TERRIBLE HORSES
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
A younger sibling has an older—and much cooler—sister. “I want her friends to be my friends. I want her things to be my things,” the child tells us. But “she wants her friends to be her friends. She wants her things to be her things.” When the two fight, the younger child retreats and writes “stories of terrible horses.” They say horses are the most difficult thing for an artist to draw, but if that’s the case, then no one told Wilson-Max. His horses careen across the page in magnificent colors, hooves blazing, hair whipping in the wind, always leaving one small pony behind. After another fig ..read more
Visit website
LAND MARKS
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
When university professor Rebecca Walton happens to recognize former student Sonya’s image as it flashes across the screen during a nighttime news report, she recalls the events of the previous two years when she, Sonya, and three other students took part in an anti-fracking environmental movement. The four students were among the few who signed up for her new Eco-Literature class in 2012; the newly designed course was shaped by their interests, which eventually led them to take their research into the field and engage in activism. Walton was formerly known as activist “Elizabeth Stone, a res ..read more
Visit website
ONE LAST WORD
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
Putting it bluntly, Sara Chae is exhausted. Though she’s overworked and undervalued at her job, she knows she can bring something new and exciting to the tech world. If only her sexist bosses would listen to her pitch for One Last Word, an app that will send out your final messages to the most important people in your life after you die. When Sara doesn’t get the support she’s hoping for, she decides to take her idea elsewhere, working on the finishing details for One Last Word from her cramped living space in her sister’s walk-in closet. One drunken night, she drafts her own messages to the ..read more
Visit website
LO SIMPSON STARTS A REVOLUTION
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
Dr. Who superfan Lo Simpson, 12, would rather be planning her next cosplay than shopping for bras or giggling over boys. Unfortunately, that’s all her longtime best friend, Jazz, seems to want to do—that and infiltrate the ultra-popular It Girls clique, even if it means leaving Lo behind. Unsure of who she is without Jazz, Lo has to find her own way through the maze of middle school. A mutual love of comics and Dr. Who connects Lo to a new crowd, where she feels like she can be her authentic self. With their support, Lo finds her voice and learns how to use it, whether that means breaking up ..read more
Visit website
MY VIETNAM, YOUR VIETNAM
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
Though some historians argue that the separation of North Vietnam and South Vietnam was born in the wake of World War II, that schism really goes back centuries, including the struggle for suzerainty between Trinh nobles in the north and the Nguyen aristocracy in the South. “The north was more disciplined and cautious,” writes the elder Vo, “while the south was more individualistic and entrepreneurial.” A southerner, he became a doctor and was drafted into the military. With the fall of the Saigon government in 1975, he became a refugee and fled to the U.S., where he had to start life anew an ..read more
Visit website
I HEARD
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
An adult invites a group of Black children—diverse in terms of skin tone and hairstyle—to gather around and listen. The story begins with Mother Africa and extends into a rich tapestry of ancestry, adversity, and accomplishments. With vibrant imagery and punchy rhyming verse, the book tells readers of African royalty and warriors, trans-Atlantic enslavement, the bravery of those who worked toward liberation, and community organizing and hard-fought institutional change. Contemporary figures appear: President Barack Obama, voting rights activist Stacey Abrams, and Supreme Court Justice Ketanji ..read more
Visit website
CHURRO STAND
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
Lucía, who narrates, helps Mamá make treats that will be covered in cinnamon sugar and served with chocolate sauce. Mamá rolls a suitcase filled with churros as the family travels to Manhattan, where they’ll sell their wares from a pushcart. Mamá joins a diverse community of street vendors who run newsstands and sell a variety of items. Ice cream proves more popular on this hot day, so the children draw sidewalk chalk directions to lure customers to the stand; after a storm washes away the chalk, Mamá joins forces with the ice cream vendor to create delicious churro sundaes. This tale of a s ..read more
Visit website
IF LIN CAN
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
“Have you ever been told that you can’t?” With growing rhetorical force, Ho asks readers if they’ve ever felt misunderstood or disheartened. “You’re not alone,” he reassures them. “Have you ever turned on a television or opened a newspaper and discovered someone who looked like you?” The author goes on to show how Lin shrugged off naysayers and those who “made fun of his size, his race, and his game.” As a professional player, he was cut from his first team and continued to warm benches. He persevered, however, until, one February night in 2012, he was at last given the opportunity to show hi ..read more
Visit website
TEAM UNIHORN AND WOOLLY
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
Raina the rhino, Shu the horseshoe crab, and Nigel the narwhal are at Burlap Beach when a chunk of ice containing a woolly mammoth washes ashore. Team Unihorn, as they later dub themselves (as Shu says, a horseshoe crab’s tail definitely counts as a horn), break Woolly and some prehistoric krill out just in time. A massive storm is on the way, along with a blood supermoon eclipse. The moon’s rays endow Raina, Shu, and Nigel with superpowers but leave Woolly unchanged. The storm has left the beach a mess, so Team Unihorn use their abilities to help, but they only make things worse. Meanwhile ..read more
Visit website
IN THE SHADOW OF LIBERTY
Kirkus Reviews
by
2d ago
“Since its inception, immigrant detention has been an affront to basic ideals of justice and compassion,” writes Stanford historian Minian, author of Undocumented Lives. Even if the numbers of detained didn’t change much from Obama to Trump to Biden, the practice of separating families and detaining children apart from their parents was employed more vigorously in that middle term than on either side. The author chronicles how draconian measures such as imprisonment without due process and even torture have been in place since the 1980s, used as an instrument of policy “by design” to deter im ..read more
Visit website

Follow Kirkus Reviews on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR