Monday, April 11, 2016

Best Historical Fiction of the 21st Century Book List

Want some good historical fiction to read? Not just good but the best? Check out this book list...




1) "The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini

Here’s a real find: a striking debut from an Afghan now living in the US. His passionate story of betrayal and redemption is framed by Afghanistan’s tragic recent past.

Moving back and forth between Afghanistan and California, and spanning almost 40 years, the story begins in Afghanistan in the tranquil 1960s. Our protagonist Amir is a child in Kabul. The most important people in his life are Baba and Hassan. Father Baba is a wealthy Pashtun merchant, a larger-than-life figure, fretting over his bookish weakling of a son (the mother died giving birth); Hassan is his sweet-natured playmate, son of their servant Ali and a Hazara. Pashtuns have always dominated and ridiculed Hazaras, so Amir can’t help teasing Hassan, even though the Hazara staunchly defends him against neighborhood bullies like the “sociopath” Assef. The day, in 1975, when 12-year-old Amir wins the annual kite-fighting tournament is the best and worst of his young life. He bonds with Baba at last but deserts Hassan when the latter is raped by Assef. And it gets worse. With the still-loyal Hassan a constant reminder of his guilt, Amir makes life impossible for him and Ali, ultimately forcing them to leave town. Fast forward to the Russian occupation, flight to America, life in the Afghan exile community in the Bay Area. Amir becomes a writer and marries a beautiful Afghan; Baba dies of cancer. Then, in 2001, the past comes roaring back. Rahim, Baba’s old business partner who knows all about Amir’s transgressions, calls from Pakistan. Hassan has been executed by the Taliban; his son, Sohrab, must be rescued. Will Amir wipe the slate clean? So he returns to the hell of Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and reclaims Sohrab from a Taliban leader (none other than Assef) after a terrifying showdown. Amir brings the traumatized child back to California and a bittersweet ending.

Rather than settle for a coming-of-age or travails-of-immigrants story, Hosseini has folded them both into this searing spectacle of hard-won personal salvation. All this, and a rich slice of Afghan culture too: irresistible.











2) "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett

The relationships between white middle-class women and their black maids in Jackson, Miss., circa 1962, reflect larger issues of racial upheaval in Mississippi-native Stockett’s ambitious first novel.

Still unmarried, to her mother’s dismay, recent Ole Miss graduate Skeeter returns to Jackson longing to be a serious writer. While playing bridge with her friends Hilly and Elizabeth, she asks Elizabeth’s seemingly docile maid Aibileen for housekeeping advice to fill the column she’s been hired to pen for a local paper. The two women begin what Skeeter considers a semi-friendship, but Aibileen, mourning her son’s recent death and devoted to Elizabeth’s neglected young daughter, is careful what she shares. Aibileen’s good friend Minnie, who works for Hilly’s increasingly senile mother, is less adept at playing the subservient game than Aibileen. When Hilly, an aggressively racist social climber, fires and then blackballs her for speaking too freely, Minnie’s audacious act of vengeance almost destroys her livelihood. Unlike oblivious Elizabeth and vicious Hilly, Skeeter is at the verge of enlightenment. Encouraged by a New York editor, she decides to write a book about the experience of black maids and enlists Aibileen’s help. For Skeeter the book is primarily a chance to prove herself as a writer. The stakes are much higher for the black women who put their lives on the line by telling their true stories. Although the exposé is published anonymously, the town’s social fabric is permanently torn. Stockett uses telling details to capture the era and does not shy from showing Skeeter’s dangerous naïveté. Skeeter’s narration is alive with complexity—her loyalty to her traditional Southern mother remains even after she learns why the beloved black maid who raised her has disappeared. In contrast, Stockett never truly gets inside Aibileen and Minnie’s heads (a risk the author acknowledges in her postscript). The scenes written in their voices verge on patronizing.

This genuine page-turner offers a whiff of white liberal self-congratulation that won’t hurt its appeal and probably spells big success.










3) "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak

When Death tells a story, you pay attention. Liesel Meminger is a young girl growing up outside of Munich in Nazi Germany, and Death tells her story as “an attempt—a flying jump of an attempt—to prove to me that you, and your human existence, are worth it.” When her foster father helps her learn to read and she discovers the power of words, Liesel begins stealing books from Nazi book burnings and the mayor’s wife’s library. As she becomes a better reader, she becomes a writer, writing a book about her life in such a miserable time. Liesel’s experiences move Death to say, “I am haunted by humans.” How could the human race be “so ugly and so glorious” at the same time? This big, expansive novel is a leisurely working out of fate, of seemingly chance encounters and events that ultimately touch, like dominoes as they collide. The writing is elegant, philosophical and moving. Even at its length, it’s a work to read slowly and savor. Beautiful and important.(Fiction. 12+)













4) "The Other Boleyn Girl" by Philippa Gregory

Historically based, page-turning story of Mary Boleyn, sister of the infamous Anne, decapitated by Henry VIII: here, as much a tale of love and lust as it is a saga about an ambitious family who used their kin as negotiable assets.

Rich with period detail, the story is told by Mary, the younger sister, who is married off at 13 to William Carey, a courtier at Henry’s court. Mary serves Queen Katherine, mother of the future Queen Mary, and begins her tale when her sister Anne, stylish and beautiful, returns from France to join Mary at court. The sisters’ ambitious parents and their uncle, the future Duke of Norfolk, are determined to acquire power and influence, as well as titles and estates, from the king, even if it means that Mary must become his mistress. Their son George is made to work on his sisters’ behalf and to live a life not of his choosing (he’s homosexual and loves a fellow courtier). Mary bears the king a son, but Anne soon after uses all her wiles to make Henry divorce the Queen and marry her. The Boleyns, more ruthlessly functional than dysfunctional, continue to plot and push to achieve their ends. Mary recounts the king’s wish for a male heir; his break with the Pope; Anne’s skillful if criminal plotting that leads to the divorce and her marriage to Henry; the birth of the future Queen Elizabeth; and Anne’s desperate attempts to bear a son. Meanwhile, she herself, widowed after her first husband dies from the plague, finds love with Sir William Stafford—the only strand of the story with possibilities for future happiness.

Absorbing tale of a Renaissance family determined to climb as high as they can, whatever the cost.

Book Two of Six









5) "The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society" by Mary Ann Shaffer

The German occupation of the Channel Islands, recalled in letters between a London reporter and an eccentric gaggle of Guernsey islanders.

This debut by an “aunt-niece” authorial team presents itself as cozy fiction about comfortably quirky people in a bucolic setting, but it quickly evinces far more serious, and ambitious, intent. In 1946, Juliet, famous for her oxymoronic wartime humor column, is coping with life amid the rubble of London when she receives a letter from a reader, Dawsey, a Guernsey resident who asks her help in finding books by Charles Lamb. After she honors his request, a flurry of letters arrive from Guernsey islanders eager to share recollections of the German occupation of the islands. (Readers may be reminded of the PBS series, Island at War.) When the Germans catch some islanders exiting from a late-night pig roast, the group, as an excuse for violating curfew and food restrictions, invents a book club. The “Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society” is born, affording Guernseyites an excuse to meet and share meager repasts. (The Germans have confiscated all the real food.) Juliet’s fractious correspondents, including reputed witch Isola, Booker, a Jewish valet who masquerades as a Lord, and many other L&PPPS members, reveal that the absent founder of their society, Elizabeth, loved Christian, a German captain. No one accuses Elizabeth of collaboration (except one crotchety islander, Adelaide) because Christian was genuinely nice. An act of bravery caused Elizabeth’s deportation to France, and her whereabouts remain unknown. The Society is raising four-year-old Kit, Elizabeth’s daughter by Christian. To the consternation of her editor and friend, Sidney, Juliet is entertaining the overtures, literary and romantic, of a dashing but domineering New York publisher, Markham. When Juliet goes to Guernsey, some hard truths emerge about Elizabeth’s fate and defiant courage. Elizabeth and Juliet are appealingly reminiscent of game but gutsy ’40s movie heroines.

The engrossing subject matter and lively writing make this a sure winner, perhaps fodder for a TV series.





6) "Water for Elephants" by Sara Gruen

Gruen (Riding Lesson, not reviewed) brings to life the world of a Depression-era traveling circus.

Jacob Jankowski, a retired veterinarian living out his days in an assisted-living facility, drifts in and out of his memories: Only days before graduating from vet school in 1931, young Jake learns his parents have died and left him penniless. Leaving school, he hops a train that happens to belong to the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. When the circus’s owner, Uncle Al, learns Jake’s educational background, he quickly hires him as the circus vet. This position allows Jake access to the various strata of circus society, from lowly crewmembers who seldom see actual money in their pay envelopes to the performers and managers who drink champagne and dress in evening wear for dinner. Jake is soon in love, both with Marlena, an equestrienne married to the head animal trainer, August, and with Rosie, an elephant who understands only Polish (which Polish-American Jake conveniently speaks). At first, August and Marlena seem happily married, but Jake soon realizes that August’s charm can quickly turn to cruelty. He is charismatic but bipolar (subtle echoes of Sophie’s Choice). Worse, he beats Rosie, and comes across as having no love for animals. When August assumes Marlena and Jake are fooling around—having acknowledged their feelings, they have allowed themselves only a kiss—he beats Marlena, and she leaves him. Uncle Al tries blackmailing Jake to force him to reunite Marlena with August for the sake of the circus. Jake does not comply, and one fatality leads to another until the final blowup. The leisurely recreation of the circus’s daily routine is lovely and mesmerizing, even if readers have visited this world already in fiction and film, but the plot gradually bogs down in melodrama and disintegrates by its almost saccharine ending.

County Cat Link









7) "World Without End" by Ken Follett

The peasants are revolting. Some, anyway. Others—the good-hearted varlets, churls and nickpurses of Follett’s latest—are just fine.

In a departure from his usual taut, economical procedurals (Whiteout, 2004, etc.), Follett revisits the Middle Ages in what amounts to a sort of sequel to The Pillars of the Earth (1989). The story is leisurely but never slow, turning in the shadow of the great provincial cathedral in the backwater of Kingsbridge, the fraught construction of which was the ostensible subject of the first novel. Now, in the 1330s, the cathedral is a going concern, populated by the same folks who figured in its making: intriguing clerics, sometimes clueless nobles and salt-of-the-earth types. One of the last is a resourceful young girl—and Follett’s women are always resourceful, more so than the menfolk—who liberates the overflowing purse of one of those nobles. Her father has already lost a hand for thievery, but that’s an insufficient deterrent in a time of hunger, and a time when the lords “were frequently away: at war, in Parliament, fighting lawsuits, or just attending on their earl or king.” Thus the need for watchful if greedy bailiffs and tough sheriffs, who make Gwenda’s grown-up life challenging. Follett has a nice eye for the sometimes silly clash of the classes and the aspirations of the small to become large, as with one aspiring prior who “had only a vague idea of what he would do with such power, but he felt strongly that he belonged in some elevated position in life.” Alas, woe meets some of those who strive, a fact that touches off a neat little mystery at the beginning of the book, one that plays its way out across the years and implicates dozens of characters.

A lively entertainment for fans of The Once and Future King, The Lord of the Rings and other multilayered epics.

Book Two of Two









8) "Shadow of the Wind" by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

The histories of a mysterious book and its enigmatic author are painstakingly disentangled in this yeasty Dickensian romance: a first novel by a Spanish novelist now living in the US.

We meet its engaging narrator Daniel Sempere in 1945, when he’s an 11-year-old boy brought by his father, a Barcelona rare-book dealer, to a secret library known as the Cemetery of Forgotten Books. Enthralled, Daniel “chooses” an obscure novel, The Shadow of the Wind, a complex quest tale whose author, Julian Carax, reputedly fled Spain at the outbreak of its Civil War, and later died in Paris. Carax and his book obsess Daniel for a decade, as he grows to manhood, falls in and out of fascination, if not love with three beguiling women, and comes ever closer to understanding who Carax was and how he was connected to the family of tyrannical Don Ricardo Aldaya—and why a sinister, “faceless” stranger who identifies himself as Carax’s fictional creation (“demonic”) “Lain Coubert” has seemingly “got out of the pages of a book so that he could burn it.” Daniel’s investigations are aided, and sometimes impeded, by a lively gallery of vividly evoked supporting characters. Prominent among them are secretive translator Nuria Monfort (who knows more about Carax’s Paris years than she initially reveals); Aldaya family maid Jacinta Coronada, consigned to a lunatic asylum to conceal what she knows; Daniel’s ebullient Sancho Panza Fermin Romero de Torres, a wily vagrant working as “bibliographic detective” in the Semperes’ bookstore; and vengeful police inspector Fumero, a Javert-like stalker whose refusal to believe Carax is dead precipitates the climax—at which Daniel realizes he’s much more than just a reader of Carax’s intricate, sorrowful story.

The Shadow of the Wind will keep you up nights—and it’ll be time well spent. Absolutely marvelous.





Saturday, April 9, 2016

Not Well Known Book List

Want an interesting book? Something that doesn't have a mile long waiting list? Something that not everyone is reading? Check out this book list...




1) The Grimm Legacy" by Polly Shulman

Fairy-tale and romance devotees, museum aficionados and budding librarians will pine for Elizabeth’s afterschool job. Lonely in New York City, her family straight out of Grimm (dead mom, inattentive dad, cold stepfamily), Elizabeth agrees to work at the New-York Circulating Material Repository. She passes the button-sorting interview and begins work in the stacks, where call slips arrive via pneumatic tubes. The Repository houses historical articles (textiles, wigs, tea sets), including the Grimm Collection, all circulating. Shulman’s prose sparkles describing the Grimm objects’ magic powers (recognizable from tales) and the profound deposits required to borrow them (a “long, translucent, sweater-shaped thing” is “somebody’s sense of privacy”; a future firstborn looks “infinitely vulnerable and undefined, like a thought before you put it into words”). The pages are a multiracial group, but the white librarians unfortunately romanticize the Akan peoples, constantly spouting proverbs from those “great men and women. Chiefs in Africa.” Some structural implausibility pales before vivid sensory descriptions (hexed gingerbread tastes “[s]weet and dark, like roast duck or cedar pencils”) and delightful magical happenings both thrilling and nefarious. (Fantasy. 12 & up)

Book One of Three



2) "Num8ers" by Rachel Ward

Jem’s been bouncing between foster homes since her mother overdosed when Jem was only six. Now she’s a typical troubled teen, skipping her special-ed classes almost as often as she goes. Though she’s not entirely typical, as most troubled teens don’t see the death dates of every person they meet, floating in eight stark numerals over each head. 10102001, her mother’s number.07142013, her foster mother’s. And 12152010, Spider’s. Spider is the gangly, twitchy, stinky classmate who’s the first person ever to try to be Jem’s friend. When the two of them are seen running away from a massive terrorist attack in London—Jem had warning of the deaths, hadn’t she?—they flee the police investigation and run away into the country. If only December 15 weren’t closing in fast, Jem could even be happy with her new romance. Their journey is filled with heartwarming encounters with helpful but realistically wary strangers feeding their bodies and touching their hearts. A lovely, bittersweet tearjerker about living life to its fullest. (Fantasy. 13-15)

Book One of Three




3) "Incarnate" by Jodi Meadows

For thousands of years in Range, the same one million souls have been born, lived, died and been reborn. But when Ciana died, she wasn't reborn: Ana was born, for the first time.

Now 18, Ana is leaving the mother who hated her behind. When an encounter with the terrifying sylph drives her to leap off a cliff into a lake, she is certain that her new, young soul will soon be an expired one. Kindly Sam rescues her and takes her to the city of Heart, where she hopes to find answers to the questions of her origin. There, she must battle both the ingrained sense of low worth instilled by her hostile mother and the suspicions of the oldsouls. Never fear: Debut novelist Meadows gives musical prodigy Ana a mentor that is the society's most noted musician, the preternaturally wise, good and—oh yes, sexy—Sam. The basic concept is a fascinating one, but it gets muddled in delivery. Worldbuilding is particularly weak: Range is populated by both creatures of European mythology and regular North American animals, but the former seem to have been thrown in largely to be set dressing and a convenient threat. Perhaps all will be explained in subsequent volumes, to which this effectively serves as a 374-page prologue. Moreover, Ana's characterization is notably uneven (the emotional scars from her upbringing emerge when the plot needs them), and 21st-century colloquialisms sound sour notes against the trying-to-be-otherworldly setting.

Overall, a promising book that would have benefited from another draft or two. (Fantasy/romance. 13 & up)


Book One of Three


4) "Crown Duel" by Sherwood Smith

Fantasy fans will cheer this latest romp, subtitled ``The Crown and Court Duet Book I,'' in which Smith (Wren's War, 1995, etc.) introduces the teenage Count Branaric and Countess Meliara of Tlanth. The siblings are noble-born, but there their good fortune ends; their father has died, leaving them in a cold, rundown castle, unable to pay taxes to the evil Galdran, corrupt ruler of the kingdom of Remalna. Galdran's cruelty forces the pair to lead their country in revolt: Despite some spirited fighting that leaves the king's forces scrambling, Meliara is taken hostage. Ill and threatened with torture, Meliara never lets panic overwhelm her, risking her life to be reunited with her brother and displaying admirable wit and courage in the process. Smith's lush descriptions evoke a fantastic yet credible world, where magic spells and enchanted stones are everyday facts of life. While the tale ends with the king's destruction, Smith leaves a few threads dangling for the next installment: The Count and Countess will no doubt saddle their mounts again soon. (Fiction. 12+)

Book One of Two



5) "Forgotten" by Cat Patrick

Imagine forgetting yesterday but remembering tomorrow.

Patrick’s high-concept debut falls flat. Each morning at 4:33, London Lane’s mind resets, blanking out the past—but she “remembers” her future. Doctors have been unable to solve her condition, so London stumbles through life faking normal, aided by notes and her mother and best friend (both of whom she “knows,” thanks to future memories). Every morning she must study her own life. Enter hot boy, but despite the growing relationship, London can’t remember him from her future. Luke’s inexplicable presence and a resurfaced actual memory set London on the trail of her own past, in which she discovers a tragic mystery. She conveniently remembers just enough to solve it, and it turns out there are happy endings all around, although only a weak “explanation” for London’s ability to effectively see the future. The flat main character and awkward necessities of writing to accommodate future memories hinder the promising premise. Present-tense narration in an adult voice (perhaps because London remembers forward?) and a personality is based only on who she will be make empathy difficult. This is compounded by the discomfiting circular logic throughout (she is friends with Jamie because she will be friends with Jamie; readers will still wonder why).

Ultimately, it’s a mess, but intense romance means some appeal. (Pseudo-paranormal romance/mystery. 12-16)




6) "Brightly Woven" by Alexandra Bracken

Conventional teen tropes translate surprisingly well to fantasy romance in an uneven debut. Sixteen-year-old weaver Sydelle is presented to North, a wizard scarcely older, as an unwilling payment for ending her village’s devastating drought. North has the information to stop an imminent war, and he needs Sydelle to guide him to the capital. Sydelle slowly overcomes her resentment of her mysterious, arrogant captor as she learns about the ways of magic and her own unexpected place within it. Sydelle’s narration portrays her as the stereotypical feisty-yet-commonsensical redhead, entirely unaware of her hidden powers and irresistible attractiveness, while North is the bad-boy hero with the angsty-secret back story. Everyone else is a stock character, especially the Crazy McEvilpants villain. But archetypes exist because they work, and, despite cursory world-building and awkward prose, the romance is chastely sweet while the plot trots along at a ripping pace, culminating in a (literally) earthshaking climax, with just enough unresolved questions to make a sequel welcome. A guilty pleasure, perhaps, but a pleasure nonetheless. (Fantasy. 12 & up)



7) "Audrey, Wait!" by Robin Benway

This fluffy-but-fun debut novel grabs the latest slot in the growing canon of the you-don’t-really-want-to-be-famous subcategory of chick-lit. Benway follows 16-year-old Audrey as she suffers the pangs of her breakup with Evan, her talented musician boyfriend. Evan writes a song about her that becomes a smash hit, resulting in instant, unwelcome fame for Audrey. Audrey struggles to continue her normal life with her family, school and quirky BFF Victoria while the paparazzi hound her, reporters slant their coverage of her and adoring fans mob her. Individual characterizations slop together a bit as everyone speaks with similar snappy patter, including her new, initially dorky boyfriend, James. This profusion of teen wit, however, both quells the mayhem of Audrey’s life and holds the story together. Readers won’t find much substance here but they will find entertainment, well pitched to the target audience of mid-teen girls. A pleasant little romp. (Fiction. YA)



8) "Hawksong" by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

Trappings of fantasy veil a stock romance plot. Nineteen-year-old Danica is a shapeshifting hawk. Heir to the throne of an avian race, she hates the generations-old war with the serpent people that has claimed so many of her kin. Her worst enemy, the dreaded, but sexy, Zane Cobriana of the serpiente, proposes a peace treaty bound by a marriage between them. Though Danica mistrusts Zane, how can she refuse the chance at peace? Despite their racial differences, Zane and Danica find each other physically appealing. Is their attraction enough to overcome centuries of hatred? Though the fantasy is strained, Danica’s (PG-rated) love story, which follows the plot of conventional adult romance, is enjoyable for that genre. (Fiction. 13-17)

Book One of Five




Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Today In History!

Are you curious about things that happened today throughout the years? Check it out...


0648 -BC- Earliest total solar eclipse; chronicled by Greeks 

0402 Battle at Pollentia Roman army under Stilicho beats Visigoten 

0610 Lailat-ul Qadar, the night the koran descended to Earth 

0774 Charles the Great affirms Pippins promise of Quiercy 

1106 Fire in Venice 

1327 Italian poet Petrarch 1st sets eyes on his beloved Laura 

1362 Robber bastion Tard-Venus strikes at Brignais France 

1516 A Willaert installed as singer of cardinal Ippolito I d'Este 

1634 Heeren XIX asks "to secure Eylands Curaçao" 

1652 Cape Colony, the 1st European settlement in South Africa, established by John of Riebeeck 

1663 King Charles II signs Carolina Charter 

1664 France & Saksen sign alliance 

1672 France declares war on Netherlands 

1712 Slave revolt in New York 

1722 Peter the Great ends tax on men with beards 

1724 Duke of Newcastle becomes English minister of Foreign Affairs 

1727 Denmark signs Covenant of Hannover 

1757 English king George II fires minister William Pitt Sr 

1789 1st US Congress begins regular sessions, Federal Hall, New York NY 

1815 English militia shoots prisoners, 100's killed 

1830 Joseph Smith & 5 others organize Mormon church in Seneca County, New York 

1841 Cornerstone laid for 2nd Mormon temple, Nauvoo IL 

1848 Jews of Prussia granted equality




1849 Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera "Le Prophète", premieres in Paris France 

1859 US recognizes Liberal government in México's War of the Reform 

1862 Battle of Shiloh, Union defeats Confederacy in SW Tennessee 

1865 Battle of Sayler's Creek, 1/3rd of Lee's army cut off 

1866 G.A.R. (Grand Army of the Republic) is established 

1868 Brigham Young marries his 27th & final wife 

1869 1st plastic, Celluloid, patented 

1883 Start of Sherlock Holmes "Adventure of the Speckled Band" (BG) 

1886 City of Vancouver British Columbia Canada incorporated 

1886 Declaration of Berlin neutralizes Tonga 

1889 George Eastman places Kodak Camera on sale for 1st time 

1890 French troops under Captain Archinard occupy Segu, West-Sudan 

1893 Andy Bowen & Jack Burke box 7 hours 19 minutes to no decision in St Louis (111 rounds, longest bout in boxing history) 

1893 Mormon temple in Salt Lake City dedicated 

1896 1st modern Olympic games begin in Athens Greece; American, James Connolly, wins 1st Olympic gold medal in modern history 

1900 James J Jeffries KOs Jack Finnegan in 1 for heavyweight boxing title 

1903 General railroad strike against "worgwetten" (anti-strike laws) 

1906 1st animated cartoon copyrighted 

1909 1st credit union established in US 

1909 North Pole reached by Americans Robert Peary & Matthew Henson 

1912 Electric starter 1st appeared in cars 

1916 German parliament OKs unrestricted submarine warfare 

1917 US declares war on Germany, enters World War I 

1920 French troop attacks Main/Darmstadt/Hanau 

1924 4 planes leave Seattle on 1st successful around-the-world flight 

1924 Italian fascists receive 65% of vote of parliament 

1924 Völkische Block (Nazi's) receives 17.8% of vote in Bayern 

1925 1st film shown on an airplane (British Air)




1926 Stanley Cup Montréal Maroons beat Victoria Cougars (WHL), 3 games to 1 

1930 1st transcontinental glider tow completed 

1930 Hostess Twinkies invented by bakery executive James Dewar 

1931 1st Scottsboro (Alabama) trial begins - 9 blacks accused of rape 

1931 1st broadcast of "Little Orphan Annie" on NBC-radio 

1934 418 Lutheran ministers arrested in Germany 

1935 H Levitt sinks 499 basketball free throws, misses & sinks 371 more 

1936 Tornado kills 203 & injures 1,800 in Gainesville GA 

1936 3rd Golf Masters Championship Horton Smith wins, shooting a 285 

1936 ANP begins telex service in Amsterdam 

1938 Teflon invented by Roy J Plunkett 

1939 US & UK agree on joint control of Canton & Enderbury Islands (Pacific) 

1939 Great Britain & Poland sign military pact 

1941 Italian-held Addis Ababa capitulates to British & Ethiopian forces 

1941 8th Golf Masters Championship Craig Wood wins, shooting a 280 

1941 Beginning of 3 day bombardment of Belgrade (17,000 die) 

1941 British General Gambier-Parry caught in North Africa 

1941 German bombardment on Piraeus (munitions ship explodes) 

1943 British & US offensive at Wadi Akarit, South-Tunisia 

1943 Lou Jansen, leader of illegal Dutch political party (CPN) arrested 

1944 Jewish nursery at Izieu-Ain France overrun by Nazi's 

1945 Coevorden freed from Nazi's 

1945 Japanese giant battleship Yamato heads to Okinawa 

1945 Massive kamikaze-attack on US battle fleet near Okinawa 

1945 US marines explore Tsugen Shima near Okinawa 

1947 11th Golf Masters Championship Jimmy Demaret wins his 2nd Masters golf tournament, shooting a 281 

1947 1st Tony Awards Arthur Miller, David Wayne & Patricia Neal win 

1950 John F Dulles becomes advisor to US Secretary of State Dean Acheson 

1952 16th Golf Masters Championship Sam Snead wins his 2nd Masters golf tournament, shooting a 286 

1954 Montréal Canadiens score 3 goals in 56 seconds in playoff game against Detroit Red Wings 

1954 TV Dinner is 1st put on sale by Swanson & Sons




1954 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Bikini Island 

1955 "3 for Tonight" opens at Plymouth Theater NYC for 85 performances 

1955 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
 
1955 Yemen failed coup by Abdullah Seif el-Islam 

1956 Polish communist Gomulka freed from prison 

1957 NYC ends trolley car service 

1957 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric tests) 

1958 Arnold Palmer wins 1st major golf tournament-the Masters
 
1959 31st Academy Awards "Gigi", Susan Hayward & David Niven win 

1964 Egypt & Belgium restore diplomatic relations 

1965 Intelsat 1 ("Early Bird") 1st commercial geosynchronous communications satellite 

1966 Mihir Sen swims the Palk Strait between Sri Lanka & India
 
1967 Premier Pompidou forms new French government 

1968 94.5% of East German voters approve new socialist constitution 

1968 Gunpowder stock at a sporting-goods store explodes, killing 43 (Virginia) 

1968 HemisFair 1968 opens in San Antonio TX 

1968 Firestone World Tournament of Champions won by Dave Davis 

1972 Egypt drops diplomatic relations with Jordan 

1973 Yankee Ron Blomberg becomes 1st designated hitter, he walks 

1973 Harbor strike in Gent/Antwerp, Belgium 

1973 Indies troops invade Sikkim 

1973 Roberto Clemente Day, Pirates retire his number 

1973 US launches Pioneer 11 to Jupiter & Saturn 

1974 200,000 attend rock concert "California Jam" 

1974 Yankees 1st home game at Shea Stadium, beat Indians 6-1 

1974 Firestone World Tournament of Champions won by Earl Anthony 11/16 

1975 Bundy victim Denise Oliverson disappears from Grand Junction CO 

1975 Fastest hat trick by a Washington Capital 3 minutes 26 seconds (Stan Gilbertson) 

1975 "Rocky Horror Show" closes at Belasco Theater NYC after 45 performances 

1975 "The Night That Made America Famous" closes at Barrymore NYC after 75 performances 

1976 1st quadraphonic movie track "Ladies & Gentlemen the Rolling Stones" 

1977 Judge rules the Beatles 1962 Hamburg album can be released 

1977 Kingdome opens, Seattle Mariners 1st game, loses to Angels 7-0 

1978 Karnataka beat Uttar Pradesh by inning & 193 to win Ranji Trophy 

1979 Rod Stewart & Alana Collins wed 

1980 Gordie Howe completes a record 26th season 

1980 9th Colgate Dinah Shore Golf Championship won by Donna Caponi Young 

1980 Post It Notes are introduced 

1981 Yugoslav government sends troops to Kosovo 

1982 Columbia returns to Kennedy Space Center from White Sands 

1982 Largest crowd ever to see a baseball game in Minnesota 52,279
 
1983 Washington Capitals 2-New York Islanders 5-Patrick Division Semifinals- Islanders hold 1-0 lead 

1984 11th Space Shuttle Mission (41-C)- Challenger 5 is launched; 1st time 11 people in space 

1985 Atlantis (OV-104) rollout at Palmdale 

1985 Bombay beats Delhi by 90 runs to win the Ranji Trophy final 

1985 Sudan suspends constitution after coup under General Swarreddahab 

1985 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site 

1986 Soccer ball juggled non-stop for 14:14 hours 

1986 15th Nabisco Dinah Shore Golf Championship won by Pat Bradley 

1987 Al Campanis appears on Niteline saying blacks may not be equipped to be in baseball management, sparking a racial controversy 

1987 Sugar Ray Leonard upsets Marvelous Marvin Hagler 

1987 22nd Academy of Country Music Awards Randy Travis & Hank Williams Jr 

1988 New Jersey Devils' 1st playoff game; lose to New York Islanders 4-3 (OT) in 1st round 

1988 North pole explorer Matthew Henson buried next to Robert Peary in Arlington 

1989 Orel Hershiser ends his record 59 consecutive scoreless streak 

1991 Former child actor Adam Rich arrested for breaking into a pharmacy 

1991 New York-New Jersey Knights 1st home game (Giants Stadium) lose to Frankfurt 27-17 

1991 Argentine soocer star Diego Maradona suspended for 15 month by Italian League for testing positive for cocaine use 

1991 Subhana, becomes 1st Australian woman to become a Zen teacher 

1992 1st game at Camden Field, Baltimore Orioles beat Indians 2-0 

1992 Britain Radio Authority licenses Virgin & TV-AM radio licenses 

1992 Duke beats Michigan 71-51 for NCCA basketball championship 

1992 Voting begins on choice of Elvis postage stamps 

1992 54th NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Duke beats Michigan 71-51 

1992 Microsoft announced Windows 3.1, upgrading Windows 3.0 

1992 Oriole Park at Camden Yards opens, Baltimore Orioles beat Cleveland Indians 2-0 

1992 Serbian troops begin siege of Sarajevo 

1992 US Supreme Court rules a Nebraska farmer was entrapped by postal agents into buying mail-order child pornography 

1993 1st test flight of Ilyushin IL-96M (Moscow) 

1993 Florida Marlins 1st loss ever (4-2 to Los Angeles Dodgers) 

1994 1st scheduled Indians night game at Jacobs Field is rained out 

1994 Chuck Jones found guilty of breaking into Marla Maples home
 
1994 Liberal Supreme Court Justice Blackmun (Roe vs Wade) resigns 

1994 Palestinian suicide bomber kills 7 Israelis & himself 

1994 Rockwell B-1B Lancers break 11 world speed records 

1995 "Having Our Say" opens at Booth Theater NYC for 308 performances 

1996 Albert Belle shows off his arm by hitting Sports Illustrated photographer Tony Tomsic in the hand prior to a game 

1997 "3 Sisters" closes at Criterion Theater NYC 

1997 9th Seniors Golf Tradition Gil Morgan wins 

1997 Annika Sorenstam wins LPGA Longs Drugs Challenge 

1997 Brad Faxon wins Freeport-McDermott Golf Classic 

1997 Progress M-34 Launch (Russia) 

1997 Twelve Bridges LPGA Classic


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

A Book List to Motivate Men to Read

Need something to get the men in your life to read? Check out this book list...




1) "Flipped" by Wendelin Van Draanen

Proof that the course of pubescent love never runs smooth. When Bryce and Julianna (Juli) meet, they are both seven and Bryce has just moved in across the street. For Juli, it is love at first sight: “The day I first met Bryce Loski, I flipped. Honestly, one look at him and I became a lunatic. It’s his eyes.” As far as Bryce is concerned, the feeling is definitely not mutual: “All I’ve ever wanted is for Juli Baker to leave me alone. For her to back off—you know, just give me some space.” Six years after their meeting, Bryce is something of a judgmental priss (just like his father), and Juli is full of passion and enthusiasm for life. But in their eighth-grade year, Juli’s fight to save an old tree from being cut down causes Bryce to look at Juli with growing admiration—just at the same time that Juli finally realizes that Bryce’s character does not measure up to his eyes. The story is told in both voices, in alternating chapters that develop from a sort of “he said, she said” dialogue into an exploration of perception, misapprehension, and context. Van Draanen (Sammy Keyes and the Hollywood Mummy Mystery, 2000, etc.) deftly manages the difficult task of establishing and maintaining the reader’s sympathy with both characters. The text stretches credibility in a couple of ways, especially with the premise that a seven-year-old is capable of a long-lasting romantic infatuation. It is, nevertheless, a highly agreeable romantic comedy tempered with the pointed lesson (demonstrated by the straining of Bryce’s parents’ marriage) that the “choices you make now will affect you for the rest of your life.” (Fiction. 10-14)



2) "The Amulet of Samarkand" by Jonathan Stroud

In a contemporary London full of magic, a thrilling adventure unfolds. Twelve-year-old Nathaniel is apprenticed to a politician (which means magician), but early emotional pain leads him toward hardness and anger. Arrogantly summoning a djinni to help him steal an amulet from slickly evil Simon Lovelace, he’s swept into a swirl of events involving conspiracy at the highest government level. Nathaniel’s perspective alternates with that of Bartimaeus, the cocky, sardonic djinni. No character is wholly likable or trustworthy, which contributes to the intrigue. Many chapters end in suspense, suddenly switching narrators at key moments to create a real page-turner. Readers will hope that Stroud follows up on certain questions—is it slavery to use a djinni? will shaky looming international politics affect the empire? who deserves our alliance? and who are the mysterious children ostensibly running an underground resistance?—in the next installment, sure to be eagerly awaited. (Fantasy. 10-14)

Book One of Three





3) "Among the Hidden" by Margaret Peterson Haddix

In a chilling and intelligent novel, Haddix (Leaving Fishers, 1997, etc.) envisions a near future where a totalitarian US limits families to only two children. Luke, 12, the third boy in his farming family, has been hidden since birth, mostly in the attic, safe for the time being from the Population Police, who eradicate such ""shadow children."" Although he is protected, Luke is unhappy in his radical isolation, rereading a few books for entertainment and eating in a stairwell so he won't be seen through the windows. When Luke spies a child's face in the window of a newly constructed home, he realizes that he's found a comrade. Risking discovery, Luke sneaks over to the house and meets Jen, a spirited girl devoted to bringing the shadow children's plight center-stage, through a march on the White House. Luke is afraid to join her and later learns from Jen's father, a mole within the Population Police, that Jen and her compatriots were shot and killed, and that their murder was covered up. Jen's father also gets a fake identity card and a new life for Luke, who finally believes himself capable of acting to change the world. Haddix offers much for discussion here, by presenting a world not too different from America right now. The seizing of farmlands, untenable food regulations, and other scenarios that have come to fruition in these pages will give readers a new appreciation for their own world after a visit to Luke's.

Book One of Seven




4) "Rumble Fish" by S.E. Hinton

The greaser gangs are no longer where it's at, but S. E, Hinton still can't get over them. At least she has the insight to build this around another kid who can't either--Rusty James, a born down-and-outer Whose self-description ("I ain't never been a particularly smart person") is an understatement. Here Rusty-James, now just "bumming around," is describing events of five or six years back. Even then the gangs had been broken up by dope, but he couldn't help trying to live up to the rep of his older brother, Motorcycle Boy, a kid who engineers his own destruction with such detachment that his sanity can only be debated in metaphysical terms. Rusty-James himself is a lot easier to figure. Sliced up the side in a knife fight, smashed over the head by two muggers, barely ambulatory throughout and always headed for the next confrontation, he is far realer than he has arty right to be. Hinton knows how to plunge us right into his dead-end mentality--his inability to verbalize much of anything, to come to grips with his anger about his alcoholic father and the mother who deserted him, even his distance from his own feelings. Even the luridly symbolic climax--when Motorcycle Boy is shot by a vengeful cop after burglarizing a pet store to liberate the Siamese fighting fish (rumble-fish, to him)--works better than you would suppose. Hinton, on her own turf, is still unbeatable, although she seems to have no more of a future, or even a present, than Rusty-James has. Not to be confused with a nostalgia piece. . . this is a remarkably preserved specimen of rebel-without-a-cause nihilism.









5) "Forgotten Fire" by Adam Bagdasarian

Bagdasarian’s moving story of the little-told horror of the Armenian genocide is based on the recorded account by his great uncle. The narrative follows Vahan Kendarian from age 12 to 16, from a somewhat spoiled and confident school cut-up to a somber and steely young man. He watches as his brothers are shot and his sister takes poison and dies to avoid rape. He is molested himself, and nurses several companions to their deaths. He also builds a sense of his own inner character as he puts on many outward disguises, traveling from one dangerous situation to the next. If the narrative itself seems to wander and stumble through these experiences imparting little sense of direction, it does add to the mood of confusion, despair, and occasional unfounded hope. The lack of contextual material may frustrate some readers (WWI is not mentioned, and the presence of German and Russian military in Turkey not fully explained), but the short foreword does give just enough information to set the scene, and plunges readers, along with Vahan, into a terrifying situation they may not fully comprehend at first. There is very little material available to young readers on this subject. Kerop Bedoukian’s Some of Us Survived (1978) and David Kherdian’s Newbery Honor book The Road from Home (1979) are still in print, but this should find a new and appreciative readership. (Fiction. 12+)




6) "The Sledding Hill" by Chris Crutcher

Eddie’s “high-speed randomness” and habit of blurting outlandish questions at school and church are unappreciated. Within three months, Eddie discovers the bodies of the two most reassuring people in his life: his dad and his best friend Billie. Traumatized, lonely and scared, Eddie elects the safety of mutism. In death, Billie continues to watch over Eddie. Unnerved by this haunting, Eddie turns to the refuge of conservative religion. When his fundamentalist minister tries to enlist Eddie in a crusade to ban a novel from the school, Eddie emails the author requesting a letter to be read at the school board hearing. Enter Crutcher as the author of the banned book . . . a character in his own story. This sly conceit works for Crutcher who disarmingly pokes fun at himself. Weaving together Eddie’s personal survival and his losing battle against censorship, this succeeds by limning its polemics with artful humor. This oft-censored author entertains, inspires, invites intellectual inquiry and concedes well-meaning motives to both sides . . . a lot to pack into a novel, but when did Crutcher ever pack light? (Fiction. 12-16)




7) "Running Loose" by Chris Crutcher

The turbulent, literally trying senior year of Louie Banks of Trout, Idaho, who has worked out vigorously over the summer and is rewarded with a starting place on the eight-man football team and a cheerleader girlfriend, smart and pretty newcomer Becky, who could have any guy in school but walks tight up and asks Louie for a date. Then, with the Trout team aiming for its third straight state championship season, nearby Salmon Lake gets a transfer from California, a black kid named Washington who's a super athlete. Trout's coach lets his team know that ""I want that Washington kid out of the garner Early!""--and that ""the only way you can stop. . . those blacks. . . is to hurt 'em."" So when the two teams meet, Trout's vicious Boomer slams Washington into a bench. Loule protests; the ref and the coach play dumb; and Louie quits the team. There's some fallout at school but his parents and Becky back him up and life goes on . . . until Becky is killed in a car accident and Louie, beside himself, makes another scene by lashing out at the sanctimonious imported preacher at her funeral. Loule never does surrender to the forces of hypocrisy, but his next act of resistance is better calculated, and his last impetuous outburst, embracing his father who is handing out diplomas at graduation, is a more positive one. Meanwhile he achieves some victories in a therapeutic track season: just getting him on the team takes courage and commitment from the young assistant coach, who admired Louie's earlier stand; and Louie goes on to an all-out, prodigious victory over Washington, an all-round winner who is running Louie's event, the two-mile, more-or-less on the side. Loule tells his story with' strong feeling and no crap, as he might say. Perhaps the weakest element in the novel is Becky, a young man's dream of love and sweet reason. But as a dramatic, head-first confrontation with mendacity, fate's punches, and learning to cope, it's a zinger.



Monday, April 4, 2016

New Young Adult Novels of 2016

Need something new and exciting to read? Looking for the next book in the series? Check out this book list...




1) "Truthwitch" by Susan Dennard

Two devoted friends dreaming of independence contend with unfathomable magic and the schemes of empires in this action-packed series opener.

Safiya and Iseult are an unlikely pair. Safi, the hotheaded daughter of an impoverished but noble family, is a Truthwitch, born with the rare ability to tell if someone is telling the truth or lying. Quiet Iseult is a Nomatsi Threadwitch, despised for her ethnic identity but gifted with the ability to perceive the emotions of others as colored threads. When the two friends become fugitives from the law, they decide to flee together, not realizing that Safi’s witchery has already made them targets in a larger political struggle. Dennard (Strange and Ever After, 2014, etc.) jumps from alternate history with zombies to epic fantasy with this new series. Her worldbuilding is impressively detailed, though neither the vaguely European setting nor the magic system breaks much new ground. The cinematic action scenes keep the storytelling brisk, and the rotating third-person narration introduces not only Safi and Iseult, but also Merik, the prince of an impoverished small nation, and Aeduan, a mercenary. The overall characterization is uneven, but readers captivated by the intense friendships and burgeoning romances will probably be happy to overlook the novel’s flaws.

Epic adventure and steamy smooches make for a crowd-pleasing formula. (Fantasy. 13-18)



2) "The Rose and Dagger" by Renee Ahdich

Passion and betrayal; sword fights, spells, and sacrifice; and (of course) a flying carpet—all spill over in this culmination of the lush reimagining of The Arabian Nights that began with The Wrath and the Dawn (2015).

Amid a devastating magical storm, Shahrzad is torn from her beloved Khalid, the cursed caliph of Khorasan. Held captive by her first love and the alliance massing against the reputed “bloodthirsty monster” Khalid, Shahrzad will need all her wits, courage, and stubbornness to break the curse, stop the war, and master her own awakening powers. Ahdieh plunges readers immediately into a complex tangle of political intrigue, dark magic, and twisted relationships with little explanation; various subplots are dropped along the way and other events never clearly explained. But the crowded, scattershot narrative is more than sustained by the heady prose, mixing poetic allusion and trenchant earthiness, redolent of exotic scents and sights and textures. The fairy-tale plotting is grounded in pure, raw emotion: Khalid’s tortured nobility and leashed self-loathing, Shahrzad’s brazen ingenuity and fiery devotion, and every other character’s overflowing shame, rage, compassion, pain, loyalty, frustration, desire, loneliness, guilt, grief, and oily ambition. Above all there is the shattering, triumphant catharsis of love—between man and woman, parent and child, teacher and student, sisters and cousins, friends old and new. In a story about stories, love is “the power to speak without words.”

Thrillingly full of feeling. (Fantasy. 14 & up)

Book Two of Two



3) "A Court of Mist and Fury" by Sarah J. Maas

After the events of A Court of Thorns and Roses (2015), Feyre struggles to pull herself back together while imminent threats loom.

In the months after defeating Amarantha and escaping hellish captivity Under the Mountain, Feyre hasn’t been doing well. She’s drowning in guilt over the prices she paid and unable to escape the feeling that she’s trapped. Tamlin is perhaps coping even worse—he’s consumed by the fear of failing to protect her and in denial. While their physical relationship is mutually pleasurable—and graphically hot—their happily-ever-after fairy-tale wedding is further derailed by Rhysand, the High Lord of the dreaded Night Court, who demands that Feyre fulfill their bargain by coming with him (one week a month). Rhys believes war is coming, and he needs Feyre for his dangerous scheme to win it. As Feyre travels between courts and explores the consequences of her resurrection, she learns more about Prythian, its history, and peoples (including its darkest sides: misogynistic cultures and tensions between High Fae and lesser faeries). Occasionally the characters fall too neatly into wholly good or completely bad boxes, which at its least subtle comes across as manipulative of readers, but the large cast provides relief from Feyre’s deep psychological wounds. The erotically charged lead-up to the romantic storyline’s climaxes (pun intended) adds stakes to the cliffhanger.

Hits the spot for fans of dark, lush, sexy fantasy. (Fantasy. 14 & up)

Book Two of Two



4) "Lady Midnight" by Cassandra Clare

By the Angel, it's a new series from the reigning queen of schmaltzy forbidden love against a backdrop of geysering green ichor.

Five years after the events of City of Heavenly Fire (2014), another generation of Shadowhunters confronts first love despite the sins of their fathers. Emma Carstairs and Julian Blackthorn are 17-year-old parabatai, platonically bonded warrior lifemates, sworn to each other since they were both orphaned at 12. Julian, responsible for his four younger siblings, became grave and adult before his time, while Emma grew reckless and obsessed with revenge. Now a series of occult murders has caught Emma's attention. The resulting chaos is trademark Clare, complete with longing looks, uncannily pretty boys, and snarky banter. No mere love triangles here; the circle of taboo ardor has six participants, all preternaturally lovely and extraordinary fighters, Shadowhunter and faerie both; though most are white and the primary characters straight, at least one is explicitly brown-skinned and two of the secondary members bisexual. It's not just lust and romance driving Emma and Julian; they're positively throbbing with stoically stifled emotions for siblings, their Mexican Nephilim allies, and the long-lost half-faerie Blackthorns. Though uneven, this series opener delivers what's promised: eyes like "doors to another world," "the ocean a mile down from the surface," "an oncoming storm over the ocean," or "the back of a silver spoon."

Fans of Clare's grandiloquence will enjoy the torrid new cast of characters, positively aquiver with secret ardor and murderous zeal. (Urban fantasy. 13-17)




5) "Glass Sword" by Victoria Aveyard

Reborn as the infamous “lightning girl,” Mare struggles to build an army of newbloods to face the murderous new king.

After narrowly escaping the burning city of Naercey, Mare and her friends make their way to a secluded island where her family and the Scarlet Guard lie low. Bruised and beaten, Mare quickly realizes she can’t trust anyone, not even her closest friends—maybe not even family. But Mare has a plan: she’s going to track down the rest of the newbloods—Reds with unknown powers that rival the strongest Silvers’—and build an army. She sets out with those closest to her, including Cal, the now disgraced prince. Feeling incredibly alone, she can’t help but gravitate toward him; they share an ache for the person they both believed Maven to be before he became a treacherous king. As her conviction rises, so does the body count, and it isn’t long before Mare becomes eerily like the killer she’s trying so hard to destroy. Though her friends are disturbed by what she’s become, not even they can stop her now. Her quest is fraught with trials and bloodshed, but the action lags; the traps begin to feel too familiar, and the first-person, present-tense narration spares no detail. Tragedy seems to be a certainty before the end, but the spectacle still packs a surprising punch.

This too-long heroine's journey requires that the next volume provide sufficient fireworks to keep readers invested in the planned four-book series. (Fantasy. 13 & up)

Book Two of Two




6) "Passenger" by Alexandra Bracken

A dedicated violinist finds her life taking a different turn when she learns that she is a time traveler in this series opener.

Etta is 17 and ready to make her musical debut near her home in New York City when she finds herself suddenly catapulted onto a sailing ship in 1776. With her is Sophia, a rival time traveler who explains that the ability runs in families. Etta soon learns that her mother has hidden, somewhere in time, a valuable and dangerous object that, in the wrong hands, could cause catastrophic damage to time. Sadly, Etta herself falls into the wrong hands but agrees to try to find the object, following clues her mother left through time. Fortunately, Nicholas, a biracial former slave, also has the ability, and he joins Etta—but is he working with her or against her? Never mind his motive, however, because the two eventually fall in love. Bracken keeps pages turning with her descriptions of the different destinations the couple explores, including 1940 London and 1685 Angkor. Nicholas, a sailor who dreams of owning his own ship, speaks modern English perhaps too well, but his reactions to technology such as electricity and buses ring fairly true. The author places more focus on suspense than on romance, which she develops slowly. Already lengthy, the book ends with a cliffhanger and clearly more to come.

Long but intriguing, and sometimes exciting—the payoff is in the future. (Fantasy. 12-18)



7) "The Raven King" by Maggie Stiefvater

A group of Virginia teenagers finally finds a long-buried Welsh king in this conclusion to the four-part Raven Cycle.

A demon has infected the magical forest, Cabeswater, killing Ronan's mother, Aurora, and threatening Ronan's brother, Matthew, as well as Ronan and maybe the whole world—Gansey knows what he has to do. It's all been foretold, and readers have been waiting for it since Blue saw him on the corpse road in quartet opener The Raven Boys (2012). For three out of four novels, Stiefvater combined extraordinary magic and visceral reality in a way that felt entirely true. Here, the magic scatters in all directions, and too little of it makes sense. The characters—Ronan, Gansey, long-dead Noah, Blue Sargent, newcomer Henry, and especially Adam—are as multidimensional and fully realized as ever; Ronan and Adam's budding romance is beautifully told. The writing sings—each sentence, each paragraph marvelously wrought. Yet at the point where the story needs to make the most sense, it makes the least, prophecy and magics piling up on one another in a chaotic, anticlimactic climax. The ending feels trivial, almost mocking the seriousness of the rest of the quartet.

Stiefvater couldn't write a bad book, and this isn't one, but it is a disappointment after years of glorious buildup. (Fantasy. 14 & up)