi after his birth mother tells him life-changing truths about his father. He, too, is targeted by bad guys. Most of the ingredients of classic Reacher are here. Our sadistic hero delivers bone-crushing blows to his hopeless foes with sadistic satisfaction (“Would you care if you stepped on a cockroach?”). He eludes the traps set for him and penetrates the high-security prison. He drinks a lot of coffee and beds a local woman. What’s missing in this follow-up to the collaborative Better Off Dead (2021) is Lee Child’s elegant writing, for which he hasn’t received enough credit. The sentences here are short and metronomically flat, and the early sections are uncharacter istically disjointed. But fans who come for the action and the

NO PLAN B Child, Lee & Andrew Child Delacorte (336 pp.)

ChristieII.picks up the story of Alexsi Ivanovich Smirnov where he left off in A Single Spy (2017): It’s 1943, and Alexsi is in Tehran, where he shares his singular story with Prime Min ister Winston Churchill at the British Embassy. After a hard scrabble childhood, Alexsi became a Russian spy and infiltrated

A unique, feminist take on the suspense genre and our fas cination with violence.

A grimly efficient addition to the Reacher canon.

Christie, William Minotaur (352 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-2500-8082-02022Adangerousspywith a secret agenda continues to cut a deadly swath through World War

from Child, Inc., in which the retiring Lee’s younger brother, Andrew, will soon take over the Jack Reacher franchise, the colossal exArmy cop traces the killing of a woman in a Colorado town to a gruesome prison conspiracy in Mississippi.

Authentic history tucked neatly into a riveting thrill ride.

NIGHT SHIFT

An OK mystery that probably won’t be the worst thing you read this year.

Why is her old law school roommate, Judge Annie Chilton, allowing Alexan dria’s Commonwealth’s Attorney Bose Flagler to beat up Scarpetta on the witness stand? Normally the state’s CME would be on the prosecutor’s side, but this time Scarpetta is determined to testify that her predecessor, the late Dr. Bailey Carter, who had rapid-onset dementia, mistakenly called beauty queen April Tupelo’s drowning murder, leading to the arrest of her live-in Romeo, Gilbert Hooke. Even so, Chilton’s rulings seem consistently heedless of Scarpetta’s for midable reputation and personal feelings, as if the judge were

Cook, Robin Putnam (352 pp.) $29.00 | Dec. 6, 978-0-593-54018-32022Acompetentmedical

for Virginia chief medical examiner Dr. Kay Scarpetta and her well-placed enemies past and present.

10 | 15 september 2022 fiction | kirkus.com |

thriller from the genre’s most famous practitioner.

Germany, becoming a high-ranking intelligence officer there. His plans apparently go beyond cooperating with the British. He undertakes a daring escape in the middle of the night. Pos ing as a poor Iranian, he hitches a ride with a group of smugglers and, after near-fatal injuries incurred during an encounter with a rival group, finds himself in a hospital, chained to his bed. There are more twists and turns before Alexsi lands in British custody again. This time he’s taken to England as a prisoner, where he’s commanded to share the unabridged account of his life and exploits for British stenographers, an appealing challenge for an inveterate yarn spinner like Alexsi, who changes identities as easily as clothes and kills without remorse. Christie’s brisk opening chapters serve to flesh out the backstory alluded to in the prologue and to illustrate the devious derring-do of his protagonist. His taut thriller is also a panoramic view of a cru cial stretch of World War II, set forth with pace and precision. Readers will be challenged to guess Alexsi’s motives and next moves as they feverishly turn the pages.

LIVID

Cornwell, Patricia Grand Central Publishing (400 pp.) $24.99 | Oct. 25, 978-1-5387-2516-02022Another15rounds

In the latest from the author of Coma (1977), husband-and-wife medical exam iner team Laurie Montgomery and Jack Stapleton return to investigate a death that hits close to home. The murder victim in question is Susan Passero, a hospital internist who’s killed in a parking garage after her shift; she happens to be Laurie’s “oldest and closest friend.” While doctors at the hospital initially speculate that the death is due to a heart attack, Jack has his doubts and tries to figure out who might have a grudge against the late doctor. After poking around, he finds that Sue had “bump[ed] heads” with two fellow doctors and a hospital executive and that she believed there might be a medical serial killer on the loose in her hospital. Things get more urgent when a charge nurse at the hospital turns up dead, convincing Jack that something’s afoot. Meanwhile, Jack also investigates the death of the wife of a police officer that was possibly staged to look like a suicide, and there’s some family troubles thrown in for good measure. Cook’s writing is not going to win any prizes—consider sen tences like “Lots of sarcastic barbs was the bulk of their normal verbal interaction”—and his dialogue is dependably stilted. But Cook’s readers are here for the suspense, and at least he’s good at that part—it’s a pretty solid page-turner even if his prose is as clunky as an engine that’s about to seize. It’s the kind of book you can take on vacation and leave there.

Dev, Sonali Mindy’s Book Studio (272 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-6625-0926-12022Anintergenerational

real deuxmoi, a pseudonymous celebrity-gossip Instagram account, and a surprisingly good read.

As usual, the dead are just more interesting than the living. Something to look forward to.

For eight years, Cricket Lopez has been the abused assistant of Manhat tan celebrity stylist Sasha Sherman, the former queen of reality TV. After one particularly humiliating day and very boozy evening, Cricket restarts her anonymous Instagram account, deuxmoi, airing the dirty laundry about her firm’s new influencer client and asking fans to spill the tea about their celebrity encounters. The account goes viral, and soon everyone is talking about the unverified blind items detailing celebrity sex habits and restaurant sightings as well as guess ing who the anonymous creator is. Cricket navigates the tidal wave of secret notoriety alongside Leon, her snarky but sweet co-worker, and Victoria, her BFF since high school who married out of the fashion industry and into the country-club world of the Upper East Side. But as the account grows in its influence, Sasha’s firm flounders, and their main A-list client may be the next to fall prey to his own history of sexual misconduct and predatory behavior. Sasha grows even more out-of-control, an internet tycoon wants to buy deuxmoi, a reporter is ready to out her, and Cricket and her friends can lose even more than they thought possible. And then there’s Ollie Snyder, the editorin-chief of a Billboard-type entertainment magazine, who is as hot as Hollywood and slides into Cricket’s DMs, offering advice and very steamy sex. For deuxmoi fans, this novel will be a solid extension of the brand’s coming-of-age story, and they’ll espe cially enjoy the inside jokes and liberal quotes from the real-life account, which helps create the tantalizing-yet-relatable tone.

| kirkus.com | fiction | 15 september 2022 | 11 adultyoung

“A candid, unexpected critique of celebrity, hanger on, and enabler culture.”

tale of self-dis covery and the relationships that matter most.Cullie Desai, a 25-year-old Indian American woman, is endlessly loyal to her mother, Alisha (known as Aly), and her paternal grandmother, Bindu. So when Cullie gets a call that Bindu is in distress, she immediately hops on a plane to Florida

anon pls.

distracted by something. Maybe she’s having previsions about her sister, CIA press secretary Rachael Stanwyck, who’s soon found dead in the kitchen of the judge’s family estate, render ing the introductory case moot to everyone but the protesters who attack Scarpetta, bellowing “JUSTICE FOR APRIL!” and providing the media with more anti-Scarpetta grist. Certainly Cornwell seems to forget about it in her eagerness to linger over the diabolical, state-of-the-art murder weapon by which the judge’s sister met her doom and to evoke the endless infighting among Scarpetta, her nemesis, Virginia health commissioner Dr. Elvin Reddy, and his minions. A second (or is it a third?) murder provides the basis for more of the post-mortem set pieces that make fans of this long-running series salivate, and it’s especially gratifying to see Scarpetta wring important evidence from a dust bunny. But the forensics mean more to Cornwell than the suspects, and the ideal reader of this installment won’t care any more than she does whodunit.

Morrow/HarperCollins (288 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-06-325780-12022Bothanadforthe

A candid, unexpected critique of celebrity, hanger-on, and enabler culture.

ANON PLS. DeuxMoi with Jessica Goodman

For nonfans, this autofiction is reminiscent of other of-themoment bad-boss books like Leigh Stein’s Self Care

THE VIBRANT YEARS

One never knows what to expect from Everett, whose prolific fictional output over the last four decades includes Westerns (God’s Coun try, 1994), crime novels (Assumption, 2011), variations on Greek mythology (Frenzy, 1997), and inquiries into African American identity (I Am Not Sidney Poitier, 2009). This time, Everett brings his mordant wit, philosophic inclinations, and narrative mischief to the suspense genre, going so far as to appropriate the title of an Ian Fleming thriller. Its nonplussed hero/narrator is a mathemat ics professor at Brown University who calls himself Wala Kitu. It turns out he’s the grown-up version of Ralph Townsend, the genius child in Everett’s novel Glyph (1999), who retains every thing while determined to say nothing. Indeed, “nothing” is the recurring theme (or joke) of Everett’s latest, beginning with its title and continuing with the meaning of both Wala (nothing in Tagalog) and Kitu (nothing in Swahili). “Nothing” also appears to be the major objective of one John Milton Bradley Sill, a “slightly racially ambiguous” self-made billionaire who declares to Wala his ambition to be a Bond villain, “the sort of perpetrator of evil deeds that might cause the prime minister to dispatch a doublenaught spy.” John Sill offers Wala a hefty sum ($3 million) to help him rob Fort Knox just as the eponymous baddie of Fleming’s Goldfinger tried to do. Wala’s not sure whether Sill’s joking or not. But the money’s big enough to compel him to tag along as Sill goes through the motions of being a supervillain, stopping along the way in places like Miami, Corsica, Washington, D.C., and, eventually, Kentucky. Wala’s accompanied throughout by his faithful one-legged bulldog, Trigo, and a math department colleague named Eigen, who at times seems to be literally under Sill’s spell but is almost as vexed by the nefarious goings-on as Wala. Being stalked throughout by Gloria, a comely, deadly Black android with an on-again, off-again Afro, doesn’t ease their anxi eties. Everett is adroit at ramping up the tension while sustaining his narrator’s droll patter and injecting well-timed ontological discourses on...well…nothing. It may not sound like anything much, so to speak. But then, neither did all those episodes of Seinfeld that insisted they were about nothing. And this, too, is just as funny, if in a far different, more metaphysical manner.

A good place to begin finding out why Everett has such a devoted cult.

DR. NO Everett, Percival Graywolf (232 pp.) $16.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-64445-208-0Adeadpanspoof of international thrillers, complete with a megalomania cal supervillain, a killer robot, a damsel in distress, and math problems.

so strong it was almost painful tightened around Bindu’s heart for these two. The world would never see them like this, entirely comfortable in their skin. This was a world they had created, the three of them, because of who they were.”

“A good place to begin finding out why Everett has such a devoted cult.”

A cozy cup of chai for the soul.

from her home in San Francisco and shows up at her grandmoth er’s new condo at a glitzy retirement center. A loving familial gesture—except that in this case, the older woman’s distress is the result of a really bad date, when the man she’s with dies in the middle of their first sexual interlude. This sets the tone for the novel as a whole: It’s the story of three women bound by deep love and very few boundaries. While Bindu’s sexual drama does drive a chunk of the plot, the three deal with a whole host of problems, supporting each other with advice, chai, and lavish home-cooked meals. Tech-genius Cullie needs to develop a new state-of-the-art app while opening herself up to the possibility of love. Recent divorcée Aly is trying to prove her worth at work while dealing with a surprise visit from Ashish, her ex-husband (and Bindu’s son). And Bindu is balancing her desire to be liber ated in her golden years with traumatic memories that she can not shut out. Told from the alternating perspectives of Cullie, Aly, and Bindu, the novel often relies on overly coincidental plot points and too-convenient characters. That said, these problems are offset by Dev’s success at portraying the profound bonds of care, humor, and love that run among the three women: “Love

dr. no

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Li, who’s received a MacArthur Fellowship among many other literary honors, was inspired to write Goose by an Eliza beth Bowen review of ’50s-era books by four French child prod igies, one of whom was a sham genius much like Agnès. But the drama in the novel is mostly interior, in keeping with Li’s deeply contemplative, precise, and often melancholy writing.

I thought it was an interesting little hoax. I’m sure it happens these days, but they get forgotten. When the narrative is not so neat, people just throw it away and move on to the next prodigy. But I wasn’t really interested in the prodigy per se. I wanted to write about a pair of friends and how, together, they outsmarted the world, at least for a period of time. And also how they formed each other.

This story was inspired in part by the story of a young French girl who became a literary celebrity before being exposed as a fraud. What did you want to explore in that incident?

WORDS WITH…

Did you have any models for writing about friendship in this way? Elena Ferrante would be an obvious recent example. It’s so funny: After I turned in the manuscript, everybody men tioned Elena Ferrante, but she did not cross my mind. At all. I

I find it so fascinating. When two children meet each other, very rarely do they smile at each other. They just look at each other and bypass the small-talk stage to get to the essence of things. I see you. Do I know you? Do I want to know you? I was thinking about how childhood friendship is formed and how it’s so instrumental to who we become.

OpaleCannarsa-AgenceBasso

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The author of The Book of Goose asks that you take your time and read her novel slowly

Speaking by video chat from her home in Princeton, New Jersey (she teaches at Princeton University), Li discussed the motivations behind The Book of Goose, the popular groupreads of classics she led during the pandemic, and the virtues of slow reading. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

BY MARK ATHITAKIS

Yiyun Li

One of the key lines in this book is, “Nothing is more in explicable than friendship and childhood.” What inter ests you about childhood friendship as a subject?

Those friendships can be mysterious. Agnès and Fa bienne invent their own way to relate with each other, wholly apart from adult norms. Yes, and I think when I was younger that was probably more prominent. With the internet, there’s a circulated language and kids are less isolated. In the ’70s and ’80s, when I was a child, consciousness was entirely wrapped around who we were talking to day to day, who your best friend was. Friend ship during that developmental stage often provides the cir cumstance for our entire being, language, and consciousness.

Yiyun Li’s fifth novel, The Book of Goose (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Sept. 20), turns on the peculiar friendship between two preteen French farm girls shortly after World War II. Fabienne is precocious and creative, with an affinity for the transgressive and macabre. Agnès is more reserved but eager to follow along. Fabienne dictates a series of stories to Agnès that becomes a literary sensation; Agnès, the public face of the duo, is wrongly hailed as a prodigy and sent to a British private school to perfect a craft she doesn’t possess.

adultyoung

What are you teaching at Princeton?

How do you feel this book fits with your other work?

Do you have another group-read planned?

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People will say, “This is not about China, this is not about Asian Americans.” But I think it’s consistent with the kind of characters and subject matter I pay attention to: loneliness and the very complicated and inexplicable interior landscapes of people. From the outside, this book might look a little dif ferent. But from where I’m looking, it’s just another book by me.

In November we’re going to read Charlotte Brontë’s Villette (1853). I love that novel. It doesn’t get as much attention as Jane Eyre, but it’s very contemporary. Jane Eyre could only hap pen in that house, in that setting. With Villette, I feel like you

It struck me that this might be a very different book if it were written from Fabienne’s perspective. Oh, I would never have let Fabienne write this book.

I realized that there’s something very special about reading slowly, just a small segment a day. I hate when someone says, “I devoured that book.” No. You have to savor it. You have to decant the book. You have to let it breathe. I’m always patient, but I’ve become much more patient. I’m astronomically pa tient at this point.

Why?

didn’t even think about it. Ferrante’s books are about a decades long friendship, and I was more interested in that period be tween ages 12 and 14, just on the cusp of becoming grown-ups but still children. There’s something very pure and a little bit nasty about that age. It’s a very complicated thing. The closest example I can think of in fiction about girls that age would be [Muriel Spark’s 1961 novel] The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.

Earlier this year you received the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story. Do you have a new collection coming?

Since the pandemic started, you’ve led online book clubs for War and Peace and Moby Dick that drew large followings. Did that experience change how you think about your work or your relationship with readers?

I teach fiction writing. One thing I learned about my students is if you give them a book to read, the day before a deadline, they can read very fast. Apparently in an hour they can read 100 pages [laughs]. So last year, and I’m going to do this again, I used a very good book for slow reading: Marilynne Robin son’s Housekeeping. You cannot rush through that book in one sitting. I assigned them just one chapter a week. They have to spend seven days reading 10 pages and annotate those 10 pag es. When you ask them to slow down, they’re reading words. They’re reading sentences, images. They’re reading their own thoughts. If you read too fast, that never happens. When I collected all my students’ annotations, I thought, “This is the best criticism ever written about Housekeeping.”

You were working on this book during the pandemic. Did that change your process?

can see its main character, Lucy Snowe, walking down the street in any city at this moment.

Mark Athitakis is a journalist in Phoenix who writes about books for Kirkus, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and elsewhere. The Book of Goose received a starred review in the July 1, 2022, issue.

Maybe five years ago, I had an entire collection ready to go, and then it just happened that I was bringing out other books instead. But I think next fall there’s going to be a collection of stories. My last one, Gold Boy, Emerald Girl, was published in 2010, so it’s been a little while. I probably have more stories than I can fit into one collection now. I may have to do some rearranging.

She has a lot of opinions and ideas and thoughts and feelings about the world, and I’m more interested in how those things are reflected by Agnès’ consciousness. Fabienne is a sharper, brighter character. She’s sort of like a diamond, sharp and clear. I like the muddiness, those smudges in the characters.

The pandemic can be claustrophobic: You’re just there with your own characters. But in a funny way it was a very good thing. I was just immersed with these characters. They were as real to me, probably more real to me, than the rest of the world.

Gallen, Michelle Algonquin (240 pp.) $17.99 paper | Nov. 29, 2022 978-1-64375-245-7Ateenagegirl

THE INK BLACK HEART Galbraith, Robert Mulholland Books/Little, Brown (1024 $32.00pp.)|Aug. 30, 978-0-316-41303-92022Anoverblownwhodunit

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Long, loose, and lax.

On the internet, everyone can hear you scream. To boot, as a very bad actor named Anomie puts it, “nobody’s who they say they are.” Robin and Cormoran have quite the task on their hands when Edie Ledwell, a cartoonist whose show, The Ink Black Heart, is a hit on YouTube and has just been bought by Netflix, turns up to ask for help in chasing down an online group, Anomie at its helm, that has built an online game around her show. Grumbles Anomie, “She’s shitting all over the fans, saying

they’re thick for liking our game.” Edie doesn’t last long; con veniently, she winds up in London’s Highgate Cemetery, ready for planting. All suspicion in what’s now a murder case points to Anomie, a slippery character. Is he (or she) a criminal mas termind, or just some creepy kid living in mom’s basement? It takes Robin and Cormoran reams of online chat–thick prose to discover the truth, sussing out the identities of characters with noms de net like Paperwhite and Fiendly1. Online identities are fluid, of course, which doesn’t help when the problem is how to lay down a coherent storyline, but it soon becomes apparent that, indeed, no one is quite who they say they are. One more thing is sure: Rowling, the subject of recent controversy, plays out her current preoccupations against an up-to-the-minute backdrop: Edie is accused of “multiple alleged transgressions, particularly against the disabled,” while a contemporary comes under the gun for having “ ‘misgendered’ a prominent trans woman,” minor plot points in a belabored narrative dotted with appearances by pedophiles, neo-Nazi cultists, “beta males,” incels, an obnoxious pickup artist, and a young woman who ends her sentences on a “rising inflection.” Who did the das tardly deed? After a thousand pages of this, the reader is likely to no longer care.

by Gal

braith, nom de plume of one J.K. Rowling, pitting Robin Ellacott and Cormoran Strike against a murderous online troll.

comes of age working at a factory during the last days of the Troubles.Maeve Murray has one goal in the summer of 1994: to get out of her small town in Northern Ireland and escape to London for university. But she won’t know whether that’s pos sible until she gets her exam results, and in the meantime, she and her two closest friends, Caroline Jackson and Aoife O’Neill, decide to earn money working at the local shirt-making factory. The factory, which is managed by smarmy, handsy, and distress ingly handsome Englishman Andy Strawbridge, is a rare space where Catholics and Protestants are forced to coexist despite the constant threat of sectarian violence. For one summer, everything in Maeve’s life is on the brink of change: her educa tion, her relationships with friends and family, and even the fac tory, a precarious social experiment vulnerable to both sectarian strife and “optimisation” that could crush workers from both factions. Gallen, who grew up in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, reconstructs this era vividly. Her characters speak in dialect, but, more importantly, their understanding of the world is shaped by their experience of the Troubles. Maeve wishes to escape the sectarian environment in which she’s been raised while also viewing Protestants with suspicion, confusion, and, at times, lust. Gallen’s mastery of her protagonist’s psychology renders this muddle comprehensible, sympathetic, and, above

FACTORY GIRLS

“An action packed thriller worthy of the Ludlum legacy.”

robert ludlam’s the blackbriar genesis

$28.00 | Oct. 18, 978-0-593-41997-72022Gervais,atalented

Gervais, Simon

ROBERT LUDLUM’S THE BLACKBRIAR GENESIS

A sensationally entertaining novel that’s deeper than it first appears.

all, funny. Truly humorous novels are hard to come by, but Gal len’s writing is full of genuine bite. Maeve shares her creator’s wit and insight: “[Tony] Blair looked like the sort of toothy creature you’d see in a Free Presbyterian church,” she reflects, “a man who believed way too hard in the wrong thing.”

thriller writer, launches a new Ludlum series.

In Cairo, a State Department official barely survives a violent attack, getting

the story off to a rip-roaring start. Then in Prague, a car bomb obliterates an Operation Treadstone assassin (no, not Jason Bourne, of whom there is passing mention), and an organiza tion called Blackbriar dispatches operatives Helen Jouvert and Donovan Wade to the Czech Republic to investigate. They are a smart, gutsy duo who are not romantically involved, but stay tuned for future episodes. Blackbriar is a hush-hush outfit con tracted by the Department of National Intelligence that, unlike the FBI, doesn’t have to worry about rules and stuff. It is a Black Ops counterintelligence program designed to neutralize hostile foreign intelligence operations “by any means necessary” and is so secret that “not even POTUS” knows about it. (Um, really? Is this what America is coming to?) Blackbriar differs from Tread stone in that it is “mostly defensive, going after whoever wants to steal our government’s secrets.” Anyway, Russians persuade four forever-fighting Mexican drug cartels to put aside their dif ferences and join them in undermining the hated United States. In a joint operation called Proyecto Verdad, the Russkies will provide the technological know-how to launch a cyberattack against the United States, and the cartels will kick in a ton of

| kirkus.com | fiction 15 september 2022 | 17 adultyoung

Putnam (416 pp.)

LECH

novelist Haldeman uses full pages of both sequential art and poetry to tell the story of a contempo rary poet’s encounters with ghosts near a Civil War battle site and how the experi ence shaped her work.

Lippmann, Sara Tortoise Books (319 pp.) $18.99 paper | Oct. 18, 2022

18 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

An action-packed thriller worthy of the Ludlum legacy.

978-1-94895-469-3Amotleycrew of neighbors gets through the summer of 2014 in Sullivan County, New Lippmann’sYork.first novel after two story collections features an ensemble cast of characters ranging from vintage quirky to seriously damaged, all with complicated backstories and interlocking current problems. The eponymous Lech is Ira Lecher, a 66-year-old divorcé who lives up to his name. He rents

TEAM PHOTOGRAPH

cash. As readers will expect, bloodletting abounds. Donovan Wade puts it this way: “A round to the chest and an eight-inch cut deep into one’s throat is a one-way ticket to the big guy.” In his lifetime, Robert Ludlum wrote 27 thrillers. Since Ludlum’s 2001 death, Eric Van Lustbader and others collectively have written about 30 more, all set in the dangerous world of assas sins and international intrigue. This is the first contribution by Gervais, and his style fits right in.

The narrator has the head of a wolf, as does every living per son in her story—youth soccer league teammates; Civil War sol diers; her dead brother; Walt Whitman—while the heads of the faceless ghosts are bulbous, fluorescent balloons. The reason for the lupine cast isn’t explained until the epilogue, and anthro pomorphism need not always be explained, but here explana tion enhances what has preceded it and underscores the book’s powerful structure. Each chapter opens with graphic-novel backstory and ends with pages of poetry on otherwise blank pages, following a girl who grew up seeing ghosts in and around her Virginia home and came to poetry as an attempt to explain these phantasms, then presenting the poetry the experiences inspired. The form of her poems evolves as she follows differ ent threads through soccer fields and a memorial park that a century and a half ago hosted a series of chaotic battles that littered the woods with amputated limbs. Haldeman’s art has an evocative simplicity, with heavy lines eschewing finer details but still wringing remarkable expressions from the wolf faces of her cast. She imbues her characters with a lanky physicality that enlivens the soccer scenes. The story touches on the savagery of war, hypnagogia, indoctrination of nationalism via sports, racism, appropriation, and the development of craft; earnest engagement with these erudite topics attempts to compensate for occasionally cursory exploration. Some eerie paranormal scenes described only in the poetry sections beg for graphicnovel interpretations, but perhaps some things seen can only be evoked, not reproduced.

Haldeman, Lauren Sarabande Books (152 pp.) $22.00 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-1-956046-00-7Poetandgraphic

A stylish meditation on bookish inspiration.

For the right reader, this jigsaw puzzle of a novel will be a pleasure.

When Rhys Lloyd’s dead body is discovered during the traditional New Year’s polar swim in the village of Cwm Coed, it quickly becomes apparent that there is no lack of suspects; many people wished to see him dead. As the owner of The Shore, a new resort community, Rhys was a polarizing figure despite having grown up in the village. As the lake and the new mansions lie right on the border between England and Wales—and represent the fraught history of these countries— police officers from both sides are assigned to the case: Ffion Morgan, a local girl trying to live down her own history as “Ffion Wyllt” (Wild Ffion) and get back on her feet after a divorce, and Leo Brady, haunted by a decision he made that may cost him joint custody of his young son. Neither are they exactly strang ers to one another, having spent one night together that was never supposed to mean more than that. Ffion and Leo must navigate their own tension—sexual and otherwise—as well as the historic tension between their countries and the extreme hierarchy of social class as it pertains to both their wealthy victim and their suspects. Mackintosh offers multiple perspec tives as the chapters both move forward from New Year’s Day and back into the past. As with most successful mysteries, the identity of the murderer, once revealed after a few red herrings, is both stunning and tragically logical. While the movement through time and perspective can sometimes be a little jarring, and makes the novel read slowly at first, the resolution—of not only the mystery, but also the relationships and side plots— offers a deep acceptance of human fragility and complexity.

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out a room to visitors in his house on Murmur Lake, aka Murder Lake due to a drowning years back. Lech’s current guests are a young woman named Beth and her precocious, allergy-ridden, almost-5-year-old son, Zach. Beth is fleeing New York City and her irritating husband after an abortion: “Two days have passed since the D&C about which she’s told no one. (The procedure sounded like a mall shop for tweens. I love your top. Did you get that at D&C?)” Lippmann’s rapid-fire narrative style seems to pay homage to Borscht Belt schtick, but here and elsewhere it can be hard to know what emotion is expected from the reader concerning disturbing sexual situations and unhappy characters. Tzvi, for example, is a Hasidic Jew and a drug dealer—“He is ser vicing a need. Better him than a shegetz [non-Jewish boy].” Bada bing. But Tzvi is also the son of the woman who drowned—he was only 3 years old at the time—and is still haunted by the mys teries of that loss. If it sounds like there’s a lot to try to make sense of in this novel, there is, including what is arguably the main plotline, which is about a grifter-y real estate agent try ing to interest investors in the property surrounding Murmur Lake, which neither Lech nor the creepy farmer who owns the

and social con text deepen the allure of this icy murder mystery set in North Wales.

THE LAST PARTY

adjoining parcel wants to sell. This storyline and others unfold in brief chapters alternating among the points of view of five of the characters.

Mackintosh, Clare Sourcebooks Landmark (432 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-72825-096-02022Layersofhistorical

Come to meet the interestingly dysfunctional characters; stay to cheer them on with a full heart.

fifth novel fol lows a promising young Soviet gymnast as she enters a ruthless sports system that emphasizes winning at all costs. It is 1973 in the remote Arctic mining town of Norilsk, where 8-year-old Anya lives with her father, Yuri, who’s employed at the local metal works. Katerina, Anya’s mother, disappeared three years ago, and it was speculated at the time that the former Bolshoi balle rina might have returned to Moscow or even defected. Despite the shadow cast by her mother’s disappearance and her father’s own loss of status within the Communist Party, Anya’s gymnastic potential has deemed her “an asset to the Soviet Union.” When she is selected to train with Anatoly Popov, Anya embarks on a

An enlightening portrait of a now-vanished world.

physical and emotional journey that takes her from a run-down gym in Norilsk to the famed national gymnastics training cen ter at Round Lake in preparation for the 1980 Moscow Olym pics. In an alternating storyline, Vera, Anya’s elderly neighbor and confidante, recalls her privileged pre-revolutionary child hood and her years in a Siberian labor camp that also killed her husband and son. Writing with a confidence based on excellent research, Meadows vividly depicts the Soviet training system— and its abuses—without taxing readers with too many technical terms. Some of the era’s greatest stars (Ludmilla Tourischeva, Nellie Kim, Olga Korbut) make brief appearances, representing a competitive gymnastics that is transitioning from traditional balletic artistry to a more athletic—and riskier—style. If there’s a flaw in this smoothly paced novel, it’s the lack of conflict moti vating its characters to action. Although well drawn, they are passive figures living in a society that allows for no individual agency. Also, the book’s final section covering the collapse of the Soviet Union feels rushed.

| kirkus.com | fiction | 15 september 2022 | 21 adultyoung

“A promising young Soviet gymnast enters a ruthless sports system that emphasizes winning at all costs.”

winterland

WINTERLAND Meadows, Rae Henry Holt (288 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 29, 978-1-2508-3452-22022Meadows’absorbing

SOMEDAY, MAYBE Nwabineli, Onyi Graydon House (384 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-525-89980-52022Ayoungwidowcomes

College sweethearts Eve and Quentin, affectionately called Q, have been hap pily married for 10 years, living in London. When Eve discovers her husband’s body on New Year’s Eve, her life’s trajectory—and their life together— is cleaved down the center into Before and After. Quentin, born to the White, “semi-royal” Morrow family, has died by suicide— and Eve had no idea he was even suffering. Eve’s world shrinks down to nearly nothing as she navigates her pain, sadness, and guilt. Her close Nigerian family and best friend, Bee, hover close while she refuses to do anything or eat anything other than painnumbing pills. Without a suicide note, Eve and those closest to Q, including his mother, Aspen—who has always been horrible to Eve and who becomes even worse in the wake of her son’s death— struggle to understand how this could happen. As months pass, Eve knows that her family hopes and prays she will soon feel like herself again, and she begins to resent them despite herself: “To grieve is to frighten the people you love.” An accidental discov ery made halfway through the novel changes the course of Eve’s life once again. The novel’s second half offers a slow, hard-earned journey toward healing, which is aided by a well-wrought cast of characters who offer Eve opportunities to figure out who she is now, without Q. Though some readers may find the book unre lenting, Nwabineli’s stunning insight and prose offer a true and honest portrayal of grief as vast, unending, and ever changing; she also meditates on themes of forgiveness, hope, and the endless love of family and friends.

evocative of roots and recognition. “When talking to her I feel—or I felt—connected to a past that is not entirely illusory. And with a place: that of before.” Molloy remembers M.L. as she used to be: “witty, ironic, snobby, critical, at times even malicious.” Now tended by carers, M.L. has forgotten how to sign her name. She no longer remembers to avoid the foods she used to dislike and will soon for get how to eat, what to chew, when to swallow. She is using tactile memory—the feel of things—to replace the mental instinct. Not only tragic and valedictory, these fragments are also philosophical: “How does someone who remembers nothing speak in the first per son? What is the location of that ‘I’, once the memory has come undone?” And on another level, there’s an attempt to scrutinize and secure a relationship by one party as the other fades. What will happen when Molloy stops recording their interactions? Who will be abandoning whom? These are the final, unanswerable, guilty enquiries.

Often chilling, occasionally banal, this ultrashort work fully inhabits its very specific terrain.

to terms with her husband’s sudden death.

paragraphs, Molloy offer snapshots of the advancing loss of a friend “who is coming apart before my veryLikeeyes.”flashes from a lighthouse, Argen tinian writer Molloy offers sudden, extremely short glimpses and apercus—while also posing complicated questions—concerning her friend and longtime associate M.L., who is disappearing into incapacity and remoteness due to memory loss. Their relationship has spanned 45 years and includes professional connections, like collaboration on writing articles, as well as more profound links, such as sharing their particular language, “an at-home Spanish….A home from another era,” words used by mothers or grandmothers,

Nwabineli’s debut is deeply moving, tender, and, against all odds, funny.

22 15 september 2022 fiction kirkus.com

Molloy, Sylvia Trans. by Jennifer Croft Charco Press (150 pp.) $15.95 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-9138-6735-5Inbrief,plangent

DISLOCATIONS

Notable mainly for uniting the author’s two franchise investigators. Let’s see what happens next.

Tatum Gray isn’t terribly receptive, and consulting profiler Dr. Zoe Bentley is downright hostile. Impervious to their lack of encouragement and desperate for a chance to neutralize Wilcox at last, Abby continues to crash their party at every opportu nity. In the meantime, Wilcox, whose messianic preaching to his rapt followers conceals nothing more original than a drive for sex, coercive power, and coerced sex, has set his sights on a new target: Delilah Eckert, who’s taken her two children and gone on the run from her abusive husband, Brad. Wilcox’s fol lowers swarm around Delilah like cartoon minions, assuring her constantly what a great mother she is, and she’s soon addicted to this community of affirmation and easy prey for their leader. Whenever Wilcox senses danger, he has his devoted disciples set fire to their lodgings and move on from Wyoming to Idaho to California. The flames grow ever higher, but suspense never rises above a simmer.

| kirkus.com | fiction | 15 september 2022 | 23 adultyoung

A BURNING OBSESSION Omer, Mike Thomas & Mercer (381 pp.) $11.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-1-5420-3432-6Acriminalprofiler and a hostage negotiator go up against a murderous cult leader from the negotiator’s past— and, to a lesser extent, up against each other.Years after surviving the Wilcox Cult Massacre, Lt. Abby Mullen, NYPD, gets wind of a cult leader out West who’s evidently just as obsessed with punishing his enemies by fire as Moses Wilcox was when she was a child— his child. In the first of many non-surprises, the new firebug turns out to be Wilcox, risen from the ashes and now calling himself Father Moses Williams. Abby, who has plenty of trau matic background experience but zero official standing, does her best to push her way into the investigation, but FBI agent

Quinn, Alyssa Dzanc (216 pp.)

HABILIS

$16.95 paper | Sept. 13, 2022 978-1-950539-47-5Anexperimental

A challenging, compassionate novel about the aftermath of exploitation and packaged youth.

stretching her skin to create the lines that would have presum ably formed if Anna hadn’t ever used Botox. Whereas her previ ous cosmetic procedures brought her closer to a symmetrical, consumable Instagram ideal, Aesthetica™ can restore Anna’s resemblance to her grandmother, a resemblance her mother always cherished. On the eve of the operation, Anna unravels the past that led her here—in particular, the power games and sexual abuse she experienced with her boyfriend and manager, Jake—and the relationships with her mother and her child hood best friend, Leah, she alternately shied away from and chased. Rowbottom’s prose moves back and forth from striking imagery to staccato simplicity (“Jake led me through the club, walking with a languid gait, his shoulders rolled back so that his heart looked open and imperiled. We sat at a sticky banquette”), which gives it an entrancing quality, like the best social media algorithms. While structurally the novel is conventional, track ing a naïve young woman’s entrapment in a sordid world and her reawakening as an adult, Rowbottom’s specificity about one moment in internet culture and the contradictory ideologies about autonomy and desire young women must parse make it worthwhile reading.

An eccentric, stylish, smart debut.

Anna is 35, and she has a face she no longer recognizes. After years of fillers and lifts—not all of which have aged well—she has the opportu nity to begin aging naturally again if she goes through with the risky Aesthetica™ procedure. This surgery has its own artifici ality; it won’t just remove implants and scar tissue but involves

24 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

AESTHETICA

DEFENDING ALICE A Novel of Love and Race in the Roaring Twenties Stratton, Richard HarperVia (576 pp.) $28.99 | Nov. 22, 978-0-063-11546-02022Ataleaboutatense

A common book-blurb cliché declares that fiction is about “what makes us human.” In this unusually structured, engaging debut novel, Quinn attempts to address the mat ter anthropologically. One thread of the novel features Lucy, a woman attending a dance party at a museum, surrounded by exhibits of human artifacts and anthropological dioramas. Braided around Lucy’s story are descriptions of particular exam ples of human ancestors—including, of course, the ancient hom inid Lucy—and Lucy’s backstory, in which she was abandoned as an infant and is eventually adopted. And later in the book, woven around all this, Quinn lightly fictionalizes the story of famous anthropologist Mary Leakey, who, along with her hus band and son, was responsible for some of the biggest finds in the 20th century around human evolution, including the Homo habilis of the novel’s title. (And yet another thread features Sukhjinder Saleem, an Indian man in the late 1800s recruited to assist on an archeological dig.) Quinn’s (very) long view of history, her interest in myth and science, and her fragmentary, sometimes abstracted prose all echo work by Maggie Nelson and Anne Carson, but Quinn isn’t a mimic. She writes engross ingly about the human need to acquire language, both scientifi cally and through Lucy’s struggles to be heard and understood. And Quinn mixes up styles to articulate that struggle, from aca demic to lyrical to abstract (“Language does not fossilize. This is all speculation. This is all lies. Let us not speak of it. Let us leave it in the earth”). We know a lot about our human history, Quinn notes, but her novel emphasizes that we’re still fumbling to make sense of what makes us human.

Leonard Kip Rhinelander, “pampered scion of an aristo cratic bloodline,” meets and falls in love with Alice Jones, a beautiful, alluring young woman of English and West Indian background. The attraction is mutual, and she appears to be indifferent to his wealth. They run off and marry, the news of which is too much for Leonard’s domineering and racist father, Philip, who has his son kidnapped. Leonard, who has a weak backbone, sues for annulment of his own marriage, with expensive lawyers paid for and under the orders of Philip. The grounds? Alice supposedly tricked Leonard into think ing she was White. Defending Alice, attorney Lee Parsons Davis warns her that the trial will be nasty and brutal. Indeed, Leonard’s lawyers look out only for Philip’s interest, portray ing Leonard as a stuttering, “brain-tied idiot” defrauded by a whore who just wants a piece of the family fortune. The mar riage must be annulled! Thus unfolds an epic courtroom clash that gains national headlines for weeks. Tension builds for both courtroom and reader. The existence of love letters comes to light—Leonard apparently wrote some doozies describing sex acts Davis deems disgusting, unnatural, even illegal. But will

legal battle over race and love, based on the sensational 1924 case of Rhinelander v. Rhinelander in White Plains, New York.

novel weaving a present-day identity crisis around stories of our millennia-old ancestors.

Rowbottom, Allie Soho (264 pp.) $27.00 | Nov. 22, 978-1-641-29400-32022AformerInstagram model prepares for a surgery that promises to undo all her previous cosmetic procedures in this dark and poignant debut.

he introduce the correspondence into evidence? He keeps the courtroom on tenterhooks. Alice is deeply sympathetic as she receives and rejects repeated offers of cash to settle the case and go away; she simply wants her marriage back. Opposing attorneys smear her entire family with racist insults. Davis is the primary narrator, and he is masterful in building suspense as opposing sides brutalize each other. Davis makes it known that he is a renowned trial attorney; and he is a great story teller as well, though he—or the author—suffers from a touch of logorrhea as he drives home essential points. Still, the story flows well.

IDOL, BURNING Usami, Rin Trans. by Asa Yoneda HarperVia (128 pp.) $24.99 | Nov. 15, 978-0-06-321328-92022Anaccusationagainst her favorite J-pop idol upends an unstable teen’s world.Akari, a high school junior in Japan, wakes up one morning to the dreadful rumor that Masaki Ueno has assaulted a female fan. She is dev astated: To her, Masaki is not simply a member of the popular group Maza Maza, he is her oshi, in whom she finds meaning and around whom she organizes her life. Akari has always had difficulty with her schoolwork, her family situation is tense, and she gets easily overwhelmed by the responsibilities of her job at a restaurant. When it comes to Masaki, however, she is dedicated and organized: She copies down every word he utters

kirkus.com fiction | 15 september 2022 25 adultyoung

Gripping courtroom drama and social commentary.

“A short, engrossing novel that captures the essence of obsessive fandom.”

idol, burning

novels about the Zarco family, mystical connections impart life-affirming meaning to Polish émigrés who lost most of their family in the Holocaust.

A thoughtful and affecting novel about generational trauma.

Zimler, Richard Parthian Books (500 pp.) $25.00 | Nov. 7, 978-1-913640-64-42022InthefifthofZimler’s

26 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

A short, engrossing novel that captures the essence of obsessive fandom.

IMAX-scale bleeding-edge techno-horror from a writer with a freshly sharpened scalpel and time on his hands.

a would-be tyrant gathers his forces. All those big beats, not least a cataclysmic showdown in Atlanta, are tempered by the book’s more intimate struggles, from Shana’s primal instinct to recover her boy to the grief Pete buries beneath levity to Mat thew Bird’s near-constant grapple with guilt. It’s a lot to take in, but Pete’s ribald, bombastic humor as well as funny interstitials and epigraphs temper the horror within.

Told through multiple voices in various eras, the novel focuses on Benni and Shelly Zarco, two cousins separated by tragic circumstances. Shelly, who is 11 years older, makes it out of Nazi-controlled Warsaw first, escaping through the forest on his eventual flight to Montreal. A larger-than-life character who opens a downtown sporting goods shop there, he attempts to cope with trauma through his uncontrollable sexual urges for both women and men—including his close cousin. Smuggled out of Warsaw and raised in hiding in the town of Brzeziny by a gentile music teacher to whom he becomes devoted, young Benni is tracked down years later in Poland by Shelly. In New York, he becomes a successful tailor, loving father, and antiwar protester who struggles to see the difference between the Holocaust and the bombing of innocents in Vietnam. Forever haunted by the ultimate sacrifice his great-grandmother made in taking his place on a transport delivering Jews to a Treblinkabound train, he turns to the cabala for answers. Tracing his Sephardic roots back to Portugal, he hears the thoughts of liv ing and departed people in his head. So do other members of his extended family through their involvement in the arts and med icine. Dialogue is not Zimler’s strong suit, and the long coda tracing the history of Jewish persecution back to Egypt is an unnecessary add-on. But the latest effort by the author of The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon (1998) succeeds with its strong emotion, memorable characters, and mosaiclike structure. Zimler’s han dling of the continuum of time is both moving and unsettling.

THE THREADSINCANDESCENT

in public in binders, interacts with other superfans through her popular blog, and spends most of her earnings on band merch and memorabilia. Other people ridicule Akari’s dedication to this one-sided relationship, but she insists that she doesn’t see anything wrong with it because she doesn’t expect anything in return. Akari is content to devote herself to Masaki from a dis tance, wanting to understand him fully and “to see the world through his eyes.” As the assault threatens Masaki’s future in the band and as a celebrity, Akari becomes further unmoored; she feels as though her future and well-being are inextricably tied to Masaki’s own: “I need to give him everything, I thought. It’s all I have. It was my cross to bear. Believing in him was how I lived.” Akari’s obsession is fatalistic and intense, and Usami’s prose (translated by Yoneda) renders it and the hold it has on her tenuous life ably and affectingly. While the intensity of the fandom and what it entails may seem outlandish to some, it will especially resonate with readers familiar with real-life superfan doms such as One Direction’s at the height of its fame, down to details such as sought-after exclusive merch and hateful online comments sections.

WAYWARD Wendig, Chuck Del Rey (816 pp.) $29.99 | Nov. 15, 978-0-593-15877-72022Theworldaswe

know it ended in Wanderers, Wendig’s 2019 bestseller. Now what?Asequel to a pandemic novel written during an actual pandemic sounds pretty intense, and this one doesn’t disappoint, heightened by its author’s deft narrative skills, killer cliffhang ers, and a not inconsiderable amount of bloodletting. To recap: A plague called White Mask decimated humanity, with a relative handful saved by a powerful AI called Black Swan that herded this hypnotized flock to Ouray, Colorado. Among the survivors are Benji Ray, a scientist formerly with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Shana Stewart, who is pregnant and the reluctant custodian of the evolving AI (via nanobots, natch); Sheriff Marcy Reyes; and pastor Matthew Bird. In Middle America, President Ed Creel, a murdering, bigoted, bullying Trump clone, raises his own army of scumbags to fight what remains of the culture wars. When Black Swan kidnaps Shana’s child, she and Benji set off on another cross-country quest to find a way to save him. On their way to CDC headquarters, they pick up hilariously foulmouthed rock god Pete Corley, back from delivering Willie Nelson’s guitar to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. This novel is an overflowing font of treasures peppered with more than a few pointed barbs for any Christofacists or Nazis who might have wandered in by accident. Where Wanderers was about flight in the face of menace, this is an old-fashioned quest with a small band of noble heroes trying to save the world while

PHOTO FINISHED Brecher, Christin Kensington (288 pp.) $15.95 paper | Oct. 25, 2022 978-1-4967-3881-3AManhattan

photographer finds murder at a high-society ball.

“A Manhattan photographer finds murder at a high society ball.”

Despite a flurry of long-shot coincidences, Brecher’s series debut is right in focus.

photo finished

modest portfolio, the photography powerhouse agrees to let Liv fill in for her missing employee, and Liv spends the night happily snapping shots of New York’s rich and famous. Unfor tunately, she also gets to see them sniping and trash-talking each other. So when she finds the corpse of Charlie Archibald, managing partner of Lion’s Mane Capital, she knows that there are plenty of folks on-site who might have wanted him dead. Unfortunately, the police zero in on a single suspect: Regina. Since Liv can’t believe that her benefactor, who’d retched and grown pale when one of the debs scratched her hand on some thing sharp, could have inflicted the bloody wound that killed Archibald, she starts her own investigation. She’s helped by Harry Fellowes, an insurance appraiser she meets in the cutest meet-cute in New York. Whether she and Harry will click is debatable: There are complications. But there’s no doubt that Liv will crack the case: It’s a snap.

mystery | kirkus.com | mystery | 15 september 2022 | 27 adultyoung

Liv Spyers can’t believe her luck when big-shot commercial photographer Regina Montague finds her way to Car rera Locksmiths, her grandparents’ West Village key shop, located upstairs from Liv’s struggling portrait studio. Regina, who wants to have a new key made, is also one shutterbug short for an important assignment documenting the doings at tonight’s debutante ball. After checking out Liv’s

THE CRIME THAT BINDS Cass, Laurie Berkley (304 pp.)

PERIL IN THE PARISH Cannell, Dorothy Severn House (288 pp.)

A pleasant character-driven cozy with an adorable cat and enough human suspects to keep things interesting.

$8.99 paper | Oct. 4, 2022 978-0-593-19773-8AMichiganlibrarian

A haunting tale of love, death, and obsession.

Clark, Cassandra Severn House (272 pp.) $29.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-4483-0665-72022Asthewatersrise,

28 15 september 2022 | fiction kirkus.com

must juggle the three most important things in her life—her fiance; her bookmobile; and her cat, Mr. Eddie—and a fourth, a case of homicide.Thebookmobile gets Minnie Ham ilton involved in two murder cases because her patrons enjoy talking and she hears plenty of gos sip. She, Eddie, and her new assistant, Hunter Morales, are on a run when a retired judge mentions that a valuable sculpture has gone missing from his family’s lakeside cottage, though he’s not sure it was stolen. Meanwhile, Pug Mattock, a down stater who’s come up early to prepare his cottage for retirement, chats with Ryan Anderson, another regular, a young man who survives on part-time jobs, about sports, beer, and the weather before Ryan gets a text and takes off. Minnie soon learns that he’s wanted by the police for bank robbery and murder, two

A fitting conclusion to an excellent series that immerses readers in medieval times and deeply conceived characters.

crimes she’s certain he didn’t commit. Although she must deal with a one-woman campaign to fire the library director and her best friend’s stubborn refusal to take time off in the last days of her pregnancy, the murder of Pug pushes her to investigate. Ignoring the police, who are looking at Ryan as the perp, Min nie finds enough other candidates to give her plenty of alterna tives to think about while she’s waiting to see if the killer adds her to their list.

Sister Hildegard of Swyne Priory must deal with her inner demons, defiant novices, an imminent flood—andConflictmurder.anddanger have swept across England in 1394. The young King Richard is in danger from his ambitious barons, at least two of whom think they belong on the throne. At Swyne, identi cal twin novices Bella and Rogella, bitter about being sent to the convent, constantly stir up trouble. Hildegard and Hubert de Courcy, lord abbot of Meaux, are passionately in love but have so far resisted the temptation to act. As the scientifically minded Sister Josiana predicts massive flooding, citizens of Meaux and Swyne make preparations and warn the countryside. Then a young man who claims to be Leonin, the king’s musi cian, arrives at the convent seeking sanctuary as he flees a hired assassin. A murdered lay sister found in a nearby creek may have been mistaken for Leonin in the dark. The next day, Hildegard and Josiana take Leonin to the priory in Meaux, which had been his original destination, as they seek answers about the mystery of the sister’s death. When the women return to Swyne, Hil degard is told that she’s been summoned right back to Meaux by Hubert, and when she arrives at the priory, she’s astonished at Hubert’s treatment of her. The next disaster strikes when one of the twins vanishes along with the abbey priest, and the remaining twin, who refuses to say whether she’s Bella or Rogella, admits to a heartless scheme to get away from Swyne. Hildegard tasks herself with uncovering a killer, locating the missing novice, discovering why Hubert is acting so oddly, and perhaps even finding her own happiness.

$29.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-4483-0863-72022Along-buriedsecret

and several love stories come together in a very English mystery set in 1933.

Florence Norris, the longtime house keeper at Mullings, is about to marry George Bird, the well-regarded owner of the Dog and Whistle Pub in Dovecote Hatch. A stranger who enters the pub says, “Twenty years ago today I buried my sis ter,” and asks George to pass on a letter to the police, setting off a series of revelations that will seriously disturb the peace of the quiet village. It doesn’t take long for Florence and George, who’ve dealt with murder in the past, to figure out who the stranger is and why he’s returned. Meanwhile, Sophie Dawson has been living frugally in another small town until a co-worker she’s hardly noticed develops an obsession with her. The poten tial scandal drives her to seek respite with her mother’s cousin Agnes Younger, who lives in Dovecote Hatch. Sophie’s met at the station by the new vicar, Aiden Fielding, who explains that her cousin is dying and wants to see her. Sophie and Aiden knew each either as children, and Sophie must admit to her self that she’s loved Aiden ever since. Florence and George dig into information from the past to solve the puzzle of who wrote the letters that drove a woman to suicide and into an unmarked grave while uncovering a raft of modern-day secrets that lead to another murder.

DARK WATERS RISING

STILL WATERS

Driscoll, Sara Kensington (304 pp.) $26.00 | Nov. 29, 978-1-4967-3506-52022Aroutinetraining

Meg and Brian Foster, another han dler on the Human Scent Evidence Team, have asked Craig Beaumont, the special agent in charge who heads their unit, to authorize their participation in an event to help their canine charges sharpen their skills at finding human remains in and under water. The weekend in Minnesota’s Supe rior National Forest, organized under the auspices of the Search Dogs of America, brings them into competition with half a dozen other person-and-pooch pairs from New York, Con necticut, Chicago, Wyoming, and California. Disappointed by

Hawk’s performance on their first search, Meg is horrified that night to see preening Deputy Rita Pratt, of the Laramie County Sheriff’s Office, choking Ava, her Malinois partner who’s taken the lead. The next day, she learns that Pratt has responded to her threat to report the incident by preemptively filing a simi lar report against Meg. What makes the turnabout particularly awkward is that in between the two shocking moments, Pratt’s corpse has been discovered by none other than Hawk. Called from the Minneapolis FBI office to investigate, Special Agent Jonathan Brogan wastes no time establishing his institutional impartiality by casting Meg as the prime suspect, and she’s stripped of her official status pending a formal investigation. Without missing a beat, she sends out an SOS to Washington Post reporter Clay McCord, her sister’s partner, who joins Brian and D.C. firefighter/paramedic Lt. Todd Webb, Meg’s own romantic partner, to search for clues against the only other suspects: the event’s organizers and other participants. As usual, though, it’s the dogs who carry off detecting honors.

Not much mystery but reams of logistical detail about the training and handling of these superskilled canines.

weekend for FBI search-and-rescue dog handler Meg Jen nings and Hawk, her black Lab, turns out to be anything but.

| kirkus.com | mystery | 15 september 2022 | 29 adultyoung

Lilly Jayne is an exemplar of active senior living. Well into her 60s, she juggles a staggering number of proj ects, mostly centered on beautifying her hometown of Goosebush, Massachusetts. Helped by her hand some neighbor Roddy Lyden, she’s heavily invested in a major renovation of Alden Park, and she’s also helping establish a bird sanctuary along Shipyard Lane. When she turns her attention to the overgrown thickets at the Goosebush Town Cemetery, however, Lilly gets a jolt. Not only are the graves badly tended, but some of the plots don’t seem to be where she remembers

30 | 15 september 2022 fiction | kirkus.com |

A pressure-packed cozy whose intrepid sleuth really feels the heat.

Kells, Claire Crooked Lane (288 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-63910-123-82022InremoteAlaska,

AN UNFORGIVING PLACE

Emphasizing personal details over the case marks a defi nite shift in this parks-focused series.

owner comes up against a malicious campaign blaming her for all sorts of misdeeds.

THE PLOT THICKETS

DEATH BY SPICED CHAI

Erickson, Alex Kensington (320 pp.)

Krissy Hancock is part owner of Death by Coffee, a charming combina tion of bookstore and coffee shop. Her father, James, is a popular author whose new novel is sure to be a hit, but when customer Hamish Lauder realizes it’s the begin ning of a new series, he complains that he’s still waiting for James to finish the last one. “It’s insulting to the reader,” Hamish says. “Making us wait. What gives him the right to decide to work on something else when there’s a series he has yet to finish.” (Pag ing George R.R. Martin!) Krissy’s own troubles start when a woman finds a cockroach in her coffee and there turn out to be more in the bathroom. Of course the story spreads all over Pine Hills, and while most of Krissy’s customers defend her, others take joy in her problem, and her new neighbor seems to hate her. Then she starts getting strange texts and a picture showing her boyfriend, police officer Paul Dalton, looking cozy with his ex, Shannon. Other people get nasty letters supposedly written by Krissy, and she’s called into the police station for allegedly throwing a brick through a restaurant window. An online news source accuses her of even worse behavior. All this is bad, but when Hamish Lauder is killed, Krissy realizes that if she doesn’t solve the crime, she may end up in prison. She’s been involved with murder cases before, but she’s never felt so threatened or helpless. Still, she plows ahead with research and questions she hopes will find the real culprit.

them. Markers are missing, and newly placed headstones have appeared in what should have been old family plots. When Lilly comes to her own family mausoleum, her surprise turns to alarm. Not only is the garden a mess, but someone’s moved the bench from one side of the tomb to the back wall. Her concern deep ens even further when Whitney Dunne-Bradford, the owner of Bradford Funeral Home, is murdered. But her author gives Lilly such a rich and varied social life that it’s hard to generate much forward thrust for her investigation. Like an underpow ered rototiller, she plows the same ground over and over with minimal progress. At the end, it’s clear that some kind of scam probably occurred, but whether premeditated malfeasance or sloppy paperwork is to blame is pretty much anyone’s guess.

Mulch ado about nothing.

a National Park Service investigator links two mysteri ous deaths to the enigmatic leader of a fertilityThoughcult. she’s on vacation from her Investigative Services Branch detail in Alaska’s Denali National Park, Felicity Harland is called in for a case that brings her to the remote Gates of the Arctic National Park, above the Arctic Circle. ISB needs to investigate two bod ies found along the park’s Alatna River. Could they be those of missing hikers Kelsey and Tim Greer? Harland asks her some time partner Ferdinand “Hux” Huxley to join her, hopeful that both his meticulous eye for detail and his past as a Navy SEAL will help. Plus, at this point, she enjoys Hux’s company, which manages to be companionable without asking anything of her. It doesn’t take Harland and Hux long to determine that some thing is amiss with the bodies, which appear to be those of two people who willingly embraced death. Clearly that’s not right, but what does it mean? Listening to folks more familiar with the area leads Harland and Hux to believe the deaths may relate to a local fertility group, a cultish cadre of long-term campers led by the enigmatic Zane Reynolds. Tracking down the group is quite a feat, but more difficulties stem from Harland and Hux’s decision to pose as a long-term couple in order to infil trate it. Their investigation threatens to cross the boundaries of safety as well as the personal and professional lines they’ve been so careful to establish. Will it change their relationship in ways that can’t be changed back?

$8.99 paper | Oct. 25, 2022

978-1-4967-3665-9AnOhiocoffee-shop

$8.99 paper | Oct. 25, 2022 978-1-4967-3310-8AnavidNewEngland gardener digs up the dirt on a local funeral parlor.

Henry, Julia Kensington (304 pp.)

greed foment vio lence and corruption in a small mountain town.Racial tension runs high in Blackwa ter Falls, Colorado, thanks to the evangeli cal, anti-immigrant Resurrection Church and its “outreach branch” of motorcycle-riding vigilantes dubbed the Disciples. Members of minority groups have filed multiple complaints against Resurrection crony Sheriff Addison Grant and his like-minded deputies, so when the corpse of 16-year-old Syrian refugee Razan Elkader is found stripped of her hijab and nailed to the door of her local mosque in a “gruesome emula tion of the Crucifixion,” the Denver Police Department’s Com munity Response Unit takes over the investigation. Led by Lt.

adultyoung | kirkus.com | mystery 15 september 2022 | 31

A timely, nuanced take on a staid formula.

blackwater falls

Waqas Seif, the CRU’s mandate is to provide accountability and transparency to overpoliced communities. Seif taps Det. Inaya Rahman to run point; though she, her parents, and her younger sisters only moved to the area six months ago, the Rahmans worship at the Blackwater mosque, and Inaya has prior expe rience working homicide. With help from Det. Catalina Her nandez and civil rights attorney Areesha Adams, Inaya probes Razan’s murder while searching for two missing Somali girls whom Grant previously dismissed as runaways. Seif pushes back on efforts to implicate Grant, prompting Inaya to question his allegiance. Khan’s third-person narrative unfolds largely from Inaya’s perspective, detailing her struggles to reconcile her faith with the realities of her law enforcement career. Occasional chapters from Seif’s POV add context and heighten tension. The mystery’s denouement is convoluted, and the supporting cast is studded with stereotypes, blunting the tale’s impact, but Inaya is a complex, compassionate protagonist perfectly poised to helm a new series challenging the outmoded conventions of police procedurals.

BLACKWATER FALLS Khan, Ausma Zehanat Minotaur (384 pp.) $27.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-2508-2238-32022Xenophobiaand

“Xenophobia and greed foment violence and corruption in a small mountain town.”

$27.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-2502-5846-52022Aformerprosecutor

Pirates win over neighboring Marshport High, the town is dev astated by the discovery of shortstop Jack Carlisle’s body on the rocks below Bluff Lookout. Since Jack was not only a bona fide baseball star, but the nephew of Detective Luther “Suitcase” Simpson, the case is guaranteed top priority—until the stone walling of Jack’s teammates and his girlfriend, Ainsley Walsh, who may have been two-timing him with first baseman Scott Ford, is upstaged by a second fatality, the shooting of retired Paradise police chief Charlie Farrell in his home. Rejecting the possibility that two such sudden deaths could be coincidental, Jesse beats the bushes looking for a connection. Along the way he finds angry parents, links to a cryptocurrency ring, mobbedup heavies, a third corpse, and a growing series of hints that the center of this criminal maelstrom, if indeed it has a center, is newcomer Hillary More’s candy store, More Chocolate, which turns out to have brought together a remarkably far-flung crowd of sweet-toothed suspects. Manfully resisting the questions of local reporter Nellie Shofner, to whom he says “We’re friends with benefits. Just not those kind of benefits,” Jesse miracu lously ties all these felonies together and manages to elude the latest crime boss he’s run afoul of.

A MURDER AT BALMORAL McGeorge, Chris Putnam (384 pp.) $17.00 paper | Oct. 25, 2022

Lupica, Mike Putnam (368 pp.)

own death, Melville resolves to do whatever it takes to win Alvarez’s release. Working under his direction with investigator Ken Breland, Robin gets Alvarez’s conviction overturned, and he’s set free. But he’s not grateful or happy about his invitation to Black Oaks, Melville’s mountaintop retreat, which has its own dark history of murder. When Corey Rockwell, the fad ing Hollywood star Melville’s invited to join them, ostensibly to discuss making a film based on the Alvarez case, begins to smell a rat, the stage is set for Melville’s stabbing in his private elevator. Margolin steeps this impossible murder in a nostal gic brew of family curses, ancient grudges, escaped convicts, improbable masquerades, supplementary homicides, and other contrivances. Fans will rejoice to detect echoes of Agatha Chris tie’s And Then There Were None, Ellery Queen’s The Siamese Twin Mystery, and countless puzzles by John Dickson Carr, though they may find the net effect more like a scrapbook of beloved memories than a coherent narrative of contemporary murder.

haunted by his role in the unjust conviction of a murder suspect years ago summons noted attor ney Robin Lockwood to his isolated Ore gon manse to enlist her aid. What could possibly go wrong?

978-0-593-54413-6Classicelements

$29.00 | Sept. 6, 978-0-593-54027-52022Apairofcouldn’t-be-less-relatedmurdersareattheheartofJesseStone’slatestcase.AlltoosoonafterthepolicechiefofParadise,Massachusetts,relaxesbytakinginabaseballgametheParadise

The helter-skelter ending is a small price to pay for such an effective series of small-town jolts.

MURDER AT BLACK OAKS Margolin, Phillip Minotaur (288 pp.)

McGeorge jumps headfirst into an alternate-history mystery hinging on a different line of succession within the Windsor dynasty in which Edward VIII had not abdicated the throne for Wallis Simpson. Elderly King Eric, the fictional heir to that Edwardian line, is preparing for what should be a cozy Christmas at Balmoral Castle and is also preparing to share his plans for his own retirement and, apparently, the designation of a successor under new rules of succession. Gathered around King Eric for the holiday are his tipsy wife, semidisgraced brother, middle-aged twin daughters and one son-in-law (a commoner!), adolescent grandsons, a security officer, and his devoted longtime Bajan chef and confidant, Jonathan Alleyne. As luck would have it, a severe blizzard strikes Balmoral and the small group is stranded and isolated in what turns out to be a very large “locked room” when the king drops dead after a traditional British Christmas dinner, just as he is about to reveal his plans for the future. Oh, and everyone’s cellphones are locked away to minimize the risk of disclosing the family’s whereabouts! When it appears the sovereign was poisoned by someone within the group, Jon reluctantly takes charge of an ad hoc investigation until help can be summoned after the blizzard. That endeavor might actually be easier than managing the band of rival royals, most of whom hold secrets from and grudges toward each other. Revered classic mystery tropes, including power failure and communication breakdowns with the outside world, come into play alongside more modern concerns such

ROBERT B. PARKER’S FALLOUT

of a cozy British murder mystery reappear in an updated and timely royal romp.

32 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

An unapologetic valentine to golden age whodunits that sports its clichés as proudly as badges.

Archie Stallings was the star witness against fellow student Jose Alvarez in 1990, when Alvarez was sentenced to death in the matter of his girlfriend Margo Prescott’s fatal bludgeoning. Seven years later, a gloating confession that Stallings makes to the lawyer defending him against a rape charge, Frank Mel ville—whose ringing courtroom speech when he was a pros ecutor sent Alvarez to death row—torments Melville, since attorney-client privilege demands his silence. Upon Stallings’

Things start to go wrong as soon as the happy couple checks into York’s best hotel in September 1905. Since the Honey moon Suite they’ve reserved is occupied by chocolatier Horace Wingrove for one night, they reluctantly agree to take the Royal Suite. Lyndy tries to talk Wingrove into moving, but he refuses, asserting that it’s where he and his late wife spent their hon eymoon. The night is far from quiet, for Wingrove has visitors, and the next morning, a maid discovers Wingrove dead. Even though Dr. Bell, who resides in the hotel, declares the death an accidental case of carbon monoxide poisoning, the hotel man ager still calls the police, and Bell volunteers to tell Wingrove’s nephew, Morgan Amesbury-Jones, who’s staying at the hotel along with Wingrove’s secretary. Stella, realizing that most of the pillows are missing from Wingrove’s room, suspects murder when feathers fall from the chimney. Wingrove’s secretary and nephew, who inherits Wingrove’s famed chocolate company, join Stella’s meager list of suspects. Since the detective sergeant assigned to the case is mainly interested in protecting the royals who are visiting York for the unveiling of a statue, Stella must deal with thwarted romance, class differences, anti-royalists, and a missing chocolate formula while surviving her serendipi tous honeymoon.

“Exciting, convoluted, and rich with compelling characters.”

no strangers here

by murders and family problems, Lyndy and Stella finally make it official through a mar riage that confirms them as Lord and Lady Lyndhurst.

Antiquities, excitedly receives a pair of documents known as the Moses papyri during a late-night rendezvous. When she abruptly goes missing, both Ronen Avraham, of the Israeli Antiquities Authority, and Elizabeth’s friend Dr. Evan Wild ing, a professor of semiotics, linguistics, and paleography at the University of Chicago, undertake separate searches. Elizabeth’s recent diagnosis of cancer leads Evan to suspect suicide. Then police detective Addie Bisset, for whom Evan has worked previ ously as a consultant, calls with the news that Elizabeth’s been found dead in her car. When examining her body, Evan discov ers an Egyptian cobra. It’s apparently the agent of death…and a message as well? Nickless’ character-driven mystery unfolds on a panoramic scale, presenting a huge cast of characters and working in interesting sidebars about mythology, paleontology, Middle East history, cobras, Chicago tourist attractions, and more. Addie focuses primarily on forensics, while Evan under takes phone- and legwork. He alertly links the murder to Eliza beth’s recent trip to Israel. Once they team up, the investigative path takes the duo through numerous sketchy characters in the worlds of antiquities, academia, and the Mossad. Perro, a corgi Evan is dogsitting, proves an able sidekick and source of comic relief.

adultyoung | kirkus.com mystery 15 september 2022 | 33

A complicated contemporary puzzler pays homage to tradition.

MURDER AT THE MAJESTIC HOTEL

DARK OF NIGHT

O’Brien, who’s new to Dingle, must depend on the locals for insight when the body of racehorse owner Johnny O’Reilly is found on a beach along with 69 black stones spelling out the words “Last Dance.” O’Reilly was 69 years old, too. DS Neely provides Cormac with background on Last Dance, one of O’Reilly’s horses that was killed in a road accident more than 25 years earlier. It’s clear that O’Reilly was murdered elsewhere and his body brought to the beach in a boat. Only a child’s footprints are found nearby. Bucking the powers that be to work the case, Cormac learns that the O’Reillys and the family of Eamon Wilde, their veterinarian, have a complex history that could have led to murder. Eamon shows signs of dementia; his wife, Maeve, who used to go danc ing with O’Reilly, reads tarot cards. Their son, Donnecha, who serves as caretaker of O’Reilly’s yachts, is a bit of a wild one. But it’s their daughter, Dr. Dimpna Wilde, that Cormac finds most fascinating. A talented veterinarian, tiny and beautiful, she’s the widow of a man who killed himself after swindling hundreds of Dubliners out of their life savings. Unable to pay her bills when her assets are seized, she returns to Dingle to help her father’s practice and try to extricate her family from a murder charge.

Nickless, Barbara Thomas & Mercer (367 pp.) $15.95 paper | Nov. 15, 2022 978-1-6625-0081-7Thetheftofpriceless papyrus frag ments leads to murder and an interna tional search for both the parchments and a Dr.killer.Elizabeth Lawrence, head of the Chicago Institute of Middle Eastern

McKenna, Clara Kensington (304 pp.) $26.00 | Oct. 25, 978-1-4967-3818-92022Afteracourtshipmarred

O’Connor, Carlene Kensington (336 pp.) $27.00 | Oct. 25, 978-1-4967-3752-62022Ireland’sCountyKerry provides the backdrop for O’Connor’s compelling seriesDIkickoff.Cormac

as establishing who is leaking information to the writers of The Monarch (think The Crown) television series the family is quasiobsessed with.

The halcyon days of 1905 are both romantic and dangerous for the charming sleuths.

Engrossing bits of scholarship tucked into a nifty proce dural with amiable sleuths.

NO STRANGERS HERE

DISCO DEAD

a motor cycle rally or a teenage girl? Texas police chief Samuel Craddock is about to find out.Not everyone is thrilled that the yearly Jubilee Motorcycle Rally is about to come to Jarrett Creek. Some locals want to ban it. But the merchants who’ve parlayed a good deal of money from the event are happy to put up with a little aggravation. The sheriff brokers a truce after a nasty war of words breaks out between Lily Deverell, who’s spearheading the campaign to shut down the rally, and Amber Johnson, a store owner whose husband was badly injured while riding with his motorcycle club, leaving her to support their fam ily by herself. Meanwhile, Craddock offers to take his nephew’s teenage daughter, Hailey, for a while to see if he can straighten out her recent bad behavior. Visiting the rally grounds to check out security, Sam notices Amber coming out of an RV. When, the next evening, she’s found dead behind the music venue at the rally, Sam and his deputy, Maria Trevino, investigate even though the case is assigned to the overburdened Department of Public Safety and Sam already has his hands full with Hailey, who alternates between acting like the sweet girl he remembers and a sneaky, hormonal teen who’s been hiding a much older boyfriend. At least Hailey takes an interest in the murder inves tigation and makes some new friends. The town rallies around the Johnson family, but Sam’s discovery that some of Amber’s income comes from turning tricks opens up a whole new ave nue to investigate both in town and at the rally.

Dimpna’s past is about to be torn wide open, revealing various crimes, including her rape by Johnny’s son Sean O’Reilly, and the revelation that what she remembers is not always the truth. Exciting, convoluted, and rich with compelling characters, this is the best of O’Connor’s Irish mysteries to date.

A neat character-intensive combo of clever police work and family angst.

The telling details that urge readers along the way might even end up teaching them something.

Roanhorse, Rebecca Saga/Simon & Schuster (208 pp.) $22.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-982166-18-22022Whenheryounger

In the world of Roanhorse’s new novel, society is divided between the Elect and the Fallen. The Fallen are descendants of the demons who followed Lucifer and rebelled against God. As a result, they are largely discriminated against and looked down upon as sinful and evil by the privileged Elect. In the mining town of Goetia, however, the Fallen and the Elect live together in order to mine a precious substance called divin ity, which the Fallen are better equipped to handle than the Elect. Celeste, a card dealer, and her sister, Mariel, a singer, are half Fallen, half Elect. When Mariel is accused of murdering a Virtue, the most respected of all the Elect humans, Celeste is determined to find evidence of her innocence and set her free. Roanhorse, an expert worldbuilder, sets up her fantasy-Western universe and her take on angels and demons as fantasy tropes

a new mission as part of an amateur sleuthing group that’s working on a murder from the disco era.

science fiction & fantasy

TREAD OF ANGELS

Shames, Terry Severn House (256 pp.) $29.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-4483-0934-42022What’smoredangerous,

34 15 september 2022 fiction kirkus.com |

informs her adult daughter, Emily, whom she runs into at the crowded Annapolis Trader Joe’s, that her next stop is the ceme tery, where she’s been taking pictures of headstones for relatives who may not be able to see them in person through FindAGrave. com (a real website). Emily can’t help but tease Hannah about her constant do-something nature, but Hannah’s involvement with all sorts of projects has brought her a lot of joy and a lot of experience solving mysteries. At St. Luke’s Cemetery some 20 minutes later, Hannah runs into Isabel Randall, from local sta tion WBNF-TV, who recognizes Hannah from her 18 previous investigations. After Izzy tells Hannah the story of Amy Madi son, a young woman killed by an unknown assailant after a night at a popular local disco in 1978, Hannah joins Izzy and the group of citizen detectives who call themselves the Silent Sleuths in an effort to find out what happened to Amy and give her poor parents some relief. Her meticulous research uses DNA details found at the scene to suggest a shocking twist: Amy’s murder may not be an isolated event but the first work of a serial killer. Worse yet, if the Silent Sleuths can’t find evidence the killer has been stopped, is it possible that he could kill again?

Talley, Marcia Severn House (208 pp.) $29.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-4483-0795-12022Ado-goodergets

Hannah Ives is one of those people who’s always doing something. She

MURDER AT THE JUBILEE RALLY

sister is arrested for murder, Celeste Semyaza must scramble to prove her innocence.

A steamy, emotional, and charming romance about defin ing success on your own terms.

TWO WRONGS MAKE A RIGHT

romance

ASTRID PARKER DOESN’T FAIL Blake, Ashley Herring Berkley (400 pp.)

$14.99 paper | Nov. 22, 2022 978-0-593-44150-3Whentwopolar

opposites get paired up by their meddling friends, their plan to fake a relationship ends up fooling every one—including themselves—in this riff on Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing Bea Wilmot isn’t prioritizing the dating scene—especially not after she trips and falls drink-first into the stuffed shirt oth erwise known as Jamie Westenberg at a party where his friend and her twin sister have just announced their engagement. From their first conversation, it seems that they couldn’t have any thing in common. She’s a struggling artist covered in beautiful tattoos; he’s the buttoned-up, glasses-wearing type who packs

Adams, Lyssa Kay Berkley (368 pp.)

$17.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-593-33279-5Anothermember of the Bromance Book Club finds love in this fifth series outing.Country star Colton Wheeler can’t get Gretchen Winthrop out of his head. A year ago, they had a steamy, satisfying one-night stand after a wedding, but when Colton asked to see her again, Gretchen bolted out the door. Gretchen comes from the wealthiest family in Tennessee but has turned her back on her family’s money and influence to start her own small prac tice providing legal expertise for immigrants. When her oldest brother asks her to reach out to Colton to be the brand ambas sador to her family’s whiskey distillery, she agrees; in return, she asks for her rightful seat on the family’s charitable foundation board. When Gretchen approaches Colton, she’s surprised that he has some conditions of his own. He agrees to consider her offer if she’ll go out on three dates with him. When Colton dis covers that Gretchen is a verifiable Scrooge, he’s determined to use their dates to show her the joy of the Christmas season. With the help and advice of his buddies in the Bromance Book Club, Colton will show Gretchen his sunshiny personality is the perfect match for her grumpy one. Longtime readers of the series won’t be surprised when the plot takes a turn toward more serious and somber topics. In this case, Colton discovers that Gretchen is aloof and prickly as a coping mechanism from having grown up in an abusive home. Colton’s instant love and devotion for Gretchen is a fact of the book rather than some thing that develops over time, and the result is a relationship that doesn’t feel fully developed. The novel is jammed full of scenes with characters from earlier installments and charming meetings of the Bromance Book Club, which will please fans of the series.

$15.50 paper | Nov. 22, 2022

A VERY MERRY BROMANCE

two wrongs make a right

978-0-593-33642-7Adriveninterior designer finds her self in new territory when she unexpect edly falls for a carpenter.

adultyoung | kirkus.com | romance | 15 september 2022 | 35

with impressive efficiency. And when her world is so quickly and easily understood by the reader, Roanhorse has plenty of space to engage with noir storytelling and the trope of the “tragic mulatto,” as she mentions in her acknowledgements. Too much description of her excellent plot would risk spoiling an inventive and propulsive narrative, but readers accustomed to Roanhorse’s richly detailed characters and beautifully executed action sequences will not be disappointed.

A superb dark fantasy.

Liese, Chloe Berkley (336 pp.)

After breaking things off with her perfect-on-paper fiance, Astrid Parker throws herself into her work as an inte rior designer. Astrid might seem uptight to her loud and lovable group of friends, but she knows she just holds herself to a high standard—one set years ago by her overbearing, critical mother. But one thing Astrid never counted on was carpenter Jordan Everwood, whom she runs into—literally—before realizing the two of them will have to work together on Astrid’s latest reno vation, the Everwood Inn. Astrid is tasked with redesigning the inn for an HGTV show called Innside America, and she’s hop ing the job will help revitalize her career. But Jordan isn’t just the carpenter on the job—she’s also the granddaughter of the inn’s owner, and her sentimentality makes Astrid’s job harder. Astrid wants to make every room sleek and modern, while Jor dan wants to keep the inn quirky and dark. But their on-camera clashes lead to an off-camera attraction, and eventually Astrid begins to realize that her carefully laid plans might not be what she wants after all. In the second book in her Bright Falls series, following Delilah Green Doesn’t Care (2022), Blake tenderly explores Astrid’s journey to becoming more herself—which involves interrogating her career dreams and realizing that she’s bisexual. Astrid and Jordan are both appealing characters, and Astrid’s boisterous and endearing group of queer friends will make Bright Falls a town readers won’t want to leave.

“An effervescent reimagining of the Bard packaged in an opposites attract romance.”

A solid but unremarkable effort in this long-running series about men who read romance.

PRIDE AND PROTEST Payne, Nikki Berkley (416 pp.) $15.99 paper | Nov. 15, 2022 978-0-593-44094-0Aspiritedactivist

and an artist find true love after a one-night stand.

Yasmen and Josiah Wade have been divorced for two years. They met in col lege, and after marrying, they opened a successful restaurant in Atlanta and started a family. Their seemingly rocksolid marriage went off course after two tragic losses: Josiah’s beloved aunt died, and their much-desired third child was

Ryan, Kennedy Forever (400 pp.) $15.99 paper | Nov. 15, 2022 978-1-5387-0679-4Adivorcedcouple finds love again.

Tuck is happy for the distraction: It’s also the anniversary of his father’s death, and he’s worried that he might be aging out of professional football. He meets a beautiful young woman, and the two have a night of anony mous, sizzling sex in a private room at the club. Ten weeks later, Francesca Lane is experiencing multiple crises: A vengeful boss just fired her from her job as a tattoo artist and she real izes she’s pregnant from her one-night stand with the mysteri ous stranger. Having grown up bouncing among foster homes, being left behind over and over, Francesca decides to keep the baby. Coincidentally, she discovers that her mystery lover has been living in her apartment building for years. They’ve never crossed paths before because he has his own private elevator to the penthouse. Tuck can’t believe his luck—the woman he can’t stop thinking about has been right under his nose all along. Francesca decides to keep the baby a secret from Tuck despite the fact that her roommates, several other building residents, and even the doorman know about her pregnancy. Eventually, Tuck and Francesca can no longer resist each other, and they begin a passionate affair that lasts for months. The book steams merrily forward with this common sense–defying plot. Tuck, a wide receiver who can sight and catch a football from anywhere on the field, somehow fails to see the baby bump right in front of him. Increasingly more dramatic storylines are introduced, perhaps with the goal of creating a chaotic, happy whirlwind of a book, but instead it feels tired and sloppy.

an extra set of clothes just in case. When their well-meaning friends plot to pair them off without their knowledge, it doesn’t take long for Bea and Jamie to find out they’ve been set up, but rather than admit defeat and go back to surviving singledom, they decide to get back by getting even. The solution? Pretend they’re desperately into one another in a fake-dating scheme to end all fake-dating schemes—but the longer it goes on, the harder Bea and Jamie begin to fall for each other for real. From a meet-cute that crackles with wit and humor to pages upon pages of scorching tension, Liese has crafted a warm, delight ful novel that emphasizes acceptance, communication, and the self-worth we can discover by both daring to love and letting ourselves be loved.

36 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

PRINCESS AND THE PLAYER

and a real estate CEO clash in a battle of heads and hearts in this inventive Austen retelling.

A contrived plot and underdeveloped characters keep this one on the bench.

BEFORE I LET GO

A lively, sexy, and fresh take on a beloved classic.

Madden Mills, Ilsa Montlake Romance (287 pp.) $12.95 paper | Nov. 8, 2022

When Alizé Bennett, otherwise known as Liza B., isn’t showcasing inter national hip-hop on her radio show, she can be found protecting the housing rights of her tightknit D.C. community. News has spread about the imminent eviction of all residents from the low-income Longbourne Gardens complex due to Pemberley Development’s newest creation, Netherfield Court. Liza, her three siblings, their mother, and Granny— along with dozens of other longtime inhabitants—face losing their homes to make way for vegan bakeries and high-end pet spas. Liza has more than one bone to pick with the man behind the gentrification of her home: Dorsey Fitzgerald, Pemberley’s acting CEO. After the tragic death of his adoptive parents and older brother, Dorsey became the heir to his family’s billions despite his feelings of inadequacy and general dislike of the very foundations of real estate development. Adopted from the Phil ippines at age 9 by the White Fitzgerald family, Dorsey has long felt as if he didn’t belong, and Liza’s fervent public protests of Netherfield do little to grant him credibility. As the two nem eses find themselves constantly in one another’s orbit, however, and as Liza and Dorsey squabble over politics and pride, their burning hatred starts to transform into passion. Soon, simple moments shared in snowstorms and innocent grocery store visits reverberate with their desire. Amid rising sexual tension, viral memes, and distractions from other potential mates, how will Liza and Dorsey make their love last? Payne’s version of Pride and Prejudice deftly explores themes of racism and ide alism while providing deep insights into her characters. The author crafts a thoroughly modern update to Austen’s novel and even offers a confident replacement for the untying-of-the-cor set trope with the satisfying snap of shirt buttons.

An effervescent reimagining of the Bard packaged in an opposites-attract romance.

978-1-5420-3846-1Afootballplayer

On Tuck Avery’s 35th birthday, his best friends surprise him with a trip to Manhattan’s most exclusive sex club.

kirkus.com romance 15 september 2022 | 37 adultyoung

A melodramatic family saga with a side of romance.

THE REWIND Scotch, Allison Winn Berkley (368 pp.) $17.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-593-54653-6Adecadeafter

Ezra Jones and Frankie Harriman become best friends during their sophomore year at college. A once-in-a-generation piano prodigy as a child, Frankie stopped playing at 17, determined to finally control her own life. She re-creates herself at Middleton University in Massachusetts, keeping her talent a complete secret. Ezra is an anxiety-ridden but kind boy on a full merit scholarship whose mother is fight ing ovarian cancer. By junior year, Ezra and Frankie are in love and inseparable. But in the hours before graduation, they have a knock-down fight, break up, and subsequently steer clear of each other for a decade. Then a pair of their college friends— April, now teaching literature at Middleton, and Connor, now an assistant hockey coach on campus—decide to get married in a “Party Like It’s 1999”–themed wedding on the eve of the new millennium. Frankie is now a high-flying music manager; Ezra is wealthy after having sold a gaming model to Yahoo, and he’s plotting the grandest gesture he can think of: He’s going to propose to his girlfriend, Mimi, with his grandmother’s 2-carat diamond ring once the new century begins. The story follows the day after the night before and Ezra and Frankie’s quest to retrace their steps and figure out if they are actually married. Author Scotch has written a book that moves in minutes rather than days and is told through memories as the pair walk around campus remembering episodes from their past—both from 10

An engaging though repetitive story of a couple that come to accept their faults and in the process find their future.

Vale, Lillie Putnam (336 pp.)

THE GIRLFRIENDDECOY

$17.00 paper | Sept. 6, 2022

years earlier and the night before. Many, many pages are spent hashing (and rehashing) the demons unearthed at each building they come to that have made them into the messy, complicated adults that they currently are.

their messy breakup in 1989, two people find themselves in bed together the morning of New Year’s Eve, wearing rings and with no recollec tion of what happened the night before.

978-0-593-42202-1Astrugglingauthor

agrees to swap places with her celebrity look-alike—and starts falling for her doppelgänger’s costar in the process.

stillborn. Yasmen suffered from brutal, agonizing depression, and, unable to cope with their grief and sadness, the two agreed to a divorce. Now, Yasmen and Josiah co-parent and manage their business, and both are trying to move on with their lives. The catalyst for change is when Josiah starts dating again. Yas men is surprised to find feelings she thought were long dead rising up to the surface—attraction, possessiveness, and love. What if their divorce was a mistake? The novel is stuffed full of melodrama and angst as Yasmen and Josiah care for their kids, decide if they should expand the business, and explore their wholly unexpected reconnection. Notably, the book shows the benefits of therapy for both children and adults. Josiah resisted therapy after the loss of their baby but now agrees to see a ther apist as a model for his son who has been struggling at school. Josiah’s willingness to finally talk about his feelings allows the couple to open up about the end of their marriage, paving the way for a new future together. Colleen Hoover fans looking for a dramatic emotional journey starring people in their 30s will find what they are looking for here.

Freya Lal is facing the biggest strug gle of her professional life—how on Earth is she going to write a follow-up to her successful debut novel, with the deadline for her first draft looming in a matter of weeks, when she’s lack ing any inspiration? Rather than continue to fret, she decides to retreat into a newer pastime: dolling herself up and pretending to be the actress Mandi Roy. The two of them look enough alike that people always assume Freya is Mandi, meaning she’s been scoring benefits all over town. Unfortunately, one scheme hits the tabloids, and Mandi figures out what’s going on, but rather than out Freya immediately, she decides to offer the author a different kind of deal: She wants Freya to keep the imperson ation going for the next four weeks so Mandi can enjoy some much-needed R&R. That said, Freya will also have to maintain the fauxmance that Mandi’s had with her co-star Taft Bamber for the last several years. While Mandi and Taft have always kept things platonic behind the scenes, using their staged rela tionship to benefit their star power, Freya doesn’t want to pre tend Taft is her boyfriend because her feelings for him start to become very, very real. To make matters more complicated, Taft is pretty sure he’s falling for Freya, too, and when the two have to move in together in order to sell their decoy dynamic, it turns out they like playing house and all that it entails. The closer they get to the end of their four-week relationship, the harder it becomes to act as though their connection hasn’t been real from the beginning. This is a perfectly engaging, flirty rom-com staged around a couple that any reader will be able to fall for. An irresistible romance.

A sweet romance with appealing hints of heat and angst.

Williams, Denise Berkley (352 pp.)

38 | 15 september 2022 | fiction | kirkus.com |

wedding planner and an even more accidental officiant must learn to purposefully stride toward love andAftercommitment.RJBrooks officiated at an impromptu celebrity wedding in a public park, she’s become a walking paradox—a divorce attorney who is also a very popular wedding officiant. Although her side gig draws the side-eye from Gretchen, a senior lawyer she desper ately hopes will mentor her, RJ is able to efficiently juggle her career as a lawyer with her interest in marrying couples until she’s knocked off balance—literally and figuratively—by Lear Campbell, a cousin of RJ’s favorite wedding planner, Penny. Lear, once a pro-football events manager, is substituting for Penny while she’s on leave. Lear has never had trouble charming people, especially because he tries very hard to be nice. But RJ is a challenge: She appears to be immune to his appeal, and recent events have caused Lear to reevaluate his proclivity for niceness. RJ decides not to work with Lear, but when he turns out to be a close friend of Gretchen’s, she finds that she cannot refuse him. Forced to spend several hours in close proximity while romance is in the air, Lear and RJ find themselves attracted to one another, but RJ’s personal demons and Lear’s past prevent them from acknowledging any mutual feelings beyond lust. RJ and Lear are instantly likable: Each has a lovely sense of humor, and their personal struggles ring true and demand empathy. RJ’s interactions with her friends and Lear’s with his family are entertaining and heartbreaking in equal measure. Although their unwillingness to lower their defenses is understandable, RJ and Lear go around in circles one time too many. But Wil liams has a talent for weaving moments of genuine warmth and tenderness with sizzling sexual chemistry in ways that are con sistently engaging.

DO YOU TAKE THIS MAN

$17.00 paper | Sept. 6, 2022 978-0-593-43719-3Anaccidental

THE GRIMKES by Kerri K. Greenidge 56

THE RUSSIA CONUNDRUM by Mikhail Khodorkovsky with Martin Sixsmith 60

A LINE IN THE WORLD by Dorthe Nors; trans. by Caroline Waight 64

A lyrical, provocative take on pop music’s power.

73 These titles earned the Kirkus Star: SHIRLEY HAZZARD A Writing Life Olubas, Brigitta Farrar, Straus and Giroux (576 $35.00pp.)| Nov. 15, 978-0-374-11337-72022

CHINA AFTER MAO by Frank Dikötter 50

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 39

DIARY OF A MISFIT by Casey Parks 66

OUTSMART YOUR BRAIN by Daniel T. Willingham 72

REQUIEM FOR THE MASSACRE by RJ Young

encounter and long obsession with the late musical icon Prince.Prince (1958-2016) contained multi tudes, and every book about him seems to explore his aura through a different filter—musical, sexual, sartorial, reli gious, and so on. In this slim book, first published as an essay under a different title in Harper’s in 2012, Pulitzer Prize–win ning cultural critic Als emphasizes Prince’s role as a queer Black icon, somebody who challenged the notion that “for sex to be sex it needs to be shaming.” Prince’s 1988 album Lovesexy wasn’t his most successful, but for Als, it represents the high point of Prince’s sexual fluidity, his “DJ-like mixing of homosexualist and heterosexualist impulses.” The author reads Prince’s defi ance toward the mainstream record industry in the 1990s as symbolic of his effort to challenge the supremacy of heteronor mative, White behavior. But Prince is still a slippery persona for Als: He writes about interviewing him backstage before a 2004 concert and being simultaneously charmed by him (his face “had the exact shape, and large eyes, of a beautiful turtle”) and put off, as when he evangelized on his faith as a Jehovah’s Wit ness. Prince at once lamented male journalists who feared their femininity while projecting a “new, heterosexualized, Jesusloving self.” At fewer than 50 pages, this book is too short to address Prince’s protean nature in depth. But as an appreciation of the liberating power he had over Als as a gay Black man, it’s undeniably engrossing. (Straight men felt that power, too: The book opens with a Jamie Foxx stand-up routine about having his hetero identity rocked by Prince.) In that regard, it’s a story about love in general, delighting in seeing yourself in a star, and lamenting when that star flickers in a different way.

WHITE WOMEN by Regina Jackson & Saira Rao 58

.................................................

MY PINUP Als, Hilton New Directions (48 pp.) $11.95 paper | Nov. 1, 2022

978-0-8112-3449-8Ataleofabrief

WILD NEW WORLD by Dan Flores 54

RONAN AND THE ENDLESS SEA OF STARS by Rick Louis; illus. by Lara Antal 61

INDIVISIBLE by Joel Richard Paul 66

SHIRLEY HAZZARD by Brigitta Olubas 65

CHEAP LAND COLORADO by Ted Conover 45

nonfiction

The Pioneers (2019): “Lively his tory of the Ohio River region in the years between the Revolution and the Civil War.…Characteristically, the au thor suggests major historical themes without ever arguing them as such.…

remembering david (1933-2022)mccullough

John Adams (2001): “While Mc Cullough never misses an episode in Adams’ long and of ten troubled life, he includes enough biographical mate rial on Jefferson that this can be considered two biogra phies for the price of one.…Despite the whopping length, there’s not a wasted word in this superb, swiftly mov ing narrative, which brings new and overdue honor to a Founding Father.”

NONFICTION Eric Liebetrau

The Greater Journey (2011): “An ambitious, wide-rang ing study of how being in Paris helped spark generations of American genius.…A gorgeously rich, sparkling patch work, eliciting stories from diaries and memoirs to create the human drama McCullough depicts so well.”

of these speeches—most were university graduation talks—reveal both McCullough’s passion for history and his profound belief in America, or at least his vision of America, which is both encompassing and deeply hopeful.…Clio, the muse of history, smiles and nods her head on every page.”

Eric Liebetrau is the nonfiction and managing editor.

Vintage McCullough and a book that students of American history will find captivating.”

OverstreetLeah

The Wright Brothers (2015): “A charmingly pared-down life of the ‘boys’ that grounds their dream of flight in decent character and work ethic. There is a quiet, stoical awe to the accomplishments of these two unprepossessing Ohio brothers in this fluently rendered, skillfully fo cused study.…An educational and in spiring biography of seminal Ameri can innovators.”

On Aug. 7, we lost the legend ary author and historian David McCullough, who died at the age of 89. McCullough was one of the most significant popular historians in the U.S. for decades. Ask any fan of Amer ican history or biography to name their favorite authors, and his name will likely be on the list. His trophy shelf alone is awe-inspiring—among other honors, McCullough won two Pulitzers, two National Book Awards, two Francis Park man Prizes, a Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the New York Public Library’s Literary Lion Award, and the 2006 Pres idential Medal of Freedom—but perhaps more impor tantly, he reinvigorated the genres of history and biogra phy, making them palatable to nearly any reader.

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A master of narrative nonfiction, McCullough was both a consummate researcher and a polished writer, and his ability to maintain his scholarly rigor while entertain ing a wide general audience is unmatched. By concentrat ing on the humanity of his subjects—whether he admired them or not—he brought history out of the dusty shad ows and into the light. He was never satisfied with mere description; he wanted us to experience the events and embrace the characters that populated his pages. “His tory is human,” he once said. “It’s about everything. It’s about education. It’s about medicine. It’s about science. It’s about art and music and literature, and the theater. And to leave [all that] out is not only to leave out a lot of the juice and the fun and the uplifting powers of human expression, but it is to misunderstand what it is.”

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The American Spirit (2017): “Ar ranged chronologically, the texts

I don’t have space to highlight all of his books—none of which is out of print—but browse through the Kirkus archives, and it’s clear that our reviewers have always been impressed by his work. Here is a brief selection of the praise he received for his books of the last two decades.

1776 (2005): “A master storyteller’s character-driven account of a storied year in the American Revolution.… Against world systems, economic de terminist, and other external-cause schools of historical thought, Mc Cullough has an old-fashioned fond ness for the great- (and not-so-great) man tradition, which may not have much explanatory power but almost always yields better-written books.”

An important book on a timely topic.

$29.00 | Oct. 11, 978-1-5417-6839-02022AjournalistforMother

Balmer, Randall Univ. of North Carolina (192 pp.) $25.00 | Sept. 20, 978-1-4696-7006-52022Abriefbutinsightful

An engaging look at the historical conditions surrounding America’s secular, on-field religions.

Balmer, the chair of religion at Dart mouth, argues that the four major American team sports—base ball, football, basketball, and hockey—link to social and cultural movements in play at the time of their foundings. There were industrialism, imperialism, entrenched (and anti-immigrant) nationalism. There were also technological developments such as the railroad and the telegraph, which “made both intercol legiate and professional leagues possible, allowing the travel of teams from one community to another and news about the con tests to filter back to hometowns.” An imported British move ment called “Muscular Christianity” also held, in essence, that a weak Christian soldier wasn’t going to win the war against evil for God. Balmer’s case studies are interesting and well docu mented. Though football was the product of Protestant schools after the Civil War—one that had the martial impulses of war riors on the battlefield—it was quickly adopted by Catholic schools such as Notre Dame, helping reduce some of the dis tance between the two strains of faith. It’s interesting to note, too, that James Naismith, hailed by one coach as an “inventor of basket-ball, medical doctor, Presbyterian minister, tee-totaler, all-around athlete, non-smoker, and owner of vocabulary without cuss words,” was both a college chaplain and a coach. Balmer discerns a fascinating link between hockey’s penalty box and the Catholic Church’s confessional booth, where a sinner can “acknowledge and atone for his transgression.” He doesn’t always effectively forge links between religion as such and sport, but he provides plenty of useful insights on the role of zeitgeist, as when he aligns football in the South to the desperate need to reestablish a sense of manhood following the defeat of the Con federacy. He also contrasts North America’s growing urbanism to the implied pastoralism of baseball and its contemporaneous vision of a “Garden of Eden, a lost, halcyon paradise.”

“Necessary in its racial and gender inclusivity, this thoughtful book will appeal to anyone looking to understand the way forward in a post-Roe world.”

no choice

cultural history of American sports that links religious elements to the rise of organized games.

Andrews, Becca PublicAffairs (256 pp.)

Andrews argues convincingly that the battle over abortion is part of a larger “war on women.” To demonstrate this, she spent three years talking to individuals who sought abortions. The three-part narrative she constructs from these interviews, which she interweaves with discussions of reproductive rights history, is profoundly sobering. In Part I, the author shows how misogyny and racism, along with the professionalization of medicine in the 19th century, created “motivation for power ful people to frame abortion as an evil comparable to murder.”

NO CHOICE

Jones gathers personal and historical accounts of abor tion and abortion activist experiences before, during, and after Roe v. Wade

The Destruction of Roe v. Wade and the Fight To Protect a AmericanFundamentalRight

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PASSION PLAYS How Religion Shaped Sports in North America

By the 1960s, anti-abortion laws gave rise to semiclandestine organizations like the Society for Humane Abortion and Jane, which linked some of Andrews’ interviewees with abortion doctors both inside the U.S. and abroad. In Part II, Andrews looks at how, by the early 21st century, conservative backlash against Roe v. Wade, the law that transformed an “evil” into a protected right, made it increasingly difficult for pregnant peo ple—especially disenfranchised ones—to get abortions. At the same time, it revealed the way a racist medical establishment ignored the myriad social and economic issues that women and people of color faced while trying to maintain their reproduc tive health. Andrews concludes her study in Part III, arguing that the demise of Roe in 2022 was not only inevitable, but per haps necessary. Until the connection between the devaluation of women and White supremacist gender control is fully articu lated—and the complacency that gave rise to its end is replaced with a grassroots commitment to seeking reproductive justice for all—abortion will always be regarded with fear, suspicion, and even outright hostility. Necessary in its racial and gender inclusivity, this thoughtful book will appeal to anyone looking to understand the way forward in a post-Roe world.

video game indus try provides an insider’s account of how the business grew to colossal proportions.

The early 21st century has seen a rise in authoritarianism and antiimmigration sentiment, both of which have emerged alongside—or perhaps in response to—explosive levels of poverty, armed conflict, and

Bleszinski, Cliff Simon & Schuster (288 pp.) $28.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-982149-14-72022Akeyfigureinthe

BARKLEY A Biography

In the video game business—worth $180 billion globally—Bleszinski (b. 1975) has iconic status as a designer and developer. Early on, the shy teenager understood the massive potential of computers, and he was drawn into gam ing through early classics like Mario Brothers and Zelda. He created and sold his first game while still in high school, drawing attention from the burgeoning industry. This led to a connec tion with a company called Epic Games, and he developed their first real hit, the Unreal series. The next step was the hugely popular Gears of War series, which helped define the hypervio lent tone and graphic quality of the first-person shooter genre. However, as the author notes, he saw the complex backstories of the characters of Gears as crucial to its success, adding an emotional depth that was missing from most games. He empha sizes that game design is an incredibly difficult process, involv ing complex teamwork, exhaustingly long hours, and total

Born in 1963, Barkley once com plained to a reporter that he’d been misquoted in his own autobiography—and then, elsewhere, reportedly confessed that he hadn’t yet read it. Washington Post writer and editor Bella does a good job of assembling the provable facts about the man known as “The Round Mound of Rebounds.” Whether on or off the court, he has always been a larger-than-life presence. “At the height of his career, he was treated more like a rock star than a basketball player,” writes the author, who adds that Barkley has hosted Saturday Night Live more times than any other athlete. Early on, Bella asks a pointed, relevant question: “Is he the greatest player to never win a ring?” Bella lays out the affirmative case well, starting out with an anecdote that finds Barkley, in young childhood, flinging himself off a building in the belief that he could fly. He couldn’t, of course, but he could do just about everything else physical, including taking a leading role on the 1992 Olym pic dream team, “considered by many as the most dominant assembly of basketball talent ever,” and passing a vertical test in college by jumping straight up onto a 42-inch wooden box, leading Clyde Drexler to remark, “He’s the best fat guy around.” After playing at Auburn, the always mouthy, always entertaining Barkley played in the NBA for Philadelphia, racking up the NBA’s highest rebound numbers, and then for Phoenix, where he was voted MVP in 1993. Still, despite outplaying nearly all of his peers, he was never able to win an NBA championship. Bella also covers Barkley’s career as a respected sports commentator— when reminded that he is now part of the media he used to com plain about, he notes, “Yeah…but at least I’m gonna be honest.”

MAP OF HOPE AND SORROW Stories of Refugees Trapped in Greece

An important, deeply felt look at lives in constant peril.

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CONTROL FREAK My Epic Adventure Making Video Games

Bella, Timothy Hanover Square Press (512 pp.) $29.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-335-48497-02022SirCharlesBarkley,

climate change. In this book, journalism professor Benedict and Syrian writer Awwadawnan humanize the plight of the 84 million people “forcibly displaced” as a result of these issues by presenting the narratives of asylum seekers from Syria, Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Cameroon. After difficult, often ter rifying journeys, these men and women landed in Greece, the “major gateway to Europe” for people fleeing social, political, and/or economic oppression. Yet because of a 2016 agreement between the European Union and an immigrant-inundated Tur key, Greek refugee camps have become like prisons. Asmahan, a woman fleeing the Syrian civil war, observes that individuals, and sometimes entire families, are forced to live in shipping containers for months on end while awaiting word on their asy lum status. Even when she arrived at a slightly more accommo dating camp, Asmahan notes that “we were still prisoners, and we were still forced to feel that we were nothing but creatures made to eat, sleep and submit.” Woman and girls are especially vulnerable to the violence that plagues these camps; assaults and rapes are rarely reported due to fear of retaliation. Even when refugees are granted permits to travel around Greece, their lives are still filled with tremendous struggle. Hasan, another Syrian, recounts his own difficulties with poor housing, poverty, ill health, and hostility from Greeks, even those who ran the local hospital in the town where he lived. Gut-wrenching and necessary, this book sharply depicts an escalating humanitarian crisis that shows few signs of slowing down. In the epilogue, the authors provide updates on their subjects.

one of the great knights-errant of the court (basketball, that is), receives a full-scale biography.

A pleasure for fans of the hard-charging legend.

978-1-80444-001-8Apowerfulcollection of stories from refugees stuck in asylum limbo in Greece.

Benedict, Helen & Eyad Awwadawnan Footnote Press (322 pp.) $19.95 paper | Oct. 18, 2022

commitment to the project. The success of these games made Bleszinski wealthy, for which he was unprepared, and he is will ing to make fun of himself for trying to live up to the “CliffyB” persona that he created. Eventually, facing burnout and with a string of bad relationships behind him, he set up his own com pany to design a new type of game. But he found that the busi ness had moved on, and in his mid-40s, he felt like a dinosaur. Nonetheless, he writes, he has found peace and satisfaction with life, and he is proud to have made significant contributions to the industry. It is a somewhat surprising conclusion to the book, but it’s appropriate.

Clark is a longtime professor of modern war studies, the founder of the Centre for Army Leadership in the U.K., and author of Anzio, Arnhem, Blitzkrieg, and other acclaimed books on WWII. In his latest, he shows that the elements of effective leadership are not in short supply, but for Patton, Montgom ery, and Rommel, rising to the top of their brutally competitive profession required prodigious ambition, a fascination with the

Bowlin, Ben with Matt Frederick & Noel Brown Illus. by Nick Turbo Benson Flatiron Books (240 pp.) $29.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-250-26856-32022Thehostsofthe

titular podcast translate their investigations to the page.

Among a spate of new books about virally strange ideas, among them Michael Shermer’s rather more insightful study Conspiracy, this one has a pointed purpose: By exposing bad and dangerous ideas while acknowledging their origins, the authors seek “to arm you with knowledge”—and, of course, knowledge is power. Aside from ignorance, the herd mentality, and badfaith grifters, there’s also this stark truth: “Your government is lying to you.” Considering the web of lies surrounding the Trump administration, for instance, it’s no surprise that there’s a prevailing narrative that Trump operates behind a smoke screen in order to fight the “Deep State” and the dark forces that seek to enslave America, “the core claim of the QAnon conspiracy theory.” As the authors enumerate, behind weird paranoiac bug aboos such as chemtrails and UFOs, there have been numerous secret military tests repeatedly disavowed and then revealed to be true. Black Americans, in particular, have reason to be con cerned that biowarfare is being waged on them. In addition to the shameful Tuskegee experiments, it’s true that AIDS, Covid19, and other catastrophic diseases have taken a disproportion ate toll on Black communities, a fact likely better attributed to systemic racism and classism than to a malicious governmentbacked origin. Feel spied on? You should, and there’s a truth behind it. Thanks to data monitoring, “a growing percentage of the US population—the vast majority—has simply given over access to their personal lives.” We are manipulated, lied to, and bought and sold—a particular bête noire of the authors is the adman Edward Bernays, propagandist extraordinaire—and scarcely have control over our destinies. Small wonder, then, that people believe in the bizarre.

THE COMMANDERS The Leadership Journeys of George Patton, Bernard Montgomery, and Erwin Rommel

A behind-the-scenes memoir of the video games industry leavened with insight and self-deprecating humor.

STUFF THEY DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW

Clark, Lloyd Atlantic Monthly (432 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 1, 978-0-8021-6022-52022Aveteranmilitary

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A page-turning book to give to someone who believes in pizza pedophilia or that the Illuminati rule the world.

historian delves into the leadership qualities of three iconic World War II commanders.

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Nothing new but astute and entertaining.

“A sweeping tale of ambition, arrogance, egos, and feuds and how they brought down a once great company.”

The Rise and Fall of an American Icon

traces the rise and fall of General Electric, the com pany that once exemplified American business.

minutiae of war, and boundless self-confidence. All matured before World War I, when military officers mostly came from upper-middle-class families where it was a traditional, if not high-status, career choice. Reaching midlevel ranks, all expe rienced combat in WWI and impressed their superiors; they continued to mature during the two decades between the wars. Clark delivers an insightful, warts-and-all account of this lesser-known period in their lives, which accurately forecasted their later triumphs and controversies. Patton was the wealthi est and most pompous. He never concealed his yearning for military glory, an ambition shared by few under his command, who mostly admired his leadership but not his bravado. Boor ish behavior endangered his career several times, but superiors valued his aggressiveness, a quality lacking in most American generals. Montgomery was as flamboyant as Patton, but he had plenty of self-confidence and dedication. The conviction that he knew best was on full display as commander of British forces in Europe during WWII, making him a controversial figure at home and widely disliked by American commanders, perhaps Patton most of all. Rommel wasn’t as conceited as Patton or

Montgomery; he preferred to lead men and fight. Like most his torians, Clark admires Rommel’s performance in North Africa but admits that he was probably the least intelligent of the three. A fawning admirer of Hitler, he did not change his mind until it was too late.

There was a time when GE, a key player in the electricity revolution that powered America in the 20th century, was a leader in innovation and acumen, a reputation that persisted into the postwar era as it became a diversified conglomerate. Now there are only scattered fragments and a broken reputa tion. In this hefty study, Cohan, a former investment banker who has written multiple books on finance and Wall Street, delves into the records of the company’s early days, but he also presents the results of his interviews with CEOs of the modern era: Jack Welch, Jeff Immelt, and John Flannery. The current CEO, Larry Culp, declined to participate. Welch’s drive took the company into new areas, but his tenure was also problem atic. GE’s strength was always industrial operations, but Welch moved it into media and financial services, using its internal bank GE Capital as the springboard. Welch picked Immelt as his successor but later said that the choice was a mistake. Immelt, for his part, claims that he spent much of his tenure cleaning up disasters that Welch swept under the rug (all of which he covers in detail in his 2021 memoir, Hot Seat). By the time Welch stepped down in 2001, the company had become dangerously overextended. The 2008 financial crisis exposed the corporation’s myriad weaknesses, and a painful period of sell-offs began. Flannery tried to bring order to the chaos with a proposal for radical restructuring, but he was fired after only 15 months. This is a long, complicated story, and there are times when Cohan struggles to keep the sprawling cast of squabbling characters organized. As he capably shows, all of GE’s leaders made mistakes, but there was also a pervasive sense of hubris. Would-be corporate titans, take note.

POWER FAILURE

Cohan, William D. Portfolio (880 pp.) $32.00 | Nov. 15, 978-0-593-08416-82022Abusinessjournalist

A sweeping tale of ambition, arrogance, egos, and feuds— and how they brought down a once-great company.

power failure

$28.00 | Oct. 18, 2022

Despite being a democracy with a constitution that protects free speech, Mexico is “one of the most dangerous countries on earth for journalists,” writes Corcoran, former AP bureau chief for Mexico and Central America. Furthermore, “the situation has only grown worse over time, with Mexico more recently ranking number one—tied with Afghanistan—in murdered journalists.” The author focuses on the still-unsolved murder of journalist Regina Martínez (1963-2012), who was beaten to death in her home in the state of Veracruz. Corcoran delves deeply into the criminal symbiosis that has plagued Mexico since the drug cartels insinuated themselves into Mexican gov ernment. Martínez was a hard-hitting political reporter who had cut her teeth at the daily newspaper Política before moving to Proceso, a center-left investigative news magazine acclaimed for its criminal reporting. Martínez had wisely steered clear of covering the cartels because of the increasing danger to journal ists who did. Many journalists were either bribed into favorable reporting—or not reporting at all—on corruption schemes and campaigns, or they were simply murdered (“plata o plomo, take the money or take a bullet”). Based on years of dogged reporting,

978-1-63557-503-3Adisturbinglook at violence against journalists in Mexico through the lens of the murder of a veteran crime reporter.

Off-Gridders at America’s Edge Conover, Ted Knopf (304 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 1, 978-0-525-52148-82022Anexplorationof

CHEAP COLORADOLAND

A captivating portrait of a community on the fringes.

IN THE MOUTH OF THE WOLF A Murder, a Cover-Up, and the True Cost of Silencing the Press

living off the grid in Colorado’s San Luis Valley.

Corcoran, Katherine Bloomsbury (336 pp.)

As Conover shows in his sharp, balanced profiles, some were unprepared for the region’s harsh environment. While remote regions offer residents solitude, isolation can also lead to loneliness, and the winters in the region, which is “beauti ful, wild, and mysterious,” can be brutal. Furthermore, most residents are impoverished and have limited job options. The area, writes the author, combines “the soaring beauty of the Mountain West and resonances of the pioneers with the hardbitten realities of life on a shoestring.” Over the course of sev eral years, Conover split his time between his home in New York and Colorado. With each trip, he learned more about the region’s history and its people, and he eventually purchased his own plot of land. With empathy, compassion, and skillful storytelling, Conover engagingly shares the dreams and reali ties of those he met and befriended, offering a window into a community that few readers will ever experience.

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Growing up in Colorado, Conover, who won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, was fascinated by “flats dwellers” in the San Luis Valley, and he wanted to learn what would drive people to live in such remote areas. In 2017, he began volunteering for La Puente, which provides services to rural residents through its outreach initiative. What he discovered were residents from various walks of life. Many of them were attracted to the valley by the offer of cheap land as well as the ability to grow marijuana legally. Most, however, were merely seeking a different lifestyle than mainstream America offered. Some were virulently anti-government and pro-gun; some tried life in the city and hated it. Others were hoping to escape their pasts, while others, disillusioned by “turmoil in the outside world,” believed they “needed to prepare for total anarchy.”

Hip-hop fame can be fleeting and inexplicable, and this oddly structured tale reflects that reality, following sensations that didn’t pan out and skipping over stars that made it big. “In human terms and in musical ones,” writes New York Times reporter Coscarelli, “Atlanta rap represents the most conse quential musical ecosystem of this century so far.” However, he quickly switches from such broad declarations, bouncing quickly past Atlanta hip-hop legends like Outkast, T.I., and TLC as well as music executives like L.A. Reid and Jermaine Dupri. The author focuses on the beginnings of the influential Quality Control label, which launched the careers of current stars Migos, Lil Yachty, and, most importantly, Lil Baby. It’s a fascinating story about the struggles of hip-hop authentic ity, and Coscarelli is a decent storyteller—though he leans more on interviews with Lil Baby’s mother than with the rapper himself, and his tumultuous life and artistic decisions could bear deeper consideration. Though Baby’s hit “The Big ger Picture,” inspired by the police murder of George Floyd, became incredibly influential, especially after its stunning performance at the 2021 Grammy Awards, Coscarelli only spends a short section discussing it. “I wanted to use a specific situation that would give people an understanding of where I come from,” he quotes the rapper, with little more explana tion. That focus problem continues throughout much of the text, and the author offers overlong discussions of Baby’s less successful friend Lil Marlo, who was shot and killed in 2020, and the stalled career of one-time teenage phenom Lil Reek. It’s also odd that Coscarelli gives short shrift to the massively successful Lil Nas X, who also hails from the city. Lil Baby’s gripping story could’ve carried the narrative, but the author’s intellectual bait and switch drags it down.

examines the rap landscape of Atlanta, which has birthed “some of the most impactful, commer cially successful and influential music of the last thirty-plus years.”

Corcoran dismisses the official line that Martínez was killed in a crime of passion, and she provides a wealth of testimony from Martínez’s mentees, who admired her work and held her up as a moral standard. The author shows how Martínez seemed to be working on the financial misdeeds of the outgoing governor of Veracruz at the time, Javier Duarte, and she may have been on the verge of a significant revelation about the mass graves of those who were “disappeared” during his administration. Read ers will be transfixed by this alarming narrative, all the more timely as free speech, even in the U.S., is under attack yet again. A tenaciously researched work of investigative journalism.

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An occasionally enlightening but uneven history of Atlan ta’s hip-hop scene and influence.

RAP CAPITAL An Atlanta Story Coscarelli, Joe Simon & Schuster (400 pp.) $28.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-982107-88-82022Aculturereporter

George F. Kennan (1904-2005), a scholar at heart who had a significant role in the Foreign Service, grew up a passion ate admirer of all things Russian—other than the government of the Soviet Union. Historian Costigliola, who edited The Ken nan Diaries, shows how Kennan’s politics verged on fascist as he was formulating many of his views on global affairs. One of his most admired friends was the far-right German nobleman Fer dinand von Bredow, who was later murdered as a rival of Hitler’s. As for Kennan, “though neither a jingoist nor a militarist, he did favor an ethnically homogeneous United States and an end to immigration.” During his rise through the diplomatic hierarchy,

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of a principal architect of the Cold War.

“A valuable resource for students of 20th century geopolitics.”

Costigliola, Frank Princeton Univ. (648 pp.) $39.95 | Jan. 17, 978-0-691-16540-02023Acriticalbiography

KENNAN

kennan

Kennan reported closely on developments in the Soviet Union but ran afoul of Franklin Roosevelt at a time when Franklin was seeking closer relations with the Stalin regime in the alliance against Hitler. When World War II ended, Costigliola writes, Kennan advocated a policy of containment, which posited that an independent Europe, led by a united Germany, would serve as a counterbalance to both American and Soviet power. Instead, that policy of containment was militarized, which Ken nan opposed to the extent that he became a critic of it in his later years. “In the post–World War II era,” writes the author, “Kennan would never accept the Cold War order as permanent.” Still, even as he challenged the idea that America police the world, the lectures and articles he wrote served to build official American consensus about the Cold War, which had terrible consequences in a doctrine that put American troops on the ground in Vietnam. When the Soviet Union collapsed, Kennan warned sharply against extending NATO into Eastern Europe, which he feared would antagonize Russia—which it did, and as a result, Russia invaded Ukraine.

A valuable resource for students of 20th-century geopolitics.

A Life Between Worlds

One of the things I was really mindful of is my really com plicated relationship with the hagiography around [Ruth Bader Ginsburg]. I feel as though, on the one hand, I have

What was it like to be creating a book while knowing that so much of what you were writing about was still in flux?

Only like seven people have read the book, and I don’t think anybody’s read it post-Dobbs, so it’s just incredibly meaningful to me if it still offers some succor. Ninety-five percent of it was written dreading Dobbs but not actual ly believing it was coming. Whether it’s even slightly ad equate to meet this moment we’re in is just such a question to me.

I think anybody who has tried to write a book in the past three, four years has had that same sense that you’re lay ing down the track one minute before the train’s coming. I thought this book was going to be literally Lady Justice, sword blazing, having vanquished Trumpism. It went from being a capstone of a moment to a real cry about voting. The last third of the book quite deliberately became a call to arms. As I wrote those voting chapters and the gerry mandering chapters and even the afterword, what oc curred to me was, if the takeaway from all of this is sim ply that people need to think about voting as sort of both the solution and the problem, then that could be a timeless call. I am very, very struck by the ways in which the book that I started to write was very much not the book I ended up writing.

Legal journalist Dahlia Lithwick has been covering law and the courts for Slate since 1999. Over some 300 episodes, her podcast, Amicus, has been a bridge between the law and the laity, carrying listeners affected by the le gal system through its intricacies. With Lady Justice: Wom en, the Law, and the Battle To Save America (Penguin Press, Sept. 20), she turns to long-form writing, with profiles of women lawyers who have resisted Trumpism in all sorts of ways. Opening with Pauli Murray, the Yale- and How ard-educated Black queer lawyer whose work was foun dational to landmark decisions on race, sex, and sexual ity, she moves on to women active now, including Brigitte Amiri (defending reproductive rights), Vanita Gupta (defending civil rights), Nina Perales (defending voting rights), and many others. Kirkus’ starred review calls it “required reading for this post-Dobbs world.” She spoke to Kirkus via Zoom from her parents’ home in Ra’anana, Is rael, where she was vacationing. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

The Slate legal correspondent finished her book on women and the law. Then came the Dobbs decision

HollinrakeKathryn

By sheer coincidence, I found myself reading Lady Jus tice on June 24, when the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade came down. I think that’s the only thing that got me through the day.

BY VICKY SMITH

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Please talk about how you chose the people that you profiled.

WORDS WITH…

Dahlia Lithwick

No. And I hated that. I mean, it’s so not my way. But I also felt an obligation. If I was going to write about this mate rial, then I had to write about my own story and how my experience at the 9th Circuit inflected how I felt about the [Brett] Kavanaugh hearings. I couldn’t not do it, because there was like a big, Dahlia-shaped hole in it if I didn’t do it. But it’s so incredibly discomforting for me to ever write about myself.

I think by the time I had finished my undergraduate de gree, which was at Yale in the U.S., and then turned to law school at Stanford, I was so enmeshed in the American le gal system that when I went home for vacation, I was just sort of flummoxed. And at the end of the day, I’m enough of a recovering English major that a [William] Brennan dis sent would bring me to tears. Oliver Wendell Holmes is po etry. I think at its best, and I guess this is what the book is about, [the American system] is just such a beautiful distil late of dreaming about freedom.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

I think this is one of the reasons that Anita Hill was a re ally important chapter for me, because I needed somebody

all the mugs, I have all the pillowcases, trust me, I own every tote bag. But I also think, and I want to choose my words carefully, that we are very much the generation that thought if we had the mugs and the tote bags, we were doing activism. And so when I started the book, front of mind for me was there are so many RBGs. It’s why I’m in love with Pauli Murray. But for the accident of history, Pauli Murray would have been RBG and would have been a really different RBG. I really felt the responsibility to open the aperture and say, for all the women who are in such grief because their hero is gone, [that] heroes are ev erywhere. If I showed you my original table of contents, there were 30 people—I could have gone on and on. But I wanted also for the arc to move from Sally Yates, whom we all fell in love with the first week when Trump was inaugu rated, to all of these women of color at the other end of the book, who’ve been doing this work all along, [like] Stacey Abrams, who has been at the epicenter of voting rights lon ger than anybody knew her name.

My daughter just finished her first year of law school, and she told me, “I’m the last class that learned consti tutional law with the right to abortion.”

One of the things that I am so aware of is that it’s really hard for men to figure out how to be allies right now and how to be in this with us. When Dobbs came down, I felt like every single panel I was on, every cable news show was just women. The last thing I want to do with this book is to suggest that there isn’t a place in this discourse for men.

Vicky Smith is access services director at Portland Public Library in Maine. Lady Justice received a starred review in the Aug. 15, 2022, issue.

You are completely, deeply invested in the American system of laws. But you grew up in Canada. What caused you to fall in love with it so much?

who’s been through a few cycles of this, who’s able to say, look, you’re in your moment, and this is the whole world to you right now. But, sister, I’ve been through it before. This is where I think Black women are leading the way. I think professor Hill is a really good marker for that. We are so of this moment that we forget that this is something that women from Abigail Adams on have been trying to do. One of the reasons the book was so important and urgent to me is that I think that law is a superpower. Your daugh ter will have a lever that can move the world.

One of the reasons both of my now-teenage sons and my husband are everywhere in the book is because I’m so aware that if it’s not their fight too, we’re doing it wrong.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 49 adultyoung

I was really interested in the #MeToo section. Were you prepared to get as personal as you did?

Doonan, Simon HarperOne (160 pp.) $25.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-063-25951-52022Doonanturnsasharp,

CHINA AFTER MAO The Rise of Superpowera

Dikötter, Frank Bloomsbury (416 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 15, 978-1-63973-051-32022Anexpertonmodern

50 | 15 september 2022 nonfiction | kirkus.com |

“A richly informative, disquieting history.”

tory examines its rapid rise following the CulturalAfterRevolution.MaoZedong died in 1976, his misgoverned and largely impoverished nation began the great est economic advance in history. Dikötter, chair of the humani ties department at the University of Hong Kong and author of multiple books about Mao and the Cultural Revolution, chron icles this period. Many Western observers believe that Mao’s death allowed China’s rulers, led by the sensible Deng Xiaop ing, to discard Marxism and welcome capitalism, leading to an explosion of prosperity. This is a myth, writes Dikötter, whose extensive reading in mainland archives, gimlet eye, and best selling histories have made him a controversial figure among some Chinese scholars. The author argues that China’s leaders dismiss Western ideas of democracy, proclaiming that, as Marx ists, they serve the people; according to them, this makes China the world’s most democratic nation. Mao remains a godlike fig ure, but his successors yearned to recover from his disastrous revolution. They believed that a top-down, disciplined com mand economy would fix things. Dikötter delivers an excellent, highly critical description of China’s spectacular expansion that emphasizes banking, industrial policy, trade, and currency. He also shows how the country struggled initially because key posi tions in the finance arena went to party loyalists who lacked suf ficient technical knowledge. With time, leaders learned from their mistakes, importing technology and investment from Western nations enraptured by the thought of more than 1 bil lion new customers and under the mistaken impression that China was “privatizing.” All expressed horror when Chinese leaders slaughtered democratic reformers in Tiananmen Square and throughout China in 1989—and then quickly forgave them. At the time, writes the author, “the regime learned to appreciate the benefits of hostage diplomacy and the price of even a single dissident.” Dikötter brilliantly recounts the defects of China’s economic model and deplores its human rights record, but he is unable to explain why it continues to grow.

QUIT The Power of Knowing When To Walk Away

It was the early 1970s, writes the author, when “pretending to be a bit femmy worked for the gay and female fans, but God forbid you actually were a friend of Dorothy’s.” Performers like Elton John and Little Richard hid their sexuality by writing off their performances as camp. But then came David Bowie and Ziggy Stardust, blowing the cover off the whole thing, and suddenly, as if in the transition from the tornado to Oz, the world gained shape and color for gay people. Following shortly after was Transformer, “the perfect soundtrack for the new glam-drogyny,” in which Reed—poet, curmudgeon, late of the Velvet Underground—paired with Bowie as pro ducer to exercise a particular insight, which Reed expressed like this: “I thought it was dreary for gay people to have to lis ten to straight people’s love songs.” One great LGBTQ+ love song, as Doonan writes in this song-by-song dissection of the 1972 album, was “Perfect Day,” but it’s another song on the album that’s the perfect anthem: “Walk on the Wild Side,” with its evocations of street life and transgression. The effect on hearing it, writes Doonan exultantly, was immediate and elec trifying: “I am immediately smitten. It’s 1972. I am a gay bloke, listening to tales of drag queens, on an album I just bought in the Manchester town center. This is so fucking insane. I am just about ready to blow a gay gasket.” Other marginalized people in that barely-past-Stonewall era felt the same, at last having music unmistakably of their own—and, Doonan adds, many more liberatory albums followed on the heels of a release now reckoned as one of the greatest rock albums of all time.

Duke, Annie Portfolio (336 pp.) $27.00 | Oct. 4, 978-0-593-42299-12022Whyquittingis

sometimes a good move.Business consultant and former pro fessional poker player Duke mounts a persuasive argument that quitting is a “decision skill worth devel oping.” Although grit and perseverance are much praised and useful in many situations, sometimes, “persistence is not always

A richly informative, disquieting history.

TRANSFORMER A Story of Glitter, Glam Rock, and Loving Lou Reed

Chinese his

china after mao

funny eye on an icon of early LGBTQ+ musical expres sion: an album by the acerbic Lou Reed.

A perceptive, pleasingly idiosyncratic work of music appreciation and cultural history.

the best decision, certainly not absent context. And context changes.” The author draws on many examples of individuals at crossroads in their lives or careers, confronting the decision to continue or walk away. She faced just such a decision when she was a graduate student in cognitive psychology, aspiring to a career in research and academia. A serious health issue derailed her progress, and she lost her fellowship. Needing to support herself until she could resume her studies, she took up poker and found she loved the game. “A poker table, it turns out, is a very good place to learn about the upside of quitting,” she dis covered. “Optimal quitting might be the most important skill separating great players from amateurs.” Quitting, though, can be impeded by negative assumptions: that quitting is synony mous with losing; others will view us badly; the time and effort already spent were wasted; giving up some project will mean giv ing up one’s identity. Duke sets out some practical guidelines for overcoming those internal forces. “When you enter into a course of action,” for example, she suggests that you “cre ate a set of kill criteria. This is a list of signals you might see in the future that would tell you it’s time to quit.” Continuing

to pursue a goal, she reminds readers, means that other oppor tunities—more fulfilling and perhaps more exciting—will be neglected. “You simply don’t see them because you’re not look ing for them,” writes Duke. When working toward any goal, “don’t just measure whether you hit the goal, ask what you have achieved and learned along the way.”

A fresh perspective on the pursuit and meaning of success.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction | 15 september 2022 | 51 adultyoung

Fanone, Michael & John Shiffman

El-Rifae is a founding member of Opantish (Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment), which helped protect women from mob attacks in the wake of the 2011 uprisings. “From physically intervening on the ground to overseeing the complicated logis tics of the operation, women led,” writes the author. “Opantish positioned itself as a necessary part of the revolution even as it struggled against sexism within revolutionary circles.” El-Rifae, who co-produces the Palestine Festival of Literature, and her friends were at the center of demonstrations in Egypt, when young revolutionaries were experiencing “all of the transcen dence and promise of unstoppable, fear-breaking collective action against decades of police brutality, dictatorship, and cor ruption.” Despite the encouraging progress, online reports soon revealed that women were being surrounded by mobs of men and sexually assaulted. As a result, El-Rifae and a motivated group of both women and men took the initiative to create Opantish. Well organized and employing protective gear and safety kits, they confronted the mobs in order to save the women, often at great personal risk. The author also discusses how the Egyptian military had been using attacks against women in public spaces since the early 2000s. In addition, the Muslim Brotherhood, the deeply conservative religious sect that briefly prevailed in its overthrow of the government, had also sanctioned assaults against “liberal,” Westernized women. Throughout the book, the author presents the results of her interviews conducted over several years after the events, many wrenching in detail. Her col leagues reveal that many perpetrators of sexual violence espoused the ideals of the revolution but took the opportunity to assault women whenever they were trapped in a crowd. El-Rifae’s text is both deeply troubling and inspiring.

Atria (256 pp.)

52 | 15 september 2022 | nonfiction kirkus.com

of valiant Ger man voices of opposition to Hitler’s mur derousTroubledregime.by

account of the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, squarely placing the blame on Donald Trump and his followers.

WHITE KNIGHTS IN THE BLACK ORCHESTRA The Extraordinary Story of the Germans Who Resisted Hitler

hold the line

The Insurrection and One Cop’s Battle for America’s Soul

Dunkel, Tom Hachette (464 pp.) $32.00 | Oct. 11, 978-0-306-92218-32022Thestoryofagroup

El Rifae, Yasmin Verso (224 pp.) $24.95 | Oct. 18, 978-1-83976-768-52022Afirsthandaccount of an influential feminist activist group established dur ing the Arab Spring.

“Justifiably angry and an important addition to the growing literature surrounding the chaotic last days of the Trump regime.”

A thoroughgoing history of indispensable purveyors of active and passive resistance in Nazi Germany.

RADIUS A Story of RevolutionFeminist

Hitler’s racist, unhinged, warlike rhetoric, these Germans, largely from the Christian upper class of Ber lin, expressed alarm and attempted to sabotage a variety of Nazi plans. Journalist Dunkel, author of Color Blind: The Forgotten Team That Broke Baseball’s Color Line, frames the suspenseful narrative around the work and family of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, leader of the Confessing Church, established in spring 1934 as “an offshoot of the Protestant National Church,” which operated “without ties to the Nazi Party, staking out a position firmly opposed to the deifi cation of Hitler.” By 1937, the Gestapo had shut down the church, jailed many of the pastors, and suppressed the teachings of Bon hoeffer and his associates. At the time, his brother-in-law Hans von Dohnanyi, a staff attorney at the Ministry of Justice, began secretly compiling a list of Nazi transgressions, which he referred to as the “Chronicle of Shame.” Both had connections to high-ranking Nazi officials, which they used to their advantage during their danger ous, clandestine plotting, creating a confederation known as the Black Orchestra. In addition to chronicling the actions of the Black Orchestra, the author weaves in the lives and fortunes of other early Hitler critics, including American journalist Dorothy Thompson, who believed that “Nazi Germany out-eviled almost everybody’s frame of reference”; Paul Schneider, the first Confess ing Church pastor murdered by the Nazis; and Carl von Ossietzky, a pacifist journalist who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1935 and then spent the next three years being tortured in a series of con centration camps before he died in 1938 in Berlin. “After some of the beatings,” writes Dunkel, “guards would ask Ossietzky to sign a statement retracting his criticisms of the German government. He never took back a word.”

$28.00 | Oct. 11, 978-1-66800-719-82022Adisturbingfirsthand

Powerful testimony of the Egyptian revolution destroying itself and the courageous people who hoped to save it.

HOLD THE LINE

Fanone has become one of the most recognizable public faces on the law enforcement side of the Jan. 6 divide. Dedicated, profane, and quick-witted, it’s clear that he strikes fear among the Republican legislators whom he protected that frightening day. Kevin McCarthy comes in for a shellacking early on, so weak that he effectively admitted, “I can’t control my fringe members.” Adds Fanone, “In public, McCarthy praised the police. Behind closed doors, he didn’t really give a shit.” When the events of Jan. 6 began to unfold, Fanone “self-deployed,” going to the Capitol on his own initiative. As the rioting escalated, he was beaten and

tased until he called out that he had children, which caused some of the rioters to break off and take him to safety. Still, the author is unafraid to name names—from Trump, who, after three hours, sent a tweet to the rioters to ask for an end to the violence (Fanone: “Too little, too late, asshole”), to “the MAGA-hat-wearing loser who electrocuted me with a stun gun.” As he did in testimony before Congress, the author calls for comprehensive prosecution. “Anyone who engaged in sedition on January 6 should be arrested and charged,” he writes. “Including Trump.” Fanone also recog nizes that the whole affair has become so thoroughly politicized that any solution is unlikely. Among other reasons, he left his job because so many of his fellow officers “prioritized their allegiance to Donald Trump over their oath to the United States Constitu tion,” and he rightfully complains that Congress is too cowardly or indifferent to mint a medal honoring their defenders. Fanone’s closing thoughts on police reform will be of interest to activists everywhere.

What made Draco Malfoy such a memorable movie villain was the feeling that there was more to him than viewers were able to see. It turns out the same goes for the actor who played him. Felton fills much of his memoir with charmingly told behind-thescenes stories of what it was like filming the eight movies in the Harry Potter series. He recalls how he brushed off Emma Watson in their first meeting and how she once slapped him in the face. “I didn’t have the cojones to tell Emma that I hadn’t meant her to thwack me in the face, or that she nearly had me

Potter film fran chise tells his story.

The Magic and Mayhem of Growing Up a Wizard

BEYOND THE WAND

Felton, Tom Grand Central Publishing (272 pp.) $28.00 | Oct. 18, 978-1-5387-4136-82022AstaroftheHarry

Justifiably angry and an important addition to the grow ing literature surrounding the chaotic last days of the Trump regime.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 53 adultyoung

WILD NEW WORLD The Epic Story of Animals and People in America

in tears,” he writes. The author’s anecdotes about his co-stars, from Daniel Radcliffe to Judi Dench, are similarly sweet and self-deprecating. However, as he fondly recalls his nonchalant reaction to his early career as a child actor and how his tightknit family kept him grounded, there is foreshadowing of potential problems, particularly when the Harry Potter films concluded. “I craved an escape from the version of myself I was becoming,” he explained. “I craved the old me. I craved authenticity.” Sud denly, Felton’s studied British charm and detached cool were replaced with the frenzied discomfort of a man struggling with very real demons. To his credit, the author is as unflinchingly forthcoming during this period as he is in the rest of his life. “Part of the reason that I took the decision to write these pages,” he writes, “is the hope that by sharing my experiences, I might be able to help someone else who is struggling….I’m no longer shy of putting my hands up and saying: I’m not okay. To this day I never know which version of myself I’m going to wake up to.”

54 | 15 september 2022 nonfiction | kirkus.com |

There’s a racial wealth gap in Amer ica, with numerous hurdles placed in the way of minorities—especially Black men and women—who must contend with differential rates of pay, discriminatory lend ing, and the inability to accumulate intergenerational wealth. In her debut book, New York Times reporter Flitter examines that story in numerous insightful ways. One reason Black people have trouble getting loans is that there are so few Black finan cial advisers and bank officers to serve their needs. As the author notes, even Sheila Johnson, one of the wealthiest Black people in America, “with a fortune worth hundreds of millions of dol lars,” was denied a loan when she tried to launch a luxury resort. Banks routinely issue memos headed “Please Use Caution” that target Black customers, who, it’s seemingly assumed, should not possess large checks. That’s one reason, Flitter points out, that check-cashing businesses flourish in Black neighborhoods, as well as the fact that those businesses are transparent about fees rather than layering on unadvertised charges, as banks do. The fact that there are Black neighborhoods to begin with connects to lending practices that discriminate against Black borrowers, “redlining” mortgages and charging higher rates than those for White customers, and to the fact that Black bank employees who want to track over to the wealthier “private client” side of the house are shunted off to lower-income neighborhoods with out high-ticket accounts. Unfortunately, as the author shows, discrimination is everywhere. “It is common knowledge that

An outstanding addition to the literature on the ecological history of America.

THE WHITE WALL How Big Finance Bankrupts Black America Flitter, Emily One Signal/Atria (336 pp.) $28.99 | Oct. 25, 978-1-982183-24-02022Damningexposéof

A surprisingly deep memoir from the actor who brought a memorable villain to the big screen.

A rousing body of evidence in favor of activist reform of financial practices, from ordinary loans to reparations.

wild new world

Flores, Dan Norton (384 pp.) $30.00 | Oct. 25, 978-1-324-00616-92022Apassionatehistory of North Ameri can animal life and people.

Historian Flores, author of Coyote America, American Serengeti, and other acclaimed books on the American West, writes that when humans arrived in America 15,000 years ago, they found a vast continent teeming with unfamiliar creatures, including mammoths, mastodons, horses, bison, beavers, ground sloths, saber-toothed cats, and flightless birds. During the 20th century, scholars believed that, unlike modern man, early cultures lived in harmony with nature. Try ing to explain why megafauna went extinct, they proposed cli mate change, disease, normal evolutionary processes, and even an asteroid strike. That they were wiped out by hunting is still considered controversial. Modern herd animals (bison, elk, deer) replaced them, and Native Americans thrived and took up agriculture as their populations got too large to survive by hunting alone. Contrary to many accounts, early travelers to America—including de Vaca, de Soto, Coronado, and others— found a populated land of cities and farms. After 1600, it was the British and French who encountered wilderness following a holocaust of European diseases, which killed 80% to 90% of Native peoples. With the human population devastated, wild life flourished. Flores offers an illuminatingly disturbing history of the following 500 years. Disappointed at the absence of cit ies of gold, early colonists quickly discovered another source of profit, and a vast industry soon delivered an avalanche of ani mal body parts to Europe. In a single year, 1743, a modest port (La Rochelle, Louisiana) “took in 127,000 beaver pelts, 30,300 marten furs, 110,000 raccoon pelts, along with its big haul for that year, the stripped skins of 16,500 American black bears.” The author makes it abundantly clear that money “trumped any philosophical debate elites might be having about humanity’s animal origins.” Readers will squirm at the vivid accounts of the fates of many species, but they will be heartened by the stories of men and women who devoted themselves to saving them and sometimes succeeded.

“An outstanding addition to the literature on the ecological history of America.”

insurance companies routinely look for reasons to deny claims,” she writes, “and that poor customers’ cases are the easiest to dispose of because those customers are the least likely to fight a denial.” Everywhere the dollar extends, by her searing account, minority communities are excluded.

the essential rac ism of the American financial system.

Goofy dad humor lives, and it’s still good for what ails you.

Gay, a sports and humor columnist for the Wall Street Journal, follows up Little Victories (2015) with another winning set of essays, many embracing the perspective afforded by the pandemic. The author’s self-deprecating approach to his limited athletic abilities and dubious masculine bona fides puts him right next to Dave Barry on the guy-humor shelf. For example, here is his assess ment of setting up a man cave in his basement: “I am not what you would describe as man cave material. I have never owned a

I WOULDN’T DO THAT IF I WERE ME Modern Blunders and Modest Triumphs (but Mostly Blunders) Gay, Jason Hachette (208 pp.) $28.00 | Nov. 1, 978-0-306-82856-02022Whenthegoing

gets tough, send in the clowns.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 55 adultyoung

framed football jersey, or a leather chair, or a vintage neon sign of any kind. I’m a clod at playing pool, foosball, and air hockey. I know very little about beer. When you are cleaning up after a party, and you find a halfdrunk can of beer, and you ask, ‘Who drinks only half a can of beer?’ Me. That is me. I drank only half a can of your beer. I am sorry.” In response to his children’s pleas for a dog, he imagines some kind of new, “custom-designed” breed, “capable of walking loyally with you to the liquor store but also discussing the new season of Ozark. I bet they make this dog now. It’s probably some form of Frankendoodle. ‘His name is Abercrombie. He’s part poodle, part Lab, part podcaster.’ ” Gay also provides an alternative to the traditional anniversary gift guide —highlights include “7th: Phone charger…“8th: Nothing…13th: Heroin….48th: Ghostbusters II on Blu-Ray.” In a particularly moving piece, the author remem bers a sportswriter pal who died of brain cancer, and a series of three essays mete out the misadventures of his mother’s cat, Baxter, giving the book a bit of a throughline and leading to the bravura ending, where he praises the “little happy things” that have gotten us through these difficult recent years.

Greenidge, Kerri K. Liveright/Norton (416 pp.) $32.50 | Nov. 8, 978-1-324-09084-72022Amultigenerational history of an American family that grappled with rac ism and Award-winningreform. historian Greenidge offers an absorbing investigation of two branches of the notable

UNREASONABLE HOSPITALITY

“A sweeping, insightful, richly detailed family and American history.” grimkes

The Remarkable Power of Giving People More Than They Expect

“Here we were, a brave new Queer Army ready to fight like hell for the living,” writes Goldberg about an early demonstra tion on the part of ACT UP, the activist group that, beginning in 1987, politicized the struggle to push medical research for AIDS into the forefront and to secure rights, medical and oth erwise, for the ill and their loved ones. Drawing on lessons from the anti-war era, from sit-ins to guerrilla street theater, ACT UP was “bold, angry, and—unlike the other AIDS groups—dedi cated to confrontation, not care giving.” Indeed, by the end of Goldberg’s years with the organization, the group had gone from marches to more provocative actions: “We’d held hundreds of die-ins, hoisted cardboard tombstones at the FDA, and carted empty coffins through the streets…we’d hurled ashes at the White House and carried a dead body through midtown Manhat tan.” Spurred to turn a long-kept chronology of the movement into a book by playwright Larry Kramer, Goldberg, a thoughtful and capacious writer, allows that ACT UP may have caused divi siveness: “Strategic concerns aside, I don’t think it’s a good idea to shout people down, particularly when you’re a group always demanding to be heard.” Still, there was plenty of blather to shout down on the parts of Rudy Giuliani, Jesse Helms, and Ron ald Reagan; even better-intentioned figures such as Bill Clinton and Anthony Fauci were not as helpful as they could have been. Whether sympathetic, indifferent, or hostile, the world stood by as millions died, just cause for anger. AIDS is still with us, but more manageably so, Goldberg closes in noting—a fact that owes at least something to ACT UP’s militance and refusal to go away, honoring its still-memorable slogan: “Silence = Death.”

shares his Guidara,experiences.co-owner of the worldrenowned New York restaurant Eleven Madison Park, makes his nonfiction debut with an enthusiastic guide for leaders. Draw ing on 25 years in restaurant work, including corporate and man agement positions, the author asserts that hospitality is crucial to the success of any business. In a restaurant, hospitality means “genuinely engaging with the person you’re serving, so you can make an authentic connection.” That engagement results from a culture of caring that emanates from everyone involved. A

from a frontline

Guidara, Will Optimism Press (288 pp.) $28.00 | Oct. 25, and manager

978-0-593-41857-42022Anotedrestaurateur

The Legacy of Slavery in an American Family

Grimke family: sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke, who became famous for their views on abolition and women’s suffrage; and the descendants of their brother Henry Grimke, a “notori ously violent and sadistic” slave owner who fathered three sons with a Black woman he owned. Drawing on abundant archival sources, the author follows the fortunes of each side of the family as Sarah, Angelina, and Theodore Dwight Weld, Ange lina’s husband, positioned themselves within the anti-slavery movement, and Henry Grimke’s sons Archibald and Francis became prominent members of the nation’s “colored elite.” Archibald, a Harvard-educated lawyer, became a co-founder of the Washington, D.C., branch of the NAACP; Francis studied at Princeton Theological Seminary and became the Presbyte rian minister of a D.C. church. Guilt led the White Grimkes to be revulsed by slavery: The sisters’ father had owned more than 300, and the girls witnessed the slaves’ merciless treatment at the hands of their parents and brothers. At first, the sisters sup ported African colonization. Blacks would be happier if they left America, they believed; eventually, however, their views shifted to abolition. Like many other White Americans, they saw the abolition movement as a path to personal redemption and considered Blacks to be “objects of reform” rather than equals worthy of respect. Racism, however, was not limited to the White Grimkes. The Black branch of the family, invested in their belief in racial respectability and material success, dis tinguished themselves from the “negro masses” whose behavior, values, and prospects they disdained. Greenidge reveals the sig nificant roles of Black women in the family’s complicated his tory: the sons’ mother, wives, and in-laws; and, notably, Archie’s daughter, poet and playwright Angelina Weld Grimke. The author’s discoveries reveal both “white reformers’ disavowal of their complicity in America’s racial project” and “the limits of interracial alliances.”

A sweeping, insightful, richly detailed family and Ameri can history.

A fine blend of history and memoir and a useful guidebook for activists.

fighter against an establishment indiffer ent to those suffering from AIDS.

BOY WITH THE BULLHORN A Memoir and History of ACT UP New York Goldberg, Ron Empire State Editions/Fordham Univ. (512 $34.99pp.)| Sept. 6, 978-1-531-50097-92022Afirsthandaccount

THE GRIMKES

the

56 | 15 september 2022 nonfiction | kirkus.com |

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 57 adultyoung ISBN: 978-163107-042-6 (hardcover, color), 978-163107-040-2 (paperback, b&w) “Even readers with just a casual interest in space travel and interstellar exploration will find much to savor in this admirable, inspiring, and heartfelt account. The memoir proves that with enough drive and determination, anything is possible.” HEART—KirkusReviewsALLYBOOKS,LLC

buoys two impressiveFinancialcareers.journalist Hilsenrath, senior writer for the Wall Street Journal, makes his book debut with a perceptive dual biography of Janet Yellen (b. 1946) and her

YELLEN The Trailblazing Economist Who Navigated an Era of Upheaval

restaurant manager must ask a host of important questions: “How do you make the people who work for you and the people you serve feel seen and valued? How do you give them a sense of belonging? How do you make them feel part of something bigger than themselves? How do you make them feel welcome?” The author distinguishes between being “restaurant-smart”— doing what’s best for the guests—and “corporate-smart”—i.e., “running a tight ship.” When those two goals created tension, Guidara found that trust was essential to forging a productive team. “A leader’s responsibility,” he writes, “is to identify the strengths of the people on their team, no matter how buried those strengths might be.” A leader is also responsible for giving praise, choosing how and when to deliver criticism, and encour aging participation from all team members. Ultimately, a leader must know when to take the helm. “If you try to be all things to all people,” writes the author, “it’s proof that you don’t have a point of view—and if you want to make an impact, you need to have a point of view.” Most of Guidara’s anecdotes come from his eventful years as manager of Eleven Madison Park, which was chosen as the world’s best restaurant in 2017. That success,

Hilsenrath, Jon Harper Business (448 pp.)

$32.50 | Nov. 1, 978-0-06-316246-42022Athrivingmarriage

he insists, came from daring to enact “unreasonable hospital ity”—going beyond flawless service and memorable cuisine to shower each guest with personal attention. Sage advice about leadership.

the relevance of Jerusalem’s history, from the seventh to the 13th centuries to today’s conflicts over its status.

Hosler, John D. Yale Univ. (384 pp.) $35.00 | Nov. 15, 978-0-300-25514-02022Anargumentfor

$16.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-14-313643-9Anenergeticcall

husband, Nobel laureate George Akerlof (b. 1940). By the time they met in 1977, Yellen had earned a doctorate at Yale, where she was inspired by the “moral passion” of her mentor, James Tobin, and had just left a teaching job at Harvard. Akerlof, coming out of MIT, had taught at Berkeley, was divorced, and, in 1970, had written a transformative 13-page paper, “The Market for ‘Lem ons,’ ” which, Hilsenrath notes, “helped open the door for a new branch of research called behavioral economics.” In many ways, the two were opposites: “Janet was disciplined, grounded, sen sible, orderly; George was creative, contrarian, and unorthodox.” Soon after meeting, they married and went off to teach at the London School of Economics. Though their personalities dif fered, their views on their field concurred. Both were critics of the efficient-market theory of economics, which held that indi viduals always act in their own best interests. Yellen and Akerlof believed that a person’s financial decisions are not always ratio nal nor predictable. Similarly, they opposed the stance of econo mists such as Milton Friedman, who saw individual liberty to be “both a virtue in its own right and the central mechanism for economic good.” In 2001, Akerlof shared a Nobel Prize; his con tinued research in behavior and social psychology led to his cre ating the field of identity economics. Yellen attained ever higher political appointments as chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, chair of the Federal Reserve, and secretary of the treasury. Hilsenrath draws on personal interviews and abundant published material to clearly elucidate economic the ories, recount Yellen’s challenges in steering the nation through economic upheaval, and convey the warmth of the family’s life.

see its relevance to the current situation in Israel. There’s no question that Jerusalem’s inhabitants during Europe’s Middle Ages experienced periods of tranquility and toleration in their multicultural, pluralistic society. However, there was also no lack of carnage, including massacres by Christian crusaders in 1099, the nadir of the city’s history. While it’s important to be reminded that, from time to time, Jerusalem was “a city for all,” the text is packed with gore, massacres, and expulsions by Christian crusaders as well as Jews and non-Christian “infidels” attempting to hold their possession in the Judean hills. Trying to balance such horrors against periods of comparative calm is a false equivalency. Nevertheless, for its factual and up-to-date solidity and skilled rendering of a deeply complex and troubling history, Hosler’s work deserves attention.

JERUSALEM FALLS

A lucid, informative portrait.

“The authors are clear and concise, making their points with no room for argument.”

Seven Centuries of War and Peace

Hosler, a professor of military history and author of The Siege of Acre, sets his narrative during the centuries known in the West as the “medieval period.” He describes the text as a “book about conquest” covering a series of Jerusalem’s “falls” when “possession of the city passed from adherents of one religious confession to another by way of conflict.” It’s a dizzy ing, detailed story of faiths, ethnic and tribal communities, and sects and subgroups using military action to secure control of a city sacred to all of them. Some of these elements—Persians, Saracens, Christians, Byzantines, Fatimids, Europeans, Arabs, Turks, Sunnis and Shia Muslims—will be known to readers, yet many will be hard-pressed to keep track of the hundreds of other figures who populate the complex narrative. While a judicious attempt at balancing accounts, it’s difficult to

white women

A useful historical resource aside from the stretch required to accept its central argument.

WHITE WOMEN Everything You Already Know About Your Own Racism and How To Do Better Jackson, Regina & Saira Rao Penguin (208 pp.)

58 | 15 september 2022 | nonfiction kirkus.com

to action for White women to fight against inherent ele ments of White supremacist thought.

Via careful examination of their personal experiences and those of the other people of color who gave testimony for this book, Jackson and Rao unpack the ways in which White women’s treatment of people (particularly women) of color upholds White supremacy. The authors are clear and concise, making their points with no room for argument. They pres ent readers with incontrovertible evidence of inherent racism and how “White silence is violence.” The authors also show how being nice can only get you so far, and White women must do the work to move beyond merely serving as an ally. “Allies don’t have any skin in the game; they are standing side by side in solidarity,” write the authors. “But you do have skin in the game—your white skin. Stop aspiring to be an ally—and good Lord, stop calling yourself an ally. Rather, be an accomplice. A partner, a collaborator, a co-conspirator. Anything but an ally.” Jackson and Rao not only call out the racism of White women on the behalf of people of color; they also call attention to the fact that White supremacy is detrimental to White people as well. At every step, the authors call for substantive action and for White women to move beyond simply sharing inspirational memes, giving thoughts and prayers, and believing that positiv ity and “colorblindness” will solve racism. The authors are espe cially astute in their investigation of the language regarding White supremacy, noting that “the words ‘privilege’ and ‘fragil ity’ are so mild—so moderate, so proper, so subtle—when you consider what they are describing, the work these things do, the heavy lifting in upholding violence against people of color.” The

Since the 1960s, historian and journalist Keay has been traveling to and writing about the Himalayas. Now, in his 22nd book, he offers a panoramic overview of the history, archaeology, geol ogy, politics, religions, and cultures of the storied mountain

HIMALAYA

the history and possible future of the Himalayas.

Exploring the Roof of the World

A highly insightful, useful text.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 59 adultyoung

range, highlighting the individuals who have aspired to reach its peaks, visited its sacred sites, investigated its flora and fauna, and created its vivid mythology. Among an international cast of intrepid, sometimes eccentric characters are the German polar explorer Alfred Wegener, who theorized the idea of con tinental drift; the flamboyant Italian Giuseppe Vincenzo Tucci, whom Keay deems the greatest Tibetologist of the 20th cen tury; linguists and folklorists David and Emily Lorimer; and opera diva and devout Buddhist Alexandra David-Néel, whose memoir My Journey to Lhasa (1927) “offers a wealth of fantasy, anecdote and domestic detail,” including “hallucinations, divi nations, mystic encounters, feats of endurance, family disputes, miracles galore and some leaden humour.” The Himalayas are a vast, young range, notes Keay. Mount Everest grows a few centimeters per year, and the area is so seismically active that it experiences an earthquake every week. “Seen from afar,” writes the author, “with the snows of their dragon’s-back skyline snag ging the clouds, they epitomise permanence and eternity; but geologically speaking they are neither permanent nor eternal.” Paleontologists have discovered remains of mastodon and

authors also append a helpful glossary of relevant terms, includ ing microaggression, toxic positivity, and tone policing

Keay, John Bloomsbury (432 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 8, 978-1-63286-943-22022Anexplorationof

that peels back the layers of the Putin regime to reveal the corruption and vio lence at the core.

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Levy, Sarah St. Martin’s (288 pp.) $28.99 | Jan. 3, 978-1-250-28058-92023Adebutmemoir

How the West Fell for Putin’s Power Gambit—and How To Fix It Khodorkovsky, Mikhail with Martin Sixsmith

Authoritative, essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the frightening breadth and depth of Putin’s methods.

the russia conundrum

THE CONUNDRUMRUSSIA

St. Martin’s (352 pp.) $29.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-250-28559-12022Adisturbingaccount

hippopotamus, porcupine and rat, among species that could not have survived in the current climate. Culturally and politi cally, the region has undergone dramatic changes as well. Leay examines the fraught conflicts that have beset much of the region: Nepal, home to 129 languages, struggling “to assert a distinct identity”; Tibet, coveted by China; and Kashmir, a Muslim-majority state in a Hindu-dominated Indian republic. Ecologically vulnerable, the region is in need of environmental safeguards—not least, against defilement from climbers’ trash. Pair this one with Ed Douglas’ Himalaya: A Human History. A wide-ranging adventure into rugged terrain.

An earnest examination of alcohol and sobriety that could have gone deeper.

“Authoritative, essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the frightening breadth and depth of Putin’s methods.”

about the author’s struggles with alcohol and journey towardWhensobriety.Levy was a junior in high school, she attended a party where a boy she had a crush on nonchalantly asked her, in front of a large group of her classmates, for oral sex. Devastated by the humiliation, she drank heavily and, for the first time in her life, blacked out. Although this pattern of excessive drinking continued throughout her 20s and resulted in the dissolution of her relationship with her best friend, Chloe—whose “uncle had run a major campaign for president of the United States” and whose “father was a high-powered diplomat in Europe”— mostly, Levy was able to maintain a functional, successful life, scaling the corporate ladder. After “a year sober” and having “just exited another startup with a work hard, play hard cul ture,” she earned the position of vice president of marketing at a “New York wellness brand,” and she lived in a series of nice neighborhoods like Gramercy and the Upper East Side. However, the author’s achievements masked her addiction, which continued to plague her. “I realized it didn’t matter if my drinking problem qualified as ‘real.’ I needed to stop, and it was clear, through years of trial and error, that I couldn’t do it myself,” she writes. “So, I did what once seemed impos sible: I walked into a twelve-step recovery meeting.” At its best, the text reads like an intimate conversation between friends; the sections about Levy’s mother’s struggle with breast cancer are particularly poignant. Too often, however, the author gives an overview of a thought process rather than actual information about her experience. For example, although she references an eating disorder, she doesn’t effec tively show readers her struggle with food. By no means does Levy owe readers specific information about traumatic expe riences or life patterns, but her emphasis on telling rather than showing feels misaligned with the vulnerability that she claims underpins the narrative.

DRINKING GAMES A Memoir

Once a wealthy oligarch and a player in Moscow politics, Khodorkovsky ran afoul of Putin in 2003 and spent 10 years in prison before leaving the country in exile. In this remarkable book, co-written by British journalist Sixsmith, he interweaves the story of Putin’s rise with a personal account of his own fall. The book could have easily turned into a conspiratorial rant, but the text remains focused. Khodorkovsky was an excellent student, studying chemical engineering, and his entrepreneurial streak allowed him to take advantage of the convulsions of the Gorbachev era, first with a bank and later an oil company, Yukos. His wealth led to close contact with Boris Yeltsin, and he even served as an economic adviser. When Putin took over, Khodor kovsky was initially hopeful, but he soon realized the danger of his authoritarian ambitions. Khodorkovsky’s criticisms of Putin, and of the level of corruption in the inner circle, led to his arrest and decade in prison. “You don’t even need to fall out with them to be targeted,” he writes. “They can simply take a fancy to your business or your property. And once they have you in their sights, there is no way out. You have no one to turn to, no one to help you—not the law, not the courts, not the media, not your bosses or your neighbors.” Khodorkovsky eventually fled to London, where he founded the Open Russia move ment to promote liberal reform. For this, he earned a price on his head. He devotes the closing chapter to his hope that Rus sia might eventually become more democratic, although this sounds more idealistic than likely, and Khodorkovsky admits that Putin’s rhetoric of returning Russia to the glory days of Sta lin’s time strikes a popular chord.

“This is not a story about grief,” writes Louis about his son’s battle with Tay-Sachs, an incurable disease. “It is just the story of a little boy who was only here for a short while. And what he was like. And what he meant to us.” There’s a fairy-tale sense of won der to such narration, a balance of light and dark that matches the stars-and-space backdrop of Antal’s illustrations. With tonal command and a penchant for understatement, the author doesn’t pull any emotional punches, but neither does he wallow in tragedy.

A spare account of a short life that will leave readers feel ing both uplifted and emotionally drained.

about losing a child to a rare neurological disorder.

The artistry underscores the tone of the text, with whimsy and flights of fancy, whether soaring toward the stars or plunging into a dark night of the soul. “I knew there was something I needed to understand, and perhaps share, about my brief, intense, joy ful, devastating parenting experience,” writes the author at the beginning. He chronicles his journey from initial indifference about parenting to the emotional richness and bonding of early parenthood to the terrible news that Ronan would not have long to live, a fact that ravaged his parents and their marriage. Yet there is joy and even redemption within the elliptical sparseness of the narration, and Antal’s illustrations reinforce the impact of the words and fill in some of the gaps. This is not a book narrowly focused on a readership of other parents facing such a rare dis order. Rather, Louis and Antal combine to create an impressive work that explores universal themes of mortality, parental love, selflessness, and resilience. “Being Ronan’s father was the great est thing that ever happened to me,” writes the author. Readers will believe him wholeheartedly.

graphic memoir

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 61 adultyoung

RONAN AND THE ENDLESS SEA OF STARS A Graphic Memoir Louis, Rick Illus. by Lara Antal Abrams ComicArts (160 pp.) $24.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-419-75108-02022Aheart-wrenching

Magnuson looks at how corporations operate in society but struggles to find a fresh perspective.

“A raw, painfully honest memoir rendered in assured prose.”

FOR PROFIT A History of Corporations

Magnuson, William Basic Books (384 pp.) $32.00 | Nov. 8, 978-1-5416-0156-72022Alawprofessor

Rolling and Tumbling Toward Sobriety

WHAT DOESN’T KILL US MAKES US Who We Become After Tragedy and Trauma Mariani, Mike Ballantine (400 pp.) $28.99 | Aug. 30, 978-0-593-23694-92022Anexploration

of the work of tragic events on the psyche, which can be corrosive but also offers the possi bility of reinvention.

SLIPPERY STEPS

McLeese, Don Ice Cube Press (360 pp.) $21.95 | Oct. 5, 978-1-948509-35-02022Aveteranmusicjournalist chronicles his descent into and rise out of alcohol dependency.WhileMcLeese, a longtime writer and editor at the Chicago Sun Times, Austin American Statesman, and No Depression, climbed the media ranks as a music writer, alcohol began playing a more significant role in his life. He opens with an episode in which his wife, Maria, called 911 after discovering the author passed out drunk on the front lawn dur ing a rainstorm. “I had been drinking for decades, nightly, and, yes, progressively more and more.” Eventually, his “self-medi cating coping mechanism” severely damaged his family life and eroded a career he’d been building for decades. McLeese writes insightfully about how binge-drinking “became a way to recap ture the impetuosity of lost youth” and probes his family history, showing how his parents’ dual alcoholism influenced his own propensity for addiction. Because he lacked the resolve to quit,

Mariani, a journalist and former English professor, has grap pled with both the psychological burdens of a motherless child hood, raised by “a father who loved my sister and me but who was also aloof and alone, forever at a wraithlike remove,” and the physical malady of chronic fatigue syndrome. Though he tends to linger too often on his own troubles, most of the subjects he profiles in the book have had it worse—e.g., a woman who was raped, two men who were incarcerated, another woman whose personality was transformed by a brain injury, and a man who suffered amputations after an accident. By Mariani’s account, none were strengthened by the experience, at least not at first; instead, they suffered from initial diminishment, people “whose very continuity of self had been ruptured forever.” Yet there is a progression among those whom trauma has forced to live “after lives.” Not all, but many, experience a strengthening that comes from piecing together the shattered fragments of their former lives. However, is a glass glued after breaking stronger than one unbroken in the first place? The answer is unclear. As Mariani notes, many traumatized people remain vulnerable, a condition that “manifests itself as a heightened exposure to not only con crete physical sequelae like injury and infirmity but also social issues like unemployment, marginalization, and poverty.” All this is less easy to parse than the conventional wisdom that what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. The reality, writes the author, is that “our tragedies and traumas saw through the ropes connecting us to what we love, setting us adrift and unmoored in faceless waters oblivious to our suffering.” What remains is to rebuild and reconnect—if that’s possible.

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slippery steps

Repetitive but with a strong message of hope in the face of life-altering trauma.

examines corpora tions through history and finds recurring themes.Magnuson walks us through relevant eras of history, from the Roman Empire to the East India Company to Silicon Valley. In the early 1900s, Henry Ford provided the blueprint for the modern corpora tion, and firms like Exxon took the idea to the multinational level. There have always been questions about what a corpo ration should do. The usual answer is to maximize profits for shareholders, although there is a crucial caveat that corpora tions must not only obey the law, but should also heed unwrit ten social rules. Aside from this, there is another line of thinking that corporations have a responsibility to do good social works, although defining that is surprisingly difficult. Magnuson looks at tech giants like Facebook, which might have started with good motives but have become known for dubious ethical behavior and astonishing arrogance. As the author rightly points out, too many corporations now look only toward profit maximization, with no regard for anything else. This raises a key problem with the book. His descriptions of corporations throughout history focus largely on their negative aspects, but Magnuson concludes that “it is important to remember that corporations have been behind man’s greatest creations” and that “they are institutions for bringing people together to work toward common ends.” This position arrives abruptly near the end of the text, contra dicting many of the author’s previous discussions. A bigger issue, however, is that the book offers little fresh information about a well-worn topic. Writers have been examining corporations, usu ally critically, for centuries. Even the reforms to encourage better corporate behavior that Magnuson presents have been well cov ered. It’s clear the author knows his subject well, but there’s just not much more to say about it.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 63 adultyoung

On March 9, 1977, nearly 150 people were taken hostage at B’nai B’rith headquarters in Washington, D.C., “the largest and oldest Jewish service organization in America,” and two other sites, an attack orchestrated by Hamaas Abdul Khaalis, the Sunni leader of the Hanafi movement. Mining thousands of documents from FBI files and Department of Justice records, trial transcripts, and interviews with five of the hostage takers and more than a dozen hostages, journalist Mufti fashions a tense, often grisly account of the events leading up to the twoday standoff and the arrests, trial, and aftermath of “the largest hostage taking in American history and the first such attack by Muslims on American soil.” Born Ernest Timothy McGee in 1922, Khaalis changed his name when he joined the Nation of Islam. After serving as a close aide to the organization’s leader, Elijah Muhammad, Khaalis derided the Nation as a corrupt “self-serving family oligarchy.” Aligning himself with a new spiri tual master, he formed a rival group, which attracted support from basketball star Lew Alcindor, whom Khaalis renamed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Mufti recounts violent conflicts and fractured leadership both within and among American Muslim groups. In 1973, the Nation’s wrath against Khaalis led to the gory massacre of seven members of his family, including chil dren. Even after some perpetrators were convicted, Khaalis felt “spurned by American justice.” One of his hostage demands was that the men who killed his family be brought to him for jus tice. Another was that the release of a biopic about the life of Muhammad be stopped and the film reels destroyed. Although Khaalis’ anger, desire for revenge, religious convictions, and psychological demons fueled the siege, Mufti places the event in the larger context of America’s involvement in the tumultu ous history of the Middle East, South Asia, and northern Africa.

Capote took interest in Ann Woodward in 1955 after she shot and killed her husband, Billy Woodward, claiming she thought he was a burglar. When he accosted her in a restaurant a year later, the socialite angrily dismissed him as “a little fag.” Montillo, the author of The Lady and Her Monsters, among other works of nonfiction, suggests that this insult may have been one of the infamously spiteful writer’s motivations for writing “La Côte Basque, 1965,” his infamous 1975 short story. The author’s fascination with Woodward and Capote is evident in her ele gantly novelistic retelling of their lives and the strange con nections and parallels that linked them. “Both had overcome hardscrabble, unsteady, fraught childhoods,” writes Montillo. “Both had cajoled, clawed, and charmed their way into the elite circles they sought to enter. Both were vulnerable and mean. Both were familiar with violence.” The beautiful Woodward had escaped a bleak Kansas life to become a New York showgirl. Capote left Alabama and flourished in New York City, where his brilliance as a writer was quickly recognized. After their initial encounter, Woodward would become an increasingly margin alized figure among the wealthy socialites who had never fully accepted her, while literary bad-boy Capote went on to become the “chronicler of the New York social world that…shunned” her. Capote’s obsession with Woodward only intensified, espe cially after he found himself unable to produce another book.

A compelling mix of true crime and literary biography.

between Tru man Capote and a millionaire’s wife brought about their mutual destruction.

A raw, painfully honest memoir rendered in assured prose.

DELIBERATE CRUELTY Truman Capote, the Millionaire’s Wife, and the Murder of the Century Montillo, Roseanne Atria (320 pp.)

the falls and the blackouts became commonplace. However, once he fully realized that he needed to stop or the strongholds in his life—especially his marriage and his relationships with his children—would continue to crumble, McLeese embarked on the true road to sobriety with earnest intentions. While his ini tial introductory experiences with the Alcoholics Anonymous fellowship are laced with wry humor, it’s clear that the author remained unconvinced that cessation was truly necessary and instead simply vowed to “play along” with the step program. “Did I want to be sober?” he repeatedly asked himself, “I wasn’t sure.” Even the beginning stages of sobriety proved to be a great challenge. Without alcohol, the fun of vacation evaporated, as did the enjoyment of daily life in general. McLeese is forth right and candid throughout, even when his honesty paints him as a functioning alcoholic deluded by fierce denial and false promises. The author’s eventual epiphany and road to sobriety continue, as evidenced by the inclusion of a closing “Step” edu cation, which sober readers will recognize and appreciate.

$28.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-982153-75-52022Howtheconnection

His 1975 story, based on the lives of Woodward and the highsociety women friends he called his “swans,” was so devastating that Woodward committed suicide by overdosing on Seconal, the drug that also killed Capote’s mother. In turn, Capote was rejected by his swans for his betrayal of their confidences and sank into the drug and alcohol abuse that eventually led to his death. This engaging, well-researched book will appeal to true-crime aficionados, Capote fans, and anyone interested in a darkly intriguing story well told.

AMERICAN CALIPH

The True Story of a Muslim Mystic, a Hollywood Epic, and the 1977 Siege of Washington, DC Mufti, Shahan Farrar, Straus and Giroux (384 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 22, 978-0-374-20858-52022Thestoryofahostage

takeover that shocked the country.

A brisk, engrossing work of investigative journalism.

Nealon, Kevin Abrams (224 pp.)

My Brushes With Fame

NOVELIST AS A VOCATION Murakami, Haruki Trans. by Philip Gabriel & Ted Goossen Knopf (224 pp.) $28.00 | Nov. 8, 978-0-451-49464-12022Theacclaimednovelist

In a series of self-deprecating, intro spective essays, six previously published, five written for this book, Murakami shares his modest views on writing. The fact that he has been able “to write novels as a profession…continues to amaze me.” He begins with gener alities: what qualities successful novelists possess and how they are able to sustain them. The author recounts how, at 29, mar ried, attending school and struggling to keep his jazz cafe afloat, he was outside watching a baseball game, and “based on no grounds whatsoever, it suddenly struck me: I think I can write a novel.” He wrote his first novel—later to become Hear the Wind Sing—in rudimentary English, “a rough, uncultivated kind of prose.” He then “transplanted” it into Japanese in a “creative rhythm distinctly my own,” finding the “coolest chords, trust ing in the power of improvisation.” Murakami believes his jazzy literary originality, voice, and style were born then. Even today, he doesn’t experience writer’s block. Words come out in a joyful “spontaneous flow” as his narratives grow lengthier and more complex. After dismissing the significance of literary prizes, he advises young writers to read numerous novels, good and bad, as he did growing up, observe the world around them, and draw upon their memories. Essays are “no more than sidelines, like the cans of oolong tea marketed by beer companies.” Stories are like “practice pieces.” When he composes his novels, he limits himself to 10 pages per day; then his wife reads it, and he makes countless revisions—“I have a deep-rooted love for tinkering.” Novelists require stamina, which Murakami gets from one of his favorite pastimes: running. Over time, he gradually began writing more in third person, creating more named characters and “simultaneously being created by the novel as well.” He doesn’t comment much on his own works nor those of others.

A LINE IN THE WORLD A Year on the North Sea Coast

opens up

Nors, Trans.DorthebyCaroline Waight Illus. by Signe Parkins Graywolf (240 pp.) $16.00 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-64445-209-7Thefirstbook of nonfiction from the iconoclastic Danish author.

Nealon is perhaps best known for his time on Saturday Night Live from 1986 to 1995. During that time, he would sketch

images of his fellow cast members in the margins of his scripts, often making them his “unwitting subjects.” More recently, while flying to and from stand-up gigs, fellow passengers have also become his subjects. During the pandemic, when standup gigs were canceled, he found himself sketching even more. The author recounts how he became interested in drawing as a boy and later developed an affinity for French impressionist painters, particularly Claude Monet, who also enjoyed drawing caricatures. Later, Nealon began visiting museums in order to study the artists’ paintings and techniques, and he learned to paint using a digital tablet, which is the technique he employs in this book. The only downside to his hobby, he writes, is that when he looks at people now, he sees their character traits exag gerated in his head. Among the celebrities and other notable individuals included in the book are Robin Williams, who was “a modern-day Jonathan Winters. No one was quicker or fun nier; I was absolutely floored by his wit, improvisational skills, characters, and voices. He was pure genius”; Johnny Carson, whom Nealon “watched religiously”; and Steve Martin, whom Nealon claims to have “first discovered” (before any of his other friends). He includes many fellow SNL cast members, includ ing Dana Carvey, Chris Farley, and Norm Macdonald, as well as SNL creator and executive producer Loren Michaels. He also includes portraits of musicians, including Kurt Cobain, Tom Petty, Eddie Vedder, and Prince. The anecdotes that Nealon includes with each image are heartwarming and sincere. As the author writes, each sketch was “a labor of love.” Other profiles include Howard Stern, Jennifer Aniston, and Anthony Bourdain. An impressive collection from a multifaceted artist.

I EXAGGERATE

$35.00 | Oct. 11, 978-1-4197-6198-02022Acollectionof

a line in the world

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“An intricate reckoning with a world that, despite our best attempts to tame it, remains elemental and wild.”

caricatures and related anecdotes from the actor and comedian.

In this graceful, lyrical text, Nors gathers 14 essays about the North Sea Coast of Denmark, which is, for her, both legacy and landscape. “That was where our kin came from; the coast line was our place of origin,” she writes in the first of the deft and offhand pieces. “My family had a little house tucked away in a deserted backwater out there all my life.” If this statement makes her efforts seem like a reclamation, there is plenty of disruption, as well. The author sees the coast as not only geo graphic, but also personal. “A landscape is beyond the telling, like the telling is beyond itself,” she writes. “It takes a person to take up the line somewhere, to open, look and make a cut.” That is her purpose in this luminous set of reflections, which she frames as something of an escape: “Me, my notebook, and my love of the wild and desolate. I wanted to do the opposite

Dry and repetitious in places, Murakami’s gentle encour agement will appeal to hesitant novice writers.

about his methods and how he creates his own private worlds.

of what was expected of me. It’s a recurring pattern in my life.” As the book progresses, Nors touches on a variety of intriguing rituals and landmarks—e.g., the Midsummer’s Eve bonfire, in which a doll is burned to ward off evil; a tour of coastal churches undertaken in one day. “We Danes,” she writes, “are more or less in agreement: all of this is a game we play.” Still, those ancient places and ceremonies exert a vivid pull. Perhaps nowhere is this more apparent then when she addresses weather patterns, the storm surges, “part of the organic, changeable and violent life of the coast,” that have wreaked havoc on inhabitants for centuries. “It’s always out there, the great storm surge,” she writes. “You know it’s coming.”

An intricate reckoning with a world that, despite our best attempts to tame it, remains elemental and wild.

SHIRLEY HAZZARD A Writing Life

portrait of the esteemed Australian-born fiction writer andWithessayist.her early fiction in the 1960s and ’70s, Shirley Hazzard (1931-2016) was quickly recognized as a prose stylist of distinctive intelli gence and insight. In 1980, The Transit of Venus firmly secured her standing, in particular among other writers; more than 20 years later, The Great Fire won the National Book Award and garnered her a new readership. In this scrupulously researched biography, Olubas, an English professor at the University of New South Wales and editor of two volumes of Hazzard’s work, charts the meandering course of Hazzard’s life and travels, drawing on events and impressions that would inform much of her writing. The author begins with Hazzard’s early years growing up in Syd ney and moves through her experiences as a teen living in Hong Kong and her family’s move to New York City, where, at age 20, she landed a job at the United Nations. Working as a Secretariat typist for the next 10 years, she gathered critical insights into the organization, which she would use in her later nonfiction work. Throughout these early years, Hazzard also had a series of love affairs, adding further grist for her fiction. Olubas describes Hazzard’s journey as a process of self-invention, noting how “she embarked early on a project of self-cultivation and selfcreation through extensive and passionate reading. Through out her adult life she mixed in elevated cultural circles, seeking out people to admire and learn from.” One of those people was Francis Steegmuller, with whom she shared a long, satisfying marriage. They traveled extensively and kept homes in New York and Capri, and though her reputation within the literary community was well established, upon her marriage, that influ ential circle expanded further. Olubas provides numerous anec dotes about their encounters with many of the leading literary figures of their time, including Graham Greene, W.H. Auden,

Olubas, Brigitta Farrar, Straus and Giroux (576 pp.) $35.00 | Nov. 15, 978-0-374-11337-72022Anilluminating

Read Gleick first and then turn to this informative, inge nious book.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 | 65 adultyoung

Muriel Spark, and Saul Bellow. Throughout, Olubas offers a dis cerning, cleareyed perspective of Hazzard’s complex character and a persuasive appraisal of what distinguishes her work.

THE PRIMACY OF DOUBT From Quantum Physics to Climate Change, How the Science of Uncertainty Can Help Us Understand Our Chaotic World

Palmer, Tim Basic Books (320 pp.) $30.00 | Oct. 18, 978-1-5416-1970-82022Anexplorationofthe

amorphous con cept of uncertainty, “an essential part of the human condition.”

An absorbing, well-crafted profile of a supremely gifted writer.

Uncertainty is another name for chaos, a fascinating concept largely unknown until the 1950s. Palmer, a professor of physics at Oxford, works hard to explain it to lay readers. He begins with Newton’s law of gravity, which can predict the Earth-sun orbit precisely into the distant future but only works with two gravitating bodies. After three centuries of searching for a for mula to predict the positions of three or more, French physi cist Henri Poincare proved that “no formula exists.” Planetary orbits are “chaotic.” Like weather or stock prices, “the system appears reasonably predictable until, out of the blue, it behaves unpredictably”—which means that it’s not impossible that the Earth will one day wander out of its orbit. One of Palmer’s main characters is meteorologist and mathematician Edward Lorenz (1917-2008). Before Lorenz, scientists believed that if you had enough accurate information about current conditions (tem perature, wind speed, humidity), you could feed the details into a powerful computer and predict weather far into the future. Lorenz proved that this was impossible; tiny changes in initial conditions can blow up into huge errors. Chaos theory doesn’t make prediction impossible, only erratic over the short term. Weather forecasts have grown more accurate, but they’re now expressed in percentages. Palmer believes that embracing uncertainty might explain phenomena considered hopelessly complex, and he illustrates his points with densely argued chap ters on financial crashes, war, climate change, pandemics, and brain function. The author is a fluid writer, but the sections on complicated areas such as fractal geometry and quantum uncertainty may overwhelm readers unfamiliar with college physics and calculus. They should prepare by reading James Gleick’s Chaos, still in print after 35 years—and which Palmer calls “masterful.”

of lives spent hid ing—sometimes in plain sight—in the shadow of bigotry and fear.

DIARY OF A MISFIT A Memoir and a Mystery

THE ISLAND EXTRAORDINARYOF CAPTIVES A Painter, a Poet, an Heiress, and a Spy in a World War II British Internment Camp Parkin, Simon Scribner (432 pp.) $30.00 | Nov. 1, 978-1-982178-52-92022AWorldWarIItale

on copious unpublished and archival material, British journalist Parkin has produced a richly detailed history of the internment of thousands of men and women because of their German or Austrian ancestry. Many had fled to England as refugees from Nazi Germany, and the vast majority were Jew ish. Though they had become productive, upstanding members of their communities, “jingoism and hatred,” stoked by the media, became justification for the new policy. “Instead of tak ing an enlightened lead,” writes the author, “the government now used public opinion as justification for strict measures.” Parkin focuses on Hutchinson, on the Isle of Man, which housed some 2,000 men from the time it opened in July 1940 and whose inmates included artists, musicians, fashion design ers, architects, academics, and writers. “It was as if a tsunami had deposited a crowd of Europe’s prominent men onto this obscure patch of grass in the middle of the Irish Sea,” writes the author. Officials ran the camp as humanely as possible, and the inmates worked to make it a community. They gave theater and music performances, set up cafes, started a newspaper, and con ducted classes, especially for the younger men whose schooling had been disrupted. Among those younger men was Peter Fleis chmann, whose story exemplifies the inconsistencies—indeed, the absurdity—of the policy of internment. An orphan who had come to the U.K. on the Kindertransport, he was at first seen as no threat to national security. Nevertheless, he was later arrested, and six weeks after the camp opened, he arrived at Hutchinson. His experiences there changed the course of his future. Parkin also chronicles the policy shift that eventually freed about half of the internees by the spring of 1941. “Histori cal ignorance and bedrock xenophobia” led to a “panic measure” that, Parkin warns, reverberates in contemporary treatment of asylum seekers.

Journalism becomes literature in this memorable medita tion on identity, belonging, and the urge to find understanding.

about how panic, fear, and xenophobia led to a drastic governmental policy in the U.K.Drawing

INDIVISIBLE Daniel Webster and the Birth of NationalismAmerican

indivisible

Though Daniel Webster (1782-1852) is mentioned in the subtitle, this book is about far more than one man’s influence,

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Parks, Casey Knopf (368 pp.) $29.00 | Aug. 30, 978-0-525-65853-52022Aremarkablestory

“An ambitious work that wonderfully delineates the formative years of the nation’s character.”

A vivid recounting of a shameful event that still resonates.

Paul, Joel Richard Riverhead (448 pp.) $30.00 | Oct. 25, 978-0-593-18904-72022Amajestichistory of “the develop ment of American nationalism from the War of 1812 to 1852.”

In a tale with depths as murky as a bayou’s, Parks, a reporter on gender issues for the Washington Post, pursues a lead dropped long ago. As her mother lamented that her daughter’s sexuality would get her kicked out of church in small-town Louisiana, her grandmother quietly remarked, “I grew up across the street from a woman who lived as a man.” The two cases weren’t quite analogous, but Parks runs with the clue “because I believed,” she recounts, “that a good Southern tale might turn my work life around.” It may have done, but it took years for Parks to chase down the story of the girl who, it seems, had been kidnapped as a child and raised as a man called Roy, a story detailed in Roy’s multivolume diary. Some towns folk attributed the puzzling question of Roy’s gender to acci dent, some to abuse, some to a poverty that led to her being “too poor to wear dresses,” some to divine accident. Even a more or less sympathetic acquaintance would venture only that Roy was a “morphodite,” which is to say, “Half man, half woman.” Even Roy’s tombstone, recording both male and female names, wasn’t clear on the matter. As for the diary, which Parks even tually found, Roy ponders, among other things, the idea that the body is just a temporary shell. The author sharply recounts the rampant pain, confusion, and prejudice but also effort on the parts of some of those small-town folk to find room for Roy and others who didn’t quite fit in. Along the way, Parks uncov ers Southern gothic–worthy secrets on the parts of her family and their community. Instead of finding longed-for definitive answers, she concludes, “I understand now that most of what haunted me before might haunt me forever.”

Saltz, Jerry Riverhead (368 pp.)

A thoughtful, sympathetic portrait of a legendary histori cal figure.

An ambitious work that wonderfully delineates the forma tive years of the nation’s character.

$28.00 | Nov. 1, 978-0-593-08649-02022Howartistsrespond to and influence our Inworld.this follow-up to How To Be an Art ist, Saltz, senior art critic for New York magazine, celebrates the works of several dozen artists, most of whose careers fall within the last half-century. The author also offers extended reflec tions on the commercial dynamics of the art world and his own career as an artist and critic. The book, which includes many of his previously published writings from the late 1990s until the present, is divided into sections based on three recent water shed moments in American history—9/11 and the elections of Barack Obama and Donald Trump—and their intersections with the art world. Saltz consistently frames his consideration of particular artists in relation to these events or the broader political climate they helped form, and he makes a persuasive case that we might profitably interpret contemporary history through—and find profound consolation and spiritual guidance in—the creations of gifted visual artists. Among the artists the author champions are prominent figures such as Jeff Koons, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, and Willem de Kooning as well as lesser-known ones such as David Wojnarowicz, Lau rel Nakadate, Dana Schutz, Katherine Bernhardt, and Joseph E. Yoakum. Saltz is particularly attentive to those artists who are “revisiting and reinventing cultural norms enforced by five hundred years of colonialism,” and he provides trenchant com mentary on the racial and gender politics of the contempo rary art world. At his best, his discussions of individual works are informed, illuminating, and accessible, as in his lengthy

Cleopatra and Ptolemy incited a bloody civil war, ending with Ptolemy’s murder, after which Cleopatra married Ptolemy XIV; the marriage was short-lived—Ptolemy died in 44 B.C.E. Prose mines classical sources, including Plutarch’s chronicles, to trace the course of Cleopatra’s affair with Caesar, which resulted in the birth of a son; and with Antony, with whom she had twins and another son. As for her suicide, it is unlikely, Prose argues, that she could have smuggled an asp into her quarters and just as unlikely that its venom could have killed her instantly. The author also explores Cleopatra’s afterlife in literature. Dante and Boccaccio damned her as a “libertine and a seductress,” and Shakespeare saw her as Antony’s “serious mistake.” In mov ies, Theda Bara, Claudette Colbert, Vivien Leigh, and Eliza beth Taylor all underscored the lascivious seductiveness of the doomed queen. In contrast, Prose imagines her as a wily strate gist determined, above all, to protect her children.

CLEOPATRA Her History, Her Myth

Prose, Francine Yale Univ. (216 pp.) $26.00 | Nov. 8, 978-0-300-25667-32022Afreshlookatthe

ART IS LIFE Icons & VisionariesIconoclasts,&Vigilantes, & Flashes of Hope in the Night

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famed Egyptian queen.Ina succinct biography, part of Yale’s Ancient Lives series, Prose examines how Cleopatra (69 B.C.E.-30 B.C.E.) has been represented for over 2,000 years in myths, legends, literary works, histories, paintings, and films. Many chroniclers, Prose notes, believed she was a liar; some were apologists for Roman imperial expansion; others refused to allow that a woman could be a leader. The most prevalent image of Cleopatra has been that of a “witchy, seductive Egyptian,” notable for her love affairs with Julius Caesar and Marc Antony rather than for her considerable prowess as a “city planner, military strategist, dip lomat, linguist,” and leader. A Macedonian Greek, daughter of Ptolemy XII, by the age of 18, Cleopatra ruled Egypt along with her 10-year-old brother—and husband—Ptolemy XIII. The time was rife with “strangling, poisoning, and dismember ing,” even among family members. The shared leadership of

significant as it was. In his latest examination of a specific period of American history, constitutional and international law pro fessor Paul, author of Without Precedent and Unlikely Allies, fash ions an impressively multilayered narrative. Focusing on a series of crucial figures and historical moments in the first half of the 19th century—e.g., the War of 1812; the Monroe Doctrine and Transcontinental Treaty, through which Secretary of State John Quincy Adams “had committed the United States to becoming a hegemon”; and the rise of Andrew Jackson’s “toxic populism”— the author shows how American citizens began to gain a sense of common community and purpose, as opposed to identify ing with a particular region. As a lawyer and senator, Webster made an early impression as “a leading opponent of slavery and the voice of New England.” During the Jackson administration, he helped to lead the charge against Jackson’s “mean-spirited campaign[s] against civil servants, bankers, foreigners, and Native Americans.” Webster opposed the annexation of Texas as a needless provocation of war with Mexico and the exten sion of slavery into new territory. However, he also defended the property of slave owners in the case of the slave uprising aboard the Creole in 1841. That incident, coupled with his later defense of the Fugitive Slave Act, tainted his glorious reputation. Indeed, in the years to come, many believed that Webster sold his soul for Southern votes in his quest for the presidency. Fol lowing the biographical thread of “one of the most influential statesmen of the antebellum period,” Paul delivers important historical context along the way, showing how “while the Union was falling apart, our American identity was taking shape.”

The Inside Story of China’s War With the West Small, Andrew Melville House (336 pp.) $28.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-68589-019-32022AlongtimeChina

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a poison like no other

NO LIMITS

Simon, Matt Island Press (224 pp.) $30.00 | Oct. 27, 978-1-64283-235-82022Asciencejournalist

why establishing a colony on the moon is a viable, necessary undertaking.Inthisimpassioned book, Silk, dis tinguished astrophysicist and cosmologist, makes a plea for governments, corporations, and the public to endorse and finance a new generation of space projects. The aim would be to establish permanent bases on the moon for resource devel opment, tourism, and advanced astronomical research. Silk insists that the required technology is largely available, and there is even a workable legal framework that has been quietly drawn up over the past few decades. He points to statements from NASA about plans to build a habitable space station to coordinate lunar development, and he cites plans for lunar vil lages from European and Chinese space agencies. As the author points out, the moon holds important minerals that are running out on Earth, and he suggests that solar energy could be effi ciently captured and sent to Earth via microwave links. One of Silk’s primary objectives is the development of new telescopes, mainly sited on the dark side of the moon, to conduct further explorations. This is all undeniably fascinating information, but much of it has a science-fiction quality. Even Silk acknowledges that in the past 40 years, there have been many promises about new manned flights to the moon, but none of them have come to fruition—although there has been a trickle of robotic explo rations. Occasionally, Silk’s enthusiasm for science for its own sake gets in the way of his argument, particularly in his exami nations of various astronomical phenomena that seem to have little to do with the moon. Given the staggering cost of build ing a moon colony, he might have done better to emphasize the resource side while devoting less time to discussing new toys for cosmologists.

for Wired issues an urgent call to action aimed at curbing the introduction of microplastics into the environment.

Silk, Joseph Princeton Univ. (288 pp.) $29.95 | Nov. 1, 978-0-691-21523-52022Anargumentfor

A POISON LIKE NO OTHER How Microplastics Corrupted Our Planet and Our Bodies

BACK TO THE MOON The Next Giant Leap for Humankind

Silk puts forward intriguing ideas but fails to make a per suasive case.

treatment of Théodore Géricault’s The Raft of the Medusa and its enduring aesthetic power. Saltz also covers an assortment of related topics, including the politics of auction culture, the paintings of George W. Bush, the cave drawings at Niaux, and the evolving censorship practices of Facebook and Instagram.

watcher takes a close look at the country’s ambitions, attitudes, and ruthless diplomatic and economic methods.

A convincing treatment of a subject that will remain rel evant for years to come.

“A convincing treatment of a subject that will remain relevant for years to come.”

As Simon explains, microplastics are pieces of plastic smaller than 5 mm, approximately the size of a pencil eraser, and they can be found everywhere, from the depths of the oceans to the highest mountaintop. From our first sip of to-go coffee in the morning to our drive home from work in the evening, we are continually dumping microplastics into the environment and, ultimately, into our bodies. Microplastics can contain up to 10,000 different chemicals, and many of these chemicals can pose potential health risks. According to one study, pre paring baby formula in plastic bottles disinfected with steam can expose “an infant to an additional 660,000 microplastics by the time they’re a year old.” When plastics break down in the environment, the pieces get smaller and smaller but never truly disappear. Scientists are in the early stages of exploring this issue, so the full extent of the problem is not yet known. However, according to the studies Simon presents, ingredients in plastics have been linked to various illnesses and conditions, including depression, sexual dysfunction, and cancer, among others. Further, Simon contends, plastic pollution is an often overlooked contributor to climate change. Throughout the book, the author presents evidence obtained from his travels with research scientists studying the negative effects of micro plastics. The evidence is clear: The oceans are growing more infested with microplastics, and they have become a fundamen tal component of the air we breathe. Microplastics also show up at all points in the food chain, and humans “are at the very end of that chain.” Even though “all the pieces of plastic great and small are out there for good,” writes the author, “we can at least turn down the tap.”

A sweeping survey and fervent defense of the value of art in modern life.

When China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, many policymakers believed the nation would become an honest trading partner and responsible global citizen. Now, however, the Chinese government is viewed as secretive, bel ligerent, and wildly ambitious. Whereas most of the world treats globalization as a framework for trade and growth, China apparently sees it as the basis for a hierarchy with itself as the dominant force. How, asks Small, who has worked for a range of policy think tanks, did this transition happen? He follows a number of connected themes, although he sees a major trigger in the attempts of the Beijing-backed firm Huawei to estab lish 5G infrastructure around the world, using it as a means of control. Australia was the first country to reject Huawei, and others followed. China responded with insults and threats of retaliation, which cemented its reputation as a bully. European governments had also become aware that China was buying up critical infrastructure assets and companies in other countries. Another issue was China’s complete rejection of any responsibil ity for the Covid-19 pandemic despite mounting evidence that it had started there. “As the Chinese government’s growing selfconfidence has bled into hubris, and as the polished, pragmatic heirs of Zhou Enlai have made way for diplomatic thugs,” writes Small, “the clarity of the challenge posed by China has sharp ened.” Though China has bought a few allies with financial aid, notes the author, there is no underlying trust. Meanwhile, antiChina coalitions are building. Beijing’s methods have created the very situation it feared: everyone against it. Some of the ground in the book has already been covered, but Small does a good job tying the threads together and providing historical context, making for a comprehensive, if worrying, text.

Armed Services Editions to Americans serving abroad in the years during and after World War II. These cheaply stapled but durable books popularized such titles as The Great Gatsby, which, though now iconic, was not widely read before its inclusion in the Armed Services collection. This initiative led to printing methods that assured the affordability of texts like Silent Spring, and that book’s widespread distribution helped spur the mod ern environmental movement. Smith also overturns common myths about literary history, most notably the idea that Guten berg created the first printing press. “Chinese and Korean pio neers of print predated Gutenberg by centuries,” writes the author, “and the relatively low cost of bamboo-fiber paper in East Asia meant that early print was a less elite technology in these regions. Chinese print technology developed movable type.” The author’s trenchant analysis, attention to detail, and conversational tone combine to make a page-turning historical study. At times, though, the rapid narrative pace becomes frus trating, as the author skips rapidly through trends—e.g., abo litionist book sales—that warrant more space. Nonetheless, Smith’s work is a delight for bibliophiles, historians, and curious readers craving an unconventional piece of nonfiction.

BAD JEWS A History of American Jewish Politics and Identities

trends in printing and book production as they relate to worldSmith,history.a professor of Shakespeare studies at Oxford and author of This Is Shakespeare, begins by examining various motivations for the mass distribution of books. These have ranged from the nefarious desires of Euro pean powers to further their imperialist, colonial agendas and disseminate propaganda to the radical desires of abolitionist societies to spread anti-slavery messages to women—and raise money for abolitionist causes—through the distribution of abolitionist texts disguised as the predecessors of Christmasthemed women’s literature. The development of the paperback, writes Smith, was directly related to the free distribution of

Small ably traces how China went from partner to rival to threat and maps out the challenges that it now poses for the West.

PORTABLE MAGIC A History of Books and Their Readers Smith, Emma Knopf (352 pp.) $28.00 | Nov. 15, 978-1-524-74909-52022Acriticallookat

Tamkin, Emily Harper/HarperCollins (320 pp.) $28.99 | Oct. 18, 978-0-06-307401-92022Anexaminationof

Journalist Tamkin, author of The Influ ence of Soros, explores a wide variety of questions about the Jewish faith and identity and the murky concept of so-called “good” and “bad” Jews. Is the distinction tied to Zionism and Israel? Should Jews be defined by religious or political ties, or perhaps even racial or ethnic? Do the Ashkenazi Jews have a more “authentic” Jewish experience than Sephardic Jews, who first came to Amer ica in the 17th century? Do good Jews vote for progressive Demo crats or vehemently pro-Israel conservatives? “I would argue that the fact that we are in a time of change and conflict and challenge has thrown many American Jews off-balance,” writes the author. “Things are not as they were. But that, in turn, means there is an opportunity to think about what things could be.” Tamkin begins her “roughly hundred-year history of Jewish American politics, culture, identities, and arguments” with the massive Jewish immigration to America in the 1920s, after which Jews started to assimilate into the mainstream. The author explores a variety of stereotypes about Jewishness and immigration, and she interweaves her own relatives’ history into the national story. When Joseph McCarthy was wreaking havoc across the nation, Jews were targeted disproportionately, especially in Hollywood.

A fascinating material history of the book told through a geopolitical lens.

the “debate over who gets to speak for American Jews and who gets to claim American Jewishness.”

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RE-SISTERS

The Lives and Recordings of Delia Derbyshire, Margery Kempe & Cosey Fanni Tutti Tutti, Cosey Fanni Faber & Faber (304 pp.) $26.00 | Oct. 25, 978-0-571-36218-92022Afascinatingexploration

history of measure ment and how it has shaped human progress.

An engaging gathering of voices demonstrate “the one truth of American Jewish identity: it can never be pinned down.”

70 | 15 september 2022 nonfiction | kirkus.com |

“An engaging book written with intelligence, self-awareness, and wit.”

Vincent, James Norton (416 pp.) $32.50 | Nov. 1, 978-1-324-03585-52022Asurveyofthe

Tamkin then moves through the civil rights era; the rise of the neoconservative movement, epitomized by Commentary maga zine and its outspoken editor, Norman Podheretz; and the wild financial excesses of the 1980s, represented by Michael Milken and Bernie Madoff, among others, who played into antisemitic stereotypes. Though not a rigorous, scholarly treatment of the subject, the book ably reflects the author’s experience as a skilled journalist and storyteller.

beyond measure

An engaging book written with intelligence, self-aware ness, and wit.

BEYOND MEASURE The Hidden History of Measurement From Cubits to Quantum Constants

In this skillful blend of memoir and biography, Tutti (b. 1951), who co-founded “a new genre of industrial music as part of the band Throbbing Gristle,” weaves her personal experiences into those of two radical women: electronic musician Delia Der byshire (1937-2001) and medieval mystic Margery Kempe (c. 1373-1438). In 2018, the author was simultaneously working on a film adaptation of her acclaimed memoir Art Sex Music, creating the soundtrack for a Derbyshire biopic, and reading Kempe’s journals. These simultaneous projects led the author to numer ous intriguing connections. Derbyshire, best known for her work on the Doctor Who theme song, lived a life unavailable to most women in the 1950s, working as an electronic composer and creative visionary at the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop. There, she faced frequent strife with her male managers, who felt her music was “too lascivious” and “too sophisticated.” Kempe faced similar challenges by living outside expected female roles and enduring “the hypocrisy she witnessed among the clergy, who could take the moral high ground but bend the word of God to suit their carnal or political needs.” Tutti, as well, has always pushed the envelope of what it means to break boundaries, whether through music, art, or performance. In this illuminating portrait, the author brings into focus “a trin ity of the sacred and profane, sinners and saints of a kind.” The compelling stories of these three women are compulsively read able, but it is the connections between them that make the book shine. Deftly, the author travels between eras to bring us a surprisingly universal story that showcases what it means to be a unique and often transgressive woman living outside of cul tural norms. At the intersection of these three lives, we find an abundance of female fortitude and irrepressible spirit.

As journalist Vincent points out, measurement is so ubiqui tous that we often don’t even think about it. His journey to the core of the science of creating accurate measurements—known as metrology—is punctuated with odd yet fascinating stops— e.g., Egypt, where, for centuries, people have measured “the bounty of the Nile, a liquid treasure metered out each year in floodwater and fertility”; the Swedish museum that houses the first Celsius thermometer; and a French vault that holds “the kilogram: what it weighs, every kilogram in the world weighs, no more and no less.” The author leads us leisurely through the history of measurement, beginning with the Babylonians, who first saw the usefulness of standardization, and progressing to the Romans, who developed metrics crucial for construction. Standardization was also a tool for control, especially via taxes. Gradually, measurement pushed societies away from faith and aristocracies and toward rationality and commerce. The metric system was a product of the French Revolution, replacing arbi trary measures like “the king’s foot,” and Napoleon was instru mental in spreading it. Most countries have since adopted the metric system, although it has not always been welcome. In the U.S., attempts to metricize measurement have been somewhat half-hearted, and the result is a uniquely mixed system. How ever, as Vincent shows, in the digital age, the desire to mea sure things and compile statistics has never been stronger. He discusses the Quantified Self movement, “a loose affiliation of individuals whose pursuit of ‘self-knowledge through numbers’ shows how far we have internalized the logic of measurement.” Vincent takes this no more seriously than he should and points out that standard measurements “are as much the product of accident and happenstance as careful deliberation.” He finds this comforting, an essential aspect of human creativity and the magic of the world.

of three relentless women and their pursuit of creative independence.

A brilliantly rendered symphony of overlapping stories that connects radical women across time.

The New Press (256 pp.) $27.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-62097-738-52022Adamninginvestigation

The scheme of Sen. Whitehouse’s title concerns “regulatory capture,” in which a business infiltrates a government agency to undo any efforts to make that business obey the law. “A classic response by regulated entities has been to try to ‘capture’ the agency meant to be overseeing them,” he writes, and the prac tice has now been extended to wholesale “agency capture.” In this scheme, the federal court system is an object of capture, which is why it should come as no surprise that wealthy busi nesses and individuals spent millions of dollars to ensure that Donald Trump’s three Supreme Court appointees made it to the bench. The Founding Fathers, Whitehouse writes, “did not intend courts as an anti-majoritarian back door for billionaire anti-government donors frustrated that the public hates their ideology”—but that’s exactly where we are. The author traces the origins of this capture movement to Robert Bork’s unsuc cessful Supreme Court bid during the Reagan administration, when conservatives devoted their energies to placing likeminded judges throughout the federal judiciary. One strong instrument of capture came with the Citizens United decision, which declared that corporations had individual rights; one strong instrument to curtail this capture, which Whitehouse has championed, would require disclosure of any campaign contribution of more than $10,000. “No surprise,” he writes, “Republican Senators have blocked it from becoming law.” Yet another instrument of capture is the appointment of individu als to legal positions even though the legal community at large has rated them to be unqualified, without—as in the case of Brett Kavanaugh—minimal due diligence. We don’t know all there is to know about the scheme, Whitehouse concludes in this closely reasoned argument, adding, “I expect history will dig out those sordid details.”

Wartzman, Rick PublicAffairs (272 pp.)

adultyoung

A maddening indictment of a corrupt and corrupted judiciary.

of the retail behemoth.

Whitehouse, Sheldon with Jennifer Mueller

A well-written account of a corporate American jugger naut and its implications for society as a whole.

By the early 2000s, Walmart was often cited as the worst example of “a race-to-the-bottom brand of capitalism,” elimi nating competition and chronically underpaying its huge work force. Then, starting in 2015, Walmart implemented a series of measures, from pay increases to expanded opportunities for its employees, that prompted even skeptics to rethink the com pany’s image as a bastion of unfettered corporate evil. Wartz man, most recently the author of The End of Loyalty: The Rise and Fall of Good Jobs in America (2017) and a longtime critic of Walmart, wanted to explore the company’s complex journey and image. When Sam Walton opened the first Walmart in Arkansas in 1962, he emphasized low prices, quality products, and serving rural areas; the company went public in 1970 and went on to become one of the nation’s biggest retailers. Walton engendered employee loyalty through profit sharing and stock options, but he also intentionally kept wages low and vehe mently opposed efforts to organize labor. After he died in 1992, both outsiders and employees felt the company abandoned any dedication to taking care of its employees in favor of solely cut ting costs. Over time, the company improved efforts to be sus tainable, was rightfully praised for its efforts during Hurricane Katrina, and expanded worker training; yet “where it had the most direct control—deciding how much to pay its workers—it hadn’t moved an inch.” In 2016, Walmart finally raised its mini mum hourly wage to $10 after decades of pressure from labor efforts. Even with the increase, writes the author, “the average full-time employee at the company was still going to be mak ing less than $26,000 a year.” Wartzman’s investigation of the company in all its complexity is thoroughly researched, and he deftly and meaningfully connects the issue of chronically low wages at Walmart to a larger undervaluation of the labor of mil lions of Americans.

$29.00 | Nov. 15, 978-1-5417-5799-82022Adetailedexamination

THE SCHEME How the Right Wing Used Dark Money To Capture the Supreme Court

of dark money by a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

STILL BROKE Walmart’s TransformationRemarkableandtheLimitsofSociallyConsciousCapitalism

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tackles learning.

In this “user’s guide to your brain,” psychology professor Willingham aims to show readers how to “fully exploit its learn ing potential.” He begins by addressing the three “tasks” that make up the bulk of education—listening, reading, and taking

Why Learning Is Hard and How You Can Make It Easy

SCENES FROM MY LIFE

memoir of life in Brooklyn, Baltimore, and the depths of addiction.Williams (1966-2021), who died from a drug overdose, was best known for play ing Omar Little, the scar-faced antihero of The Wire, one of the most memorable TV characters of the past few decades. Omar, he writes, was informed by his upbringing in Brooklyn’s projects and his own experience as an addict and gay Black man. Much of this memoir hits all the more poignantly with his death: He repeatedly notes how a recovering addict is only “one choice away” from falling off the wagon. Despite his tough exterior, Williams describes his early life as defined by vul nerability. He was the product of a broken home, often shy, and insecure about his sexuality. New York’s club scene and an early career dancing in music videos gave him an escape hatch and a career path but also introduced him to a yearslong, off-and-on struggle with cocaine and crack addiction. He recalls coming off a three-day bender when he first met Barack Obama, a fan of The Wire, and his fame as Omar was psychically brutalizing: “I meditate on painful things all day long for a scene and when it’s over, it’s little wonder I’m tempted to go off and smoke crack.”

looks at the culture that has underpinned the com pany’s growth—and what it means for the Wongworld. has held a number of senior positions at Alibaba, including as founder Jack Ma’s special assistant for interna tional affairs. Because he joined the company in its early days (he was the 52nd employee and first American), he is well posi tioned to track the company’s development and explain the cul ture expansion. The book has the feel of an official corporate history, and anyone who is looking for critical analysis or an account of Alibaba’s ethically dubious cooperation with China’s authoritarian rulers will not find it here. That said, Wong has plenty to discuss. His initial emphasis is on the company’s pri orities: customers first, employees second, shareholders third. This might sound like anathema to American businesses but it has worked well, and shareholders have received good returns. Wong points out that 20 years ago China had thousands of

Wong, Brian A. PublicAffairs (320 pp.) $29.00 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5417-0165-62022AkeyAlibabaexecutive

The prose is rarely more than workmanlike—co-author Stern feld says the book was near completion when Williams died— but he projects an engaging humility and candor throughout. Those qualities are especially stark in the final pages, as Wil liams relates his growing awareness of politics, social justice, and the school-to-prison pipeline that undermines the lives of young Black boys. The author describes himself as having got ten closer to reconciling his art with his activism and conquer ing his demons, which makes his loss feel especially tragic.

A bittersweet memento of a generational talent gone too soon.

Willingham, Daniel T. Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster (336 $27.00pp.)| Jan. 24, 978-1-982167-17-22023Acognitivescientist

THE TAO OF ALIBABA Inside the Chinese Digital Giant That Is Changing the World

OUTSMART YOUR BRAIN

72 | 15 september 2022 | nonfiction kirkus.com

Williams, Michael K. with Jon Sternfeld Crown (288 pp.) $23.99 | Aug. 23, 978-0-593-24037-32022ThelateTVstar’s

tests—and suggests ways students can perform each one more effectively. The author’s advice ranges from the big picture (dur ing a lecture, listen for verbal cues that denote the hierarchical organization of material) to the granular (sit in the front row of a classroom, since “there is less chance that someone in front of you will do something distracting”). He provides an illuminat ing comparison between taking notes longhand versus on a lap top, explaining how the brain processes information differently according to which media is involved. The book is similarly comprehensive about test-taking, moving from the common sense (read each question carefully) to the less obvious (to reduce pre-test anxiety, students should reduce their consump tion of caffeinated drinks). Throughout, Willingham master fully synthesizes the relevant research for practical application. For example, he cites studies showing that people “remember a little more each time they attempt to remember,” particularly if they leave a few minutes between each attempt. So, if an answer eludes you on a test, try again in five minutes, returning to the question at intervals until your time is up. Willingham lays out his recommendations in admirably clear prose with a logical structure, and he includes numbered “tips,” with essen tial points rendered in bold. Each chapter ends with an equiva lent set of tips for teachers. The author also addresses a more personal obstacle to learning: students who, perhaps because of family background, don’t feel like they truly belong in school. On this subject, the author is both eloquent and encouraging. Highly informative and inspiring: a must-read for stu dents of any age.

adultyoung

of memoir and a history of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

this place much cares what happens to it,” he writes, “only what had once happened to it when white Tulsans murdered Black Tulsans.” The author also reflects thoughtfully on thorny sub topics ranging from interracial relationships to Donald Trump’s grotesque return to the rally stage, in Tulsa, at the height of the pandemic. The swerve toward the personal is occasionally jar ring, but the author’s prose is consistently acute and his societal analysis, astute. “To be a Black American,” he writes, “is to want some of what white folks have and to hate yourself for wanting it all at once.”

REQUIEM FOR THE MASSACRE A Black History on the Conflict, Hope, and Fallout of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre

Tulsa native Young, a FOX Sports analyst, offers an ambi tious, forceful continuance of his debut memoir, Let It Bang, focused on his development as a consciously Black writer while dogged by the massacre’s uneasy centennial. The author opens with the horrific flashpoint, in which an ambiguous encounter between a Black boy and a White girl spiraled into an attempted lynching followed by the coordinated destruction of the Green wood district, the so-called Black Wall Street, by the National Guard and White citizens. Decades of denial suggested pre meditation motivated by envy over the accomplishments of the Greenwood community. “White folks decided they’d had enough of the luminous district many saw as a leprosy,” writes Young, “and they aimed to kill it.” In addition to recounting the history, Young interweaves a jaundiced, potent examination of his own upbringing. He rebelled gradually against his con servative churchgoing parents as he endured a casually menac ing racism that reflected the legacy of the massacre. Yet while enduring poverty, depression, and a failed marriage in his 20s, he found improbable salvation in Oklahoma’s athletic tradi tion, breaking through as a sportswriter and radio personality. In the final chapters, Young highlights his emotional disbelief over the tone-deaf centennial celebration. “No one outside of

A well-organized, well-written account of how Alibaba grew from a tiny startup to a corporate giant.

| kirkus.com | nonfiction 15 september 2022 73

Young, RJ Counterpoint (336 pp.) $27.00 | Nov. 1, 978-1-64009-502-12022Auniquesynthesis

“An arresting account of Black ambition and endurance from an important new voice in narrative nonfiction.”

An arresting account of Black ambition and endurance from an important new voice in narrative nonfiction.

dynamic small companies which had no way to reach customers. Alibaba provided the portal to link sellers and buyers in a digital mall. Unlike Amazon, it did not have to carry huge inventory loads, but the key problem was payment. Credit cards were rare in China, so the answer was to jump to cellphones as primary payment mechanisms. Alibaba overcame the trust issue with its own payment arm, Alipay. Wong emphasizes that Alibaba has eschewed detailed planning in favor of responding to prob lems as they arise. Ma, when he was CEO, had an eye for good tech people although he also recruited people who showed capacities for innovation and customer relations rather than programming skills. The company gives division, branch, and team leaders wide discretion in decisions, which was especially valuable when Alibaba started global expansion and had to learn new cultural environments. The book might have been given more depth by a considered examination of some of the com pany’s failures but nevertheless The Tao of Alibaba presents a dif ferent way of looking at business as well as telling the story of a company that has become a key part of the world economy.

requiem for the massacre

LET’S ADD UP!

Sixth grade pulls twins in separate directions.

NOT DONE YET by Tameka Fryer Brown; illus. by Nina Crews 85

THE FIRST NOTES by Julie Andrews & Emma Walton Hamilton; illus. by Chiara Fedele 75

children’s

FIRE CHIEF FRAN by Linda Ashman; illus. by Nancy Carpenter 77

TOO EARLY by Nora Ericson; illus. by Elly MacKay 91

TANGLED UP IN NONSENSE by Merrill Wyatt ............................. 120

WILL WE ALWAYS HOLD HANDS? by Christopher Cheng; illus. by Stephen Michael King 87

MAMA’S HOME by Shay Youngblood; illus. by Lo Harris 121

Teachers and parents can count on an enthusiastic response from younger audiences. (Math picture book. 3 5)

A FIELD GUIDE TO MERMAIDS by Emily B. Martin..................... 103

WE THE PEOPLE! by Don Brown 85

HOT DOG by Doug Salati 111

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Allenby, Victoria Illus. by Maggie Zeng Pajama Press (24 pp.) $17.95 | Nov. 8, 978-1-77278-248-62022Series:Big,LittleConcepts, 4 8 + 2 becomes more than just num bers in this invitation to think outside the worksheet.

MY FADE IS FRESH by Shauntay Grant; illus. by Kitt Thomas 95

WHOSE TRACKS IN THE SNOW? by Alexandra Milton 104

REINA RAMOS WORKS IT OUT by Emma Otheguy; illus. by Andrés Landazábal 107

Pascal’s original 1980s spinoff for younger readers of her Sweet Valley High series gets a graphic-novel makeover with some updates. The girls share a cellphone, carried by the more responsible Elizabeth. The blond, blue-eyed twins are White, but scenes at school and ballet class include racial diversity.

Andelfinger, Nicole Illus. by Claudia Aguirre Dev. by Francine Pascal Colors by Sara Hagstrom & Andrea Bell Random House Graphic (224 pp.) $20.99 | $13.99 paper | $23.99 PLB Nov. 1, 978-0-593-37646-1978-0-593-37647-82022 paper 978-0-593-37648-5 PLB Series: Sweet Valley Twins, 1

NIGHT ON THE SAND by Monica Mayper; illus. by Jaime Kim 103

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LISTEN TO THE LANGUAGE OF THE TREES by Tera Kelley; illus. by Marie Hermansson 99

SWEET VALLEY TWINS

BEAUTIFUL YOU, BEAUTIFUL ME by Tasha Spillett Sumner; illus. by Salini Perera 116

WE’RE IN THIS TOGETHER by Linda Sarsour 111

BLUE by Nana Ekua Brew Hammond; illus. by Daniel Minter ...... 84

DARK ON LIGHT by Dianne White; illus. by Felicita Sala 119

THE BRIDGE BATTLE by Jacqueline Davies; illus. by Cara Llewellyn 89

STOPPING BY WOODS ON A SNOWY EVENING by Robert Frost; illus. by P.J. Lynch 93

Here, as she did for shapes and for sounds in her previous entries in the Big, Little Concepts series, Allenby turns arith metic into play—so objects in various groupings (5 drums plus 5 tambourines, 6 pots plus 4 pans, 8 cars plus 2 trucks) add up to 10. The further “addition” of as many children on the following spread also adds up to a concrete shared activity (5 drums plus 5 tambourines also adds up to a band, 6 pots plus 4 pans also makes a feast, and 8 cars plus 2 trucks results in a fun race). The children are diverse in terms of skin tone, dress, and hairstyle; one child uses a wheelchair, and one wears a hearing aid—all participate equally. The author supplies caregivers with further enrichment activities designed to stretch counting and classifi cation skills at the end, and Zeng’s expressively posed children are having so much fun throughout that readers will jump at the chance to join in. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Best Friends

HOW WE EAT by Shuli de la Fuente Lau 122

These titles earned the Kirkus Star:

Introducing Guido d’Arezzo as a small boy in Pomposa, Italy, the writers gracefully weave in details about his education in the monastery and the sounds that surrounded him. Finding it hard to memorize the hymns, he devised a notation system to make learning easier, using the six syllables that began the lines of a familiar hymn (“ut,” “re,” “mi,” “fa,” “sol,” “la”). Though his teachers dismissed his ideas, he drew on them when he trained

Illus.HamiltonbyChiara Fedele

Overlong, with tranquilizing prose: a tough sell for a story about 12-year-olds. (Fantasy. 11 14)

Elizabeth is more reluctant to let go of the girls’ habit of dress ing identically, while Jessica longs to be a star and to branch out socially. Broad, exaggerated expressions create a light, come dic vibe, and events move along briskly. Jessica, impulsive and extroverted, aspires to be one of the queen bees in the socially exclusive Unicorn Club (where the main activities are gossip and talking about boys). Elizabeth, kinder and more of a scholar, wants to start a newspaper, and her friendships seem healthier. The twins’ mother enrolls them both in ballet, and though it’s Jessica’s passion, Elizabeth seems to shine. Jessica attempts to get Elizabeth accepted into the Unicorns, but when she refuses to play a cruel practical joke on a classmate, Jessica assumes her identity, with a predictably unpleasant outcome. The sisters find that while they remain best friends, there are challenges in navigating their differences. The perennial appeal of twins— the ready-made best friend relationship and the possibilities for fooling others—is a big draw here. Bright, expressive colors and emotive facial expressions enhance the text.

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 75 adultyoung

Easy and light as cotton candy. (Graphic fiction. 8 12)

THE FIRST NOTES The Story of Do, Re, Mi Andrews, Julie & Emma Walton

Little, Brown (48 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-316-26590-42022ActorAndrews

and her daughter Walton Hamilton offer an account of the 11th-century monk who invented Solfège, which in turn became the modern sys tem of musical staff notation.

WOLFISH Andrews, Christiane M. Little, Brown (416 pp.) $16.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-316-49606-32022Aprophecy,abad

king, and a lost heir or two.Alba, the Oracle-Apprentice, hates the bad news she’s always forced to deliver. Though she often lies to give her supplicants better prophecies than the foretelling demands, she isn’t always stronger than the magic. The newly crowned boy king (cognitively disabled, interested only in cooked cream, and at the mercy of manipulative, powerhungry adults) is brought to Alba for an augury, and despite her kindest intent, the prophetic vapors speak a dread warning through her: “Murderous worm,” she calls him, declaring that he’ll be destroyed by his mother’s unborn child. Thus does the king become selfish and wicked, and thus are his mother’s twins vanished off into the wilderness, where they survive to bring about his inevitable downfall. One twin is a girl, Rae, raised by a kindly shepherd, while the other turns into a wolf and periodically growls “Rommm.” This retelling of the Romulus and Remus legend isn’t explicitly connected to the mythology despite some Roman trappings. In this slow moving, ellipsisladen, dreamy morality story, the goodness of Rae and Alba overcomes the selfish cruelty of the nameless king. Characters are light-skinned.

Can an introvert be a party ani mal? The protagonist of Naseem Hrab’s How To Party Like a Snail (Owlkids Books, Sept. 15) retreats into his shell (literally) when things get too loud at parties, and soon the invitations stop coming. But with help from a supportive tree stump, Snail devises a way to party that suits both him and Stump— one that involves donning jammies and listening to lulla bies. Hrab leans heavily on the humor in this delightful tale that encourages quiet children to find happiness on their own terms; Kelly Collier’s endearing cartoon illustrations are the perfect accompaniment.

Mahnaz Dar is a young readers’ editor. Dar a quiet life

PICTURE BOOKS | Mahnaz

As a quiet, introverted kid, I was often told to speak up. It was a mes sage I got not only from educators, but also from kid lit. Some of my fa vorite characters—Mary Anne Spier from Ann M. Martin’s The Baby-Sit ters Club series, Beth Ellen Hansen from Louise Fitzhugh’s The Long Se cret (1965)—were quiet kids whose shyness was often greeted with exas peration by those around them. But what was wrong with being quiet? Nothing, I (and many others) slowly realized. In the last decade, attitudes toward introversion have begun to shift, due in part to books like Susan Cain’s Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking (2012). I’m heartened to see children’s lit erature following suit; several picture books published this year center on quiet kids who find fulfillment while staying true to themselves. These stories will serve as balms to chil dren and lessons to many adults: A quiet life can be a pro foundly satisfying one.

“Cat got your tongue?” “Emile, don’t be shy.” Adults of ten offer well-meaning advice to the tan-skinned protagonist of Andie Powers’ I Am Quiet: A Sto ry of the Introvert in All of Us (Bala Kids/Shambhala, April 12), but, as Emile informs readers, he’s not shy. He may be quiet, but he also has wild daydreams, spends time in nature, and interacts with others on his own terms. Teasing out the differences between introversion and shy ness, this narrative features an unapologetically bold firstperson narrative and winsome, childlike illustrations from Betsy Petersen that vividly depict Emile’s rich inner life.

In Jane Yolen’s Love Birds (Cameron Kids, Nov. 8), Jon, a light-skinned boy, keeps to him self until he befriends fellow introvert and bird-watcher Ja net, a Black girl; over the years, their rewarding friendship blos soms into romance. Anna Wil son’s textured images of chirping, flapping, tapping woodpeckers, crows, and cardinals make it clear that while Jon’s silence may frustrate his chatty mother, his world is a vibrant one.

Leo isn’t so sure about speak ing up in front of a new class. But, as he and readers learn, sometimes actions speak louder than words. Ahiyya’s gen tle story and Joey Chou’s soothing illustrations will reassure

Pauline David-Sax’s Everything in Its Place: A Story of Books and Be longing (Doubleday, July 19) follows Nicky, a Black child who takes ref uge from the overwhelming world of recess by shelving books for the school librarian but feels adrift when the library closes for a week. Nicky soon discovers, however, that community comes in many forms. Complemented by Char nelle Pinkney Barlow’s intimate collage art, David-Sax’s sensitively crafted verse charts the emotional trajectory of a child who learns to connect with out altering who they are.

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nervous youngsters that they, too, have plenty to contrib ute in their own ways.

Vera Ahiyya’s KINDergar ten: Where Kindness Matters Ev ery Day (Random House Studio, June 21) follows Leo, a brownskinned boy who frets when his new teacher sends a letter to students in anticipation of the first day of school, inviting them to share ways to be kind.

sea otter comes of age.Odder’s mom told her to stay away from sharks, humans, and anything else she didn’t understand, but after saving her friend Kairi from a shark attack, she encounters all three. Injured herself during the rescue, Odder ends up recuperating at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, or Highwater as the otters call it, where she once lived as a young orphaned pup. Last time, the humans helped her reintegrate into the wild, but because of her injuries this time the outcome might be different. Soon Kairi is there too, stricken with “the shaking sickness” and having lost her newborn pup. Now Kairi is fostering a new pup, and soon one is introduced to an initially reluctant Odder in hopes that she will help raise it so it can return to the wild. The free verse effortlessly weaves in scientific information, giving Odder a voice without overly anthropomorphizing any of the animals. The natural appeal of sea otters will draw readers in, but the book doesn’t shy away from real-world threats such as preda tors, disease, and pollution. Loosely based on the stories of real sea otters rehabilitated at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, this novel will give readers lots to talk about, but uneven pacing and a rushed ending may leave some unsatisfied. Charming blackand-white spot art captures the world and life of the sea.

Readers are introduced to the myriad responsibilities of a small suburban fire department through the eyes of fire chief Fran, a dark-skinned woman with curly black hair. Over the course of her shift, the firefighters suit up so they can save a dog that accidentally got stuck in a fence while chasing a duck, put out a small brush fire at a campsite, meet a diverse class of stu dents touring the station, perform basic first aid, and more. The story, told in an engaging and varied rhyme scheme and accom panied by bright, appealing acrylic and digital illustrations, doesn’t shy away from the amount of work that firefighters need to do, including the physical and practical training that keep the firefighters performing at peak capacity. A final page addressing “A Few Fast Facts About Firefighters” will help answer linger ing questions and dispel misconceptions—the book notes, for instance, that two out of three calls are for medical aid and that, for safety reasons, not all stations have fire poles. The backmat ter also states that while Fran has a diverse team, in real life only about 10% of firefighters are women. Hopefully this title will help improve that statistic. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

This book is on fire! (Picture book. 4 8)

I WOULD TEACH YOU TO FLY Asper Smith, Sarah Illus. by Mitchell Watley Little Bigfoot/Sasquatch (32 pp.) $16.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-63217-404-82022Series:AnimalFamilies

the choir at the cathedral of Arezzo, and his methods proved so successful he was invited to Rome by the pope. The book concludes by explaining that Guido’s notes changed over time; “ut” became “do,” and the seventh note, “ti,” was added later. This leads smoothly into illustrated scenes of monastery life accompanied by the lyrics of the Rodgers and Hammerstein song made famous by Andrews’ performance in the film version of their musical The Sound of Music. Fedele’s playful art, done in watercolor, gouache, and colored pencil, expresses contrast ing moods beautifully and adds context. Extensive backmatter makes this useful for an even older audience. Even libraries still owning Susan Roth’s Do, Re, Mi (2007) will want this richer depiction. The characters present as White. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

An action-packed day in the life of a fire chief.

ODDER Applegate, Katherine Illus. by Charles Santoso Feiwel & Friends (288 pp.) $16.99 | Sept. 20, 2022 978-1-250-14742-4AMontereyBay

Asper-Smith introduces children to some of the things ani mal parents do to care for their young, the phrase “If you were…” helping kids imagine themselves as that animal.

“If you were a Dall sheep, I would teach you to climb the steep cliffs and slopes of the mountain-side.” A few lines in a smaller font introduce a further fact, in this case, that the male’s curled horns keep growing every year. These facts can be read or not, depending on the audience’s age, though several could have used more fleshing out. For instance, one talks about an ermine’s coat changing color for winter but leaves out why. The text appropriately ends with an overhead view of a child and adult sharing a book. While the text here—“Because I love you, I will teach you many ways to live in this world”—would better match a book about lessons applicable to both animal and human offspring, it gets to the point that it’s important to know about other species sharing our world. Watley’s gorgeous, realistic-looking spreads immerse children in each animal’s hab itat—the Arctic bumblebee is shown up-close on a flower, and the coyotes are appropriately shown at night—and make clear

Rich, naturalistic details will delight lovers of marine life. (glossary, author’s note, bibliography, resources) (Verse novel. 8 12)

FIRE CHIEF FRAN Ashman, Linda Illus. by Nancy Carpenter Astra Young Readers (32 pp.) $17.99 | Dec. 6, 978-1-63592-426-82022

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 77 adultyoung

A charming collaboration that strikes just the right notes. (note about the song, glossary, details on Guido’s life in the abbey, information on the Guidonian Hand, historical note) (Informational picture book. 6 10)

Every year since 1988, Sept. 15Oct. 15 has been observed as Nation al Hispanic Heritage Month, a time to honor “the histories, cultures and contributions of American citizens whose ancestors came from Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America.” This year, young readers have an unusually rich bounty to choose from with recently or soonto-be-released books covering a range of genres, formats, and cultural backgrounds. Here are just a few to begin with.

MIDDLE GRADE | Laura Simeon

In the verse novel A Seed in the Sun by Aida Salazar (Dial, Oct. 25), Lula lives with her Mexican American migrant worker family in 1960s Delano, Califor

Coming Up Cuban by Puerto Rican actor Sonia Manza no (Scholastic, Aug. 2), known for playing Maria on Sesame Street, is a thoroughly researched, deeply authentic vol ume of historical fiction following four young people: Ana, Miguel, Zulema, and Juan. They each struggle in different ways during the early years of Castro’s Cuba, when fami lies and friends are divided.

The latest in the Horse Country series, Where There’s Smoke by Yamile Saied Méndez (Scholastic, Sept. 20), re unites readers with Carolina Aguasvivas, an Irish, Mexican, and Argentine girl growing up on an Idaho horse ranch. Compassionate Carolina wants to share horses with kids whose families can’t afford riding lessons. In this heartfelt third entry, she tries to protect a victim of bullying.

Undercover Latina by Aya de León (Candlewick, Oct. 4) is a page-turn ing thriller that follows a Puerto Ri can and Mexican 14-year-old who has grown up in a family of undercover agents in an organization working to protect people of color worldwide. Andréa’s first independent mission brings danger—and incredible oppor tunities to hone her skills and deepen her understanding.

nia. Living conditions are grueling and desperate, but Fili pino and Mexican workers unite in striking, and readers learn from this vivid story about pivotal events in U.S. his tory.

Frizzy by Claribel A. Ortega, illus trated by Rose Bousamra (First Sec ond, Oct. 18), is a celebratory graph ic novel exploring negative messages girls absorb about natural, curly hair stemming from biased notions of beauty—and how they can be criti cally examined and overcome. Lively illustrations show Dominican Ameri can Marlene gaining strength through the support of those who love her.

great reads for hispanic heritage month

Alexandra V. Méndez’s What the Jaguar Told Her (Levine Querido, Oct. 11) is a thoughtful coming-of-age nov el about Mexican and Irish Ameri can Jade, who grapples with many life changes in 2001 Atlanta—a new Cath olic school, missing her abuela, puber ty, and more. Art and stories shared by wise Mexican elder Itztli, who takes the form of a jaguar, help anchor her.

Iveliz Explains It All by Andrea Bea triz Arango, illustrated by Alyssa Ber mudez (Random House, Sept. 13), an other novel in verse, follows a tween in contemporary Baltimore. Her grand mother from Puerto Rico is joining the family due to her worsening Alzheim er’s and devastating post–Hurricane María conditions. Meanwhile, Iveliz is dealing with mental health difficulties and friendship challenges that are sen sitively explored.

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The Bluest Sky by Christina Diaz Gonzalez (Knopf, Sept. 6) is a gut-wrenching novel that centers Héctor and his family, who have been torn apart by Castro’s author itarian policies. It takes place during the Mariel boatlift of 1980, when tens of thousands of Cubans were permit ted to leave the country, many in perilously overcrowded boats.In Tumble by Celia C. Pérez (Koki la, Aug. 16), Mexican American seventh grader Adela, who has a loving mom and stepfather, discovers the iden tity of her birth father, who’s from a family of famous lucha libre wrestlers. Throughout this touching story, she builds deeper relationships as painful family history is revealed and healing bonds are built.

Laura Simeon is a young readers’ editor.

Llamas, Iguanas, and My Very Best Friend

RICA BAPTISTA

$17.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-4197-5605-42022Adventuresare

any obvious differences between the adults and offspring (the spotted seal and bald eagle, for example), though not all are easy to differentiate. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Bardhan Quallen, Sudipta Illus. by Leeza Hernandez Abrams (40 pp.)

SNOW FOAL

A satisfying story of friendship and kindness. (Fiction. 6 10)

Bates, Janet Costa Illus. by Gladys Jose Candlewick (128 pp.) $16.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-5362-1630-12022Series:RicaBaptista, 1

Realistic and poignant. (Fiction. 9 12)

to heal with the help of an orphaned wild foal.

A nice link between children and their animal counter parts, though it doesn’t stand out on an already crowded shelf. (Informational picture book. 3 8)

finds herself on an adventure to return to her rosy paradise. Sure, the stakes are relatively low, and Roxie’s dilemma falls squarely into the category of “First World (Dog) Problems,” but the rhyming text and the amusing illustrations diligently work in tandem to carry the middling plot. Pug owners and pug enthu siasts will laugh hardest at the adorable poses and faces Roxie makes as she struggles to get back inside, but even cat lovers will chuckle at this pup’s antics. The fluffy pink mixed-media illustrations will STRONGLY appeal to fans of all things pink and princess-y but may make the story a slightly harder sell to others. Librarians and storytellers will be able to make the most of the tale, however, and Roxie is bound to win over just about everyone once the tale starts. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

$16.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-68263-414-12022Ayounggirlisable

A frilly pink delight. (Picture book. 6 8)

Bailey, Susanna Peachtree (288 pp.)

ROXIE LOVES ADVENTURE

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 79 adultyoung

Rica Baptista must convince her par ents to get her a pet, but the reason why is a secret.Nobody knows, not even Rica’s best friend, Laini Shanahan, but Laini is going to move away. Rica isn’t supposed to know either, but she overheard Laini’s parents talking, and now she’s made a plan so she won’t be lonely: convince her parents to finally get her a pet. She’s not picky about what animal it is— she’d be fine with an iguana, a llama, a potbellied pig, or any thing else. She already picked a name: Frederica. (It is her name, but everybody calls her Rica, so she figures that’s fine.) Rica is flexible about the details, though, as long as the pet can keep her company when Laini eventually leaves. Her parents aren’t going to say yes easily, though, so she and Laini come up with plans to change their minds. In this engaging and fast-paced narra tive, Rica proves herself a smart protagonist with a big heart and great sense of humor. As she goes through her schemes, she offers lessons in responsibility. Rica is Cabo Verdean and Black; Laini is White. Winsome illustrations from Jose break up the text.

Set in England, this poignant story interweaves the vulnerabilities of foster children with the healing power of ani mals, in this case, an orphaned Exmoor pony foal. When 11-year-old Addie is taken from her alcoholic mother and sent to a foster home far from the crowded street where she lived with Mam, she is at first resentful and afraid. Even though the foster home is welcoming, she still feels she needs to be with Mam and take care of her. At the foster home— a large farm—she meets two other foster children: 6-year-old Jude, who doesn’t speak, and 10-year-old Sunni, who is cool toward her. There’s also 14-year-old Gabe, the irrepressible son of the farm owners, Ruth and Sam. As the story unfolds, Addie very slowly learns to trust as she takes care of a tiny foal that Gabe found lost in the snow. Caring for the vulnerable creature, Addie gradually begins to navigate the deep waters of her rela tionship with her mother. The book is solidly written although a bit repetitive in the frequent mentions of how much Addie misses Mam, which, juxtaposed against the backstory of her neglect of Addie, may need further explanation for some read ers. Addie is a nuanced, complicated protagonist, while Jude, Sunni, and Gabe are strong supporting characters. Characters read default White.

stressful. Someone bring Roxie a treat.

Roxie, a pampered pug enthroned in a house replete with all things ruffled, frilly, and pink, is a bit spoiled. Her happy (and slightly gassy) life is filled with the finest things, from doggie treats served on silver dishes to the most indulgent grooming routines. When a necessary trip to the bushes outside in the middle of the night accidentally leaves her locked out, Roxie

through with pranks are signs that he may not be cut out for proper evildoing. Things only get worse when his penchant for connecting with classmates rather than sabotaging them lands him in the lowly track assigned to, ugh, sidekicks. And so, in a truly last-ditch effort to raise his standing, he volunteers to duke it out with legendary superhero Captain Perfectus. The face-off doesn’t go off as expected at all, as instead of fighting the Captain, George makes him a secret ally by helping him weather an existential crisis (it’s not so easy being “Perfectus” all the time). This experience finally prompts the relieved George to face facts, quit the academy, return to his loving mother (who doesn’t seem all that surprised) in Omaha, and enroll in a regular middle school. For readers who haven’t caught on to the title’s ambiguity, Bearce leaves her young dropout proudly regarding the new Worst Villain Ever plaque on his door.

A lighthearted and entertaining play on the title’s double meaning. (Fiction. 9 12)

Shines a light on Black pioneers who not only made a dif ference, but broke boundaries for those who followed. (Collec tive biography. 10 14)

TELL THE TRUTH, PANGOLIN Beatty, Melinda Illus. by Paola Escobar Anne Schwartz/Random (40 pp.) $18.99 | $21.99 PLB | Oct. 18, 2022 978-0-593-18014-3978-0-593-18013-6 PLB

BLACK TRAILBLAZERS

“Shines a light on Black pioneers who not only made a difference, but broke boundaries for those who followed.”

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A noble look at the courage needed for honesty. (Picture book. 4 7)

black trailblazers

Bessie Coleman, Toni Morrison, and Barack Obama are among the individuals covered in this collection of Black biographies.Peoplein a variety of fields, among them activism, politics, arts, culture, and business, demonstrated perseverance and vision. The subjects range from Phillis Wheatley, who published her first poem before the United States existed as a country, to Vice President Kamala Harris and Misty Copeland, who dances with the American Ballet Theatre, where she made history as its first Black female principal dancer. Some names will likely be more well known, such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., while others will be less so—for instance, Diane Nash, who organized and participated in many pivotal events in the civil rights move ment. Singer Mahalia Jackson and actor Sidney Poitier are rec ognized for both their contributions to their fields and their commitment to social change. Also profiled is Dick Gregory, who wove politics, racism, and other issues into his comedy act. Among the athletes covered are boxing champion Muhammad Ali and Olympic gold medalist Florence Griffith Joyner, whose blend of glamour and speed expanded the idea of what a sports personality could be. Entries are enhanced with colorful illus trations, quotes from the subjects, and sidebars with additional information. This lively and pertinent narrative makes famil iar stories feel fresh while also highlighting potentially lesserknown individuals.

seriously hamper a youngVillainyvillain-in-training.havingbeen the family occupation for generations, 11-year-old George Pruwell is thrilled to audition for a spot at the exclusive Academy of Vil lainy and Wrongdoing in New York City, with a chance to earn a Distinguished Villain plaque. But at the same time, he frets that his compulsive kindness to animals, surreptitious friendship with a Regular Public Citizen neighbor, and inability to carry

Bayne, Bijan Illus. by Joelle Avelino Andrews McMeel Publishing (128 pp.) $21.99 | Sept. 20, 2022 978-1-5248-7477-3

30 Courageous Visionaries Who Broke Boundaries, Made a Difference, and Paved the Way

A pangolin must decide whether or not to lie to the Queen. With a great big smile on his face, Pangolin is swinging in the sunshine on the palace grounds. But suddenly, to his horror, the swing breaks. “Heavens! What have I done? And what will I tell the Queen?” Pangolin consults his friends for advice. Badger suggests saying that a royal musician needed the strings for a lute. Goose has an even stranger idea: “Perhaps you can say that a giant bird mistook the ropes for worms.” And Pug? Well, Pug suggests blaming aliens. Fox and Cat also contribute possibili ties. Stammering and quaking, Pangolin must make a decision. What will he tell the Queen? Lush, jewel-toned illustrations thrum with warmth; outside the palace, the rolling landscape is filled with endless flowers and swooping trees. Inside, ornate windows and scalloped archways present a truly royal atmo sphere. Beatty expertly taps into a childlike perspective; she’s keenly aware that to avoid trouble, youngsters often spin fan tastical explanations and that the push and pull of truth-telling can result in an agonizing internal debate. Luckily, all ends well when Pangolin finally decides to own up to the Queen—and the conclusion will point readers in the right direction when facing similar conundrums. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

THE WORST VILLAIN EVER Bearce, Amy Snowy Wings Publishing (218 pp.) $12.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-1-952667-79-4Mixedmotives

Pearl’s Grandpa Joe was the finest horse trainer in Georgia, and he passed down his love of horses to her.While she has grown up on his fam ily’s peach farm, Kip’s dad has forbidden pets of any kind, including horses, for reasons he won’t share. On the Fourth of July, Kip finds a one-eyed white donkey in bad shape in the woods and lures him home with her peach biscuits. Her family discovers that this donkey and two starv ing horses were recently seized from an abusive home. Despite her dad’s objections, Grandpa Joe decides he and Kip should foster the animals while waiting for the court case to decide their fate. Kip falls in love immediately with the donkey she names Liberty Biscuit, and when the judge rules in the owner’s favor and orders the animals to be returned, Kip promises to do everything she can to get them back. Thirteen-year-old Kip’s voice feels inconsistent for her age, oscillating between sound ing very young and much older. Kip’s mom’s side of the family is Black, and her dad and his family are White. While Bowles states in the acknowledgments that this novel was born out of a desire to normalize mixed-race families like her daughter’s, the conversations about race are superficial, and their delivery and placement in the story feel stilted and forced. Despite these limitations, Kip’s story is heartwarming.

One of Us Is Lying for the middlegradeFourset.seventh graders—eager school paper reporter Nora, passionate art ist Jack, talented dance team member Maddie, and perennial joker Henry—are placed in in-school suspension à la The Breakfast Club after the backpack belonging to Sasha, the PTA president’s daughter, is stolen. Captured on video entering school early without per mission, the four suspects must remain there until one of them confesses. Through alternating narratives from each student’s perspective, readers learn they each have a hidden and plausible motive—and Sasha knows their secrets, too. In a setup similar to Benedis-Grab’s I Know Your Secret (2021), the four seemingly different middle schoolers must work together to recover the stolen backpack and thwart Sasha’s blackmail attempts. There is an empathetic element that adds to this light thriller: Each student’s secret also offers a brief look into a common adoles cent dilemma. Set after the Covid-19 lockdowns, the novel also addresses repercussions from the pandemic. Jack, who has a Vietnamese American father and White mother, experiences anti-Asian racism, and Henry’s father’s restaurant closed due to the pandemic, leaving the household financially insecure. The author links these diverging storylines in just the right places to drive the twists and turns, bolstering an underlying antibullying theme. The main characters, other than Jack, present White; names signal ethnic diversity in the supporting cast. A socially conscious whodunit. (Thriller. 9 12)

ELEPHANTS Bishop, Nic Scholastic (48 pp.) $19.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-545-60580-92022Aveterannature

Personable and informative. (Informational picture book. 7 9)

I KNOW YOU’RE LYING

Bowles, Melanie Sue Trafalgar Square Books (224 pp.) $12.95 paper | Oct. 18, 2022 978-1-64601-125-4Katherine“Kip”

along with explaining how elephants communicate with pos ture and scent as well as sounds, claims they “have a type of lan guage and can even discuss things.” In a lively closing note about how he got some of his shots, he mentions help from a scien tist and a Maasai guide, but there are no humans in the photos here. The only real bobbles are the perfunctory index (“African savanna elephant” is listed on nearly every page, for instance, with no subcategories to indicate what is being covered) and the two-item bibliography, so for further information on anatomy or ways elephants are being threatened, pair this title with the likes of Katherine Roy’s How To Be an Elephant (2017). (This book was reviewed digitally.)

LIBERTY BISCUIT

Animal lovers will appreciate many aspects of this gentle tale. (Fiction. 9 13)

Benedis Grab, Daphne Scholastic (240 pp.) $7.99 paper | Sept. 6, 2022 978-1-338-79398-7

Showing his usual ability to get the money shots, Bishop puts together a sharply focused gal lery of photogenic pachyderms in the wild, ranging from cute calves flapping outsized ears to a huge old African tusker—with memorable views of competing males with trunks intimately intertwined, matriarchal family groups at waterholes, and more. Using anthropomorphic but not inaccurate language in the equally engaging commentary, Bishop describes how gather ings of herds allow younglings to “find new playmates and make friendships that last a lifetime,” notes that individual elephants display intense emotions and have their own personalities, and,

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photographer best known for studies of smaller creatures sets his (camera) sights on the largest land animals alive.

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Yet the pair, who also created the National Geographic docuseries One Strange Rock, have always shared an interest in curiosity and awe, science and magic, of which there’s a good amount in their latest collaboration, the novel Monster Club, with illustrations by Ronald Kuriawan (Harper/HarperCol lins, Sept. 13). When middle schooler Eric “Doodles” King discovers that the ink he found amid his great-great-grandfa ther’s belongings brings his drawings to life, he knows he has a way to get best friend Alan “Yoo-hoo” Yoo and their buds interested once again in the fight club they created for their monster drawings. Their battling creations are jaw-dropping— and lovable. But once bully Darren Nuggio gets a hold of the magic ink, things quickly go from way cool to calamitous.

BY LISA KENNEDY

Darren Aronofsky & Ari Handel

Aronofsky: I got more exposed to it with my son. He’s 16 now. And one of the great gifts of parenthood for me was reading to him every night. When I was a kid, there were movies like Goonies and Gremlins. I think those early movies were prob ably the aesthetic we were going for in this book.

Handel: That ’80s aesthetic is definitely something Darren and I shared. But the groundings of this Brooklyn world come out of Darren’s life.

Glikas/WireImageBruce

Darren Aronofsky

Kirkus’ review calls Monster Club “action packed and wildly creative.” We talked with the longtime friends about their Coney Island–set ride; the conversation has been ed ited for length and clarity.

Generationally, I’m thinking that kid lit was probably not your thing. Are there books you remember from youth?

“I grew up five miles down the same beach from Coney Island, two neighborhoods over. You could walk there, and we did as kids. We would walk down the boardwalk and go check it out,” Aronofsky recounts during a recent video call with Handel. “There are just so many lives, so many stories, and so many historical photographs that it was this incred ible, ancient mystery right in my backyard that I was always drawn to. It’s got a scene in Pi and a scene in Requiem for a Dream. I get a lot of root energy there.”

The acclaimed director and his collaborator take a detour from Hollywood to write a middle-grade novel

If the novel—they’re working on the second in a series— were a movie, the scene-stealer would be New York’s Coney Is land, where Eric’s family owns a broken-down amusement park.

WORDS WITH…

Ari Handel

A book for young readers might be the last thing one would expect from Darren Aronofsky. The director’s films, so very smart (Pi, Requiem for a Dream, and Black Swan among them), have often been equally dark. The Fountain and Noah, which Aronofsky made with writer, producer, and neurosci entist Ari Handel—his Harvard undergrad suitemate, de cadeslong friend, and frequent collaborator—may be a little less edgy but no less adult.

Aronofsky: It was a pretty beat-up town at the bottom of its history—with crime and drugs—when I was a kid. But still it twinkled with magic. But then to see it start to blossom and bloom in the last couple of decades has been great. You go to the beach there now in the summer, it could be hundreds of thousands of people. And it’s such a mixture. The Russians, the Puerto Ricans, the Greeks, the Jews, and the Italians, and everyone is doing salsa dancing out on the pier.

Aronofsky: [Looks teary.] It’s hard not to get too choked up, because it is the friendship of a lifetime. But trying to sum it up and not make this a speech for Ari’s 60th birthday, I think the clarity of his mind never fails to impress. Emotionally, his ability to empathize has no match. And then as a member of his community, a member of his tribe, he’s just someone you want to have on your team.

Aronofsky: The book actually started as a movie. But the mov ie business is very complicated. I feel like the big superhe ro movies have invaded this age group. To make a visual ef fects–heavy movie, you have to compete with these incred ibly huge franchises. So, the screenplay sat on a back burner. Then a writer friend of mine read the script and loved it , and he was like, “Why don’t you just write it as a novel?”

Handel: We were in a [dorm suite] of six people, and we all hit it off. It was a great group. I think there was no thought, real ly, that we were going to work together, particularly because we were in very different fields. I went my way into sciences, and Darren went his way into film. We came together profes sionally through a little bit of kismet. And we just ended up having an incredibly good working relationship on top of the friendship. We can challenge each other. We can reinforce each other. It’s always pretty much about pushing things for ward and making things better.

Handel: The amazing thing about Darren that is a lodestone for me is, he never lets the needs of the story drive. He’ll nev er say, “Well, this is going to be the easier way to tell it, or this is the way the plot is going to work better.” He’ll always take a step back and say, “Yeah, but what are we saying? What is the story?” And I guess if I was going to say something that’s relevant to this book about Darren as a man, it is just what a tremendous father he is. I think there’s a lot of sweetness and a lot of love for that age group.

you’re coming from a place that may not have even had one light bulb? Suddenly you’re seeing this whole coast lit up.

What inspired you to write the book?

It does feel like there’s a three-act structure. What seems different is the interiority. There are these touch ingly self-aware moments where Eric thinks to himself something like Oh, apologizing is kind of cool. Was it freeing to embark on a new form?

Aronofsky: It’s such a great New York scene. And I just want ed to capture that energy.

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Handel: It was fun. All of a sudden, there are different chal lenges and possibilities. When you’re doing stuff for the screen, you’re always thinking about how is it going to be shown? What you’re saying about Eric, I think it’s completely true. You can have a character who might do some things that on the outside seem a little selfish or difficult, but you can see the sweetness in him all the time.

Eric’s the great-great-grandson of Eastern European Jews, but then most of the Monster Club kids come from immigrant families.

Aronofsky: It’s always been the story for me about Brook lyn, right? At least my Brooklyn, growing up. It really was a melting pot, going to a magnet school like Mark Twain [mid dle school], then going to Edward Murrow [high school] in Brooklyn. If it wasn’t first-generation kids in my classes, they were second-generation, maybe third-generation, but no more than that. And there are so many different types of im migrant stories in Coney Island. I mean, my favorite one is: Most people think that the first light that the refugees saw when they pulled into New York Harbor was the Statue of Liberty’s torch. But that’s a lie. The actual first light they saw were lights of Luna Park in Coney Island. Could you imagine

What have you learned from—and about—each other through these collaborations?

adultyoung

Darren, what’s your clearest memory of Coney Island growing up?

That’s pretty glorious.

Friendships are big in Monster Club. Did you two hit it off when you met in college?

Lisa Kennedy writes for the New York Times, Variety, the Den ver Post, and other publications. Monster Club was reviewed in the Aug. 1, 2022, issue.

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COZY IN LOVE

$18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-593-10985-42022Alovelornmuskox

Captivating art elevates this work. (index) (Informational picture book. 7 11)

A History of the Color as Deep as the Sea and as Wide as the Sky Brew Hammond, Nana Ekua Illus. by Daniel Minter Knopf (40 pp.) $18.99 | Feb. 15, 978-1-984894-36-62022

BLUE

Serviceable but disappointing in comparison to the author’s timeless titles of years past. (Picture book. 3 7)

A few good reasons to appreciate the color blue. Throughout history, humans have captured, cultivated, and coaxed the color blue out of everything from mollusks to rocks to plants. In this fascinating exploration of our relationship to this once-precious color, Brew-Hammond begins by discuss ing its elusive nature: Seawater is blue, but the color disappears when water is cupped in one’s hand; similarly, crushing iris petals yields blue, but the hue quickly dissipates when soaked in water. Readers learn that the earliest known use of blue dates back to about 4500 B.C.E. in Afghanistan’s Sar-e-Sang Valley and that ancient Egyptians used it, too. But blue has been found world wide. It was extracted from the bellies of particular shellfish in coastal Japan, Central America, the Mediterranean, and Mexico and harvested from plants in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and the Americas. Because of its rarity, blue has been considered a royal color reserved for use by the wealthy and privileged. Laced with insights, Brew-Hammond’s meditative verse covers a wide range of cultures, time periods, and geographical locations, while Minter’s mesmerizing images highlight the significance of blue to diverse groups of people through culturally specific visuals such as hairstyles and clothing design. The highly tex tured backgrounds add life and movement to the focal images in the foreground. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Brett, Jan Putnam (32 pp.)

There is no doubt that Braun has created a labor of love. The introduction sets humans apart from the animal king dom, positioning them as threats and dedicating the book to wild creatures. Its promise of introducing readers to animals on every continent is kept, with chapters devoted to one con tinent apiece. Every page has breathtaking art in a style that includes masterful attention to the colors, textures, and geo metric shapes inherent in the featured animals’ bodies and habi tats. The combination of both single- and double-page spreads adds to the visual appeal. The scope and level of detail of facts provided for each highlighted species vary widely and are often based on a well-known characteristic. For example, the information about lions focuses solely on the male lion’s mane, the monarch butterfly page offers a rudimentary explanation of metamorphosis, and a paragraph both humorous and awk wardly written expounds on the striped skunk’s stench. Many of the short text entries include advanced vocabulary and com plex sentences, and at least one assumes specialized scientific knowledge. However, they are too brief to satisfy the curiosity of older children, who will long for more surprising facts about the commonly known animals. There are also inconsistencies between the many whimsical, sophisticated entries and others that are prosaic or even awkward.

uses his strength to save a Cozyfriend.longsto win the heart of the enchanting Lofti, but as he and the rest of the bulls charge one another and bash heads in shows of strength, he is overshadowed by the others. Just as Cozy resigns himself to wallowing in snowy self-pity, he’s called to rescue his friend Bella, a young beluga whose joyful splashing creates rainbows across Teardrop Inlet. If Bella stays too long in the inlet, the surface will freeze over, trapping her under with no air to breathe. Can Cozy use his head (literally and figura tively) to save Bella? Could his bighearted actions also win him the heart of his beloved Lofti? Realistically drawn animals are set against a snowy Alaskan background in this pedestrian and

WILD ANIMALS OF THE WORLD

Stunning and informative—and as profoundly rich as the color blue. (author’s note, facts about blue, selected sources) (Informational picture book. 4 10)

from around the world are represented by exquisite illus trations and brief text translated from German.

$35.00 | Nov. 1, 978-1-83874-114-32022Numerousanimals

Braun, Dieter Trans. by Jen Calleja Flying Eye Books (216 pp.)

predictable sequel to Cozy (2020). Brett’s signature decorative borders and teardrop-shaped vignettes frame each double-page spread. Heart-shaped rocks, colorful sea stars, and textured seaweed complete the tableaux. The brief third-person nar ration is linear and descriptive but feels flat in the absence of true character development. Character motivation is explained rather than shown. For instance, Cozy’s devotion to Lofti might be more compelling if she were a three-dimensional character rather than a plot device. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

we the people!

A tribute to one of the previous century’s most renowned and innovative fashion designers.

$19.95 | Sept. 1, 978-0-228-10382-02022

Dubbed “Unsinkable” by Brewster for the same reasons Molly Brown was—rising from relatively humble origins to styl ish celebrity and then surviving the sinking of the Titanic—Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon (to use her final married name), not only became a celebrated belle epoque dressmaker in France, Great Britain, and the United States, but is credited with inventing both tinted undergarments to go with her filmier tea dresses and high-society gowns and also runway-style fashion shows with live models. (She also sparked a pre–First World War furor for “Crazy Big Hats.”) Following an isolated glimpse of her as a child living with her strict grandparents near Guelph, Ontario (after her father’s death, the family relocated from England), the author skips ahead through high spots and notable incidents in her career to the Titanic disaster (she and her husband were unjustly stigmatized afterward because of rumors that they had bribed their way aboard a lifeboat), later struggles, and death in 1935. The generous mix of newly colorized period photos and McGaw’s formally composed scenes of shows, dances, and other events offer enough examples of her work to impart a clear idea of their characteristic lines and looks. People depicted present as White.

As powerful as the woman it profiles. (author and illus trator notes, timeline, bibliography, additional sources, note about quotations) (Picture book biography. 8 10)

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White House?

Shirley!The life of teacher, activist, and congressperson Shirley Chisholm is examined in this poetic biography that packs an exciting and educational punch. Endpages include select quota tions, like “Service is the rent we pay for the privilege of living on this earth,” and images of quippy campaign buttons (“Ms. Chis. for Pres.”). As the book opens, readers meet baby Shirley and learn about her early life in Brooklyn before she and her sisters were sent to live with their grandmother in Barbados. Return ing to New York at the age of 9, Shirley set out to become a teacher, but her desire for everyone to be treated equally led her to the world of politics. Advancing from an assemblyperson in New York to Congress wasn’t easy, but Shirley persisted, even tually running for president in the 1970s. The tone of the book is inspiring, but Brown doesn’t shy away from the mistreatment Chisholm encountered: “When Representative Chisholm / walked the hallowed halls of Congress, / the thing she felt most / was unwelcome. / No one would sit with her at lunch. / Her colleagues made nasty remarks. / One man even spat when she entered the room. / All to scare her / and keep her in her place.” Crews’ vividly textured illustrations positively sing, enhancing the text and making for a perfect introduction for young read ers everywhere. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

UNSINKABLE LUCILE How a Farm Girl Became the Queen of Fashion and Survived the Titanic Brewster, Hugh Illus. by Laurie McGaw Firefly (40 pp.)

WE THE PEOPLE! Brown, Don Abrams (128 pp.) $14.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-4197-5738-92022Series:BigIdeasThat

Changed the World

Stylish and significant. (glossary) (Nonfiction. 10 12)

A graphic-novel history of the demo cratic ideal and its slow, difficult progress toward realization in the United States.

NOT DONE YET Shirley Chisholm’s Fight for Change

Brown, Tameka Fryer Illus. by Nina Crews Millbrook/Lerner (32 pp.) $20.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-72842-008-02022Awomaninthe

“Engagingly informal, more cogent than ever, and rich in rare facts and insights.”

systems has been challenged recently, it holds in broad out line and sets up subsequent surveys of empires worldwide, of Athenian democracy, of republics from Rome to the Iroquois Confederacy, and of significant documents about rights such as the 13th-century Manden Charter in West Africa. She addresses the outrageous racist compromises built into our Constitution (“No, I’m not making it up”) and subsequent watermarks both low, like the Dred Scott Decision, and high, up to Dr. Mar tin Luther King’s dream of an equitable future. In the loosely drawn panels, dark- and olive-complexioned men and women are steadily present to reinforce the message that, yes, they, too, belong in this aspirational, still unfinished story.

Following the practice of the three previous Big Ideas titles, Brown chooses a historical figure to conduct his tour, and he outdoes himself here by picking Abigail Adams—a brilliant, self-educated woman whose famous dictum to her husband, John, to “Remember the Ladies” positions her well to remember Native Americans, immigrants, and people of African descent as she chronicles the long struggle to build a “more Perfect Union,” from the prin ciples of equal rights for all and government through “consent of the governed.” If her opening review of prehistoric linkages between the inventions of agriculture, cities, and governmental

Engagingly informal, more cogent than ever, and rich in rare facts and insights. (timeline, information on Abigail Adams, endnotes, bibliography, author’s note, index) (Graphic nonfiction. 9 11)

TOO-SMALL TYSON Brown Wood, JaNay Illus. by Anastasia Magloire Williams Charlesbridge (32 pp.) $15.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-62354-164-42022Series:StorytellingMath

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A young, tan-skinned child with dark hair explores the trees in their yard and other surroundings as readers are encouraged to think about trees differently. “What do you see when you look at a tree? / Leaves and twigs and branches? // Or do you see a living thing / that moves and breathes and dances?” Every tree has a unique shape and name. Some touch other trees; others are great for climbing. Trees provide habitat for animals. The text turns philosophical when musing whether trees have feelings and what history they might have seen. And it ponders future trees: Who will pick their cherries; what will their wood make? In a meta turn, the book asks readers: “Have you ever curled up with a tree in your hands, / as stories or songs in a book?” While the text rhymes, it spreads across page turns and includes just enough info and questions that readers may not notice until they reread it—or they question the few words chosen for (near) rhyme instead of meaning. Backmatter offers more info about trees, including the wood wide web, and sug gests ways that readers can be like trees (e.g., being authentic and taking time for self-care). Muted colors in the pencil-andwatercolor illustrations match the tree theme and give the scenes a cozy feel. Other people in the pictures are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Stomp City Show make you want to stomp and shout?

Reflects everyday Black boy joy with a mathematical twist. (author’s note, note on math, suggested activities) (Picture book. 3 7)

stomp!

living being.

STOMP! Ready-To-Read Ready-To-Go! Calmenson, Stephanie Illus. by Baptiste Amsallem Simon Spotlight (32 pp.) $17.99 | Sept. 27, 978-1-66591-659-22022Series:Ready-to-ReadWouldmissingthe

After their train is delayed, Zak the raccoon and Ziggy the hippo must race across a city reminiscent of New York to get to the show. But the bus is full, their bike gets a flat, and when they run, they have to detour for construction. When they do finally arrive, their worst fears come true: The show is sold out. Ziggy rages and stomps, and the Statue of Lib erty intervenes, encouraging Ziggy not to stomp or shout but to breathe in, breathe out, and slowly count to 10 again and again. The now calm Zak and Ziggy hear music and follow the sound to a happy party in the park. The book ends with the news that the Stomp City Show will return next week. The book opens with lists of names, word families, sight words, and bonus words,

which will help new readers enjoy the story, but many words in the signs found in the illustrations (city, delay, park, next, week, and news) that are critical to the story are omitted from these lists. Humorous, detailed illustrations and text that relies on short rhyming sentences, questions, and exclamations create a fun, fast-paced romp. The book ends with several reading com prehension questions. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

WHAT DO YOU SEE WHEN YOU LOOK AT A TREE?

Tyson may be the smallest and youngest of five brothers, but his math skills make him a giant at saving the day when the fam ily pet goes missing.

Readers will look at the forest and see each tree in a whole new light. (author/illustrator note) (Informational picture book. 3 8)

Carlisle, Emma Templar/Candlewick (40 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5362-2666-92022Eachtreeisaunique

When playing basketball with his older brothers, Tyson struggles to keep up; his steps are smaller, and he quickly real izes that he has to take more of them to compensate. Nick named Li’l Man, Tyson enjoys playing with and taking care of the family’s pet gerbil, Swish, who is significantly smaller than him. When Swish escapes from his cage, his brothers take the lead on finding the little animal, while Tyson cleans and pre pares the cage for his eventual return. When his brothers are unable to locate Swish, Tyson must consider, “If I were Swish, where would I go?” Turns out Swish is under the bed, just out of reach. Tyson uses the tubes from Swish’s cage to lure the gerbil out, realizing that if he uses smaller tubes, he’ll need more of them to bridge the distance, and he ultimately rescues Swish. Brown-Wood has crafted an accessible and relatable narrative in which knowledge of proportional thinking helps solve a realworld problem. Magloire Williams’ fun, funky, colorful digital images of a loving Black family of boys complement the story well. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

“Proof that good things happen when you breathe, slowly count to 10, and stomp for fun instead of frustration.”

Proof that good things happen when you breathe, slowly count to 10, and stomp for fun instead of frustration. (Early reader. 5 8)

A bespectacled rat asks a panda for reassurance of their friendship.Whiletraveling through a landscape of different seasons and weather conditions, Rat poses a variety of questions to Bear, all centered on the constancy of their companionship, starting with whether they will still be friends when they are old. Bear’s answer is sweet and gently humorous (“I’ll even hold your tail so you don’t trip over it”). Throughout, Bear pledges loyalty in sickness and health, through crankiness and loud snoring, and even through misbehavior. Finally, Rat asks the toughest ques tion of all: “What if I have to leave and go somewhere you can’t come?” Soft watercolor, ink, and pencil art features wispy, deli cate linework that evokes motion, especially when winds blow the anthropomorphic pair’s brightly colored umbrellas (provid ing early, visual hints of the anxiety behind the climactic ques tion about the two being separated by circumstances outside their control). Bear’s answer avoids being trite by acknowledg ing how sad separation would be and saying that they would still carry an absent Rat; Bear’s gestures are especially sweet. Although Bear and Rat are still together at the end, this book would be useful for children struggling with the idea of saying goodbye to friends as well as a comfort for sensitive readers. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 87 adultyoung

SUPERWORLD Save Noah Cheney, Carrie Illus. by Yarrow Cheney Simon & Schuster (384 pp.)

Simultaneously quietly soothing yet deeply empowering— a friendship tale for the ages. (Picture book. 4 8)

who can return things to normal. At first Noah turns Möbius down, leading to the unleashing of several loopy superheroes like Hugh-Mongous (his friend Hugh), Granimal (his grandma), and Hairstrike (his friend Tabitha). When Noah finally accepts his destiny, he’s guided by the all-knowing Möbius and aided by musclebound sidekick Mantastic. Spoiler alert: Noah prevails. Noah’s hyperpaced odyssey is a grab bag of obstacles fueled by nonstop puns and imaginative art that’ll keep readers swiftly turning the pages. The stylish, smoky, black-and-white illus trations take up about half of the book, accompanying every action-packed development and frequently involving images of comical crime fighters or Noah floating through space with a wide-eyed expression. Names and illustrations cue some diver sity; Noah reads White.

On Miriam’s 12th birthday, four years after her parents’ deaths, glowing words on the attic door beckon her to Orphan Wish Island. Only orphans are invited annually to the tropical paradise where they hear a message from their parents, receive one of the six wishes their parents left for them, and get to make a wish of their own. Readers follow Miriam from seventh grade through senior year. Unfortunately, the story is at the mercy of the timeline: trying to cover growing pains from mid dle school through high school leaves her life lightly sketched, not fully embodying her character at any age; the supporting cast is also not deeply developed. There is a saccharine, moralis tic quality to the writing, and seemingly insignificant elements are mentioned in great detail while larger events are puzzlingly skimmed over. The most emotionally authentic voice is found when Miriam’s grandmother ends up in the hospital—at this point the tension is palpable and the writing is tighter. Miriam lives in a seemingly all-White community in which receiving a car at age 16 is the norm along with tutoring when grades slip and private music lessons. The interplay between this existence and the magical island falls flat as a device for exploring parental loss. However, the love between Miriam and her grandmother is quite sweet.

Imaginative adventures sure to trigger both giggles and groans. (Illustrated adventure. 9 12)

In a world populated by superheroes, it takes a normal boy to save society.

Noah, our energetic narrator, is the only unsuper person in Superworld: A meteor shower slammed into Earth and turned everyone into a superhero; everyone, that is, except him. And on his birthday, too! Even little sister Joy has become Psychlone, named for her twin powers of telekinesis and controlling the weather. The school’s curriculum is geared to superhero powers, but luckily librarian Mr. Almaraz helps Noah find refuge in read ing. One day genius Hero Leader Professor Möbius warns Noah that the world in in grave danger—and Noah is the only one

Series: Superworld, 1

$16.99 | $20.99 PLB | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-593-47944-5978-0-593-37537-2 PLB

$18.99 paper | Oct. 4, 2022 978-1-59211-147-3Anorphan’s

Cheng, Christopher Illus. by Stephen Michael King Random House Studio (40 pp.) $18.99 | $21.99 PLB | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-593-56451-6978-0-593-56450-9PLB

ORPHAN WISH ISLAND Carter, Sarah Anne Histria Kids (212 pp.)

A poorly developed premise struggles to become a compel ling story. (Fiction. 10 14)

trip through a magic door to a tropical island brings wishes from her dead parents.

WILL WE ALWAYS HOLD HANDS?

Series: Berrybrook Middle School, 5

88 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

Chmakova, Svetlana JY (256 pp.)

Terry, who dreams of moving out of his working-class neigh borhood and making it big, is excited for his first day at the pres tigious Rock City Academy, where he’ll be able to pursue his passion for art (which he balances with a love of sports). At first, Terry loves the school, but a week later, he feels out of place and begins to have doubts, though the chance to participate in an upcoming talent show buoys him. Rick, a popular student, offers to let Terry join his team for the show, but first Terry must bully Xander, another student. Terry does, but he instantly has regrets, and eventually he, Xander, and Terry’s class guide, Rani, form their own team for the talent show. Though the three are different, as they work together, they become closer. But when Terry’s grades begin to suffer, his mother wants him to stop working on the show. However, with the support of friends and family, Terry finds a solution. This story is thematically similar to Jerry Craft’s New Kid (2019) but is simpler and presented with less polish. Still, the friendships and family interactions are real istic, and the colorful drawings pair well with a story where art is a major component. Rani and Rick are brown-skinned, Xan der presents White, and characters in both Terry’s school and neighborhood are diverse.

Clanton, Ben Simon & Schuster (88 pp.) $12.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-5344-9318-62022Series:TaterTales,1Onegrumblyday, two mutant tater brothers vie to determine who is the greatest in the world.

TERRY’S CREW

Lively, engaging, perfectly pitched tween drama. (Graphic novel. 9 13)

$25.00 | $13.00 paper | Sept. 27, 2022 978-1-975312-72-5978-1-975312-79-4 paper

hill after Tot. No one wins, and the third contest is a laugh-off. Rot declares he’s laughing so hard that he needs to pee his pants but then remembers he doesn’t wear pants. When Rot and Snot are laughed out, Tot is still giggling. That’s when the plot twists and twists again. The text, primarily boastful speech-bubble banter between Rot and Snot, also contains songs, cheers from an enthusiastic worm, and fun wordplay, including alliterative places names like Barrel Bottom Bog and the Moldy Mounds. Text in a smaller typeface alternates with graphic panels, keep ing the action moving. Expressive potato faces make the action and emotions clear. Fans of the picture book Rot: The Cutest in the World (2016) will enjoy seeing the protagonist again; Clanton relies on the same simple yet expressive cartoon illustrations and humor.

THE GREATEST IN THE WORLD!

This tater trio, and worm, will keep readers laughing, sing ing, and cheering from the first page to the last. (pictures of other taters who have excelled in the Hot Potato Hill chal lenge, facts about potatoes, lesson on how to draw Rot) (Graphic novel. 5 7)

ENEMIES

978-0-316-49998-9FormerNFLplayer

In this latest addition to the Berry brook Middle School series, a girl enters a school contest for the wrong reasons— with mixed results.

It’s goofy-looking Rot Poe Tater, with an awesome unibrow and “surprisingly sturdy stick legs,” versus big brother Snot, a sleepy, upset couch potato with bedhead. Tot, their “usually super chipper” little sister, acts as the judge. The first challenge, a potato sack race with shades of “The Tortoise and the Hare,” ends in a tie. The second con test is Hot Potato Hill, where the brothers must roll down a

Crews draws inspiration from his early years for this graphic novel about a Black boy attending a new school in a different neighborhood.

A worthwhile read, especially for kids with grand aspira tions of their own. (Graphic novel. 8 12)

Crews, Terry Illus. by Cory Thomas Little, Brown (208 pp.) $12.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022

Felicity Teale loves art, writing, and cosplay; she is less keen on school. In contrast to her organized, punctual, scienceaward–winning younger sister, Letty, Felicity has serious gaming and drawing skills but fails to complete projects. In elementary school, Felicity, who is Black, was close friends with Korean American Joseph Koh, but their middle school relationship has been complicated since super outgoing Felicity tried to pressure Joseph to socialize more. To prove to Letty that she can complete and win something, Felicity enters an entrepre neur club contest with a $1,000 prize. But Joseph also enters, partnering with someone from their gaming group and shutting Felicity out. Obsessed with winning, Felicity nixes her partner Tess’ suggestions and rejects Letty’s offer of help with the busi ness plan. Although Felicity and Tess come up with a great idea, they fail to complete the submission on time, and Felicity’s behavior alienates Joseph and offends Tess. Felicity’s humorous, colloquial, first-person narration rings true, from her passion for gaming to her sibling rivalry to her volatile middle school relationships. With its use of emphatic text, exaggerated ges tures and facial expressions, a muted color palette, and rapidly changing visual perspectives, the graphic format proves ideal for anime fan Felicity’s tale of self-acceptance, friendship, and family.

An unusually nuanced exploration of bullying; as percep tive as it is entertaining. (Fiction. 9 13)

| kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 89 adultyoung

THE BRIDGE BATTLE Davies, Jacqueline Illus. by Cara Llewellyn Clarion/HarperCollins (240 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-358-69299-72022Series:TheLemonade War, 6

A spooky adventure rooted in Guya nese folklore.

Bobbing in the wake of 2016’s heavyweight Book of Joy (2016), this brief but buoyant address to young readers offers an earnest insight: “If you just focus on the thing that is making / you sad, then the sadness is all you see. / But if you look around, you will / see that joy is everywhere.” López expands the simply delivered proposal in fresh and lyrical ways—beginning with paired scenes of the authors as solitary children growing up in very different circumstances on (as they put it) “opposite sides of the world,” then meeting as young friends bonded by streams of rainbow bunting and going on to share their exuberantly hued joy with a group of dancers diverse in terms of age, race, culture, and locale while urging readers to do the same. Though on the whole this comes off as a bit bland (the banter and hilarity that character ized the authors’ recorded interchanges are absent here) and their advice just to look away from the sad things may seem facile in view of what too many children are inescapably faced with, still, it’s hard to imagine anyone in the world more qualified to deliver such a message than these two. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Fills a need, though only by basic standards. (Picture book. 3 6)

THE GHOST TREE Deen, Natasha Illus. by Lissy Marlin Random House (112 pp.) $6.99 paper | $12.99 PLB | Aug. 30, 2022 978-0-593-48888-1978-0-593-48887-4 PLB Series: Spooky Sleuths, 1

THE LITTLE BOOK OF JOY Dalai Lama & Desmond Tutu Illus. by Rafael López Crown (40 pp.) $18.99 | Sept. 27, 978-0-593-48423-42022FromtwoNobelPeace

Hundreds of pages of unbridled uplift boiled down to 40. (Picture book. 6 8)

“An unusually nuanced exploration of bullying; as perceptive as it is entertaining.”

Prickly 9-year-old Jessie is initially disgusted, as instead of being enrolled in a summer camp for young engineers, she’s rele gated to “How to Make and Decorate Fairy Houses”—worse yet, she joins a trio of mean third grade girls led by nemesis Becky. For easygoing fifth grader Evan, it’s summer school, where he’s not only singled out for remedial tutoring, but has accidentally been placed with older middle schoolers with an established pecking order and Reed, a vicious bully, at the top. Unsurpris ingly, in short order Jessie has hijacked her class, efficiently leav ing Becky on the outside but leading everyone else in a seminar on bridge design and construction (learning along the way to tolerate the occasional toy troll or other nonscientific embel lishment). Evan has a harder time as he battles powerful twin urges to stand with classmate Stevie, Reed’s favorite victim, or stand by to fit into the established social order. Making the bet ter, if perhaps not safer, choice leads to a climactic brush with disaster…but with some timely help from a surprising source, Reed is ultimately sent packing in a satisfactory way. As before, it’s the interplay between Jessie’s fierce intellect and Evan’s emotional intelligence that resolves issues and boosts this series from good to great. Characters read White.

$17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5064-8308-52022Consentiskey.

SIMON THE HUGGER Davids, Stacy B. Illus. by Ana Sebastián Beaming Books (32 pp.)

Prize winners, an invitation to look past sadness and loneliness to the joy that surrounds us.

Simon the sloth loves to hug. He hugs family, friends, trees, rocks, even himself. One day, while Simon is playing with his best friend, Elsa the jaguar, she tells him she doesn’t feel like being hugged. Simon is confused, but Elsa is firm. Other friends also decline Simon’s hugs, even when he offers them in celebra tion. When he arrives at a birthday party, he immediately hugs a young tamarin, who screams, “No!” The other guests make their disapproval clear. Dejected, Simon makes a sign—“Please hug me!”—and stands waiting. His only taker is Ricky the porcu pine. As Ricky leans in, Simon realizes that for the first time he doesn’t want a hug. Undismayed, Ricky offers a fist bump instead. Realizing that both parties must agree to a hug, Simon eventually makes up with Elsa following a brief episode in which he cares for her after she injures her paw. Though the cutesy, cartoonish illustrations are serviceable and the story is nothing special, it makes the topic of consent easy to grasp, especially for those encountering the subject for the first time. Davids

the bridge battle

ends with a discussion guide for grown-ups fielding questions from young readers, encouraging “a supportive, nonjudgmental manner” and including the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Net work’s website in case “unexpected disclosures” come up. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

The summer following the events of The Lemonade War (2007) is one of literal as well as figurative bridge building for sibs Evan and Jessie.

Latine girl learns to direct her energy toward justice, she finds how much her voice is Viva’sneeded.mighty voice shakes the playground and sometimes overpowers others. Viva also has a loving family, including her beloved Papi, who has a quiet voice but drives a loud city bus. Viva loves to join Papi on his route whenever she can, until one day she can’t because Papi and his fellow bus drivers are going on strike for better working conditions. But Viva begs to join her Papi on the picket line, as it seems like just the place for her big voice—“I know how to make lots of noise,” she says. Viva loves the energy of the picket line, and her enthusiasm helps give Papi the boost he needs to speak up for himself and his fellow workers. Inspired by the author’s own experiences on a picket line with her father, Viva’s story reminds us all of the power of our voice when used to help elevate the voices of oth ers. Colorful illustrations expertly render Viva’s enthusiasm and her father’s trepidation, depict the bustling, diverse community that Viva calls home, and give a strong sense of place. Though the location is never specified in the text, small details in the illustrations evoke the author’s childhood home of Los Angeles. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

An unnamed 9-year-old boy narrates, announcing that he always carries a special ball, and though he hates fighting, he’ll do so if anyone takes it. He introduces his hero and friend Don José, a corporal in the Dragon Regiment of Alcalá, who, the nar rator tells us, is a real dragon (he mostly appears as a man until later in the story). The boy also describes his plan to marry his beautiful, free-spirited neighbor Carmen when he grows up. Don José falls in love with Carmen, but his obsessive behavior leads to violence and tragedy. The innocent boy watches events unfold and in the end is left deeply disillusioned. The action is depicted as dance movements from Carmen as choreographed by the Spanish National Dance Company; the art portrays death and violence, and sexuality is implied. Complex blackand-white illustrations with touches of subtle color—bright splashes of red in Carmen’s costume and her signature rose, the green dragon in varying sizes, and the always-present brown ball—highlight and inform the text, translated from Spanish. In a few illustrations, Carmen and the dragon are shown as dolls, potentially causing some confusion. The boy shares profound, hard-won insights on the nature of love, though young readers

VIVA’S VOICE

Carmen retold as a disquieting coming-of-age tale.

Quinn’s older brother, the star of the family, has left for college; her parents are constantly arguing, possibly over her terrible grades; and her longtime (and once best) friend, Jack, who shares her love for skateboarding and gaming, seems more interested in Jade, the new girl in town. What else could go wrong this year? A tornado that rips through her house. It’s also National Poetry Month, and Quinn’s English class has been

It’s a good thing that fourth grader Asim Macinroy loves creepy stuff, because the new island town his family has moved to—Lion’s Gate, Washington—is one weird place, from the mysterious lab where his mom and dad work to the strange lights and hovering objects at night, not to mention the mon strous-looking tree in the cemetery. Asim quickly finds himself befriended by Rokshar Kaya, who aspires to be a scientist and cultivates a far more skeptical attitude toward the supernatural than Asim. But when the tree appears to be infecting people and turning them mean, including their beloved teacher Mx. Hudson, who is nonbinary, the duo work together to come up with a solution. A promising start to a new series, this simple, fast-paced illustrated chapter book nicely blends scientific processes with folklore—Asim’s mother, who is Guyanese (his father presents White), tells Asim about Dutchman trees, said to be inhabited by human spirits. The tale is never overly frightening, and the open-endedness of the story is especially effective, leaving readers to decide what really happened and whether they are Team Asim or Team Rokshar or somewhere in between. The author’s note offers a compelling description of the folklore of the silk cotton tree that inspired the story, giving a glimpse into history and culture. Illustrations depict Rokshar as brown-skinned and Mx. Hudson as light-skinned.

An easy, breezy read with just the right amount of chills. (Fiction. 6 10)

$18.95 | Oct. 4, 978-84-18302-76-32022Thedarkstoryof

Donoso, Raquel Illus. by Carlos Vélez Kind World Publishing (32 pp.) $18.99 | Sept. 27, 978-1-63894-006-72022Whenaboisterous

viva’s voice

90 | 15 september 2022 children’s kirkus.com

Inspiring and bold. (author’s note, discussion questions) (Picture book. 3 8)

CARMEN del Mazo, Margarita Illus. by Concha Pasamar Trans. by Jon Brokenbrow Cuento de Luz (36 pp.)

might need to share this tale with a reassuring grown-up to fully understand it. Characters are light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

ODE TO A NOBODY

Quinn to become a poet during an already unsta ble eighth grade year.

“Inspiring and bold.”

Difficult, disturbing, and shocking but worth the effort. (Picture book. 9 12)

DuBois, Caroline Brooks Holiday House (304 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-8234-5156-22022Atornadoinfluences

Earley, Chris Firefly (48 pp.)

$19.95 | $9.95 paper | Aug. 15, 2022 978-0-2281-0376-9978-0-228-10401-8 paper

Cozy, sumptuous, and stirring—the perfect way to greet the dawn. (Picture book. 2 6)

tasked to write a poem a day; her poems become the basis of this work. Told in segments taking place before, during, and after the tornado and in a variety of formats, the verse not only reflects all the changes in the presumably White 13-year-old’s life, but how she’s reacting to them internally. Amid the chaos, there are beautiful turns of phrase (“Houses spill themselves into yards, / cough their curtains out their windows / as if they’ve grown tired of their people”) and moments of kindness when Quinn’s community rallies together. She realizes that the force of the tornado has altered her in more ways than one, encouraging her to become a poet, set new goals, make new friends, and adapt to family shifts. In turn, as Quinn learns the process of writing, readers follow her own life revisions.

Eszterhas, Suzi Owlkids Books (40 pp.)

TOO EARLY Ericson, Nora Illus. by Elly MacKay Abrams (32 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-4197-4207-12022Riseandshinefor

A LEOPARD DIARY My Journey Into the Hidden World of a Mother and Her Cubs

$18.95 | Oct. 18, 978-1-77147-491-72022Agiftedanimalphotographer records

A blend of lovely writing and insightful middle school dynamics. (Verse novel. 9 13)

An engaging invitation to see nature in action right outside the window. (index) (Nonfiction. 8 10)

a starting-the-day read.Bedtime books abound, but this win ning title invites readers into the morning routine of its characters. The child narrator rises before dawn, prompting Daddy to declare, “Too early.” Both parents caution, “Shhhh, don’t wake the baby.” At this point, illustrations are com posed of gorgeous blue, gray, and black washes and linework, a palette evoking the still, predawn hour. While Mama stays in bed, Daddy and child pass stretching doggies on their way to the kitchen to make one mug of coffee and another of steamed milk. The pair sit on the porch, with the moon still overhead, snuggling as the world awakens. Readers may notice warm col ors beginning to hint at the culminating sunrise that will con clude the book; before that, however, the quiet yet potent text engages other senses by describing rustling leaves, cooing birds, and, finally, the baby crying. Once everyone is up and rushing to ready themselves for the day, the child muses, “It won’t feel so early anymore.” The early morning stillness is clearly something this new big sibling savors, including when Mama and baby join them outside to enjoy the golden warm sunrise. Mama and the child appear to be people of color; Daddy presents White. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

encounters with a wild leopard and her offspring.Along with personal reactions and memories, Eszterhas offers hints of how a wildlife photographer gets the money shots (“After a couple hours, we heard rustling sounds at the den”) as she distills “thousands of photos” into a few dozen. Eszterhas made a series of visits to the Jao Reserve in Botswana, over time observing two different litters from the same mother (known as the Camp Female). With help from Kambango Sin imbo, a local guide who contributes to a closing Q&A about his work, the author not only catches the mother leopard both in majestic repose and gracefully slinking out to hunt, but also patiently grooming her cubs and even in midair when a branch

HOW TO BACKYARDFEEDBIRDS

A Step-by-Step Guide for Kids

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 91 adultyoung

How and what to feed avian guests, with a gallery of com mon North American species.

Getting feathered visitors to hold still is a perennial prob lem for budding bird-watchers, but bird feeders offer oppor tunities for observation. Earley provides helpful suggestions aplenty—from types of feeders, including specialized designs and homemade ones constructed of plastic bottles or craft materials, to popular seeds and other foods like suet, fruit, and, with a recipe, an appetizing peanut butter spread. The author acknowledges the squirrel problem and offers clever strategies for foiling these fiendishly ingenious foragers (such as springloaded feeders); he also notes ways to dissuade finches, starlings, and other more aggressive birds to give shyer species places on the perch. And, as a sort of stretch goal, Earley provides guid ance on persuading bolder sorts to feed out of an observer’s hand. All the birds depicted throughout chowing down in the close-up color photos are identified, and the common types posing in the appended gallery also come with lists of distinc tive physical characteristics. Occasional naturalistic touches, like an image of a woodpecker eying a well-chewed animal car cass, underscore the message that birds are almost always quite able to find food on their own; still, Earley makes clear that backyard bird-watching is easy, fun, and educational.

NIGHT LUNCH Fan, Illus.EricbyDena Seiferling Tundra Books (48 pp.) $18.99 | Sept. 27, 978-0-7352-7057-22022Anighttimelunch

A surefire hit for almost any emerging reader. (Graphic fict ion. 5 8)

Feral is probably a nice town to live in—so long as you stay away from the play ground tube slide after dark, that broken down ice cream truck in the woods, and the (shudder) middle school’s basement.

WELCOME TO FERAL Fearing, Mark Holiday House (240 pp.) $21.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-8234-4865-42022Series:FrightsFrom

As collected and retold by deceptively genial local archivist Freya, the five incidents here mostly involve tweens doing some thing they may, or more likely may not, live to regret. For failing to turn in a book report, Agatha finds herself serving detention in a dim, doorless basement room where the clock ticks…but the time never changes. Likewise, Keller and Landon nerve themselves to dive into an old, twisty slide (despite the eerie screams that issue forth)…and have yet to emerge. “Your ice cream—it’s moving,” turn out to be a hiker’s last words as she and two friends become tasty snacks for a trio of toothy, tenta cled horrors. And in the final tale, a troop of Ferret scouts turn the tables on their new troop leader, an overconfident vampire. Readers can track these episodes and anticipate others thanks to an opening map with lots of suggestive labels (“unidentified ruins,” “bog beast sightings,” etc.). In contrast to the popeyed young folk who have an ordinary look and come in a mix of skin colors and body types, the adult humans tend to be—or sud denly change into—menacing, green-skinned monsters. The more gruesome bits, though, are largely left for imaginations to supply.

on which she’s lounging suddenly snaps. And, besides tracking the growing cubs as they tussle at various ages, Eszterhas treats readers to views of one helpless newborn cannily stashed for a while in the camp’s bathroom to keep it safe from predators and an older one plopped down on a comfy bed of elephant poop. Shots of the camp and of elephants and other occasional wild visitors add color. Kambango, who is Black, and the author, who is White, both appear in photos in the book. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Fascinating reading and viewing for younger prey—er, ani mal lovers. (glossary) (Informational picture book. 7 9)

The duo set out on their daily beach exploration but are dis appointed when they don’t find anything. All the cool stuff must have ended up in Starfish’s awesome tidal pool, they realize, and though they wish they could hang out with her, they decide that they are definitely not cool enough, even after several failed attempts at coolness, including getting ice cream (“Ice cream will keep us cool and make us look really cool”), donning cos tumes, and wearing sunglasses. Frustrated yet determined, they keep searching until the perfect idea strikes and they discover that having fun, especially with friends (Starfish included!), is way better than being cool anyway. Simple, colorful illustra tions and funny (and punny) jokes throughout add hilarity and buoyancy to this second installment in the series aimed at bur geoning readers. A sprinkle of oceanic trivia, plus some deeply introspective questions by Snail, and an appearance by Isabel, the invisible whale featured in the first volume, add layers and complexity to this wacky, bighearted story. Ferry has a knack for concealing thought-provoking concepts in deceptively simple stories, and this newest offering definitely continues that trend.

A tasty little treat. (Picture book. 4 8)

Feral, 1

92 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

Crab and Snail’s search for cool things on the beach leaves them empty-handed, they find a way to make their own fun.

Subtly toned digital illustrations welcome readers to a nos talgia-tinged town where a horse pulls the “Night Owl” cart to provide meals for the nocturnal animal residents. The chef, a literal owl, prepares different meals for different creatures: A fox in a top hat dines on a mince pie, while a badger snacks on a sandwich and fries, moths devour eggs, and a possum with a passel of joeys purchases puddings. At the foot of each page, a short sentence appears underneath the illustration and fre quently includes an unfamiliar word crying out to be defined, repeated, and memorized, such as aglow, shuffle, sizzling, and brightening. They’re not wholly unusual words, but they may be unfamiliar enough that a good storyteller will be able to coax a few open-ended questions out of the tale. The illustrations have a scratch-art or pen-and-ink vibe that feels part Sendak and part Gorey, with the slightest dash of Van Allsburg thrown in for good measure. Adults and children alike who appreciate a quiet read will enjoy the subtle nuances of the book and the soft warmth of the characters. This is a good choice for a pajama storytime or bedtime tale, though it may leave readers craving their own midnight snacks. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Thrill-seeking readers will be eager to visit. (Graphic para normal. 8 12)

leaves readers filled with vocabulary words.

THE TIDAL POOL OF COOL Ferry, Beth Illus. by Jared Chapman HarperAlley (64 pp.) $12.99 | Sept. 6, 978-0-06-296216-42022Series:Crab&Snail,2Whenbestbuddies

Her family accepts and supports her, especially her 6-yearold brother, Spanner, who loves the stories she tells about No Magic Girl that include descriptions of her clever inventions. But Hex knows that she can never really be independent with out magic—and her only chance to gain magical abilities is to visit the Wishing Wyrm, a volcano-dwelling dragon who lives in the middle of the Great Barren, a desert enveloped in a per petual sandstorm. Approximately once a century, the storm ceases, offering people the chance to receive a single wish from the dragon. Fortunately, the timing is right, and the sandstorm clears. On her journey to find the Wishing Wyrm, Hex joins Fuse and Cam, two fellow Undevelopeds who teach her about clank, their name for nonmagical laws of nature—in other words, sci ence. The Clanksmiths show her that there’s a lot more to the world than casting spells, and Hex wonders if wishing to be magical is really the right choice. Florentine’s STEM-positive debut is a delight. The story drives home the fact that science is all around us, and we only have to use some imagination, trial, and error to apply it to reality. Hex and Cam read as Black; Fuse has olive skin and turquoise hair.

Calkins Creek/Astra Books for Young Readers (40 pp.)

12-year-old Hex Allen is used to being Undeveloped, or someone without magic.

Inventor Thomas Edison and car manufacturer Henry Ford are tired from their jobs making “life easier for others.” They decide to go on vacation and motor off to explore the coun try in one of Ford’s Model T’s. They invite along their friend nature writer John Burroughs; the next summer, Ford and Edi son take another trip, this time with tire kingpin Harvey Fires tone. Finally, all four of them decide to travel together, and the

Frost, Robert Illus. by P.J. Lynch Candlewick (32 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-5362-2914-12022

A beautiful story of discovering science and self. (map, Hex’s sketchbook with science project instructions) (Adven ture. 8 12)

kirkus.com | children’s 15 september 2022 93 adultyoung

The Innovation Press (256 pp.)

ROAD TRIP!

Three titans of industry (and one writer) rough it.

foursome innovate the road trip. The book describes the places they visited, the activities they enjoyed, and how these stuffy old figures from history “acted more like kids at camp than men on vacation.” Busy illustrations in a muted palette, reminiscent of sepia films highlighted with green and orange, help make this feel like an old-timey movie. While some children, espe cially those with an interest in history, will get a kick out of this lighthearted but informational text, the niche topic will limit its audience. Furthermore, the overall cheerful tone means that Henry Ford—an outspoken Nazi sympathizer admired greatly by Adolf Hitler—comes off as a peculiar but lovable gentleman, a complicated authorial choice. Extensive backmatter includes photographs, a map, and further anecdotes from the foursome’s joint vacations, which stretched over a decade. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A picture-book adaptation of Frost’s pensive poem. Its four rhyming quatrains are divided into six couplets interleaved with several wordless double spreads; the last four lines each appear on a separate page. Notably, Lynch visually subverts several of the poem’s customary narrative interpreta tions, depicting a young, light-skinned rider astride a dappled gray horse. While the poem’s line “He gives his harness bells a shake” implies a horse-drawn wagon, Lynch supplies a belltrimmed bridle instead. Such innovations shift the poem’s authorial voice away from that of the venerable poet, adding a fresh layer of mystery to the purpose of this traveler’s journey. The narrator’s clothing, suggestive of the late 19th or early 20th century, includes a long dress, a belted jacket, a sturdy, widebrimmed hat, and thick work gloves; a bedroll is stowed behind the saddle. Where the poem mildly personifies the horse, who “must think it queer / To stop without a farmhouse near,” Lynch depicts the dismounted rider fondly cradling the animal’s head as twin puffs of breath exit his nostrils. Belying this “darkest evening of the year,” Lynch illuminates the blue-grays of snowladen conifers and frozen lake with a pallid gold winter sunset and a fleeting moon. Variable perspective—from bird’s-eye to close-up—bestows a quasi-cinematic sense as the coming dawn draws the rider’s furtive look. Endpapers bracket the journey, from twilit village to sunup, horse and rider long gone. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

stopping by woods on a snowy evening

HEX ALLEN And the Clanksmiths Florentine, Jasmine Illus. by Ebony Glenn

$18.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-943147-77-92022Series:HexAllen,1Inamagicalworld,

Lovely pictures newly elucidate this renowned, euphoni ous work. (Picture book/poetry. 5 10)

$18.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-68437-272-02022

“Lovely pictures newly elucidate this renowned, euphonious work.”

This car-centered history lesson is a lemon. (afterword, bibliography, further resources, photo credits) (Informational picture book. 5 9)

Camping With the Four Vagabonds: Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, and John Burroughs Friddell, Claudia Illus. by Jeremy Holmes

STOPPING BY WOODS ON A SNOWY EVENING

A HEAD FULL OF BIRDS Garibal, Alexandra Illus. by Sibylle Delacroix Trans. by Vineet Lal Eerdmans (32 pp.)

LITTLE HEARTS Finding Hearts in Nature

Gentle rhymes and illustrations with the look of soft watercolors primarily in pastel colors are a perfect fit for this sensitive exploration of nature. Four animal friends—a fox, a

At first, Noah does nothing to stop his classmates when they ridicule Nanette, who can stare for hours at a spider’s web and who “rocks back and forth, to and fro / fluttering her fingers like butterflies.” But when Noah goofs off in class, he is told to sit next to Nanette. Noah observes Nanette, and he sees the beauty in the way she interacts with the world, whether it’s setting col ored paper boats afloat in the gutter or removing her boots to splash in the rain in the schoolyard. Noah and Nanette become friends who explore the worlds in their minds together. Trans lated from French, this third-person narrative has a straightfor ward quality. There are plenty of details but also ample space for readers to fill in their own. Soft colored-pencil illustrations use shading, composition, and primary colors to direct the eye and highlight Nanette, who seems to almost glow in her yel low rain slicker. Textual clues point to Nanette’s neurodiversity, although no specifics are named. Unfortunately, readers never get a sense of Nanette’s perspective; she feels less like a fully realized character and more like an inspirational catalyst for Noah’s character development—a choice that centers a neuro typical point of view. Both characters are light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Noor, a boy with dark hair and skin the color of the page, lives with his family in an apartment building. The neighbors have all left, and only a woman on the sixth floor remains. Each morning, Noor waits for her to walk her dog—whom he secretly names Bobby—“dreaming that some day they’ll play together.”

Ghigna, Charles Illus. by Jacqueline East Red Comet Press (36 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-63655-030-52022

$17.99 | Oct. 18, 978-0-8028-5596-12022Ayoungboybefriends

One morning, a taxi is waiting for her, and Noor is sad she will take Bobby with her. But then Noor sees Bobby waiting on the curb as the cab departs. When Bobby chases the taxi, Noor runs after him. He urgently searches for Bobby, along the way performing acts of kindness as he frees a bird trapped in barbed wire and provides shelter for a cat who has just given birth. In this book translated from the French, Gay-Para never uses the word war, though her text clearly describes a ravaged

Though Rory can spell different words, casting magical spells is a different story: “What she wanted to spell with her wand and what came out of her wand never matched.” When she tries to conjure up socks, she ends up with rocks. When she wants new, she gets blue. The other students at Bibbidi Bob bidi Academy for godmothers- and godfathers-in-training don’t seem to have any of the same problems, and Rory’s spelling only gets a little better with practice. But when Rory and two classmates must help a lonely boy as their first magical assign ment, Rory realizes that her spelling troubles won’t necessar ily keep her from being good at granting wishes. The author’s play on the idea of spelling will be amusing to readers who are still learning to spell with letters rather than a wand, and Rory’s excitement and nervousness will resonate with many children. Energetic illustrations, often incorporating images from nature, feature cheerful, vivid colors and delicately drawn scenes. Rory has brown skin and dark hair; her school is diverse.

city—“Behind a wounded wall”; “Noor climbs atop a pile of stones, steps over rubble.” Quentric’s paper-cut collage illustra tions and choice of colors for the buildings—gray and brown— keep the focus on Noor and the animals he encounters. The result is a simple tale that hints at the devastation of military conflict yet exudes optimism; with context from educators or caregivers, this one could be a jumping-off point for larger con versations.(This book was reviewed digitally.)

Love and hearts are all around. Just stop and look.

Rory’s attempts at spellcasting often go awry, but a new school and new friends help her see that there is more to being a great fairy godmother than what she can do with her wand.

NOOR AND BOBBY Gay Para, Praline Illus. by Lauranne Quentric Trans. by Alyson Waters Yonder (40 pp.)

“A hopeful story laced with complex themes of destruction that centers a child’s love and kindness.”

$18.95 | Oct. 25, 978-1-63206-327-42022

94 15 september 2022 children’s | kirkus.com

A hopeful story laced with complex themes of destruction that centers a child’s love and kindness. (Picture book. 4 8)

A child searches for an abandoned dog.

A visually appealing but ultimately one-sided friendship story (Picture book. 4 8)

An effervescent, adorable series opener. (Fantasy. 5 8)

noor and bobby

RORY AND THE MAGICAL MIX-UPS

a girl with “a head full of birds.”

George, Kallie Illus. by Lorena Alvarez Gómez Disney-Hyperion (80 pp.) $14.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-368-05739-42022Series:BibbidiBobbidi Academy, 1

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 95 adultyoung

This fun, powerful, and empowering tale belongs on every shelf. (Picture book. 3 8)

THE PENGUIN WHO WAS COLD Giordano, Philip Tra Publishing (40 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-7353115-1-72022Achillybirdwith

barbershop with hair everywhere and leaves with the freshest fade.

A joyful friendship tale begging to be read on Valentine’s Day or before a thoughtful nature walk or even a nap. (Picture book. 3 6)

MY BROTHER IS AWAY Greenwood, Sara Illus. by Luisa Uribe Random House Studio (40 pp.) $18.99 | $21.99 PLB | Oct. 11, 2022 978-0-593-12717-9978-0-593-12716-2 PLB

A child lives far apart from their incarcerated older brother. The narrator peers into their older brother’s empty bed room with a despondent look. “Sometimes I stand in his quiet room and pretend he’s not really gone.” Grappling with the weight of his incarceration amid questions from curious class mates, the child experiences anger, embarrassment, and pain. But their bond is a strong one, and memories remind the pro tagonist of happier times: a contented smile as the pair snug gled up and read together, arms flung wide with joy during starlit strolls together. The juxtaposition of these different sentiments helps to illuminate the narrator’s reality, particularly when they and their parents make the long drive to see the child’s brother in prison. When they finally reconnect with a warm embrace, the main character realizes that other kids are also in the vis iting room, reuniting with their incarcerated family members.

The adventure starts when the narrator walks into the bar bershop, where Black folks are working, styling, sitting, and talking. The child sits and asks for “THE FRESHEST FADE UP ON THE BLOCK!” Instead of getting right to it, the hair dresser suggests other options—a trim, an Afro, cornrows— and cuts bit by bit. As the girl’s hair slowly gets shorter, other patrons suggest different options, like spikes, twists, or locs. Time passes as the suggestions keep pouring in, and the hair dresser and the child’s mother become visibly distressed. Finally, it all comes to an end when the child’s hair is short enough for her to say, “Just line me up.” The rhyming text is great fun to read, with perfect rhythm and style, though at times it can be slightly difficult to tell who is talking. The call and response detailing myriad creative Black hairstyles is both a humorous romp and a glorious celebration of Black beauty. The gentle message of a girl choosing her own look despite others’ attach ment to her long hair is neither lost nor overdone. Thomas’ illustrations attend to every detail and exude energy, commu nity, and warmth as they cycle through interesting characters and the narrator’s many different looks en route to her chosen fade. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

bear, a rabbit, and a wild piglet—visit the woods, the shore, the meadow, and a farmer’s field to find a world “full of little hearts. / Each one a sign of love.” The book’s endpapers contain maps to help readers trace the friends’ journey, and a dotted line on the back endpaper map charts the quartet’s path. Hearts abound in this tale—strawberries, seashells, and ladybugs all resemble the shape—as do sensory references (the “smell of roses in the air,” “Puffy clouds go drifting by, / Oh what a dreamy sight!”). The friends also discover pairs of birds snuggled up to create a heart shape, a spider who spins a heart-shaped web, and butter flies flying off in a heart-shaped group. Alliteration and simple, elegant rhymes (“A sweet bouquet of butterflies. / We wave as they depart”) create a pleasing melody and fun read-aloud. Lit tle ones will eagerly snuggle up to enjoy this with a cherished caregiver; it also makes a wonderful option for a small-group storytime to allow close inspection of the illustrations. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Warm as a feathered hug. (penguin facts) (Picture book. 3 5)

tropical seas on the brain sets out to find some warmth.

Children’s books love to tap into the sensation of feeling different from the pack. Milo is no exception. One day the little penguin wakes up and realizes that he is, in fact, quite cold. He also realizes that he is alone in this feeling, as seemingly every other penguin thoroughly enjoys the ice and the snow. After Milo balks at the prospect of diving into the freezing sea, a friendly whale offers to take him somewhere new. The game little penguin hitches a ride and, on a tropical island, is delighted to find a flock of friendly birds. Upon leaving, he is presented with a scarf of warm feathers, a gift he shares with another cold little penguin back home. The story of find ing your community and then returning to find others like you has a timely feel. The true lure of the book, however, comes in Giordano’s geometric art style. Penguins are little more than circles and rectangles, artfully constructed to resemble birds. The whale is all curves, while a tortoise sports triangles on their shell. From the multicolored splendor of the island to the black and white of the Antarctic to the brilliant blue of the sea, the storyline and the accompanying images are suffused with com fort. Backmatter provides further info on penguins and penguin life. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

MY FADE IS FRESH Grant, Shauntay Illus. by Kitt Thomas Penguin Workshop (32 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-593-38708-52022Agirlarrivesatthe

ANNE An Adaptation of Anne of Green Gables (Sort of) Gros, Kathleen Quill Tree Books/HarperCollins (304 $13.99pp.)paper | Oct. 25, 2022

A way for young people to reflect on a troubled time. (note about tanka) (Verse novel. 8 13)

ARCHIBALD FINCH AND THE CURSE OF THE PHOENIX Guyon, Michel Illus. by Zina Kostich Andrews McMeel Publishing (464 pp.) $19.99 | Oct. 25, 978-1-5248-7136-92022Series:ArchibaldFinch, 2

of Garvey’s Choice (2016) faces world-altering challenges.

978-0-06-305765-4AnneShirley’s

While the staid Cuthberts expected a younger foster child, they slowly warm to 12-year-old Anne. She settles in and quickly discovers friends, passions, and a crush. Anne experiences true belonging for the first time and comes into her own even as her impulsive and imaginative nature gets her into trouble. Includ ing the titular heroine’s most infamous hijinks—feuding with classmate Gilbert Blythe, dyeing her hair green, and longing for a dress with puffed sleeves, among others—Gros takes a great est-hits approach, which results in the story’s lacking much of the complexity that makes these adventures work in Montgom ery’s classic. Anne, as presented here, lacks some of the spark and quirk that made her character so appealing, although cer tain updates work successfully, such as her traumatizing expe riences in the foster care system and a low-key exploration of her feelings of same-sex attraction. The art is simple and boldly colored, with expressions and actions that at times add humor and emotion and at others look stiff. The medium of comics is utilized within the story itself: Anne is a zine-maker, and instructions for how to make zines are integrated into the text. The main characters read White; the supporting cast is racially diverse.

A sweet but too pat adaptation. (Graphic fiction. 8 12)

Greenwood (who in an author’s note says that she grew up with an incarcerated brother) describes these experiences in simple, poignant language ideal for a range of readers. Also notewor thy is Uribe’s moving artwork; both detailed and restrained, the illustrations bolster the sensitive plot. In the author’s note, Greenwood offers readers reassurance: “If someone you love is in prison, I want you to know you aren’t alone, either.” The child and their family are light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

96 | 15 september 2022 children’s kirkus.com

An accessible, validating narrative about the impact of incarceration within families. (Picture book. 4 10)

One year after 11-year-old Archibald escaped Lemurea, an underworld where witches are hiding, he returns to find Faery dae, the only person who can help him catch the Marodor that followed him home. Faerydae refuses to leave, but Archibald tricks and abducts her, bringing her back to Earth with him. To make matters worse, the Orbatrum, a device that opens portals between their realms, breaks, leaving Faerydae no choice but to

GARVEY IN THE DARK Grimes, Nikki Wordsong/Astra Books for Young Readers (176 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 25, 978-1-63592-526-52022Theprotagonist

In Grimes’ earlier book, Garvey, a young Black boy, found his courageous voice in the school chorus and con nected with his sports-obsessed father. Relying again on the poetic form of tanka, this elegant verse novel sees Garvey and his family seeking to push through the maelstrom of life in 2020. Not only is Covid-19 sweeping the world (“The Invisible Beast,” as Garvey terms it), things are exacerbated by the continued presence of anti-Black violence as global communities lift up in protest the names of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. School is now driven by laptop cameras and screen time. Everyone is home now except for Dad, whose work installing Wi-Fi may expose him to threats that the entire family must take seriously. The stress builds, affecting everyone. The public outlets that Garvey discovered to fuel his happiness just aren’t available to him like before, when things were “normal.” Grimes conveys many of the elements specific to Black life in 2020, focusing on how families adapted to Covid, not knowing whether a lasting resolution would arrive. Though this story feels a little rushed compared with the first installment, it nevertheless tackles themes of family, friendship, grief, and coping with injustice and will inspire dialogue about this chaotic period as well as a sense of hope and healing.

A cruel ancient conflict between Earth and a hidden dimension involving witches and monsters continues in this second installment of the Archibald Finch series.

life changes forever when she is taken in by brother and sis ter Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, resi dents of the bustling Avon-Lea apartment complex.

WHAT’S UP, PUP? How Our Furry Friends Communicate and What They Are Saying Hamilton, Kersten Illus. by Lili Chin

Sounds are involved in canine communications, certainly, but dogs mostly employ a series of movements to express them selves to guardians and other dogs, and they ingeniously use body parts—eyes, ears, paws, noses, faces, tongues, butts, legs, and tails—to say what they want to say. Additionally, where dogs happen to be at any given moment and the circumstances they find themselves in also figure into how pooches relay important messages. Dogs have much to tell us, and this book clarifies the basics of pupspeak effectively and humorously, getting its points across in simple, albeit clunky, verse. When necessary to make the rhyme scheme and rhythm work—and to enhance

Clarion/HarperCollins (208 pp.)

the raven mother

Dogs “speak” in body language—literally!

Values and practices of the British Columbian Gitxsan Nation are reflected in glimpses of a raven’s natural place and behavior in this latest series entry.

WHAT WE SAW

THE RAVEN MOTHER Gyetxw, Hetxw’ms (Brett D. Huson) Illus. by Natasha Donovan HighWater Press (32 pp.) $23.00 | Sept. 6, 978-1-77492-003-92022Series:MothersofXsan, 6

$16.99 | Sept. 6, 978-0-358-41441-42022Twogirlsgetswept

A rich mix of nature and culture, pointing out connections between the two. (Informational picture book. 9 11)

Messy in execution and representation. (Fantasy. 8 12)

Hahn, Mary Downing

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 97 adultyoung

A chilling and thrilling addition to a beloved author’s oeu vre. (Thriller. 9 13)

“A rich mix of nature and culture, pointing out connections between the two.”

It’s a hot summer, and 12-year-old Abbi and her best friend, Skylar, spend their days at the mall, the pool, and the library. When Skylar, the more daring of the duo, decides they should bike to the edge of town, a seedy area where the bullies from their school live, Abbi has reserva tions but says yes anyway. The discovery of a treehouse makes the journey worthwhile, and things become even more inter esting when they spot a mysterious man and woman meeting up just below. Are they Russian spies like Abbi imagines or just regular adults having an affair like Skylar’s dad did? The fun mystery turns serious, though, when the woman runs off into the menacing woods. When a beloved teacher goes missing, the friends piece together the information and have to figure out how to help without winding up in trouble with their parents, or worse. The prolific Hahn, particularly known for her eerie ghost stories, stays away from the supernatural in this quickpaced tale but keeps the thrills coming. She expertly captures the feel of a small-town summer and tumultuous middle school friendships and never talks down to young readers or shies away from frank descriptions of real-world threats. Still, an optimis tic ending shows there is always light and joy to be found. The protagonists are cued White.

confront the Marodor and the world she left behind centuries ago if she wants to get back home. On their hunt for the Mar odor, the all-White team of Archibald; his sister, Hailee; former thief Oliver; and Faerydae encounter a vicious witch hunter who has a beaklike nose. The large or hooked noses of other vil lains are a recurrent theme that evokes antisemitic stereotypes, in stark contrast to the explicit mention of Archibald’s small nose. The description of an antagonistic multiracial army of witches led by an African former child soldier stands out as the only direct representation of people of color. The characters’ magic includes elements from various cultures: golems, Roma nian animal spirits, and shamans (who are equated with wizards and sorcerers). Hailee, who likes boys, shopping, and fashion, is portrayed as unintelligent. Apart from all this, the plot itself is a chaos of tiring twists and turns.

Nox Gaak, a mother raven, cares for two new chicks under a succession of moons with help from the flock—teaching them how to hunt and store food (while noting that forgotten caches can nourish and renew the woodland), stretching wings to soar acrobatically, and, beneath January’s “K’uhloxs,” or “Stories and Feasting Moon,” leading a wolf pack to a moose carcass that is too frozen for ravens to scavenge alone. A delectable descrip tion of Spring’s “hagwiltsum,” or salmon chowder, which includes “potatoes, onion, rice, seaweed and, more recently, a touch of curry,” is just one of the frequent references to cultural lifeways embedded in the natural history, and further detail about the Gitxsan Nation, presented with a map and a list of the annual cycle of moons, caps the narrative. Donovan’s illus trations are both stately and naturalistic, with the heavy lines and flatly applied colors of woodcuts. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

up in a murder mystery in their small town.

Farrar, Straus and Giroux (40 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 15, 978-0-374-38919-22022

Since her twin, Arthur, died four years ago, 13-year-old Thomasina, a pale, brown-haired, gray-eyed girl, has blamed herself. After all, she challenged him to a race before he died of their shared afflic tion, which she later learns is called asthma. Filled with loss and guilt, she makes gingerbread for her family’s floundering sweet shop while running the house and caring for her grieving par ents. As the Great Frost grips London, a Frost Fair opens on the frozen River Thames, and Thomasina’s family sets up a stall there. Lured to the river one night by a blue light, Thomasina encounters Inigo, a peculiar stranger who offers to bring Arthur back to life if she will temporarily surrender her memories of him and make four visits to the Other Frost Fair where Father Winter, Frost Beasts, and Frost Folk gather. As her memories of Arthur fade, Thomasina discovers silvery snowflakes on her skin: Is she becoming one of the Frost Folk? Set against the backdrop of the Great Frost of 1683-84, the third-person narra tive conveys Thomasina’s consuming guilt, fear for her mother’s mental state, frustration with her father, longing to become a sweetmaker, and desperation to heal her family. Her harrow ing efforts to unlock the secrets of Inigo’s past and expose Father Winter’s demonic designs prove intriguing while chilling descriptions of the Other Frost Fair evoke the surreal.

A wide-ranging pictorial panorama of phenomenal sights from our world and beyond.

“A gripping, atmospheric, fantastical tale of atonement.” frost fair

child friendliness—some words are occasionally substituted for familiar vocabulary; e.g., waggers for tails and sniffers for noses Different type sizes and some words set in all capitals heighten visual interest. The lively, colorful illustrations have child appeal and feature frisky pups of various colors, sizes, and breeds; one particular large, yellow, curly-haired, red-leashed pet pooch plays a starring role. Stylized-looking humans are diverse in terms of race and age. Endpapers present an assortment of jaunty dogs “speaking.” Backmatter includes an author’s note, an explanation of the dog language used in the book, dog facts, and a bibliography. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

98 | 15 september 2022 | children’s kirkus.com |

the

Felix’s quest to save a perceived damsel in distress has dangerous but enlightening results.

THE BIG BOOK OF W.O.W. Astounding Animals, Bizarre Phenomena, Sensational Space, and More Wonders of Our World Hargrave, Kelly & Andrea Silen National Geographic Kids (224 pp.) $19.99 | $29.90 PLB | Nov. 8, 2022 978-1-4263-7276-6978-1-4263-7277-3 PLB

An upbeat reminder that canine conversations are rich with meaning. (Informational picture book. 3 6)

Unusually broad and tailor-made for casual browsing. (index, photo credits) (Nonfiction. 8 12)

FLY Hughes, Alison Kids Can (200 pp.) $19.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-5253-0583-22022Inthisversenovel,

A gripping, atmospheric, fantastical tale of atonement. (Fantasy. 9 12)

Often sacrificing size for sheer quantity, fresh sheaves of bright color photos—digital images aglow with saturated col ors—compete for attention with each page turn; the potential to elicit widened pupils in viewers seems the only criterion for inclusion. Grouped into nine broadly topical sections, the subjects range from spectacular geological formations and dra matic weather phenomena to wildlife (including blue whales, sharks, and exotic seahorses), skyscrapers and other manufac tured wonders of both the ancient and modern worlds, and rare sights, from an elephant with a prosthetic leg to a portrait of twin astronauts Mark and Scott Kelly. One chapter is devoted to mysteries, from unicorns and UFOs to Amelia Earhart’s fate. Nor is the sky the limit, as in another section, exoplanets and colliding galaxies swim into view. Quick spurts of well-caffein ated commentary, superimposed on the pictures or wedged in between, crank up the wow factor while adding the odd fact or contextual note. Though sustained exposure carries a risk of reader fatigue, there is likely something here to pique almost any sort of interest, even on a quick flip through.

A girl in 17th-century London enters a dangerous bargain to resurrect her deceased brother.

THE FROST FAIR Hastings, Natasha Harper/HarperCollins (368 pp.) $16.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-06-316127-62022Series:TheMiraculous Sweetmakers, 1

Felix Landon Yarrow, whose initials resulted in the unfortunate nickname Fly, feels a deep connection to Don Quixote and fancies himself a knight in his own way, complete with steed (he uses a wheelchair due to “pro found” cerebral palsy), sidekick (Levi, his aide), damsel in need of rescue (Daria, his crush), and villain (school bully–turned–drug dealer Carter). Often treated as though he’s not there or is incapable of understanding, Felix intends to use his powers of invisibility to prove his bravery when Carter begins to show interest in Daria. Bitingly sarcastic and darkly witty Felix is a

A single seedling sprouts at the base of its parent tree (backmatter reveals that the trees are all Douglas firs). As its little roots reach down, they connect with “a silky net of fungi” through which the trees of the forest are able to send messages to one another. The giant tree, towering above, is able to col lect enough extra sunlight to send excess food to the seedling. It passes food and water to other trees as well until one day, dur ing a storm, lightning strikes. Burned and battered but not dead,

Harper/HarperCollins (40 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-06-304541-52022Series:FoodGroupArecoveringcurmudgeon

Grape wasn’t always sour, as they explain in this origin story. Grape’s arc starts with an idyllic childhood within “a close-knit bunch” in a community of “about three thousand.” The sweetto-sour switch begins when Grape plans an elaborate birthday party to which no one shows up. Going from “sweet” to “bit ter,” “snappy,” and, finally, “sour,” Grape “scowled so much that my face got all squishy.” Minor grudges become major. An aha moment occurs when a run of bad luck makes Grape three hours late for a meetup with best friend Lenny, who’s just as acidic as Grape. After the irate lemon storms off, Grape recog nizes their own behavior in Lenny. Alone, Grape begins to enjoy the charms of a lovely evening. Once home, the fruit browses through a box of memorabilia, discovering that the old birthday party invitation provided the wrong date! “I realized nobody’s perfect. Not even me.” Remaining pages reverse the downturn as Grape observes that minor setbacks are easily weathered when the emphasis is on talking, listening, and working things out. Oswald’s signature illustrations depict Grape and company with big eyes and tiny limbs. The best sight gag occurs early: Grape’s grandparents are depicted as elegant raisins. The les sons are as valuable as in previous outings, and kids won’t mind the slight preachiness. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

John, Jory Illus. by Pete Oswald

THE SOUR GRAPE

narrates life lessons in the latest entry in the punny Food Group series.

A young Jewish high-wire walker faces the dangers of Nazi Germany.

The nature of tree communication is laid out clearly, clarify ing some remarkable facts.

LISTEN TO THELANGUAGETHEOFTREES

Sweet, good-hearted fun. (Picture book. 4 8)

deeply realized character from the beginning. Other charac ters are rounded out as Felix comes to understand them more deeply. Lyrical free verse lends itself well to the story, deftly conveying both action and Felix’s emotions and the space he perceives himself as occupying. Characters are mature and independent, and themes of being misunderstood, underes timated, and trapped by others’ preconceptions will resonate with many readers. Most characters, including Felix, are cued White; Daria is brown-skinned.

A superficial treatment of an exciting true-life story. (author’s notes) (Historical fiction. 10 14)

A Story of How Forests Communicate Underground Kelley, Tera Illus. by Marie Hermansson Dawn Publications (40 pp.) $16.99 | March 1, 2022 978-1-72823-216-4

Sharp-edged verse and strong narrative construction frame a teen’s realizations about the world. (Fiction. 11 16)

HIDDEN ON THE HIGH WIRE Kacer, Kathy Second Story Press (216 pp.) $13.95 paper | Sept. 27, 2022 978-1-77260-251-7Series:Holocaust Remembrance Series for Young Readers, 20

Thirteen-year-old Irene Danner is a proud member of the Lorch Family Cir cus, founded by her Jewish great-great-grandfather, but even though Irene’s non-Jewish father is now listed as the owner, the Nazi law forbidding Jews to work causes it to close. Irene’s father is drafted into the army; Irene, her mother, and her grandmother go to live in a small town, living quietly to escape the eyes of possible persecutors. But when Irene’s grandmother is dragged away from the public market and taken to a concen tration camp, Irene’s peace is shattered, and she approaches Althoff Circus, another German circus, which agrees to let her hide in plain sight—back on the high wire. Loosely based on the life of the real historical figure Irene Danner, with some significant differences, the novel shines an interesting light on Jewish-owned circuses, Jewish circus performers, and their plight during the Second World War. Unfortunately, Kacer never quite conveys the athleticism and talent required to be part of a circus—for example, after not practicing for nearly two years, Irene still performs her routine flawlessly on the first attempt. The characters lack nuance and never seem fully devel oped; Kacer relies too much on dialogue for exposition and tells emotions rather than showing them.

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 99 adultyoung

Kim, Diana Clarion/HarperCollins (32 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 22, 978-0-358-52593-62022Aneye-(notto

Smart, concise explanations of a tricky topic leave readers only wanting to learn more. (activities) (Nonfiction picture book. 6 10)

prized posses sions goes missing, she realizes she has to get creative in order to replace it.

the giant tree is then attacked by an insect hoard. No food exits the tree, but instead, remarkably, the surrounding trees send their own excess food and water back to their ailing compa triot. Meanwhile, the seedling continues to grow. Accompany ing at-times poignant text, the book’s rich illustrations remain fairly realistic while using clever visual clues to explain different concepts. For example, to indicate the kind of help that passes among the trees, each type of message sent through the fungi appears as a small colored symbol. The end result drills home this complicated idea of tree communication in a way that many kids will appreciate. Additional photographic backmatter with more information on trees rounds out the book. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

ZARA’S RULES FOR FINDING HIDDEN TREASURE Khan, Hena Illus. by Wastana Haikal Salaam Reads/Simon & Schuster (144 $17.99pp.)|Oct. 18, 978-1-5344-9762-72022Series:Zara’sRules,2WhenoneofZara’s

The second book in Khan’s middle-grade series centering on 10-year-old Zara begins with the lively protagonist realizing that her brand-new bike has been stolen after she forgot to lock it while at the park with her friends. After she breaks the news to her parents, they are disappointed that she didn’t take bet ter care of her bike; now it’s up to her to earn the money for a new one. When attempts at selling painted rocks don’t generate much income, Zara’s uncle suggests she host a garage sale, so she begins collecting unwanted items, carting her wares around in a wagon. But when Zara accidentally sells a box of her moth er’s keepsakes, Mama becomes upset, leading the whole plan to unravel. However, the mistake also helps Mama better under stand Zara’s grandmother (early on, Mama had encouraged her parents to sort through their clutter, to her own mother’s consternation) and sparks a conversation between Mama and Zara about holding on to treasured belongings. Khan’s loving depiction of Zara and her Pakistani American Muslim family is accompanied by energetic illustrations by Haikal. References to Marie Kondo, Zara’s mother’s worries about her parents, and the way the misunderstanding unfolds also make this fun, quick read feel fresh and realistic.

mention mouth-) opening look into a common yet myste rious activity.

“No, bugs don’t yawn,” as Kim pithily puts it, but nearly all other large animals, including penguins, snakes, and guinea pigs, do. Humans begin just 12 to 14 weeks after conception, more often as we grow and then less as we age. Why? There are no clear answers, but, as she observes, people often do it when bored, fatigued, hungry, or focusing on a task. Also, and perhaps most mysteriously of all, it’s mightily contagious, as anyone viewing the author’s neatly drawn, geometrically exact scenes of daintily yawning, diverse figures will discover. Picture books from Susan Bonners’ Just in Passing (1989) on have conveyed the same lesson but usually as a means of pitching a wakeful tyke willy-nilly into slumberland. Here, past victims or caregivers curious about how that happens will get the same effect but with some background facts and findings on the phenomenon added in and capped with an unusually large list of sources cited. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Informative and, intrinsically, interactive. (Informational picture book. 4 7)

OODLES OF DOODLES! Kontis, Alethea Illus. by Christophe Jacques Simon Spotlight (32 pp.) $17.99 | Sept. 27, 978-1-66590-380-62022Series:Ready-to-ReadTheconversationof two egg-shaped characters reinforces for beginning read ers the long “oo” sound and several sight words.

The larger, blue creature—replete with suspenders and a fedora—greets the smaller, green one: “Hello! Do you doodle?” The ensuing conversation affirms that not only do both char acters doodle, but the poodle who belongs to the smaller egg doodles prolifically. Illustrations of the little dog drawing with pencils and pieces of white paper clarify the meaning of doodle The friendly characters have large, googly eyes and big grins, while the petite poodle wears round spectacles and a beret. The mostly rhyming conversation—full of words ending in oodle—appears to take place in an urban park, with a low brick wall behind the characters eventually becoming a makeshift art gallery. The blue egg and the green egg barter for doodles of various subjects from each other and from the doodling poodle. The book uses more than one definition of noodle as well as funny, memorable wordplay (“Think of the doodles we could doodle with a caboodle of doodling poodles!”). All words

A tale about a relatable mishap—and our often complex relationships with material possessions. (Fiction. 7 10)

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THE YAWN BOOK

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 101 adultyoung

of No Fuzzball (2020) deals with an adorable interloper.

one tiny bubble

Fun for young noodlers and doodlers. (Early reader. 3 6)

Lee, Gee eun Trans. by Sophie Bowman Amazon Crossing Kids (40 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-66250-825-72022Author/illustrator

As furry and funny as the first. (Picture book. 2 7)

Roomba.) Her subjects have a surprise for her, though: a little sister. A tiny, white furball of a kitten pops out of a box, saying to NoFuzzball, “Hi, I love you! Who are you?” She’s pretty clue less, and at first NoFuzzball wants nothing to do with her. When the newcomer proves her usefulness with a sneak attack on the canine subject, however, NoFuzzball decides to train her up as a princess. Grooming lessons, stealth lessons, even shredding lessons don’t seem to go well—but suddenly, as the little kitten climbs the curtains, the subjects start chanting, “NoSnowball!” NoFuzzball has her princess, and they agree to rule together. Kung follows up her tale of queenly kitty confusion with the inevitable new-sibling story. Her watercolor and gouache illus trations of a family and their wide-eyed, endearing pets are a perfect match (and mismatch) for the tale’s action—hilariously, NoFuzzball’s interpretation of events is sometimes at odds with what is depicted in the artwork. One of the parents in the fam ily is tan-skinned, the other is lighter-skinned, and the child is light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A touching tale that exudes love and warmth. (Picture book. 5 8)

A simple, matter-of-fact reminder that we are all con nected. (glossary) (Informational picture book. 6 8)

are in large print. Two readers could easily alternate reading the dialogue aloud. Preschoolers will enjoy the short rhymes, word repetition, and cartoonlike art. One light-skinned human figure appears toward the end.

to LUCA, the “squishy blob” that sits at the end of the deepest root of the fam ily tree that includes every living thing.

NO SNOWBALL!

MY GRANDMOM

Gee-eun, a Korean child, is introduced seeking comfort in her grandma’s arms as her mother leaves for work. Softly tex tured lines and colors are blended and smudged to invoke a sense of intimacy as Grandma, or Halmoni, distracts Gee-eun by making knife-cut noodles together. As they slurp the wellearned meal of kalguksu, they talk about how Halmoni raised Gee-eun’s mother when she was younger. The forthright, poi gnant narrative reveals that Gee-eun is worried about who will accompany her to the upcoming Family Sports Day in her par ents’ absence. Halmoni answers in stride, telling stories of her athleticism and the nicknames she earned for her prowess. On the big day, children and their parents run in curved streaks of color across the pages as Halmoni and Gee-eun participate in the first race. “Halmoni, fast! Faster! Even Faster!” Yet Halmoni falls, and Gee-eun begins to sob. The disappointed pair walk through different neighborhoods in Korea that are saturated in warm colors, vivid shapes, and images as Halmoni offers a curry bun to Gee-eun to cheer her up. When they arrive home and Halmoni prepares a feast for the entire family, the experience is cemented as a fond memory. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Black-furred, fluffy feline NoFuzz ball is happy in her queendom with her three human subjects chanting her name to worship her. (They are, of course, tell ing her to stop whatever mischief she is up to, like riding the

ONE TINY BUBBLE The Story of Our Last Universal Common Ancestor Krossing, Karen Illus. by Dawn Lo Owlkids Books (32 pp.)

$18.95 | Sept. 13, 978-1-77147-445-02022Anintroduction

What with falling meteorites, erupting volcanoes, and vio lent weather, the Earth of over 3 billion years ago was, Kros sing writes with considerable understatement, an “unfriendly world”—but it was then that our Last Universal Common Ancestor “formed from / the dust of exploded stars.” It had no legs, arms, eyes, mouth, or stomach, but because it would divide, grow, and change to develop all those and more, it connects us to all the “mushrooms and moss, / fir trees and ferns, / bacte ria and bedbugs, / sea stars and sharks, / lizards and lions” on our planet. Lo gives this narrative a cozy, intimate feeling with a quick progression of broadly brushed scenes featuring figures from an amorphous glob with a few indistinct organelles inside through the appearance of low green plants and orange dino saurs to a final view of a family of brown-skinned human camp ers smiling up at swirling northern lights and stars. Indeed, the author and the illustrator suggest at the end, the miracle that is us could well be repeated on another world. Readers after a fuller account of evolution might pair this with the likes of Lisa Westberg Peters’ Our Family Tree (2003), illustrated by Lauren Stringer; those wondering how scientists deduced LUCA’s exis tence and nature will find details in an afterword in a smaller type and a source list at the end. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Lee draws on childhood experiences in this South Korean import about a girl who gains a greater appreciation for her grandma.

Kung, Isabella Orchard/Scholastic (40 pp.) $14.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-338-56546-12022Theregalprotagonist

“A simple, matter of fact reminder that we are all connected.”

their familiars—and that they must find them in the wild as a team. Marina and the others set out on a journey to reveal her Mythie first. Infused with a mild dose of peril, this straightfor ward story unfolds with a satisfying earnestness that pays off with an expected but entertaining ending. Readers with anxiety will see themselves in Marina, who deals with stomachaches and racing thoughts throughout the journey. Ember, a Mythic with dark skin and curly hair, was born with one arm, which is addressed in the story. Marina and her family have brown skin and straight hair.

In the land of Terrafamiliar, everyone has an animal com panion, or familiar, with whom they’re matched up. On Pair ing Day, 10-year-olds like Marina all discover their familiars and begin the rest of their lives together. Marina worries that she’ll match with a scary or difficult animal. Puzzlingly, however, she doesn’t connect with any animal at all and soon discovers that she and a handful of other 10-year-old girls from across Terrafamiliar have similarly been left solo, an unprecedented phenomenon. Marina and the others learn that they are Myth ics—special kids who have mythical creatures, aka Mythies, as

Jedi Padawan Rooper Nitani, a 14-year-old human with brown skin and eyes, eagerly anticipates the thrill of an adven ture when she, her master, and their Pathfinder team follow a distressed message from another Jedi Master who reports sabo tage and an ambush. They travel to the planet Aubadas, home of the Katikoot, an advanced civilization of flightless, batlike peo ple. A promise to help with fuel supply problems sent the miss ing team to the mines of Gloam, Aubadas’ polluted and dying twin planet, but only the Katikoot guide returned alive from the mission after monsters attacked them. With the lives of her allies and the future of a whole civilization on the line, Rooper struggles with the heavy realities of her responsibility as a Jedi. The looming threat of further sabotage forewarned by the incit ing distress message heightens the suspense as Rooper ventures into danger. Intertwining themes of environmental disaster, the detrimental impacts of capitalism, and what it means to be a monster play a significant role in the conflict. Sweeping action sequences, well-timed shifts among different points of view, and a touch of levity from bantering droids all add to the story’s appeal. Final art not seen.

Marina and the Kraken Magaziner, Lauren Illus. by Mirelle Ortega Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins (144 $16.99pp.)|

A fun first installment in a new series that will prime read ers for more. (Fantasy. 7 10)

Could use clearer safety cautions for actual would-be observers, but armchair nature lovers will grab with both paws. (glossary, index) (Informational picture book. 7 9)

animal familiar.

A high-stakes, coming-of-age adventure with relevant realworld themes. (timeline) (Fantasy. 10 16)

THE MYTHICS

Lewis Jones, Huw Illus. by Sam Caldwell Thames & Hudson (48 pp.) $18.95 | Nov. 1, 978-0-500-65276-32022Alongwithanswering

In the midst of ongoing war, a team of Jedi and Republic Pathfinders vanish during a mission to provide emergency fuel for a planet in energy crisis.

102 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

the titular question (“You bet they do!”), this field guide to bears presents a…heaping helping of facts.

Whatever readers, particularly those who actually live in bear territory, may think of Lewis-Jones’ positioning bears as “cute and cuddly” creatures and of Caldwell’s placing himself and the author in several painted scenes peeking out of bushes just a few feet away from their wild ursine subjects (“They should be watched from a safe distance.” No kidding!), there are enough behavioral notes, biological basics, and even bear references in myth and legend to satisfy most omnivorous younger natural ists. Not only do the eight extant species get individual charac ter files and closer looks, with nods to both long and recently extinct species and the ultra-rare Gobi grizzly (perhaps less than 40 left), but the author explains in detail how the crea ture’s supersharp sense of smell works, how they communicate, and (natch) what scientists can learn from analyzing the con tents of their voluminous scat—which, along with the expected food waste, “has been known to include tin cans, pizza boxes, plastic watches and even hubcaps.” In the illustrations, the two nature guides are occasionally joined by a cast of light- and darkskinned children or researchers in museums or woodsy settings. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

QUEST FOR THE HIDDEN CITY Mann, George Illus. by Nilah Magruder Disney Lucasfilm (304 pp.) $14.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-368-08010-12022Series:StarWars:The High Republic

DO BEARS POOP IN THE WOODS?

Sept. 6, 978-0-06-305888-02022Series:TheMythics,1Ayounggirlseeksher

When a nature-based calamity befalls a pair of young broth ers, the boys find refuge and community among sandy shores.

habitats and their residents.Definitively making the point that mermaids can be found anywhere there is water—even a little, or for a little while—Martin depicts doz ens of types, each linked to a specific (real) locale and arranged by their favored habitats, from deep ocean abyssal zones to shal low desert pools, hot springs to swimming pools. Martin notes 11 species that dwell in wetlands alone, including residents of both fresh and saltwater marshes as well as mangrove swamps, bayous, baygall bogs, freezing wetlands, and ciénagas. There are male merfolk, the author admits, but she sticks to the feminine term. To assist young nature detectives, each mermaid is posed in a natural setting along with selected specimens of wildlife that share the same habitat. As mermaids are great mimics, they tend to resemble their wild companions, and so along with displaying individual adornments and embellishments, they are each as distinctive looking as the accurately rendered fish, marine mammals, reptiles, and other not-so-mythical creatures on view. Moreover, enlightening discussions of mermaid behav iors and environmental concerns mingle with general questions and activities suitable for any encounters with nature. Readers will come away uniquely prepared to find and identify these elusive creatures as well as the vast array of aquatic niches they (putatively) inhabit.

The child’s sorrow is palpable as the house is packed and the tías are tearfully embraced. On the road, the family passes a boarded-up bakery and a store with a sign declaring that Mexicans aren’t served there. When nighttime comes, they and other families sit by a campfire and talk about the lives they left behind; the child’s parents describe picking pecans “here in Texas.” The book ends with the family reaching the Mexi can border; the author’s note explains that the story takes place in the 1930s during a largely forgotten chapter of U.S. history:

Martin, Emily B. Henry Holt (144 pp.) $13.99 | Sept. 27, 978-1-250-79432-12022Aguidetowatery

STILL DREAMING /SEGUIMOS SOÑANDO

Powerfully compelling. (Picture book. 4 8)

“Powerfully compelling”

An indispensable, encyclopedic resource for nature quests—mythological or otherwise. (Fantasy. 11 15)

In this bilingual English-Spanish tale, a brown-skinned child describes the journey their family must undertake, head ing to a country only Papá knows.

Images of happier times adorn the title and copyright pages: a birthday party, a snuggle on a couch. Turn the page, and a catastrophe emerges with “a howl, / a dark whirl of wind and power.” Snapshots of destruction—homes destroyed, a fallen roof—follow. Bruised purples and deep reds bleed across the artwork, a solemn, breathtaking portrait of ruin. It’s now night, and the brothers can’t find their parents. Covering their shoul ders with a blanket, the children walk “one foot in front of the other,” away from the destruction behind them. They arrive at a beach, where they lie down; others slumber near them, “strewn on the shore like shells, / like rocks, like driftwood.” Morning comes, bringing with it soothing light. Hunger pulls the broth ers out of their thoughts and toward a fire, where others gather. With the calm waves at their feet, the survivors huddle near the fire, waiting until help breaks through the horizon. This pain ful yet hopeful tale renders its difficult subject matter palpable. Mayper’s decision to omit specific context from this tale—in, as she describes in an author’s note, a move toward “our human connection”—proves sensible thanks to evocative text that allows readers to fill in the details. Similarly, the artwork delin eates moods and emotions via a precise, rich palette that favors visceral landscapes and nondescript characters to its advantage. Characters are dark-haired and light-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Martínez, Claudia Guadalupe Illus. by Magdalena Mora Trans. by Luis Humberto Crosthwaite Children’s Book Press (40 pp.) $20.95 | Oct. 11, 978-0-89239-434-02022

night on the sand

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 103 adultyoung

A tale about a specific moment in history that is neverthe less universal. (Picture book. 5 8)

NIGHT ON THE SAND

Mayper, Monica Illus. by Jaime Kim Clarion/HarperCollins (32 pp.) $17.99 | Aug. 16, 978-1-328-88418-32022

A FIELD GUIDE TO MERMAIDS

Mexican Repatriation. After the Mexican-American War of the 1840s, Mexican territories were annexed by the United States, and many Mexicans were encouraged to come to the United States to work; during the Great Depression, however, many were forced to leave. Some families, like the one in this story, included both U.S. citizens and those born in Mexico and so chose to leave together to avoid being separated. Martínez’s straightforward text and Mora’s signature smudgy yet vibrant illustrations bring to life a story that reminds us that little has changed in U.S. history, as immigrant families still face deporta tion and the fear of separation. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

whose tracks in the snow?

language will spur children to become wintertime trackers.Rhyming

THE SECRETS OF STONE CREEK McDonald, Briana Simon & Schuster (400 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 22, 978-1-5344-9826-62022StungthatSophie,

her friend and former fellow adventurer, made other plans for spring break, seventh grader Finley vows to have a superior adventure without her.

Milton, Alexandra Boxer Books (32 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-912757-94-72022Cluesanddescriptive

Best for patient readers. (Mystery. 8 12)

THE INVISIBLE SPY McMann, Lisa Putnam (336 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-593-32543-82022Series:TheForgotten

“Sure to lure children into the woods.”

A spy-flavored romp. (Fantasy. 8 12)

Finley’s annoyed when Mom, traveling on business, makes 13-year-old Oliver responsible for her and Griffin, who’s 8, while the siblings spend spring break with their adult cousin Jeff in Stone Creek, Vermont. The town is commemorating the 20th anniversary of the disappearance of Meggie Riley, who at 12 discovered a trove of valuable antiques in the woods. At 23, she went missing in those same woods, and the $100,000 reward for finding her is as of yet unclaimed. Fascinated, Finley’s confident she can solve the mystery—and make Sophie sorry she missed the excitement. Among the suspects are Meggie’s family mem bers, a business rival profiting from her story, and men she knew, including Jeff and the father of Jason, Oliver’s new crush. Secur ing Oliver’s reluctant (and Griffin’s enthusiastic) assistance, Fin ley feels scared but vindicated when her investigations attract unwelcome attention from a mysterious person who begins tail ing them. The lengthy novel’s meandering pace unfortunately inhibits suspense; action scenes are paused repeatedly while Finley reacts, repeating already well-aired emotions that are punctuated with flashbacks. Finley’s dreams of achieving celeb rity ring true, but while she spells out her grievances and gran diose hopes in repetitive detail, her quarry, Meggie, remains out of focus, her story too thin to explain its decadeslong grip on her hometown. Characters are presumed White.

The Forgotten Five—a ragtag team of youths with unique superpowers— partner with new allies to take down President Fuerte and his sinister plot that implicates the kids’ criminal parents.

104 | 15 september 2022 children’s | kirkus.com

the five friends for the fight ahead. The team’s first mission? To figure out what’s up with President Fuerte, the man behind Estero’s anti-super fervor, as rumors abound of his nightly excursions abroad for clandestine meetups with supernaturals and to plan more thefts. Then he inexplicably repeals the antisuper laws. It also seems that some of the Five’s parents have covertly joined forces with the president. Resuming right from the end of Map of Flames (2022), this volume packs in a whole lot of espionage fun and poignant family drama. McMann’s explo ration of the Five’s conflicting feelings over their parents’ inten tions works marvelously to stir an adventure that’s more of a gut punch than its predecessor. A bundle of shocking, slightly zany plot twists and political intrigue, this follow-up delivers the goods. Characters have a range of skin tones.

Sure to lure children into the woods. (life-size tracks) (Informational picture book. 3 7)

WHOSE TRACKS IN THE SNOW?

Overnight, news of a daring escape by supers from the presi dent’s palace spreads across Estero. Hiding from palace guards for their role in the breakout, Birdie, Seven, Tenner, Cabot, and Brix find refuge in an underground maze and, eventually, in a monastery. Much-needed support comes from former Estero spy The Librarian and Lada, a young super with cerebral palsy who uses crutches and a wheelchair. They help train and prepare

text that begins identically on every other spread—“Look! Look! / Tracks in the snow!”—describes the main characteristics of each track for readers and then asks them to guess who made it. “Tracks with three points, / Tracks like a wedge. / Who left the tracks by the snow-topped hedge?” Smudgy black tracks echo what children would see in nature, and a glimpse of a part of each animal gives a further clue. In this case, the vibrant tip of a blue, yellow, and orange tail. The page turn reveals the answer—a long-tailed pheasant—and a short paragraph of information. Though the rhyme stumbles once (claws with fours), the descriptions of tracks are stellar, giv ing kids similes and adjectives that they can then use for other things; the duck’s tracks are like kites, the red squirrel’s are like fingers and have claws, and the deer’s are heart-shaped and in two lines. Made with shredded and torn handmade paper and colored pencil, the spreads are filled with gorgeous textures, encouraging the eye to pore over not just the tracks, but the animals’ habitats as well. The snow isn’t flat white; it has shad ings and color variations. And while the animals look realisti cally furry or feathered, the foliage is more stylistic: a pine with lace collars of snow, another with delicately feathered branches. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Five, 2

GRUMPY NEW YEAR Moore, Katrina Illus. by Xindi Yan Little Bee Books (40 pp.) $18.99 | Dec. 13, 978-1-4998-1282-42022

into a parallel world, 12-year-old Oscar from Sydney, Australia, finds himself involved in an elaborate quest to save a town of Elves.

One Monday morning at the skate park, Oscar Banetti gazes into a mir ror and finds himself transported to another skate park where a giant silver wave is speeding toward him. That same day, 13-year-old Imogen Mettlestone-Staranise, her two sisters, a cousin, and another boy are summoned to the Elven city that is buried beneath a blanket of silver. Witches have placed all the Elves under a sleeping spell. Imogen and the children also wit ness Oscar apparently being killed by the silver wave. In fact, Oscar’s not dead—though he’s now stranded in this magical world until the Elves are freed. In order for this to happen, the six young people must become questers, deciphering enigmatic

Nail-bitingly suspenseful and refreshingly witty. (Fantasy. 9 13)

Definitely buzzworthy. (Science fiction. 9 13)

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 105 adultyoung

OSCAR FROM ELSEWHERE Moriarty, Jaclyn Levine Querido (400 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-64614-202-62022Accidentallyslipping

In this follow-up to Grandpa Grumps (2020), a Chinese fam ily enjoys a traditional celebration.

A simpatico portrayal of holiday travel across time zones. (author’s and illustrator’s notes) (Picture book. 4 7)

clues to find nine pieces of a key held by different key keepers, unlock a spell, and set the Elven city free within five days—or the Elves will die. Organized by the advancing days of the week to heighten the tension, the complex, fast-paced plot unfolds in Oscar’s and Imogen’s droll, alternating voices. On this endlessly surprising, often precarious, sometimes frustrating, and seem ingly doomed quest, the children encounter magical creatures, including a Genie, Radish Gnomes, Crystal Faeries, and Water Sprites as their “tricky, tricksy trip” becomes a true journey of self-discovery. Oscar has Italian, Scottish, and Chilean heritage; Imogen reads White.

starts middle school with a literally electrifying secret to keep.After eight years of home schooling and sudden flights with his fanatically cautious mother, frustrated Trex jumps at the chance to be a “normal” kid for once—a tall order, as his whole body functions as a capacitor to power the experimental bioware in his brain, and touching anyone else or any metal item creates a dangerous electric spark. Worse yet, unbeknownst to Trex and (initially) his mom, the evil technocrat who financed the experiment has caught up with them at long last and, eager to get him back onto the operating table for further slicing and dicing, has hacked into his mental settings. Morrell really stacks the deck against her protagonist, but along with casting him with a winning mixture of decency and smarts, she deals him Mellie, a sharp young recluse who fancies herself a detective and, despite struggling with a profound anxiety disorder, proves a redoubtable ally through cascading crises that escalate from pranks into kidnappings, brutal attempted murders, last-tick rescues, and shocks both literal and in the form of revelations about Trex’s history, family, and even identity. Trex and the rest of the central cast are White; two siblings in the supporting cast are Black. The author offers reassurance to readers who identify with Mellie in an afterword.

There are 10 days until the new year when this picture book opens, and the countdown begins as Daisy travels to China to visit her grandfather, accompanied by Auntie. Daisy stays awake throughout the long flight while anticipating all the fun she and Yeh-Yeh (grandpa) will have together. When her bird kite fails to take off like Yeh-Yeh’s, however, and as jet lag sets in, Daisy becomes grumpy: Nothing—not the karaoke or painting or boat ride Yeh-Yeh arranged—feels as enjoyable as she had expected. Daisy’s struggle to process her emotions while hoping they will not affect Yeh-Yeh will resonate with anyone who has managed both their own and others’ disappointment. Eventually, Daisy succumbs to exhaustion and sleeps for well over a day, waking in time to help make zong zi (sticky rice treats wrapped in bamboo leaves). Only two days are left until the new year when Daisy’s spirits finally lift during an outing to the market, where she and Yeh-Yeh share a hearty laugh. Vivid spreads alternate between vignettes and close-ups of facial expressions registering surprise, frustration, and fatigue, while atmospheric full bleeds convey a child’s sense of wonder, festive fireworks, an extended-family gathering, and a bustling street parade. Cantonese and Manda rin phrases are featured; the backmatter includes two recipes. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

TREX Morrell, Christyne Delacorte (304 pp.) $16.99 | Aug. 30, 978-0-593-43324-92022A12-year-oldfugitive

“Tongue in cheek, pedal to the metal action, with an unusually broad cast of humans, aliens, and…others.”

Murray, James S. & Carsen Smith Illus. by Patrick Spaziante Penguin Workshop (240 pp.) $16.99 | Oct. 25, 978-0-593-22614-82022Series:Area51Interns, 2

Tongue-in-cheek, pedal-to-the-metal action, with an unusually broad cast of humans, aliens, and…others. (Science fiction. 8 12)

Abby hosts a sleepover with her friends. She admits that she likes Jake, and shortly after, she receives a threatening text from an unknown number, warning her to stay away from “him”— presumably Jake. Leah tells her it must be a wrong number, but Abby isn’t so sure—especially when Leah texts Abby reminding her of their recently deceased classmate Sara James, who was killed in a car crash and who had been romantically involved

with Jake. After Jake asks Abby to an upcoming dance, strange things start happening—Abby sees a girl staring into her win dow, and she finds a lock of hair in her drawer. She starts to won der if Sara’s ghost could be responsible. The first in a series of graphic-novel adaptations of the You’re Invited to a Creepover titles has real appeal for late elementary and middle school read ers. The story is immediately engaging and comes to a quick res olution. There are twists and turns, and just when the narrative feels predictable, it takes a turn that will keep readers guessing. Fans of Goosebumps and Stranger Things graphic novels will certainly enjoy this one. Dynamic artwork with effective use of color ramps up the creep factor without ever becoming too terrifying. Abby presents as Black, while Jake, Leah, and Sara present as White.

ZONED OUT

Sure to please young connoisseurs of terror tales. (Graphic novel. 8 12)

is adopted by a gorilla.Life at the Renfanan orphanage is a drag. Gerd, the manager, is sour-faced and demanding. The children clean vig orously and hope to get adopted. But when a gorilla arrives to take her pick of the children, they run from sight to escape being adopted. Nine-year-old, brown-skinned Jonna, who bears the brunt of Gerd’s insults, doesn’t disappear quickly enough and is horrified to be chosen as the gorilla’s adoptee. Gorilla’s home is one room in an abandoned factory building, and she earns money selling scrap. But Jonna quickly becomes accus tomed to living with Gorilla and is comforted by her new caregiver’s kindness and humor. Jonna also gets used to a freer existence, with unkempt hair and no shoes, and learns to ride a bike and then to drive a car. When a predatory prospector decides that the threat of losing Jonna will make Gorilla finally give up her land, Gorilla and Jonna must decide how to reclaim their freedom. Aside from Jonna and a few other orphans, most characters present as White in the illustrations (stills from an animated feature film based on this story). The premise of this Swedish import relies on overdone tropes, such as the Dicken sian orphanage and the racialized misunderstood savage—there are frequent references to the ape’s “black” body parts, and over time, her kindness outweighs her beastly behaviors. Despite some interesting plot developments, it is unsettling at best.

If it’s not aliens, it’s cryptids and ide alists that complicate the lives of Area 51’s teen Barelyinterns.aweek since the harrowing events of Alien Summer (2022), the discovery of a tantalizing Forbidden Zone beneath Area 51’s sprawling facility pitches Viv, Charlotte, Elijah, and Ray (with cute pocket alien Meekee) into an escalating catastrophe after parties unknown stage a mass breakout of cryptids ranging from jackalopes and a huge but (being Canadian) polite lady Yeti named Roger to a terrifying Chupacabra with mind-control powers. What with Viv’s unsuc cessfully struggling to suppress her own recently revealed alien powers and also stewing over the attention Elijah seems to be paying to newly arrived auburn-haired brainiac Joanna Kim, Murray and Smith also stir plenty of emotional turmoil into the effervescent whirl of attacks, betrayals, and cliffhangers. As it turns out, the cryptids were released by a well-meaning animal rights activist, and if the authors sidestep a meaningful discus sion of the ins and outs of that issue, they do at least give the ethics of the act some nuance on the way to a tidy and (improb ably) fatality-free resolution. Spaziante contributes a helpful set of colorful creature and locale files. As previously established, Viv is Black, Elijah is Latine, and their fellow interns are White; Joanna’s surname may point to Korean heritage.

Abby’s admission during her sleepover seems to have incited jealousy from some one—she just needs to learn who.

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TRUTH OR DARE...THE GRAPHIC NOVEL Night, P.J. Illus. by Glass House Graphics Simon Spotlight (160 pp.) $20.99 | Sept. 6, 978-1-66591-564-92022Series:You’reInvited to a Creepover: The Graphic Novel, 1

An engaging narrative can’t rescue this story from prob lematic tropes. (Fiction. 8 12)

THE APE STAR Nilsson, Frida Trans. by Julia Marshall Gecko Press (144 pp.) $18.99 | Sept. 6, 978-1-77657-421-62022Amisfitorphan

zoned out

a conflict at school.Mr. Li’s class will be hosting a wax museum. Students will dress as notable figures and stand like statues—until they come alive for visitors. Reina Ramos has her heart set on dressing as Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, who was strong (“like my mami and abuela—and me!”) and loved to paint. Reina is crushed when her friend Nora picks Frida for the project, and she must sort out her big feelings of disappoint ment and frustration. But Nora and Reina talk to each other about the project and smooth over their friendship. Reina’s abuela helps her think of another amazing Latine star to emu late—singer Celia Cruz—and the wax museum is a success. Les sons about flexibility, communication, and caring are embedded in a sweet school story. Readers won’t be able to resist Reina’s spunky enthusiasm and her tender heart. Reina is brownskinned, her classmates are depicted with a variety of skin tones, and Mr. Li presents as Asian. A brief glossary at the end of the book illuminates the lives of the famous Latine role models the students have selected for the wax museum.

REINA RAMOS WORKS IT OUT Otheguy, Emma Illus. by Andrés Landazábal Harper/HarperCollins (32 pp.)

HAMMER Fight for the Ocean Kingdom Odin, Jey Rockport Publishers (224 pp.) $13.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-0-7603-7692-8Series:Hammer,2DOOM-studded

battles continue in this all-action, manga-style sequel. DO-OM! Compiling seven more segments originally published as web comics, the ongoing adventures of Stud, a light-skinned, blackhaired human lad, or Swirl, who comes with the ability to turn his extremities into enormous hammers, reach the end of an underwater story arc in which he helps dark-skinned merfolk allies bring a terrifying lawbreaker to bay. Though each chapter opens with a color tableau, the art then switches to small panels crammed with dizzying monochrome scribbles of lines around mighty blasts, grimacing faces, and thunderous noises crowd ing, or often drawn as bursting beyond, the page borders. The bad guy, Steele—a sort of monstrous shark-squid—in particular, seems too big to be visible all at once. But after his menacing minions are reduced to sushi and despite sporting giant, writh ing tentacles and seemingly invulnerable ink armor, even he falls at last with a mighty DONG to his diminutive nemesis’s ultimate weapon, the awesome HAMMER HEADBUTT! Of course, hints of an even more powerful foe in Stud’s future drop (cue a final, melodramatic DOOM) in the last panel. The work is cluttered and confusing at times, but this volume may appeal to fans of the series.

who repurposed “old drain pipes, door keys, metal forks and spoons, X-ray films, bottle caps, glue canisters,” and more into custom-made instruments over a period of years. At last, the child musicians each got the instrument they needed to create music under the tutelage of Favio. “And what music they made!” Indeed, this remarkable retelling of the surprising origins of the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura, which has since gained inter national acclaim, motivates by the sheer ingenuity described. Oliver’s text carefully chronicles each step undertaken by Favio in his quest to share a little music and hope with the town of Cateura, a community toiling through the material excesses of the modern world. Uribe’s artwork—full of color yet naturalis tic in its depictions—complements the prose. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 107 adultyoung

Oliver, Carmen Illus. by Luisa Uribe Eerdmans (44 pp.) $18.99 | Oct. 25, 978-0-8028-5467-42022Harmonycomesfrom

an unlikely place.

BUILDING AN ORCHESTRA OF HOPE How Favio Chávez Taught Children To Make Music From Trash

Arriving in Cateura, Paraguay, in 2006, the musically inclined Argentinean Favio Chávez expected to help the fami lies of “a small village built on a landfill” with a recycling project. The local recyclers, called gancheros, spent their days wading through loads of filthy trash to gather and sell whatever was salvageable. As Favio grew closer to the ganchero community, he worried about the futures of the children. Could he teach them to play instruments in his youth orchestra? One prob lem: “He had more kids than instruments.” An idea soon struck. Favio roped in a ganchero friend named Nicolás “Colá” Gómez,

978-0-06-322310-3Series:ICanRead!ALatinegirlnavigates

A sparkling tale starring a resilient young protagonist. (Spanish glossary) (Early reader. 4 7)

Like a dose of pure inspiration. (further information, bib liography) (Informational picture book. 5 10)

$4.99 paper | Sept. 20, 2022

Not the easiest to follow but a properly percussive climax. (Adventure comic. 10 13)

HAPPY SPARK DAY!

Richardson, Shane & Sarah Marino Aladdin (96 pp.)

A magic-filled treat. (Fantasy. 8 12)

Counting Critters

Van Dog is an anthropomorphic canine who loves art. On the first spread, details in the protagonist’s home, such as paint ing supplies and books about artists like Monet and Van Gogh, indicate this passion. Van Dog sets out by bicycle to paint en plein air, finding a spot in an open meadow and declaring, “What a beautiful day to paint.” The colorful, cartoonish scene soon becomes abuzz with bugs, worms, and other creatures whose speech balloons invite readers to pore over the pages and take in the visual details and running commentary. Strategic use of perspective denies readers a view of the protagonist’s canvas for most of the book, instead focusing attention on Van Dog and on the many characters, fantastic and otherwise, who show up and provide inspiration. The overall presentation of this story, translated from the Polish, is a bit chaotic and may make for a better individual or small-group reading rather than one with a large group. A culminating reveal of the painting at book’s end may disappoint some readers since its style is so similar to the art they’ve seen on prior pages; others, however, may enjoy play ing an I Spy sort of game to find characters they observed while Van Dog was painting. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A local park turns out to be rich in wildlife as two young “community scientists” learn from a day of organized observa tion and Joiningdiscovery.teams of volunteers led by expert naturalists,

A busy book with a heart for art. (Picture book. 4 7)

VAN DOG Pa, Illus.MikolajbyGosia Herba Trans. by the author Milky Way (50 pp.) $19.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-990252-12-92022Awacky,immersive

$19.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-5344-7524-32022Series:DragonsofEmber City, 1

to break a curse—or it will bring about her family’s demise.There’s a rule that no more than three Goode witches can be in the town of Cranberry Hollow at a time without unleashing a curse. It has been 5 years since 12-year-old Adelaide Goode, a curvy, White, redheaded witch, and her mom have visited her mother’s hometown—where her estranged mater nal aunt also lives. Feeling her mom is abandoning her at her grandmother’s house to go on a monthslong work trip, Addie does something that accidentally unleashes the curse, turning Addie’s bones to glass, awakening a witch hunter, and forcing her mom to stay. Set during Cranberry Hollow’s annual Hal loween festival, the book follows Addie and new friend Fatima, a Pakistani American hijabi girl with a love of all things relat ing to monsters and the macabre, as they work together to try to reverse the spell. Featuring fast-paced action and high

A promising introduction to a new series featuring a win some group of dragon pals. (Graphic novel. 6 9)

BIOBLITZ!

Welcome to Ember City on the day young dragons learn what their Spark is. Several dragons are attending the Spark Day Ceremony to find out what their special talents are, among them best friends Li, a green dragon who “always carries glue in case of emergencies,” Runa, a blue dragon who “thinks googly eyes can solve any problem,” and Drake, a flame-colored dragon with big ideas, as well as Fizz, a winged yellow dragon who doesn’t “always see eye to eye” with Drake. After everyone discovers their new powers, Mayor Copper leaves them with some advice: “Remember: our Sparks shine their brightest when we use them to help one another....” These words of wisdom are soon forgotten when, at the cele bration party, Drake and Fizz compete to see who has the best Spark and, in the process, shatter the legendary disco ball made “with the Sparks from all the dragons on the very first Spark Day.” When their individual efforts to repair the disco ball fail, some times with hilarious consequences, and alternative solutions prove impractical, the young dragons finally remember the mayor’s words and work together to restore the disco ball. This first book in a new graphic series for young readers consists of six short chapters illustrated with eye-catching, action-packed illustrations and plenty of onomatopoeia to make reading fun.

Richmond, Susan Edwards Illus. by Stephanie Fizer Coleman Peachtree (36 pp.)

$17.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-68263-311-32022

stakes, this novel also touches on Addie’s internal struggle as she strives to embrace her fat mother’s body positivity in a way that feels authentic to her age. Fatima is a crucial problemsolver for Addie, and though the friendship between the girls forms quickly, Fatima is bubbly and smart with her own goals and dreams, and she gets to be more than just a sidekick. The worldbuilding can be a bit rushed at times, but overall this is an enjoyable, festive autumnal adventure.

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THE GLASS WITCH Puckett, Lindsay Scholastic (224 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-338-80342-62022Ayoungwitchneeds

picture book about artistic inspiration.

Ten creatures show off their mental powers in a bid for sapi ent supremacy. Who will win?

Rish, Jocelyn Illus. by David Creighton Pester Running Press Kids (48 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-7624-7994-82022

SANTIAGO’S DINOSAURIOS

Budding zoologists will be strongly tempted to join in. (resource list) (Informational picture book. 7 9)

The many vehicles that help the farm run throughout all fourTrucksseasons.from Rinker’s previous outings roar up to the farm, ready to work. They meet Big Tractor and Pickup Truck, who show them the ropes. In spring, everyone helps to prep the fields, which involves plowing, planting, and clearing. Big Trac tor and Little Tractor are the stars of that season. Summer is the time to gather hay for the livestock. Balers help roll it up. Excavator, Skid Steer, Bulldozer, and others also finally get to show off their skills during this season. The team also works together to construct a beautiful red barn—a moment that will draw comparisons to old-fashioned barn raisings. Autumn finds Combine and Augur harvesting, while winter sees Bulldozer clearing snow and Excavator moving hay. Each season has spe cific jobs on the farm, with nary a human in sight. The lovable, multiwheeled protagonists get up at sunrise, tend to the fields with smiles on their grills, and roll into night after a hard day’s work, proud of their contributions. Ford’s carefully composed illustrations use color to lovely effect, employing verdant hues for spring and golden yellows for summer. Truck enthusiasts will step right up for this next installment, and urban tots will glimpse a whole new world. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Ríos Ramírez, Mariana Illus. by Udayana Lugo Whitman (32 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 1, 978-0-8075-7230-62022Onhisfirstday

May require multiple readings until the cows come home. (Picture book. 3 6)

santiago’s dinosaurios

FARMING STRONG, ALL YEAR LONG Rinker, Sherri Duskey Illus. by A.G. Ford Chronicle Books (48 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-79721-387-32022Series:ConstructionSite

cousins Ava and Gabriel compete for sightings as they comb open woodlands and underbrush for animal species. Young readers will have no trouble following along and understand ing the rules and procedures, not to mention keeping track of finds, because along with many having their names called out in the dialogue, each accurately rendered bird, insect, and other creature is numbered in the pictures and identified in a running side list. By day’s end, 84 types of animals have been cataloged, from a mosquito and pillbug (“It’s a crustacean. Did you know some bugs are related to lobsters?”) to white-tailed deer and an elusive blue-spotted salamander. Along with a version of the list broken down by category (amphibians, reptiles, birds, etc.) that serves as an index, Richmond appends both expanded nature notes and an invitation to take part in similar community “bio diversity counts” (also referred to as “Bioblitzes”), explaining that they are “important tools for learning about the health and biodiversity of an area.” Ava and Gabriel are brown-skinned; the human figures in Coleman’s expansive outdoor scenes are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Santiago is starting school in the United States after moving from Mexico. He readies his dinosaur-themed backpack with all of his dinosaur school supplies, including his favorite dino saur book. Worries, nonetheless, plague him. “¿Cómo haré nuevos amigos?” he wonders (“How will I make new friends?”), particularly because he doesn’t speak or understand English yet. When Mrs. Taylor introduces Santiago to the rest of the class, he recoils from all the attention. Though the boy sitting next to him greets him, Santiago can’t find the words beyond sharing his name in Spanish—and he worries that he “has a Brachiosaurus sized problem.” Library time introduces more language barriers. However, the day improves when Santiago goes to music class, where a classmate flashes a thumbs-up at Santiago’s cool dino saur shirt. Now, “Santiago’s problem might only be Iguanodon sized.” With compassion and insight, Ríos Ramírez chronicles the anxieties that many children feel upon attending school in a new country. The use of dinosaurs to measure Santiago’s appre hensions works well (further underscored with the dinosaurstamped endpapers). Unitalicized Spanish words and phrases slip in throughout the tale, with translations tucked away at the bottoms of pages. Mrs. Taylor is Black; Lugo’s vibrant, smilefilled illustrations feature a diverse group of students. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

“A rawr ing good depiction of being the new kid.”

A rawr-ing good depiction of being the new kid. (dinosaur glossary) (Picture book. 4 8)

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 109 adultyoung

BATTLE OF THE BRAINS The Science Behind Animal Minds

of school in a new country, a young boy discovers a dinomite way to make friends.

As in Battle of the Butts (2021), also illustrated by CreightonPester, Rish invites readers to judge. After wowing them with some head-exploding research, she asks them to decide where each animal belongs on a five-stage scale, from “Basic Brain” to “Incredible Intelligence.” That won’t be an easy task because the exploits—most of which were observed under controlled conditions—range from African grey parrots naming colors and counting up to eight, rats learning how to drive little cars, and a border collie who could identify more than a thousand toys by

A warm subterranean friendship tale, though unlikely to get many repeat readings…ings…ings. (Picture book. 5 8)

The Danger Club faces a dangerous plot during a sports tournament in this sequel.

Rodin, Al Tundra Books (32 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-77488-062-32022Ashyechofindsher

Readers will want to level up quickly to tackle the cliff hanger ending. (Fantasy. 8 12)

A no-brainer stocked with full measures of breezy scien tific gosh-wow. (glossary) (Informational picture book. 6 8)

voice just in time to save a young cave explorer.

Harper/HarperCollins (224 pp.) $12.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-06-303914-82022Series:Dungeons&

Dragons: Dungeon Academy, 2

The book spotlights children from neighborhoods around the world. Along with a brief summary, each entry contains a simplified map of important locations in the child’s life. An entry devoted to Rejan, a young girl liv ing in Cairo, Egypt, features a map that includes her home, her mosque, her school, and the main road near the Nile. Another spread, devoted to Moana, a boy who lives on Tongareva in the Cook Islands, includes a map that highlights the child’s church, his home, a nearby solar farm, and the wharf where Moana is learning to fish. Each map includes a compass, a legend, and a

TOURNEY OF TERROR Roux, Madeleine Illus. by Tim Probert

LITTLE ECHO

After the events of No Humans Allowed! (2021), Zelli’s dreams are plagued by cryptic nightmares sent by the defeated necro mancer, Lord Carrion, held captive in the Dungeon Academy detention room. While the adults, including secretly human Zel li’s adoptive minotaur mothers, tell her to leave it to the grownups, she’s not convinced they’re doing enough. She enlists the Danger Club to help research Lord Carrion’s clues. But then the school’s thrown into chaos, hosting the Waterdeep Dragons for the Tourney of Terror, a monstrous sporting event. Aside from the sports rivalry, there’s interspecies tension between the drag ons and the monsters. Investigating portals while everyone’s distracted, black-haired Zelli discovers a dragon who’s actually a human boy. From their shared secret knowledge of each other’s identities, Zelli forms a bond with blond Tavian (in a storyline handled with all the subtlety of a brick to the face), and soon he’s ignoring the dragons’ snobbery to join the Danger Club’s investigation. Though the themes are heavy-handed at times, the action delivers on epic battles (especially against skeletal foes), and the storyline gives the characters real stakes and costs along with solid twists, all fitting seamlessly into the humorous Dungeons & Dragons setting. Final art not seen.

In an episode that’s stronger on feel ings than logic, an unhappy cave echo— embodied in the garish, heavily daubed illustrations as a yellow, rabbitlike creature with outsized ears—looks on longingly yet hides from the other animals who play together joyfully. All that changes when she follows a lightskinned lad named Max as he enters in search of treasure, saves him from a bear by shouting “RUN!” (a bad strategy IRL), and then joins him in further explorations until they give up on the treasure and take to playing pirates. In the final scene, the now fast friends sit together, sharing marshmallows and chattering together…atop a disregarded pile of glittering gold. If the sym bolism of that image is obvious enough to need no pointing out, the import of Max noticing Little Echo only when she speaks up for herself is oblique enough to be, possibly, unintentional and does need unpacking. Still, their bonding makes for a cozier resolution than the tragic lack of one in the classic “Echo and Narcissus” myth. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

name to pigs that could spell words like (ironically or otherwise) ham, chimps taught to play Rock-Paper-Scissors, and ravens who can add and compare sums. Humans with an exaggerated opinion of their own mental capacities may be taken down a peg or two by elephants (“Can you identify each of your friends and family members by the sound of their voice? How about by the smell of their pee?”). Smiling animals strutting their stuff in Creighton-Pester’s cartoon illustrations further lighten the informational load, and to counter any suspicions that some of it might be fabricated, the author points to a source list on her website (not there at time of review). So who will win the Cool est Cranium cup? It’s a head-scratcher. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

WHERE WE LIVE Mapping Neighborhoods of Kids Around the Globe Ruurs, Margriet Illus. by Wenjia Tang Kids Can (40 pp.) $19.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-5253-0137-72022Communitiescome

in all sizes.

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A fun heist is a reward for expository worldbuilding. (Fan tasy. 8 12)

Well meant but somewhat confusing. (glossary, index) (Nonfiction. 8 10)

prove to be the perfect antidote to city burnout in this loving doggy tale.

Sands, Kevin Viking (400 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 18, 978-0-593-32754-82022Series:ThievesofShadow, 2

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 111 adultyoung

HOT DOG Salati, Doug Knopf (40 pp.) $17.99 | May 24, 978-0-5933-0843-12022Cooloceanbreezes

WE’RE IN THIS TOGETHER A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here To Be Bystanders

Sarsour, Linda Salaam Reads/Simon & Schuster (240 $17.99pp.)|Nov. 29, 978-1-5344-3929-02022Theco-organizer

On a hot summer’s day in a metropolis reminiscent of New York, a middle-aged human and a wiener dog run errands. But today the little dog is feeling overwhelmed by the crowds and the heat. Spare text reveals their unhappiness: “too close! too loud! too much! THAT’S IT!” The dog digs in their heels, refus ing to go any further. The owner sympathizes and immediately whisks the little dog away. Not simply off the streets, but from a train to a boat to an island, “wild and long and low.” After a day playing by the sea (and encountering what turns out to be a seal), they return to the city, where the world has cooled down and the two can come home to dinner and a sleep filled with dreams of seals. Salati expertly captures the stifling claustro phobia of hot and crowded city streets. One can almost feel the palpable temperature shift when the colors on the pages move from vibrant oranges, reds, and yellows to blues and greens, like a tonal reprieve. Happily, the book avoids demonizing cities in favor of the country, showing instead how a bad day affects your every sense. Spare poetic text also perfectly captures this small canine’s mindset. The dog’s human presents as White; other characters are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

scale bar that uses meters as the only measurement of distance. Graphically, the illustrations are reminiscent of the poster arts program of the WPA, but the style feels stagnant, and the oversize landmarks and the metric measurements make dis tances feel confusing. The introduction and the author’s note both mention that the stories are based on interviews with real children, but neither explains whether the names have been changed or how accurate the accounts are or if they are a fic tional conglomeration of stories told to the author. The book may attract readers with an interest in geography or storytell ers, but educators and caregivers should prepare to help with supplemental research support.

of the 2017 Wom en’s March on Washington shares the story of growing to be unapologetically herself in this young readers’ adaptation of her 2020Sarsourmemoir.reminisces about growing up Muslim and Palestin ian American in the 1980s and ’90s and her journey to becoming an community organizer. She reflects on visiting Palestine as a child, living in an underserved Brooklyn community, and how witnessing parallel injustices in both places sparked an under standing that would influence her future work. The author

SEEKERS OF THE FOX

Following Children of the Fox (2021), Callan’s band of thieves plans a heist to save one of their Lachlan—smallown.even for his 10 years—is mortally wounded. Cal’s only hope is that the Dragon’s Eye (a powerful, less-than-trustworthy magical artifact that bonded with him) will lead them to Lach lan’s salvation. The Eye delivers, but their relief is short-lived, as the primeval magic that saved him leaves a stain on Lachlan’s soul—and will eventually consume him completely. Cal still owes the Eye his assistance in return for its previous help, and it guides them to a storyteller who gives him hope for Lachlan as they learn of long-lost relics, a pair of magical swords—one possessing the power to heal. In subsequent action, the band of thieves navigates through their world’s lost history and mythol ogy on a quest that will take them diving to reach a shipwreck and ends with a major heist. The climax even delights in genre conventions, cutting from the action to flashbacks of the plan ning and scheming. The text offers frequent reminders of the characters’ wants and the plot’s stakes; the slowdown from the repetitive recapping will frustrate some readers but be helpful for those who need to read the lengthy book in shorter chunks. Overarching mysteries about side characters are added to, and the ending preps for the next installment. Characters default to White.

You needn’t be a dog owner to identify with this expertly wrought tale of physical and emotional relief. (Picture book. 3 6)

As charming and spontaneous as the first installment. (Graphic fiction. 7 10)

contrasts her youthful struggles with identity and her longing for recognition (many peers knew nothing about Palestine and questioned why it was not on the classroom map, and she was frequently mistaken for Puerto Rican or Italian) with later deciding to wear the hijab and thus being visibly Muslim in the aftermath of 9/11. She also describes grappling with personal tragedy and organizing social justice movements both locally and nationally. Weighty and challenging matters are addressed in a straightforward way in approachable language that allows young people to understand the triumphs and tribulations of an activist’s life. Much of what Sarsour writes will feel relatable to readers, especially her process of dealing with identity and loss, and she offers space for them to see their own experiences reflected in hers. The moments of accomplishment, struggle, sadness, and perseverance shown here provide a touching, uplifting image of America that is seldom represented.

Better choices abound in the boom of mindfulness titles for kids. (Picture book. 5 9)

The freehand drawings that came to life and made mis chief in 2020’s series opener both help and hinder Drew and her sketchbook-toting art club as, in the wake of a repeat out ing to the Art Institute of Chicago, the disappearance from a painting of an errant baby wearing a hilariously extravagant hat touches off a wholesale exodus from the rest of the collec tion. Worse yet, angry disagreements about how, or whether, to restore order come close to breaking up the club even as events take a scary turn when nonbinary rebel TJ casts a spell that

Film, friendship, and food are powerful forces for good in this community-minded follow-up to Mayor Good Boy (2021).

Schneider, Tina Tuttle (64 pp.)

DOODLEVILLE Art Attacks!

Equal parts inspiring, emotional, and informative: a neces sary read. (glossary, endnotes) (Nonfiction. 9 14)

$16.99 | Oct. 11, 978-0-8048-5375-02022

Even a disciplined monk can lose his cool. A light-skinned, bald monk in orange robes sits for medita tion each day in a field of morning glories. He sits so still that wild animals feel safe around him. “They knew this monk like nature, like weather and earth know each other.” He sits night and day, and all the animals are at peace with him except one: a fly. The fly buzzes around the monk’s head, angering him. His outbursts frighten the other animals away. Each day he vows to ignore the fly, but each day his anger gets the better of him. The monk uses breathing meditation to calm himself, but the annoying fly still gets to him. One day, the fly lands on the monk’s nose. The monk looks at the fly and really sees it. He sees himself in the fly’s eyes and feels a oneness with the fly and all creation. He sees the fly as “Buddha-Fly.” The fly is no longer an irritant; it’s a teacher. Subtitled “a tale of mindfulness for children,” Schneider’s story of awakening might work best for children who already have a passing knowledge of the teach ings of Buddha since concepts such as oneness, “Buddha-Fly,” and meditation aren’t explained. The illustrations, a mix of folk art and abstraction, contain a few confusing moments. Simple meditation instructions are included at the close. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

112 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

MAYOR GOOD BOY GOES HOLLYWOOD Scheidt, Dave Illus. by Miranda Harmon Colors by Lyle Lynde Random House Graphic (224 pp.) $9.99 | $12.99 PLB | Sept. 20, 2022 978-0-593-12545-8978-0-593-12489-5 PLB

Sell, Chad Knopf (256 pp.)

Series: Doodleville, 2

Painted figures stepping out of their frames create chaos at the art museum— paralleled by conflicts among young visi tors trying to restore peace.

$20.99 | $23.99 PLB | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-593-56930-6978-1-984894-73-1 PLB

The fluffy white canine leader of Greenwood works hard with the assistance of helpful if sometimes silly junior aides Abby and Aaron Ableman. A film crew is in town to make a documentary about Mayor Good Boy, to be screened in a vol unteer-renovated community theater. Filming is interrupted by a string of thefts around town, which motivates the community to unite and find the culprits. Abby is portrayed as bright and responsible, while Aaron is impulsive and steers most interac tions toward either food or action. In fact, nearly every scene in the story includes food, so readers may want to have a snack handy. The cartoonish art brims with humor; layouts frequently use about four, five, or six neatly arranged panels per page and are easy to follow. Though the wacky premise of a dog as mayor yields plenty of jokes—Mayor Good Boy gets distracted by a hunk of cheese in his pursuit of one of the thieves—the book also contains a strong message about working together and sup porting others. Backmatter includes a demonstration of comics production from script to sketch to finished page. There are also four recipes, each from a different character. In addition to the beige-skinned Ableman siblings, the town is relatively diverse.

THE ANGRY MONK AND THE FLY A Tale of Mindfulness for Children

NINA SONI, SNOW SPY Sheth, Kashmira Illus. by Jenn Kocsmiersky Peachtree (192 pp.)

remembering mom’s kubbat halab

An accessible story about coping with loss. (Picture book. 4 8)

Heavy-handed on the life lessons but a refreshingly cre ative take on a Night-at-the-Museum theme. (Graphic fantasy. 8 12)

“An accessible story about coping with loss.”

SALLIE BEE WRITES A THANKYOU NOTE Sheinmel, Courtney & Susan Verde Illus. by Heather Ross Abrams (32 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-4197-4960-52022Nothingsaysthank

It’s not every day that Sallie gets a gift in the mail, but when she receives a handmade scarf from Grandma Bee, she just has to say thanks. Sallie is eager to text Grandma, but her mother is on her phone, and Sallie finally decides to write down her text so she won’t forget it. Saying thank you isn’t enough, Sallie decides, and the thanks naturally evolve as she writes down what she is thankful for and how the gift makes her feel. Mom declares Sallie’s work a thank-you note that just needs to be signed and mailed. Sallie is hooked on writing thank-you notes decorated with hearts and swirls—for the crossing guard, a bus buddy, and the lunch lady. Readers with sometimes-annoying siblings will appreciate that Sallie even thanks her brother for keeping his tarantula, Cuddles, caged all day. Later, Sallie receives more mail—a thank-you note from Mom for showing her “how many reasons there are to write a thank-you note.” Rosy illustrations featuring Sallie’s colorful notes help tell the story and capture familial love and the protagonist’s kindnesses. Look for Sal lie’s kitten in most of the illustrations. Sallie and her family are brown-skinned; their community is a diverse one. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

turns an already creepy portrait of Dorian Gray into a writhing mélange of different art styles. The dialogue runs to moralistic reflections—on understanding others, what real heroes do, the importance of working together and learning from mistakes, and similar—but there’s plenty of silent action in the small (but flexibly shaped and arranged) panels as two-dimensional figures turn the museum’s walls into a battleground. Ultimately, the three-dimensional ones both bond and prevail. Along with sage observations about the rewards and value of art, Sell—without identifying the many works he freely redraws—folds in hints for interested art detectives to pursue. Drew reads White in a broadly diverse cast.

brother miss their dayik and their favorite meal she used to prepare.Bushra and her brother, Sherzat, miss Mom and all the things she did for them. Since her death, they have not had their favorite meal, kubbat halab, which she used to prepare for them. Their dad isn’t much of a cook. Grandma and then Aunt Latifa both claim to “make the best kubbat halab,” but neither of their versions is quite like Mom’s. Bushra decides she can make it with Sherzat and Dad and shows them the steps. But when their kubbat halab still doesn’t taste like Mom’s, Bushra cries. Her brother and dad comfort her, and Dad reminds Bushra, “Your dayik will always be with us.” He adds, “And we’ll always remem ber her, especially when we cook together.” Kim’s gentle illus trations capture Bushra’s emotions—disappointment when she realizes her grandma’s and aunt’s kubbat halab are not like her mom’s, joy as she, Sherzat, and their dad prepare the kubbat halab. Sharif deftly portrays a child’s grief after losing a parent and shows a family healing together through a special meal that brings them memories of a loved one. Language and food ref erences cue the family as Middle Eastern; in an author’s note, Sharif mentions her own Iraqi Kurdish background, discusses kubbat halab, and includes a recipe. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

you like a heart felt handwritten note.

$15.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-68263-498-12022Series:NinaSoniNinahasafunwinter

holiday with some new friends.

REMEMBERING MOM’S KUBBAT HALAB Sharif, Medeia Illus. by Paran Kim Whitman (32 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 1, 978-0-8075-6932-02022Alittlegirlandher

Will inspire and prepare readers to share their thanks. (step-by-step instructions for writing a thank-you note) (Pic ture book. 5 8)

It’s Friday, and Nina and her younger sister, Kavita, are excited for the long weekend break from school. Everyone has exciting plans, like Nina’s best friend, Jay, who’s going skiing with his cousins. Nina’s family is getting the house ready to welcome some old friends of her parents, who have two children who are about Nina’s and Kavita’s ages. Nina comes up with the idea of build ing a snow fort and makes a list of all the fun things they could all do in it, like being snow spies! That night, Nina notices an unknown person visiting one of the houses on her street, but her neighbors are away on a monthslong vacation. Who could this Mystery Person (MP for short) be? Maybe Nina’s idea of

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 113 adultyoung

Alors! Beaucoup de français abounds in this third outing starring everyone’s favorite francophone gastropod.

LOVE, ESCARGOT Slater, Dashka Illus. by Sydney Hanson Farrar, Straus and Giroux (40 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-374-31426-22022Series:Escargot

Though love and snails rarely go together, it’s easy to be won over by this mighty mollusk. (Picture book. 4 7)

poo outside the zoo!

love, escargot

A quirky treat for the bathroom obsessed. (Picture book. 2 6)

POO IN THE ZOO

A delightful tale of family love and complexity. (Fiction. 8 12)

Parent Trap redux that doesn’t disappoint.Asharplays hockey and lives with his mother. Shaheer likes interior deco rating just like his paternal grandfather, something he can’t really indulge in because the two of them are constantly moving house with Sha heer’s doctor father. Ashar’s least favorite subject is science, one that Shaheer is pretty good at. The two boys, long-lost identical twin brothers whose parents divorced when they were babies, finally come face to face at school after a series of comedic errors. Determined to figure out why they were separated and the existence of each kept hidden from the other, the twins come up with a complex swapping system in which Shaheer gets to spend time with his mother and Ashar with his father and grandfather. What follows is a heartwarming story of fam ily, siblings, and belonging. Set in Northern Virginia, the story’s outline may be familiar, but what makes it work is the writing: It’s lucid, pacy, and gives enough space for all the characters to find their own voices, especially the tweens. There are morsels of Pakistani food, moments of Muslim solidarity, and lots of hopes and aspirations about growing up that come with being eighth graders, all skillfully brought together.

BHAI FOR NOW Siddiqui, Maleeha Scholastic (288 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-338-70209-52022A

snow spies came at just the right time. Nina, who enjoys making lists and sometimes has trouble focusing, is an earnest protago nist with classic worries about the sometimes-intricate levels of friendship. As in other Nina Soni titles, the text keeps to simple sentence structures without many clauses, making this book an optimal choice for emerging readers. Occasional grayscale illustrations, boxed-off definitions of some higher-level words, and Nina’s lists break up the text. Nina and Kavita are of Indian descent, Jay is of Indian and Norwegian descent, and the Sonis’ guests are Indian and Filipino American.

114 | 15 september 2022 children’s kirkus.com

Zookeeper Bob McGrew, a brown-skinned boy, is back and all set to vacation with his animals. How are they travel ing? By poo, of course! Led by the series’ previous zoo visitor, light-skinned poo collector Hector Gloop, this bevy of zoo residents, including an elephant, a lion, a giraffe, and a flamingo, climb into a poo-shaped flying contraption and set off in search of various samples. They’re on their way to Kerplink, aka “the Land of Living Poo,” also home to an assortment of dinosaurs, and as they travel, “Dear old Hector never stopped / catching anything that plopped.” They find the stools of a stoat, a hare, a bear, a mountain goat, a yeti, and more. But they’re also in search of a living creature said to be made up of poo. Can they find it, or will they end up being eaten by a hungry dinosaur? A diverse group of zoo visitors is waiting back at the zoo to find out! Appealing, action-filled illustrations show the animals on their oddball journey, and while the rhyming text is sometimes awkward, young readers and listeners won’t mind a bit; they’ll be left hyperventilating in a plethora of giggles. Lovers of toilet humor will appreciate the multitude of poo references (bolded for extra emphasis). Without a doubt, this tale is full of absur dity, fun—and, of course, poo. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Snow good! (Fiction. 7 10)

It’s Snailentine’s Day, and Escargot is dressing up to the nines. Why? Because Escargot has received an invitation to a

“Though love and snails rarely go together, it’s easy to be won over by this mighty mollusk.”

The Island of Dinosaur Poo Smallman, Steve Illus. by Ada Grey Tiger Tales (32 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-68010-283-32022There’smoreanimal

party and is determined to arrive with the perfect outfit. Break ing right through the fourth wall, the stylish snail encourages readers to embrace their snail selves. After Escargot shows readers how to wave their tentacles, practice “shy-hiding,” and dance, it’s time to attend the party. However, Escargot experi ences a bit of shell shock when it becomes clear that there are no other snails here—instead, it’s Volerie’s Volentine’s Day party. (“Do voles like snails? Do voles eat snails?”) Will Escargot embrace the unknown and dance with Volerie? But of course! Like a mini Maurice Chevalier, this sweet snail must come out of their shell after having waxed eloquent about what to do at a party. Truthfully, there’s not as much to this tale beyond the usual declaration not to judge a book by its cover. Be wary, though. Sweet art means that when Escargot winsomely tells readers, “You can kiss me if you like,” it’ll be hard for them to pass up the chance. Be prepared for a moist Valentine’s Day storytime. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

THE MERMAID MOON Smith, Briony May Anne Schwartz/Random (40 pp.) $18.99 | $21.99 PLB | Oct. 4, 2022 978-1-984896-57-5978-1-984896-56-8PLBAfriendship-focused

modern fairy tale in an idyllic seaside village.

Michael Jordan

dialogue and announcers’ commentary with prose interludes setting up the episode, the game’s stars and rules, and the after math (along with a paean to Jordan’s signature shoes). Dramatic angles and flashes of dazzle crank up the pace, and figures in the panels, nearly all people of color, have individualized features and a range of skin tones. New and confirmed fans will appreci ate the MJ timeline (up to his third and final retirement in 2003) and multiage reading list at the end.

Like life, grab this book with both paws! (author’s note, index of animals) (Nonfiction. 8 13)

Pulse-pounding, both as a sports highlight and a tribute to the character and determination of one of the game’s unex celled greats. (Graphic nonfiction. 9 11)

Close to enchanting but not quite. (Picture book. 5 8)

David Fickling/Scholastic (160 pp.) $14.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-338-80218-42022Importantemotional

ROAR LIKE A LION How Animals Can Help You Be Your Best Self

Sorosiak, Carlie Illus. by Katie Walker

lessons from the animal world.

It’s suspenseful from the get-go: With the seven-game series between the Chicago Bulls and the Utah Jazz tied at two wins apiece, Bulls shooting guard Michael Jordan wakes up in the middle of the night before Game 5 feel ing sick as a dog. Six foot eight small forward Scottie Pippen reassures his worried teammates: “He’ll be here. And if he’s sick, he’ll still play, ’cause you know how he is.” And (spoiler alert) show up he does—looking shivery and miserable in Williams’ chiseled action scenes, but through an exciting, seesaw contest, he racks up 38 points on the way to a close-fought win. Switch ing back and forth between the game and an argumentative trio of young fans pinned to their TV, Soria alternates punchy

Have you ever marveled at two dogs first meeting and seeming to make friends so easily? Or perhaps you feel like a pigeon amid a flock of other birds—just a part of the crowd? Well, the dogs recognize the importance of healthy bonds, and each pigeon is unique! Animals interact and adapt in such marvelous ways; they can be inspirations to humans. With proclamations and affirmations directed to readers (“dear young humans”), the book features chapters on individuality, inner confidence, a supportive pack, kindness, bravery, resilience, and happiness. Sorosiak compares facts about certain species and true stories of particular animals to common human challenges involving school, art, and friendship. She includes various perspectives and emphasizes that everyone is different—and that’s OK. For instance, a crow can’t run fast like an ostrich or hover like a hummingbird, but it can solve complex puzzles and remember human faces for years, and that’s really impressive! Playful typography intermixes with Walker’s charming illustra tions to sustain visual appeal. Taken together, this is a great read for animal lovers (full of interesting information) or any young reader needing a smile (images of pandas somersaulting in the snow are sure to elicit grins) and some encouragement through the trials of life. Humans depicted with their animal friends are racially diverse.

WHO IS THE MAN IN THE AIR?

One night each year, on the Mermaid Moon festival, sea creatures float through the picturesque town of Merporth, frolicking alongside the cheerful villagers. Merrin, a light-skinned mermaid whose long red hair may invite com parisons to Disney’s Ariel, is at last old enough to join the other creatures, and she can’t wait to go to her best friend Molly’s house. Molly, a light-skinned, brown-haired human, often visits Merrin, diving underwater or sitting with her by the sea, but tonight will be different. With an emphasis on camaraderie, this tale sees Merrin having a fun night out with Molly. Para graphs of text in a small black font make this an option for a slightly older or more patient audience. Mixed-media art shim mers, with appealing blue-greens bringing to life Merrin’s sea home and deep blues depicting the sky on the night of the Mer maid Moon festival. Still, the story lulls overall, with only one brief conflict—it seems Merrin may not make it back to the sea before “the moon’s reflection disappears from the sea,” which would spell death for her cove’s magic. The solution is creative yet too swiftly and neatly found to satisfy readers. Molly is an uncomplicated character, defined by her love of Merrin, evi denced by jars of sea ephemera in her bedroom. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 115 adultyoung

Novels

A dramatic visual account of the piv otal game of the 1997 NBA Finals.

Soria, Gabe Illus. by Brittney Williams Penguin Workshop (64 pp.) $12.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-593-38592-02022Series:WhoHQGraphic

town join forces to rescue an unloved dog.

Stansbie, Stephanie Illus. by Frances Ives Tiger Tales (32 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-68010-281-92022Followamother

$17.99 | $20.99 PLB | Aug. 23, 2022 978-0-525-57942-7978-0-525-57941-0 PLB

With a stream of stagey patter, a magician invites willing viewers to participate in an exploit that will test their imagina tions to the utmost.

bear and cub as they spend a day in the woods and the cub learns about life.

A bighearted novel that suffers from issues with represen tation. (Fiction. 9 13)

LOOKING FOR TRUE Springstubb, Tricia Margaret Ferguson/Holiday House (288 $17.99pp.)|

worrying over the way she looks is comforted by her mother.Izzy’s favorite place to be is snuggled up with her mama. But being so cozy and close, it’s hard not to notice all the ways that Izzy and Mama don’t match. Izzy’s skin is dark like chocolate, while Mama’s is lighter like sand. Izzy’s hair coils up in springy curls, but Mama’s hangs straight in a long, swaying braid. Izzy anxiously points out these differences, wishing she could look just like Mama, but Mama reassures her each time that while “not all mamas and babies match…they still belong to one another.” Spillett-Sumner’s quiet text strikes a steady rhythm of call and response: Izzy’s uncertainties and her mother’s answer ing refrain that celebrates rather than dismisses the pair’s differ ences. Perera’s illustrations play behind and between the beats, gently pulling readers into an intimate visual space and giving dimension to the safety and strength of the mother and daugh ter’s relationship. While Izzy is portrayed as Black and darkskinned, Mama’s heritage is left open, though she is depicted as brown-skinned. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Big-for-11 Jude lives with his mother and younger half brother; their mom works at a nursing home. Small-for-11 Gladys, who is adopted, helps her mom run an in-home day care; her dad was laid off from the auto plant. When Jude, Gladys, and a strange woman with a blue-eyed dog collide, both kids feel an immediate, wordless connection—to the dog, if not each other. When True Blue, as Gladys dubs her, disappears, Gladys and Jude find her and hide her in Jude and best friend Jabari’s secret for tress on the wrong side of town, but it’s not a long-term solution. Gladys’ dad is allergic, and Jude’s mom is afraid of dogs—how can they save True Blue from the owner who treats her poorly? Chap ters from alternating close third-person perspectives show what Gladys and Jude think of themselves and each other, their deep est worries and fears, how their parents’ beliefs have shaped their own, and how they are shaping each other. The protagonists are a study in contrasts, and the supporting characters bring different

Like most parents, Mommy Bear wishes the best for her cub—strength, courage, perseverance in the face of adversity, and future loving companions. Someday. But now is the time for the mother and cub to make memories of berry feasts, swims, and snuggles. Their day is idyllic as they roam, lounge, play, and finally sleep. The illustrations include other animal parent-child units out and about, too. Early in the story, Mommy Bear com pares her cub to a sapling growing into a tree, and trees, in vari ous forms and from different perspectives, figure prominently in the soothing illustrations. The dark bears with crisp contours stand out against a variety of soft pastel nature scenes. Tree limbs often flow across the page and subtly underscore the gowith-the-flow attitude of the bears’ day. However, the leaves in fall flame hues, which add splashes of color to most illustrations, seem incongruously tiny given the small size of the cub. This quiet, philosophical read-aloud is just right for nap time. Given that Mommy Bear is the picture of relaxed parenting, it’s also an ideal gift to remind new mothers or mothers-to-be to savor each day with their child as well as a wonderful Mother’s Day present. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A sweet parent-child relationship laced with lessons about enjoying today while also looking ahead to the future. (Picture book. 3 6)

SOMEDAY

A lovely accompaniment to any cuddle. (Picture book. 3 7)

THE DISAPPEARING MR. JACQUES

Nov. 1, 978-0-8234-5099-22022Twokidsinasmall

Sterer, Gideon Illus. by Benjamin Chaud Knopf (40 pp.)

BEAUTIFUL YOU, BEAUTIFUL ME

Spillett Sumner, Tasha Illus. by Salini Perera Owlkids Books (32 pp.) $18.95 | Oct. 15, 978-1-77147-452-82022AyoungBlackgirl

worldviews and advice. Jude reads White. Jabari’s name and fre quent, negative, othering mentions of the size, texture, and hairproduct smell of Gladys’ hair may indicate that they are Black. The repeated use of lame as an insult and insensitive language used to describe people with substance abuse issues detract from the otherwise moving writing.

116 | 15 september 2022 children’s kirkus.com

The power of suggestion works its usual magic. (Picture book. 6 8)

MIDNIGHT AT THE SHELTER Steveson, Nanci Turner Quill Tree Books/HarperCollins (304 $16.99pp.)| Nov. 1, 978-0-06-267321-32022Athree-legged

of what love is andThoughisn’t. the text is straightforward, the spare cartoon illustrations are loaded with fun details. Spreads feature the words I love you followed by three rhyming phrases. The first illustration of each verse offers a humorous contradiction: “I love you like a cuddle loves”—a cactus? (The accompanying image depicts a brown-skinned child looking nervously at the cactus.) Of course not. But the next illustrations and words show more likely compar isons. “I love you like a cuddle loves / a bunny.” Even the youngest listeners will get the joke that a bear loves honey and not broccoli or that a cat prefers sleeping in the sun to walking under cloudy skies, although many young readers will not embrace I love you “like a heart loves / romance.” Strategic page turns add suspense or giggles and create opportunities for children to supply their own answers, perhaps even in rhyme, and the text’s simple format can easily be extended for more wordplay using daily events. Fun word choices will introduce kids to potentially new vocabulary. “I love you like a pirate loves / an X, // like a witch loves / a hex, // and like a muscle loves / to flex.” Because the book ends with the clear mes sage of “I LOVE YOU!” readers should be prepared to close the book and share a loving hug or two. Characters throughout are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Tate, June Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins (40 pp.) $17.99 | Dec. 13, 978-0-06-311413-52022Simplesuggestions

I LOVE YOU LIKE Swerling, Lisa & Ralph Lazar Chronicle Books (60 pp.) $9.95 | Nov. 1, 978-1-79721-007-02022Ahumorousexplanation

“A quiet book that will help readers experience and reflect on the rich sensations of life.”

WHAT’S SWEETER

Animal lovers will appreciate the canine content if they have the patience to read until all the stories converge. (Fiction. 8 12)

Many magicians seem to disappear with the help of cur tains or other props, but only Mr. Jacques—properly kitted out in Chaud’s minimally detailed scenes with wand, top hat, twirly mustache, and smiling rabbit assistant—will actually fade out before your eyes in the span of just a few page turns. “Can you find me?” Mr. Jacques teases from an empty spread. “Am I…perched atop your head? // Not anymore.” “Make a fist. I will reappear inside your hand…but if you open it, I will vanish.” Per haps to take an invisible leap…and “land upon your nose!” Or, appealing to another sense, very careful listeners just might hear subtle audio cues. Reappearing suddenly, the pale-skinned per former at last invites sharp observers to watch closely as magi cian and rabbit fade one last time and promise to teach the trick…to anyone, again, who can find them. Readers willing to suspend disbelief (or play along) may or may not succeed but will certainly come away seeing, feeling, and listening to every thing more attentively. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

what’s sweeter

kirkus.com children’s 15 september 2022 | 117 adultyoung

Perfect for a snuggly read, a Valentine’s Day storytime, or a gift between special friends of any age. (Picture book. 3 8)

In a series of uncomplicated obser vations and questions, Tate reminds readers that each day is full of amazing experiences. Some are wonderfully sensory in nature, like when you stroke the “soft spot / behind a cat’s ear,” “when a ladybug / lands on your arm,” and “when you get a hug / from someone / you haven’t seen / in a very long time.” Some experiences are more personal, such as “finally getting something / you’ve been practicing”—like land ing a tricky skateboard jump for the first time—or “the feeling you get // when you do something / you really like // and you forget / about everything else.” In the accompanying multipage sequence of illustrations for this last one, a brown-skinned child artist paints butterflies that imaginatively lift off the can vas and become real. Other observations will help readers look more carefully to find “a turtle / eating a salad” or shift their

to enjoy the little, sweeter things in life.

rescue dog helps other shelter dogs escape The Unthink able and matches them with their perfect foreverCanineshomes.MahDi and Ozzie and feline Domino live with MomDoc; MahDi and Ozzie are fre quent visitors to MomDoc’s veterinary practice and the local shelter. Mike and Rebecca usually run the shelter, but a man called Huck is taking over temporarily while Mike goes to the hospital, and all the animals—plus Toby, MomDoc’s 13-year-old neighbor—have a bad feeling about Huck. MahDi serves as the main narrator, but stories told by nine other dogs who all ulti mately end up at the shelter are interwoven. When Huck puts an orange tag on each of their crates, marking them for eutha nasia, MahDi and his friends conduct a breakout, delivering each dog to a new home. An epilogue that takes place a month later ties up all the stories neatly and provides a final reunion. Some readers may struggle to keep the expanding cast of char acters straight, and the pace of the story is somewhat slow until the breakout, but each dog’s story illustrates one of the many ways dogs come to need new homes and how wonderful rescue animals can be. Human characters are minimally described and seem to follow a White default.

Welldon, Christine Red Deer Press (224 pp.) $14.95 paper | Oct. 1, 2022

causes Billy’s fam ily to lose their farm in Saskatchewan, so he takes to the rails looking for work.

978-0-88995-669-8Extremedrought

never been so over-the-top.

the cosmic unities within and beyond each reader.

van der Merwe, Lizelle Tilbury House (48 pp.) $18.95 | Nov. 15, 978-0-88448-955-92022Ameditationon

A mind-boggling muddle of fuzzy imagery, mixed meta phors, and confusing leaps in scale. (Informational picture book. 7 9)

wally the world’s greatest piano-playing wombat

KNIGHT OF THE RAILS

How can Wally Wombat keep up with Wylie Wombat? Play the piano? Done that. Tap dance—while playing the piano? Done THAT. Twirling a ball on a furry snout—while tap danc ing and playing the piano? DONE THAT! Ferociously sweating Wally Wombat has had “ENOUGH!” Wylie Wombat can do everything he can, and maybe even better. If Wally can’t be the best, he won’t play at all. So there. Wally quickly realizes that a quiet life in his burrow, while nice, isn’t what he wishes for most of all. Wylie offers up a truce and chocolate chip cookies on a picnic blanket—playing alone isn’t quite as much fun as having a friendly competitor. Wally and Wylie set up their dueling pianos. Soon the overachieving marsupials unicycle and flamethrow to stardom under the eucalyptus tree. They are the best—until they aren’t….Tep’s encouraging message about doing what you love despite not being the greatest of all time will spur children to explore life’s joys just for the pleasure it brings. (Regardless of cheeky parachuting wombats.) Pintonato’s vividly detailed illustrations comically highlight the myriad emotions clashing across put-upon Wally’s face. The unifying motif of the picnic blanket–patterned endpapers cleverly foreshadows the conflict resolution to come. The illustrator’s skillful use of negative space emphasizes the escalating mayhem to hilarious effect. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

perception to recognize “a fire truck / getting a bath” or realize that “you never quite know // what color the sunset might be / at the end of the day.” The final observation will elicit “aws,” a fittingly tender moment for a soothing bedtime read. Almost childlike in their execution, the illustrations are colorful but calm and highlight active kids with a variety of skin tones and hairstyles and colors. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

This rollicking fable will resonate with aficionados, dilet tantes, and prodigies everywhere. (Picture book. 4 8)

118 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

Tep, Illus.RathabyCamilla Pintonato

WALLY THE WORLD’S GREATEST PIANO-PLAYING WOMBAT

Using scientific concepts but in ways more likely to elicit incomprehension, van der Merwe first takes readers from the infinite “universe” to the more per sonal “youniverse” and then in stages to photons…which weave together with atoms to create the molecules that make up every thing on Earth…which is a member of “our town,” the solar sys tem…which is zooming along in the Milky Way through space, which has “many, many, many, many gazillions of atoms.” “Space and time are laced together into a fabric called space-time,” she goes on, “which supports everything you see and everything you can’t see in its palm,” including “your extraordinary imagi nation” and also “another kind of consciousness in the quaking aspen, a spark we do not yet fully understand.” Readers may be excused for not fully understanding any of this—nor do the illustrations offer much enlightenment, as fuzzy clouds repre senting atoms give way to swirly stars and galaxies, culminating in a fuzzy, swirly human figure aglitter with stars that becomes a shadowy silhouette floating in space: “This is you, / gazing / into the / universe. / This is the / YOUNIVERSE.” Anyone seeking a sense of their place in the (physical) scheme of things will be better served by Jason Chin’s Your Place in the Universe (2020). (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A quiet book that will help readers experience and reflect on the rich sensations of life. (Picture book. 3 7)

YOUNIVERSE

Princeton Architectural Press (40 pp.) $18.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-64896-180-92022One-upmanshiphas

“This rollicking fable will resonate with aficionados, dilettantes, and prodigies everywhere.”

Money and food are scarce, and his parents are moving into town; the stock market crash has destabilized everything. Thirteen-year-old Billy decides to go west across Canada in search of work. Lack ing train fare, he jumps a boxcar. The action starts immediately and follows a push-pull rhythm. Some hobos teach Billy the ropes; another man attempts to molest him. Jumping trains is exciting but dangerous; he loses a friend. Kind strangers offer meals while a farmer cheats Billy out of hard-earned pay. Vivid, heartfelt descriptions illustrate how many among the mainly White cast are suffering (Billy crosses paths with a young

The Quantum Kaleidoscope of You

DARK ON LIGHT White, Dianne Illus. by Felicita Sala Beach Lane/Simon & Schuster (48 pp.) $18.99 | Dec. 6, 978-1-5344-8789-52022Abedtimechant

one story starts eating all the other ones?

Métis man, learning about his community’s struggles), yet Billy remains open to wonder and surprise as his father advised. Still, with each challenge, his hopes for the future wane, reaching a low when he enters one of Prime Minister Bennett’s degrading so-called relief camps. Billy throws his frustration and anger into a failed protest. Political reforms may be slow, but Billy has changed: He has discovered he loves the freedom of travel, but it’s balanced by loyalty to his family, especially when he learns they need his help at home. When Billy next leaves home, it’s to fight Hitler, but the best surprise is yet to come.

ONE AND EVERYTHING Winston, Sam Candlewick Studio (48 pp.) $19.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5362-1566-32022Whathappenswhen

THE BAKER BY THE SEA White, Paula Templar/Candlewick (40 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5362-2389-72022Alovelettertoabygone era in coastal England.White’s author’s note provides context for her tribute to a fishing

community called Beach Village in Suffolk, England, recall ing how villagers worked together to bring in and preserve the catch. Fans of Joanne Schwartz’s Town Is by the Sea (2017), illus trated by Sydney Smith, may find parallels with this title, though there’s less longing or melancholy here. Instead, the tone is one of pride in recalling a former way of life. By highlighting not the fishermen or the Scotch fisher-girls who preserved the catch but instead the titular baker, the author showcases the crucial contributions of other townspeople (all of whom appear to be light-skinned) who sustained those directly involved in fishing. White cleverly casts as narrator the baker’s son, who wants to become a fisherman since their work seems more adventurous and heroic. Over time, however, he realizes how important his father’s work is. This shift allows readers to reinterpret the title not as a reference to the father, but to the child and his new aspirations. Pencil-and-ink illustrations, rendered in a muted palette of blue, gray, white, and sepia, underscore the text’s nostalgic feel. Fittingly, given that the book appears to be set during the first half of the 20th century, the art seems to chan nel Virginia Lee Burton’s style, with repetitive patterning in landscapes and attention to detail in the material culture of the seaside setting. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A toasty warm, sentimental read. (Picture book. 4 8)

kirkus.com children’s | 15 september 2022 | 119 adultyoung

Lilting, haunting, rhyming, and as unforgettable as a dream the daylight just can’t quite erase. (Picture book. 3 5)

Heartening and uplifting. (author interview, citations, suggested reading list) (Historical fiction. 10 14)

Sumptuous watercolor, gouache, and colored pencil illustrations show a day shifting from sunshine to twilight to a deepening night sky. Mean while, three children are pulling on their boots, grabbing their flashlights, and heading out into a nighttime world as alive as it is welcoming. As the children search and explore, the text repeats the words dark on light through mesmeric rhymes. “Orange the moon, burnished and bright. / Meadow and owl and dark on light.” At last the children peek into a burrow and find their dog, the object of their search. The nighttime is welcoming here, and the children return home to the cozy arms of their parents. Truly the entire enterprise feels similar in tone to Janice May Udry’s Moon Jumpers (1959), illustrated by Maurice Sendak, as when the children ramble through fields of fragrant lavender beneath a brilliant sky. This is a book capable of ban ishing nighttime fears, showing the night to be a time of wonder, exploration, and even comfort. Sala’s art matches the cadences of the text beat for beat, offering consistently beautiful images of this undiscovered nighttime world. The children and their parents present as White. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A somewhat oversimplified story about stories followed by fascinating backmatter. (Picture book. 5 10)

The main characters of this picture book are colorful circles that contain symbols, characters, and script from living and extinct languages, each representing a story, ranging from tales about “beautiful sunsets” to ones that are “simply full of dogs.” The tales seem to exist in rela tive harmony until one story decides to be “the most important story in the world.” Calling itself the One, the black-and-white circle begins swallowing other stories whole. The One nearly consumes every story on Earth, “but inside the One’s belly, something was happening”—the other stories, combined into new words, become a Voice. Pushing back against its captor, the Voice gets the One to understand that it is actually Every Story, not merely a single one. This realization causes the One to explode into multitudinous stories, transforming the imag ery from monochromatic blob to jewel-toned spheres. The text is sparse and the plot minimal; the heart of Winston’s book is the author’s note, which describes the importance of language preservation and introduces readers to the linguistic characters featured in the illustrations. Though the storyline won’t rivet younger readers, some children may appreciate the extensive appendix about ancient and endangered languages. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

capable of trans forming anyone into a night owl.

“My love for you would fill 10 pots / 15 buckets and 16 cans / 3 teacups and 4 cakepans,” a gray cat informs a brown dog while ladling hot chocolate into the enumerated vessels. The sweet image and statement allude to the unquantifiable nature of love. Earnest pencil and digitally drawn art looks like it could be placed on a refrigerator alongside well-loved handmade notes and drawings. The anthropomorphic animals’ attachment to each other is without label, making for an inclusive tale that just about any caregiver could easily share with little ones at bed time. At one point, the cat states, “I love you up,” while the dog, suspended in the air while flying a kite, responds, “I love you down / My love for you / can touch the ground”—a page that makes effective use of perspective and movement. Wood and Karas also root the poem in the tangible as the characters refer ence the rainbow and trains to express their love. There are no

bumps in the road here, and some may find the lack of narra tive or drama unfulfilling, but most will fall into the declarations heart-first. Fans of Salina Yoon’s Penguin and Pinecone (2012) or Kathryn Cristaldi’s I’ll Love You Till the Cows Come Home (2018), illustrated by Kristyna Litten, will find new companions in these pages. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

$12.99 | Oct. 11, 978-1-4197-6021-12022Series:BabyAnimalTales

120 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

LITTLEGOODNIGHT,SEAOTTER Wood, Amanda Illus. by Vikki Chu Photos by Bec Winnel Magic Cat (24 pp.)

It is time for Little Sea Otter to grow up and learn how to paddle down deep and find food. She is nervous. The water is dark and cold. In a nod to a sea otter’s most endearing man nerism, Little Sea Otter’s mother gives her a great big hug while floating on her back. Filled with the courage she needs, Little Sea Otter dives deep. Later, her mother shows her how to break open a clam on the rocks, but she is unable to do so. She struggles and struggles. Her mom tells her that “learning takes time” and she should try again tomorrow. When Little Sea Otter encounters an even smaller sea otter who is hungry and lost, she steps up and finds herself easily drawing on her newfound skills—especially the hugging part. The simple tale is wonderfully reassuring. As with other installments in the series, the art features a distinctive blend of photography and illustra tion, with adorable photos of the young protagonist set within watercolor-esque underwater scenes. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A child awaits the return of her dad during a big celebration.

There’s a lot of love here, and it’s all good. (Picture book. 3 5)

As this Chinese import (translation uncredited) begins, it’s the Mid-Autumn Festival, and everyone is getting ready. Grandpa crafts a lantern that resembles a jade rabbit, Grandma makes mooncakes, and Mom cooks a tasty traditional meal. While they prepare, Yueyue wonders if Dad will come back today. “Dad said he would come back when the moon was the roundest.” So it must be today, the day of the Mid-Autumn Festival. As night falls and festivities commence, still Yueyue waits. When the moon hides behind clouds, impatience turns to worry. Yueyue cannot see the moon anywhere. “Moon, come out. Come out now!” she cries. But the moon remains con cealed. Will Dad really come home tonight if the moon is miss ing? Mom reminds Yueyue, who is named after the moon, that she is the “biggest and roundest moon” in her parents’ hearts. And ultimately, Dad (and the moon) comes back. This is a wellpaced story of waiting, worries, and reassurance. Meng’s paint erly illustrations complement Wu’s narrative beats. Spreads in dynamic perspectives bring visual interest to the calming, earthy palette of primarily tans and browns. The setting is not specified, but the community is cued as Chinese. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Filled with warmth, comfort, and irresistible baby animal photos. (Picture book. 2 5)

As soft and reassuring as moonlight. (Picture book. 3 7)

Sloane and Amelia haven’t had a good case since they solved the centuryold mystery of the Cursed Hoäl Jewels (Tangled Up in Luck, 2021), and they’re losing YouTube subscribers. But they have an amazing opportunity: What if they find the missing fortune of bootlegger Jacqueline “Ma” Yaklin, a legendary Toledo criminal?

Reycraft Books (36 pp.)

“A warmhearted, very funny, madcap caper.”

Two middle school sleuths search for a 1920s gangster’s missing loot.

$17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-545-44193-32022

CALLING FOR THE MOON Wu, Illus.XiabyZiru Meng

tangled up in nonsense

I LOVE YOU LITTLE, I LOVE YOU LOTS Wood, Douglas Illus. by G. Brian Karas Scholastic (40 pp.)

TANGLED UP IN NONSENSE Wyatt, Merrill McElderry (272 pp.)

A tiny sea otter learns new life skills in the latest entry in the Baby Animal Tales series.

A love poem, told in dialogue.

$17.95 | Oct. 14, 978-1-4788-7958-92022

$17.99 | Nov. 29, 978-1-66591-232-72022Series:TangledMysteries, 2

Sloane’s troublemaking, gambling, scheming grannies (whom she adores) trick Amelia’s hypercompetitive family into attend ing the Annual Ohio Peony Enthusiasts Competition—at a hotel that was once Ma Yaklin’s mansion. Now the Osburn and Poe Detective Agency has no excuse for not solving the cold case of the missing millions. Harassed by the over-the-top she nanigans of Amelia’s family’s ridiculous braggadocio, pestered by the grannies to (cough) discreetly acquire cuttings of prize winning peonies, and accompanied everywhere by Amelia’s costume-wearing, joyful dramatics, the girls will surely solve the mystery and find the lost lucre. Sloane helps Amelia feel bet ter about her family’s disrespect, and Amelia comforts Sloane, who’s worried about her dad’s new girlfriend. But even the laughter at their families’ antics is not unkind in this friendshipbuilding yarn. The puzzle itself is solvable by readers, as the foreshadowing omniscient narrator periodically prompts them to notice. Main characters are White.

Simply fun, ripe for repeat reads. (Picture book. 3 5)

Novelist Youngblood tells a story of a child with seven homes and seven Big Mamas.

Yagüe, Elisa Illus. by Celia Sacido Trans. by Jon Brokenbrow Cuento de Luz (34 pp.) $18.95 | Sept. 6, 978-84-18302-63-32022Inthistaletranslated

GO, SLED! GO!

MAMA’S HOME Youngblood, Shay Illus. by Lo Harris Make Me a World (40 pp.) $18.99 | $21.99 PLB | Oct. 18, 2022 978-0-593-18023-5978-0-593-18022-8 PLB

Yang, James Viking (40 pp.) $18.99 | Oct. 25, 978-0-593-40479-92022Anaction-focused

sled ride.

A cheerful character with tan skin and a striped cap totters over the crest of a bare snowy mountain on a yellow toboggan. The text gets right to the point, cheering, “Go, sled! Go!” The protagonist stares in dismay, shouting, “Oh, bunny! No!” as the sled barrels toward the startled critter. The sled doesn’t slow, and the following page shows the bunny riding along, too. With slight variations, this encounter repeats when the sled comes across a snowman, a moose, penguins, and the tan-skinned, pink-haired Mrs. Baker, whose cakes wind up everywhere when she ends up onboard. As the sled races along, picking up passengers, the dialogue, in speech bubbles, includes apologies and checks on well-being, perfect for starting conver sations about emotions and helping friends. The chunky black text gloriously becomes art, wrapping around in circles for the sled’s inevitable roller-coaster loop. Basic action words like jump and stop will make for interactive read-aloud moments. Blocky graphic illustrations are grounded in paper-white snow and blue tones throughout. The book contains many visual and narrative similarities to Kim Norman’s Ten on the Sled (2010), illustrated by Liza Woodruff, and other stories where each spread slipslides into the next. But Yang’s tale is an earnest, pleasant romp, and there is room on the shelf for this one, too. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A Black child with two puffs goes to a different home every day. The child’s mother works late and sometimes travels for weeks at a time. So the Big Mamas take care of the narrator, and the child has different experiences and dreams with each of them. With Nurse Louella, the protagonist cycles around the airport parking lot and later thinks of being a pilot. With Miss Zikora, the narrator sings in Spanish, French, and Igbo (“I think I want to sing in my own band”). Other Big Mamas braid the child’s hair in a salon or teach them to fish. Finally, when Mama comes home, everyone celebrates together with more delicious food, and the child gets to sleep in their own little room in their own house, glad that Mama is home. This is a joyful, heartfelt celebration of family—born and chosen—and community, of

A warmhearted, very funny, madcap caper. (historical note) (Mystery. 9 12)

A gentle reminder that even sadness, when served up with a dose of imagination, isn’t so bad after all. (Picture book. 4 6)

| kirkus.com | children’s | 15 september 2022 | 121 adultyoung

I’M SAD TODAY

from Spanish, a child explores different ways of looking at sadness.“I’msad today,” declares Olga, a child who wears green glasses and a striped shirt, with dark hair piled into a topknot. “I’m so sad I can’t even speak.” So Olga draws their sadness in black and then notices the white spaces look like stars and so colors them yellow, which makes them think of holes made by giant hands, and on it goes until the drawing ends up with a laughing giant. Later, when Olga again is sad and feels like cry ing, they draw a sea, which naturally requires a ship; fantasies of traveling the ocean lead to an afternoon of playing at being a pirate searching for treasure. On another sad occasion, Olga gazes in the mirror to see how sad they look; pulling faces leads to an irrepressible bout of laughter. Even when Olga feels their heart must be full of sorrow, this story manages to turn that concept on its head. Whimsical, clutter-free illustrations keep the focus on Olga and their grandmother, who quietly follows the child’s creative exploits. Yagüe’s text and Sacido’s artwork seamlessly come together to explore the boundless possibilities of a child’s imagination. Both child and grandmother have lighttan skin. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

At first glance, this book covers familiar board-book ter ritory: little ones eating. However, it offers more than simple dishware and starter foods. In this installment in the We Are Little Feminists series, readers see feeding tubes, breast pumps and breastfeeding, and adaptive cutlery along with diverse rep resentations of families and cuisines. Spare text makes use of alliteration and simple rhymes. What really sets this title apart, however, are the beautiful images, taken by various photogra phers. Some look like a snapshot of a moment in time, a tired new parent with baby, for example. Others capture intentional memories like a celebratory dish and beaming faces. People depicted are diverse in terms of race and ability; included also are a hijabi and a child using a wheelchair. The book ends with “A Note for Grown Ups” about discussing differences (with a URL to a website with more information) along with “Family Discussion Questions” broken down by age level. Sharing a meal, nourishing bodies, and preparing food are essential pieces of human and cultural experiences; this sweet book makes clear that everyone is a part of that. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

With quacks, buzzes, and meows, among other animal noises, a narrator explains just how much joy and love they have for their baby: “For your belly laugh, I’d tweet tweet like a bird. Because it’s the best sound that I’ve ever heard.” Each layout shows an animal pair happily enjoying each other. The illustra tions are done in black and white with pops of red throughout— an artistic choice that, according to the back cover, was done so that babies can more easily see the images. The red mostly dots cheeks and highlights words, but one standout page depicts two mice in the doorway of their den, shadowed black against white light, a large red, eye-catching spool of thread to the side. Some illustrations give the impression of woodblock printing, most notably a diapered baby joyfully bounced by a parent with the night skyline of the Brooklyn Bridge visible through the win dow. The singsong-y rhymes provide appropriate pacing and a loving sentiment familiar in many similar board books. Unlike many other black-and-white, infant-intended titles, however, this one features far more visually stimulating illustrations that are well integrated with the text. Both the human parent and baby have skin the white of the page. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Age appropriate for little ones yet will also be appreciated by adults. (Board book. 0 2)

HOW WE EAT

The myriad ways in which infants and children eat.

Black womanhood and expressions of love. The variety of people and homes in the child’s life is thoroughly engaging; the details of the women’s lifestyles, from fashion and cars to foods and conversations, immerse readers in each setting. Harris’ bright, warm illustrations use thick blocks of saturated colors to bring the Mamas, the child, and their relationships to life. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

122 15 september 2022 children’s | kirkus.com |

Your Baby Can See

FOR YOUR SMILE Brantz, Loryn HarperFestival (22 pp.) $8.99 | Sept. 6, 978-0-06-308634-02022Series:ALovePoem

A rhyming board-book ode to a par ent’s love for a baby.

TONS OF PALABRAS Comida: An English & Spanish Book for the Real World Duopress Labs

Illus. by Alyssa Maria González duopress/Sourcebooks (22 pp.) $10.95 | Oct. 24, 978-1-955834-18-62022

A bilingual Spanish-English picture dictionary, with a closeup onBright,food. bold, and simple illustrations depict food, divided into categories such as “Las frutas y verduras / Fruits & Vegeta bles,” “Los dulces y bebidas / Sweets & Beverages,” “Los platil los / Dishes,” “Las botanas / Snacks.” Some fruit—among them guanábana (soursop), maracuyá (passion fruit), and mamey (mammee apple)—will not necessarily be familiar to all children, but many will be aware of these mouthwatering foods. Each item is first named in Spanish followed by the English equiva lent. There has been an effort to include the different regional variations in names (“el plátano / el guineo / el cambur / banana”; “la calabaza / la auyama / el zapallo / el ayote / pumpkin”) and to feature food typical of some countries, such as “chicha morada” from Peru and “arepas” from Colombia and Venezu ela. In general, though, Mexican foods and names prevail, such

de la Fuente Lau, Shuli Little Feminist Press (22 pp.) $9.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-73418-249-12022Series:WeAreLittle Feminists, 5

Meaningful and inclusive. (Board book. 1 4)

board & booksnovelty

Unique and universally resonant, this fascinating tribute is one to share. (notes from the author and from Make Me a World creative director Christopher Myers, recipe for sweet pink punch) (Picture book. 4 9)

monster toys

“A monstrously good read.”

$7.99 | July 19, 978-1-66591-597-72022

What kinds of toys does your little monsterReaderslike?jump right into the action with the first two lines of text: “Monsters like all kinds of toys. What will they play with today?” From there, each page uses simple, declarative sentences to introduce a new monster and their toy of choice. Caregivers and other adults may be tickled by the juxtaposi tion of regular toddler activities with monstrous illustrations— for instance, a purple monster with dinosaurlike spikes smiles while playing with plush mice and a homemade dollhouse cre ated from a box with an open hardback book as the pitched roof (“Megan makes a mouse house”). The intended audience may not appreciate the humorous contrast, but they will be drawn in by the soft tones and slightly fuzzy lines of the silk screen illustrations. The closing images feature a blue monster with an inscrutable face, a broken robot toy, and the sugges tion that all playtime must eventually end: “But Ramona needs a rest. So Bernard brings a blanket and a book.” It’s the gen tlest hint that everyone, regardless of species, should consider taking a nap now and then. The solid board-book construc tion will ensure that this title stays around for many future nap times to come.

A Spooky Book With Flaps

This rhyming, counting board book lives up to its title, showing children participating in various fall traditions and festivities. The signs of the season are all here, from a pile of leaves (to jump into, naturally) to apples from the farmers mar ket to the backpacks that mark the beginning of a new school year. Beyond those, Goldberg Fishman includes other cultural

as the words for the categories “botanas” for snacks or “platil los” for main dishes. There are two mistakes: Alubias and judías are defined here as “cannellini beans,” but they in fact refer to beans in general; fried rice is not “arroz chufa” but “arroz chaufa.” Adults reading with little ones must be familiar with the words as there is no pronunciation guide. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Trucks at a construction site don Halloween costumes. This rhyming, lift-the-flap board book features trucks with windshield wipers for eyebrows, bumpers as mouths, and head lights as rosy cheeks. Young transportation lovers will enjoy seeing their favorite trucks dressed up in familiar costumes: a dump truck as a dinosaur, a recycling truck as a robot, and a cement truck as a ballet dancer. Each page shows the dressedup vehicle; a lift of the flap reveals the working truck sans cos tume. The get-ups are cute and clever, like the crane, who wears a giraffe costume with ears made from orange traffic cones. Lit tle ones who already love trucks won’t find anything new here, but seeing recognizable favorites in sweet disguises will appeal nonetheless. The rhyming text largely succeeds, keeping the momentum going and even working in the word plié. The story describes the work that the trucks do in addition to showing off their Halloween duds. The construction site includes little nods to the holiday, with jack-o’-lanterns, bats circling the sky, and a bright, full moon overhead. All of these elements together make for a likable little Halloween read. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

kirkus.com board & novelty books | 15 september 2022 | 123 adultyoung

A look at autumnal celebrations.

An attractive and useful vocabulary-building tool. (Board book. 3 5)

Eliot, Hannah Illus. by Jen Taylor Little Simon/Simon & Schuster (18 pp.)

celebrations that mark the changing season—costumes for Hal loween, mooncakes for the Mid-Autumn Festival, calaveras for Dia de los Muertos, and a subtle nod to Diwali. The counting and rhyming are effective, the gentle rhythm keeping pages turning. Hall’s eye-catching illustrations offer context; layered and textured images, which appear to be made with collage, give life to one brown-skinned child’s springy dark hair and a feeling of movement to twirling leaves on a crisp autumn day. The book represents children of different races and faiths; one child wears a hijab, while another wears a kippah. The result is a book that shows the diversity of experiences in a community as well as the joy of it all. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

MONSTER TOYS Hirst, Daisy Candlewick (18 pp.) $8.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-5362-2655-32022Series:DaisyHirst’sMonster Books

TRUCK OR TREAT

A monstrously good read. (Board book. 1 3)

Goldberg Fishman, Cathy Illus. by Melanie Hall Familius (20 pp.)

$9.99 | Sept. 13, 978-1-64170-726-82022Series:IntheCity

A lovely way to welcome fall. (Board book. 2 4)

A FALL FROLIC IN THE CITY

A look at various modes of transportation.

Few board books ask the really important questions, like

Sweet and enjoyable toddler fun. (Board book. 1 3)

MONSTERS GO Hirst, Daisy Candlewick (18 pp.) $8.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-5362-2656-02022Series:DaisyHirst’sMonster Books

Little Simon/Simon & Schuster (16 pp.) $7.99 | June 28, 978-1-66591-757-52022Alookatclassroom

124 | 15 september 2022 | children’s kirkus.com |

A sign posted on the bulletin board reads “VIP Week”— readers learn that VIP stands for “Very Important Preschooler.” Five diverse tots bask in the glory of their big responsibilities. A brown-skinned child is the greeter: “I wave and say hello / to each friend who walks in. / A bad morning mood / can always change with a grin.” Another brown-skinned child, this one using a wheelchair, is the line leader. “It’s my job to lead the class / and stay quiet in the halls. / I watch and wait and keep the pace / so that nobody falls.” The days of the week carry the narrative forward as each child describes their job. With over size heads and wide, curious eyes, these young tots look eager to learn. Most images are cropped tight so there is not much school setting shown; readers never even see the teacher. But VIPs are encouraged to be kind and helpful, two important pre school (and human) readiness skills; this tale will reassure little ones, who often feel powerless, that they have much to offer: “We’re all VIPs in more ways than one— / there are many things you can do!” (This book was reviewed digitally.)

These monsters will happily take you places! (Board book. 1 3)

$6.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-593-40351-82022Black-and-white

jobs found in a preschool.

Sweetly empowering. (Board book. 1 3)

VIP Very Important Preschooler Jin, Illus.CindybyElla Bailey

Familiar territory, though mother-child love never really gets too tired. (Board book. 1 2)

heart-shaped images of items from space.

board book, sing song-y rhyming text describes just how much three chicks adore Mommy.

BABIES LOVE OUTER SPACE

Why do the little ones love Mommy so? This doting mother checks on her chicks when they make a “Pío!” in the night. She’s patient with her babies and cuddles with them. To show just how much they love her, the chicks surprise her with a handmade card, a bouquet of flowers, and a stack of pancakes. The celebration of mother-child love makes this a sweet read for Mother’s Day even though the holiday isn’t specifically mentioned. The three chicks are distinctive: One is bespectacled, another wears a sailor hat, and the third sports a pink bow. The backgrounds of all of the images feature soft colored circles and plenty of hearts. The chicks conspiratorially shush readers as they prepare their surprises for Mommy, and their pride, hope, and love are readily apparent. The best use of the flaps is the one that serves as the hen’s wing as she snuggles up with her little ones. The theme of parent-child love can be seen in many similar board books, but while there isn’t anything novel here, it’s still sweet. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

I LOVE MY MOMMY Jaramillo, Susie Roaring Brook Press (24 pp.) $9.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-954689-03-92022Series:CanticosInthislift-the-flap

“When monsters have places to get to, how do they like to go?” It’s a nuanced one, because readers aren’t learning how they go; they’re learning how they like to go. (Caregivers, take note: It’s a subtle but important distinction!) Each monster has an allit erative preferred means of travel. “Skeeter speeds by scooter.” “Willa likes to walk.” Even two tiny tots follow the pattern: “Debbie and Steffi go by double stroller.” Caregivers will love the gentle phonetic introductions and the mix of names for the monsters. Readers will delight in the fun sounds and intro ductions to new words, concepts, and scenarios: “Zebedee goes by zip line, and Danni is delivered with dinner” (this last one is accompanied by a green creature nestled in a pizza box). Children will also enjoy the soft palette and fuzzy lines of the silkscreen illustrations that create each unusual and highly expressive monster. The mixture of traditional and fantastical travel methods skillfully introduces a bevy of vocabulary. Savvy caregivers will also appreciate the imaginative conversations that this story opens, and the sturdy board-book design means that it will be around for many rereads as toddlers consider how they would like to travel.

König, Susanne Philomel (18 pp.)

This board book, which can stand up on its own so babies can interact with it during tummy time, features only the colors black and white, some images against an all-white background, others against an all-black one. Each illus tration is inside of a heart shape: an astronaut, constellations, and a rocket ship, for example. There are also more unusual inclusions, like a rover, a satellite, and a black hole—lofty sub ject matter for babies but meaningful for discovery nonetheless. The illustrations are made up of thick lines and clustered dots, offering a sense of shadow, texture, and dimension and mak ing these images more captivating. The heart framing of each illustration seems unnecessary aside from displaying a repeated shape. While all of this may very well appeal to infants, sim ply propping up this book in front of a baby (as caregivers are encouraged to do) won’t magically help them learn about outer space. The wordless approach provides room for caregivers to describe and name items however they’d like, potentially expos ing little ones to all kinds of vocabulary and language, so long as

kirkus.com board & novelty books | 15 september 2022 125 adultyoung

Cheddar, Puddles, and Dig Doug are back in this latest board book in Shea and Won’s Adurable series. When Miss Polly assigns the truck-driving dogs the task of making a swim ming spot, Dig Doug ignores directions and gets stuck inside

out the singing animal crew with “If you’re happy and you know it, // smile BIG and really show it!” before abruptly concluding with “If you’re happy / and you know it, / clap your hands!” Start ing the song over again with a reread is an option, but the book on its own feels like one verse instead of a complete tune. It is too short even for the youngest children, who need repeti tion to learn and mirror motions. It is too souped up in cheer even for a song about happiness. And the color scheme is dis jointed, with the wombats shown in a more natural brown and the kangaroos and koalas in more off-the-wall hues. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Purple koala bears shimmy up trees and offer the open ing lines “If you’re happy and you know it, // clap your hands!” Those who have heard this tune before may expect the line to repeat, but the next two spreads instead introduce googly-eyed orange kangaroos in a desert and march right into “If you’re happy and you know it, // stomp your feet!” The illustrations are unpleasantly loud, with pinstripe backgrounds and intense gazes from the animals. What might be baby wombats round

EAT TOGETHER

of colors, shapes, counting, and Unclutteredfood.pages feature little to no background detail in the appealing art, which presents simple, colorful shapes. On the first spread, there are three shapes, and accompanying spare, sans-serif type prompts, “Time to eat! 3 shapes get together to make….” The page turn reveals the three shapes assembled to form “a strawberry!” On the facing page of this reveal, an ant (unmentioned by the text) carries the strawberry on its back, with implied movement to the right and toward the next page turn. The next spread presents four shapes, which, when put together, create a cupcake, and subse quent spreads continue to increase the number of shapes and the complexity of the depicted foods. With each reveal, more ants arrive to march off with lettuce leaves, a cheeseburger, a roast turkey, and a pizza slice, in turn. The climactic spread presents a dilemma: The foods won’t fit down the hole of the anthill. The clever ants have a solution, however, and they disas semble the foods again into smaller shapes, inviting readers to play an amusing I Spy game to identify which pieces go to which foods. The resulting “feast” on the last page offers a final laugh when the ants reassemble the shapes to silly results. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Roberts, James Flowerpot Press (20 pp.) $7.99 | $6.99 paper | Oct. 18, 2022 978-1-4867-2529-8978-1-4867-2404-8paperSeries:AnimalLovers

A weak adaptation of the popular song. (Board book. 0 3)

POLAR PALS

Interesting images that rely on adult intervention for a more meaningful experience. (Board book. 0 1)

Playful fare for toddlers. (Board book. 0 3)

A bevy of Australian beasts invite little ones who are happy—and know it— to join them in showing it.

Rhymes

A quick overview of some arctic animals. This board book describes the arctic hare, arctic fox, polar bear, fur seal, and king penguin. Images show each animal up close and in detail, giving readers a peek at each in its environ ment. The facts range from those likely to be familiar (“fur seals have a thick layer of blubber and extra fur to keep them warm in their cold habitat”), while others might be lesser known—for instance, arctic foxes’ fur changes color depending on the sea son. The text is concise, which makes for an age-appropriate book but does also mean that there are missed opportunities to answer every child’s favorite next question: Why? Readers may wonder, for instance, why king penguins gather in large groups. Still, this is a nice jumping-off point for caregivers and educators looking to bring in additional texts or information to share with curious kids. This one is practically tailor-made for a preschool classroom literacy center or a home with an animal enthusiast. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

adults are actually interacting with the child and the book. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

THIS PUP IS STUCK!

“Playful fare for toddlers.” together

IF YOU’RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT illus. by Quintanilla, Hazel Flowerpot Press (14 pp.) $7.99 | Oct. 18, 978-1-4867-2403-12022Series:HazelQNursery

eat

Shea, Bob Illus. by Brian Won Dial Books (32 pp.) $7.99 | Aug. 30, 978-0-593-32592-62022Series:Adurable

Ordóñez, Miguel Rise x Penguin Workshop (32 pp.) $9.99 | Nov. 8, 978-0-593-38480-02022Aboard-bookfeast

One dig-happy pup has trouble listening to directions and winds up getting in too deep.

A great first step in exploring nonfiction for little ones. (Board book. 2 4)

ABC ROAR

Wu, Junyi Cartwheel/Scholastic (20 pp.) $7.99 | Sept. 6, 978-1-338-65486-82022Corgihasaplay-filled, adventurous day.

the deep hole he created. The problem-solving pups work together to help Dig Doug drive his way out. The message here is clear: Listening is important, especially when it comes to safety. When Dig Doug frets that he’s not a good puppy, Miss Polly carefully reminds him that he’s very good at digging but needs to remember that “other things are also important.” The story concludes with the pups taking a swim even though read ers never see them finish their work. Won’s adorable doggies in their sunglasses and trucks are clear toddler fodder. Little read ers will enjoy the illustrations of Dig Doug digging deep into the dirt, passing dino bones, bunnies, a mole holding a lantern, and even a treasure chest. Another page provides an interesting shift in perspective, showing the view from above as the other dogs look down at Dig Doug in the hole. This story lends itself to conversations about paying attention, working together, and making mistakes. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

126 | 15 september 2022 | children’s | kirkus.com |

Urban, Chiêu Anh Little Simon/Simon & Schuster (30 pp.) $12.99 | July 26, 978-1-66590-302-82022Ananimalalphabet book.

Toddlerhood lessons in an “adurable” puppy package. (Board book. 2 4)

Better versions of this already exist. (Board book. 1 3)

From chowing down on breakfast to meeting other dogs to keeping cool at the pool, Corgi enjoys every moment of the day. There’s a lot of personality packed into this short book. Whether sporting a hat and bandanna while eagerly meeting a squirrel, donning floaties to go swimming, or wearing sunglasses, this irresistible dog has style. The youngest dog lovers will enjoy seeing familiar canine behaviors as Corgi licks, plays with toys, and finally enjoys a well-earned nap. Each page includes just one simple sentence or phrase, with a rhyming scheme that keeps up across page turns, making this most suitable for young lap sitters. The illustrations are done in soft strokes, giving the dog the appearance of fuzzy fur and the story a gentle tone. One page in particular demonstrates movement effectively as Corgi shakes off after a dip in the pool, sprays of water going every where. Corgi’s cuteness is what ultimately sells this darling book for little ones. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Simple and sweet. (Board book. 0 2)

Each spread includes two letters of the alphabet decorated with the featured creatures. “B is for bear, fishing down the stream” depicts the letter B as a body of water with fish below the surface, a bear wading across and another looking on. Though the illustrations are attractive, they don’t include much detail or depth. There are cutouts for each letter, and a tactile shiny line invites readers to trace the letter’s shape. An arrow points to the starting spot. This fine motor practice, while welcome, will be a bit more complicated for younger readers as some letters require them to lift and move their finger, as with T. The audience for this book is below writing age, and caregivers will make up the gaps, but the starting arrows could have been left out altogether. Though the book mixes some lesser-known animals (ibex, quokka, and xerus) in with well-known creatures (gorilla, flamingo, and hip popotamus) and steers clear of overused alphabet animals (here, Z is for zebra shark rather than zebra), there’s little to set it apart in a rather crowded field.

CORGI LOVES

SOCRATES Devra Lehmann H.

In this multigenre anthology, which opens with a nod to the mutability of fairy-tale narratives, the act of transformation is as central to how each story is constructed as what is being told. Whether by magical means, through physical appearance, or otherwise, the contributors—well-known YA authors including AnnaMarie McLemore, Stacey Lee, Alex London, Malinda Lo, and more—depict the arrival of change and how it is received. In Gita Trelease’s “In the Forests of the Night,” set in colonial India, the Indian and White narrator discovers a chilling secret about a tiger hunter’s trophies. The trans protagonist of H.E. Edgmon’s “Mother’s Mirror” finds self-affirmation and love despite parental rejection. A planet’s vainglorious ruler tries to escape Death in “The Emperor and the Eversong” by Tracy Deonn. Other themes include deception, desire, and ven geance, explored in stories that range in tone from the sinister undercurrent of Melissa Albert’s original fairy tale, “The Sister Switch,” to the cheerful recounting of clever trickery in Dar cie Little Badger’s “Coyote in High-Top Sneakers.” Diversity in ethnicity, gender, and sexuality is represented in the cast, which includes a teen hacker with a carefully guarded name, a hijabi known only as Red, and genderfluid merfolk. The stories draw upon perennially intriguing themes, presenting tales in genres from fantasy and historical fiction to horror in a collection sure to please a broad range of readers.

RABBIS, SPIES

SPIES

refashion tales both familiar and obscure.

kirkus.com young adult | 15 september 2022 | 127 adultyoung

AT MIDNIGHT

146

136 THE 9:09 PROJECT by Mark

Unsung Women of the Holocaust Swartz, Sarah Silberstein Illus. by Liz Parkes

youngadult

15 Beloved Fairy Tales Reimagined

by

Ed. by Adler, Dahlia Flatiron Books (464 pp.)

Liz

Second Story Press (192 pp.) $19.95 paper | Oct. 18, 2022 978-1-77260-262-3

Timely and timeless. (about the original authors) (Anthol ogy. 13 18)

$19.99 | Nov. 22, 978-1-250-80602-42022Fifteenshortstories

Parsons 142

These titles earned the Kirkus Star:

HEROINES, RESCUERS, by Sarah Silberstein Swartz; illus. by Parkes

HEROINES, RESCUERS, RABBIS,

In the small southern Kentucky city of Bentley, comments on social media condemn Hunter as responsible for Chloe’s disappearance. When he attends the community vigil for her, Chloe’s mother publicly accuses Hunter of obstructing the investigation. Hunter’s own mom died when he was 15 and his sister, Olivia, was 12. Their dad has awkwardly attempted to pull his weight as a solo parent, and Hunter has stepped in and nurtured Livvy. Small but mighty Livvy is an ardent defender of her brother and is fiercely in love with her girlfriend, Gabriela. To make things worse, childhood friend Daniel informs Hunter that he’s making a true-crime documentary about Chloe. Hunter is upset, especially since it makes him look like a prime suspect, and a subsequent dramatic event draws more attention to the video. Hunter and Chloe met in creative writing club, and he knew she kept a journal—but it’s missing. Enter the sleuthing team of Hunter, Livvy, and Gabri ela, who hatch a plan to find it. The dynamics between Hunter and Livvy and Livvy and Gabriela are endearing and will charm readers, who will root for them to solve the well-executed mys tery. Main characters default to White; Gabriela is Mexican American.

class president-elect? Growing up with a Persian Muslim dad and Irish Protestant mom, Jasmine previously hadn’t paid much attention to news from Iran, but since the revolution, she’s wor ried about her grandmother’s safety. When Americans are taken hostage in Tehran, Gerald villainizes Iran in his campaign; Jas mine describes herself as Persian, hoping he won’t connect the dots, but Ali vocally educates classmates about Iran’s history. Caught between separated parents, figuring out her identity, and maintaining her integrity, Jasmine is a sympathetic char acter who makes some questionable decisions. Humor offsets the heavier themes. The supporting cast represents the area’s diversity.

978-1-72825-420-3Seventeen-year-old Hunter Gifford has no memories of the car accident he was in the night of the homecoming dance with Chloe Summers, his nowmissing girlfriend.

This gripping page-turner will keep readers guessing until the final twist. (Thriller. 14 18)

FRIENDS LIKE THESE Alvarez, Jennifer Lynn Delacorte (384 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-593-30967-42022Acruelprankgets

out of control.

Auntie Minah has come from San Francisco to stay with Jasmine and her younger brother, Ali, in Los Angeles while their dad travels for work. Their mom is at Grandma Jean’s in Kansas, considering divorce. Meanwhile, Jas mine’s school guidance counselor tells her she needs to beef up her record to help her get into a top East Coast college. When stuffy, xenophobic Gerald announces he’s running for senior class president—and, worse, also applying to NYU—Jasmine jumps at the chance to run against him. Beating Gerald should be a cakewalk, but with the NYU early decision deadline only two days away, surely it’s all right to put down that she’s senior

friends like these

Jessica Sanchez and Jake Healy are their small town’s most Instagrammable couple, but they are only hoping for a quiet start to their senior year. Northern California’s Crystal Cove has a coastline with brutal waves, chilly shark-filled water, and riptides, all setting the scene for a dangerous location where a last sum mer get-together before school starts can easily escalate into something deadly. At a drugs- and alcohol-fueled party hosted by Tegan Sheffield, Jessica’s former best friend who is also Jake’s ex-girlfriend, the pair have a fight and go their separate ways. Jake goes looking for Jessica, but he ends up in bed with Tegan— and worse, his betrayal is livestreamed for everyone at the party to watch on the TV downstairs, Jessica included. Jessica’s heartbroken, but there are worse things to be: Jake is 17, Tegan is 18, the video that is now doing the rounds qualifies as child pornography, and the FBI is involved. When people go missing and a body is found, this satisfyingly gripping cautionary tale with multiple unreliable narrators in which nobody is what they seem ramps up. With pulsing dialogue and believable action, the thriller raises the stakes at every turn. The characters take readers on a journey that interrogates consent, bullying, and, ultimately, friendship. Characters are minimally described and racially ambiguous.

A fast-paced thriller to keep readers on the edges of their seats. (author’s note) (Thriller. 13 18)

“With pulsing dialogue and believable action, the thriller raises the stakes at every turn.”

A thoughtful coming-of-age story with a relatable protago nist. (Historical fiction. 12 18)

Bell, David Sourcebooks Fire (360 pp.) $10.99 paper | Nov. 1, 2022

SHE’S GONE

128 15 september 2022 | young adult kirkus.com |

JASMINE ZUMIDEH NEEDS A WIN Azim Boyer, Susan Wednesday Books (336 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-250-83368-62022It’s1979and

Jasmine Zumideh dreams of attending New York Univer sity for journalism and writing for rock magazine Creem

A harrowing, rewarding tale of survival. (map, author’s note, ship diagram, cast of characters) (Fantasy. 14 adult)

INCREDIBLE DOOM

Hopeful and information-packed, this is a positive addi tion to the environmental shelf. (glossary, source notes, bib liography, further information, places to explore, calendar of events, index, photo credits) (Nonfiction. 13 18)

The residents of an intentional com munity in the 1990s struggle with new and changing relationships.

Large cities with paved streets and tall buildings create extra heat and pol luted air for their inhabitants. Around the world, architects are designing buildings that incorporate plants and trees to provide healthier environments. Castaldo explains why planting more trees is beneficial and takes a quick look back into the history of such projects. She then introduces Italian architect Stefano Boeri, summarizing his development as a green architect and describing at length the construction of Bosco Verticale, a treescraper in Milan. Widening her scope, the author discusses urban wildlife; rooftop plantings and green roofs; living walls; and urban farms. Her concluding chapters suggest some of the critical challenges to these approaches and ways readers can become part of this greening movement. Along the way, seg ments set off by the design present topics as varied as photo synthesis, Seneca Village before Central Park, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater, the rise of environmentalism in the West, aerial arborists, the health benefits of including nature in your life, High Line Park in New York, pollinators, green jobs, and electric cars. These inserts and the many photographs break up the text nicely, but some of them also distract from the work’s main focus.

BUILDINGS THAT BREATHE Greening the World’s Cities

$21.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-984816-67-22022Series:GracelingRealm, 5

kirkus.com young adult | 15 september 2022 | 129 adultyoung

littered with icebergs. Prickly, curious, and furious, Hava is a singular hero, charting their grueling way home with humor and anguish. Embedded in her first-person narration, the journey is also internal, as Hava reckons with how a childhood spent hid ing (both through her Grace and from her feelings) has shaped her and how she relates to and understands creatures around her, human and animal alike. Within her fantasy world, Cashore never shies away from showing the charming mundanities of the everyday and the brutal realities of the harshness of wilder ness and emotions as well as exploring how enduring trauma shapes a person and a kingdom. While the story feels overlong, the chance to spend time inside Hava’s head as she learns who she is and what she desires is ultimately a worthy experience. Hava reads White; the supporting cast is cued racially diverse.

Series: Incredible Doom, 2

SEASPARROW

Bogart, Matthew Dev. by Matthew Bogart & Jesse Holden HarperAlley (304 pp.)

Part rock stage, part sanctuary, Evol House belongs to the band The Disappointments and teens who have nowhere else to go. Allison fled her abusive father with the help of her outsider boyfriend, Samir, and they now sleep in the attic. While Allison thrives on the residents’ chaotic behavior and her newfound freedom, Sam sees Evol House as a negative influence. Their opposing views are intriguing: Allison enjoys the adventure and experiences everything on offer, while Sam hides in video games, distrusting the shoplifting and other risky behavior. Sam and Allison’s relationship is realistically depicted, including the gradual shift in his love from protective to controlling. Tina, another resident, struggles to stay motivated when a chance at a new life and romance appears. Her view of Evol House as a found family sworn to defeat apathy and help those in need is impactful, contrasting with their bleaker reality. After numer ous run-ins with local teen Ryan lead to Evol House residents cyberbullying him on a BBS, tensions culminate in a dramatic showdown. The minimal but emotive drawing style combined with realistic and humorous dialogue creates an immersive atmosphere. The discussions of morals, familial and relation ship ties, and finding meaning in life, along with glimpses of the cast members’ backstories, are equally strong. Most charac ters appear White; Sam’s mother is cued as Iranian, and Tina is Native American (no tribal affiliation is given).

Weeks after the events of Winterkeep (2021), Queen Bitterblue and her com panions are traveling home to Monsea by ship.Hava, Bitterblue’s half sister, uses her Grace—she’s able to change how people perceive her—to work as a spy. She’s also translating previously obtained weapon plans. Left mostly to her own devices, Hava thrives onboard, mentored in the ways of the sea by a kind captain. But when tragedy strikes and they are shipwrecked, the crew members are forced to rely on each other in an unforgiving landscape

$24.99 | $18.99 paper | Sept. 6, 2022 978-0-06-306496-6978-0-06-306497-3 paper

ways that innova tive architects are adding health-giving greenery to densely populated cities.

Engrossing and dramatic. (Graphic novel. 13 18)

Cashore, Kristin Dutton (624 pp.)

Castaldo, Nancy F. Twenty-First Century/Lerner (112 pp.) $37.32 PLB | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-72841-946-6Anoverviewof

note explains why they decided to take on this challenge, with intriguing clues pointing to which author wrote which charac ters. The characters are all well written and perfectly flawed as they navigate the complexities of love. After conducting experiments on the biochemistry of teenage love for her AP Chemistry project, Stevie posits that love is simply a biologi cal response built into human brains for the survival of our spe cies. Her girlfriend, Sola, feels angry and hurt, and when Stevie is pedantic and arrogant, ruining their coming-out dinner with her Nigerian family, Sola gives Stevie an ultimatum: Stevie must explain what happened at dinner and show Sola that she feels something for her and believes in love—or it’s over. With the help of her friends, Stevie hopes the perfect romantic gesture can win Sola back. The scheme is a fun adventure, bringing various couples together. Each relationship has friendship at its foundation, and the different journeys result in something of interest for every reader.

Weak storytelling that relies on outdated tropes under mines this work. (Fantasy. 12 16)

Blackout (2021) return with a new collaboration.

A slim, smart manifesto that uplifts young people of color hoping to carve out space in homogeneous professional industries.ForCharles, a technology executive known for her creative achievements and activism, the road to Silicon Valley began when, as an ambitious Black high school student in San Diego, she intended to pursue a safe career that would bring the finan cial security her small-business–owner parents prioritized. A TV program about Google showed someplace marvelous beyond her imagination—but seemingly included no Black people. After interning on Capitol Hill as a college sophomore, she earned a highly selective Google internship. There, Charles realized that she had to be her own advocate; she also learned that building bonds with Black mentors was critical. After college graduation, Charles worked at Twitter and Instagram before she landed her current position as the first head of Diversity & Inclusion Com munications at TikTok. Charles’ eye-opening journey critically examines glaring inequities in the tech industry, showing how marginalized people—especially Black women—can stay true to their convictions, mobilize their communities, and use the internet as a collective force for global action. Charles cites the tech industry’s shortcomings and catalogs various struggles that come from lack of representation, but her experiences are ulti mately portrayed as beneficial growing pains. Despite the bleak injustices of the present, Charles envisions a hopeful future that offers accessibility and accountability.

130 | 15 september 2022 young adult | kirkus.com |

BLACK INTERNET EFFECT Charles, Shavone Illus. by Ashley Lukashevsky Penguin Workshop (64 pp.) $8.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-0-593-38753-5Series:PocketChange Collective

YA stars Clayton, Jackson, Stone, Thomas, Woodfolk, and Yoon’s second novel covers the same theme—Black teens falling in love—with two big differences. This story is set not during a sweltering New York City sum mer but a historic winter storm in Atlanta, and rather than each author’s penning a separate chapter focused on one couple, they all worked together on the snowy romance. The authors’

This frank, spirited guide spotlights a thoughtful leader who embraces social responsibility. (Nonfiction. 12 18)

Another success. (Fiction. 14 18)

THE PRICE OF HOPE Conrad, Lance Dawn Star Press (234 pp.) $18.99 | Oct. 31, 978-1-7333406-1-82022Series:TheHistorian Tales, 5

WHITEOUT

After the king dies, the prince gives up, and the Empire attacks, people in the Kingdom of Tumani need to find the hope to fight on.

When the Historian, immortal wit ness to all great stories, arrives in Tumani, he finds the beloved king has died. Prince Matan’s grief is so deep he refuses to take the throne, leaving the learned, justice-minded citizens vulnera ble. The evil Empire—zealots of the God-Horde—send feathercaped priest Kitok to offer them terms: If they surrender, the warmongering Empire will only enslave them; if they refuse, they’ll be annihilated. Matan and Cmdr. Ison decide to evacuate the Kingdom and save as many Tumani as possible. But then the ridiculously clad Lord Magnificus the Grand appears and urges them to fight. At first Ison thinks him an incompetent con man, but Magnificus’ actions inspire Ison in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds. Together, they face the Empire, under mine the enemy’s faith in their false gods, and tell a story of hope beyond the Historian’s expectations. This latest addition to the Historian Tales is accessible to new readers. However, only existing fans may find this thinly veiled, exposition-laden allegory compelling. The language used to describe those from the Empire evokes negative stereotypes of Indigenous people. There are no well-developed teen characters, and the narrative feels too simplistic for teen readers. Most characters are racially ambiguous.

Clayton, Dhonielle, Tiffany D. Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas, Ashley Woodfolk & Nicola Yoon Quill Tree Books/HarperCollins (288 $19.99pp.)| Nov. 8, 978-0-06-308814-62022Theauthorsof

Coryton, Laura Red Shed (224 pp.)

When 20-year-old June Merriweather got on a plane with a hastily packed bag and her brother’s ashes, it wasn’t because she wanted to visit Scotland in January. It was because that was the cheapest ticket out of Cincinnati and away from the stress of maintaining her family’s lies about the circumstances surrounding her brother’s death. When June inadvertently ingests a peanut during a job interview at the Thistle Stop Café in Knockmoral, Lennox Gordon is the surly paramedic who treats her allergic reaction. They immediately butt heads, a dynamic that doesn’t let up as June moves into his family’s inn and becomes part of his quirky friend group. June is beginning to suspect that their antagonism is rooted in

JUNE, REIMAGINED Crane, Rebekah Skyscape (304 pp.) $16.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5420-3611-52022Ayoungwoman

learns to be true to herself, finding love along the way.

$10.99 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-0-00-855265-7Thistoolkitencourages

| kirkus.com | young adult | 15 september 2022 | 131 adultyoung

An upbeat handbook for young changemakers. (timeline, index, resources) (Nonfiction. 12 17)

A sincere story about navigating life and love. (Romance. 15 adult)

“The real love story here is between the protagonist and her authentic life.”

june, reimagined

speaking up to promote change in issues that matter to teens.Fedup with period products being considered a luxury in the U.K. and taxed as such, the author took on the tampon tax. Starting with a petition, she found the internet to be a superpower as hundreds of thousands of people signed—and others were inspired to launch similar campaigns around the world. By illuminating this facet of sexism, Coryton was able to focus on a tangible goal and create an action plan with what she calls “five golden steps”: Be specific, be focused, be smart, be creative, and be confident. Recognizing that teens may be passionate about a wide range of different topics, the book provides valuable tips and specific examples of successes and setbacks to guide readers through their own activism. Accessi bility is a strength, as the book can be read straight through or dipped into as desired. The author’s enthusiasm is contagious. Unfortunately, the work has not been updated since its original U.K. publication in early 2019. In stark contrast to Coryton’s use of inclusive language, such as “people who menstruate” and “menstruating people,” and her praise and quoting of trans activ ist Charlie Craggs, this U.S. edition retains a paragraph lauding J.K. Rowling for standing up against online trolls, an example that, due to subsequent events, will dismay readers who have followed Rowling’s comments about trans rights.

SPEAK UP!

something warmer when her best friend, Matt Tierney, arrives in Knockmoral to declare that he’s in love with her. June is faced with a choice: go back to a comfortable life of sorority parties and studying to be a teacher or rip apart her old life and build something new from the debris. Readers will sympathize with June’s grief and pain about her brother’s death and root for her to be true to herself. The romance storyline pays off, but the real love story here is between the protagonist and her authen tic life. Main characters default to White.

As a Black person who also possesses the ability to use Root, a form of magic borrowed from deceased practitioners and passed down to her through her mother’s family, Bree is unique in the Line of Pendragon. It is through blood and violence that Bree’s magical abilities intertwined—both those from Arthur’s Welsh origins and from her family’s Bloodcraft originating dur ing chattel slavery in the American South. Together they have

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turned her into one of the most powerful people either Line has ever known. The intricacies of her navigation of her new powers are at the heart of this sequel to Legendborn (2020), espe cially as Bree balances the knowledge that her Blackness cre ates a critical distance between her and the racist people she is sworn to protect as the king of all Legendborns. The plot is complex, and the morsels of information that help fill in the gaps of knowledge don’t always feel fully formed, which may leave readers confused as they try to keep up with the new pow ers and beings that are presented. Still, there are important, if hard to read, references, for example, when Bree is kidnapped and experimented on by an all-White council, a turn of events that reflects Deonn’s commitment to presenting unflinching truths about the cyclical insidiousness of racism.

Danns, Jennifer Hayashi

BENEATH THE BURNING WAVE

One More Chapter (384 pp.)

the dormant spirit of her ancestor King Arthur Pendragon, almost-17-year-old Briana Matthews must fight to learn and control her magical inheritances.

In 2098, as Nubian teens awaken to immense supernatural powers, they may become their people’s saving grace—or confirm the prejudices of those who vilify

Thethem.struggling

A justifiable critique of today that falls flat in imagining tomorrow. (Fantasy. 14 18)

“A worthy successor to an explosive debut.”

BLOODMARKED Deonn, Tracy Simon & Schuster (640 pp.)

bloodmarked

A strikingly different trilogy opener. (author’s note, con tent note, resources, glossary, note about worldbuilding) (Fan tasy. 14 adult)

On an ancient island, the birth of twins could mean salvation—or absolute destruction.Twinson Mu have never been allowed to live past birth, until Kaori and Kairi were born. Growing up on an island controlled by the Experienced, who have organized society based on the type of work an individual performs for the community’s survival, the two are viewed as complementary halves of a whole, but they are rarely in harmony. Where Kaori has the ability to manipulate water, Kairi manipulates fire, and neither can control their impulses or see eye to eye with the other. As a prophesied fate looms and the chasm between the twins grows, they challenge the leadership of the Experienced, with devastating consequences. Ambitious in scope, though sometimes falling short of the mark with underdeveloped rela tionships between characters, this fast-paced novel explores the fall of a fabled civilization, subjugation and gender roles, pain and manipulation, and more. Mu symbology incorporates both Egyptian and Japanese elements, reflecting the people’s mixed heritage. Most characters have both same- and opposite-sex romantic and sexual encounters, and all are referred to by gen der-neutral pronouns. While refreshing stylistically, in a society that is deeply divided by traditional binary gender roles, this apparent genderfluidity is hard to understand, and later compli cations are underexplored.

$19.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-5344-4163-72022Series:Legendborn,2AfterAwakening

Epps, Omar & Clarence A. Haynes Delacorte (368 pp.) $19.99 | $22.99 PLB | Nov. 8, 2022 978-0-593-42865-8978-0-593-42864-1 PLB

Nubian Quarter, dubbed the Swamp, which exists in the remnants of lower Manhattan behind a precarious sea wall, houses Black and brown Caribbean refugees displaced by the climate emergencies of the 2080s. More privileged New Yorkers largely live in the Up High, a floating Jetsons-like mar vel of future tech, away from the gang violence and rampant drug use. At High School 104, bookish Uzochi tries to ignore the biased, selectively taught history, remaining committed to his academic goals as a path out of the Swamp. When his powers of telepathy emerge, the accompanying responsibility is daunting. His cousin, Lencho, caught up in gang life, develops the ability to drain people’s energy; he turns away from family and community in pursuit of power. Zuberi’s powers allow her to see spirits and people’s futures, but even she is unprepared for the coming threat. As powers once thought lost forever are rediscovered by younger Nubians, evil, manipulative Up High architect Krazen St. John aims to exploit them for his own purposes—and Lencho is particularly vulnerable to his lies and machinations. Throughout, connections between Nubians and the African diaspora are implied but confusingly explained in this near-future account of racial injustice that errs on the side of underexplained fantasy tropes.

A worthy successor to an explosive debut. (Fantasy. 14 18)

$10.99 paper | Nov. 8, 2022 978-0-00-849118-5Series:TheMuChronicles, 1

NUBIA The Awakening

$17.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-64375-270-92022Asshedidwith

Bracing as a late-winter morning. (Fiction. 14 18)

French, Gillian Algonquin (352 pp.)

Ernshaw, Shea Simon & Schuster (400 pp.)

Grit (2017), French embeds a mystery within a coming-ofage tale set against an unromanticized agricultural New England backdrop.

A WILDERNESS OF STARS

SUGARING OFF

adultyoung

Owl finds herself attracted to Cody, whose difficult childhood in the foster system could have been hers but for her aunt and uncle; she also begins to warm to both Ms. Z and even possibly the idea of finding a Deaf community. Owl’s Passamaquoddy aunt’s conflicted relationship with her family of origin and distance from her tribe offers measured counterpoint. By the time a thriller plot kicks in, readers will be thoroughly embed ded. Most characters present White; a neighboring Houlton Maliseet family provides thoughtful representation of an Indig enous experience different from Owl’s aunt’s.

Owl, a 17-year-old White girl, lives on New Hampshire’s remote Waits Moun tain, where she helps her uncle tend the family maple-sugar operation. At her tiny K-12 school she endures twice-a-week ses sions with Ms. Z, the district’s teacher for the Deaf. Owl’s been partially deaf since she was 7, when her brute of a father hurled her down the stairs—an act that sent him to prison—but she’s more adept at reading lips than signing. Just as the sap begins to run in February, two intrusions threaten Owl’s hard-won seren ity: the arrivals of a letter from her father announcing his release and Cody, a neighbor’s troubled, estranged grandson, who’ll help with the sugaring. As ever, French weaves her storylines deftly.

secret on her skin.Seventeen-year-old Vega’s life has been one of secrets whispered to her by her mother, mysteries passed down through generations of astronomer daughters and the marks of the Astronomer tattooed onto their necks. Vega and her parents live in a remote valley, hiding from the dangerous outlaw Theorists who believe the Astrono mer has the answer to the consumption, a mysterious, rapidly spreading illness. But Vega’s mother is dying of the consump tion, and after a century of waiting, a sign appears in the sky as two eastern stars finally align. As the Last Astronomer, Vega must find the Architect so they can travel to the sea and save humanity before it’s too late. But the Architect is not quite what Vega expected. Noah is young like her and equally haunted by the secrets they carry and the mission they share. As they run away from those who wish to do them harm, Vega and Noah’s journey and personal connection feel inevitable from the start. With a vibe reminiscent of old Westerns, this evocative, slowmoving novel unveils its secrets little by little with unconvinc ing worldbuilding that wobbles on the central reasoning for the Astronomer-Architect setup. The love story between Noah and Vega is rushed and unearned, and the characters are barely developed. Vega and Noah are assumed White.

Atmospheric but ultimately underwhelming. (Science fiction. 14 18)

$19.99 | Nov. 29, 978-1-66590-024-92022Agirlcarriesalifesaving

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 133

Associates&ClarksonClarkson/RichRich

“I injured it by slowing down on a curve. I for got that slowing down is as important as taking off,” Smith says. “If the finals had been [held] the next day, I could not have run that race.” Through in tense concentration, canny athleticism, and sheer will, Smith edged his friend and teammate John Car los and Australian Peter Norman at the tape, with Norman finishing second and Carlos finishing third.

Almost everything in Tommie Smith’s life that led up to that seminal moment, along with much of the fury, ostracism, and, eventually, lasting glory that happened in its wake, is chronicled in Victory. Stand! Smith, now retired from 27 years of teaching and coaching at Santa Monica College and living in Georgia, collaborated with award-winning writer Derrick Barnes (Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut) and artist Dawud Anyabwile (Rebound) on the book and its black-and-white illustrations.

Having already published an autobiography for adults (Silent Gesture, 2008), Smith was at first re luctant to tell his story again in book form. Eventu ally, he says, “I was convinced that both the writer and the illustrator would be great at making my sto

ON THE COVER

The athlete and activist—legendary for his raised fist at the 1968 Olympics—tells his story for young readers

Smith, then 24 and one of America’s track-andfield elite, had badly pulled a groin muscle just as he’d crossed the finish line of a semifinal heat a cou ple hours before.

“It was a ligament, just above my left leg,” Smith, now 78, recalls during a phone interview about his graphic memoir, Victory. Stand!: Raising My Fist for Justice (Norton Young Readers, Sept. 27).

BY GENE SEYMOUR

Tommie Smith

Tommie Smith, center, at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City.

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What happened shortly afterward that Oct. 16 in Mexico City was of such magnitude that it all but swept away every other detail of Smith’s improbable triumph.Bytwilight, as Smith and Carlos ascended the victory stand to accept their gold and bronze med als, they had removed their track shoes and put black leather gloves on one hand each. As “The Star-Span gled Banner” played, both Black American athletes bowed their heads to their nation’s flag and raised their gloved fists to the darkening skies in silent pro test against racial injustice.

Here is the truly amazing thing that few peo ple besides Tommie Smith remember about his gold medal–winning 200-meter run in the 1968 Olym pics: He broke the world record in just under 20 sec onds on one good leg.

kirkus.com young adult | 15 september 2022 | 135

Gene Seymour is a writer and editor living in Brooklyn and has written for the Nation, the Washington Post, and CNN.com. Victory. Stand! received a starred re view in the July 15, 2022, issue.

before moving back to California and Santa Mon icaAfterCollege.the turn of the 21st century, Smith and Car los received belated accolades and honors, includ ing the Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at the 2008 ESPY Awards, formal recognition of their courage at the White House by President Barack Obama in 2016, and commemorative statues of Smith and Car los’ Olympic salute at both the National Museum of African American History in Washington and on the San Jose State campus.

Although he and his family didn’t talk about seg regation or politics when he was a child, Smith en tered his 20s with a burgeoning social conscious ness fed by the civil rights movement of the early ’60s. “I had an obligation,” he writes, “not just to carry the banner for San Jose State, during track meets. I was obligated to carry an even larger ban ner for my Originally,people.”Smith, Carlos, and other Black track stars intended to boycott the 1968 Games as pro test. The virulent, sometimes violent reactions from Whites toward that prospect (including death threats and hate mail sent to Smith and other pro testing athletes) anticipated the wave of negative re actions against Smith and Carlos’ silent demonstra tion. Both were suspended from the games by the U.S. Olympic Committee and given 48 hours to head back to the States. Before Smith reached home, he’d been fired from a part-time job he had at a Pontiac dealership. And that was only the beginning.

ry understood to kids, to be told in a manner that would make them feel a part of my own life. And to make [a child], when they read this, say to them selves, ‘Gee, I need more than what I got.’ Because that was how I felt growing up and coming to that moment in my life when I did what I had to do.”

adultyoung

“I was banned from any competition in Europe representing the United States,” he recalls. “I couldn’t run under the flag in the U.S. I needed to move on. And I had to support a family. I was 24 years old, married with a son, and there was no time to wait for somebody to give me hand outs, and I was at the peak of my career as a trackand-field athlete.” He got teaching jobs in public schools and, in 1972, landed a coaching position at Oberlin College, where he worked for six years

“It tickles me. My life used to frustrate me, used to scare me,” Smith says. “Now I can see myself from the inside out.”

Victory. Stand! is part of what seems an ongoing process of reacquainting the world with Tommie Smith, who confesses with mild amusement that the book has given even him an opportunity to reac quaint himself with the child, the man, the athlete, and hero he’s become.

The 200-meter final in Mexico City is used as a framing device for Smith’s life story, from his impov erished childhood in rural Red River County, Texas, as the seventh of 12 children born to a sharecropper and his wife. (In the book, Smith describes his young self as “antsy, a bright ball of energy that found it hard to be still.”) The family migrated to Lemoore, California, near the San Joaquin Valley, where young Tommie attended racially integrated schools, in cluding the local high school where he first showed promise as a multisport athlete and won a scholar ship to San Jose State University in 1963.

A vivid, perceptive portrait aimed at spurring readers to take up the quest. (map, notes, note on sources, bibliography, glossary, index) (Nonfiction. 13 18)

Enticing treachery. (timeline) (Fantasy. 14 18)

to join a troupe of vampire-hunting magicians and avenge her mother’s death.

PATH OF DECEIT

As in her outstanding Spinoza: The Outcast Thinker (2014), Lehmann doesn’t present an encyclope dic analysis of Socrates’ life and thought, focusing instead on themes and ideas that will (or should, anyway) provoke immedi ate responses from today’s readers. Here, then, she steers (more or less) clear of esoteric philosophical topics to describe her subject’s lifelong quest for clarity on ethical issues, on how to conduct a meaningful life, and on the nature of true virtue. In retracing the course of his life, she also explores his adversarial relationship with the polis of Athens as soldier, public figure, and ultimately political victim. Along with describing his trains of reason in clear, simple language, she brings him to life as a “modest but arrogant, ugly but alluring, sensuous but ascetic, mocking but earnest” force of nature who considered himself not a teacher but a sort of intellectual midwife, asking thorny questions to confound the supposedly wise but leaving it to others (us, for instance) to work out answers. This account is based on judicious use of source material and massive research and further livened throughout by frequent photos or diagrams of major Athenian buildings, sexually suggestive images on arti facts, and even an illustration of a hemlock plant. Women do get rare but occasional mentions.

Fuston, Margie McElderry (512 pp.)

A Life Worth Living

A thorough study of the brilliant, timeless, entertainingly abrasive thinker.

As the Republic spreads to the far reaches of the galaxy, two Jedi clash with zealots from a religion dedicated to liber ating the Force.

CRUEL ILLUSIONS

On Dalna, an isolated Outer Rim planet, the Path of the Open Hand awaits the completion of the Gaze Electric, the ship on which they hope to find sanctu ary. Marda Ro, a gray-skinned Evereni, yearns to serve the Path like her cousin, Yana, one of the chosen Children who carry out the Force-inspired visions of their prophet, the Mother. Unlike her earnest cousin, Yana knows better than to trust the Path or the Force, but she also doesn’t care about the Mother’s true plans for the artifacts that the Children steal for her as long as Marda stays protected. An investigation of the Path’s connec tion to a high-profile theft brings Jedi Padawan Kevmo Zink,

“A vivid, perceptive portrait.”

socrates

$19.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-66590-210-62022Agirlisdetermined

SOCRATES

Young People

Gratton, Tessa & Justina Ireland Disney Lucasfilm (352 pp.) $17.99 | Oct. 4, 978-1-368-07612-82022Series:StarWars:The High Republic

Lehmann, Devra Triangle Square Books for Young Readers (288 pp.) $19.95 | Oct. 18, 978-1-64421-136-62022Series:Philosophyfor

a blue-skinned Pantoran, and his master to Dalna, but when Kevmo meets Marda, her faith in the Force draws him in, caus ing him to question his beliefs. This High Republic–era mystery builds tension and suspense by alternating among the perspec tives of characters who are at odds with one another. Establish ing from the beginning that the Path stole the missing artifact elevates the overarching plot from a straightforward investiga tive adventure into a complex intrigue about motivation. Fore shadowing sets up the brutal and heart-wrenching ending. The cast of characters includes casual representation of polyamory, queerness, and nonbinary gender identities.

136 | 15 september 2022 | young adult | kirkus.com |

Sure to dazzle those in the mood for something sensuous and sinister. (Paranormal. 14 18)

Ava Perry, 18, and Parker, her younger brother, have been in the foster system since their magician parents were killed. Their dad died so long ago that Ava barely remembers him. Ava never shared with Parker that a vampire was responsible for their mother’s death a decade earlier or that she has been training for years to kill one herself. Her mom always said magic wasn’t actually real, but when Ava learns this was a lie to protect her, she wants to know everything. A troupe of magicians reveal that they use their magic to hunt vampires, and they invite Ava to join them. However, to become immortal like them, she has to prove herself in a competition against other apprentices. As the competition gets underway, she realizes there is something more sinister at play, and the truths she held fast to may not be so true after all. This lush, stand-alone paranormal fantasy blends several beloved tropes into a fresh, enchanting tale. There’s a delicious love triangle, gory blood magic, fierce rival ries, and found family. It’s a bit slow to start as the worldbuild ing is unveiled, but then the action accelerates and the romance heats up. The twisty reveals will keep readers captivated. Main characters are White; there is some racial diversity and a queer couple in Ava’s troupe.

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 137 adultyoung

abridged version of his co-published Unedited (2022), the author personally steps into a first-love YA novel to school a fictional teenager in assumedAwashagency.inunrequited love for class mate Philomel, Mike is devastated to feel her drift away as high school gives way to college…until the discovery that he can alter past events leads him to hope for a replayed scene somewhere along the line that will trans form her feelings for him. Not gonna happen, says Lyga, stroll ing into view as the original plot gives way to a guided tour of the writer’s mind and process. Supported by a putative Editor who chimes in occasionally, plus two alternate versions of him self, Lyga affirms his godlike powers to shape invented char acters despite their protestations. “The only character in the

EDITED Lyga, Barry Blackstone (288 pp.) $19.99 | Nov. 15, 979-8-2008-3240-82022Inaconsiderably

Worthy concept; inadequate execution. (author’s note, resources on website) (Fiction. 12 16)

SOME KIND OF HATE

Littman, Sarah Darer Scholastic (336 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-338-74681-52022Alifelongfriendship

Part star-crossed love story, part creative writing seminar. (Metafiction. 14 18)

is threatened by WhiteTeensnationalism.Declan Taylor, a talented pitcher, and his best friend, Jake Lehrer, are both White—like most in their small, rural New York town—but Jake is Jew ish, and Dec is not. When Dec’s severely injured while trying to impress his crush, he finds himself playing video games all sum mer instead of baseball with Jake. His working-class parents worry about the medical bills more than his misery. Resentful and bored, he’s primed for the MMORPG Imperialist Empires, which takes him down a rabbit hole of hatred. Soon he’s hang ing out IRL with local players, spewing invective, repeating beliefs that “globalists want to dilute the purity of the white race”—and putting that hate into action. Opening with a note about the difficult content, which includes slurs, Littman tack les an important topic. Jake’s feelings of differentness within the larger community are poignantly realized, from casual micro aggressions to active-shooter drills at the synagogue. Unfortu nately, Declan’s characterization is paper thin. A bundle of toxic masculinity from the get-go, he gives readers little insight into what Jake gets from their friendship, while his leaden, presenttense narration (alternating with Jake’s) tends to lines like “fury bubbles in my belly like molten lava.” Frequent infodumps fur ther weigh the tale down.

book who is fully realized and actually matters is me,” he writes, explaining to Mike that he’s just a self-centered adolescent naif when it comes to real love, but it would spoil the story to write his heartbreak out. How this coldly analytical line of reasoning will go over with teens is easy to guess, as is the reaction to the way Phil is intentionally left, even in a tacked-on single chapter of her own, as a paper cutout who is more described than shown. Aspiring writers may appreciate this look backstage. The entire cast reads White.

UNEDITED Lyga, Barry Blackstone (800 pp.)

deeply lovestruck teen Mike’s efforts to change the past and win back his less-attached lover, Philomel, just make things worse, he sets out to argue the author into a major revision. Along with plenty of hot bedroom scenes, the page count balloons with duplicate and disordered chapters of disastrous do-overs plus point-of-view switches that allow supporting cast members to weigh in. Not to mention a set-piece quest that takes Mike and companions through sub way tunnels to a ruined city that only those who have lost in love can enter. Lest he be accused of creeping romanticism, the author abandons this story partway along to tell his own, shoul dering his way in to assert godlike powers. He banishes several significant characters, analyzes how his life and earlier works have informed this one, and professes to help readers get over their own first heartbreaks by telling Mike that he’s too young to be really in love. The author’s attempts to insulate himself from criticism for thin characterizations (notably Phil’s), with, for instance, an ironic reference to his “Male Gaze” and a scene in which Mike is mortified by the sudden realization that his lifelong best friend is Black (the rest of the cast presents White), look like afterthoughts in what reads more like a ponderous, messy archive than a perceptive study on love and loss.

A sprawling, cantankerous self-exploration. (Metafiction. 14 18)

Told in timelines set decades apart, the novel follows the lives of three teen residents of 8 Sunflower St. in the fictional rural Brazilian city of Lagoa Pequena. Expressing itself in a delightful voice, the narrator is the house itself; through it, readers get to know Ana, Greg, and Beto. In the 2000 storyline, Ana is a lesbian with a girlfriend who still hasn’t worked up the nerve to come out to her dad. Just when things are starting to look up, she finds out that they are moving to Rio de Janeiro for his new job. In 2010, Greg is sent to his aunt’s house while his divorcing parents work through things. Awkwardly, the person he feels closest to is the young woman who works as his plastic surgeon father’s per sonal assistant. But in this new place, Greg meets someone new: Tiago, another gay teen who may or may not fit into his plan of finally having his first kiss. In 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic starts, and Beto is stuck with his mother and sister, navigating his complicated relationships with them. He’s also trapped in a city he hates for the narrow gender roles the residents perpetu ate. The reflective stories offer different perspectives on the lives and struggles of the protagonists, with heartfelt moments that readers who appreciate quiet books will enjoy.

book translated from Portuguese about making your home where your heart is.

A sweet, introspective story about queer teens. (Fiction. 13 18)

$19.99 paper | Nov. 15, 2022 979-8-2008-3219-4Adoorstopper

An entry point for reluctant readers to explore the per sonal side of social justice issues. (glossary) (Verse novel. 12 18)

iteration of the copublished Edited (2022) with all the excised sex, alternate pasts and dysto pian futures, sex, authorial commentary, metaphorically significant journeys, and sex left Whenin.

THIS IS OUR PLACE Martins, Vitor Trans. by Larissa Helena PUSH/Scholastic (320 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-338-81864-22022Acharacter-driven

138 | 15 september 2022 | young adult kirkus.com

cop brother shoots an unarmed man in Queens, rising 10th grader Kiki Aspiringinvestigates.GreekAmerican artist Kiki Pantazis goes with her friends to a pro test. There, she sees someone holding a photo of her brother, Stavros, labeled #MURDERER. She learns that he fatally shot Ray Brennan, an unarmed schizo phrenic man who is cued as White, claiming that he was acting in self-defense. Her friends want Kiki to join the protest against police violence, but Kiki is reluctant out of loyalty to her family even though she knows that Stavros isn’t always a good guy. Kiki decides to find out for herself what happened, learning about

KIKI IN THE MIDDLE Malaspina, Ann West 44 Books (200 pp.) $25.80 | Aug. 1, 978-1-978596-06-12022Afterherrookie

the dangers often faced by mentally ill people and seeking out Ray’s parents for their side of the story. Meanwhile, she decides to work through her feelings by painting a mural on the wall of her mother’s bakery—of Stavros and Ray, with the identical bikes they both owned and loved—with help from other stu dents in her summer art class. Kiki’s shift from only drawing in black and white to incorporating color into her art mirrors her growing recognition of real-world complexities. This novel in verse may appeal to teens interested in the social commen tary and therapeutic aspects of art, though some may find the messaging heavy-handed and question the tastefulness of the mural’s content.

THE SECRET WORLD OF LICHENS A Young Naturalist’s Guide

A lichenologist shares both his enthusiasm and a more than superficial portion of what he knows about his favorite subject.

$18.99 | Nov. 15, 978-0-593-20528-02022Margotreturns,this

time becoming immersed in the world of political strat egy and Followingscandal.her spectacular but per sonally anguishing takedown of Roos evelt Bitches, a revenge porn site run by students at her high school, as detailed in Margot Mertz Takes It Down (2021), Margot is attempting to steer clear of her old business as a cleaner of people’s compromising online images. She pines for Avery, the guy she wound up falling for after she faked a relationship with him to further her investigative work, though he seems to want to remain just friends. Drawn into both his father’s campaign for state Senate and the race for class president at her high school, she is soon pressed to put her old sleuthing skills to work. Once again, heavy subject matter, such as sexual predation and misogyny, is balanced by Margot’s fre netic, intelligent, wickedly funny, expletive-laden, first-person voice as she wends her way through unexpected twists. By turns hilarious and heartbreaking—as well as unflinching in its por trayal of the costs of remaining true to one’s personal convic tions—this volume’s open-ended conclusion suggests there may be more to come. Readers ideally should read the previous book in order to fully appreciate this one. Margot is White; Avery’s mom is Black, and his dad is White, and there is racial diversity among secondary characters.

A gripping sequel with a smart, flawed, indomitable pro tagonist. (Fiction. 14 18)

McMullin, Troy Firefly (48 pp.) $19.95 | $9.95 | Sept. 1, 2022 978-0-2281-0398-1978-0-228-10399-8paper

Mushrooms may get most of the fungal love, but after poring over high-quality photos of 38 lichens and pausing to absorb McMullin’s densely informative notes on their physical and reproductive structures, distribution, and manifold uses as food, medicine, dyestuffs, and even air pollution monitors, readers will be strongly tempted to divide their affections. A general introduction informs readers that these truly ancient symbiotic organisms, which combine a fungus and either algae or cyanobacteria (or, as the author puts it, “occasionally both!”), can be thousands of years old and grow up to “27 millimeters per year!” The book introduces close-up, in-your-cortex views

McCrossen, Carrie & Ian McWethy Viking (336 pp.)

of specimens with, often enough, memorable names like Fairy Puke Lichen, Blushing Rock Tripe Lichen, or Dead Man’s Fin gers. One type, Elegant Sunburst, survived more than a year and a half outside the International Space Station—but readers will have no trouble finding lichens of their own closer to home or, following the author’s basic instructions, identifying and study ing them.

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 139 adultyoung

MARGOT MERTZ FOR THE WIN

Glimpses of a minuscule new world for budding natural ists and a rare gap-filler for library collections, too. (glossary) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

the secret world of lichens

“Glimpses of a minuscule new world for budding naturalists.”

$21.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-5344-9351-32022Apoliticalassassin

Morrow, Jackie Colors by Allie Pipitone Image Comics (232 pp.) $14.99 paper | Sept. 20, 2022

face the end of high school with trepidation and nostalgia.

Nora isn’t ready for things to change. When senior year starts, and she can feel the cracks beginning to form in her long time friendships with Iris and Lili, she scrambles for an activity that will keep the three connected. Her solution? Supper Club. Nora, Iris, Lili, and some other friends come together to share food, laughter, and memories. Nora, who is Italian American, makes rainbow cookies and lasagna. Lili, who is cued as being of Chinese heritage, celebrates the Lunar New Year with steamed sea bass and high school graduation with braised pork ribs and spring bao. Iris, who is White, brings in mac and cheese and her mom’s banana bread. Their other friends contribute to the cul tural mélange with mofongo, challah, and flautas. Each friend weathers her own challenges—sick parents, anxiety attacks, alcohol use, and romantic pursuits gone wrong, to name a few. These bumps in the road don’t leave their friendships unscathed, but the story is ultimately reassuring. The richly colored art is full of movement and personality, gestures and facial expres sions bringing intensity to every character. The text relies on dialogue for exposition, trusting readers to connect the dots and build connections between events that take place in the characters’ lives over the course of the school year.

A relationship-driven fantasy with much to offer. (Fantasy. 13 18)

Mooney, Carla ReferencePoint Press (64 pp.) $32.95 | Sept. 1, 978-1-6782-0338-22022Abriefoverviewof

“Bursting with flavor.”

Aare.so-called peace between humans and Witchik is maintained through a treaty—a one-sided treaty that’s slowly threatening the witches’ existence. When the treaty demands that Ranka serve as the Bloodwinn, or prince’s bride, she refuses—only to have close friend Yeva mistakenly abducted in her place. Ongrum, Ranka’s coven leader, sends her to the capi tal city of Seaswept to rescue Yeva and assassinate the prince, but he and his twin sister aren’t what she expects. Sheltered Prince Galen’s kindhearted; icy, calculating Princess Aramis matches her brilliance with her goodness. Aramis and her best friend, a mysterious ambassador, have been desperately trying to cure a new plague that’s claiming witches—turning them into warped versions of the special kind of witch Ranka is, a blood-witch or nigh-uncontrollable killing machine. Working with the twins, Ranka learns dark secrets about the disease and who the villains really are in the twisty plot (which becomes a marathon of action and betrayal in the final act). Ranka and Aramis’ slow-burn romance is rewarding. Some worldbuilding questions are left unanswered, as the story’s more concerned with narratives about betrayal of trust and untangling abuse and manipulation from love. Large, muscular Ranka is White; the twins are Black. There’s racial diversity that holds no in-world significance among humans of all classes and witches (who can be of any gender).

GETTING HELP Coping With and Overcoming Mental Illness

supper club

Mix, Rebecca McElderry (480 pp.)

speak out about their experiences (which add a note of hope). The book then goes on to look at treatment, with individuals’ varying needs and treatment options being discussed, includ ing psychotherapy, cognitive behavior therapy and other tech niques, medication, and hospitalization. Long-term self-care approaches are also noted, such as exercise, engagement with the arts, animal therapy, and peer support. Diverse personal perspectives that offer practical insights into lifelong strategies enhance the work, grounding the topics while humanizing the overall detached tone. While a strong case is made for improv ing understanding of mental illness as a common reality for many, there is a somewhat oversimplified distinction between positive and negative states of emotion. Although the work is well organized in bite-sized chunks of language accessible to a range of readers, there is limited discussion of social contexts and factors that may influence well-being.

Starting with a general introduction to topics like depression and anxiety, readers encounter a basic survey of mental illnesses: conditions that have an impact on emotion, thinking patterns, and behav ior choices. The work opens by looking at disability, financial and career effects, relationship stress, implications for aca demic achievement, and the recent impact of Covid. The sec ond chapter addresses stigma, media representation, access to affordable care, and changing perceptions as public figures

SUPPER CLUB

Bursting with flavor. (recipes, concept art) (Graphic fiction. 13 18)

140 | 15 september 2022 young adult | kirkus.com |

sent to save her kind must discover who her true ene mies

978-1-5343-2421-3Threebestfriends

struggles with men tal illness and approaches to treatment.

A clinical, introductory guide to understanding mental health. (source notes, getting help and information, further research, index, picture credits) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

THE ONES WE BURN

Miami, Florida, has spent nearly $2 billion dollars battling rising coastal waters. People on the island nation of Kiribati are using sandbags and dredging material from the seafloor in hopes of keeping the ocean from entirely taking over their home. The warming of the globe is also causing droughts, wildfires, and stronger hurricanes, all leading to the loss of habitat and animal extinction as well as a rise in climate refugees as some places become uninhabitable, particularly as erratic weather exacer bates existing challenges. Sourced from recent reporting and told in a digestible journalistic style, this work brings imme diacy to the situation by briefly showing how things got to this place, how fast things are changing, and what is being done by governments, organizations, and companies around the world. The information is well organized; text boxes expand and define terms used. Color photos throughout help illustrate con temporary disasters caused by warming temperatures. Broad and global in its perspective, this is more of an overview of cur rent information rather than deep research and social context.

$18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-68263-488-22022Whatpricemagic?Setagainstanimaginative

THE VERMILION EMPORIUM

the new Ground hog Day in Painter’s latest teen romance.

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 141 adultyoung

ground and inspired by the Radium Girls, this is a love story between two broken, orphaned older teens who dis cover magic both literal and figurative when they meet. When Twain discovers a strand of starlight and Quinta finds a book of starlight lace patterns at the Vermilion Emporium (possibly the most creative and least utilized magic shop in YA fantasy), they discover a secret—that starlight lace once conferred power, although magic was last seen in Severon a couple of hundred years ago. Together they set out to make a dress of starlight for the Casorina who rules their land. Both Quinta and Twain are appealing and easy to root for. Unfortu nately, every conflict resolves rapidly, compelling obstacles are nearly nonexistent, and love blossoms immediately so that the

back

THE DO-OVER

Pacton, Jamie Peachtree Teen (416 pp.)

CLIMATE CRISIS Our Planet in Peril Nardo, Don ReferencePoint Press (64 pp.) $32.95 | Sept. 1, 978-1-6782-0456-32022Alookatthe

Unequivocally hilarious and delightful. (Romance. 13 18)

impact of human behavior on climate change showing how rapidly things are progressing and, in the process, impacting ecosystems, biodiver sity, and human life.

According to Emilie Hornby, “love is for planners,” and she is confident that Josh is the perfect boyfriend: He is well liked, academically gifted, and extremely handsome. So after dating him for three months, she adds “Say ‘I love you’ to Josh!!!!!!!!!!!” to her Valentine’s Day to-do list. But Fate has other plans for Emilie, and she ends up crashing her car into her surly chemistry lab partner Nick’s truck, losing a journalism fellowship due to a clerical error, and catching Josh kissing his beautiful ex in his car. After sleeping over at her grandma’s, Emilie wakes up in her own bedroom and discovers that it is Feb. 14 again. Trapped in a time loop where she repeat edly relives the day’s heartbreaking events, she tries to manipu late things in order to free herself. But tomorrow never seems to come, and she keeps finding her way back to Nick, who is not only annoyingly handsome, but surprisingly charming. Painter plucks readers’ every heartstring, from writing a sweet love story between two teens with very different views on romance to honestly depicting how Emilie’s parents’ messy divorce has impacted her feelings of self-worth. Italicized confessions at the beginnings of various chapters prove there is a playful side to Emilie that is further brought out by Nick, whose constant teasing leads to flirty banter. Main characters are cued as White.

Much potential, mixed payoff. (author’s note) (Fantasy. 13 18)

Painter, Lynn Simon & Schuster (304 pp.) $19.99 | Nov. 15, 978-1-5344-7886-22022Valentine’sDayis

only barrier is Quinta’s love-’em-and- leave-’em attitude (her sexual experience, which includes past male and female lovers and many one-night stands, is, refreshingly, never an issue for her or for Twain). The world is a vibrant, multiracial, magical place, but uneven pacing makes the first half drag while the lat ter portion of the book rockets along and provides all the con flict and tension. With this work Pacton pivots from realistic fiction to fantasy, and the often lovely writing creates a feast for the senses despite the plot’s weaknesses.

An accessible and urgent primer on a crisis of urgent pro portions. (photo credits, source notes, organizations and web sites, further research, index) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

an individual

just a hobby to Jamison when he uses an art project to reconnect with his family and friends after his mother’s death.

Roehrig, Caleb Scholastic (304 pp.) $11.99 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-338-78403-9Series:HuntaKillerWhenhisuncle’s

Discover What Being a Guy Means to You Reigeluth, Christopher S.

142 | 15 september 2022 | young adult | kirkus.com

Exquisitely drawn characters and deeply authentic emo tions elevate this to something greater than the sum of its parts. (Fiction. 14 18)

THE 9:09 PROJECT

$18.99 | Nov. 15, 978-0-593-30975-92022Photographybecomes

Jamison Deever, a 17-year-old implied White Californian boy, has developed the habit of taking a photo on the same corner—the intersection of Fig and Gardena—at 9:09 p.m., the exact time his mother died two years ago. When he forgets her birthday and worries that means he’s forgetting her, Jamison decides to use the 9:09 photos to keep his mom close by looking more carefully at his subjects. As he learns to spot and draw out connections to the strangers he photographs, he also cultivates deeper relation ships with the people in his life. In this brilliant literary por trait, Jamison’s charming adoration of his sister, Ollie; authentic (and frequent) cursing; and lively, energetic demeanor skillfully complement the more cerebral examinations of grief, art, love. The chapters open with intriguing quotes from photographer Dorothea Lange, and the technical jargon is accurate but not distracting. Gifting readers with a wryly funny, extremely intel ligent, and sweetly romantic contemporary novel full of biting sarcasm and threaded through with tender yet powerful emo tions, Parsons asks them to consider questions of meaning and value in their own lives.

more than

THE WORKBOOKMASCULINITYFORTEENS

masculinity then provides activities to help readers understand how the Guy Code influences them. For example, in assess ing messages about sports being more important than school, related activities include identifying personal goals and tag ging specific academic subjects and extracurriculars according to gender messaging. The activities are nicely presented, and, as explained in Michael G. Thompson’s foreword, such selfknowledge can empower the individual to choose his own path. But the author sometimes tends to oversimplify and overgener alize. This is particularly true when he tries to explain masculin ity through the lenses of culture and race, a sensitive topic that begs for more in-depth treatment. The appendices explore sex versus gender, the gender spectrum, and more.

Instant Help Books (192 pp.)

A useful guide that poses important, soul-searching ques tions in an engaging manner. (references) (Nonfiction. 12 16)

BLOOD IN THE WATER

death turns out to be more than an accident, Zac races to decipher the series of clues he uncovers before the murderer catches up to him. Working right on the beach generally isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, and Zac Fremont should know. He’s prepared for yet another season of dealing with the spring break crowds at his family’s beachfront restaurant instead of riding the waves with his former pro-surfer uncle—until Uncle Flash is found dead and it looks like Zac’s dad is the prime suspect. Determined to clear his dad of any wrongdoing while becoming increasingly frustrated with his obligations to the family busi ness and growing disillusioned with the uncle he idolized as he learns more about him, Zac knows that whatever happened to Flash may happen to him or someone else he loves if he doesn’t figure things out in time. Complexity is added with the unrav eling of rumor-skewed town mysteries and other, more recent, developments. The novel’s events take place over a span of about one week, keeping the secondary cast focused on just the necessary players. Images of a variety of clues replicate the immersive nature of the Hunt a Killer tabletop crime-solving game from which this novelization originates. The ending brings a satisfying conclusion while not being so perfectly tied up as to be totally implausible. All characters read as White.

$18.95 paper | Nov. 1, 2022 978-1-68403-949-4Helpsreadersdevelop

Parsons, Mark H. Delacorte (384 pp.)

understanding of masculinity through a series of prompts and simpleReigeluthworksheets.begins with three separate letters, one to teen guys; one to parents, caregivers, and mentors; and one to therapists, counselors, and other supporters. His introduction lucidly explains “Guy Code” and its potential toxicity, lays out the structure of the book, and offers the first few activities designed to help readers understand their own views surround ing issues of masculinity. In one, there’s a list of attributes relat ing to physical appearance, interests, and emotional traits to be tagged as either relating to girls and women or guys. Each chap ter unpacks a specific aspect of conventional thinking about

An absorbing, puzzling narrative sure to entertain truecrime fanatics and murder mystery readers alike. (photo cred its) (Mystery. 12 18)

Scarfarotti, Lorie Red Deer Press (216 pp.) $14.95 paper | Oct. 30, 2022

Rogers, A.M. West 44 Books (200 pp.) $25.80 | Oct. 1, 978-1-978596-09-22022Highschoolstudent

Harper wishes that she still lived in Los Angeles where there are more opportunities for acting, which is her passion.

978-0-88995-668-1Eighthgrader

Rowell, Rainbow Illus. by Jim Tierney Wednesday Books (288 pp.) $24.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-2508-5541-12022Romanceblooms

scattered showers

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 143 adultyoung

honest, layers-peeled-back connections by which people feel seen by one another. With this volume, which includes four pre viously published entries, Rowell offers more of what she does best: character-driven stories interlaced with a healthy dose of nerdiness and a little sappy indulgence thrown in as a treat. It’s easy to get swept up in these tales and root so passionately for the protagonists that it almost hurts, but readers will close the covers feeling satisfied. Except for one Vietnamese American protagonist, the cast is predominantly White. Each story is prefaced by an attractive mulberry- or mint green–and-white, full-page illustration that helps set the mood.

“Readers will close the covers feeling satisfied.”

THINGS THAT BURN

Josie Tomaselli is a runner, spurred on by her dad, who is nowHerhospitalized.coach,best friends, mom, and younger brother, Lucas, are also strong supporters. Josie’s parents are amicably divorced, and her family life is pretty good. Josie is not always confident, but she gets along well with outgoing Lucas. She’s starting to think about boys and gets drunk at a local fair with her friends. Always on her phone, Josie is attached to her spe cial running playlist—her dad’s inspiration (the chapter head ings reference the song titles). Nervous before every race, she depends on her lucky shorts, her “fast hair” (the French braids her mom gives her), her dad’s encouraging text messages, and her friends’ urging her to have “lady balls” to get through. At the beginning of the week covered in the book, Josie wins a race, finally getting to advance to the city finals. Running in the park, she meets the woman who starts the school races: Aurora Osborne, a former Olympian whose locs may cue her as Black in the otherwise predominantly White cast, gives Josie encour agement and recommends special drills. This approachable debut about contemporary middle school life deals honestly with Josie’s anxiety about her own abilities and her dad’s recur ring lung cancer. There are occasional references to her Italian heritage, mostly centered around food.

SCATTERED SHOWERS Stories

Emotional turmoil and environmental threats are skill fully handled in this accessible novel in verse. (Verse novel. 12 18)

She is inspired by actress and human itarian Audrey Hepburn and has just made a new friend, Dakota, who is nonbinary and cued as Black and who speaks out about climate change. Harper is trying to get used to the California town that she and her father have moved to with Ara, Harper’s new stepmother; Harper’s mom has moved to Atlanta. Harper and her dad are White, while Ara is from Morocco—and very pregnant. Harper has always been close with her dad, but she misses her mom and is ambivalent about becoming an older sister. When wildfires blaze, her fire fighter dad must leave them to go do his job. Harper and Ara are thrown together uncomfortably as they wait to find out whether and where the fire will spread; fortunately, they escape when it threatens to engulf their home. The situation stresses everyone out, but luckily, Dakota and their capable mom are at the emergency shelter and step in to assist Harper and Ara at a critical time. This novel for reluctant readers in first-person free verse strongly and realistically portrays a young woman who experiences family problems and larger dangers.

even during turbu lentMissedwinters. chances on New Year’s Eve, a Star Wars movie premiere, the soundtrack to grieving a breakup, break ing traditions for a school dance, celebrating holidays amid a pandemic, a modern fairy tale, stark realizations about life passing by, the awkwardness of bringing a boyfriend home for Christmas, and characters in limbo, waiting to be written into the story: Rowell weaves these scenarios into nine short stories, some realistic and some fantasy and most taking place during the winter or relating to holidays. A number are set in the author’s home state of Nebraska. Fans will recognize a few familiar characters, including Simon and Baz from Carry On (2015), the sole queer couple in this collection. All but one story ends in a definite romance, but they are all about the

A treat. (Short stories. 14 18)

RUNNING THROUGH IT

A sensitively told story about parental illness interwoven with meaningful friendship and sports themes. (author inter view) (Fiction. 12 14)

and otherwise— abound for high school junior Jo Porter, better known (though still not all that well, to her dismay) for portraying Jo March in her family’s theater production, Little Women Live!

luminary

offers some methods to help boost holis tic health.Initial chapters address the practices of tarot, astrology, witchcraft, energy work, and spirit guides, while later ones examine body positiv ity, therapy, mindfulness, and creative pursuits. Throughout the book, Scelsa uses a broad definition of energy that leaves plenty of room for individual connections, spiritual or otherwise, while always stressing that readers should employ these strategies in ways that are helpful for them personally. She candidly discusses her own journey of navigating depression and anxiety. Her tone is remarkably approachable and nonjudgmental—it’s like you’ve struck up a conversation with a more experienced rela tive or family friend who’s more than willing to talk shop while adamantly wanting what is best for you. This dialogue extends to actual conversations Scelsa has with experienced profession als chosen with care for each chapter. They each speak from diverse perspectives concerning race, queerness, and physical and mental conditions. Scelsa gives a primer on the basics of each set of tools, including simple introductory exercises at the end of each chapter. Whether readers are seasoned practitio ners or baby witches—or just open-minded people interested in expanding their self-care toolboxes—this is a fantastic resource for getting a new perspective on why these practices are poten tially valuable and how they interrelate to one’s physical, mental, and metaphysical well-being.

“A fantastic resource for getting a new perspective.”

A valuable resource filled with productive possibilities. (author’s note, references) (Self help. 12 18)

account of

Overly long and unevenly paced. (Fiction. 14 18)

THE HUNGER BETWEEN US Scott, Marina Farrar, Straus and Giroux (304 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-0-374-39006-82022Afirst-personfictional

Seventeen-year-old Liza buries her mother in secret so that she can still use her ration cards. Not that it matters much: Nearly a year after fascists sur rounded the city, there’s simply no food to be had—the daily allotment is 125 grams of bread, much of that made of sawdust. Liza’s best friend, Aka, tells her about the Mansion, a place where the secret police give girls food in exchange for sexual favors. When Aka goes missing, Liza searches for her and for the Mansion, where she’s sure she will find her. Along the way, she encounters two young men she knew before the war— Maksim,

starvation during the siege of Leningrad.

a member of the secret police, and Luka, a musician who lives in the tunnels beneath the city that are rumored to be inhabited by bands of cannibals. Liza’s an unrepentant thief, desperate to survive, but there are lines she won’t cross—or are there? Scott’s Vilnius childhood behind the Iron Curtain adds authenticity to this story; the unrelenting misery and stomach-churning denouement make it an emotionally difficult read. The set ting is fully depicted, but the characters never quite come to life, especially Luka and Maksim, who seem more or less inter changeable, and Aka’s father, who is a cardboard villain.

144 15 september 2022 young adult | kirkus.com |

A vivid setting and nail-biting events are let down by char acterization that lacks heart. (author’s note) (Historical fiction. 14 18)

LUMINARY A Magical Guide to Self-Care Scelsa, Kate Simon & Schuster (368 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 8, 978-1-66590-234-22022Fromspellstomindfulness,

this work

BELITTLED WOMEN Sellet, Amanda Clarion/HarperCollins (384 pp.) $17.99 | Nov. 29, 978-0-358-56735-62022Tensions—romantic

For the past seven years, Jo and her sisters, Meg, a senior, and Amy, a sophomore—in the absence of a fourth sister, they hold annual auditions for a Beth—have played their parts in turning their mother’s favorite book into a “semiprofessional tourist attraction” on their small Kansas farm. As in Alcott’s book, their father is vaguely elsewhere. From Jo’s point of view the sisters’ personalities track, too: Meg is pretty, Amy spoiled, and despite her wish to earn a cross-country scholarship to college, Jo gets stuck being resentfully responsible. She’s got a crush on David, Meg’s ex who’s signed on to play John Brooke in the upcoming season. When a New York reporter comes to do a possible national feature story on the show, Jo sees her and her cute son, Hudson, as a possible way out of the life she finds stagnant. The main characters are all White except Laurie, a Black classmate with acting ambitions, and some of the Beths. The story starts out meanderingly slowly and heavy on bicker ing and Little Women references only existing fans will get. Even tually Jo comes into focus and the ending has honesty and heart, though some readers may crave a firmer resolution.

A concise and reader-friendly guide. (picture credits, source notes, resources, further research, index) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

A readable introduction to angry, distressed, impassioned, idealistic teens acting on their visions of positive change. (source notes, organizations and websites, further research, index, picture credits) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

recognize (and avoid) the pitfalls of the online world.

WAIT FOR ME Shepard, Sara Union Square & Co. (320 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 1, 978-1-4549-4577-22022Aprecociousyoung

Steffens comes out swinging, with an introduction that lays out six hallmarks of behavioral addiction, linking them to the case study of a college student whose extreme obsession with watching movies on his laptop descended into addiction. The isolation caused by the recent Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated teens’ dependence on electronic devices, heighten ing the dangers. The first four chapters unpack the allure and hazards of the online world, while the final one offers a path to overcoming addiction. The need for social acceptance trig gers the fear of missing out, but ironically, the more a person engages with their devices, the less they are connected to the real world. Because social media presents idealized portraits and images, it frequently leads to unhealthy obsessions and selfhate. Online gaming is another pitfall of the cyberworld that can lead to social withdrawal. While we tend to blame ourselves for our fixations with our devices, it’s important to recognize that apps are designed to be habit-forming. Dependence on them can even change the brain’s chemistry. Like other addic tions, the solution comes from first admitting that you have a problem: The author encourages steps that include seeking professional help, joining a support group, and behavior modi fication through mindfulness. Captioned stock photos and text boxes citing relevant studies break up the clear and accessible text and add useful context.

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 | 145 adultyoung

TEEN ACTIVISTS

woman with many faces is gripped by a mysterious voice.Seventeen-year-old Casey seemingly has it good: She’s attending New York University on scholarship; she’s close with her roommate, Pippa; and she’s dating supernice, super rich Marcus. But something feels off. After a company holiday party where she meets Marcus’ CEO father, she is haunted by an insidious, whispering voice that makes her distrust Marcus. Is she being haunted by a forgotten memory, or is this a premo nition? Deciding to spend some time alone and study for finals, she hops on the Long Island Rail Road and randomly heads to

Steffens, Bradley

future for them selves and others, the teens profiled in this work strive to make a difference.

An enjoyably twisty romantic puzzle. (Mystery. 14 18)

ReferencePoint Press (64 pp.) $32.95 | Aug. 15, 978-1-67820-352-82022Explainshowto

Examples of young people taking action and sharing their thoughts in their own words make this book vivid and inspiring. The author warns that activism is difficult work requiring a variety of skills as well as persistence, self-confidence, and determination. Organizing, marching, writing, and speaking are often added to days that are filled with other responsibilities. Activists have also been ignored, insulted, bullied, patronized, and threatened. They can’t let discouragement stop them and must accept not being like other teens. Some of the individuals highlighted here are well known, like Malala Yousafzai and Greta Thunberg, who views her autism as a strength. Others are less famous, like Alé Ortiz, a queer Latina gun control activist in Los Angeles. Sheen introduces young people in Canada, England, Pakistan, Uganda, and elsewhere. Their causes cover a variety of topics, and the book’s chapters each focus on one area: environmental issues, gun violence, racial justice, and children’s welfare. Sheen presents activism as an engaging challenge while not sugar coating the sometimes-limited immediate results. This acces sible overview with text boxes that introduce related subjects offers readers a peek into the motivations and strategies of teen changemakers who may inspire them to speak out.

Sheen, Barbara ReferencePoint Press (64 pp.) $32.95 | Aug. 15, 978-1-67820-356-62022Aimingatabetter

Youth Changing the World

seaside town Avon Shores, where she inexplicably knows more than she should about a place she’s never been. Then she meets a boy named Jake who remembers her as Becky. All the while, Casey is inundated with disturbing visions, including a wedding gone wrong, a car crash, and a drowning. As the book is narrated from Casey’s first-person, present-tense perspective, readers closely follow her as she makes missteps and causes some of her own problems. What follows is a typical love triangle but with a surprise thrown in. There is a slow buildup to a fast-paced mys tery in which each new piece of information casts what came before in a new light. Most characters default to White.

SCREEN ADDICTION A Teen Epidemic

146 15 september 2022 young adult | kirkus.com |

Illus. by Sophie Jones Clock Tower Publishing (352 pp.) $9.99 paper | Sept. 6, 2022 978-1-78226-959-5Series:GameOver, 1

Second Story Press (192 pp.) $19.95 paper | Oct. 18, 2022 978-1-77260-262-3Acollective

Action-packed interplanetary hijinks. (Science fiction. 12 16)

High schoolers Jack Delaney, Cam eron Yates, Megan Joyce, and Ayo Osikoya-Arinola aren’t the most popular students at their school. But as tHeScOuRgE, ForgeFire666, Zuul, and Hephaestus in Distant Dawn, a global online co-op game featuring massive mechs and tentacled alien foes, they comprise the Raid Mob, the game’s most legendary squad. Their skills have gained them exclusive first access to the company’s new virtual reality con troller set, and this next Fullmersion level of Distant Dawn brings the sights and smells very close. When the teens seem ingly come face to face with aliens spouting plans for a take over of Earth, they must use their skills to save humanity. Are reality and the world of Distant Dawn colliding, or are they just experiencing overstimulation from the new tech? Sulli van explores themes of friendship, family, resolve, and reality in this fight-filled series opener. Cameron, who stutters, and Ayo, who is autistic, in particular draw strength from their vir tual selves. Sullivan also touches upon issues in technology and gaming like doxxing and data mining. Extended action-packed scenes should engage gamers and science-fiction fans, though some casual readers may find them dense. Illustrated elements, including scoreboards, robot and weapon specs, and blackedout “game over” spreads, add an immersive element, as does a musical playlist. Other than Nigerian British Ayo, the main characters read White.

Four friends face off against an impending alien invasion.

Swartz, Sarah Silberstein Illus. by Liz Parkes

RISE OF THE RAID MOB Sullivan, M.J.

How a Group of Young Kenyans Fought To Transform Their Slum and Inspire a Community Suthar, Nihar Rowman & Littlefield (184 pp.) $28.00 | Nov. 15, 978-1-5381-6873-82022ThreeyoungKenyans utilize com munal philanthropy to build a brighter future for the next generation.

biography of nine women who took on important roles during World War II but whose courage and contributions have beenReginaoverlooked.Jonas, the first female rabbi; Faye Lazebnik Schul man, a photographer documenting Jewish resistance in White Russia; and writer and journalist Rachel Eiga Auerbach, who helped record the lives of Polish Jews under the Nazi occupa tion: These women and the others featured in Swartz’s book came from different backgrounds (including social class, reli gion, nationality), spoke different languages (though many, cru cially, were multilingual), and took different paths during and after the war. However, common threads run through their stories, and many made it their life goal to preserve personal accounts of the Holocaust for future generations. Each chap ter begins with an attractive, stylized portrait that effectively evokes the time period; the woman’s name and dates of birth and death; and a capsule description. These personal stories are illuminating and powerful, offering ways for readers to connect with and understand the past. Swartz writes from a feminist perspective, questioning why these heroic figures went unsung and frequently even unmentioned while male heroes received praise and recognition. With one exception, she chose to focus on women who survived the war, and her personal connection becomes poignantly clear in the final chapter about her mother

An eye-opening account of undeterred resilience and hardwon triumph. (guide to the area, map, discussion questions, website, notes, bibliography, index) (Nonfiction. 13 18)

HEROINES, RESCUERS, RABBIS, SPIES Unsung Women of the Holocaust

who dreams of becoming a soccer star. With the help of sym pathetic adults, their song about Kenya’s economic plight, inspired by the G8 summit, is posted to YouTube and shared with Italian government officials, garnering much attention. A chance introduction to rollerblading spawns an official skat ing team. Lucy, who seeks a different path than that dictated by tradition, falls in love with the sport; her passion and disci pline make her a role model for girls to feel empowered. The Hope Raisers face challenges, including criticism from elders, but skating becomes a catalyst for lasting change through travel and exposure to life outside Korogocho. Suthar’s storytelling doesn’t sensationalize poverty, and it highlights the value of change that originates within communities. He clearly respects his subjects. The young people’s perseverance is commendable: Their optimism contrasts with the realities of their environ ment. Cultural and historical information is woven into the nar rative, seamlessly providing important context.

Life in Korogocho, Kenya’s fourth largest slum, is a struggle. Mutura Kuria’s mother picks trash in a landfill to earn money so he can stay in school. When his friend Daniel Onyango invites him to join his band, the boys soon realize the connection between music and social change. The band, the Hope Raisers, attracts other neighborhood youths, including Lucy Achieng,

THE HOPE RAISERS

Walters, Eric DCB (288 pp.)

Thrilling worldbuilding plus a creative tangle of mysteries mark this debut. (playlist, discussion questions) (Science fiction. 12 18)

$10.99 paper | Nov. 15, 2022 978-1-68497-093-3Series:Elle(s),1Ateen’srapidswitches in personality lead to greater mystery in this graphic novel translated from French.

978-1-77086-661-4Thetalented

but strange new kid at school is more than he appears—and the target of more danger than anyone wouldWhenguess.Becky is assigned to show around Gene, a new student, he quickly imprints upon and follows her. He is awkwardly literal in con versations and stands out with his suit and briefcase, but he’s ripped and a quick study in many activities, including basket ball, academics, and playing saxophone. Becky eventually goes from teaching him to use more contractions in his speech to exchanging “I love you”s. Becky enjoys Gene’s massages and advanced study techniques, but he still has an air of mystery about him. Roughly halfway into the book, Gene’s secrets catch up to him, placing him and Becky in danger and on the run. The

THE MEMORY INDEX

It’s 1987, and it’s been almost a decade since Memory Killer swept the globe, fundamentally changing the way society operates due to its ability to leave large swaths of people without access to their own memories. Some, like foster kid Freya Izquierdo, are labeled degenerates due to their need to rely on artificial recall technology to fill in for the missing halves of their memories. Others are luckier, like ever curious Fletcher Cohen, who is a recollector—someone who only accesses arti ficial recall once a day to function. When Freya is invited to be a guinea pig for a new treatment at Tennessee boarding school Foxtail Academy as an alternative to getting sent to jail for tres passing as she investigated her father’s death, she has no choice but to accept. Freya finds there’s much more than meets the eye at her new school, and she joins forces with newfound friends Fletcher, Chase Hall, and Hoa “Ollie” Trang to unravel a cor porate conspiracy unfolding on campus. This central mystery is fun and engaging, evoking the spirit of ’80s action/adventure movies, and the characters are intriguing, their personal devel opment nearly as compelling as the main storyline. Freya is Mexican American, Ollie is Vietnamese American, and Chase and Fletcher read White.

$15.95 paper | Sept. 20, 2022

the memory index

| kirkus.com | young adult 15 september 2022 147 adultyoung

MADE 4 YOU

Phenomenally done and more necessary than ever. (author’s note, timeline, map, glossary, suggested reading) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

The New Girl Toussaint, Kid Illus. by Aveline Stokart Trans. by Montana Kane Ablaze (94 pp.)

New at school, Elle appears cool, stylish, and put together. Standing up to mean girls Justine and Safia, she quickly makes friends with spacey Linotte, steadfast Maëlys, girl-crazy Otis, and wisecracking Farid. But Elle’s stress levels build when her class presentation deadline is moved up two weeks and Otis kisses her, changing their friend dynamic. After a vicious vol leyball game, Elle suddenly changes personality, with each facet possessing its own hair color: the mysterious aquamarine narra tor, outgoing blond, highly emotional brown, silent green, and goofy purple. While aesthetically pleasing and matching the color scheme, the varied hair colors lessen the impact of Elle’s personality reveal by making inner changes immediately obvi ous. With help from Maëlys, Elle investigates her childhood and history of strange mood swings. The artistic style fits the tone perfectly, with large expressive faces and soft outlines that match the detailed backgrounds. The atmospheric changes in color palette are subtle but highly effective in depicting Elle’s stress levels, adding to the tension. While Elle’s friends are mostly one-dimensional, their ongoing banter, support, and a fun Polaroid montage successfully sell their strong connection. The mysterious subplot and dramatic cliffhanger are gripping, setting up for the next entry. Elle, Linotte, and Otis present White; queer Farid is cued as Middle Eastern, and Maëlys is Asian.

Strong visuals bolster an intriguing mystery. (Graphic fiction. 12 16)

Vaca, Julian R. Thomas Nelson (384 pp.) $18.99 | Aug. 9, 978-0-840-70066-72022Series:TheMemoryIndex, 1

ELLE(S)

A plague that distorts memory shifts the ways of the world.

and aunt, Regina Zlotnik Silberstein and Ruth Zlotnik Altman, Holocaust survivors who were active in the resistance in Warsaw.

“Fun and engaging, evoking the spirit of ’80s action/adventure movies.”

CASTE

“What does racist mean in an era when even extremists won’t admit to it?” asks Wilkerson, who introduces readers to caste, “an artificial construction” not solely based on race or class but “a fixed and embedded ranking of human value.” In America, she writes, there’s a “shape-shifting, unspoken, race-based caste pyramid” persisting through generations. The parallels between caste and race are palpable throughout the book, though, Wilk erson writes, they “are neither synonymous nor mutually exclu sive.” Unlike race, which is a mutable social concept, and class, which can shift through luck and achievement, the author makes the case for caste as a permanent fixture which can be traced to the 1619 arrival of enslaved Africans in the Virginia Colony. Prior to defining caste rankings and outlining its eight pillars, Wilkerson draws comparisons between India and the United States, referencing the treatment of Adivasi and Native Americans, Dalits and African Americans. Additionally, the book provides provocative insights into America’s influence on Nazi Germany, whose researchers carefully studied U.S. race laws. Vignettes and memoir intertwine, illuminating the book’s arguments. With easy-to-digest storytelling and elaborate met aphors embedded in extensive research, Wilkerson challenges readers to resist validating any semblance of hierarchy and to refer to history as a pathway for eradicating its stronghold.

Compelling and accessible for a younger generation ener gized to build a better world. (index) (Nonfiction. 12 18)

An inconsistent fish-out-of-water high school romance with a twist. (Fiction. 12 18)

from the 2020 adult bestseller, this timely work urges readers to complicate conversations around American race and class divisions.

caste

Wilkerson, Isabel Delacorte (352 pp.)

HOUSE OF YESTERDAY Zargarpur, Deeba Farrar, Straus and Giroux (320 pp.) $18.99 | Nov. 29, 978-0-374-38870-62022Throughanguishand

148 | 15 september 2022 | young adult | kirkus.com |

A suspenseful, artfully written paranormal drama explor ing the ghosts of intergenerational trauma. (Fiction. 13 18)

grief, a 15-yearold is determined to uncover the secrets haunting her Afghan Uzbek family.

The Origins of Our Discontents: Adapted for Young Adults

transition from gentle school romance to suspenseful scrapes maintains the pace of a reluctant reader title that is half as long. The narrative depends heavily on readers being as interested in Gene as Becky is, as their conversations often revolve around his explaining a concept followed by her feeling tingles of love and awe at his powerful intellect. What starts with intrigue unfortunately ends in cheesy dialogue. Main characters seem to default to White.

“Compelling and accessible.”

$18.99 | Nov. 22, 978-0-593-42794-12022Adaptedforteens

What Sara knew, before everything changed, is now only a memory: “the present and past wrapped up so tight until there’s nothing left.” Bibi jan, her beloved maternal grandmother, has dementia. Madar and Padar, her parents, are separated and living apart. She’s estranged from Sam, her for mer best friend and neighbor, who is cued White. As a coping mechanism this summer before sophomore year, Sara counts the beads on her bracelet to help remember the past. Madar has roped her into taking photos for the family business, flipping houses. Their latest project is the dilapidated Sumner house, where an apparition of her Bibi jan as a young woman, sing ing and dancing, appears to Sara. Getting to the truth behind the house, the ghost, and her family’s history becomes her new obsession, alarming her friends and family, including an army of aunts and cousins, with her increasingly risky behavior. Is the house truly haunted, or have the sleepless nights and stress taken a toll? Set on a post-pandemic Long Island, the place the Amani family has called home since fleeing Afghanistan, this debut features rewarding character development and complex family dynamics centered in a revelatory cultural lens. Though Zargarpur depicts Sara’s unraveling with compassion, the stel lar prose is hampered by the haunted house mystery, which becomes tedious.

TYPO AND SKIM by Barbora Klárová & Tomáš Končinský; illus. by Daniel Špače; designed by Petr Štěpán 159

Anani, Nike Hambone Publishing (242 pp.) $19.99 paper | $6.99 e-book | June 21, 2022 978-1-922357-36-6Aconsultantshares ways to unlock the potential of a family business.

LIFETIME TO LEGACY A New Vision FamilyMultigenerationalforBusinesses

ABIGAIL’S DRAGONS by Patrick Matthews ................................... 161

OUR LADY OF THE HIGHWAY by Hal Hartley 157

SMALL THINGS LIL PETER MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE by Peter Valdez & Tasche Laine; illus. by Mei Mei Leonard 167

These titles earned the Kirkus Star:

PLACES I REMEMBER Tales, Truths, Delights From 100 Countries Lane, Lea Illus. by Greg Correll

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 149 adultyoung

PLACES I REMEMBER by Lea Lane; illus. by Greg Correll 160

EPIC PERFORMANCE by Bryan Gillette 156

indie

Authoritative, compassionate counsel for family busi ness owners.

THE 2-HOUR COCKTAIL PARTY by Nick Gray 156

NO MORE BAD DAYS by Lindsey Whitaker 168

The Three Tomatoes Book Publishing (203 pp.) $40.00 | $26.95 paper | $14.95 e-book Oct. 27, 978-0-578-59331-9978-0-578-62510-22019 paper

SCEPTER OF FLINT by N.L. Holmes 158

Anani, co-founder of a consulting firm that serves African family businesses, wrote this debut guide to help family enterprises create enduring legacies. While she focuses primarily on firms based in Africa, her counsel should be broadly applicable to anyone who participates in a family busi ness. The author demonstrates a deep understanding of the spe cial challenges faced by family businesses, intentionally slanting the book toward “relational elements” rather than the opera tional side of company management. The volume covers a wide range of issues, including the role of the founder, generational attitudes, the unique aspects of running a family business, family dynamics, the importance of having a clear vision, and collabora tion. The key concepts discussed by Anani are a direct result of her consulting experience. For example, she notes that “business families should pursue evolutions,” not revolutions, “whereby siblings enjoy gradually increased power, authority, and influ ence over the family enterprise during the life of the founder.” She makes it clear that “the family has to come together and col lectively work together to co-create the enterprise of the future.” She delivers insights into both the reticence of the founder to let go and the desire of the next generation to be mentored. Espe cially intriguing is Anani’s discussion of the “secret sauce” of the family business, in which she highlights different types of capital, such as spiritual and societal, rather than just financial. Clarity of vision, mission, and values are also part of the secret sauce, writes the author. Her concentration on connection, collaboration, and communication throughout the book is an essential part of her comprehensive strategy for family business success. Anani refer ences several other works, excerpting material as appropriate, to support the useful advice she shares. A few chapters in the vol ume deal specifically with the African family business. While this material is most appropriate for African readers, it also pro vides an intriguing cultural overview of African families for oth ers. With an eye toward not just transition, but transformation, the author provides real strategic value.

$7.99 paper | $2.99 e-book | Oct. 21, 2021 979-8-4916-6261-6Inthisnovel,a single mother and an itinerant military bachelor get to know each other during one eventful holiday season.

ROMANCING CHRISTMAS

150 | 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

A delightfully romantic tale that hits all the right Christ mas notes.

A new police detective’s investigation of a murder takes him all the way to Russia. Richard Meredith’s fast-paced thrill er, Maskirovka, features a cast that is “intriguing, fresh, and flawed.” Det. Steve Nguyen, “a Vietnamese American Stanford Law dropout and Bruce Lee look-alike…[who] graduated from the University of California at Berkeley at the age of 20 [and]… has trouble fitting in as a policeman,” is a sympathetic, layered character. The result is “a taut, timely, terrific thriller.”

INDIE | Karen Schechner top draw

Ava is well aware that she lives next door to an unusually attractive Navy officer. She has never done more than wave at him in passing, and that’s fine, because she’s totally focused on caring for her young son, who has health problems. She cannot afford to get distracted by something as frivolous as a romance. But then one day, when she’s bringing her son, Nicholas, home from school, her handsome neighbor, Harris, is building a snowman in his yard. A meddling female friend knew what time Ava would be returning home with Nicholas and concocted a reason why she needed Harris to construct a snowman. As expected, the young boy is desperate to join the fun. All it takes is one conversation between Harris and Ava, and everything begins to change. When Nicholas goes to his father’s house for Christmas, Harris and Ava have the holiday break to enjoy each other’s company. It will be a quick tryst before Nicholas returns and Harris relocates for his next assignment. Though wildly attracted to each other, when they begin to connect on a deeper level, they realize all the reasons why their relationship can never work. Told alternately from Harris’ and Ava’s perspectives, the story pokes fun at how easy it is to create a romance simply by participating in trite activities during the holiday season. At the same time, Aster cleverly utilizes each of these tropes to strengthen Ava and Harris’ attachment to each other. From snowball fights and ice skating to decorating trees and baking Christmas treats, no holiday-season milestone is neglected. Despite the light hearted tone, the issues that Ava faces as the mother of an ill child are deep and complex, but the author handles them with grace and insight. Replete with witty banter, steamy sex scenes, and oodles of Christmas cheer, the book is engaging and com pulsively readable. Despite the story’s clichéd setup and a few cheesy lines, Aster’s openly formulaic approach helps the novel achieve exactly what it set out to do.

In Jazzed, Jill Dearman’s “tale tweaks the real-life story of child-killers Leopold and Loeb into a love story of two women set in a richly atmospheric panorama of New York in the Roaring ’20s, awhirl in high society, hothouse dorms, and uptown gin mills.” The setting is stylish, but the leads are the main attraction: “At its center are indelible portraits of the doomed lovers: Will, who’s incurably awkward and ardently besotted, and Dolly, whose glittering, teasing surface belies a hollow core.”

Aster, Kate Self (212 pp.)

Our reviewer’s description of Jacob M. Appel’s Shaving With Occam is, I think, all the enticement a reader needs: “The tale’s narrator is Henrietta Flor ence Van Duyn Brigander, aka Granny Flamingo, aka The Mad Bird Lady of East 14th Street. Born into a wealthy and well-connected, if quirky, old fam ily, she slipped into schizophrenia early on in life and has been on the streets or in psychiatric wards ever since. Now, someone in the mental ill ness ward at Mount Hebron hospital has been murdered. Henrietta is de termined to find the killer, especially because she was sweet on the victim, Big George Currier.”

Karen Schechner is the president of Kirkus Indie.

A good thriller has nearly univer sal appeal. One way suspense/thrill er authors (like Patricia Highsmith, Stephen King, Walter Tevis, or Stieg Larsson) boost storytelling appeal and staying power is by making their main characters—whether they’re heroes or villains—memorable. These Indie thrillers don’t stint on foreboding at mosphere and murder, but their big gest draws are their unforgettable leads.

| kirkus.com | indie | 15 september 2022 | 151 adultyoung

A selection for the Driftless Connecticut Series publication award program, the memoir urgently addresses issues surround ing familial disability, specifically growing up with the challenges of Down syndrome as a doting sibling. A generous selection of scrapbook snapshots sprinkled throughout give the book emo tional depth and lend a moving visual marker to Bilyak’s family heritage. The author’s readable prose flows swiftly and descrip tively through episodes ranging from ebullient moments with family and friends to poignantly sad ordeals of temporary sep arations and confusion. Bilyak’s flair for vivid language is evi dent right from the opening sequences, as when she describes Chris’ consistently “sleepy expression that offers a cryptic mix of faraway and immediate” and educates readers on what the

offers macabre short stories set in Texas.

Bilyak, Dianne Wesleyan University Press (208 pp.) $24.95 | $18.95 paper | $11.99 e-book March 1, 978-0-8195-8029-0978-0-8195-8028-32022 paper

All of Berry’s stories are linked by death, whether it comes from a character’s own hand or the brute force of someone who likes to grow potatoes. Descriptions throughout the narratives can be straightforward yet cruelly effective. Take, for instance, the graphic, bloody description of how the suicidal character in “The Definitive Act” wields a razor blade. As simple as the words are, the audience will find it hard to read them without a grimace. These are tales that are meant to plumb dark depths, and they certainly do so. But some stories take longer to get to the tough stuff. “Reluctant Succubus” manages to be gruesome, yet it chooses a scenic route in getting to the terror. The tale not only describes just how much the main characters like to party, but also delivers such extraneous details as Hal’s musical inter ests. The fact that Hal loves the band Ministry gets repeated. As Evan says, “Hal was a big Ministry fan.” Evan later recalls listening to the band in Hal’s car. The standout in the collection is “Phantom Limb.” Though it is the least bloody offering, it proves to be insightful and more than just a little bit eerie. The story’s monster is out and about in the world and he’s not happy. Like so many people, he has an existential “itch” he can’t seem to scratch. The narrative manages to explore such a fantastical concept without getting too silly. Taken together, the four sto ries will certainly make readers both ponder and squirm. Sometimes brutal, sometimes thoughtful, these gripping tales make a strong impression.

This heartfelt book by Pushcart Prize–nominated author and poet Bilyak was adapted from a series of personal essays on her experiences growing up with a sister with Down syn drome. Born in rural Connecticut in the mid-1960s just shy of one year apart, the author and her older sister, Christine, were “Irish twins.” Bilyak recounts that they were raised in a reli gious Polish family by a pretty, petite, “ubiquitous but periph eral” mother and a troubled, alcoholic father who became an award-winning chef. Early on, Chris began experiencing motor skills difficulties and was assessed by a local pediatrician who treated her as a subhuman “mongoloid idiot” best suited for life in an institution. Despite Chris’ Down syndrome diagnosis in 1969, the sisters’ bonding rituals continued, and their enduring relationship jelled symbiotically. The author was a curious child, prone to creating inventive versions of the truth and snooping into others’ belongings. Her parents dealt with Chris’ disability poorly and with “a sense of loss for the future they’d assumed she’d have.” Chris, outgoing and friendly, favored odd rituals, petty theft, denial, and a love of Special Olympics events and gymnastics. Both sisters navigated their incremental ascents into adolescence with a smooth amalgam of awkward trepida tion and wide-eyed adventure. Fiercely loyal to each other yet playfully competitive, Bilyak and Chris were “two class clowns with a mafia streak—entertaining, unless you so much as look at us funny. Then, not only will we always defend each other, but we’ll stand together and find a way to make you pay.” Through out the author’s college years and in separate adult trajectories, the women remained close, loving unconditionally and learning valuable life lessons from each other. Chris’ eccentricities and foibles often delighted those around her, and these traits end up stealing the spotlight in this delightful and moving chronicle.

RELUCTANT SUCCUBUS AND OTHER TALES OF SACRILEGE Berry, Tytus Starkweather Imprints (118 pp.) $13.99 paper | April 25, 2022

NOTHING SPECIAL [The Mostly True, Sometimes Funny Tales of Two Sisters]

978-0-578-29347-9Adebutcollection

In this memoir, a writer chronicles her life growing up in a New England family that faced myriad challenges.

This volume’s first and lengthiest piece, “Reluctant Succubus,” takes place in Austin. The narrator is a man named Evan Phillips. Back in the 1990s, Evan and his friends used to love to go out drinking. No matter the occasion, they went to bars throughout the greater Austin area. One of Evan’s companions was Henry “Hal” Nilson. Hal liked downing alcohol, not for the taste but for the enjoyable effects. Then one day, Hal vanished without a trace. Twenty years later, Evan has settled down, and out of the blue he is contacted by the local police. A woman has signed a confession that she killed Hal. But judging by how young she looks, would that even be possible? As the police explain to Evan, “We were hoping you might be able to help us corroborate her story. Substantiate it. Or dismiss it.” In the second tale, “Phantom Limb,” a famous monster con fronts a tenured professor about the possibility of the creature having a soul. Perhaps there’s hope for some sort of salvation for the monster, who has “obviously done considerable thinking on these subjects.” In “Sad Potatoes,” a “half-wit” and skilled gar dener named Ben becomes a little too enamored with funerals. The consequences prove deadly. In the final tale, “The Definitive Act,” Eladio Segura’s well-planned suicide in the Rio Grande Val ley leads to a horrifying act by the young man’s girlfriend, Julie.

Fusing together the experiences of a museum collection with an art exhibi tion, this journey explores miscellaneous pieces of Chang’s personal history, from “It’s a Lamp, Charlie Brown” and “On Jolly Holiday” to “Un-sippy Cup” (“Now my daughter drinks from the cup”). Although only featuring 12 poems, the volume includes some powerhouse works. “She Couldn’t Quite Explain It/[It] Had Always Just Been There…,” which deals with resilience and transformation, works on mul tiple levels and exemplifies the author’s strength at not only telling a wisdom-filled story, but immersing readers in the viv idness of the narrative as well. Revolving around a mint green shelf that Chang and her lover plucked from the garbage while living in Manhattan, the poem reveals that the object—which was very much like the author (“defiantly wrong, / too loud and odd”)—outlived that relationship and made it through “five moves, / a marriage, and children.” The poem, while a forceful analogy, is made exponentially stronger by Chang’s descriptive prowess. As the piece begins, the author plunges readers into the time and place: “Wednesday mornings in the West Village / trash trucks lumber up the narrow streets early enough / to sound like rebuke, their metal bodies screech / and seize, startle us from slumber. / No residents stir that early—only shopwork ers / blasting vomit from front stoops, scraping dogshit from the curb.” Masterful imagery coupled with insightful self-exam ination can be found throughout the collection. In “The Perfect Bathing Suit: A Forgery,” a one-piece suit that once transformed the poet into a Hollywood starlet is now a “pearly exoskeleton” that reminds her of a cicada shell clinging to a tree: “It is hard to believe that a warm, / living thing once smoothly filled this architecture. That she is gone.” Lastly, each piece is accom panied by a museum label, which brilliantly adds information and depth to the poem. For example, a label for “The Gift of Horseradish” says in part: “Artist Unknown, b. mid-20th cen tury….Poured glass bottle, embossed Pierre Smirnoff label in red, white and gold approx. 8” tall, 375ml capacity.”

In this compact volume, poems are structured to resemble artifacts in a museum, with each piece focusing on an item significant to the author’s past.

A splendid and intelligent recollection of an eventful law career.

disability is really like in the volume’s intimate vignettes. The women’s experiences coalesce beautifully as adults celebrating their 50th birthdays a year apart, their sisterly bond a lifetime in the making, with both emerging stronger and more supportive of the other than ever. Readers will cheer these siblings along as they grow and mature into women whose complex individuality and uniqueness make their story that much sweeter.

Chang, Liz Manuscript (24 pp.)

152 | 15 september 2022 | indie kirkus.com

$16.99 paper | $9.99 e-book | Aug. 24, 2022 978-1-63337-634-2Inthismemoir,

A warm account of supportive, loving sisterhood written with immense grace, humor, and heart.

Bowman, Jamie Boyle & Dalton (335 pp.)

A powerful and ingenious collection of personal artifacts— and the associated memories—in poetry form.

The Global Adventures of a Foreign Aid Practitioner

MUSEUM OF THINGS Poems

a woman recounts her experiences as an international legal adviser in countries burdened by war and poverty.

Bowman spent 15 years working as a lawyer in the American mortgage industry but became disillu sioned by lending models that were increasingly not “ethical or sustainable.” As a result, she pivoted away from the comfort able predictability of her profession and took a job in Micro nesia, but she found her work unchallenging and island life far too leisurely. She fixed both problems with her next assignment: working for USAID in Pristina, Kosovo, writing mortgage laws, a much more adventurous post. There, she encountered a difficulty that forms one of the central themes of her remem brance—the tension between American and European pow ers trying to shape these post-conflict nations, one that often rose to the level of unabashed acrimony, astutely depicted by the author. The reflexive and even thoughtless criticism of the United States took such a toll on Bowman that she finally began to reconsider her new career. In response to suggestions that she had only just discovered America had detractors, she asserted: “No, I’ve known we’ve had critics. But I love my coun try and want other people to love it, too. Our countries are like our families. It’s fine for us to find fault with our own, but I don’t like it when other people feel free to criticize my family and expect me to agree and join in the condemnation.” Bowman thoughtfully recounts her experiences in Afghanistan, Ukraine, and Bangladesh, among others, furnishing perceptive commen tary on the various cultures and histories of these nations rav aged by war and impoverishment. She writes with great lucidity and a breezy, anecdotal charm and harbors no idealistic preten sions about the work she does, however important. And while not everyone will be seduced by detailed descriptions of mort gage laws, there is much more to this surprisingly candid mem oir, including danger and romance.

BIKE RIDING IN KABUL

$21.95 paper | $7.99 e-book | April 19, 2022 978-1-956056-29-7Adebutmemoir

$17.33 paper | $6.87 e-book | Feb. 10, 2022 978-1-00-515025-9Inthisdebutnovel, a man returns to his childhood home to unravel a vexing familyAustralianmystery. journalist Chilton’s tale is a family-centric affair chronicling the

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 153

adultyoung

Molly Chanson first learned to practice yoga at the age of 15 through her mother and kept it up into college and adulthood, even as her children and family responsibilities limited her time. In the foreword, she reveals that she wrote this book in the midst of her divorce from her husband, who had been having an affair, and that yoga was the primary means through which she processed her emotions. The author does extrapolate on popu lar poses, such as Pigeon, Eagle, and Warrior, punctuated with Anne Chanson’s illustrations, as well as yoga’s primary tenets of nonviolence, nonexcess, and self-study, among others. But these serve more as supporting threads in the author’s examination of the highs and lows of her life. She recalls how her yoga practice often resulted in premonitionlike dreams and that realizations, like her husband’s affair, came to her in the midst of difficult poses. Yoga also helped her recognize her alcoholism, for which she sought therapy. Yoga here is not a cure-all but a means through which people can look inward. The author is refresh ingly frank about her insecurities, namely her body image and skills as a mother, her shame as a wife, and relapses. Yoga did not fix them but, rather, she writes that “my body already knew what I needed to do, though my rational mind couldn’t process it….I began to see myself with compassion.” Her marriage’s dis solution is devastating to read about. She presents vivid emo tional imagery as she weaves her practice into healing: “The practice of dharana can incite a shift in perception, so we turn our gaze away from the ever-traversed samskara in order to see an alternate view.…I glimpse that I may not need to mold and perfect myself in order to be worthy of love. I glimpse truth…I glimpse a moment of freedom.” She closes her moving story fit tingly, by going from yoga student to teacher.

a detailed look at a French artist best known for his collages.

Chilton, Gemma Self (418 pp.)

“Chilton’s novel combines lush details of the Australian landscape with players who draw readers in with humble hearts.”

FALLEN STAR A Return to Self Through the Eight Limbs of Yoga Chanson, Molly Illus. by Anne Chanson

A poignant account of a woman’s journey to self-love through multiple poses.

guides readers through yoga’s “eight limbs,” which con stitute a path to enlightenment.

life of Liam Murray, a city dweller from a small Aussie village who has lost his footing in the urban jungle. He attempts to fill the unhappy void with sleep, work, and, perhaps most danger ously and desperately, a torrid affair with Hannah, his married upstairs neighbor. Though tragic, the news of his mother’s sud den diagnosis of breast cancer spurs Liam to quit his dead-end job and move back to Elanora, his hometown. There, he feels most needed and wanted, though the memory of his father’s dis appearance two decades prior still haunts him. He was just a boy when his father went fishing by himself and only the charred remains of his boat returned. Reuniting with childhood friends and caring for his mother (who’s started seriously dating again) fill his days at home, while memories of fishing and oyster hunt ing with his father permeate his mind. Stubbornly overwhelmed by open emotional wounds, Liam determinedly resolves to dig deeper into why his father disappeared. Was he depressed and suicidal when the family lost its second child, Annie, in the womb? What starts as a ransacking of his father’s old shed soon turns serious, and dark, personal secrets and a messy, hidden life are uncovered. If the story meanders a bit too leisurely for some readers, Chilton’s vibrant and smoothly lyrical prose more than makes up for a rather slack plot. Her consistent use of similes is also an appealing and effective touch: Female workers rush ing through city streets on their ways to work have high heels sounding “like the start of rain,” and Liam’s childhood bedroom gives him an unsettling feeling, “as if it was he who had disap peared without a trace as a child, not his father.” Determined to live unencumbered by the past, Chilton’s characters yearn for love, understanding, and some semblance of a resolution. Com bining lush details of the Australian landscape with players who draw readers in with humble hearts, this is a stirring first novel.

Jacques Villeglé was born in Brittany in 1926. He lived in Nantes during the Nazi occupation, and, after the Liberation in 1944, he moved to Paris. In that city, he liked to roam like a flâneur. His walks turned into a search for some thing special: posters. Villeglé developed a style in which he tore posters from the streets and rearranged them into something new. His works are full of fragments, letters, and sometimes clear images. They are often named for the streets where the post ers were found. The materials were culled from advertisements, political proclamations, and anything else put up for Parisians to see. The book is filled with color photographs of the results, though it is not just about Villeglé’s art. Much is written about his life as well as the time in which he became an artist. He was

confluence

Shanti Arts (222 pp.)

A gentle, engaging, and heartfelt tale of family secrets and emotional closure.

CONFLUENCE

JACQUES VILLEGLÉ AND THE STREETS OF PARIS Conrad III, Barnaby Inkshares (276 pp.) $80.00 | May 31, 978-1-950301-37-92022Abiographypresents

meets the world’s hottest psychiatrist in this giddy romance.

well acquainted with individuals like Yves Klein and Raymond Hains. Villeglé was in Paris when the American artists Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg came there in the 1960s. The volume, which includes historical photos, follows Villeglé’s life into the modern day. Conrad creates an intimate feel by often quoting directly from conversations he had with Villeglé, who died in June 2022 in Paris. Villeglé recalled signing a manifesto as part of the newly formed Nouveaux Réalistes art movement with other artists: “I had some misgivings about the whole thing.” With high-quality images, the engrossing book also allows close inspection of the art itself. In Rue de Vaugirard (Bas Meudon), from 1991, a vivid mix of numbers, French words, and torn images of people, there is much to uncover simply by looking carefully. But some chapters delve into the mundane. For instance, the author explains how, when Villeglé was in San Francisco, he drove the artist to “the Palace of the Legion of Honor, a museum built in the 1920’s, which is a replica of the Palais de la Legion d’Honneur in Paris.” The anecdote does not yield much intriguing informa tion. Despite such lulls, the volume proves to be an indispensable resource. Even though Villeglé is not a household name, his work and life are skillfully explored here.

Red pleads. Queenie, more concerned with literal food, sends Red off to help haul a dropped burger. Before Red can reach it, though, he’s nearly stepped on! Even after Red makes his voice heard, the human dismisses him as just an ant—until the man spies Red’s guitar. With the help of his band and his friends to increase his volume, Red shares his music with the humans, and they pledge to invite the ants to future gatherings. The familiar plot structure mirrors other tales of misunderstood dreamers; e.g., Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who (1954). DaVeiga and Gibson’s puns steal the show, including Red’s favorite band, the Beetles, who play the song “Help!” Ram’s cartoon illustrations set a play ful tone, giving the insects long hair to reflect their rocker sensi bilities. The choice to give the human’s shoes eyes and a face as well is odd but doesn’t interfere with the story. Endnotes provide ant facts.

$12.99 paper | $1.99 e-book | Feb. 21, 2020 978-1-7329645-2-5Amentallyillwoman

ROCKET RED A Little Ant With a Big Dream DaVeiga, Cheryl & Dave Gibson Illus. by Remesh Ram Waterhole Productions (36 pp.)

A thorough, engaging, and personal survey of an oftneglected 20th-century artist.

In the twilight, a brown-skinned, curly-haired child and a pig tend to a sapling by lamplight, and the tree introduces itself: “I start as a tiny, little seed.” Helped by “sun and rain,” the sapling takes root, and it quickly grows as seasons pass. The huge tree blooms, benefiting pollinators, and the child collects the fruit it produces. Finally, beneath the tree’s branches, the diverse local community gathers around a campfire, sharing apples with friends. End pages, directed at adults, discuss a say ing about apples, comparing them to the praise that parents shower on their children and how those words will be treasured. Dawson’s rhymes and scansion flow well throughout, and the large font and simple vocabulary make the story approach able for emergent readers. While the text offers few scientific details, the descriptions of the growth process and the idea that humans’ actions affect a sapling’s health reinforce the connec tion between people and trees. The uncredited illustrations vary in quality, from a beautiful painted cover and opening page to more cartoonish images that feature an apple wearing sunglasses and a hat. The juxtaposition of the two styles can be jarring, and the appearance at the campfire of the child who planted the sapling, having not aged at all while the tree has clearly matured, is an odd choice.

Emergent readers who love trees—and their fruit—should feel empowered by this tale’s message.

$17.99 | $12.99 paper | $3.99 e-book Nov. 9, 978-1-73639-514-1978-1-73639-515-82021 paper

MERCY

A rocker ant gets his chance to shine—and bring his music beyond the colony—in this insect-centered picture book about following a dream.

Decker, K.C. Camden Publishing (265 pp.)

A charming, easy tale about making yourself heard.

An apple tree describes how it grows and brings humans together in this debut rhyming picture book.

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Red and the Lucky Bug Band dream of being famous, but Red’s mom, Queenie, doesn’t think their music will help the colony. “Mom, can’t you see how music feeds my heart and soul?”

Twenty-year-old Mercy Kavanaugh has been in and out of mental hospitals since she was abandoned in childhood by her parents. They were members of a religious sect who thought her violent hallucinations, which felt as if she was being skewered with nails and burned with acid, were caused by demonic possession. She and the rest of the psych ward are shaken up by the arrival of Dr. Travis Sutton, a new psychiatrist who, with his tousled hair, jeans, and muscle T-shirts, looks more like a Hugo Boss model than a shrink. Sut ton good-naturedly parries Mercy’s defensive snark and soon declares a breakthrough: She’s not suffering from paranoid

MY NAME IS APPLE Dawson, Jenelyn Q. FriesenPress (22 pp.) $18.49 | $7.99 paper | $3.99 e-book June 27, 978-1-03-911035-9978-1-03-911036-62022 paper 978-1-03-911037-3 e-book

A fizzy tale about an entirely inappropriate but entertain ing love affair.

Fox, Matthew Ed. by Charles Burack Orbis (272 pp.)

revisits memories of her haunting past to prevent her teen daughter from committing to a terrible man in Foyt’s novel.

sensuality; intent on furthering social justice; warmly accept ing of the body; vigilant about protecting Mother Earth from ecological crises; and centered on “the Cosmic Christ,” who is immanent in all things. (Fox is known for his celebrations of “the Cosmic Mass,” a worship service that resembles a rave with dancing and light shows.) Fox grounds all of this in intellectually sophisticated but lucid and engaging discussions of medieval Catholic thinkers, like Thomas Aquinas and Hildegard of Bin gen, Native American and Eastern religions, and quantum phys ics, which, he contends, provides a scientific rationale for the mystical oneness of all being. Traditionalists may sometimes wince at his revisions of Catholic verities—“Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us co-creators now and at the hour of our cre ativity” is his rendering of the Hail Mary prayer, which came to him during a vision quest—but his religious effusions have their own resonant grandeur. (“A new commandment has been given to us: thou shalt love your life with all your strength and energy, growing daily in appreciation of the joys of life; and you shall allow and aid where possible your neighbor to love his/hers and do the same, using common norms of justice to determine life’s priorities.”) Readers will find here a captivating introduction to Fox’s multifaceted ideas.

valentine to faith

adultyoung

A vibrant, sonorous, philosophically rich introduction to Fox’s teachings.

VALENTINE TO FAITH

MATTHEW FOX Essential Writings on Creation Spirituality

spiritual movement emphasizing creativity, holism, ecology, and feminism sounds off in this wide-ranging digest.

Fox, a major contemporary theorist of progressive spiritual ity, began his career as a Dominican priest but was expelled from the priesthood by the Vatican for deviating from Catholic doc trine. He went on to become an Episcopal priest and founded the University of Creation Spirituality. Burack’s volume gath ers excerpts from Fox’s many books and interviews in which he critiques traditional Christianity, which he views as excessively focused on original sin, the fall and redemption of man, private salvation, repression of passion, an “uber masculine and phal lic” patriarchal perspective, and a separation of spirituality from nature and the body. Challenging this orthodoxy, Fox proffers a “creation spirituality” that posits creativity as the organiz ing principle of the universe, which he sees as inherently good and steeped in “original blessing.” His creation spirituality is feminist, revering God the Mother; full of ecstatic passion and

The book opens on Florida’s Sani bel Island in 1985, where Angel del Corazón lives with her daughter, Faith, who’s approaching her high school graduation. Angel has devoted the past 18 years to raising her child and ensuring she has both the grades and the finances to attend college. Faith has always lived up to expecta tions, but recently, she’s been lying about her whereabouts. The tension between mother and daughter comes to a head when Faith stumbles onto correspondence revealing that her father, Santiago—whom she’s never known—is not dead, as Angel had always claimed. As a result, Faith declares her distaste for her mother and her intention to reunite with her dad. Read ers learn through several flashbacks that Angel’s history with Santiago was rocky and violent; her decision to lie to Faith was based entirely on a desire to protect her. When Angel meets Faith’s new boyfriend, a controlling older man, she decides to come clean about her past to keep her daughter from making a mistake; she begins revealing her story through a series of let ters, but is she already too late to make a difference? Foyt’s story alternates between sections in 1985 Sanibel, told in the third person, and sections on Angel’s past decades earlier, narrated

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schizophrenia, as previously diagnosed, but from PTSD caused by the cultic abuse she suffered as a girl. He takes her off anti psychotics, reviving her libido, and applies his signature treat ment of cradling her in his arms and soothing her tears after she has nightmares. Coached by her gal pals, Mercy tries seducing Sutton with outrageous sex talk during their sessions and, to make him jealous, a flirtation with a male patient. As she stam pedes over Sutton’s weak protestations about transference and his medical license, passionate make-out sessions ensue with much groping and fondling. Alas, their love is threatened by federal regulations that will age her out of the hospital on her 21st birthday and into a halfway house. Decker’s yarn features an ideal lover, a dreamboat who’s fascinated by every wrinkle of the hero’s psyche in addition to her body, set in a glamorized rendition of a mental health facility that’s full of good-looking patients who don’t even seem crazy, just oversexed. The author’s skillful prose plangently evokes Mercy’s loneliness and fear of abandonment in the novel’s opening. (“Following each return to the unit, each searing disappointment, I let go of a little more hope,” Mercy muses of her rejections by foster families. “Once I was all hollowed out, I understood that no one would save me.”) After Dr. Sexy perks her up, though, the writing takes on a sala cious energy and cheer. (He: “I have something for you.” She: “Is it a vibrator?”) Readers will root for Mercy’s campaign to under mine the psychiatric profession’s code of ethics.

Foyt, Victoria Sand Dollar Press (291 pp.) $9.99 paper | $6.99 e-book | July 4, 2020 978-1-64786-455-2Asinglemother

“The story becomes insightful and compelling as the author delves deep into issues such as family dysfunction, abusive relationships, and self doubt.”

$24.00 paper | $14.99 e-book March 23, 978-1-62698-455-42022Aleaderofa

EPIC PERFORMANCE Lessons From 100 Executives & Endurance Athletes on Reaching Your Peak Gillette, Bryan Amplify Publishing (248 pp.) $29.95 | $0.99 e-book | Aug. 16, 2022 978-1-63755-217-9Adebutbusiness

by Angel herself. Interspersed are vignettes about mermaids and sea goddesses, related to myths and religious teachings that Angel learned in her youth. The novel gets off to a slow start, revealing key information slowly and sporadically. Eventually, though, the story becomes more insightful and compelling as the author delves deep into issues such as family dysfunction, abusive relationships, and self-doubt. However, as the author attempts to combine a coming-of-age tale with elements of romance, familial drama, and magical realism, it becomes need lessly complicated. Still, by the end, readers will be disarmed by the two endearing and fiercely loyal female leads.

How To Build SmallRelationshipsBigWithGatherings

THE COCKTAIL2-HOURPARTY

Gray, Nick Lioncrest Publishing (276 pp.)

Gray strikes an effervescently positive tone throughout; his book is almost entirely free of the hard-line battlefield com mands that littered its predecessor from decades ago, How To Do It ( 1957) by the legendary party thrower Elsa Maxwell. But in both cases, the host is absolutely the key to the success or failure of the gathering that Gray calls a “structured cocktail party.” He paints a glowingly positive picture of how wonderful an experi ence those structured cocktail parties can be: “Two hours fly by. Now, new friends who didn’t know anyone when they arrived have met several interesting people whom they genuinely look forward to following up with.” (“I warmly usher people out,” he adds charmingly, “and some are surprised to get home before 10:00 p.m.”) There’s a touchingly earnest element to the way the

expect”; and “Big problems are easy to see but hard to fix, while little problems are hard to see but easy to fix.” These are a few examples of the meaningful, memorable lines that frequently appear in the work and should resonate with any high achiever. An outstanding performance playbook.

$17.99 paper | $8.99 e-book | June 8, 2022 978-1-5445-3007-9Adebutguide offers a new strategy for meeting people and networking.

There is an elegant simplicity to this work that belies its depth. Beneath the surface of what seems to be a straightfor ward guide relying on an acronym is rich content deserving of serious consideration. Gillette’s own intriguing experiences as an endurance athlete, coupled with words of wisdom from over 100 fascinating people, make for compelling reading. The author’s credentials as a past human resources professional and current performance coach add to the volume’s veracity. The book is divided into five “pillars,” four of which are represented by the acronym EPIC (“Envision, Plan, Iterate, Collaborate”); the fifth one is “Perform.” Each pillar is succinctly summarized at the beginning by Gillette, who also helpfully includes syn onyms, such as Dream and Conceptualize for Envision. Each pillar comprises three chapters, or “behaviors.” This structure clev erly provides continuity across the pillars, and it enhances the readability by breaking the text into manageable bites. Chap ters are equally consistent; each one starts with a relevant quota tion and ends with “Questions To Ask Yourself” and “Exercises,” helping readers to engage with the material and maintain focus. The author often refers to his remarkable athletic challenges— such as running races that were hundreds of miles—using them metaphorically to relate to personal and business leadership. These anecdotes are integrated with descriptions of business leaders’ challenges as well as their observations, all nicely fit ting into the appropriate pillar. The Iterate pillar is particularly absorbing because it focuses on “trying, failing, tweaking, and trying again until you get it more right and then moving on.” The counsel conveyed in this section is especially valuable, including “Practicing when it doesn’t matter pays dividends when it does matter”; “You get what you inspect, not what you

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book offers advice from business leaders and athletes on achieving peak performance.

An ambitious but uneven novel with strong-willed characters.

Gray admits at the beginning of his book about social gath erings that he doesn’t have the good fortune of being a natural extrovert. “In social situations, I sometimes felt overwhelmed and intimidated,” he writes. “My heart would race, and I’d stut ter or say something embarrassing.” Whether it was personal meetings or more business-oriented events, he found himself continuously out of step and disappointed. So he decided, as he puts it, to “bring the party to me” by hosting bashes in his home. Soon, he developed a way to “hack” a social life. He shares the parameters of that hack in these pages, laying out for readers what they should do in order to host truly wonderful parties. He insists these parties are not intended as networking events, but he also makes it clear that networking benefits will almost certainly result. “In the time it takes to watch a movie, you can improve your relationships with a room full of people,” he writes. “It is the most efficient and effective way I’ve found to strengthen many different connections.” In chapters clearly aimed at readers who share his initial social awkwardness, Gray explains the rules of these parties (including name tags for all attendees and clear starting—and stopping—times) and the burdens incumbent on the host, all the while providing exam ples of successful professionals who have adopted this method and seen positive results. “I created so many new connections,” enthuses Nagina Sethi Abdulla, founder of MasalaBody.com. “I also gained confidence that I’m adding value to my community.”

An encouraging, upbeat, and useful call to host parties and make friends.

A raucously funny yet heartfelt and illuminating tale of holy orders at their most chaotic.

The One Truth

and a psychic novice reinvigorate a failing convent in this comicHartley’snovel. rollicking yarn centers on Our Lady of the Highway, a run-down convent in a grim, industrial area of Brooklyn where the sisters have spent 347 years praying non stop in shifts for world peace. But with only three nuns left, the youngest being the 71-year-old Mother Superior, Sister Bernadette, their vigil will sputter out unless the parish priest can find new blood. Such materializes in the form of Sister Magdalena, who’s a fugitive thanks to righteous crimes, such as sinking a freighter full of weapons bound for a Venezuelan coup. She brings along Sisters Evelyn and Veronica, both with equally shady resumes. Taking over as Mother Superior, Mag dalena scandalizes Bernadette by starting a microbrewery to cater to Brooklyn hipsters. Meanwhile, the sisters fend off the machinations of a tycoon who wants to turn the convent into a sewage treatment plant. Further stirring the pot is Lola, a former insurance claims adjuster with psycho-kinetic powers that result in stopped clocks, shattered glass, or collapsing fire escapes when she gets upset. She joins the convent thinking it’s a calm place where she can’t hurt anyone. With a marketing plan of offering intercessory prayers for customers who buy beer and having Lola do pin-up posters in an off-the-shoulder habit, the convent does a boffo business and signs up dozens of new nuns—until the police, the FBI, and the National Guard come for Magdalena. Hartley, a celebrated indie film director, writes in a confidently cinematic style, filling the novel with quirky, sharply drawn characters; multiple viewpoints and flashbacks; exquisitely carved, imagistic vignettes—“Confident, preoccu pied, serious but smiling, Magdalena is uncomplicated, graceful and selfless even as she pauses to slip a handgun into her ankle boot”—and hilarious deadpan dialogue. (“Mother Superior, may I ask a question?” “Of course.” “Are you all wanted by the law?”) For all its farcical elements, the story is an inquisitive depic tion of the cloistered life, exploring its seething tensions and energetic discipline and taking seriously its commitments. (“In reality,” Bernadette muses, “God doesn’t make himself known to you except through the miracles of endurance and selfless ness.”) The result is an entertaining but thoughtful spoof.

A smoothly written religious fantasy enlivened by fiery antagonists.

Green, Kayla E. Emerald House Group (124 pp.) $12.99 paper | $4.99 e-book | July 26, 2022 978-1-64960-136-0Humankingdoms

adultyoung

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AIVAN

foment war as rival deities consolidate power in this fantasySeventeen-year-oldnovella. Rune Kallio lives in the northern kingdom of Kansanai. One day, she washes clothes by the river, singing songs to Jokaiu, the river god. Rune’s deepest desire is that during the Pairing Ceremony, Jokaiu will match her with Jyri Glycen, her beloved. But Adda, the teen’s 14-year-old sister, has a dream that the world will catch fire only for Rune to save it as “princess of the heavens.” Further, the dream nymphs whisper to Adda that Aivan, the mythological god representing “the One Truth,” will sponsor Rune’s ascent. Meanwhile, in the southern kingdom of Etal entin, 17-year-old Rolf Larsen heads to the local temple to pray to Vesai, one of the Vihishki gods. As he prays, he hears Aivan say that Vesai is a “false god” and that “I am not in the temple. I speak to you now through your heart.” Later, a vil lage Elder sends Rolf to the court of King Petri with a mes sage. When Master Alviss, the king’s adviser, learns that Rolf knows limited magic, he determines that the teen, if prop erly trained, will be the key to defending against the designs of Queen Isilda in the north. But Lord Paholai, a spirit who is Aivan’s opponent, plans to wield greed and power to sway Rune and Rolf to his plans. In this well-crafted series opener, Green offers a spiritual fantasy that hopes to illustrate the starkness of good versus evil. Yet many of the vivid scenes will remind history buffs of ancient Rome during Christi anity’s rise, as when a man called Kirkus says, “I challenge your Vihishki gods against my One Truth,” and demands the temples’ destruction despite the solace they bring to many people. During his training, Rolf is indoctrinated by the phrase “Love is nothing. Power is everything.” It’s note worthy that the intriguing protagonists are young enough to be swayed by such extreme viewpoints. Many important narrative choices are made once characters “Pray to Aivan for guidance.” Queen Isilda, learning that her clout is at risk,

author leaves nothing to chance. He devotes energetic atten tion to everything from handling RSVPs (don’t spam people) to managing the right mix of attendees and preparing the space for an influx of guests. He provides innumerable helpful hints and “party pro tips” for prospective hosts, everything from post ing little map directions on the stairs (“Almost there! You look great!”) to a wide array of possible icebreakers designed to get people talking and having fun. Anyone who has ever attended a networking event (or a dinner party) will fervently hope that Gray’s idea takes root and becomes universal.

“Hartley writes in a confidently cinematic style, filling the novel with quirky, sharply drawn characters.”

becomes the player with the most agency and provides the spark for the sequel.

Hartley, Hal Elboro Press (316 pp.) $17.99 paper | June 14, 2022 978-1-73792-743-3Roguenuns

OUR LADY OF THE HIGHWAY

our lady of the highway

SCEPTER OF FLINT A Lord Hani Mystery Holmes, N.L.

An entertaining whodunit set in a richly textured pan orama of the pharaonic world.

It’s 1343 B.C.E., and Egyptian diplo mat Amen-hotep, aka Lord Hani, gets the delicate assignment from his boss, Ptah-Mes, and the vizier, Aper-el himself, to investigate a series of robberies of noblemen’s tombs in his hometown of Waset. The robberies are rumored to involve a Mitannian foreigner with diplomatic immunity. These are heinous crimes warrant ing impalement, since the theft of the tombs’ foodstuffs, exqui site jewelry, and luxurious furniture has left the victims with nothing to eat, wear, or sit on in the afterlife. Complicating the case are the victims’ sketchy religious politics: They were all, like Hani, skeptics of King Akhenaten’s overthrow of Egypt’s polytheistic pantheon and establishment of the monotheistic worship of the sun god Aten. Further complicating matters are an outbreak of plague and the intrusions of the brutal police chief Mahu, an enemy of Hani’s who keeps showing up with his retinue of thugs and his snarling attack-baboon to interfere with the probe. Helping out Hani are his dwarf scribe and sonin-law, Maya, who wants to work the case into an adventure story; his jovial dad, Mery-ra; his good-hearted, ne’er-do-well brother, Pipi; and his teenage daughter, Neferet, an apprentice physician at the king’s harem who handles the investigation’s toxicology. (She IDs one poison by mixing it with honey and feeding it to ants.) Amid epic voyages up and down the Nile, Hani unearths hidden murders and pursues a tangle of leads that could implicate the tomb artists, claimants for the Mitan nian throne, renegade priests of the old gods, the Egyptian army, or the king’s father-in-law. But before he can unravel the knot, another untimely death ends his official backing and exposes him to dangerous retaliation.

In this book’s early sections, public relations specialist Keller describes his background as a journalist covering the Minneapo lis music scene (and yes, Prince does make a cameo). In the early 1990s, he decided to change lanes and try to sell a magazine article about advocates urging government officials to reveal “the Truth” about UFOs—one that had been kept hidden ever since the alleged crash of alien craft in Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947. The effort consumed Keller, who came to believe that he witnessed an alien presence in his North Dakota bedroom when he was a boy; he awakened, he says, to the sight of a red “cherry bomb”–like sphere, which he later interpreted to have been some kind of diagnostic tool. Keller immersed himself in the UFO–enthusiast underground, connecting with the charismatic Dr. Steven Greer of the Center for the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence—an organization that believed humans could productively commu nicate with enigmatic, basically benevolent alien visitors using meditation, lights, and sound. Although Keller’s future wife feared that he might be joining a cult, the writer started work ing for CSETI in a public relations capacity, which brought him into the orbit of Washington, D.C., insiders, astronauts, shamans, and many other figures. Along the way, mainstream media started taking UFO–sighting claims—and secret government/military involvement in them—seriously, perhaps initially inspired by the popularity of the Fox TV show The X Files.

In this latest installment of her Lord Hani series, Holmes, an archaeologist, embroiders a detailed, atmospheric portrait of ancient Egyptian civilization, mores, and high fashion—per fumed wax cones affixed to one’s wig are de rigueur at dinner parties—embedded in a warm, naturalistic depiction of Hani’s life with his wife, Nub-nefer, and family. There’s plenty of exotic pageantry in the novel: “Hani thought of Nub-nefer marching along, singing hymns and shaking her sistrum rhythmically, her face alight with fervor…his brother-in-law, Amen-em-hut, in his starred leopard skin and jeweled sporran, proudly bearing the ram-headed standard of the god as the glittering procession passed from the Great Southern Temple back to the Ipet-isut”— but humble domestic scenes are just as vivid. (“Nub-nefer was standing with her hands on her hips and her skirts tucked up while two naked servants carved the bloody carcass, packed it in salt, and prepared to hang strips on lines for smoking. The reek of blood and offal was horrific.”) Holmes renders this seemingly

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In these pages, Keller clearly expresses his anger with both UFO skeptics and overboard conspiracy theorists, noting that

Self (384 pp.)

THE SPACE PEN CLUB Close Encounters of the 5th Kind, UFO ConsciousnessDisclosure,&OtherMindZoomers

$19.99 paper | $9.99 e-book | June 5, 2021 978-1-950743-55-1Anonfiction

account of an unruly, largely civilian-based group of inves tigators, activists, and misfits who pushed for government disclosure of the existence of extraterrestrial intelligences visiting Earth.

sleuth investi gates murder and, worse, tomb robbery in this colorful period mystery.

Keller, Martin Calumet Editions (370 pp.)

$14.99 paper | $5.99 e-book | July 17, 2020 978-1-73498-685-3AnancientEgyptian

archaic society with subtlety and realism, rendering characters’ psychologies with sharp-eyed nuance. (Ptah-mes, a cool ironist who edges into depression, is especially magnetic.) Her deft prose skillfully conveys the Egyptian worldview—“How will the murderer keep a straight face at the Weighing of Hearts when he has to say, ‘I have not sinned in the Place of Truth; I have not caused tears; I have not killed; I haven’t taken milk from the mouths of children?’...He’s damned for sure, whoever he is”—while infusing it with noirish corruption and menace. (“I hear you have nice horses, Ptah-mes. Maybe we’ll have to slit them open to see if Talpu-sharri is hiding inside.”) The result is a captivating mix of old-fashioned lore and modern suspense.

A collection of brief biographical vignettes commemorates all of the American soldiers who died on the first day of the Tet Offensive during the Vietnam War.

Klárová, Barbora & Tomáš Illus.KončinskýbyDaniel Špaček

many people in the ufology field seem to suspect everyone else of being CIA spies. He also reveals how conferencegoers endlessly promise “disclosure”—someone in the government admitting to the reality of space aliens—but never follow through with providing it. Overall, this enjoyable account freeassociates through its colorful narrative in a manner that may, for some readers, call to mind the style of fellow Minnesotan Garrison Keillor (who also makes a cameo in these pages). At the same time, Keller’s narrative voice is effectively reminiscent of the style of the late Hunter S. Thompson—particularly his novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1971), as both books cen ter on smart, savvy individuals grappling intellectually with extraordinary, otherworldly stuff that they just can’t shrug off. Keller’s story is loosely framed by fondly expressed flashbacks of a college Space Pen Club, a jejune campus group known for Dadaist stunts and named for a popular writing gadget. He particularly details his dissatisfaction with mainstream media, especially CBS News, which he asserts is either inept or collud ing in UFO coverups; however, he does give props to a 1990s Fox show called Sightings. Early on, Keller also reveals that he initially shunned another key UFO pop-culture touchstone— Whitley Strieber’s popular alien-abduction memoir, Commu nion (1987)—because he didn’t like the movie version.

is no inconsiderable feat of research—Kelley presents 247 por traits, each which includes some general biographical informa tion, an account of the circumstances of the soldier’s service and death, and, in most cases, a photograph, if not of the ser viceman, then of his family or headstone. In one remarkable case—that of Fredrick Martin Kittle, an Air Force captain—the author reproduces photos found on the soldier’s camera of the attack that took his life. While the information is presented in the spirit of journalistic objectivity, the accounts are heart breakingly sad, especially the depictions of soldiers who died leaving behind families, like Robert Beryl Stafford, who had a wife and four children. Kelley served in Vietnam during the war, and his profound respect for his fellow servicemen is mov ingly evident with each biography. His prose is plainly unliterary and foursquarely lucid—this is an encyclopedic document and not a poetically nostalgic one. He prudently allows the accom plishments of the soldiers to speak for themselves. Most read ers likely won’t have the necessary discipline to read so many accounts consecutively, but there is no need to—this book is a valuable resource for those researching the war and those look ing for a poignant reminder of its human costs.

Kelley, Rodney L. Self (262 pp.)

Trans. by Andrew Oakland Designed by Petr Štěpán Val de Grace (120 pp.) $26.00 | Oct. 11, 979-8-9858-7871-42022Inthisphysics-themed

A snappy UFO memoir-tapestry from a music journalist-turned-publicist.

An affecting biographical work about Vietnam War sol diers that’s meticulously researched.

fantasy, an elf’s quest to prevent entropy has unintended consequences.

Biographical Sketches of the United States Military Personnel Killed in Action on the Deadliest Day of the Vietnam War—January 31, 1968

What is entropy, and what would happen without it? Origi nally published in the Czech Republic, this new U.S. edition of co-authors Klárová and Končinský’s book (translated by Oakland) is a don’t-miss for science-minded middle schoolers. Set in a wildly inventive world, “entropic elves,” invisible to humans, create disorder and chaos. The book’s lively, relatable narrator, Typo, a young elf in third grade at the Primary School for Aging Things, speaks directly to readers, explaining that all things inevitably become older, damaged, or lost thanks to the work of the entropic elves. (And today’s built-in obsolescence, he enthuses, is a golden age for the elves: “never before has aging occurred at such speed.”) Typo’s specialty is mistakes in published works. His best friend Skim excels at cocoa spilling (one page of the text in Štěpán’s inspired book design features a realistic cocoa stain). Typo considered entropy to be the elves’ noble calling, he says, until the day his faith was shaken: Dur ing a field trip to a human bakery, his creative misspelling of a little girl’s name on her birthday cake made her cry. Within the authors’ clever, informational framework, faintly reminiscent of The Phantom Tollbooth (1961), Typo recounts how he set out,

“The book is a valuable resource for those researching the Vietnam War and those looking for a poignant reminder of its human costs.”

TYPO AND SKIM

america’s national treasures

According to Kelley, the rapidly accumulating historical scholarship on the Vietnam War has failed to highlight the personal sacrifices made by the soldiers who died during it, a dismal oversight. “Over the decades, historians shaped our understanding of the war’s military strategy and tactics,” he asserts. “However, this legacy of the war diminishes a grasp of the lives impacted by the tragedy of conflict. The extent of our collective memories of the fallen often is a list on a monument.” In order to correct this problem, the author here assembles a series of short biographies honoring each of the American sol diers who died on Jan. 31, 1968, the first day of the infamous Tet Offensive, one of the deadliest moments of the war. This

$15.00 | $10.00 paper | $8.00 e-book Jan. 22, 979-8-4048-4251-7979-8-4066-6014-02022paper

AMERICA’S TREASURESNATIONAL

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 159 adultyoung

A nonfiction book examines a mis carriage of justice that resulted in the execution of a Black man in Jim Crow–era Maryland.

A seasoned traveler shares memories of her adventures on seven continents in this memoir.

American travel writer Lane’s first travel overseas was in 1965 for her honeymoon, when she and her then-husband trav eled from the United States through Europe. In the ensuing decades, she lived in London, Bangkok, and Manila and began writing for such venues as the New York Times and HuffPost. Her desire to be her definition of a traveler (“tourists do what makes them comfortable. Travelers seek discovery”) took her to more than 100 countries over the course of 50 years. Proceeding alphabetically, beginning with Andorra and end ing with Zimbabwe, Lane shares an array of memories tied to specific locales. The author describes being mugged in Barce lona, when she instinctively tried to wrestle her handbag back from her assailant—an unsettling event that was mitigated by an “idyllic” picnic in Andorra the following day. Lane also dis cusses reviewing hotels in Russia after perestroika and taking a river cruise from St. Petersburg to Moscow. In far-flung Mada gascar, she says, she realized her lifelong dream of photograph ing lemurs in the wild. The author also turns her attention to the United States, celebrating the beauty of Antelope Canyon, Arizona, pondering her most treasured experiences, and list ing the five states she has yet to visit. Lane stresses that this isn’t intended as a guidebook but rather a record of how she perceived the world through decades of voyaging. Charming watercolor illustrations by Correll, which are based on Lane’s photographic travel archive, complement her memories.

PLACES I REMEMBER Tales, Truths, Delights From 100 Countries

The Three Tomatoes Book Publishing (203 $40.00pp.)| $26.95 paper | $14.95 e-book Oct. 27, 978-0-578-59331-9978-0-578-62510-22019 paper

Lane, Lea Illus. by Greg Correll

This is a beautifully balanced memoir that packs a wealth of personal experience into a comparatively short book. Lane cap tures the atmosphere of each location with swift and evocative precision, as when describing a street in Cairo: “Vendors sell tissue on the dusty streets for drivers who blow their noses and wipe their sweaty faces, then toss the tissues out the windows. The snotty papers swirl like huge snowflakes as cars pass on the hot pavement.” The author also offers laconic yet thought ful commentary throughout, as when describing the historic Mostar Bridge in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which was destroyed then rebuilt following the Croat-Bosniak War in the 1990s:

Koper, Joseph Secant Publishing (308 pp.) $26.95 | $8.99 e-book | Sept. 15, 2022 979-8-9851489-0-9978-1-7359957-9-3 paper 979-8-9851489-1-6 e-book

Imagination soars in this smart, humorous, visually capti vating approach to a scientific concept.

Isaiah Fountain, a Black resident of Talbot County, Mary land, narrowly avoided being lynched by a local mob after he was charged in April 1919 with raping a 14-year-old White girl named Bertha Simpson. But the hangman’s noose caught up with him 15 months later, the culmination of an appalling mis carriage of Jim Crow justice on Maryland’s Eastern Shore that made him what Koper calls the “second victim” of the assault on Simpson. “Even having a solid and compelling alibi provided by three prominent and disinterested White citizens wasn’t enough to overcome the pervasive Jim Crow sentiment of the time,” the author observes in a book that provides a coherent and detailed picture of the case based largely on newspaper accounts. In the Jim Crow South, nothing was more likely to ignite White rage than allegations of a sexual assault of a White girl or woman by a Black man, as the cases of Emmett Till and the Scottsboro Boys graphically show. Fountain’s alibi put him in the town of Easton, where he had been looking for his wife, at the time Simpson was assaulted about seven miles away in the underbrush beside a rural road. The county sheriff appears to have concluded that Fountain’s horse and buggy had not been at the crime scene and he was, therefore, not the assailant. But none of that mattered to State’s Attorney Charles Butler or the judge, William Adkins, who presided over a trial in which the outcome was preordained, with the jury returning a guilty verdict in nine minutes. That verdict was overturned on appeal, but a three-judge panel convicted Fountain in the retrial, shock ingly fabricating its own timeline so that he “had the opportu nity to commit the crime after all.” The book lacks the color and character development that would really bring the material alive. But Koper’s dogged dissection of the record includes the

This rigorous account clearly shows that Isaiah Fountain suffered a fate he didn’t deserve.

with a talking dung beetle as his guide, to find entropy’s mas ter, the legendary Cog of Time, and stop the process of aging and disorder. Špaček’s illustrations encompass witty, full-page, full-color imaginings of the elves’ busy, messy world and cartoon renderings, in color and black and white, of the characters, their gadgetry, and more, on text pages. With various font sizes for emphasis and eccentric juxtapositions of text, illustrations, and chapter titles in large, transparent blue letters, Štěpán’s design adds to the book’s delights.

160 | 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

THE ISAIAH FOUNTAIN CASE Outrage and Jim Crow Justice on Maryland’s Eastern Shore

“lost” diary of a 16-year-old girl—“At 3:13 this morning…Fountain was hanged in Easton,” she wrote—and he leaves no doubt that the defendant “was denied the justice he deserved.”

adultyoung

Lane’s sharply observant yet intimate writing will trans port readers to places all over the world.

abigail’s dragons

FOREVER SHERIFF

A serious, exciting coming-of-age fantasy.

The High Mountain Sheriff Series

“The fantastical elements are fresh, and the relationships among the teens feel authentic.”

Matthews, Patrick

“Time heals. But history warns.” The unconventional but fun A-to-Z format allows the reader to work through it from cover to cover or to dip in at any point for travel inspiration. Read ers concerned that this format might make for a fragmented memoir in which they never truly get to know the author need not worry. She avoids dry reportage and offers candid snippets about her personal life and travel partners: “I was traveling for the first time with an elegant man whom I was seriously dat ing, and I wanted to make a good impression.” Correll’s striking works offer a color palette that leans toward blues and greens, and they make this cleverly conceived and satisfying voyage of escapism all the more vivid.

comes of age in a changing West in this third installment of the High Mountain Sheriff fiction series.

Second Story Up (308 pp.)

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 161

coming-of-age tale as well as its echoes of modern tensions in the spheres of law enforcement and pandemic management. A slow-burning, engrossing, quietly philosophical Western.

ABIGAIL’S DRAGONS

From Matthews, a group of young teens must work together to escape fairy captors and control their own burgeon ing powers.

Summit County, Utah, 1905. When 18-year-old Mark Willford Simms is sworn in as deputy sheriff, he’s following a family tradition. His father, John, is the current sheriff, and his grandfather was sheriff before that. There’s a shooting on Mark’s very first day on the job. A new ranch hand in the area, Tom Hixson, shoots a boy working for a local cattle company owned by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mark soon suspects that one of the local ranchers has set up a meatpacking business in order to hide the fact that he’s rustling cows, and Hixson is at the center of the operation. Years later, when Hixson drowns under mysterious circumstances, Mark can’t help but wonder if there isn’t more to the story. By this point, World War I has come and gone, and Summit County is plagued by more than the meatpackers and their muscle: The nation is in the grip of the Spanish flu. Mark, who has ascended to sheriff following the death of his father, is tasked with leading the county through quarantines and elec tions. Soon, he’s also got a murderer to bring to justice. All of this gets him thinking: Just how long will Summit County need a Simms to enforce the law? Massey’s prose is as stoic as his char acters, as in this description of the town’s longtime liverymanturned-mechanic: “Old Seth Parker had gone from fixing wagon axles and feeding horses to fixing transmissions and selling gaso line. Like all men in the community, he went about it without comment. When he decided to learn something new, he made no show of it. He made every effort to hide it. Something sin ful lay at the center of being imperfect.” The novel spans two decades, and more than any particular conflict, its focus is on the closing of a certain period in the history of the Old West. Fans of the genre will enjoy the pensive precision of the author’s

Massey, Edward Five Star (331 pp.) $25.95 | May 18, 978-1-4328-9230-22022Ayounglawman

$24.99 | $11.99 paper | $2.99 e-book July 1, 978-1-73307-776-7978-1-73307-777-42022 paper

Thirteen-year-old Abigail has spent the last two years shut up in a cave. She has a magical force growing inside of her, a gallu draig that affords her the ability to both heal and put oth ers into comalike sleep. But if the gallu draig isn’t drained peri odically, it will turn Abigail into a monster. Or so Abigail has been told by the tiny fae man who guards her. That is why she endures her lonely life, working to protect six other “sleepers.” Abigail believes the fae are searching for a cure. But when two of her charges are taken away, their gallu draig having supposedly claimed them while Abigail herself was sleeping, her doubts turn to certainty. She and the others are being held captive! Abigail revives the remaining sleepers: Dwayne, Jeff, Meili, and Luca. At first they are hostile, holding Abigail to blame for her complicity in their imprisonment. But Abigail’s knowledge and healing powers help them to escape...as does the destructive force unleashed when Meili turns into a dragon! Can Abigail and her companions stay free from their fae pursuers and ward off their own transformations? Matthews writes in the third person from Abigail’s perspective, delivering realistic dialogue and a well-constructed storyline. The fantastical elements are fresh, and the relationships among the teens feel authentic. Abigail and the other sleepers are accepting yet temperamen tal, good-hearted but self-absorbed, brash though insecure. The cast is diverse—Dwayne is Black, Meili is Chinese, Luca is Latine, and Abigail and Jeff, who is deaf, are White. The plot, while never slow, gains traction as it unfolds and carries some genuine surprises. Abigail’s story is the second in a series but is more or less entirely self-contained, requiring no knowledge of the first book. Middle-grade readers (and above) will immerse themselves in the adventure.

BEYOND THE BACK ROW The Breakthrough Potential of Digital Live Entertainment and Arts

McCarthy, a former CEO of Goldstar and current CEO of the hybrid live-event platform Stellar, dramatically frames live entertainment as operating under a “Business Model of the Damned” that is hamstrung by the limitations of capacity and stuck with “high fixed costs and low variable costs.” When Covid-19 hit in 2020, livestreaming was how plays, operas, musi cals, etc., reached housebound audiences, and this new approach to the stage seems not only poised to stay, but to become the future of live entertainment. Livestreaming offers: a solution to the problems of limited space and seating, new ways to stage events, cost-cutting tools, show-development opportu nities, and a chance to expand audiences. McCarthy describes the technology behind livestreaming and explains how hybrid events (which have both an in-person audience and an online component) work for various types of productions. Quick to dispel the notion of streaming events as merely “Zoom events,” the author shows how, with the proper planning, a good inter net connection, and an eye toward production values specifi cally for the screen, one can offer hybrid or livestream events for any venue. McCarthy was on the ground in the industry as Covid hit, and he brings enthusiasm and experience to his book (“With online events, you’re looking for a customer that’s more enthusiastic about the content itself. A good cocktail and a summer night don’t sell tickets to online shows. That’s how you draw casual fans to in-person events, but it doesn’t work for online events”). The guide lays out its most important points in clear, bulleted lists, and the outlines, budgets, and examples scale to events of all sizes.

THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO JOBSUCCESSFULINTERVIEWING

Celebrity conservationist Isabel Bari has created a revolu tionary, carbon-based currency system called the Equivalent Carbon Credit, believing its worldwide adoption is the only hope to fight climate change. To win hearts and minds, she has created a wildly popular reality show and drawn influencers to her cause, attempting to turn attention into political capital. More than 3,000 years later, the ECC has become the standard; ecological disaster has been averted; and a fiery statue of Isa bel stands in a city that’s the very picture of botanical futurism. Auditor Mangus Skåber is a hard-nosed enforcer of this grand utopia’s tenets, assigning public gardening or confiscating

Covid-19 reveal new possibilities—and a future—for streamed events.

An approachable, informed introduction to improving online events.

McCarthy, Jim Houndstooth Press (156 pp.) $24.99 | $6.99 e-book | July 19, 2022 978-1-5445-3107-6Lessonsfrom

162 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

In these pages, Miller draws on his own decades of expe rience in “talent acquisition” in order to dispel the mysteries surrounding the hiring process in the hope of increasing the chances that his readers will land their dream jobs or desired promotions. According to the author, some 80% of professional turnovers result from faulty hiring practices, with either the employer asking the wrong questions or the applicant giving the incorrect answers. The book’s chapters are short and filled with bulleted points, with each one concluding with a summary—all designed for quick and easy access by job aspirants daunted by the sometimes murky but crucial hiring process. (Most people change jobs many times in their lives.) Miller coaches his read ers to do a large amount of research on their target jobs, listen carefully to every part of each question, and practice possible answers ahead of time. These answers “should be concise and relevant to the questions asked,” he writes, “but always con necting you to the ideal profile.” The author has interviewed thousands of job applicants, and the calm confidence of all that experience comes through clearly on every page of his manual. His insights and advice are always no-nonsense and straight to the point. “Do not bring up other candidates,” he warns. “Have a compelling, succinct explanation of why a business needs your services.” He provides a valuable backstage look by explain ing why employers ask many of the kinds of questions they do in interviews, well-known gambits like “What is your biggest achievement?” He also cautions readers against making the most common mistakes—such as lying about their experience. “Being dishonest is the fastest and most sure-fire way to guar antee that you don’t get the job,” Miller writes. Job seekers will find a great trove of valuable, levelheaded advice in these pages.

Miller, M.L. Ethical Recruiters DBA SoaringME (117 $29.95pp.)| $19.95 paper | $9.95 e-book April 16, 978-1-956874-07-5978-1-956874-09-92022paperAmanualoffersacomprehensive set of tips for improving job interview performance.

A sweeping and sharp-eyed guide to interviewing for the job of your dreams.

WE PROMISED UTOPIA Morales, Adrian, Robert Holman & Charles J. Martin Illus. by John Eric Osborn, Chloe Elimam & Jonathan Koelsch Literati Press Comics and Novels (114 pp.) $10.99 paper | $2.99 e-book | Jan. 1, 2021

In this SF comic, a shrewd visionary sets out to remake the world to avoid ecological disaster only for her idyllic future to collapse into a snowy wasteland.

with wooden teeth, and a speculative narrative that surmises the possibilities of animals with elemental powers. Hints of allegory, symbolism, and philosophy are embedded in several tales, some more obvious than others. The initially fanciful “Panda Dancing” eventually alludes to larger questions about the meaning of life, while the manipulative politician in “The Filibuster of the Sailor-Senator” maneuvers legislation around the Patriot Act despite the dire warnings of a local demon. As a prolific designer and developer of a series of role-playing games who has a doctorate in computer science, Moran displays a boundless creativity throughout a literary mélange that often disregards logic but consistently entertains. If the anthology seems mystifying and extraordinarily offbeat, it is, and that’s an integral part of its effervescent charm. Readers of quirky, bizarre fiction will appreciate the author’s wit, inventiveness, and philosophical meanderings encapsulated in this celebration of the unexpected.

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 163

nonnative produce from those who would break its laws. Yet his constant hunt for corruption has him investigating unspent car bon credits with a connection to Isabel. Further into the future, a family of four traverses the ruins of the ECC’s society in a New Ice Age. But Isabel’s words survive even there, passed between well-meaning survivors despite the fact that the paradise she created is long frozen over. Holman, Martin, and Morales deftly introduce three radically different eras early on, easily building intrigue by silently positing what Isabel did so right in Mangus’ time and what later went so wrong as to tear it all down. Each age is defined by its vivid art. Osborn’s minimalist pencil works portray a present day that feels malleable while its red palette gives Isabel and her collaborators a chic look. Koelsch’s lush cityscapes and modernist character designs, the latter clearly influenced by artist Neal Adams, inject the comic’s weakest plotline—weighed down by a setting whose inner workings are left a bit too obtuse—with some much-needed dynamism. Eli mam’s style is distinctive in a way that belies her background in children’s books, cleverly depicting the nomadic family’s often violent quest for survival in an icy world. Though the series opener leaves plenty of unanswered questions, it offers readers just as many reasons to return for the sequel.

A timely, engrossing SF tale with an environmental theme and striking art.

Moran, Jenna Katerin

magical bears in the context of contemporary political theory

A phantasmagorical oddity full of wonderfully weird char acters and otherworldly creations.

memoir, a woman describes her quest to become the first femaleOstfeldcantor.was neither conventionally beautiful nor traditionally cool. She was chunky and big-nosed, and her mother cut her hair and made her clothes. Luckily, the author had one place where she felt com pletely comfortable: her synagogue, where she sang in the temple choir. “When we read together during services, I feel strong and important,” narrates 8-year-old Ostfeld. “The cantor gives me solos. When I sing, I am not fat or nearsighted. I sing like a long sigh, like magic, like the hot glass I saw the man spinning in Colonial Wil liamsburg.” Called Barbi Prim by her uncle, the author had dreams of being a performer, but when she was cast in plays throughout her teenage years, it was always as the housekeeper rather than the lead. Her home life became increasingly claustrophobic, especially after the family moved from Chicago to Connecticut so her father could take a job at Yale. Ostfeld was instrumental in having her father—who started popping pills and drinking too much—com mitted to a psychiatric ward for his erratic behavior. After she fin ished high school, the author enrolled at Hebrew Union College, where she hoped to become the first female cantor in the recorded history of Judaism. Was such a thing even possible, especially in a religion steeped in such ancient traditions? As Ostfeld struggled against professional obstacles in her quest to break the glass ceil ing—as well as the hurdles within her own family, both the one that raised her and the one she built across several marriages and chil dren—she was reminded again and again that her place of greatest comfort was within the music and the mystery of her faith.

CreateSpace (164 pp.)

$9.99 paper | $0.99 e-book | July 14, 2015 978-1-5058-8320-6Aneclecticcollection of fables defies reason yet commands attention.

“Readers of quirky, bizarre fiction will appreciate the author’s wit, inventiveness, and philosophical meanderings.”

adultyoung

MAGICAL BEARS IN THE CONTEXT OF CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL THEORY Hitherby Dragons Collection

Ostfeld, Barbara J. Erva Press (358 pp.) $17.95 paper | $9.99 e-book | March 27, 2019 978-0-9980326-1-0Inthisdebut

The Ballad of Barbi Prim

CATBIRD

Sewn inside Moran’s patchwork quilt of 22 curious literary sketches, poems, and short stories are underlying messages about society, the world at large, and the complexities of the human condition. The “naturally sticky” mammals in the opening narrative are stacked into totems to conjure rainstorms or to make “China untether the yuan from the dollar.” The son in “The Cut-Off Man’s Father” tries to relate to his dad, who is physically plugged into machinery that assesses and collects people’s debts. One of the best and most promising tales is the multipart, metaphoric fable “Rain bow Noir,” which features the magical bears of the book’s title. The story is set in an apocalyptic former “Rainbow World” that was once “beautiful and bright” but has, since the early 1950s, become a dark, grim, noir “Shadow City.” Can a group of activist bears named Transgression Bear, Fatalism Bear, Alienation Bear, and Femme Fatale Bear (who unlocks men’s innermost desires) stop Nihilism Bear from destroying the world? Some tales con vey mood and spirit in the economy of a few pages, like the slim, sinister story of George, a petulant young boy in “At the Cherry Tree,” who makes demands of a backyard tree nymph

health advo cate with bipolar disorder shares advice in this debut memoir.

$22.99 | $9.99 paper | $3.99 e-book March 27, 978-1-08-785738-1979-8-5012-1447-72020paperAbloggerandmental

When a friendly cat appears in his yard on Halloween, Benjy, a White boy, sees it as a sign that Tricks is meant to be his, though his parents have steadfastly refused to get any pets. Benjy’s mom insists the social cat can’t be a stray (“She’s too well fed. She smells too good”). Indeed, it turns out that the feline belongs to Erika, the new neighbor, who has started staying with her grandmother during the week while she attends a Deaf school in the area. Erika, a Black girl with curly hair, uses a hear ing aid, lip-reads, and is learning sign language—and she makes the sign for stealing in front of Benjy. This inauspicious intro duction becomes a friendship when Mrs. Currie, Erika’s grand mother, has to pick Benjy up from school after he helps rescue Tricks, whose real name is Fluffy, from the street’s misanthropic tomcat. Erika warms to Benjy and teaches him signs. When her parents suggest that Fluffy should live with them, rather than travel back and forth each weekend with Erika, Benjy proposes a win-win solution. Fluffy will live with Erika during the week and Benjy on weekends. Erika’s participation in Deaf culture is depicted as a source of well-being. She finds friends, a community, and a positive environment at her Deaf school. Pattison’s text is accessible for newly independent readers, and the simple story is undergirded by a satisfying emotional realism. Benjy’s singleminded pursuit of a pet—and his love of Fluffy—is one-note but deeply relatable. Pet lovers will be encouraged by Benjy’s and Eri ka’s caring, reasonable families. McBride’s sketches in graphite are useful visual cues for coming plot points in this gentle, engag ing story. Erika’s signs are illustrated with clear diagrams, and an addendum teaches readers a few more.

In 1999, Poehler was diagnosed with a mental illness that affects 5.7 million American adults,

Poehler, John Self (178 pp.)

Mims House (46 pp.) $19.99 | $9.99 paper | $3.99 e-book Aug. 9, 978-1-62944-210-5978-1-62944-209-92022paperAboycovetshisneighbor’s

Pattison, Darcy Illus. by Kyle McBride

Neighborly communication and care are at the heart of this excellent tale for young readers.

THIS WAR WITHIN MY MIND

The memoir is presented as a series of vignettes, most no more than a few paragraphs in length. They will wash over read ers, with the author’s awkward moments and epiphanies accu mulating like pictures in a photo album: fretting over the lyrics of Christmas carols; writing letters to advice columnist Ann Landers; discovering a hair growing from her chin at Torah camp. Ostfeld writes with vigor and humor, capturing Barbi’s voice at various ages and always in the present tense. Here, she discusses new motherhood after adopting a baby girl from Colombia: “Maternity leave ends, and I am ready. It’s been hard work tak ing care of Hana. Hard, repetitious, and exhausting. I’ve read too many books about stimulating infants in their early months, so Hana’s tiny head is chock-full of songs, rhymes, numbers, verbose descriptions of nature.” The book reads more like a novel than a memoir, and its shift from early childhood to adulthood is partic ularly reminiscent of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (one of the works that the bookish young Barbi devours), though Ostfeld continues her narrative deep into middle age. While it’s not always dramatic, the volume offers readers the novelistic sensation of being deeply immersed in another’s consciousness, riding the emotional ups and downs and expanding with the passage of years. By the end, readers will feel they have lived a whole life.

cat and finds both feline and human friendship in this illustrated children’s book.

This Issue’s Contributors # ADULT Mark Athitakis • Colette Bancroft • Sarah Blackman • Amy Boaz • Catherine Cardno • Emma Corngold • Perry Crowe • Morgan Davies • Sara Davis • Coeur de Lion • Dave DeChristopher Melanie Dragger • Lisa Elliott • Lily Emerick • Chelsea Ennen • Rosalind Faires • Talia Franks • Mia Franz • Glenn Gamboa • Geoff Hamilton • Katrina Niidas Holm • Damini Kulkarni • Carly Lane Brandi Larsen • Tom Lavoie • Judith Leitch • Elsbeth Lindner • Don McLeese • Gregory McNamee Clayton Moore • Jennifer Nabers • Christopher Navratil • Mike Newirth • Therese Purcell Nielsen Connie Ogle • Mike Oppenheim • Nina Palattella • Derek Parker • Jim Piechota • Carolyn Quimby Lloyd Sachs • Bob Sanchez • Michael Schaub • Gene Seymour • Linda Simon • Margot E. Spangenberg • Mathangi Subramanian • David L. Ulin • Francesca Vultaggio • Wilda Williams Kerry Winfrey • Marion Winik CHILDREN’S & TEEN Nada Abdelrahim • Lucia Acosta • Mahasin Aleem • Autumn Allen • Jenny Arch • Elizabeth Bird Christopher A. Biss-Brown • Kimberly Brubaker Bradley • Jessica Brown • Timothy Capehart • Ann Childs • Amanda Chuong • Anastasia M. Collins • Jeannie Coutant • Maya Davis • Dave DeChristopher • Elise DeGuiseppi • Ilana Bensussen Epstein • Brooke Faulkner • Eiyana Favers Amy Seto Forrester • Ayn Reyes Frazee • Jenna Friebel • Lakshmi Gandhi • Laurel Gardner • Judith Gire • Carol Goldman • Melinda Greenblatt • Ana Grilo • Abigail Hsu • Julie Hubble • Kathleen T. Isaacs • Darlene Ivy • Wesley Jacques • Danielle Jones • Betsy Judkins • Deborah Kaplan • Stephanie Klose • Lisa Krok • Megan Dowd Lambert • Angela Leeper • Patricia Lothrop • Kyle Lukoff • Kaia MacLeod • Joan Malewitz • Thomas Maluck • Michelle H Martin • Gabriela Martins • J. Alejandro Mazariegos • Kirby McCurtis • Breanna McDaniel • Jeanne McDermott • Zoe McLaughlin • Kathie Meizner • Mary Margaret Mercado • Lisa Moore • Mya Nunnally • Katrina Nye • Sarah Parker-Lee Hal Patnott • Deb Paulson • John Edward Peters • Justin Pham • Kristy Raffensberger • Amy B. Reyes Nancy Thalia Reynolds • Jasmine Riel • Christopher R. Rogers • Hadeal Salamah • Meredith Schorr E.F. Schraeder • Karyn N. Silverman • Allie Stevens • Deborah D. Taylor • Bijal Vachharajani Jenna Varden • Yung Hsin • Angela Wiley • Vanessa Willoughby • Bean Yogi INDIE Alana Abbott • Paul Allen • Kent Armstrong • Darren Carlaw • Charles Cassady • Michael Deagler Steve Donoghue • Jacob Edwards • Joshua Farrington • Jackie Friedland • Lynne Heffley • Matthew Heller • Justin Hickey • Ivan Kenneally • Collin Marchiando • Brendan McCall • Randall Nichols • Jim Piechota • Sarah Rettger • Hal Schrieve • Barry Silverstein • Mo Springer • Amelia Williams 164 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

GOT ME A CAT

A finely wrought account about embracing big dreams.

In this revised edition of her latest book, originally published in 2019, Simons mines a career spent celebrating environmental and social changemakers to iden tify important attributes of successful leaders and to encour age women to develop their own leadership potential. The book comprises three sections—personal development based on the author’s experiences with learning and growth; unique attributes of female leaders, with several individuals explored in detail; and recommendations for creating a more equitable world, shaped by Simons’ understanding of intersectionality. The author blends a number of writing styles, using plain prose

adultyoung

with occasional forays into poetry (“If we don’t feel what hurts, surrender to its demands, / speak the wound, / how can we really begin to heal?”). She also includes interview transcripts, some featuring Simons as the subject; in others, she serves as the interviewer, gleaning insights from noted figures, like author Terry Tempest Williams. The book encourages readers to view leadership through the lens of narrative, turning actions into a story and developing storytelling skills in order to commu nicate the aims of an organization or a movement. Through out the book, there is a focus on the particular challenges and opportunities that face leaders of color. Each chapter concludes with a series of prompts designed to guide readers’ engagement with the concepts (“List any connotations, positive or negative, that leadership holds for you”).

“Simons’ exploration of intersectionality and equity issues is heartfelt, and her earnestness is affecting.”

nature, culture & the sacred

according to the National Institute of Mental Health. The diagnosis prompted him to create the blog The Bipolar Battle; this book, which is based on the blog, will be equally useful for those who have bipolar disorder, their family and friends, or anyone with an interest in learning more about it. The work is both autobiographical and instructive as it traces Poehler’s challenging journey and offers insights into his struggles as he “experienced the paralyzing depths of depression” and “the psy chotic intensity of mania.” The author appropriately cautions readers to neither self-diagnose nor self-treat, and he trans parently exposes his own treatment regimen to offer a greater understanding of how he manages daily life. The author covers quite a bit of ground over the course of the book; he intelli gently ponders reactions to bipolar disorder diagnoses, clearly describes symptoms and manifestations in detail, offers a help ful overview of medications and therapies, details events that can trigger manic or depressive episodes, and explores how bipolar disorder affects one’s relationships with spouses, chil dren, extended family members, and friends. Overall, the book is an effectively comprehensive collection of frequently asked questions, as curated by an experienced guide. Poehler’s candid, no-nonsense prose not only portrays the difficulties of living with bipolar disorder, but also shows his inner strength and resolve. For instance, Poehler wisely suggests creating both a “treatment plan” (“your daily plan of attack to manage your bipo lar disorder”) and a “crisis plan,” which details specific actions to take and people to contact during a manic or depressive epi sode. Poehler believes in being proactive and views himself as a warrior: “Warriors do not let the world dictate their lives. They make things happen.” This book’s short, readable chapters contain sensible advice for other fighters who navigate similar battles every day.

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 165

A valuable and insightful discussion of a common illness.

NATURE, CULTURE & THE SACRED A Woman Listens for Leadership Simons, Nina Green Fire Press (352 pp.) $16.95 paper | $9.99 e-book | June 20, 2022 978-1-73475-717-0Anexploration of leadership focused on women’s roles.

Simons is clearly a thoughtful writer committed to develop ing her own leadership skills and those of other women, and the work she has put into structuring her lessons is evident. The guide covers both abstract and specific lessons that have shaped Simons’ understanding of leadership and equity; for example, leaders are advised to require substantial minority represen tation among both participants and facilitators of leadership workshops. Some sections, like Simons’ description of spend ing hours meditating in the dark, may leave skeptics with an eyebrow raised, but while there is a spiritual dimension to the book’s definition of leadership, the overall approach deals with tangible practices and results. Readers will find practical advice for being self-aware, making principled decisions, and building coalitions, with specific stories of women’s activism illustrating general concepts. For instance, Simons explains how she has learned to notice her physical reactions to emotionally uncom fortable situations, then draws on that discomfort to actively address and resolve a problematic situation. The work is slightly repetitive; quotations and historical trivia are cited multiple times, making the text feel a bit disjointed, although the prob lem is minor. Simons’ exploration of intersectionality and equity issues is heartfelt, and her earnestness is affecting. Readers who are well versed in the leadership genre will find this book distinctive for its continual emphasis on community and ways of understanding, while those less familiar with the topic may find it a unique, holistic introduction. This is an exploration of leadership aimed at those in nonhierarchical organizations and those with social justice–driven missions, and it offers a valu able perspective from well outside the corporate world.

A smart, informed guide to developing inclusive leader ship skills.

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Provocative, explicit poetry written with muscular swagger.

rhythms of how his characters talk, think, and feel and to chal lenge the reader to sort it all out themselves.

$13.79 paper | $2.99 e-book | July 2, 2022 978-1-66784-123-6Inthisnonfiction book, a journalist investigates romantic strains in the Don ald Trump Accordingera. to a 2018 statement posted on the popular dat ing site eHarmony, “Politics are on the minds of daters more than ever.” Indeed, to many adults looking for romance, writes Terry in this intriguing study of contemporary American life, “more than in any other political era, a vote for Trump told more about the person than their dating app profile would dare admit.” With an academic background in sociology, the author builds on his 2013 book, Marriage War, about America’s declin ing marriage rates, and offers readers an in-depth glimpse into the nation’s “Loveless Age,” when “singleton” has become a defining trait among late millennials and Generation Zers. In addition to dissecting the politically fraught terrain of dating in a time when Trumpian views continue to reverberate even after his presidency, the book analyzes myriad factors that compli cate intimacy in the 21st century, from the “pornification of cul ture” to Covid-19 restrictions and social distancing. The volume is divided into three parts, with the first section showing how political divisions have taken a central role in stifling romance, from ending marriages to causing users to swipe left on Tinder based on a person’s politics. Part 2 delves into competing ideas among women, exploring those who adhere to “traditional femininity’s” goal of “marrying-up to a ‘good catch’ ” versus individuals who emphasize “boosting women’s opportunities in the modern workworld.” The book’s final section looks at the role of economic change when traditionally male jobs (such as trades or factory work) are in decline and women are emerging as the family breadwinners in a postindustrial economy. A com mon link across all sections is how Trump tapped into latent misogyny and patriarchal resentment against feminism to build his base as well as how nearly half of America’s White women “would choose to vote for an odious poster-boy of the patriarchy.” Though at times repetitive, the volume is written in an engaging style that blends an accessible narrative with solid, interdisci plinary research.

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$12.99 paper | $2.99 e-book | Nov. 11, 2021 978-1-73684-102-0DebutauthorStocks’ poems address issues of poverty, masculinity, identity, andInmore.the poem “Fair Play,” the Arkansasborn, Mississippi-raised author describes boxing with a reverence that’s reminis cent of Ernest Hemingway’s attitude toward Spanish bullfighting, making the violent sport seem almost ennobling: “It’s exciting to see men fall in the ring, after giving their all, instead of on battle fields, or murdered in the streets without a choice.” Indeed, the collection is replete with images referencing violence and desper ation: “We kill each other over parking spaces / Shoot-up schools, malls, churches / ’cause our little feelings get hurt,” the speaker of “The Emerald City” says in despair, knowing that “Fury runs deep for no real reason” in him and many of his peers. Each poem is written with an almost brutal honesty and directness, explor ing such topics as yearning to be a professional football player, being a victim of a stabbing, and coming to terms with an impov erished upbringing in ways that don’t feel confined to the South; when a speaker affirms in “Conjecture” that “Boys grow up to be bastards. Ruthless amnesiacs, / more snaggletoothed and snarl ing / than any starving beast (indoctrinated into the system),” he could be talking about people anywhere in America. Stocks’ writ ing has a powerful immediacy, and his poems are packed with both profanity and pop-culture references, as when a speaker notes his aspiration to “feel like Elvis Presley, Marilyn Manson & Judas Priest during their peak touring years.” Occasionally, the language can feel problematic—especially speakers’ occasional use of the N-word. Its apparent aim is to capture the complex

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BLAMEFOREST

A thoughtful examination of a topic that affects the lives of millions of “loveless” Americans.

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AMERICA’S LOVELESS AGE Trumpism, Fempower, the End of Patriarchy Patriarchy (Why Singleton Is the New Normal)

Stocks, Jason

Mindstir Media (122 pp.)

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78710 and at additional mailing offices. 166 | 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

$17.99 | $9.99 paper | $4.99 e-book June 6, 978-1-955674-29-4978-1-955674-28-72022 paper

A young boy learns that taking care of pets is difficult but worthwhile in the fifth installment in Valdez and Laine’s picturebookWhenseries.Lil Peter’s friend Christine explains what it means to foster a pet, he immediately wants to bring home a rescue animal. His parents allow him to volunteer at the rescue center

small

All the stories in this compact col lection traffic in the surreal and end in ambiguous ways. Anderson seems like an ordinary white-collar worker in the title story. Except he earns money as a hit man, and his latest kill goes off without a hitch. But an uneasy bus ride doesn’t quite prepare him for what’s waiting at home. “My Nightmare Nurse” compiles NYU professor Antonio Ken nedy’s notes and digital diary excerpts. He describes childhood nightmares and panic attacks that are suddenly resurfacing. But his perspective doesn’t clarify whether he’s seeing visions of a headless demon nurse or an unearthly entity is truly physically tormenting him. Readers will speed through these brief tales; a couple might have been even more unnerving if they were longer. In the case of “An Imperial Decree,” electronics store employee Sharla gets a cryptic email asking for a yes or no response. The story hints at ominous consequences, but the ending is too vague to leave much impact. Throughout, Tierney’s concise, animated prose adds scene-setting details: “from hip-hop kids of all races with hoodies, tats and earrings to dark-suited executive types, to chubby balding geeks with their Spock tee shirts and scuffed up Vans, all staring up at screens of all sizes.” Most characters are everyday people caught up in inexplicable predicaments. That’s certainly true for 37-year-old sports blogger Jesse, who appears in the collection’s longest (but still very short) story, “Shadow Play.” It seems only natural that he talks with his shadow since it has developed a consciousness and a solid form and, like each of these stories, becomes increasingly unpredictable. Diverting, grim, and outright bizarre.

| kirkus.com | indie 15 september 2022 | 167

where Christine’s mother works. Lil Peter’s very sure of him self—“This is going to be fun and easy!” he believes—but when the work starts to get challenging, he wonders if he’s making a difference. However, he knows the animals are depending on the shelter, so he puts in extra work, doing small but important tasks, including cleaning floors and litter boxes, and showing his parents he’s ready for the responsibility of pet ownership. Val dez and Laine clearly capture Lil Peter’s enthusiasm and deter mination while painting an accurate portrait of pet care, never glossing over the dirtier parts of the job. The approachable text features a few challenging vocabulary words (such as responsibil ity) but offers context to assist readers. Leonard’s cartoonlike illustrations have depth and texture and effectively capture Lil Peter’s struggles and successes. Lil Peter, Christine, and their family members have brown skin tones; their friend Timmy is portrayed as White.

things lil peter make a big difference

Tierney, Daniel AuthorHouse (62 pp.)

Weber, Ken & Daryl Weber

Valdez, Peter & Tasche Laine Illus. by Mei Mei Leonard Skye Blue Press (40 pp.)

As authors who believe that “Ameri ca’s future depends on Democrats doing better in elections,” the Webers lament in this book that the party is simply “terrible at branding.” This failure to “exploit the tenets of long term brand ing and smart marketing,” they argue, has opened the door to potential victories by the “radical Right” in close elections despite Democrats’ clear demographic advantages. Fearing that “Republicans are moving quickly to restrict voting rights,” the authors urgently appeal for a revitalization of the party. Tired of “yelling at the television screen…when Democrats do dumb things,” this father-son duo of marketing experts wrote this work to offer Democratic politicians, campaign staffs, and vol unteer activists a rebranding and marketing strategy based on a lifetime of personal experience. In the volume, Ken, the founder and president of a successful New York investment firm, and his son, Daryl, the former global director of creative strategy at the Coca-Cola Company, present a practical guide for a “major reset” of the Democratic Party’s marketing tactics. Central to their vision is combating Republican talking points of Demo crats as “Coastal elites” by relentlessly emphasizing that the party “fights for the people.” Accompanying their rebranding plan are also business-tested strategies on how to protect, rein force, and saturate the political marketplace with that brand. As the authors of previous business and marketing books, the Webers are skilled writers who effectively distill their acumen into an accessible account of under 200 pages that is designed

$24.95 | $9.99 e-book | Sept. 13, 2022 978-1-63755-471-5Inthispolitical

A Top-to-Bottom Reimagining of Campaign Strategies

themselves in surreal, often unsettling circumstances in this debut collection of seven tales.

SMALL THINGS LIL PETER MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE

RealClear Publishing (200 pp.)

$10.99 paper | $3.99 e-book | Sept. 23, 2018 978-1-5462-6098-1Charactersfind

adultyoung

A well-told story about the importance of small tasks that will appeal to kids hoping to adopt a pet.

“Valdez and Laine clearly capture Lil Peter’s enthusiasm and determination while painting an accurate portrait of pet care.”

book, two profes sional marketers provide a rebranding strategy for Democrats.

DEADMAN AND OTHER TALES OF THE IRREAL

BRANDING DEMOCRATS

In this mystery, an investigation into a woman’s murder and dismemberment forces police detectives to delve into the worst of humanity.

for readers (including politicians) from outside the financial world. With a firm grasp of both 21st-century politics and mar keting strategies based on consumer data, psychological studies, and even neuroscience, the authors make a convincing case for their rebranding overhaul. Still, some on the left, already leery of the rise of neoliberalism and Democratic ties to corporations, may question the wisdom of prioritizing marketing strategies over rethinking the party’s centrist policies.

A convincing, practical case for immediately rebranding the Democratic Party.

NO MORE BAD DAYS

Whitaker, Lindsey Self (270 pp.)

168 | 15 september 2022 indie | kirkus.com |

$21.97 | $13.99 paper | $8.99 e-book March 14, 979-8-4321-6788-0979-8-4322-3243-42022 paper

For Det. Kimberly Hall, a murder investigation is nothing new. She knows how to deal with her boss, Capt. Mitchel, and the frustrating reporter Jessica Stevens. Hall recognizes she has a team of experts to help her find the killer. But the same experience and knowledge aren’t shared by her rookie partner, Det. Alex Diaz, and one of his decisions may cost the victim, Laura Gibbons, the justice she deserves. For Laura, life had never been easy—and now it is over. The abuse she faced as a child from her violent father and her neglectful mother had left her afraid to trust anyone to truly love her. The suspects in her murder include her ex-boyfriend Nathan Watters; her current boyfriend, Jordan Walsh; and the best friend she was in love with, Brady Callister. Something happened between Brady and Laura that left them not speaking for months. Her mother says Laura had a bad breakup with Nathan. And it turns out that Jordan has a criminal history. Medical Examiner Ramya Singh concludes that Laura died on Friday night—right after she had dinner with Brady. But Brady saw her alive when he left his girl friend, Andrea, and detectives discovered a necklace on Laura’s body that was given to her by Nathan (“It has an inscription on the back: ‘No more bad days’ ”). More concerning is the enigmatic older man Laura texted a friend about: Ryan Leary. Whitaker’s characters are well developed, with their moral complexity highlighting the mystery and creating a compelling story. Diaz’s eagerness and Hall’s experience and by-the-book attitude meld well. The fast-paced plot with unexpected turns is effectively supported by the captivating characters driving it. The real ism of the players, especially Hall and Diaz, and the challenges they face add believable stakes to the mystery. Even characters like Jessica, whose actions are unsympathetic but understand able, remain intriguing and bolster the intricate narrative. The author has crafted a masterful mystery.

An unpredictable and gripping thriller with a strong cast.

SALESTRANSPARENTTHELEADER

kirkus.com books of the month 15 september 2022 | 169

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MARKETINGEMAIL THAT DOESN’T SUCK

A book of lively and relatable marketingadvice.

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An adept and chilling cautionary tale—the narrative equivalent of brass knuckles to the skull.

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adultyoung

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A dozen more books in the series would follow, including Curse of the Bane, Night of the Soul Stealer, and Grimalkin the Witch Assassin Revenge of the Witch was adapted into a 2014 film, Seventh Son, by director Sergei Bodrov; its cast included Kit Harrington, Jeff Bridges, and Julianne Moore.

Carrasquillo/FilmMagicGilbertBooksPuffin

Joseph Delaney, the British fantasy author known for The Last Apprentice series of young adult fantasy novels, has died at 77, the BBC reports.

Delaney was the author of two other series of novels, Arena 13 and Aberrations.Hisreaders and admirers paid tribute to him on social media. On Twitter, author William Hussey wrote, “I’ve just learned that the wonderful Joseph Delaney of SPOOK’S APPRENTICE fame has passed away. One of the kindest, gentlest souls, and a simply phenomenal writer. He was so kind to me when I started out as a children’s author all those years ago. Sleep well, dear JoeAuthorxx.” and illustrator Thomas Taylor tweeted, “I’m shocked to hear of the death of Joseph Delaney. His brilliant ’Spook’ books were a huge inspiration to me. RIP.”

BY MICHAEL SCHAUB

Seen & Heard

Delaney worked as a teacher before publishing his first fiction under the pen name J.K. Haderack. In 2004, he published the novel The Spook’s Apprentice in the U.K.; the following year, it was released in the U.S. as The Last Apprentice: Revenge of the Witch

best known as the author of The Butler: A Witness to History, a 2013 book about Eugene Allen, a longtime White House waiter and maître d’hôtel. The book was based on Haygood’s Washington Post article “A Butler Well Served by This Election”; that article was adapted into a film, also called The Butler, by director Lee Daniels in 2013.

FANTASY AUTHOR JOSEPH DELANEY DIES AT 77

WIL HAYGOOD TO RECEIVE HOLBROOKE ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

170 | 15 september 2022 seen & heard | kirkus.com |

The annual award is presented by the Dayton Literary Peace Prize Foun dation and recognizes lifetime achievement in promoting peace through the writtenHaygoodword.is

Michael Schaub, a journalist and regular contributor to NPR, lives near Austin, Texas.

dispatches from the book world Wil JosephHaygoodDelaney

Haygood’s other books include In Black and White, Sweet Thunder, Tigerland, and, most recently, Colorization, a history of Black films in the United States.

“For three decades, Haygood has captured the sweep of American culture, focusing on the rarely or never-told stories of the Black experience with the analysis that this nation so desperately needs,” said Sharon Rab, chair of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize Foundation. “We are thrilled to honor one of Ohio’s greatest authors with the international recognition that his body of work deserves.”TheHolbrooke Award is named for the U.S. assistant secretary of state who was instrumental in brokering the Dayton Agree ment in 1995, which led to the recognition of Bosnia and Herzegovina and ended the yearslong war that plagued that part of the formerHaygoodYugoslavia.willreceive the award at a ceremony in Dayton on Nov. 13.

Journalist and author Wil Haygood has been named the winner of this year’s Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award, the Dayton Daily News reports.

The “mutual friend” of the novel’s title is the smartphone, which plays a key role in almost every scene in a way so true to life it hurts. Among the many characters connected by this little friend are Alice, a 28-year-old nanny who has been trying to get it together to take the MCAT and apply to med school ever since announcing it on Facebook two years ago; her crazy new roommate, Roxy, a social media maniac and sexy troublemaker who works in the New York City mayor’s office; Alice’s brother, Bill, a tech zillionaire, and his wife, Pitterpat. As funny as The Mutual Friend is, it is also, as our reviewer wrote, full of wisdom and compassion, “original, intelligent” and “beautifully written.”

Jean Hanff Korelitz has a wonderfully sneaky way of unfolding plot, as many learned from her 2021 bestseller, The Plot. In her newest, The Latecomer (Macmillan Audio, 16 hours and 19 minutes), which our reviewer called a “satisfyingly twisty” story of triplets who hate each other from birth and the unhappy parents who brought them into this vale of tears, that sneakiness has an added element, which is: Who the heck is telling this story? They sure do seem to know everybody’s secrets and woes. Yet as Julia Whelan’s chatty, personable reading underlines, this narrator is a character in his or her own right.

| kirkus.com audiobooks 15 september 2022 | 171 adultyoung

If I Survive You, the debut of rising star Jonathan Escoffery (Macmillan Audio, 8 hours and 45 minutes), is read by Torian Brack ett, whose voice is the ideal instrument for this dazzling collection of linked stories, moving fluidly in and out of Jamaican patois, using first-, second-, and third-person narration to show different angles on brothers Delano and Trelawny, their cousin Cukie, their families, their schoolmates, their employers, and their girlfriends. These Miami-born sons of Jamaican immigrants come of age in a world striated by racism, sucked dry by capitalism, and flattened by Hurricane Andrew yet lit up by “humor, savvy and a rich sense of place,” according to our review.

A first-person narrator with a concealed identity is also featured in Carter Bays’ The Mutual Friend (Penguin Audio, 15 hours and 56 minutes), the author’s fiction debut after co-creating the TV show How I Met Your Mother. George Newbern’s reading of the story— his delivery recalls the arch, plummy tones of a 1960s game show host—is even more perfect when you finally find out whose voice it is in the audiobook’s final minutes.

The dramedy begins with tragedy: While on a double date as an undergrad at Cornell, Salo Oppenheimer flips his Jeep, killing his fiance, his best friend, and any prospects for future content ment. He marries a woman he meets at the funeral; their extended, etiolating attempts to produce offspring are finally rewarded with some of the most miserable siblings who ever lived. As unhappy families go, these uppercrust Oppenheimers are definitely in the top 1%. But believe it or not, Kore litz—through the machinations of her mystery narrator—has a plan to lift them out of their misery.

AUDIOBOOKS | Marion Winik

Unexpected Narrators

Marion Winik is the host of the NPR podcast The Weekly Reader.

The first story, “In Flux” establishes the unending ironies of identity politics as the main topic of Trelawny’s primary, secondary, college and post-institutional education. What is he? people demand to know. The answer changes depending on whether he’s in Miami, where no matter what he says they are sure he’s Dominican; in the Midwest, where he is “simply, unquestionably Black”; or in Jamaica, where despite the assertion that “there’s no racism here,” the police “only shoot you if you’re black-Black.” By the last story, all his education, family dysfunction, trauma, and a long string of (extremely odd) odd jobs culminate with a short stay in the city jail— and a vision of the way forward for his family.

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