Fiction
Clay by David
Almond (Delacorte)

“A stranger comes to town” is a classic theme
in literature, and it’s shaded in Almond’s suspenseful
tale with the arrival of a troubled boy and a golem —
a Catholic golem, no less — in an English village.
Atmospheric setting and rich imagery texture this resonant
story of danger and faith. Review 7/06. (Middle School, High
School)
The Astonishing Life of Octavian
Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume I: The Pox Party
by M. T. Anderson (Candlewick)

In a precise eighteenth-century voice, young slave/laboratory
experiment Octavian tells of his bizarre life growing up in
a household of rational philosophers on the eve of the American
Revolution. Brilliant in its sustained complexity; exhilarating
in its form; searing in its portrayal of human hypocrisy,
this is an alternative narrative of our national mythology
that simultaneously appalls and enthralls. Review 9/06. (High
School)
The Last Dragon
written by Silvana De Mari, translated from the Italian by
Shaun Whiteside (Miramax/Hyperion)

In De Mari’s unique and vividly evoked post-apocalyptic
fantasy world, elves are persecuted and dragons are nearly
extinct. The last dragon, the last elf, and the child of the
human couple who saved them fight for hope in a new era, proving
the redemptive power of love and sacrifice in this heart-pounding
— and heartbreaking — epic. Review 11/06. (Intermediate)
An Abundance of Katherines
by John Green (Dutton)

Recent high school grad Colin, devastated by his latest romantic
breakup, hits the road with his best friend Hassan (“Hassan
Harbish. Sunni Muslim. Not a terrorist”). Exceedingly
smart and funny, this novel charts a singular coming-of-age
road trip that is at once a satire of and tribute to its many
celebrated predecessors. Review 9/06. (High School)
The Green Glass Sea
by Ellen Klages (Viking)

When Dewey joins her mathematician father in Los Alamos in
1943, she finds a community that respects her scientific mind
but cannot protect her from hurt. Klages compellingly partners
the historic drama of the Manhattan Project with the coming
of age of an intelligent young girl. Review 11/06. (Intermediate,
Middle School)
Street Love by
Walter Dean Myers (Amistad/HarperCollins)

In this Romeo and Juliet story set in modern-day
Harlem, Damien is a semi-sheltered, college-bound model citizen,
while street-strong Junice is fighting to keep her family
intact after her mother is sent to prison. The fierce emotions
of young love are dramatically conveyed in this lyrical, instantly
approachable verse novel. Review 11/06. (High School)
Aggie and Ben: Three Stories
written by Lori Ries, illustrated by Frank W. Dormer (Charlesbridge)

A young boy gets a dog and learns good-naturedly about pet
ownership. The clean, expressive panel illustrations are as
unassuming as the humorous easy-reader text, which has both
the simplicity and repetition needed to engage beginning readers
and the deeply satisfying story elements that will keep them
coming back for more. Review 9/06. (Preschool, Primary)
Thumb on a Diamond
written by Ken Roberts, illustrated by Leanne Franson (Groundwood)

The kids of tiny, isolated fishing village New Auckland have
never played baseball — a mere detail in their clever
plan to earn a free trip to the big city. This sequel to Thumb
in the Box portrays without a trace of condescension
the kids’ wonder at such urban delights as escalators
and buses; the baseball play-by-play is exciting if (delightfully)
eccentric. Review 5/06. (Primary, Intermediate)
A Drowned Maiden’s Hair:
A Melodrama by Laura Amy Schlitz (Candlewick)

Recalcitrant Maud is probably the most unlikely inhabitant
of the Barbary Asylum for Female Orphans to be adopted, and
when the maiden Hawthorne sisters do so, Maud’s gratitude
leads her into a very dangerous game. Schlitz plays the melodrama
for all it’s worth but with a completely straight face,
allowing genuine darkness and emotion to emerge. Review 11/06.
(Intermediate)
Ptolemy’s Gate: The Bartimaeus
Trilogy, Book Three by Jonathan Stroud (Miramax/Hyperion)

In alternate-universe London, power-hungry magician Nathaniel,
principled commoner Kitty, and enslaved spirit Bartimaeus
all resist a corrupt government in overlapping (and occasionally
opposing) struggles. Humor, philosophy, and explosive action
are masterfully interwoven, and the thrilling, inventive climax
provides a stunning end to this intricately plotted, emotionally
rich trilogy. Review 3/06. (Middle School, High School)
The King of Attolia
by Megan Whalen Turner (Greenwillow)

Eugenides (The Thief; The Queen of Attolia)
is now the reluctant King of Attolia, striving to overcome
his subjects’ hatred and his own aversion to the position.
An action-packed plot and an irresistible hero (equal parts
vulnerable lover and calculating conqueror) combine for a
suspenseful, psychologically mesmerizing fantasy. Review 3/06.
(Middle School, High School)
The Book Thief
by Markus Zusak (Knopf)

Set in a small town in Nazi Germany, Zusak’s sweeping
yet intimate novel is narrated with startling, wrenching compassion
by Death itself. Exquisitely written and memorably populated,
Zusak’s poignant tribute to words and
survival — and their curiously inevitable entwinement
— is an unforgettable tour de force. Review 3/06. (High
School)
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