Fiction
True Confessions of a Heartless Girl
by Martha Brooks (Kroupa/Farrar)

Canadian writer Brooks focuses on seventeen-year-old Noreen,
pregnant and feuding with her boyfriend, but also explores
the lives of two other women, one in her thirties and another
in her seventies. This multilayered novel about love and trust
features distinctive, memorable characters, both teen and
adult. Review 5/03. (High School)
Olive’s Ocean by Kevin Henkes
(Greenwillow)

With economy, grace, and humor, Henkes takes the stuff of
summer novels — a twelve-year-old girl, a grandmother
with a house by the sea, a first crush, the idea of summer
as the time between — and turns it into a convincing,
fully-realized portrait of a girl on the cusp of adolescence.
Review 11/03. (Middle School)
The Canning Season by Polly Horvath
(Farrar)

When thirteen-year-old Ratchet is packed off by her unloving
mother to live with nonagenarian twin aunts in the wilds of
Maine, what follows is Horvath at her best — simultaneously
poignant and outrageous, tragic and hilarious. Review 5/03.
(Middle School, High School)
Circle of Doom by Tim Kennemore,
illustrated by Tim Archbold (Farrar)

When Lizzie’s “magic potions” look like
they’re actually working, her younger brothers Dan and
Max find themselves facing one of life’s great mysteries,
the confluence of magic and coincidence. With a dash of Anne
Fine and a dollop of Helen Cresswell (in her Bagthorpe novels),
Tim Kennemore serves up a rich domestic comedy. Review 9/03.
(Intermediate, Middle School)
Heart’s Delight by Per Nilsson,
translated by Tara Chace (Front Street)

Setting out a row of objects — from a bus ticket to
a bottle of pills — that commemorate his first passionate
romance, a seventeen-year-old boy brings himself and readers
face to face with heartbreak. Both the pain and the wry humor
of the story are real. Review 1/04. (High School)
The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett
(HarperCollins)

Humor both slapstick and cerebral is shot through this essentially
mythic tale of a girl’s quest to retrieve her baby brother
from the fairies. Aiding Tiffany in her quest are the sustaining
pastoral landscape, her grandmother’s wisdom —
and the Wee Free Men of the title, a swaggering band of tiny
blue warriors, as brave as they are funny. Review 5/03. (Intermediate,
Middle School)
Locomotion by Jacqueline Woodson
(Putnam)

In this moving novel in verse, eleven-year-old foster child
Lonnie discovers that writing poetry can ease the pain of
and amplify the joy in his life. “You have a poet’s
heart,” his teacher tells him; thanks to Woodson, he
also has a strong and believable voice. Review 3/03. (Intermediate) |