The Reading Rutabaga
A blog about books (usually)
Friday, March 20, 2026
Thursday, March 19, 2026
"The Curse Breaker" by Jen Calonita
<This is
the second novel in a series.>
<Alert:
Potential spoilers ahead.>
The game isn’t over. Instead, there is a new game. Everly
“Benny” Benedict found the island, but the inheritance isn’t yet hers. Benny
has found Evelyn’s friends, trapped for two centuries on the island. Being
stranded in perpetually glorious weather may sound divine, but learning
you’ve been on the island for 200 years versus 200 days and that everyone you
once knew is dead takes time to accept. There are more clues to seek out and
new journal entries to read. All pieces of the pirate treasure need to be returned
to break the curse, but who has the missing piece or pieces? Someone Benny
thought was her friend has betrayed her, but she’s gained Gilbert “Gil” Monroe.
(Aggy Bishop, Laurel Henderson and Thomas Lyons remain on the island, and no
one knows where Axel Rudd is since he scampered off it.) Jonas Kimble is as
cranky and fusty as ever, but he’s nearby. He’s limited to how far from
Greenport, New York (part of Long Island Sound), he can venture, and he’s
looking for Grace. She goes by many names that all begin with “C” for some
reason. The Isle of Ever should be around for a fortnight, but the clock is
ticking. If time runs out, the greedy Rudd family will inherit, and the island
will disappear for another 200 years.
Calonita’s
middle-grade fantasy adventure features family, friendship, magic, mayhem,
pirates and lost treasure. The characters of 2025 and 1825 are intriguing and
curious. Captain Jonas Kimble reminds me of Captain Jack Sparrow, but for the
middle-grade set and without the smell of rum. Ha! No sequel syndrome with
this Isle of Ever series book, as it is a riptide of conflict,
calamity, mystery and spirit. Even when characters are slogging through the
rain, this novel is an escapade and a local research expedition. There are
twists to capsize the reader and a confrontational cliffhanger that’ll have the
audience impatiently awaiting the next installment.
Book
One: The Isle of Ever
Sunday, March 15, 2026
The Positive Page-turner's Challenge: Take 22
This is my first book photo challenge since June of last
year. As I mentioned in that Challenge, I haven’t been purchasing as many
books, and that remains true. But even if I only buy books to fill one Page-turner’s
Challenge, I will keep posting one of these challenges per year. My aim;
however, is two per year.
There
are 17 books in this photo. I will again donate $5/book. A check for $85 will
be written out to a fund at my local church. Currently, I’m unsure if I’ll
donate it to the Sunday School, Altar Guild or the Haiti Fund.
The need
around the globe and in our own communities is greater than ever. Please donate
whatever you can, whether it’s time, money, pantry items, clothing or baked
goods for a bake sale. It’s all worthwhile, and it all counts. YOU count, and together,
we can all make a positive difference.
Monday, February 23, 2026
"Sunrise on the Reaping" by Suzanne Collins
<This is
the fifth Hunger Games novel.>
<Chronologically,
it occurs 40 years after TBoSaS and 24 years before the THG trilogy.>
The odds will be ever in someone’s favor. But whose?
Panem is readying for the Fiftieth Annual Hunger Games. In honor of the Quarter
Quell, twice as many tributes will be taken from their homes.
Two girls and two boys. In District 12, Haymitch Abernathy tries not to think
too hard about his odds, especially since he has extra tesserae in order to
receive extra food rations for his family (mom: Willamae; 10-year-old brother:
Sid). His birthday is never one to truly celebrate, landing on reaping day as
it does, but he does want to be with Lenore Dove Baird, the girl he loves.
Unfortunately, Haymitch’s name is called without being drawn. He’s torn from
his family, Lenore, everyone he knows in District 12, and as the Games begin,
he knows he’s been set up to fail. His fellow tributes are Louella McCoy (a
12-year-old who’s like a younger sister to him), Maysilee Donner (the snobbiest
girl in town) and Wyatt Callow (an oddsmaker and the son of a Booker Boy). Does
he want to die? No. Does he expect to die a painful, gruesome death? Yes. So,
if he’s going to die no matter what, he wants to die fighting a fight that will
reverberate beyond the arena all the way to District 12. If he can, he will drown
the arena if the arena and the Career tributes don’t end him first.
It took
me almost a year since its publication to read, but once I dove in, the
propulsive storyline propelled me quickly through this YA science fiction
dystopia. Because I already “knew” Haymitch from The Hunger Games trilogy,
I rooted for his character and so was easily swept up in his story, brutal and
broken and gut-wrenching as it is. It’s a formidable edition to the canon, and
it’s explosive in its portrayal of an authoritarian government with
totalitarian control. There is jet propulsion to this book that is upsetting,
agonizing, raw and candid, but it makes it all the more provoking, emotional
and exceptional. There is rage. There is compassion. And there is inspiration.
Perhaps one day, there will be hope and no sunrise on the reaping.
Also
reviewed by me: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
"Arsenic and Adobo" by Mia P. Manansala
<This is
the first novel in a series.>
Big city life in Chicago was the dream and still is, but
Lila Macapagal is back home with Tita (Aunt) Rosie and Lola (Grandmother)
Flor. The Calendar Crew of aunties not by blood (Mga Ninang April,
Mae and June) give her a hard time for leaving for three years, showering her
with love and judgment, as Lila is back working at Tita Rosie’s Kitchen. When
the particularly unpleasant, self-proclaimed food critic in Shady Palms,
Illinois (population around 20,000), drops dead soon after a wisecrack from
Lila about, “Would it kill you ...,” her life tilts. Not only is the deceased
her ex-boyfriend, but Detective Jonathan Park treats her like the only suspect
and is convinced of her guilt based on evidence [definitely] planted in her
work locker. Lila has no choice but to conduct her own investigation. She’s got
a list of restaurants who’ve been targeted by Derek Winter (the dead guy), the
nosy auntie network, her barista bestie Adeena Awan and her trusty, overweight
Dachshund Longganisa. There’s also the family lawyer, Amir Awan, Adeena’s
golden-child big brother and the guy Lila’s had a crush on for forever. And Dr.
Jae Park, town dentist, has entered the picture. Both are attractive. Both are
successful. Both are single. But first, Lila must figure out who killed Derek,
framed her and brought further distress upon her family’s already struggling
restaurant.
The
debut adult fiction novel in Manansala’s Tita Rosie’s Kitchen Mysteries series
brings Filipino American food culture to the forefront of a cozy, culinary
mystery series with a sizzling plot and mouthwatering dishes. It is ripe with
sticky situations and satisfying snark, humor, hard work and heart. Lila is
plucky and sarcastic and is definitely new to amateur sleuthing, flawed bits
and all, but I rooted for this tight-knit (if sometimes overbearing) family and
community of color. There is one moment where I really struggled with Lila, as
she’s the one who’s bringing the “high school drama.” Not Adeena. Yeah, I
realize she’s going through a lot, and while I have compassion for her, I have
zero patience for bratty behavior. There is emphasis on culture and
language (Tagalog) with the story tackling heavier matters like drug-dealing,
racial discrimination and fatphobia. (There is a trigger warning.) I flew
through this story like a contestant in a timed showdown (minus all the stress
and the actual cooking or baking). There is food. There is murder. It is cozy
and culinary with the right amount of drama. It’s a little sweet, a lot salty,
but all the mentions of food balance it out and keep me hungry. Now, how about
a plate of ube crinkles?
P.S.
This library checkout was my Blind Date with a Book this
month.
P.P.S.
There are recipes at the back of the book, including a recipe for those ube
crinkle cookies!
Friday, February 13, 2026
Rutabaga's Reads 2026: Part 2
I have the library to thank for the books rounding out
this chapter book compilation. We’ve got an axolotl, fashionable young friends
and a fractured fairy tale, all for the 6-9 age range. If you have children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews
in this age group, what do they like to read? What are you reading together?
Letizia Rizzo, illustrator.
<This book is
part of an unnumbered series.>
In Ms. Garcia’s sixth grade class in Brownsville, Texas,
there is Amigo the Axolotl. He is from Mexico, and when he hears Alejandro
telling Ms. Garcia that he’s going to the Charro Days Fiesta, he plots quickly
to tag along with the Student Helper. The festival should be great. Maybe Amigo
will meet a lady lizard! Or he’ll get to eat shrimp burritos! Instead, things
don’t go as planned, and he ends up separated from Alejandro and in the sights
of a dog. What’s an axolotl to do?
This
book geared for ages 7-8 is part of the Homeroom is a Zoo series. It is
constantly-moving and fun to read the axolotl’s chaotic misadventure. It is a
story for emergent readers ready for chapter books who may still need help with
some of the vocabulary. I would read more of these.
JoJo and the Fashion Show (Aug. 1, 2025) by
Annette M. Clayton.
Carolina
Vázquez, illustrator.
<This is part
of an unnumbered series.>
JoJo Jupiter has a new hearing aid. At first worried
about the bold purple color standing out, she chooses to own it and blings it
up with a Dazzle Kit, also making herself other accessories to complement her
ear-ware. JoJo sets a classroom trend and soon her best friends Rae and Mia are
sporting Dazzle Kit jewelry along with many of their other classmates. Her
third best friend, Cassie, is not sporting Dazzle Kit accessories. With a
recess fashion show coming up, JoJo isn’t seeing that Cassie’s having a hard
time. How can JoJo make sure the fashion show goes on while being the friend
Cassie needs her to be?
An
unnumbered book in the JoJo series that is youthfully stylish gets
readers thinking about what they might do if one of their friends was
struggling. It is a thoughtful story that involves teamwork and troubleshooting
in order to help a best friend feel included and seen. Advanced readers will
fly through this book in no time, making it a good one for those budding
readers ready for more challenging chapter books.
This Journal Belongs to Rapunzel: A Rapunzel Fractured
Fairy Tale (Aug. 1, 2025) by Stephanie True Peters.
Danesh
Mohiuddin, illustrator.
<This is part
of an unnumbered series.>
There is a girl who lives in a lighthouse in the middle
of an island teeming with the most delicious clams. The girl’s name is
Rapunzel. She’s never been allowed to eat a clam. She only ever remembers
living in the lighthouse and being its keeper, tasked even with switching out a
broken lightbulb in a massive storm. The only one who ever comes to visit her
is a large talking crab called Gurgle. She is unpleasant, Rapunzel has to
regularly remove barnacles from her when she visits, and she’s, well, crabby,
but Gurgle is also the only way Rapunzel gets any food. Her favorite treats are
marshmallows. When she hears, “Rapunzel! Rapunzel! Let down your hair!” and up
climbs a boy named Henry, she is in shock. Henry may be her ticket off the
little island, but first she’ll have to face off with Gurgle and her super
sharp claws.
Geared
for youth ages 6-8, this chapter book written in journal form is a fractured
fairy tale just right for this age group. It’s fast-paced and
attention-keeping. There are harrowing moments that aren’t scary and a
revelation expected to anyone familiar with the story of Rapunzel that is a
good moment to read all the same. It’s a worthy tale for confident chapter book
readers.
Friday, January 30, 2026
Rutabaga's Reads 2026: Part 1
Welcome to the first picture books compilation of the new
year! This compilation features a broken cup, a humble pie, a kitty camp, a
strong father/daughter bond and a baby with a library card (maybe).
Here is a story of Ama’s cup. That Mei Mei accidentally
breaks when she tries to surprise Mimi, Ama’s cat. Mei Mei feels terrible and
so she runs away, because she’s scared that Ama will be so mad that she’ll yell
at her or kick her out of her house. Innocent Mimi is blamed by Ama, and Mei
Mei feels certain that Mimi is staring at her with accusation, because the cat
knows the truth. Finally, the guilt overwhelms young Mei Mei and the story
pours out. What will Ama’s reaction be? Will she yell? Kick her out? Take away
her piece of cake?
Author
and illustrator Fang presents readers with a well-paced story that is easy to
follow. Children and adults who remember being children will relate to the
weight of guilt that unexpected accidents can cause. The illustrations are
vivid but also moody. Mei Mei’s weighing guilt shows through with darker tones.
There is compassionate drama in this picture book of fault and forgiveness.
There’s also a lot of love and a little glue to mend what’s been broken and
give the cup its own story to tell.
Also by
the author: We Are Definitely Human
The Humble Pie (Nov. 4, 2025) by Jory John.
Pete Oswald, illustrator.
<This is the eighth
book in the Food Group series.>
For the Humble Pie, humble looks like meek, the one
always hiding in the shadows. When he pairs with his best friend, a cake named
Jake, on a major science project for Mr. Berryman’s class, they’re thrilled to
be a dream team together. Unfortunately, Jake’s a busy cake, participating in
most extracurriculars in existence, it seems like, and eventually, Humble Pie
is doing all of the work alone. There’s much yet to do, and he isn’t going to
complete it in time alone. They’ll be mincemeat if that happens. All
this time, Humble Pie has thought that being humble meant being unseen and
sometimes getting walked all over like a rug. He’s going to need to push up his
hypothetical sleeves and have that tough conversation with his best friend.
Will he learn that always being the side dish takes the cake? Or will this
Humble Pie learn to fly?
The
eighth in the Food Group series is a sweet little delight of a picture
book. Oswald’s illustrations complement John’s writing superbly. I love all of
the color and the bright-eyed classmates in treat form. This is a kid-friendly
story about learning the importance of advocating for yourself. Advocating for
yourself can include asking for help instead of tackling it all on your own
when you’re struggling, and it can mean sticking up for yourself so you’re
treated fairly. This book also serves up how great it is when best friends are
there for each other, especially in a time of need. It’s a charming story to
sweeten up anyone’s day.
Also
from the author: The Smart Cookie
Kitty Camp (Apr. 29, 2025) by Drew Brockington.
It’s camp day. Hooray! One girl is so excited to attend
her first summer (day) camp. She’s going to arts & crafts and can’t wait to
hike, swim and sing. She’s in for a big surprise when she accidentally gets on
the wrong bus and ends up at … Kitty Camp! Arts and Crafts is disorganized,
hiking is nap time, her tuna sandwich lunch is nabbed, and no cat wants to go
swimming with her. She’s about decided that Kitty Camp isn’t so fun until she
comes across the best idea. Superfort, anyone?
As a cat
person, yes, please, sign me up for Kitty Camp! Author-illustrator Brockington
creates an entertaining tale accompanied by colorful, lively illustrations. There
is enchantment in the story’s hilarity and delight through the hijinks. My
first story from Brockington tells me I’ve been missing out. This one is full
of feline friskiness and friendly fun.
My Daddy Tells Me (2022) by Thuba Nguyen.
Serena Lombardo,
illustrator.
Young Mai is a precocious girl, curious about life and
well-loved. She’s a biracial Vietnamese African American being raised by her
father. He showers her with positive affirmations and encourages her bright
personality and myriad interests. And Mai is the light as they
emigrate from Vietnam for a new life in the United States. Mai’s life isn’t
going to be without toxicity surrounding color, culture, tradition, gender and
more, but with her dad’s enduring love and support helping to shape a healthy
and self-assured self-image, Mai will grow up with a strong sense of identity
and self-worth.
Nguyen’s
picture book is a celebration of fathers and daughters and the importance of
having that strong bond. The power of love and the impact of parental support
is life-changing. Sure, Mai and her father are connected by blood, but that
connection is cemented by trust and knowing one is loved. This story is sweet,
tender and heartwarming, but it’s also infused with strength, perseverance and
integrity.
Never Give a Baby a Library Card (Oct. 21, 2025)
by Erin Sandberg.
Tom Booth, illustrator.
Give a baby a library card? What a thought! Because
“…what if a baby learned how to make clothes?/We’d all look ridiculous!/Who’d
want to wear those?” A mother and grandmother have come to the library to get a
baby its first library card, but Shouty Man wants none of that. He’s galled at
the idea of babies running barbershops after learning to cut hair “just a
moment ago” and adults walking about in the latest $400 diaper fashions. Or of
babies finding inspiration that trigger their imagination. The chaos! The
horror! But a practical child contradicts him and asks if he hasn’t also
learned from the books he’s read?
This
rhyming picture book is a lively romp that’s perfect for reading aloud. It
promotes libraries, the power of books and the significance of learning at
every age. The story from this married duo is colorful, the rhyming tempo is
spot-on and little details in the illustrations like PRADADA and GUGUCCI
are hilariously adorable. For someone like me, who loves books and libraries
(and currently works in one), this book is a celebration and a joy. It empowers
readers and library users and reminds us all that access to knowledge should
not be limited. Keep on reading, and get your library card if you don’t already
have an active one!
Monday, January 19, 2026
"The Poisoned King" by Katherine Rundell
<This is
the middle novel in a trilogy.>
The call to return to the Archipelago comes when
Christopher Forrester wakes to find Jacques the jaculus dragon chewing on his
face. Finally! A summons! He’s joyful to return, but the news is grim. Someone
has a poison strong enough to kill the dragons. Such poison does not exist in
the Archipelago, so it must’ve come from the Outerlands. The great red-winged
dragon Sarkany states that she’ll only trust Christopher because he’s
from the Outerlands and not of the Archipelago. After correctly answering
Naravirala the sphinx’s question (and thus preventing being eaten), he travels
on her winged back. Before making course for Sarkany in Edem (a dragon island),
they detour to save Princess Anya Phoebe Cornelia Argen of the Island of
Dousha, Duchess of the Silver Mountains, Countess of the Winged Forests. The
Argens are the last royal family in the Archipelago. Anya’s dad is being held
prisoner, set up for a murder he didn’t commit, and Anya is about to be
murdered. She’s a 12-year-old with nothing but the clothes on her back, a flock
of royal gaganas at her side, a newly-hatched gagana chick called Koo in her
pocket and a thirst for revenge so strong that her throat burns with injustice.
One wants to save the dragons, the other wants to rescue her father, but both
need the other’s help, as the avarice-filled killer connects them.
Rundell’s
sequel suffers no second-book syndrome in this mythological, magical thrill
ride in a world of creatures both gentle and dangerous, intelligent, cunning
and helpful (depending on the species). The fantastical fantasy adventure
includes corruption in a royal family, dragons of all sizes, retribution and
friends new and old. There’s triumph and new life, grief and peril, advice and
wisdom. It’s emotional, cheeky, high-spirited and fast-moving. With brilliant
illustrations, magnificent world-building, heart-tugging scenes and continuous
adventure, this story is a resplendent return to a wondrous world. As with the
previous story, there is a Guardian’s Bestiary of magical
creatures at the back.
Book
One: Impossible Creatures
Thursday, January 1, 2026
Happy 2026!
Happy New Year!
Look at us. We made it through 2025. I hope your year was
filled with shining moments and not 365 Mondays. I hope your 2026 is full of
goodness and gladness, wellness and well-being. Don’t stop chasing dreams and
don’t be afraid to try something new. In fact, go DO something new, something
that gets you out of your comfort zone. Drive someplace you’ve never been.
Tackle that challenging recipe. Jump out of an airplane. Eat squid. Whatever
that something is for you, go do it, and please let me know about it!
Have a
year of successes and core memories. Make lemonade out of lemons. Break those
eggs so you can make that omelet. Be a creative potato. Have a year of
sunshine days and wind-at-your-back moments. Fulfill all of your resolutions.
Cheers to us and the light that we’ll all bring to 2026!
Love and
sparkles,
Lisa
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