Wednesday, December 14, 2016
GENIUS: THE GAME, by Leopoldo Gout
The story: Two hundred of the best--geniuses--have been chosen to compete in teen tech billionaire Kiran Biswas's Game. Rex, Cai, and Tunde all have a reason to need to be there: Rex is desperately searching for his lost brother, Cai is trying to find who's corrupted her Chinese businessman father, and Tunde is trying to keep his family and village out of the hands of an African warlord. Working desperately to solve the puzzle and stay in the Game, they come to realize that they've been maneuvered right into a trap and that to stay alive, solving the puzzle is no longer enough. Now they'd better stay one step ahead of The Game...or it may be their last step ever.
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence PG; Sexual content PG; Nudity G; Substance abuse PG; Magic & the occult G; GLBT content G; adult themes (complex conspiracies; misuse of technology in order to take over the world) PG-13; overall rating PG-13--mostly due to the very tech-dense narrative that is simply too hard for most MS readers...unless they're GT types like the kids in the story.
Liz's comments: This is a Dan-Brown type thriller featuring super-smart kids doing what they do best. There's the occasional moment of inability to suspend disbelief that kids could perform this kind of technological wizardry...but maybe that's where the "Genius" part of the title comes in. If you're wanting to believe that kids are going to save the world someday, you'll enjoy this one.
Friday, December 9, 2016
MARK OF THE PLAGUE (Blackthorn Key #2), by Kevin Sands
The story: It's 1665, and the black plague has hit London with a vengeance. A unexpected message from Christopher's dead master, apothecary Blackthorn, reveals that there's a treasure hidden somewhere in the house...but Christopher can't seem to find it, and money is getting tight. Even worse, friends are falling victim to the plague, and a mysterious plague "prophet" has predicted that Christopher's best friend, Tom, will be among the next to die...
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence PG; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse PG; Magic & the occult PG-13; GLBT content G; adult themes (manipulation of public fear for gain) PG; overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: I'm a big fan of "The Blackthorn Key", and thought this one was really good as well--although a little less like a Dan Brown book for kids, and a little more like the historical fiction that it is. Even so, there are puzzles to crack and mysteries to solve, and fans of book 1 will like book 2 also.
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence PG; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse PG; Magic & the occult PG-13; GLBT content G; adult themes (manipulation of public fear for gain) PG; overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: I'm a big fan of "The Blackthorn Key", and thought this one was really good as well--although a little less like a Dan Brown book for kids, and a little more like the historical fiction that it is. Even so, there are puzzles to crack and mysteries to solve, and fans of book 1 will like book 2 also.
FUZZY, by Tom Angleberger
The story: When Maxine is assigned to befriend robot-in-training Fuzzy as part of integrated him into her school, she's thrilled. But it turns out to be a lot less exciting than she thought--the other kids make fun of her, her anti-robot mom isn't happy about it, and worst of all, she seems to have run afoul of the other AI presence in the school: evil robotic Vice Principal Barbara. Can Max keep one step ahead of Barbara, the military, AND the Russian baddies who want to kidnap Fuzzy?
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence PG; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse G; Magic & the occult G; GLBT content G; adult themes PG (artificial intelligence overstepping its programmed bounds); overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: A fun read for sci-fi lovers. Too bad the main character isn't a boy...that way, more guys (the usual audience for this kind of book) would be willing to give it a go.
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence PG; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse G; Magic & the occult G; GLBT content G; adult themes PG (artificial intelligence overstepping its programmed bounds); overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: A fun read for sci-fi lovers. Too bad the main character isn't a boy...that way, more guys (the usual audience for this kind of book) would be willing to give it a go.
THE SEVENTH WISH, by Kate Messner
The story: When Charlie catches a magic fish that grants wishes, it's not long before she's back at the fishing hole again...and again. Her wishes seem to help at first--but then they go sideways, and somehow they've made things even worse than when she started. Can Charlie figure out how to solve her problems without magic? It doesn't seem very likely...
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence G; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse PG-13; Magic & the occult PG; GLBT content G; adult themes (addiction) PG; overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: I liked this story a lot, but found it to be a very strange juxtaposition of whimsical magic fish/wish granting and the difficulties of dealing with an older sibling's addiction. Messner does a good job of showing the neglected child's anger as parents deal with putting out the older sister's fires, and she also shows that wishing for life to get better--and having those wishes granted--just leads to more complications. I'd say the audience here is grades 5-7; Charlie is a 6th grader, but her older sister's problems would resonate with older readers...if they can get past the magic, wish-granting fish.
June Cleaver's ratings: Language PG; Violence G; Sexual content G; Nudity G; Substance abuse PG-13; Magic & the occult PG; GLBT content G; adult themes (addiction) PG; overall rating PG.
Liz's comments: I liked this story a lot, but found it to be a very strange juxtaposition of whimsical magic fish/wish granting and the difficulties of dealing with an older sibling's addiction. Messner does a good job of showing the neglected child's anger as parents deal with putting out the older sister's fires, and she also shows that wishing for life to get better--and having those wishes granted--just leads to more complications. I'd say the audience here is grades 5-7; Charlie is a 6th grader, but her older sister's problems would resonate with older readers...if they can get past the magic, wish-granting fish.
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