Fiction
The Revenge of the Witch (The Last
Apprentice, Book One) written by Joseph Delaney,
illustrated by Patrick Arrasmith (Greenwillow)

When so much recent neo-Gothic fiction seems to be written
with tongue firmly in cheek (if not check), it is pure shivery
pleasure to read a novel of the supernatural that is both
admirably concise and genuinely frightening. Delaney’s
storytelling is at once accessible to unseasoned readers and
satisfying for confirmed genre fans. Review 11/05. (Intermediate,
Middle School)
The Game of Silence
written and illustrated by Louise Erdrich (HarperCollins)

This sequel to The Birchbark House is infused with
elegy, as if young Omakayas is storing up the details of her
Ojibwe family’s way of life as they prepare for a government-
ordered “removal” to the West. Like Laura Ingalls
Wilder, Erdrich uses a simple but lyrical style to convey
the particulars of a historical context. Review 7/05. (Intermediate)
The Minister’s Daughter
by Julie Hearn (Seo/Atheneum)

In an English village in 1645, Christianity coexists with
the old beliefs, piskies roam the hedgerows, and a sister’s
jealousy smolders. Hearn creates an ambiance both earthy and
richly magical, straddling supernatural and concrete realms
of human interaction in a skillfully plotted tale of passion,
politics, deceit, and revenge. Review 9/05. (High School)
An Innocent Soldier
written by Josef Holub, translated from the German by Michael
Hofmann (Levine/Scholastic)

With an immediacy not often found in a historical novel, Holub
relates sixteen-year-old Adam’s experiences as an unwilling
participant in Napoleon’s disastrous 1812 Russian campaign.
A memorable story of survival, friendship, and the realities
of war unfolds through a clear-eyed and often surprisingly
humorous first-person narrative. Review 1/06. (High School)
Martin Bridge, Ready for Takeoff!
written by Jessica Scott Kerrin, illustrated by Joseph Kelly
(Kids Can Press)

Three stand-alone stories introduce a likable third grader
as he confronts real-life challenges. What to do, for example,
when best friend Alex copies his best model-rocket-decorating
idea? The author allows large issues to arise from everyday
situations in this warm, thoughtful chapter book, which features
frequent graphite-and-charcoal sketches on generously designed
pages. Review 5/05. (Primary)
Black Juice by
Margo Lanagan (Eos/HarperCollins)

Taut, resonant prose and an unerring sense of place elevate
these ten short stories to the first rank of speculative fiction.
Each probes an aspect of mortality, carefully detailed and
developed within divergent realities; the brief, indelible
glimpses of other worlds that are all the more human for their
strangeness make this collection truly exceptional. Review
5/05. (High School)
Permanent Rose
by Hilary McKay (McElderry)

The Casson family — parents Bill and Eve and their four
paint-color-named children, Cadmium, Indigo, Saffron, and
Rose — previously reported on in Saffy’s Angel
and Indigo’s Star, has lost none of its sparkle
in this third book. This is exemplary comic writing —
buoyant, perceptive, subversive, and trailing a whiff of melancholy.
Review 7/05. (Intermediate, Middle School)
Criss Cross by
Lynne Rae Perkins (Greenwillow)

This ensemble novel of neighborhood friends dreaming their
way through the summer captures readers with its expansive
yet minutely observed evocation of the curious anticipation
of growing up. In idiosyncratic, wistful prose, Perkins mines
every moment of missed connection and near-change with a hypnotic
hyperawareness reminiscent of adolescence itself. Review 9/05.
(Middle School)
Full Service by
Will Weaver (Farrar)

From what seems like an over-familiar premise — a farmboy
spends his sixteenth summer working at a small-town gas station
— Weaver develops a novel with a bumper crop of subtly
delineated characters and quiet surprise. The 1965, small-town
Minnesota setting is as much a character as is Paul himself;
both are poised for change. Review 11/05. (Middle School,
High School)
Elsewhere by Gabrielle
Zevin (Farrar)

Killed in a hit-and-run accident, Lizzie finds herself on
a ship bound for Elsewhere — Zevin’s inventive
vision of the afterlife. In Elsewhere, “everyone . . .
ages backward from the day they died” until, at seven
days old, they return to Earth. The strikingly original premise
is powerfully sustained in this unusual coming-of-age story.
Review 9/05. (High School)
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