Monday, November 19, 2012

Moon Over Manifest

Moon Over Manifest
Image courtesy of Barnes and Noble

Moon Over Manifest
by Clare Vanderpool
Call Number:
FIC VAN

Review by Kathleen Isaacs of Booklist (Oct. 15, 2010 Vol. 107, No. 4)

After a life of riding the rails with her father, 12-year-old Abilene can’t understand why he has sent her away to stay with Pastor Shady Howard in Manifest, Missouri, a town he left years earlier; but over the summer she pieces together his story. In 1936, Manifest is a town worn down by sadness, drought, and the Depression, but it is more welcoming to newcomers than it was in 1918, when it was a conglomeration of coal-mining immigrants who were kept apart by habit, company practice, and prejudice. Abilene quickly finds friends and uncovers a local mystery. Their summerlong “spy hunt” reveals deep-seated secrets and helps restore residents’ faith in the bright future once promised on the town’s sign. Abilene’s first-person narrative is intertwined with newspaper columns from 1917 to 1918 and stories told by a diviner, Miss Sadie, while letters home from a soldier fighting in WWI add yet another narrative layer. Vanderpool weaves humor and sorrow into a complex tale involving murders, orphans, bootlegging, and a mother in hiding. With believable dialogue, vocabulary and imagery appropriate to time and place, and well-developed characters, this rich and rewarding first novel is “like sucking on a butterscotch. Smooth and sweet.” Grades 5-8

Lies Beneath

Lies Beneath
Image courtesy of Barnes and Noble

Lies Beneath
by Anne Greenwood Brown
Call Number: 
FIC BRO

This is not your mother’s mermaid story.  Forget Ariel.  These mer-people are murderous and they are out for revenge.

Meet the Whites, a family of mer-people; sisters Mavis, Tallulah and Pavati and their brother Calder.  Their mother was killed in a tragic accident.  The siblings are sworn to uphold justice for their mother’s death.

That justice is targeted at the human Hancock family; parents Jason and Carolyn and their two daughters, Sophie and Lily.  Jason Hancock has also honored a promise he made to his father; staying away from Bayfield Michigan and staying out of the water.

Will Calder betray his family to protect the girl he has fallen in love with?  How far will his sisters go to avenge their mother’s death?  Lies Beneath will leave you guessing until the last page. 

Sunday, November 11, 2012

You Against Me

Image courtesy of Barnes and Noble
You Against Me
By Jenny Downham
FIC DOW

Family is everything, or is it?  What would you do to protect your family?  What happens when your sister is the victim of a violent crime?  What happens when your mother turns to sherry and cigarettes as a coping mechanism?  Who will be there to take care of your younger sister, get her to school, make sure she eats?  And who will see that justice prevails?

One flip of the coin.  What do you do when your brother has been accused of a violent crime?  How far would you go to protect your family?  Who is responsible for ensuring that your brother stays out of jail?  What happens when you fall in love with the enemy?

These questions loom in the well written story of Mikey and Ellie.  Many teenagers might see themselves in the decisions that are made and the dramas that unfold.  Jenny Downham has told a story that will engage High School students and adults alike.  

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Prodigal Summer

Prodigal Summer
Image courtesy of www.barnesandnoble.com

Book review by Kristin C.

Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver
Call Number
FIC KIN

Prodigal Summer is book about the laws of attraction, richly laced with pheromones and complicated relationships all occurring on or around Zebulon Mountain in rural Virginia.

In this book we meet Deanna who lives on the Mountain, a forest ranger who prefers to be hidden away from the world of people she cannot trust.  She cares deeply bout the forest and the delicate cycle of life between predators and prey.  Her life changes drastically when a much younger, handsome stranger named Eddie Bondo suddenly appears one day.

We also meet Lusa, a beautiful and smart city transplant with a brain for science who marries a man from the country and must find a way to integrate into his family and the new life she has chosen, despite unforeseen challenges.

And finally we meet Garnett Walker - a bitter old man who spends most of his life trying to erase the sins of his family.  A religious and fastidious man, he's quite sure that he's living his life the way everyone else should until a neighbor shakes up his world view.

If you've read Barbara Kingsolver before, you'll recognize her style of rotating stories and perspectives in each chapter.  And, if you've read Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, this one feels like a precursor, as her characters speak in a way that support her ideas on keeping things local, farming in a natural way and respect for the intricate connection of all living things.