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MOLLY'S MOON MISSION

What better role model than a bug with the right stuff to make her dreams come true?

Molly the moth goes where no moth has gone before.

The back of a closet is too small to hold Molly’s yen for adventure, and so she dons a paper helmet and blasts off past her skeptical mom toward that bright light in the sky—which turns out to be a light bulb. “The moon is much bigger and much further away,” says a fly. “Too far for a little mite like you.” Oh yeah? Onward and upward! Past the street light and its equally discouraging spider, past the dizzying lighthouse, all the way to the “biggest, brightest, farthest light she could see” in the night sky. That would indeed be the moon…where she helps two astronauts (one white, one a person of color) gather samples and make dust angels. In return they give Molly both a lift home and a genuine mission patch. In his illustrations, Beedie goes for cuteness over verisimilitude by outfitting his insect astronaut with long lashes, a hair bow, and wings that look more decorative than functional. Readers accustomed to the dismissiveness of their elders will cheer as, despite all distractions Molly achieves her goal at last, triumphantly taking that one small step. She takes the next step too, going on in a final scene, after her mom (who also rises to the occasion) proudly welcomes her back, to prepare her younger sibs for flights of their own.

What better role model than a bug with the right stuff to make her dreams come true? (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: May 19, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5362-1016-3

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Templar/Candlewick

Review Posted Online: March 28, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2020

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CARPENTER'S HELPER

Renata’s wren encounter proves magical, one most children could only wish to experience outside of this lovely story.

A home-renovation project is interrupted by a family of wrens, allowing a young girl an up-close glimpse of nature.

Renata and her father enjoy working on upgrading their bathroom, installing a clawfoot bathtub, and cutting a space for a new window. One warm night, after Papi leaves the window space open, two wrens begin making a nest in the bathroom. Rather than seeing it as an unfortunate delay of their project, Renata and Papi decide to let the avian carpenters continue their work. Renata witnesses the birth of four chicks as their rosy eggs split open “like coats that are suddenly too small.” Renata finds at a crucial moment that she can help the chicks learn to fly, even with the bittersweet knowledge that it will only hasten their exits from her life. Rosen uses lively language and well-chosen details to move the story of the baby birds forward. The text suggests the strong bond built by this Afro-Latinx father and daughter with their ongoing project without needing to point it out explicitly, a light touch in a picture book full of delicate, well-drawn moments and precise wording. Garoche’s drawings are impressively detailed, from the nest’s many small bits to the developing first feathers on the chicks and the wall smudges and exposed wiring of the renovation. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-20-inch double-page spreads viewed at actual size.)

Renata’s wren encounter proves magical, one most children could only wish to experience outside of this lovely story. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: March 16, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-593-12320-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Schwartz & Wade/Random

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2021

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IMPOSSIBLE CREATURES

From the Impossible Creatures series , Vol. 1

An epic fantasy with timeless themes and unforgettable characters.

Two young people save the world and all the magic in it in this series opener.

When tall, dark-haired, white-skinned Christopher Forrester goes to stay with his grandfather in Scotland, he ventures to the top of a forbidden hill and discovers astonishing magical creatures. His grandfather explains that Christopher’s family are guardians of the “way through” to the Archipelago, where the Glimourie Tree grows—the source of glimourie, or the world’s magic. Black-haired, olive-skinned Mal Arvorian, a girl from the Archipelago, is being pursued by a murderer, and she asks Christopher for help, launching them both on a wild, dangerous journey to discover why the glimourie is disappearing and how to stop it. Together with a part-nereid woman, a ratatoska, a dragon, and a Berserker, they face an odyssey of dangerous tasks to find the Immortal, the only one who can reverse the draining of magic. Like Lyra and Will from Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials, Mal and Christopher sacrifice their innocence for experience, meeting every challenge with depthless courage until they finally reach the maze at the heart of it all. Rundell throws myriad obstacles in her characters’ way, but she gives them tools both tangible (a casapasaran, which always points the way home, and the glamry blade, which cuts through anything) and intangible (the desire “to protect something worth protecting” and an “insistence that the world is worth loving”). Final art not seen.

An epic fantasy with timeless themes and unforgettable characters. (map, bestiary) (Fantasy. 10-16)

Pub Date: Sept. 10, 2024

ISBN: 9780593809860

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: May 30, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2024

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