The Great Migration

Thursday, February 13, 2014

What Night Brings by Carla Trujillo




Marci Cruz, 11, is determined, sincere, and funny without meaning to be.  She speaks Spanglish sometimes and makes up her own terms for sex stuff.  Like many kids, she notices how the community treats people who are different and people who ask questions that no one wants to answer.   

Marci and her younger sister, Corin, get frequent beatings from their father.  Their mother is aware, but is blind to his faults.  Marci prays to god to get her father out of her life forever.  She doesn’t go as far as wanting her dad to be dead because she doesn’t want god to think badly of her.  She needs god's help to change her into a boy, which she believes will allow her to live out her attraction to girls.
Although the well-described beatings continue and helpful adults seem to be missing, all is not hopeless. The two girls, Marci and Corin, work together on inventive ways to help their mother come to her senses about their dad.   Marci also manages to get to the library, make a garden, and have a crush.--Joy Ferguson

Joy Ferguson has worked with detained youth as both an outreach librarian and a facility staff member.  She currently serves students as a school librarian  at PS 261 Phillip Livingston School.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Ender’s Game (Graphic novel adaptation)




After having repelled an alien invasion, the International Fleet creates Battle School, a program to train children who show great tactical prowess into becoming military leaders.  The fleet hopes that one trainee can rise above all others and lead the future space armada on a preemptive mission to destroy the invading alien race before they try to invade Earth again. Enter Andrew “Ender” Wiggin who was the third child birthed by the Wiggin family upon request from the government.  Ender is selected to attend Battle School at the age of six. Here he will climb the ranks and become one of the youngest battle commanders in battle school history.  But that is only the beginning. With humanity’s hope resting on Ender’s young shoulders, battle school has to make sure Ender is ready for anything.  They toss the rules and place Ender in every impossible-to-win situation they can. Is Ender the tactical prodigy the fleet has been looking for? Can the fleet finish the training before the aliens invade again? If the human race is to survive, they will have to.

The graphic novel is a stripped down version of the book.  Some of the subplots are missing and character development is limited. The art is very sleek and colorful.  It all adds a nice touch that complements the sci-fi aspects of the book, especially the battle-room combat scenes. I recommend reading the graphic novel along with the book.  Comic book readers should enjoy Ender’s Game. --Claudio Leon

Yost, Christopher, Pasqual Ferry, and Orson S. Card. Ender's Game. New York: Marvel, 2013. Print.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Aphrodite: Goddess of Love by George O'Connor




Hey, my name is George O’Connor, and I’m making a blog tour of the greatest book blogs in the universe to promote my newest book Aphrodite: Goddess of Love, the sixth volume of my ongoing series Olympians, which retells classic Greek myth in graphic novel form. The good folks at What's Good in the Library have forwarded me five interview questions from Belmont library patron Daniel, 15.  As any writer will tell you, there is nothing more intimidating than a big blank page, except for maybe an armored grizzly bear with a grumpy disposition. That’s pretty intimidating, yo.

Daniel: What gave you the idea or made you interested in re-telling the stories of the Olympians?

George: This is a two part question, or rather a two part answer. I was first introduced to Greek mythology when I was in the fourth grade. It made a huge impression on my young mind, as I was suddenly allowed to draw musclemen fighting monsters in school, which is pretty much what I wanted to do anyway and at least now I wouldn’t get yelled at for doing it. From that point on I was obsessed with drawing the gods and monsters of mythology, and did so for years and years. That’s what made me want to retell the stories of the Olympians. As for what gave me the idea to actually retell the stories of the Olympians, my editor Neal Porter  referred to a mutual acquaintance of ours as slobbering like Cerberus the three-headed dog of Hades. I said, something equally geeky back to him about a Cyclops or something and he fixed me with a steely gaze and pulled a book off of his shelf and said “,what if you do a graphic novel retelling the Greek myths, about this big?” In retrospect, it was the sort of thing I should have come up with by myself, but I needed that kernel of inspiration. I went home, wrote Zeus and came back with it and plans for eleven more.


Daniel: Which of the Olympians is your favorite and why?

George: Another two part answer. Hermes is my favorite god, and has been since I was a little kid. I’ve always liked fast characters, like the Flash or Quicksilver from the Avengers, and I always liked the trickster characters who are the smartest guys in the room but always play it for laughs. Hermes was both of those in one. My favorite goddess is Hera, which surprises a lot of people who think of her as a bad guy, but I think that’s such a narrow viewing of her character. Yeah, she persecutes a lot of Zeus’s girlfriends and illegitimate children, but that’s because Zeus is the worst husband in the universe. In my studies I uncovered how she was such a remarkably important divinity to the ancient Greeks that it bums me out how much of that gets lost in modern retellings.

Daniel: Do you believe that all gods and goddesses are equal, or are some of more importance than others?

George: There’s a definite hierarchy at play in the Olympian order. The idea of a big three encompassing Zeus, Hades and Poseidon has been popularized by Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson books, but I think you need to add the other three children of Kronos, Hera, Demeter and Hestia to that upper echelon as well (even though Demeter and Hestia tend to be the ‘forgotten’ Olympians). The second generation, like Ares, Apollo, Hermes, and the rest tend to comprise the second tier of Olympians, though sometimes some second generation gods like Athena seem to be jostling for a position at the top. I would also place Aphrodite, the only Olympian not directly related to Zeus, who essentially married into this family of super-powered lunatics, as a top tier diety. With her control of the powers of love, in her own way, she is the most powerful god on Olympus.

Daniel: Did you always love to write books or was it something you grew to like?

George: I always have loved, and continue to love, to write, but I will say writing is much harder for me than drawing.  Writing has given me a lot more headaches and misery, but  I also get more satisfaction out of a piece of writing that turned out well than anything else I can do.


Daniel: What other books are you planning in publishing? A book on more Olympians? Or on different subjects, like urban, fantasy and biographies?

George: Hopefully, if all goes well, there will be six more books on Olympians. I just turned in the seventh book, Ares: God of War, and that will be followed up by Apollo. I have some picture books, another love of mine coming out from Candlewick Press. My first one, If I Had a Raptor, drops in May. Finally, since writing is so rewarding (yet difficult! So difficult!) I want to write a young reader novel—something that stands more or less entirely on the merit of my words. I’m working on a couple of comedic adventure ideas along those lines, but it’s too early to announce anything else about them.

Thank you, George, thank you Daniel!  --Jessica Fenster-Sparber

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Suckerpunch by David Hernandez




“At the funeral for Oliver’s father, I daydreamed about killing my own.”  So begins Marcus’ narrative of his summer before senior year.  Marcus’ father has abandoned his family and his best friend’s father just committed suicide, setting the stage for Marcus and Oliver’s illicit drug use and desire to escape.  Set in contemporary Cerritos, California, this novel features an attention-grabbing start and gathers steam as Marcus, his brother, and Oliver plan to find and confront Marcus’ dad.  Hernandez’s  use of  fresher imagery and dialogue remain consistent, but the story’s momentum peters out in the last third. This book may appeal to teen male readers ready for conversations about author’s craft.  Suckerpunch pairs interestingly with Last Night I Sang to the Monster on the themes of brotherhood and teen substance abuse, or Fitz on the theme of confronting absent fathers.--Jessica Fenster-Sparber

Hernandez, David.  Suckerpunch.  New York: HarperTeen, 2008.