Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Rutabaga's Reads 2022: Part 16

With all of the other posts floating around my blog this year, I almost considered forgoing a “Hodgepodge” compilation. As it were, I like the variety that tends to come with a hodgepodge post, both in terms of age range and genres. Happy reading!
Cat & Cat Adventures: The Goblet of Infinity (June 7, 2022) by Susie Yi.
Graphic novel fiction.
*This is the second graphic novel in a series.*
What would pair well with the Potion of Unlimited Snacks? The Goblet of Infinity, of course! Squash and Ginny portal to the Land of the Unibears, one of the “most beautiful forests in the spirit-magic universe!” The two locate the chest, but it’s empty. Fern, a Unibear, informs them that the Goblet must be with the evil Dragon Witch. On their journey to the Dragon Witch, they encounter King Bum Bum (a bullfrog) of Bum Bum Bog, helping to clean up and undo the waste caused by a magic converter (Fern helps reluctantly). Then they meet Cinder, a demon, who’s having trouble rolling a wheel of cheese up a steep hill. Fern doesn’t trust the Dust Demon, but Squash and Ginny want to help. At the top, they’re introduced to the Dragon Witch, and she’s … not scary! She’s happy to entertain guests, share lots of good food and provide a safe spot for a sleepover. The Dragon Witch has enchanted cookware, but she does not have the Goblet of Infinity. If she doesn’t, who does?
            I’ve never purchased a graphic novel, and this is only the second one I’ve checked out from the library. When I saw my library had this one, I grabbed it because I found the first one to be so delightful. Fortunately, this one follows the delightful thread. Not only are the graphics colorful and simple yet bold, but the text is easy to understand. The story moves seamlessly. I like that it’s not only about obtaining the Goblet, but showing kindness and friendship, focusing on the characters and not their outward appearances, and being deserving of second chances. This story is PAWsitively adorable and completely family-friendly.
            Book 1: The Quest for Snacks
Harry Potter: Friends & Foes: A Movie Scrapbook (May 24, 2022) by Jody Revenson.
Film scrapbook –  nonfiction, but is likely grouped with other Harry Potter fiction.
*This is a standalone, but the author has written extensively about the Harry Potter films.*
Anyone who’s read all of the books or watched all of the movies – or both – will already be familiar with the relationships surrounding Harry Potter, friend and foe, classmate, Hogwarts professor or staff, etc. But this book delves further, giving some behind-the-scenes information. There are quotes from the actors and concept art, amongst other features.
            Like the other Revenson film book I’ve read, I checked this out from my local library. While I don’t feel the need to own them, they’d add to a diehard fan’s memorabilia collection nicely. I appreciate that the profiles aren’t lengthy, yet feel detailed. While I’m familiar with all of the characters featured, it was fun to see concept art photos, though the ones of Dobby, well, let’s just say I’m really glad that they settled on the version of Dobby that they did!
            Also by Jody Revenson in: Rutabaga’s Reads 2022: Part 6
Never After: The Stolen Slippers (Feb. 1, 2022) by Melissa de la Cruz.
Middle-grade fantasy fiction.
*This is the second ​ novel in a series.*
What Filomena Jefferson-Cho thought to be true has been turned on its head yet again. Cinderella is no servant with an evil stepmother and two wicked stepsisters. No. Cinderella is the villain; she’s a thief. Her twin stepsisters, Hortense and Beatrice, are delightful, caring and beautiful. Filomena, together with Jack the Giant Stalker, Alistair (Jack’s trusted wingman) and Gretel (the Cobbler’s fashionable daughter), must find a way onto the Queen of Hearts’ grounds in Leastphalia​ without, well, losing their heads. This is after their calamitous candy house escape (but the candy and sweets sure tasted good). Filomena and her friends want to retrieve the slippers, as they are rightfully Hortense’s. Hortense is in love with Prince Charlemagne (Charlie), also dubbed Prince Charming.
            While I know twisted fairytales aren’t for everyone, I tend to enjoy them, and I enjoy this series immensely. The author is wildly imaginative and brings her stories to life with her vivid world-building and themes at once familiar and topsy-turvy. There are also struggles, like when Jack wonders what it means to be a hero, and life lessons, such as Filomena learning that words can completely change a story, in taking truths and making them lies, for example. The story is filled with plucky banter and fast-paced action on top of a fractured plot that is, like the first book, filled with the fantastical, fantasy, magic, strongly fleshed out main and supporting characters and an expected amount of middle-school angst. This is, after all, a middle-grade novel. It will have wide appeal, but not for those looking for an intensely dark novel. With adventure and whimsy, Never After is a place I’d happily visit, as long as ogres aren’t out to eat me.
            Book One in the Never After series: The Thirteenth Fairy
The Silver Secret (Dec. 1, 2020) by Astrid Foss.
   Monique Dong, illustrator.
Chapter book fantasy fiction.
*This is the first book in a series.*
There is a selfish witch (Veronika, the Shadow Witch), and she’s managed to abduct Nordovia’s Keeper of the Lights, Freya Aurora, and her husband, Magnus Aurora. The Everchanging Lights sustain and protect the island, but Freya traps them in three orbs of light to keep them away from Veronika. Freya’s and Magnus’ triplet daughters, all green-eyed and looking toward coming into magical powers as they celebrate their twelfth birthdays, must go on a quest to locate the first orb. All three must be retrieved before the Day of the Midnight Sun, which brings strong magic, and is only a few weeks away. Ida (blond-haired), Magna (brown-haired) and Hannah (red-haired) set off with their polar bear cub, Oskar, who can magically grow in size, as all Nordovian polar bears have this ability, and come across Gregor, the falconer’s apprentice.
            The first in the Snow Sisters series is cute, and the pacing is steady and fast-moving. The prose is complemented by illustrations created with a light touch and delicately sweeping lines as opposed to heavy, bold ones. The main characters all read as a white default, though one scene involving a crowd shows some diversity. This isn’t a series I plan to continue, but it might be right up a young reader’s alley if that person appreciates magic, lovely gowns, arctic animals and snow.
To Steal a Heart (Nov. 17, 2020) by Jen Turano.
Christian historical fiction.
*This is the first novel in a series.*
It’s been years since Gabriella Goodhue was a street thief. That was in her childhood (she dressed as a boy and went by Gabe back then), but when a fellow resident (Jennette Moore) at the boardinghouse she resides at is unjustly accused of the theft of precious diamond and sapphire jewels, Gabriella puts her old skills to use. While investigating under the hastily-named Bleecker Street Inquiry Agency (it’s the boardinghouse), Gabriella encounters Nicholas Quinn. He was her best friend when they were child-sized street thieves, both under the guidance of Humphrey Rookwood. Nicholas was taken under the wing of a gentleman professor soon after Gabriella was caught thieving in their childhood. She’d always wondered why Rookwood never came for her and Nicholas never looked for her. While their reunion is fraught with tension, it is clear that they still care for each other. Together, they will clear Jennette’s name, along with the help of many others, most of whom are friends that Gabriella was afraid to let become friends (like Daphne Beekman, also a boardinghouse resident, Eunice, the woman who runs the boardinghouse, and Monsieur Phillip Villard, who isn’t actually French, but effects a French accent at the dress shop he owns and Gabriella works at). They know Jennette is innocent, so who is the Knickerbocker Bandit who’s already been involved in at least two dozen thefts? The Pinkertons have been called to help investigate. With Gabriella and Nicholas reunited, their childhood affection will have the chance to grow into newfound love, but can it survive the truths about their pasts that they will discover? Will they survive the danger that lurks closer than they think?
            This Gilded Age-era novel takes place in late 1886. I always appreciate Turano’s feisty, independent female protagonists, clever dialogue and fast-paced storylines. I thrill when the antagonists get their due (yes, even if an antagonist dies, because no one wants a violent, retaliatory antagonist on the loose). “To Steal a Heart” is the first in Turano’s The Bleecker Street Inquiry Agency series, and it’s a literary showpiece. Her tale is expressive, and the scenes are lavishly-imagined, especially those that involve balls and historical details that must’ve taken research to create. I want to be friends with the assorted group from the Bleecker Street Inquiry Agency, and I look forward to the key players in the next stories, all of whom I’m guessing we’ve already met in this opening novel.

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