Friday, December 3, 2021

Rutabaga's Reads 2021: Part 11

With this post, it’s a Happy Hodgepodge Day! What have you been reading this year?
Chain of Iron (Mar. 2, 2021) by Cassandra Clare.
Fantasy/supernatural young-adult fiction.
*This is the middle novel in a trilogy.*
It should be a life that glitters. Cordelia Carstairs is engaged to James Herondale, whom she’s secretly loved since childhood, and he’s a handsome Shadowhunter to boot. She’s living her life in London alongside her best friend, Lucie Herondale, her father will soon reunite with the family, and she enjoys the company of the Merry Thieves. In addition to James, the charming group includes Matthew Fairchild, Thomas Lightwood and Christopher Lightwood. But the  truth is not dazzling. Cordelia’s marriage is a sham, as James is in love with the beautiful but mysterious Grace Blackthorn and whose brother, Jesse, died years ago when his rune ceremony did not take. Cordelia’s brother (Alastair) abhors their father, and their father has become a bitter, angry man. Cordelia’s sword, forged by the famed weapons maker Wayland the Smith and christened Cortana, is reacting against her (it burns) and a serial murderer is targeting London’s Shadowhunters. Cordelia, James, Lucie, the Merry Thieves and others of the London Institute follow the trail of the killer and try to keep watch over the streets once darkness has fallen each night. They all do their part even as they each have their own secrets to harbor: Cordelia’s dangerous oath to an entity that is not who she thought, Lucie’s plan to raise Jesse from the dead (necromancy is a no-no) and James’ fear that he’s the one doing the killing at night. There are chains of iron, and they are heavy.
            The second in The Last Hours trilogy is full of magic and mayhem and is contained in a tome-like novel. Obviously my own opinion, but the novel doesn’t need to be as long as it is. There do not need to be so many dramatics – to be fair, I’ve never been into soap operas, even in book form – and tangents from the main plot. That said, regular fans of Clare’s Shadowhunters’ novels will have long read this one and added it to their collections. Yes, there’s drama over love, but there’s suffering and plenty of bloodshed, which means there’s lots of action, adventure and the sorts of struggles that come with unrequited love. So, for a fantasy/supernatural YA novel featuring romance, pretty standard stuff. Now, go grab your seraph blades and other impressive weaponry and get rid of the demons. It’ll make for a stinking mess of ichor, but sometimes life is messy.
            Book One: Chain of Gold
Granny Bricks a Bandit (Feb. 18, 2019) by Julie Seedorf.
Humor/adult fiction/easy reading.
*This is the sixth book in a series.*
If there is a dead body to be found in Fuchsia, Minnesota, one can be certain that Hermiony Vidalia Criony Fiddlestadt Crickett, better known as Granny, will find it. And find one she does … while waterskiing, of course! Sleuthing radar on high alert, Granny is ready to identify the “soggy sap” and catch the killer. Granny teams up with her usual cronies, including her best friend, Mavis, and twin sister, Amelia. Her husband, Silas, wants her to keep her nose out of the investigation, but Granny listens to no one but herself. A side excursion takes Granny and company to the Mall of America (via the shoulder of the road), where they hear of another dead body, and the victim is (was) a Fuchsia resident! Along with a rising body count, Mavis’ fiancé, George, goes missing, but Mavis is sure she sees him at the Mall of America, sneaking through the backdoor of Granny’s house and exiting the Go Belly Up Casino, while, another time, Granny thinks she sees him sneaking into the mausoleum. Is George evading the law and everyone else because he’s played a part in the murders? What does he know?
            A local author, Julie Seedorf creates another tale featuring “sleek, unique, quirky and perky” Granny. A simple mystery, it is nonetheless filled with humor and cheekiness. For anyone wanting a story with grand world-building, weighty issues and a complex plot, you’ll want to seek another book. Mavis, perhaps predispositioned to be dramatic with her love of making her own reality TV shows, is often overly dramatic, and Granny’s won’t-listen-to-anyone-else bulldozer antics got on my nerves after a time. If it’s possible, future installments should be proofread before publishing. Still, for fans of Seedorf’s Fuchsia, Minnesota series, I’d expect this one to be met with many grins and perhaps laughter, too.
            Favorite quote: “He will corrupt this town with sameness.” -- Granny, despairing over what will happen if her brother, Abraham, becomes mayor of Fuchsia
The Nature of a Lady (May 4, 2021) by Roseanna M. White.
Inspirational/historical fiction.
*This is the first novel in a series.*
In this tale of two Elizabeths (for real, there are two), Lady Elizabeth “Libby” Sinclair has fled to the Isles of Scilly (primarily the islands of St. Mary’s and Tresco). She’s defying her brother and summering there with her lady’s maid, Mabena Moon, who hails from the Scillies. Libby is unlike other ladies of her station. Instead of whiling away her days at parties, she’d rather spend her days in nature, sketching flora and fauna and studying slides under her microscope. She is considered eccentric within society. She’s also been mistaken for Elizabeth “Beth” Tremayne, whose whereabouts are unknown and secrets are possibly endangering to her/others. Beth’s brother, Oliver Tremayne, a gentleman and a clergyman who loves botany, is determined to find his younger sister and learn what she’s been up to. He’s unprepared to find that the Elizabeth letting the cottage on St. Mary’s isn’t his sister, but a Lady Elizabeth he met years previously, one who shares his love of botany, and whom he didn’t at first realize was the young lady of the house, sitting in the dirt as she was. The hunt for Beth will involve more than nature walks for Oliver, Libby, Mabena and Casek Wearne (he’s smitten with Mabena and lets her know it), as Oliver also worries about Mamm-wynn (Grandma), whose memory isn’t what it once was, though she is so attuned to her “spiritual lens.” Libby and Oliver will uncover a legend surrounding a pirate wreck, but the most interesting thing they will uncover is the mysterious phenomenon known as love.
            The first in The Secrets of the Isles series takes place in 1906. If you make the mistake of judging the book by its pretty, serene cover, you’ll miss out on the adventure of the story. Tas-gwyn (Grandpa) Gibson may be good at telling tales, but his story about the vice admiral of a pirate fleet perhaps isn’t as make-believe as others presume. While there is appreciation of nature, love and faith, there, too, is secrecy, threatening intimidation and actual danger. The beauty of the story reads like soothing breezes on a warm day, while the intensity within the story is rollicking like a boat in active, possibly angry, waters. It is not a frivolous story, but one with depth complementing lightness … and a bit of mayhem thrown in.
            Fun fact: Per the author’s Instagram account, she shared that her model for the character of Oliver was Ben Barnes. Like the author, I’ve been a fan of Ben Barnes since watching him portray Prince/King Caspian in the “Narnia” movies.
The Night Before Groundhog Day (Dec. 24, 2019) by Natasha Wing.
   Amy Wummer, illustrator.
Children’s picture book.
*The author has numerous books in her Night Before series.*
Anticipation builds as Groundhog Day nears. The class makes its predictions, and the day comes as a celebration. There’s music and a news reporter; revelry is in the air. One child wants spring to come early and another loves snow. Will the groundhog see his shadow? Will there be six more weeks of winter?
            Told in the vein of “’Twas the Night Before Christmas,” Wing’s book is expectedly adorable in its rhyming scheme while maintaining youthful simplicity. It’s a story meant to be enjoyed and not toiled over for deep, meaningful or hidden lessons.
Race to the Sun (Jan. 14, 2020) by Rebecca Roanhorse.
Middle-grade mythology/fantasy.                         
*This is a standalone novel.*
Yá’át’ééh (Navajo hello)! Welcome to Dinétah. Is it totally normal to be a seventh grader that can now detect monsters? No? Well, Nizhoni (pronounced Nih-JHOH-NIH) Begay can, and she’s got her sights set on a pale man with thin blond hair wearing a black suit and tie (monsters wear human skin fairly often). Nizhoni is trying to focus on her basketball game at Intertribal Community Charter School (ICCS and pronounced icks), but red monster eyes are distracting. It turns out that the monster goes by Mr. Charles, and he’s the new boss for their dad. Their also includes her brother Marcus (Mac) (they’re only 10 months apart). When their dad gets a secret message onto an apple telling the kids to RUN!, they take the train. Nizhoni’s best friend, Davery Dallas Descheny, goes with them, as does her once-a-stuffed-animal horned toad named Mr. Yazzie (short for Theodous Alvin Yazzie). He talks. He explains that the siblings are the latest incarnations of the Hero Twins (they get that from their mom’s side of the family). This means they are the descendants of Changing Woman and have her sons’ powers: Nizhoni is Monsterslayer and Mac is Born for Water. They must visit the Four Sacred Mountains, gathering an item from each place, and find Spider Woman (no relation to Peter Parker). And then they must reach the House of the Sun (Jóhonaa’éí = the sun) by way of enduring the trials of the Rainbow Road in order to procure weapons to defeat ancient monsters. Will Nizhoni become the monsterslayer she’s supposedly destined to be? Or will she wind up in the Lost and Found?
            I read that the author turned to her husband’s Navajo (or Diné) heritage for this story, and it is undoubtedly a thrilling adventure. The antagonists fell a bit flat for me, but it’s easily overlooked with the novel’s steadfast blend of humor, fast-paced writing, and, of course, the presence of a strong female protagonist. The theme of family and culture are vital to the story. It’s as educational as it is entertaining. Should I someday visit the southwest, as is on my bucket list, you better know I’m going to seek out Navajo Nation. How intriguing it’ll be to speak with a Navajo culture keeper to hear traditional stories! All ages should be reading this story; it should be in all of the libraries, especially school libraries. A tale of heart and magic like this should not be ignored. Native stories of all kinds NEED to be known and shared.
            One of the many things I learned while reading this story is that the Navajo people like to know who you are, even if you’re not Navajo. So, in introducing herself to Rock Crystal Boy (RC), Nizhoni says, “Yá’át’ééh. My name is Nizhoni Begay. My mother’s clan is Towering House. My father’s clan is Bitter Water. My maternal grandfather’s clan is the Mud People clan, and my paternal grandfather’s clan is the Crystal Rock people.”
            P.S. I want a plate of Spaghettini Macaravioli. (That is spaghetti, macaroni and ravioli covered in red sauce.)

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Rutabaga's Reads 2021: Part 10

As anticipated, here is my second middle-grade compilation post for 2021.
Aru Shah and the City of Gold (Apr. 6, 2021) by Roshani Chokshi.
*This is the fourth novel in a pentalogy.*
It’s no secret that Aru made a wish to Kalpavriksha, the wish-granting tree, right near the third story’s end. Oddly enough, she cannot remember what she wished for, but she’s fairly certain that she didn’t wish for a sister named Kara. Kara claims to be the Sleeper’s daughter, too, and she was found in his lair, so … *shrugs shoulders*. She doesn’t want to trust her at first, but Kara is eager to be helpful, to be part of the Potatoes. Plus, she has a cool trident, and it looks like something wielded by a god, yet it’s Kara that wields it. The Pandavas (a.k.a. the Potatoes) know that they’re speeding closer to war with the Sleeper and his army. Kubera, ruler of Lanka, the city of gold, promises to give them powerful weapons to help prevent Sleeper and Company from taking over the Otherworld. Granted, Kubera also calls them “blips of mortality,” and he’s a god, so he clearly doesn’t care if they pass his trials. Best of luck and all that!
            Chokshi’s Pandava series is one of magic and adventure (and misadventure), but reading it is pure magic. The way the author immerses readers in the slice of Hindu mythology she writes about (because it is vast and stories vary from state to state within India) is complex and rich with witty banter, strong South Asian female leads (though Aiden and Rudy are good company, complementing the rest of the Potatoes nicely and amusingly) and a plot that only rushes forward. However, there are also layers of mistrust, jealousy and even betrayal to break through, lest the group crumble due to the lack of camaraderie and support of one another. Reading the “Aru Shah” books brings me great joy, and they’re so mesmerizingly written that I hope you’ll read them, too, if you haven’t already, yet enjoy mythology.
            P.S. I want to befriend a golden-furred mongoose (Kubera has so many). Because they’re mongooses. Very agile. It’s an added bonus that Kubera’s mongooses hiccup/cough up precious gemstones.
            Book One: Aru Shah and the End of Time
            Book Two: Aru Shah and the Song of Death
            Book Three: Aru Shah and the Tree of Wishes
Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow (Oct. 31, 2017) by Jessica Townsend.
*This is the first novel in a series; it’s also a debut novel.*
Fair weather turned foul? The kitchen cat died? There was fire damage because the school lunch lady left the stove burner on overnight, and it was clearly her own fault? Whatever the misfortune, go ahead and blame Morrigan Crow. She was born on Eventide, the unluckiest day for any child to be born; she’s on the Cursed Children’s Register and everything. Why cursed? Well, on top of bringing supposed misfortune to her locale, she will die on the next Eventide. Normally a 12-year Age, this one comes a year early. Morrigan already felt cheated expecting to die right as she turned 12. But 11? Remarkably, Morrigan receives multiple bids on Bid Day. It’d be unheard of for a “cursed child” to receive one. But Captain Jupiter North “of the Wondrous Society, the League of Explorers, and the Federation of Nevermoorian Hoteliers” does arrive at Crow Manor. And he whisks her off in the nick of time, barely avoiding the Hunt of Smoke and Shadow, taking her to the Hotel Deucalion. Nevermoor itself is a wonder, a Free State housing the illustrious Wundrous Society, a secret world of magic and wonderment. It’s wholly unlike where she fled from: the town of Jackalfax in the state of Great Wolfacre in the Wintersea Republic. In Nevermoor, Morrigan has the opportunity to become a member of the Wundrous Society (or Wunsoc), but there are rigorous trials that she must endure to vie for one of nine spots … and there are 500+ candidates competing. But no pressure! Not passing a trial only means that Morrigan will get kicked out of Nevermoor and have to face the Hunt again. Certain death! But again, no pressure! Because what Nevermoor can give Morrigan are things she’s never really had: a family (Jupiter, Dame Chanda, Fenestra) and friends (Hawthorne Swift, kinda-sorta-maybe John Arjuna Korrapati a.k.a. Jack).
            I bought this on a whim and am so very pleased that I did. It’s no Harry Potter (but nothing ever will be except Harry Potter, so), but it is wildly imaginative, cheekily charming and happily spellbinding. It is a splendid adventure and a fast-paced one, at that. Townsend has crafted this world with care and opulent detail. I imagine the scenes that readers construct in their minds to be as impressive as the world-building within the pages. The cast is diverse, and the magic isn’t so wand-wielding magical as it is clever. But that isn’t all that makes this story, for the core relates to Morrigan herself. It isn’t discovering what Gossamer is (“an invisible, intangible network”). It’s far deeper and highlights the complexity of someone realizing her own worth. Morrigan has moxie, but it’s hope and bravery and self-love that’s been sorely missing. And which she needs in her life. We all do.
            P.S. I wish Fenestra (Fen) were in my life. She’s a Magnificat (not to be confused with the Christian canticle, which is spelled the same). Fen is actually a giant, talking cat.
            P.P.S. Remember to befriend Frank. He’s a vampire dwarf (not a dwarf vampire – do be sensitive). He will not bite you. At least, I don’t think so.
Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky (Oct. 15, 2019) by Kwame Mbalia.
*This is the first novel in a trilogy.*
What happens when 7th-grader Tristan Strong goes on an adventure in which he encounters West African gods (like Nyame, the sky god, and Anansi, the Weaver and trickster, whose normal form is that of a spider) and African-American folk legends (like Brer Fox, John Henry and High John)? Lots of bickering. Yep, working together isn’t their thing, but Tristan wants to return to Alabama. Thanks to a fight with Gum Baby (a sassy, living doll who’s sticky with sap), Tristan knocks a bottle off the Bottle Tree, and it shatters, releasing a haint (evil spirit) who calls himself Uncle C. He winds up in Alke, a place that is “the dream to your world’s reality. The tales, the fables, the things you think are made up, they exist here” (p. 76). The Maafa and its minions (fetterlings a.k.a. iron monsters and poisonous brand flies) are hunting them. Many Midfolk have fled to MidPass (it’s here that Tristan first encounters John Henry), an island in the Burning Sea, but it is attacked when Tristan, Ayanna, Gum Baby and Chestnutt aim to reach Nyame’s Palace to collect the Story Box. They need Anansi’s help to repair the hole in the sky above MidPass and also to enable Tristan to return home. But how does one barter with a trickster? Tristan is an Anansesem, a storyteller, and when he tells stories, they come alive. The world listens to him, and he listens to it. The stories in his late best friend’s (Eddie) journal aren’t simply stories. But will Tristan trust in his Anansesem abilities to use them to save Alke? How? How does storytelling defeat the Maafa, a feeling of “devastation and destruction, hunger and greed.” The Maafa survives on pain, but it came with the other gods: “It came here with the first of us. The sadness to our joy.”
            The first thing I thought when reading this story was, “I will be reading the rest of this trilogy.” Coming into this novel, I’d heard of MidPass gods like John Henry and High John and the Brers (Fox, Rabbit, Bear) but I was not familiar with the West African gods at all. I love mythology and so happily learned more about this one. This novel is wildly busy, like a magical rollercoaster roving on a topsy-turvy, right-side-up-and-upside-down track that only moves at top speed. Concluding the story is like that feeling you get when a wild rollercoaster suddenly comes to a stop -- your hair is riotously unkempt, your face feels both frozen and flushed (maybe that’s just me), and you can’t move right away. Mbalia’s novel is constant action and adventure. The only thing I missed was a Glossary at the book’s end, as this story is a trove of mythology. Like Rick Riordan says of Tristan’s adventure, “…the sky’s the limit. Wait, no. Tristan punched a hole in the sky. There are no limits.” So, go forth and be limitless! (But also responsible. Please don’t do anything illegal or uncouth.)
            My favorite line comes from High John, who purposely aggravates one of Nyame’s guardians, Leopard. Leopard has just growled at High John, so High John says, “Purr at me again, little kitty, I'll be wearing you soon.” (p. 455)
            Another line that made me chuckle: “When grown-ups get on their high horses, those things gallop for days.” (--Tristan, p. 119)

Monday, November 29, 2021

The Positive Page-turner's Challenge: Take 13

Hello, Book Dragons! If triskaidekaphobia is something you struggle with, you’ll want to skip this post. This should be evident from part of the title – Take 13 – but use this as another reminder in case the title was overlooked. For me, 13 is my favorite number, so reaching this goal in my Positive Page-turner’s Challenges feels wonderful.
            As is customary, I will donate a package of bar soap for every book that I read, chapter books on up. Like with all other products, the 10-bar packs of Ivory soap have gone up, but I will continue with that brand, not only because it’s more economical for me, and I buy A LOT of Ivory soap, but it’s a gentler soap for babies and those with sensitive skin. Like I’ve mentioned before; however, they will not turn away bath-sized bars of soap of any kind.
            Normally, I have an additional feature in a Positive Page-turner’s Challenge, but I don’t have one this time. My extra feature from The Positive Page-turner’s Challenge: Take 12 is still ongoing, and Toys for Tots donations are already a regular line item in my Christmas budget each year.
            Happy reading, my friends! Have a safe, healthy and fun holiday season!

Sunday, November 28, 2021

"The Cursed Carnival and Other Calamities: New Stories About Mythic Heroes" by Rick Riordan, et al.

This solo book post features a middle-grade anthology from the Rick Riordan Presents imprint. It features nine stories from the imprint’s contributing authors with the tenth story contributed by Rick Riordan. Riordan also edited the anthology. As with my more recent solo anthology posts, I will give summaries of each of the short stories and wrap it all up with my concluding thoughts.
            Welcome to the Multiverse Mansion.
The Cursed Carnival and Other Calamities: New Stories About Mythic Heroes (Sept. 28, 2021) by Rick Riordan, et al.
   1. Calamity Juice by Carlos Hernandez.
            Rainbows smell like horse barf. Unicorns’ horns grow out of all parts of the body (leg, back, stomach, etc.). And Sal Vidón and Gabi Reál can travel amongst an infinite number of universes (or multiverses). This is a handy skill, as their universe’s Gladis is missing, but there’s also PrankGladis. They must retrieve both of them, but one’s on a unicorn, and how does one track a unicorn? Enter the gallant Norberto. But treat him with the proper respect. Or he will precision-barf you into an entirely other universe.
   2. Beware the Grove of True Love by Roshani Chokshi.
            Just because Urvashi, an apsara, teaches dance and poetry does not mean she will be understanding when the Pandava sisters fall asleep in her class. Nope. Sunday Errand Day for Aru, Mini and Brynne. Five tasks. Five Sundays. Easy peasy, right? Haha. Nice try. From getting attacked by Urvashi’s powerfully enchanted dry cleaning to almost drowning when picking up “special” vitamin water, the Pandavas feel beat up (and, in Brynne’s case, extremely hangry). The final task should be a simple pick-up, but they wind up in The Grove of True Love, and they have to fix something. They’re training to defeat the Sleeper. How does learning about love stories contribute to their training? “You’ve seen some of the world’s teeth, but you have not yet felt their bite on your soul” (p. 81).
   3. The Cave of Doom by J.C. Cervantes.
            Eyeless birds (creepy). A slimy, human-shaped being with white scales (creepier). Ixtab, goddess of the underworld (watch out). Zane and Brooks are sent to Isla Pájaros by Zane’s Uncle Hondo to look for the human-shaped thing that cries like a baby and is the reason that Maya Adventures received its first negative review. Too bad Bartholomew Butts III was right. But what is the being? Zane’s trusty dog-slash-hellhound, Rosie, accompanies Ixtab to the surface to try to get some answers, but her “so-called enough was no more than a lousy crumb!” So the eyeless birds know that Zane and Brooks are sobrenaturals (supernaturals or godborns, in this case), but that doesn’t help them know what the “species of being” are. Ixtab calls them monsters, but that is not exactly specific.
   4. The Initiation by Yoon Ha Lee.
            Attending a place called the Gray Institute sounds less-than-exciting until Kim Min (remember, with Korean names, the surname is first) is told that it’s a spy school. It’s technically her first assignment for the Thousand Worlds’ Domestic Security Ministry, and she’ll have to appear 16 years old instead of her actual 13. Good thing her gumiho (fox spirits) abilities allow her to shape-shift, but unfortunately, gumiho tend to get a bad reputation. Min not only has to keep her heritage a secret, but she can’t let on that she’s also accompanied by her brother, Kim Jun. That wouldn’t normally be a significant deal, except Jun is dead; he’s a ghost, and ghosts are typically viewed as bad luck since ghosts that linger tend to not be around for friendly reasons. (Jun is an exception. He wants to travel the Thousand Worlds.) She’ll gain teammates in Trainee Group Nine: Hansoo (human), Duri (they are of dragon heritage), Chinsun (goblin) and Haru (human). And she’s concerned that Commandant Paik seems power-hungry. But the training is only eight weeks. How much trouble can Min get into in that short span of time?
   5. The Gum Baby Files by Kwame Mbalia.
            Being a small (about a foot tall), living doll is tough. All Gum Baby wants is to “be the best adventurer this world has ever seen” and take her turn with the “shouty stick” (it’s Ayanna’s staff-turned-baseball-bat) but instead she’s mostly viewed as a nuisance who gets in everyone’s way and messily oozes sap (on Nyame’s, a West African god, throne, or in people’s hair -- she’s not particular where she saps or sap attacks). While at a museum, she gets left in the LOST AND (HOPEFULLY) FOUND, meets a magic woman called Granny Z and notices a “ghostie” trying to make people forget. Forget what?
   6. The Demon Drum by Rebecca Roanhorse.
            It’s the Ancestor Club’s first field trip, and they’re going to the All-Nations Assembly in Albuquerque. Hundreds of Indigenous people from all over North America and beyond will come to the event. It’s an intertribal celebration “with people from all Native Nations participating.” Nizhoni and her brother are of Navajo heritage, and that heritage has given them unique abilities to sense monsters. She’s not expecting any monsters on this trip with her best friend, Davery, and other club members Maya, Darcy, Kody and Toni. But when Nizhoni notices that so many things are off – from her frybread tasting rotten to arguments breaking out amongst assembly-goers to that awful drumbeat that keeps getting louder – she admits that the powwow is cursed. As in, there’s a monster about. Time to locate a demon drum.
   7. Bruto and the Freaky Flower by Tehlor Kay Mejia.
            There is something wrong with Bruto, but Paola Santiago cannot take him to the vet, because Bruto is a chupacabra puppy. Yes, chupacabras are monsters, and they have been fearsome enemies to Pao, but Bruto is like a puppy dog. Albeit a puppy dog that loves Starbursts, wrappers and all, and used to have tentacle-like spines. Pao is given a vague idea of what will perk Bruto up, and she needs it pronto or she fears that Bruto will die. Together with her friend, Dante Mata, the two head into the desert to find a flower that exudes the smell of raw meat. Not only do the two have to locate the flowers, but battle rock creatures and hopefully pulverize them before they’re the ones pulverized. Oh, and is that a pack of chupacabras running this way?
   8. The Loneliest Demon by Sarwat Chadda.
            What do you do when Rabisu, the demon of deformities, repeatedly calls you a “puny mortal” and threatens you with death on the daily? If you’re Sikander Aziz’s mother, you invite her into the family’s home/business, of course, because she’s lost and alone in a strange city. That’s true. Rabisu, being a demon, is of Kurnugi, the Mesopotamian netherworld. Despite her threats and bluster, all she really wants to do is return to her home. Sik probably has an object that will open the gate to make this possible, but it’s a mission abort before the doors can open. The Anunna are just on the other side, and it’d be very bad if they made it from whichever multiverse they should stay in to the one Sik and Rabisu are in. Which, by-the-way, is the same one you and I are in, as long as you also reside on the same Planet Earth that I do.
   9. My Night at the Gifted Carnival by Graci Kim.
            The one night a year spent at the Gifted Carnival should be the best, but for Riley Oh, it’s a reminder that she is a saram. That is, she’s non-gifted, whereas her sister, Hattie, will be formally initiated into the Gom (healing) clan, as she will turn 13 next summer. As “amazeballs” as the Carnival is, the promise of magic is just a reminder of what Riley will never be able to do. So she refuses to have fun. She doesn’t want to indulge in deep-fried choco pies that’ll make her fluent in “Elvish, Parseltongue, and Klingon for an entire hour.” She won’t eat a pinch of rainbow-colored cotton candy to see a Haetae horn manifest atop someone else’s head. She refuses to even enjoy the international troupe in the performance tent, except it totally sucks her in. So much, in fact, that she realizes Hattie didn’t return from the bathroom until after the show’s over. Hattie discovered something, and it’s a story of nightmares. Unfortunately, the Dalgyal Gwisin is real, and instead of being confined to one of the Spiritrealm’s hells, she’s somehow become tangible in the Mortalrealm. You can’t kill someone who’s already dead, so how do you banish such a someone?
   10. My Life as a Child Outlaw by Rick Riordan.
            Clan Morna warriors came to kill Demne (pronounced DEV-nah) when he was eight. He was forewarned by Bodbmall, one of his foster mothers, a druidess and a hunter, and further sent along running by Líath Lúachra, a fénnid like Bodbmall. He spends time amongst a group of skin-condition-riddled men. They are traveling craftsmen (or áes dána). He spends months with Fíacail the Reaver. For the record, reavers are not the same as outlaws (or fénnidí). Outlaws follow a code of honor such that even kings recognize their value, but reavers murder and pillage however they please. Demne’s foster mothers eventually find him with Fíacail, and surprisingly, the reaver doesn’t put up a fight when they take him back. Back with the women, he tries to make friends, but that goes alarmingly bad. He may even have been betrothed at one point at the age of 10, but no matter, because he’s already been running from Clan Morna again, trying to find work and someone to take him in for a spell. He tries not to share his name or his lineage. In the end, his name won’t matter. He will still face his worst heartbreak yet.
            Concluding Thoughts: I have read at least one book by eight of the ten featured authors. While I can say that having read the books that I have has been helpful in understanding backstory references and knowing who various characters are, the anthology is accessible without having read any of the full-length novels. (But you should if you haven’t, because all that I’ve read have been excellent.) While I have favorites amongst the short stories, I’m not going to rank them, as the collection in its entirety is captivating and satisfying. The multiverse contained within these stories is expansive, and I would love for there to someday be another anthology featuring these authors and these characters. I love mythology across all worlds, and the diversity of it all is stunning, as there is so much to learn. Reading these tales in one storybook is like taking a grand and gratifying world tour of adventure, magic, wonder, awe and heritage. For anyone who enjoys mythology (and magic, heart, humor, chaos and imaginative brilliance), this is a must-read no matter which universe you reside in!