Annie Metcalf

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Leigh Bardugo’s new series, set in the same universe as her best-selling Grisha trilogy, kicks off with Six of Crows. In this gritty world, gangs battle for control of the streets in the bustling port city of Ketterdam. One of these gangs is the Dregs, led by Kaz Brekker, whose youth belies his cunning as a thief and viciousness as a leader. Because of this growing reputation, Kaz is offered a job: liberate a prisoner from the Ice Court, a legendary stronghold in the nation of Fjerda. It’s almost certainly a suicide mission, but the reward money, even split between six accomplices, is worth the risk. 

Six of Crows is narrated by the rotating perspectives of Kaz’s young crew, a relatively diverse group whose personalities are distinct and compelling. Bardugo reveals each character’s backstory in stages, which adds suspense in the early chapters before the action ramps up. The bonds between members of the gang, especially the romantic ones, are sufficiently convincing to carry readers through a few weaker moments. Beyond the romance, Six of Crows is undeniably exciting. Bardugo cultivates a taut sense of urgency that intensifies as the heist unfolds minute by minute, leading to an unexpected twist in the final moments.

While the adventure and romance are perfect for the provided age range, episodes of extreme violence makes this dark heist novel suitable for older teen readers.

 

This article was originally published in the October 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

Leigh Bardugo’s new series, set in the same universe as her best-selling Grisha trilogy, kicks off with Six of Crows. In this gritty world, gangs battle for control of the streets in the bustling port city of Ketterdam. One of these gangs is the Dregs, led by Kaz Brekker, whose youth belies his cunning as a thief and viciousness as a leader.

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Ten-year-old Christa Adams has a problem. Her parents are making the disastrous mistake of selling the family cabin in Wisconsin’s north woods, where Christa has spent every summer of her life. In the past, she might have had help reasoning with her parents from her sister, Amelia—but she’s been replaced by Amelia-the-Princess, who only seems to care about texting and tanning. Luckily for Christa, her new friend Alex might have a solution buried in his family’s past.

Alex’s family has moved to Hayward to help his grandfather run the family restaurant, Clarks Pizza. Clarks is famous for its glory days in the 1920s, when it was known as Clarks Fine Dining, and Al Capone himself would do business from his regular table. Most of Hayward believes the rumors about the Clarks, that they hid a chunk of Capone’s loot and Grandpa Clark knows where it is. If Christa and Alex—and their adventuring alter egos, Chase Truegood and Buck Punch—find Capone’s loot, Christa can save her family’s summer home.

Finders Keepers is infused with the magic of summer but also the bittersweet realities of growth and change, as Christa learns to see her family differently and to separate their priceless memories from the cabin itself. Christa is funny, confident and every inch a tomboy. Alex is shy and smart, but with a healthy dose of 11-year-old cheek. Their realistic friendship—and Christa’s passion for the Northwoods—captures the instant nostalgia of childhood summers and makes Finders Keepers a perfect escape from the school year.

Ten-year-old Christa Adams has a problem. Her parents are making the disastrous mistake of selling the family cabin in Wisconsin’s north woods, where Christa has spent every summer of her life. In the past, she might have had help reasoning with her parents from her sister, Amelia—but she’s been replaced by Amelia-the-Princess, who only seems to care about texting and tanning. Luckily for Christa, her new friend Alex might have a solution buried in his family’s past.

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Dave and Julia are best friends. They have feelings for each other, but neither has admitted it. When they rediscover a list of “cliché” things they vowed never to do in high school, they decide to spend the remaining weeks of senior year checking off items. With this setup, Adi Alsaid’s novel Never Always Sometimes follows one of the most familiar high school plotlines, luring young readers into familiar territory for a quick, satisfying and eventually surprising read. Alsaid uses clichés throughout both the plot and the structure of the novel, but ultimately twists them into a relatively realistic outcome in the book’s final act.

Like many creators of classic American high school tales, from John Hughes to John Green, Alsaid requires from his audience almost as much suspension of disbelief as with a fantasy novel, with protagonists who are several degrees more articulate and far less self-conscious than any real teenager. But like those beloved stories, this does not make Dave and Julia’s story any less enjoyable for the reader. Told in three acts, first from Dave’s perspective, then Julia’s, then alternating chapter by chapter, the novel undercuts generic differences between boys and girls, instead highlighting the specific differences between Dave and Julia. How these differences can go unnoticed, and how they can ultimately affect a relationship when they bubble to the surface, is a refreshingly clear-headed spin on the best-friends-in-love plotline.

Alsaid delivers a quick, satisfying read about change and continuity that will resonate with young readers approaching their own periods of transition.

Dave and Julia are best friends. They have feelings for each other, but neither has admitted it. When they find a list of “cliché” things they vowed never to do in high school, they decide to spend the remaining weeks of senior year checking off items. With this setup, Adi Alsaid’s novel Never Always Sometimes follows one of the most familiar high school plotlines, luring young readers into familiar territory for a quick, satisfying and eventually surprising read.

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BookPage Children's Top Pick, July 2015

The summer before starting middle school, Ruby Danes meets a new girl in her neighborhood. Margalit doesn’t make Ruby feel foolish for being herself, but Ruby has never been able to reveal her deepest secret to a friend: Her mother has been in prison for six years and is sentenced for at least 10 more. Ruby keeps her life strictly compartmentalized: on the “outside,” in the real world with her peers and aunt, and on the “inside,” in prison, the only place where she can see her mother. As the girls spend more time together, Ruby struggles to find the courage to tell the truth about her life while preserving her new friendship.

In Ruby on the Outside, Nora Raleigh Baskin gives readers a serious, relatable look into the criminal justice system and its ripple effects. The story of Ruby, her aunt and her mother contributes to the growing body of children’s literature highlighting nontraditional family structures. While Ruby’s vocabulary—far beyond an average 11-year-old’s—may strike adult readers as unrealistic, the ample context clues and mature narrative voice make this title an ideal option for advanced young readers. 

Ruby’s situation is unconventional, but her anxieties about growing up different and forging lasting friendships are universal. With its careful attention to the complex emotions of a mother-child relationship, Ruby on the Outside will leave an enduring impression on young readers. 

 

 

This article was originally published in the July 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

In Ruby on the Outside, Nora Raleigh Baskin gives readers a serious, relatable look into the criminal justice system and its ripple effects. The story of Ruby, her aunt and her mother contributes to the growing body of children’s literature highlighting nontraditional family structures.
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Twelve-year-old Lily is thoughtful and bright but needs an extra push to unleash her imagination and individuality. That push is Salma Santiago, a migrant worker whose family is in Maine for the blueberry harvest. 

The two girls connect when Salma helps catch Lily’s blind dog, Lucky, when he runs off through the blueberry barrens. Lily shares her plan to raise money for an operation to restore Lucky’s sight, and soon Salma is adding her artistic flair to Lily’s hand-painted bee-house business. When Salma learns that the winner of the annual Blueberry Queen pageant receives a large savings bond, which she needs to start a college fund, Lily vows to help Salma win the pageant. But a migrant worker has never before entered the competition, and Lily’s friend Hannah is also a contestant. 

Though the story acknowledges tensions that arise between friends, Lily and Salma exhibit a mutually supportive friendship that is often missing from stories about girls. Young readers will appreciate Lily’s concerns about growing up and the confidence she finds in a new friendship. 

Newbery Honor winner Cynthia Lord delivers a sweet story about letting go creatively and emotionally while holding onto friendship.

 

This article was originally published in the June 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

Twelve-year-old Lily is thoughtful and bright but needs an extra push to unleash her imagination and individuality. That push is Salma Santiago, a migrant worker whose family is in Maine for the blueberry harvest.
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In the powerful first installment of a new trilogy from Michael Buckley, species collide in this sci-fi tale infused with emotionally charged themes of immigration and xenophobia.

Lyric Walker and her family live in “Fish City,” Coney Island’s nickname since the arrival of the Alpha, aquatic humanoids that emerged on the shore three years ago. With Alpha looting the city by night and human gangs retaliating with extreme violence, Lyric’s neighborhood is under martial law. Lyric’s father is a policeman, but it’s not a sense of duty that keeps the Walker family in Fish City; they’re guarding a secret that makes passing the checkpoint impossible.

Despite protests, the president has ordered Coney Island to allow Alpha children into public schools. Lyric’s mysterious new principal assigns her a dangerous task: befriending Fathom, the handsome but deadly Alpha prince, in hopes that their relationship will influence other students and quell the interspecies brutality. As Lyric defends herself against mistrust from both sides, she is pulled into the heart of the integration conflict and drawn perilously closer to Fathom.

Buckley delicately mirrors two cultures steeped in violence, subtly indicating parallels between the novel’s world and our own. Well-plotted and containing one of the most beautifully written family relationships in recent YA fiction, Undertow’s execution is as captivating as its premise.

 

This article was originally published in the May 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

In the powerful first installment of a new trilogy from Michael Buckley, species collide in this sci-fi tale infused with emotionally charged themes of immigration and xenophobia.
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In Beth Kephart’s One Thing Stolen, the beauty and history of one of the world’s great cities and the confusion and fear caused by a rare brain disorder combine to produce a fresh, unexpected story.

Seventeen-year-old Nadia Cara and her family are in Florence for her father’s research on the massive 1966 Arno River flood. But something is wrong: For months, her ability to speak has been slipping away. She compulsively steals random objects and weaves strange, beautiful nests out of them. She can’t even find comfort in her new friendship with a mysterious boy named Benedetto, because no one else has seen him. Incapable of expressing her fears or explaining her actions, Nadia is trapped within her untrustworthy mind.

While less plot-driven than most young adult fiction and more focused on the power and limitations of language, One Thing Stolen will entrance readers through the excellently portrayed bond between Nadia and her best friend, Maggie, as well as the lingering question of Benedetto’s existence and the fascinating setting. Kephart captures Florence using all five senses, from the smells of the leather shops to the birdsong in a church courtyard. And like Kephart’s other young adult titles, such as Small Damages and Going Over, the music of language itself propels readers onward.

One Thing Stolen explores themes of destruction and rejuvenation, emphasizing the possibilities and hope found in disaster. This is a unique and engrossing exploration of how characters deal with the pain and beauty of the real world.

In Beth Kephart’s One Thing Stolen, the beauty and history of one of the world’s great cities and the confusion and fear caused by a rare brain disorder combine to produce a fresh, unexpected story.

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Centuries-old dragon Miss Drake, narrator of A Dragon’s Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, is mourning the death of her beloved pet, Fluffy (actually a human named Amelia) when young human Winnie shows up at her door. Winnie is precocious, observant and, at first, annoying. But Miss Drake soon realizes that Winnie is dealing with a painful loss as well—her father—and decides she must look after the girl to honor Fluffy’s memory.

When Winnie draws the marvelous creatures she encounters on trips with Miss Drake in her new sketchbook, trouble begins. The magical book brings the sketches to life and sets them free, so the two new companions must recapture them all before a magical disaster takes over the city.

In the first book in this new series, authors Laurence Yep and Joanne Ryder skillfully blend fantastic creatures and powerful spells with the relationships, emotions and small pleasures that make up everyday life. With Yep and Ryder’s guidance, a view of San Francisco Bay or a picnic bought at a farmer’s market are equally as magical as flying on a dragon’s back.

Perhaps most impressively, this whimsical and often wise adventure explores themes of love and loss accessibly and honestly. A straightforward tale embellished with excellent voices, vivid details and subtle lessons in empathy, A Dragon’s Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans will capture the attention and imagination of young fantasy readers.

Centuries-old dragon Miss Drake, narrator of A Dragon’s Guide to the Care and Feeding of Humans, is mourning the death of her beloved pet, Fluffy (actually a human named Amelia) when young human Winnie shows up at her door. Winnie is precocious, observant and, at first, annoying. But Miss Drake soon realizes that Winnie is dealing with a painful loss as well—her father—and decides she must look after the girl to honor Fluffy’s memory.

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Laura Rose Wagner’s debut novel tells the heartfelt, gritty story of a girl living through the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. Sixteen-year-old Magdalie and her cousin, Nadine, are like sisters, both raised by Nadine’s mother, who dies in the quake. The boredom, poverty and filth of the makeshift refugee camp are made bearable by the girls’ friendship, but then Nadine’s father procures an American visa, and she moves to Miami. Nadine promises to send for Magda, but as the months drag on, Magda stops expecting a reunion and must rediscover her connection to the people and opportunities that remain in Haiti.

Hold Tight, Don’t Let Go is an excellent choice for readers searching for a diverse narrative. Wagner worked in Haiti for three years, including the year of the earthquake. She is sensitive to reductive and sensationalist portrayals of Haiti, and she tackles these issues in a particularly compelling moment between Magda and an American photographer. There is darkness, anger and despair in what Magda endures, and Wagner is harsh when she needs to be, depicting the hazards faced by young women through moments that are difficult to read. With a realistic balance between righteous anger and sardonic humor, Wagner produces an empathetic and enlightening portrait of a teen’s life in Haiti.

 

This article was originally published in the January 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

Laura Rose Wagner’s debut novel tells the heartfelt, gritty story of a girl living through the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. Sixteen-year-old Magdalie and her cousin, Nadine, are like sisters, both raised by Nadine’s mother, who dies in the quake. The boredom, poverty and filth of the makeshift refugee camp are made bearable by the girls’ friendship, but then Nadine’s father procures an American visa, and she moves to Miami. Nadine promises to send for Magda, but as the months drag on, Magda stops expecting a reunion and must rediscover her connection to the people and opportunities that remain in Haiti.
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Anthropologist and poet Ruth Behar makes her middle grade debut with Lucky Broken Girl, the story of a young Jewish-Cuban girl in Queens that was inspired by the author’s own experiences. Ruthie Mizrahi and her family are still adjusting to life in America when a car accident leaves Ruthie confined to her bed in a full-body cast. In her year of recovery, Ruthie discovers the love and support of her community and family, but also confronts anger, fear and despair as she comes to terms with her new circumstances and changing personality. A love letter to a diverse New York City neighborhood and a sensitive portrayal of growing up with unforeseen challenges, Lucky Broken Girl is gentle, heartfelt and highly entertaining.

What can you tell us about your own experience that inspired this story? Why did you decide to transform your story into a book for young readers?
The story was inspired by the year I spent in a body cast, confined to my bed, when I was 9 going on 10. It was a traumatic experience, for me as well as my family and our friends and neighbors. Imagine an immigrant family, just arrived from Cuba, penniless and afraid, and suddenly they have an invalid girl to take care of. When I sat down to write, I wanted to conjure how I felt at that young age, when it seemed to take forever to get back on my feet. I also wanted to honor all the people who surrounded me and tried to help me heal.

The child’s voice came easily. It was as if Ruthie was whispering the story into my ear, letting the adult Ruth know what she was going through. Transforming my story into a book for young readers wasn’t a choice but a necessity. It was the only way the story could be told. I was listening to Ruthie and putting down her story on the page.

What was the biggest challenge in writing your first novel for young readers?
My biggest challenge was figuring out where the drama was in a story that essentially takes place while nothing much is happening, while a girl is in bed and waiting to recover. Figuring out how to make immobility of interest to a young reader, who is more accustomed to action-packed storytelling, was something I struggled with as a writer. But then it became clear that Ruthie’s journey of the heart was filled with movement and that you can go through huge transformations while being perfectly still.

The pre-accident chapters could easily have been romanticized as a time when everything was perfect for Ruthie, but there is clear tension between Mami and Papi regarding decision-making, parental roles and finances. Did this refreshingly honest representation of family spring naturally from your experiences, or was it something you intentionally created as part of Ruthie’s narrative?
The tensions between Mami and Papi in the novel definitely spring from my own experiences when I was growing up. As a sensitive child, I worried a lot about the arguments between my parents and was scared of my father’s temper, while I felt sorry for my mother who tried so hard to please him. My parents were struggling to get by, and I didn’t want to be a burden to them. I put huge pressure on myself to succeed as an immigrant child, to learn to speak “good English” and do well in school. The memory of those feelings found their way into the novel. That’s why there isn’t a romanticized image of the time before the accident.

“You can go through huge transformations while being perfectly still.”

We don’t get to see Ruthie grow up, but you, of course, grew up to become an anthropologist as well as a writer. Did that influence the way you wrote and described Ruthie’s neighborhood?
I think I’ll always see the world as a cultural anthropologist. By that I mean I never assume that people think alike or should think alike. I am fascinated by how culture and history shape human behavior and make us different. In writing about Ruthie’s neighborhood, I tried to show how people of diverse nationalities and backgrounds intersected in Queens, New York. Bringing together immigrants from Cuba, Mexico, Puerto Rico, India and Belgium, among others, I wanted to show how people hold onto memories of their home places while assimilating in different ways to American life.

Ruthie gets to know her friends and their family traditions through food, and the food in her house is described in detail, from the flan to the arroz con pollo. What is your favorite childhood food memory?
As a child, I loved my mother’s flan. It always seemed magical to me, how the alchemy of eggs, milk, sugar and vanilla produced something so divine. I later learned to make my own flan, and I enjoy preparing it for special occasions. I also have fond memories of the cream puffs that my friend Danielle’s mother would make for us at the end of the school day. Danielle and I felt so sophisticated eating those exquisite delicacies in our working-class neighborhood in Queens.

In the afterword, you mention that the fear Ruthie develops during this difficult year is something you share with her. What about her discovery of storytelling and art? Do you credit your time recuperating with sparking your interest in artistic pursuits?
Yes, the time I spent recuperating opened my eyes to literature and art, and there is no question that this period in my life made me the person I am today. Though it was a terrible experience to go through, I am grateful for all that I learned. This is why Ruthie is a “lucky broken girl.” I was very lonely during that year and books were my best friends. I became an insatiable reader. But we didn’t have books in the house. Books were a luxury to us as immigrants. The tutor that my public school sent to our home to teach me filled our house with books. Ever since, I have lived surrounded by books. Unable to move, I had to use my imagination and pretend I wasn’t stuck in bed but solving mysteries like Nancy Drew.

Reading awakened my curiosity and made me look beyond myself. It was a time in my life when I became attuned to the suffering of others, when my heart opened. I listened to the stories of people around me and felt their pain. That time in bed recuperating taught me empathy, and having empathy is the foundation for all artistic pursuits.

“You have to give up something old in your life to let in something new.”

Ruthie’s reaction when Papi suggests she be a secretary rather than an artist feels very mature—she decides to learn typing anyway, just in case, and use it to support her storytelling abilities as well. What advice would you give to children who are drawn to the arts but feel the understandable responsibility to follow more financially predictable paths?
I am a strong believer that children who are drawn to the arts should follow their dreams and not feel they have to give them up in order to be financially stable. I think doing something you hate just for the sake of a salary is not a wise choice emotionally. Doing what you love opens doors. And there are so many paths to becoming an artist. Children need to be shown the diversity of ways that artists have achieved their goals, so that they can gain confidence and be able to pursue their dreams without fear.

One of the final hurdles that Ruthie must overcome is the realization that part of her personality has changed, and it is difficult to reconcile her past and present self. How can we best help children with these complicated transitions, especially when even adults have trouble thinking of identity and personality as fluid rather than fixed?
The crux of my book is precisely that: Despite the difficulties, you can reconcile the distance between your past and present self. By the end of the story, Ruthie is aware she has gone through a metamorphosis and is not the same person she was before the accident. She mourns the loss of her former self but comes to accept who she has become. We have to help children to accept the transitions in their lives, teach them that change is inevitable, and that at each phase they will learn new things about themselves and others, and gain wisdom and knowledge. My cousin Judy told me that whenever she buys a new garment, she gives away an old garment from her closet. That’s the kind of advice we might give to children (and adults, too). You have to give up something old in your life to let in something new.

What’s next?
I am at work on a new novel for young readers. It is set in Cuba at the time of the revolution. I was inspired by Carson McCullers’ wonderful novel The Member of the Wedding. The story focuses on a 12-year-old girl who watches jealously as her older sister prepares to marry and is fitted for a beautiful lace honeymoon nightgown sewn to fit her measurements. Then things get more complicated as the revolution brings about dramatic changes and her parents decide to send her out of Cuba against her will with the Peter Pan Operation.

 

Author photo credit © Gabriel Frye-Behar.

A love letter to a diverse New York City neighborhood and a sensitive portrayal of growing up with unforeseen challenges, Lucky Broken Girl is gentle, heartfelt and highly entertaining.

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