The YA YA YAs

All YA, all the time

Under the Radar: Resurrection Men by T. K. Welsh August 31, 2007

Filed under: Events, Fiction, Reviews — Trisha @ 12:20 am

cover of Resurrection Men by T.K. WelshWhen the Marquess of Stanton’s coach runs over a boy, his coachman and mistress insist on taking the boy to a doctor. In his determination to save the boy, Dr. Lambro minces no words and throws the marquess out of his house. Dr. Lambro’s neighbor, Colonel Maxwell, warns Lambro that he may have made an enemy out of the marquess, but the good doctor is not afraid. As he begins to operate on the boy, he tells the colonel a story about a young boy just like the one lying on his table.

Twenty-two years earlier, in 1830, a boy named Victor watched soldiers kill his parents in Modena. Though some of the soldiers wanted to kill Victor, too, their senior officer had a better idea. Selling him would be much more profitable, and so Victor ends up a cabin boy on a ship sailing west. But when his leg is shattered, Victor is of no use on the ship and is thrown overboard. He manages to survive, washing up on the shores of England, where an elderly man rescues him, taking Victor in and saving his leg. Although Victor is forced to use a crutch to get around, it’s a pleasant life, until the old man can no longer afford to keep Victor around and sells him to a Mr. Tipple and Mr. Biggs.

Mr. Tipple and Mr. Biggs take Victor to London. His journey is an unpleasant one, as he has been thrown into a coffin and must share the space with a corpse. Once in London, Mr. Tipple and Mr. Biggs leave Victor at the home of Master Hartley, who forces children to beg for money in exchange for living in his attic. Master Hartley also has a menagerie of animals he rents out to these children. With so many beggars in London, an animal can make the difference between earning enough money to live in Master Hartley’s attic and living in the streets. Gradually, Victor learns which animals will earn him the most money, and he also begins to earn his keep by doing errands for Hartley, including driving Mr. Tipple and Mr. Biggs around London as they steal corpses and dig up graves, for they are Resurrection Men, selling bodies to doctors eager to learn more about human anatomy.

T. K. Welsh brings Victor’s surroundings, which range from his idyllic days on the English coast to a dirty, squalid, awe-inspiring London, to life in vivid detail. He doesn’t flinch from messy, gory descriptions, but neither does he dwell in them. Likewise, Victor is a worthy and sympathetic hero, making the most of his circumstances and determined to save his friends when it becomes apparent that someone is kidnapping and killing London’s poor children to supply doctors with corpses.

Resurrection Men was inspired by a real 1831 trial. A note about this in the book, along with a bibliography or short reading list, would have been nice. But this is a minor quibble. A bigger problem, in my opinion, is the flap copy, which does the book a disservice by immediately telling us that the protagonist is twelve years old. Yes, Victor is twelve, but to first describe him with his age will no doubt dissuade some older teens from giving Resurrection Men a try, which is a pity. It is more appropriate for them than it is for twelve-year-olds, and it is a book adults will appreciate, as well. As our narrator says, “And while the average life expectancy in London was around thirty-five, when you factored in infantile deaths, twenty-seven was the average age people died, twenty-two among those in the working class. Twenty-two! By that measure, Victor was already middle-aged.”

Also reviewed at Big A, little a. And the VOYA review? Spoilerific.

Here’s the rest of today’s Radar Books schedule:
Big A, little a: The Deep by Helen Dunmore
Bildungsroman: The May Bird Trilogy by Jodi Lynn Anderson
A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy: The Vietnam books by Ellen Emerson White radar
Chasing Ray: Kipling’s Choice by Geert Spillebeen
Finding Wonderland: The Avion My Uncle Flew by Cyrus Fisher
A Fuse #8 Production: Stoneflight by George McHarque
Interactive Reader: A Plague of Sorcerers by Mary Frances Zambreno
lectitans: Gentle’s Holler and Louisiana Song both by Kerry Madden 
Not Your Mother’s Bookclub: A look at some recently reissued books (Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack and Jane-Emily, and Charlotte Sometimes)
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast: Such a Pretty Face: Short Stories About Beauty edited by Ann Angel

 

Your book humor for the day August 30, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — Trisha @ 11:37 pm

It’s only tangentially related to teens and YA lit, but my branch manager and I were cracking up at some of these butchered book titles shared on the Fiction_L listserv.

Some of my favorites:

  • Harry Potter and the Chamberpot of Secrets
  • Fire Hydrant 415
  • Flowers for Allergies
  • Satan in the White House

Can you guess which book the patron who asked for “Satan in the White House” was actually looking for? If I had gotten this question at the reference desk, I probably would have gone to Amazon.com thinking it was a real book.

And it’s not a butchered book title, but I feel sorry for the librarian who said, “I spent several hours looking for information for a mother doing her son’s ‘biology’ home work on Fetal Scent Syndrome. Turns out it was his GEOGRAPHY home work and he was supposed to research the Fertile Crescent.”

It also reminded me of this classic misspelling. (via librarian.net)

Fortunately, or unfortunately, for me the only book title incident I can personally remember is the kid who asked me for “Desperado” when he really meant The Tale of Despereaux. Well, a lot of teens do get the titles of Dave Pelzer’s books mixed up, but those incorrect titles aren’t exactly funny.

 

Get Well Soon by Julie Halpern August 30, 2007

Filed under: Fiction, Reviews — Jolene @ 2:59 pm

getwellsoonAnna Bloom’s deep depression has landed her in a mental hospital, where she encounters an array of dysfunctional teens. Anna is also self-conscious about her appearance, which intensifies after the hospital strips her of clothing and beauty products, and the “a-hole” psychiatrist suggests she lose weight. In-group sessions Anna encounters a shy boy named Justin who is mysteriously disfigured, and obsessed with The Doors. She later crushes on Justin, but is not sure if he feels the same way. In addition, Anna gets a roommate who carries a secret as well as a plastic baby. However, as the weeks go by Anna finds herself oddly comfortable in the loony bin and is making friends, talking to cute boys, and surprisingly losing weight!

Based looslely on Halpern’s experience as a teen in a mental hospital, Get Well Soon is an honest and often funny look at teen depression. Anna’s character is so endearing that at times I found myself cheering at her little accomplishments. And the love story between Anna and Justin will make you smile remembering your first crush. Get Well Soon could also be compared to Girl Interrupted or Prozac Nation except a lot less dark and lot more fun!

*Also stay tuned for The YAYAYA’s WBBT interview with Julie Halpern!

 

Thursday’s Under the Radar Recommendations August 30, 2007

Filed under: Events — Trisha @ 12:23 am

Big A, little a: A interview with Helen Dunmore
Bildungsroman
: Swollen by Melissa Lion
A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy: Friends for Life and Life Without Friends both by Ellen Emerson White
Chasing Ray
: Juniper, Genetian and Rosemary by Pamela Dean
A Fuse #8 Production
: The Noisy Counting Book by Susan Schade
Finding Wonderland: Lucy the Giant by Sherry L. Smith
Jen Robinson’s Book Page
: The Treasures of Weatherby by Zilpha Keatley Snyder
lectitans: Who Pppplugged Roger Rabbit? by Gary K. Wolf
Miss Erin: A discussion of Erec Rex: The Dragon’s Eye and an interview with author Kaza Kingsley
Semicolon: Christian fiction you may have missed
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast
: Billie Standish Was Here by Nancy Crocker
Shaken & Stirred
: The Changeover and Catalogue of the Universe, both by Margaret Mahy
Writing and Ruminating
:
Hugging the Rock by Susan Taylor Brown

 

Wednesday’s Under the Radar Recommendations August 29, 2007

Filed under: Events — Trisha @ 12:36 am
 

Under the Radar Books: Massive by Julia Bell August 28, 2007

Filed under: Events, Fiction, Reviews — Gayle @ 12:01 am

Can you inherit an eating disorder from a parent? Along with her good looks fourteen year old Carmen has inherited her mother Maria’s insecurities. After her parents split up and a move to Maria’s hometown, Carmen grows up quickly. Carmen wants to return to her old life with her father, but is forced into growing up for the sake of her mother.

Maria is always on a diet although she is rail thin. To Maria appearance is everything. Maria is absorbed in herself and what she wants and goes full speed ahead toward her goals not considering those around her. In the past Maria has be hospitalized for her eating disorder, yet she refuses to acknowledge her problem. Instead of fighting her own demons and accepting responsibility for her decisions in life, she plays the blame game with everyone around her including her daughter, her parents, her sister, and her husband.

Maria’s jabs at Carmen’s weight and eating habits are abusive and readers will no doubt resent her. I felt a mixture of pity and revulsion toward Maria. Although Maria is a repulsive character, I couldn’t help but get drawn into the story to find out whether or not Carmen saves her mother or is sucked into the vacuum of her psychosis. Massive is a realistic read with the trappings of real problems and appended with methods for seeking help for eating disorders. If you desire quality literature with an uncanny verisimilitude definitely read Massive by Julia Bell.

Today’s Radar Book Schedule:

Big A, little a: Ingo by Helen Dunmore

Bildungsroman: Girl in the Box by Ouida Sebestyen

Bookshelves of Doom: The Olivia Kidney series by Ellen Potter

A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy: A discussion of author Ellen Emerson White

Chicken Spaghetti: Natural History of Uncas Metcalf by Betsy Osborne

Finding Wonderland: A Door Near Here by Heather Quarles

A Fuse #8 Production: The Winged Girl of Knossos by Erick Berry

Jen Robinson’s Book Page: The Changeling and The Velvet Room, both by Zilpha Keatley Snyder

Miss Erin: Girl With a Pen and Princess of Orange by Elisabeth Kyle

Writing and Ruminating: Jazz ABC by Wynton Marsalis;

The YA YA YAs: Massive by Julia Bell.

 

Under the Radar: I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade by Diane Lee Wilson August 27, 2007

Filed under: Events, Fiction, Reviews — Trisha @ 12:00 am

cover of Diane Lee Wilson's I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade

That night, and for many days and nights afterward, I humbly cringed beneath the leer of the red-footed doll. I began to believe in my parents’ prayers. The gods had certainly stamped bad luck upon me. Such was to be my place in this world then: always to huddle within the smoky half-light of a ger, only to watch as others galloped upon the backs of swift horses, to startle and quiver at every passing cloud. My childhood seemed defined by what I could not do.

Then one day, just at dusk, I discovered what I could do.

When she was a child, Oyuna’s foot was crushed beneath a horse. Her parents try to keep her indoors where she’ll be safe, but living on the Mongolian steppes, Oyuna wants to be outdoors and on the back of a horse. After sneaking away to ride a horse too many times, her parents finally give in and let Oyuna ride freely.

In the city of Karakorum, where her father intends to find a husband for Oyuna and promises to buy her a horse of her own, Oyuna thinks she hears someone calling for help as she looks upon the horses for sale. All she sees, however, is horses. One horse in particular, a white mare past her prime, draws Oyuna’s attention. The mare has an injured leg and Oyuna could swear that she heard the horse say, “Help me get away from here.” Oyuna wants a horse she can ride to win a famous race but is unable to forget the mare. She asks her father to purchase the mare for her and later names it Bayan.

“Oyuna, my grandchild,” Echenkorlo continued, “many years ago the horse crushed your leg. ‘Bad luck,’ people say. And they pity you. But I say this brought to you good luck. I say that the horse claimed you as its own. That by crushing your leg it freed you from the ground and invited you upon its back to travel the wind. It is no surprise, then, that the white mare spoke to you.”

When the soldiers of Kublai Khan’s army thunder into her ail to collect horses and conscript new soldiers, Oyuna is horrified to see them take her beloved Bayan. Not wanting to be separated from her horse, Oyuna cuts her hair, pretends to be a boy, and takes the place of her stepbrother with the army. Oyuna and the troop spend miserable days riding the steppes, seemingly dogged by bad omens. When her secret is discovered and one of the Khan’s arrow riders arrives with injuries to himself and his horse, the commander of the troop sees this as an opportunity to get rid of Oyuna. He gives Oyuna the two leather bags the arrow rider was transporting and a paiza, a token of safe travel, sending Oyuna on a journey that ultimately takes her to the Khan’s city of Khanbaliq.

I first picked up Diane Lee Wilson’s I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade four years ago because of its evocative title (note to authors: titles do matter). I’m not a horse person, but “milk white jade”? So I picked up the book, and once I saw it was historical fiction set in Mongolia, I had to read it. And I wasn’t disappointed at all. The book’s title is indicative of the lyricism of Wilson’s writing. The narrative is framed by, and with occasional interludes of, a grandmother telling her granddaughter a story, so the book itself has the cadence and rhythm of an oral tale. If you’re anxiously awaiting Shannon Hale’s Book of a Thousand Days, why not try I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade in the meantime?

Today’s Radar Books schedule:
Finding Wonderland: The Curved Saber: The Adventure of Khlit the Cossack by Harold Lamb
Chasing Ray: Dorothy of Oz from Illusive Arts Entertainment (the Dorothy comic you should all be reading!)
Bildungsroman: Christopher Golden’s Body of Evidence series
Interactive Reader: Christopher Golden’s Body of Evidence series as wellradar
Not Your Mother’s Bookclub: An interview with Robert Sharenow, author of My Mother the Cheerleader
lectitans: The Angel of the Opera: Sherlock Meets the Phantom of the Opera by Sam Siciliano
Bookshelves of Doom: The God Beneathe the Sea, Black Jack & Jack Holburn all by Leon Garfield
Writing and Ruminating: An interview with Tony Mitton and a review of his book, Plum
Chicken Spaghetti: The Illustrator’s Notebook by Mohieddin Ellabad
Semicolon: Under the radar picture books

 

Carpe Diem Part Deux Review August 24, 2007

Filed under: Fiction, Reviews — Gayle @ 9:42 am

Okay, okay, I know you guys are thinking what the heck is Gayle doing re-reviewing something that Trisha’s already reviewed, doesn’t she read the blog and know that it’s been said and done?  Well, I just wanted to weigh in with my review of Carpe Diem in addition to Trisha’s wonderful review.

One of the opportunities that I had while growing up was to take trips with my parents during the summer.  Although my parents weren’t as eccentric or artistic like Grandma Gerd, my experiences overseas no doubt were comparable to that of the protagonist Vassar Spore.  *Think here my dad eating the Peruvian delicacy–guinea pig better known to me as one of my childhood pet’s distant cousin– while my brother chanted “Purry Curry, Purry Curry” said pet’s name.*  So I was elated that there was finally a book that seemed targeted to the market of those who like to think globally and experience different cultures.  Carpe Diem nicely fills this unfilled niche. 

Some of you may be wondering how Carpe Diem differs from 13 Little Blue Envelopes by Maureen Johnson and I have one word for you that epitomizes the difference: Durian.  For those of you who are not familiar with Durian it’s THE fear factor fruit of Asia.  I capitalize it although technically it’s not a proper noun because I fear it so much.  Autumn Cornwell captures traveling to Southeast Asia so well that I could feel the humidity creeping up on my skin as I read about Vassar’s foibles.

So here’s the top five reasons I’m going to give you to read Carpe Diem by Autumn Cornwell:

1. 2 out of 2 Young Adult Librarians who’ve read it highly recommend it;

2. Reading Carpe Diem is like taking a mini-vacation to Southeast Asia sans the humidity;

3. You’ll fall in love with Hanks the Chinese cowboy even before Vassar realizes his chops are glued on;

4. Opium Den: what do I mean?  Read the book to find out!

5. Autumn Cornwell’s debut novel will no doubt leave you wanting more so carpe diem and LIM (live in the moment)!

And Trisha forced Gayle to include this in her review wants to add: Yes, go and read this book! I’ve been meaning to rewrite my review of Carpe Diem because I know I didn’t do it justice. So, thanks Gayle! Anyway, did I mention it was funny? And that it has one of the most unusual (in a non-paranormal way) romantic interests I can recall reading? And that most of the book takes place in Southeast Asia? If that’s not enough, between the family dynamics, humor, romance, personal growth, and friendship, there’s something for everyone here, and for the most part, each aspect develops and resolves satisfactorily. Even though I didn’t like Vassar, I can see why people may sympathize with her more than I did. Yet as unlikeable as I found her, Vassar is still a great character and I like the book so much precisely because I found her unlikeable. The book might still have worked had she been more likeable, but I wouldn’t have finished it with the same sense of satisfaction, and I doubt I’d find it as memorable.

 

Radar Books August 23, 2007

Filed under: Events — Trisha @ 7:59 pm
radarradarNext week the same group that brought the Summer Blog Blast Tour and recent One Shot World Tour of Australia to life will be posting about books we all individually feel have been overlooked. Some of them might have been award winners in the distant past, and some are even out of print, but all of them are books that each of us have enjoyed and want to tell more people about. We’re calling the event “Recommendations From Under the Radar” (or Radar Books for short) and we really hope you guys will check us out and, more importantly, track down some of these great books as well. — Colleen Mondor

On Monday, I’ll be talking about Diane Lee Wilson’s I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade. Tuesday’s schedule includes Gayle on Julia Bell’s Massive, and our last Radar Books post will be my review of Resurrection Men by T.K. Welsh. Colleen’s got the full schedule of what should be a great week.

 

Hmm.. August 21, 2007

Filed under: Book News — Trisha @ 4:00 pm

From Publishers Lunch:

Children’s
Francesca Lia Block’s prequel to her WEETZIE BAT series, to Joanna Cotler at Joanna Cotler Books, by Lydia Wills at Paradigm (world).

Children’s: Middle grade
Francesca Lia Block’s modern-day vampire story, to Joanna Cotler at Joanna Cotler Books, by Lydia Wills at Paradigm (World).

I’ll read the vampire book, whenever it comes out. Not sure about a Weetzie Bat prequel, though. I love that book too much.