Book reviews contributed by participating librarians throughout the Santiago Library System

Monday, December 22, 2008

A Man for all Season: The Life of George Washington Carver, by Stephen Krensky


Illustrated by Wil Clay
Rating: Recommended
HarperCollins, 2008, $17.00
ISBN: 978-0060278861
Age/Grade Level: 6-9 years (content may appeal to children over 9)



This inspirational biography of George Washington Carver focuses on his continuous search for learning from his boyhood days examining plants on his Uncle Moses' farm to his student days at Iowa Agriculture College.


When George graduated in 1894, he was recognized as a promising botanist. The theme of the story emphasizes his endless curiosity, and his passion for sharing his knowledge with others. He will be remembered for his work as a professor at Tuskegee Institute and for developing multiple uses for the peanut.


Every page of this book enriches the reader's understanding of this remarkable man. The beautiful illustrations effectively capture the emotions and character of Carver.


Reviewer: Jane Yarbrough, Library Consultant

Magic in the Margins: A Medieval Tale of Bookmaking, by W. Nikola-Lisa


Illustrated by Bonnie Christensen
Rating: Very Good
Houghton Mifflin, 2007, $17.00
ISBN: 978-0618496424
Age/Grade Level: 6-9 years



A Middle Ages Tale of a young orphan named Simon, whose education fell to Brother William, a monk who worked in the monastery's scriptorium. Simon learned how to make parchment, cure quill pens and grind pigments to paint, but most of all he wanted to draw pictures on his own.

The young apprentice is challenged by Father Anselem to use both skill and vision, and most of all his imagination. "Begin by capturing mice," directs the good Father. These mysterious words send Simon on a mission that leads to his understanding of how great artists are not those who merely copy pictures, but create wonderful images from their imaginations.

The text is framed in decorative illustrations resembling those found in the early illuminated manuscripts. These pages should surely motivate the young artist to try creating his own illuminated story. The afterword provides useful information about this period.

Reviewer: Jane Yarbrough, Library Consultant

Baseball Treasures, by Stephen Wong


Photographs by Susan Einstein
Rating: Very Good
Smithsonian/HarperCollins, 2007, $17.89
ISBN: 978-0061144738
Age/Grade Level: 7-12 years

View this book on Amazon

If you love baseball, enjoy collecting baseball cards and want to learn some fascinating stories about the sport since its early days, this book is for you. The more than 100 photographs bring to life the champions of the game and fill the pages with memorabilia of caps, balls, bats and players' jerseys. A chapter on the World Series captures the excitement of games gone by.

Stephen Wong, a devoted collector of baseball trearues, share with his readers his early interest in baseball and the culminating results in the Wong Family Archives Collection for everyone to enjoy.
Reviewer: Jane Yarbrough, Library Consultant

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Bear's Picture, by Daniel Pinkwater


Rating: Very Good
Houghton Mifflin, 2008, $16.00
ISBN: 978-0618759231
Age/Grade Level: preschool


View this book on Amazon


This is a simple story about a bear who wants to paint a picture. Along come “two fine, proper gentlemen” who keep telling the bear that his picture doesn’t look like anything. But of course, the bear doesn’t mind because at the end he likes his picture anyway. This is a great choice for storytime as the text is short and sweet. The pictures are colorful and engaging and children will enjoy trying to decipher what the bear is painting as the story moves along. It’s also a good choice for teaching children the importance of being unique and appreciating their own creations. Overall, it’s a good picture book that will undoubtedly find plenty of readers in the children’s collection.



Reviewer: Sarah Stimson, Orange County Public Library/Irvine University Park


The Trouble Begins at 8: A Life of Mark Twain in the Wild, Wild West, by Sid Fleischman


Rating: Marginal
Greenwillow, 2008, $18.99
ISBN: 978-0061344312
Age/Grade Level: ages 9 to 12


This biography of Mark Twain was written by a Newbery medalist and generally received good reviews. It should be a sure selection. However, the unappealing writing style and seeming contradictions cited throughout the book make it a marginal choice for the library’s collection. Fleischman’s prose is tedious and unduly verbose. There is very little flow and children would find the text very difficult to follow. Although extensively and thoroughly cited, it seems as though the author constructed this entire book around a random selection of quotations that he found in other works. He is extremely subjective in certain parts of the book taking far too much artistic liberty- an act that he later tries to defend. (p.177) But the most glaring problem with the book is that it is full of contradications. For example, Fleischman states that Twain became depressed and gloomy near the end of his life. “His bleak view of life became as frozen and fixed as the north star”. (p.171) But less than a page later he writes that “Twain was never able to abandon his gift for laughter.”
Overall, the book does not capture the essence of Twain’s life or his works. The prolix descriptions will turn away young and old readers alike. The only redeeming qualities to this biography are wonderful illustrations, a very good timeline, and a chapter that includes one of Twain’s stories, “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County”.

Reviewer: Sarah Stimson, Orange County Public Library/Irvine University Park

Monday, December 15, 2008

The Adventures of Sir Lancelot the Great, by Gerald Morris


Rating: Recommended
Houghton Mifflin, 2008, $15.00
ISBN: 978-0618777143
Age/Grade Level: ages 9 and up


Chivalry is not dead! The defender of Arthurian tales, Sir Lancelot, endures, slashing one heck of an enjoyble read. The Adventures of Sir Lancelot the Great is a hero's quest, beginning when newly knighted Lancelot leaves home pursuing honor, nobility and the "shiniest armor in all the world." Amusing in its tales, with a hint of Monty Python for children, the Sire doth make a reader contented. Gerald Morris writes with especially good command over dialogue and Aaron Renier's illustrations complete the good show. Recreants aside, purveyors of a good tale will enjoy this tale to the hilt.


Reviewer: Rebecca Porter, Orange County Public Library/Laguna Beach branch

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Hate That Cat, by Sharon Creech


Rating: Recommended
Joanna Cotler, 2008, $16.89
ISBN: 978-0061430930
Age/Grade Level: ages 9 and up



Grief's sting is still palpable in Sharon Creech's Hate That Cat, an appropriate sequel to Love That Dog. The main character, Jack, continues his poetic bildungsroman with room 204's Miss Stretchberry. A critical uncle, a hearing-impaired mother, a nasty cat, and a summons to love another animal provide grist for his self-expressive poetry. What is to "love, love, love" about this gem of a book is its real and raw look at death and the pain that follows loss. Poetry provides a nice vehicle for the call to love again. The question is not whether to read this book, but how much time to allow between reading the two Creech companion books.


Reviewer: Rebecca Porter, Orange County Public Library/Laguna Beach branch

Amandina, by Sergio Ruzzier


Rating: Very Good
Roaring Brook Press, 2008, $16.95
ISBN: 978-1-59643236-9
Age/Grade Level: Ages 2-6



Amandina was a dog who was shy, so she decided to overcome her shyness and give a performance at a run-down theater. She did a lot of work to get her performance and the theater ready. No one showed up, but she just kept on performing. A little cockroach was in the audience and ran to get his friends, who called all their friends. Amandina kept performing. When the show was over, she got a big surprise. The theater was packed, and her show was a success.


The pictures are cute, although the little dog, Amandina, doesn't look much like a dog. It's a colorful, nice story.


Reviewer: Kim Bell, Orange County Public Library/Cypress Branch

The Cobbler's Holiday, or Why Ants Don't Wear Shoes, by Musharraf Ali Farooqi


Illustrated by Eugene Yelchin
Rating: Very Good
Roaring Brook Press, 2008, $16.95
ISBN: 978-1-59643234-5
Age/Grade Level: Ages 4-8

Ants need shoes for every foot. Thirty shoes per ant. One day, the shoe cobbler for the ant shoes took a vacation and never returned. The ants were always walking and dancing and wore out their shoes quickly. A red ant changes their minds about wearing shoes. A cute picture book for ages 4-8.


Reviewer: Kim Bell, Orange County Public Library/Cypress Branch

Monday, December 8, 2008

Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World, by Jane Yolen


Rating: Very Good
Illustrated by Christine Joy Pratt
Charlesbridge, 2008, $18.95
ISBN: 97858089131
Age/Grade Level: Ages 9-12

View this book on Amazon


This is an informative book covering women pirates from every country starting very early in history. Illustrations in a gothic style add to the telling of successful and unsuccessful ventures by women pirates. This book is not necessarily designed to be read in one sitting, but can be put aside and returned to later. I would recommend it for grades 5 and up. Some of the content may not be understood by a 4th grader for the most part.


Reviewer: Katherine Robinson, Richman Elementary School


Hairy Tarantulas


Rating: Very Good
Series: No Backbone! The World of Invertebrates
Bearport, 2009, $21.28
ISBN: 1597167045
Age/Grade Level: Ages 9-12



A very informative book about tarantulas, their habitat, physical characteristics, and eating habits, with colorful photographs. This would be a great read-aloud for 3rd graders. It is leveld at 4.2 by Renaissance Learning.

Reviewer: Katherine Robinson, Richman Elementary School

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Bird Lake Moon, by Kevin Henkes

Rating: Very Good
HarperCollins, 2008, $16.89
ISBN: 9780061470783
Age/Grade Level: Gr. 3-5


Nobody loves Mitch. Not his father, who left his mom for another woman. Not his mother, who is too busy to hide her true emotions. Not his grandparents, who are forced to provide a temporary place for Mitch and his mom, by the Bird Lake.

Spencer is depressed. He’s fed up with his younger sister’s “weird” behavior, and upset by his mother’s paranoia, ever since they made a trip to the Bird Lake. The thing is that Spencer lost his elder brother, Matty, by drowning in Bird Lake several years ago and around his parents, Spencer is trying to be sensitive.

It is Jasper, Spencer’s dog, who brought these two frustrated boys together. Will the new friendship help these two frustrated boys cope with their struggle?

Caldecott medalist Kevin Henkes is well known for the mouse characters he created in Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse and Wemberly Worried. Now older children will enjoy his latest novel that is full of intriguing emotions.


Reviewer: Tracy Li, Orange County Public Library/Laguna Niguel Branch

Twenty Heartbeats, by Dennis Haseley

Illustrated by Ed Young
Rating: Recommended
Roaring Brook Press, 2008, $16.95
ISBN: 9781596432383
Age/Grade Level: Preschool-Gr. 3



This is a philosophically enriched story by critically-acclaimed author Dennis Haseley and Caldecott Medalist Ed Young. In ancient China, a wealthy man asked the master of horse painting, Homan, to paint his favorite horse. He waited year after year, until his hair turned gray, just like the mane of his horse. Running out of patience, the wealthy man went to Homan, demanding a finished art piece. He could not believe his eyes when Homan finished the portrait in twenty heartbeats, right in front of him. Infuriated, the wealthy man followed Homan into his studio, trying to reason why he had to wait for so many years. There, he finally understood why Homan's masterpiece took so many years of waiting.

Accompanied by Young's exquisitely layered collage work, this is a story with profound meaning that is up to your interpretation.


Reviewer: Tracy Li, Orange County Public Library/Laguna Niguel Branch

The Human Body, by Seymour Simon


Rating: Very Good
Henry Holt & Co, 2008, $15.99
ISBN: 9780060555412
Age/Grade Level: Preschool-Gr. 2



From the prolific author of juvenile science books, Seymour Simon, and the Smithsonian Institution comes this fundamental yet comprehensive book on the human body. Young readers will learn about the twelve major systems that we are born with, how they function, and what they look like. The nice collection of photographs and diagrams is a good addition to the text.

This book can be paired with David Macaulay’s The Way We Work, for curious readers who want to explore in depth, the human body.


Reviewer: Tracy Li, Orange County Public Library/Laguna Niguel Branch

Monday, December 1, 2008

The Juliet Club, by Suzanne Harper

Rating: Additional
HarperTeen, 2008, $17.99
ISBN: 9780061366918
Age/Grade Level: Teen


Kate Sanderson is the daughter of a rational law professor and a passionate Shakespeare scholar. When she wins a contest to study Romeo and Juliet in Verona, it's a great chance forher to experience romance in the setting of one of the most romantic stories ever. Which would be great--except Kate was cruelly dumped and has given up on romance forever. Then she meets Giacomo.


What sounds like a pretty interesting premise is actually not quite as interesting. The writing is good; however, it seems that the characters lack depth and ultimately they aren't very compelling. The romances between the characters seem forced, and the reader may find it hard to connect with any of the characters, even Kate. As much as I wanted to like this story, I could not.


I tthink this story ends up suffering from the "trying to do to much"s. Read it if you LOVE Romeo and Juliet, but for a better romantic comedy, you can read Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew, or try Suzanne Harper's first book, The Secret Life of Sparrow Delaney.

Reviewer: Shirley Ku, Fullerton Public Library