A New Kind of Wild by Zara Gonzalez Hoang

Ren lived on the edge of a National Forest in Puerto Rico. “His days were filled with green and dirt and rocks and mud.” His days were also filled with rich imaginative play and his nightly dreams filled with endless possibilities. When Ren and his mother move to the city, Ren can no longer feel the magic or the wild. Even surrounded by people, Ren is lonely.

Ren’s upstairs neighbor Ava loves the city and shares with Ren all the things that bring her joy. But it is a bit overwhelming for Ren and he cannot feel the magic. When they next meet up, Ren explains what he misses about his wild. This helps Ava understand and she takes him to the basement and the roof to share with him a new different kind of wild.

A New Kind of Wild is a perfect read for youngsters experiencing a move to a new environment or loneliness due to change.

Emmy Noether: The Most Important Mathematician You’ve Never Heard Of, by Helaine Becker and Kari Rust

With persistence and dedication to her field, Emmy Noether was a pioneer in mathematics during a time in history when gender norms excluded women from such studies.

The book delves into a number of very intense topics including stereotypical woman’s behavior, discrimination, the Nazi rise in Europe and and anti-semitism. It also tries to explain extremely complex mathematical concepts in a way that elementary school students can understand. The scope of the book is so broad that none of significant ideas are addressed too deeply. The big takeaway is that Emmy Noether was a remarkable, yet unrecognized woman who overcame a lot of challenges. Her amazing mind and unique thinking in the area of mathematics forever impacted how our greatest minds think about cutting edge science and math concepts.

STEM biography collections that tend to be heterogeneous and this title about Emmy Noether will provide enrichment and diversity.

A Place at the Table by Saadia Faruqi & Laura Shovan

A Place at the Table is told from two voices in clearly marked alternating chapters. Sara and her family are Muslim Pakistani immigrants. Her chapters are written by Saadia Faruki who is a Pakistani immigrant herself and her children’s experiences are reflected in Sara. Elizabeth’s Jewish-American father is married to her British mother. Her chapters are written by Laura Shovan whose personal story is similar. The story is told with intersections of faith, family, food, and friendship. Issues touched on in the book include: not fitting in; judging and being judged on appearance; death of a family member; a parent’s depression; and family financial struggles. These personal struggles take place in the framework of the first year of middle school for both girls and the first year of public school for Sara.
The authors’ personal experiences add depth to their characters. The story provides an appropriate amount of tension and conflict. The ending is satisfying. The book includes a recipe and the authors’ websites provide a few more, Saadia Faruqi also has posted an “Educator’s Guide.” I highly recommend this pleasure-to-read book.

The Girl who Speaks Bear by Sophie Anderson

Yanka is looking for the story of where she came from. Who were her true parents? Why did they leave her out in the wild forest? Yanka loves the woman, her Mamochka, who found her and raised her as her own, but still there are questions.

The story is set in and around a village on the edge of a frozen forest. Yanka enjoys when Anatoly – the woodsman ventures out of the forest, stops by Mamochka’s house, and tells her tales that are true and partly true. Mamochka puts no store in these fairy tales, but Yanka does. Yanka, ” ‘ I feel the pull of the forest, stronger than ever before. Somewhere, deep in the dark between the trees, hides the truth of my past.’ ” (11) The morning after the Winter Festival, Yanka wakes with the legs of a bear! “Something about me has changed, beyond just my legs. Something deep inside. The thought is both exciting and nerve-racking, because although understanding animals could be wonderful, and all this change might help me discover the story of my past, I don’t know what it means for my future.” ( 60-61)

Yanka sets her mind to discover the answers to all of her questions by going into the forest. There the real fairy tale begins. Her bear senses make Yanka extremely alert to her surroundings. Wolves talk to her and she understands them. Yanka reveals to a wolf she possess one of its claws from long ago. How can that be? But, it was a part of one of Anatoly’s tales. Soon, other parts of Anatoly’s tales are revealed as true.

Yanka finds the story of her family. Yanka, also, finds that family is all about who you care for and the people you love.

Sophie Anderson has sprinkled eleven of Anatoly’s short tales throughout the book. They include a curse, a castle, a father who turns into a bear, a Yaga (witch) with a house that walks on giant chicken legs, and a dragon. Fairy tales within a fairy tale.

Carmen Sandiego endangered operation: chase your own caper by Sam Nisson

Super thief turned “good guy” Carmen Sandiego is out to stop VILE make a fortune by stealing extremely rare or endangered species to a private collector. What makes this book extra fun for the reader is being given choices to make as to how the story turns out in the end. I tried over 28 scenario combinations as to whether or not I would be helping Carmen Sandiego save the animals or whether I would be helping VILE sell the animals to the private collector. Each scenario kept my attention and wanted me to keep trying other possilibities.

This book just proves there is more than one way to end a story.

Every Body Looking

Dance is something that has been in Ada’s bones since her birth. She could saunter across the floor of her home much easier as a little girl than when she matures because Ada’s life becomes one of inner turmoil, which reaches a breaking point while in the fall of her freshman year at college. Flipping between a narrative of her college life and flashbacks of various influential times in her childhood, readers are introduced to different aspects of Ada. She has been obedient to her deeply religious father. She has tried vehemently to show her self-centered, unequipped mother that she will always love her. She has dealt with her own inner body image demons as well as teen awkwardness and school hazing. She has witnessed the love in her Nigerian culture and its clashes with contemporary America. When given the opportunity to attend a Historically Black College, Ada leaves her father behind, but she won’t be able to leave her past. And it’s her past that will shape her future — to choose to dance or not to dance. Candice Iloh writes with tension that matches Ada’s strife. Because the novel is in verse, the plotline clips along despite its jolts between settings. Some readers will devour this in one sitting while others will slowly enjoy its introspection. Highly recommended for high school and public libraries.

Mike

 Mike by Andrew Norriss is a fictional story about a tennis prodigy named Floyd going through a journey of self-discovery with a mysterious boy named Mike, someone that only Floyd seems to be able to see. It is a book that every reader can connect to in some way or another, and is a genuine and heartwarming story. The plot was compelling and introspective, allowing the reader to see deeply into Floyd’s consciousness and connect it to their own. While the development of Floyd’s character was above-average there could have been more in aspects of his character’s story, including but not limited to his time with his grandma, his relationship with his parents, and his time studying marine biology. The story leaves the reader wanting more, but also with a new sense of understanding of themselves despite the concise nature of the book. The sweet and honest character of Floyd and the ending of the book will leave readers with their hearts warm and content at seeing his internal conflict resolved, and readers will find themselves devoted to the outcome of Floyd’s story. Mike is a book that is great for all readers, but especially for readers in high school or later who find or have found themselves facing big life decisions and are looking for a quick and lighthearted read. — Reviewed by Sam, CHS Student and voracious reader.

We Are Not Free

We Are Not Free by Traci Chee is a powerful, poetic historical fiction novel for young adult readers. This book goes through the perspectives of many Japanese-American teenagers starting in 1942, during World War II, as they are forced by the American government to leave their neighborhoods for camps, complete loyalty forms, and join the army. I really liked the variety of perspectives in this book, and through those different perspectives, you are able to see how different people deal with their situation. Some are consumed by anger, some try to look upon it as positively as possible, and many different reactions in between. If I had one criticism of this book, it would be that the characters can be a little hard to follow at times, since some characters have a real name and a nickname, and it switches to a completely new perspective every chapter. The way the book is laid out, and the perspectives of teenagers around our age, makes this book far more relatable and interesting than many others in the historical fiction genre. I think fans of historical fiction will definitely enjoy this book, and I encourage anyone who is not a fan to also try it, as it is non-traditional and refreshing. Fans of diverse novels and stories will love this book, as it provides many different perspectives from a group of people heavily discriminate against in America. This book is an intense look at what Japanese-American teens and their families had to go through during World War II and is sure to stir up many emotions for readers. I highly recommend this book. – Reviewed by Avian, CHS Student and voracious reader.

Our Favorite Day of the Year by A.E. Ali, illus. by Rahele Jomepour Bell

What is your favorite day of the year? Is it a holiday? Your birthday? The first day of school? Musa’s teacher’s favorite holiday is the first day of school. He and his new classmates wonder why because there are so many other great days of the year! They each have their own favorite day: Eid, Rosh Hashanah, Las Posadas, and Pi Day. As we follow along in the book, Ms. Gupta (their teacher) invites each student to introduce their own favorite day of the year to their classmates. Together with their families, they bring in food and decorations and tell share with their friends the joys of their favorite days.

As you follow these four new friends on their journey sharing with each other and their classmates, you are reminded how sharing small or big parts of ourselves can help create lasting memories and friendships. This is a perfect back to school book that shows how we may all start out differently, but in the end, we share in the togetherness that is a classroom community.

In addition to a wonderful story of friendship and the beginning of the school year, this book is exquisitely illustrated and has fantastic end papers.

You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson

“High school is complicated, and the lines of demarcation that The Breakfast Club said divided us aren’t quite so clean-cut…..But there’s still those outliers. The people who are everywhere but fit nowhere. People who are involved but not envied — present but imperfect — so the scrutiny pushes them out of the race. People like me.”

Liz Lighty is Black in a mostly-White high school. She’s smart and driven and fatherless and now motherless. She’s poor and she’s musical and she rocks at community service. Oh, and when she meets the new girl, Mack, she realizes she’s queer.

A high school senior, Liz knows exactly what she wants: she wants to attend her mother’s alma mater, Pennington College, play in their orchestra and go on to medical school. With her excellent grades and extra-curricular activities, she’s confident she’ll get the scholarship needed to make her dreams a reality. But when she doesn’t get the scholarship she had counted on, there’s only one thing to do: run for prom queen and earn the generous scholarship for “outstanding service and community engagement.” As an outlier, what are Liz’s chances of rising to the top of the 25 girls in the run for prom queen? Does the title of the book give away the ending, or set the reader up to wish good things could happen to good people? This book tackles tough teenage angst in a book that is a laugh a page.