Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 2.8 • Interest Level: 4-7 • AR Points: 2.0 • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Harper Collins • Pages: 249 • Copyright: 2019 • ISBN: 978-0-06-288550-0 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
I am a teacher librarian that now services school libraries for Perma-Bound. I've been reviewing YA books for years and now happy to share my opinions with my colleagues. All non-fiction books are reviewed only if recommended and will not have a rating. Fiction rating guide: : 5 = An absolute must read --- 4 = Very good, highly recommended --- 3 = Enjoyable --- 2 = Passable --- 1 = Don't bother.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 2.8 • Interest Level: 4-7 • AR Points: 2.0 • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Harper Collins • Pages: 249 • Copyright: 2019 • ISBN: 978-0-06-288550-0 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Julian's grandmother, Sara Blum, was a well to do Jewish girl in the southern region of France. Her father a surgeon and her mother a math teacher, she was admittedly spoiled, having everything she wanted, as a single child of two loving parents. France falls to Germany and suddenly life changes as German rule and French law starts herding the Jews and sending them to concentration and work camps. Sara has a false security at her private school, where unexpectedly all the Jewish students are removed. Sara hides, and is almost caught, when Tourteau, a fellow student on crutches disabled from polio, leads her safely out of the school and into his family's barn to hide. In hiding for years, Sara's and Tourteau's relationship grows from one where she teased and mocked him for his disability to one of mutual respect and friendship. While fiction, there is much historical fact and characterizations of real people.
Palacio shows her talent as the graphic artist as well as the author. The line drawings and coloring have a tone that lends itself to the seriousness of the narrative. Palacio provides more detailed explanations of events and terms in a glossary following. She admits to not being Jewish herself, but married to a Jew, and feels it is the responsibility of Jews, and non-Jews alike to remember the story of the Holocaust.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 3.5 • Interest Level: 5-9 • AR Points: 2.0 • Lexile Level: GN440L • Publisher: Random House • Pages: 218 • Copyright: 2019 • ISBN: 978-0-525-64553-5
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 5.3 • Interest Level: 9-12 • AR Points: 7 • Lexile Level: HL800L• Publisher: Harper Teen • Pages: 417 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-06-288276-9 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 2.4 • Interest Level: 4-7 • AR Points: 1 • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Roaring Brook Press • Pages: 223 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-1-250-17111-5 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 4.5 • Interest Level: 3-6 • AR Points: 4 • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Bloomsbury • Pages: 177 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-1-547-60056-4 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Coming home from school, Efrén is surprised to find the house empty. His mother always keeps to a tight schedule, and is very protective of Efrén and his siblings. Worried, Efrén starts looking, but soon finds out his mother has been deported, captured by ICE when interviewing for a job. Efrén and his family's lives are turned upside down. Efrén is now tasked with household duties, caring for his brother and sister, while his father working three jobs, is trying to get his mother back.
Efrén has been taught to not burden others with his problems, and to not trust outsiders, so he doesn't share his problems with his friends, neighbors or teachers. Efrén starts to suffer in school, especially when one of his teachers come down hard on him for his tardiness and missing assignments. He will not reach out to his best friend, David, as he doesn't want his pity. But he does share with Jennifer Huerta, one of the smartest in his class. His relationship with Jennifer comes in conflict with his friend David, as Jennifer and David are running against each other for student body president. In the midst of middle school drama, Efrén just wants his mother back, and is willing to put himself in grave danger to help his father with her return.
This is an important book to be shared. As a middle school teacher, Efrén Divided was painful to read. I was, at one time, one of those unforgiving teachers that didn't accept excuses. Fortunately I changed midway through my career, but the book made clear to me my lack of compassion and understanding. Middle school life, as portrayed by Cisneros (a middle school teacher himself), is accurate. More important, is how the current status of immigrants in America, and the unconscionable way families are being ripped apart is brought to the forefront with a story that is carefully drawn to show the emotional toll, and the price our communities pay for governmental policy that is heartless. What happened to "Give me your tired, your poor...?"
Mark's Book Picks Score: 5
Reading Level: 4.5• Interest Level: 4-7 • AR Points: 6 • Lexile Level: 710L • Publisher: Harper Collins • Pages: 260 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-06-288168-7 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
I Am Every Good Thing is a beautifully illustrated ode to the author's and illustrator's sons and dedicated to Black young men who's lives ended far too early. Told in the first person, the poem expresses everything a young Black man is. From son to father, artist to athlete, a difference maker, a leader, a son, a caregiver, "I am a brother, a son, a nephew, a favorite cousin, a grandson. I am a friend. I am real." Every illustration shows the same love, compassion and importance of the words. The beautiful oil paintings use brushwork that evoke the emotion. A necessary message for young Black men that should not have the imperative that it does today.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 2.0 • Interest Level: P-2 • AR Points: NA • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Penguin • Pages: 32 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-525-51877-8 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4.5
Reading Level: 3.7 • Interest Level: 4-7 • AR Points: 4.0 • Lexile Level: GN530L • Dewey: 921 • Publisher: Penguin • Pages: 256 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-525-55290-8 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Amal Shahid is a teenage boy in New York with a gift for poetry and an artistic talent. He knows the world is unjust and unfair for people of color, especially teenaged boys. Convinced by a friend to play basketball in a newly gentrified, now white neighborhood, Amal goes, against his better judgement. With taunting and racial epithets, a fight breaks out. Amal admits to throwing the first punch, but not the blow that puts a white boy into a coma. A criminal justice system that treats privileged white boys differently, Amal is found guilty of assault, his Black friends take a plea deal, and none of the white boys are charged. He enters the juvenile detention system, innocent of crime, innocent in character. In detention he learns to deal with a heartless system that works to diminish Amal's humanity. Fortunately there are a few who care, who are willing to give Amal the opportunity to expand and express himself through books, words, and art.
Based upon the experiences of Yusef Salaam, one of the Exonerated Five, Ibi Zoboi's free verse is precise, biting, and truthful. The structure of the words in each sentence and on each page adds impact to the meaning. While enough to stand alone, the words are supported by the artwork of Omar Pasha.
While the message is dire, and revealing of the injustice for Black Americans, especially boys, in our justice system, Amal's (and Yusef's) story contains a small glimmer of hope.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4.5
Reading Level: 6.0 • Interest Level: 7-12 • AR Points: NA • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Harper Collins • Pages: 386 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-06-299648-0 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
The deeply personal graphic memoir by Jarret J. Krosoczka, author of the immensely popular Lunch Lady series , is raw, honest, and in no way for the Lunch Lady crowd.
Jarrett doesn't mask the flaws or the deep love he has for his mother, Leslie, and his grandparents, Joe and Shirley, who raised him. He details his life with his mother and the bond they had. She was artistic, talented, and fun loving, but at the early age of thirteen becomes a heroin addict. An addiction that she will never be able to shake. Jarret's mother and grandmother could never get along, but her grandfather did what he could to help Leslie. Leslie is arrested, and Joe decides to take custody of Jarrett before he can become a ward of the state. Life with his grandparents was far from perfect. Shirley had a foul, acerbic mouth with no filter. His grandfather would temper Shirley, but would often come home late, drunk. Jarrett misses his mother immensely. Her letters reveal the love she has for Jarrett, often connecting the one thing they share; their creativity and artistic talent.
Art is what keeps Jarrett afloat and becomes increasingly important to keeping him centered. His grandfather recognizes his talent and sends him to an art class at an art museum. Here he is formally introduced to the history and creating of comic art. It is his art that drives Jarret, and he is determined not to let his talent go to waste, as did his mother. There are moments of joy, life changing experiences, and opportunity to meet family he didn't know he had. Jarrett does face crisis, gets himself into trouble, and deals with self-doubt, but we know how it ends.
Jarrett's art work is loose and evocative of his feelings and mood. Cell borders and speech bubbles are left undefined for purpose. Ink washes vary in tone from light gray to dark, with only rusty spot color throughout. Endpages and chapter dividers use grandma Shirley's favorite pineapple wallpaper, as well as images of letters and other artifacts from Jarrett's life.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4.5 (while non-fiction, I still wanted to rate this book)
I Talk Like a River is an absolutely gorgeous picture book, with a touching, heartfelt, and important story about an experience in the author's youth, dealing with his stuttering. The illustrations by Sidney Smith are breathtaking, and Sidney, if you're reading this, I'd love to purchase some if they are for sale.
The story opens with a young boy waking up and thinking of all the words around him that he can't say. "The P in pine tree grows roots inside my mouth and tangles my tongue." As he gets ready for school, he doesn't say a word. In his classroom, he tries to disappear, but the teacher asks him a question, and the class turns to look at him. Wrought with fear, getting out the words is particularly hard, and he just wants to go home. His father picks him up from school, and after hearing about his son's day, he decides to take him somewhere quiet, to the river. While being with his dad in a quiet place soothes him, he still thinks about his horrible day at school. As he wells up with tears, his father tells him "See how that water moves? That's how you speak." The river becomes a simile for all the words bubbling, churning and crashing in his mouth. The metaphor "I talk like a river." becomes a constant reminder, to keep himself from crying, too keep from not wanting to speak. The next time he goes to school, he stands in front of the class to talk about his favorite place; he talks about the river, and he talks like a river.
The illustrations are artworks in and of themselves. The deep blacks, the simple painterly strokes, the page composition, and the use of blurred images help to illustrate the emotion and pain the young boy feels. The interior gatefold is impressively impactful. Closed, it is very tight on the boys face, eyes closed, sad, with strong back light. Opened it is a gorgeous spread of him in the river with dappled light reflecting off the water's surface.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 5
Reading Level: 2.0 • Interest Level: K-3 • AR Points: NA • Lexile Level: NA • Publisher: Penguin • Pages: 40 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-8234-4559-2 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
A girl and her family, leave their home at the crack of dawn, to avoid the wrath of their sharecropping boss. Headed to the train station with all they can carry, they are traveling north to New York, looking for opportunity. As they are seated in the colored section, the girl sits by the window, watching fields, filled with the labor of sharecroppers picking crops, pass by. She reminisces over the goodbyes from her relatives, her angry Daddy saying No more picking, and her Mama, No more working someone else's land. As they travel from stop to stop, they pass the time playing cards, and the girl reads to her Mama a book given to her by her teacher, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas. As they pass into northern territory, they are no longer required to sit in the colored section of the train car. They move to other parts of the train, where people stare, and motion that they don't want them sitting near them. As they finally pull into Penn Station, stepping onto the streets of New York, she sees the bright lights, tall buildings and stars...their journey has just begun.
The illustrations, done with paper, graphite, paste pencils and watercolor, richly illustrate the text with warmth and compassion. An excellent introduction to sharecroppers and the great migration to the north, looking for hope, freedom and a better life.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 3.5
Reading Level: 4.2 • Interest Level: K-3 • AR Points: 0.5 • Lexile Level: AD1000L • Publisher: Holiday House • Pages: 48 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-0-8234-3873-0 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
The theme here is that everyone and everything matters. The message is communicated with simple phrases and metaphors that are boldly illustrated with a mix of acrylic paint and collage.
The text itself is sparse but meaningful:
Mark's Book Picks Score: 3.5
Reading Level: 2.0 • Interest Level: K-3 • AR Points: NA • Lexile Level: AD310L • Publisher: Simon & Schuster • Pages: 40 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-1-534-42169-1 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
Gene Luen Yang, author of American Born Chinese, has created a unique graphic novel; part memoir, part high school tournament basketball action, and part sport and religion history, with some experiences of racism and prejudice thrown in. The theme that ties it all together is right on the cover, "From Small Steps to Great Leaps."
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 4.6 • Interest Level: K-3 • AR Points: 0.5 • Lexile Level: AD830L • Publisher: Random House • Pages: 40 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-1-524-76828-7 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding
William "Scoob" Lamar was grounded and suspended from school. When G'ma comes by in her new Winnebago, offering Scoob freedom, he jumps at the chance. Scoob and G'ma are now traveling partners that will take them from Georgia through Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and eventually to Mexico. G'ma is retracing a road trip she did with G'pop way back in the 60's. The seemingly innocent road trip becomes an important lesson for Scoob, teaching him the history of Civil Rights, racism, segregation and living under Jim Crow laws. More importantly, he learns of his family history. The difficulty G'ma and G'pop had living as a mixed race couple in the deep south (G'ma's white, G'pop, black), how difficult it was for them to travel (G'ma gives Scoob the green book they traveled with), how G'pop died while incarcerated for jewelry theft, why his father has deep resentment towards G'pop, and why his mother abandoned them when Scoob was an infant. While learning of the past, Scoob discovers the deep-rooted racism that still exists and why his father is so strict with him. A mystery seems to be afoot and Scoob has a lot of questions, questions G'ma keeps avoiding.
A well written, middle level book that cleverly teaches as well as entertains. The story arc is complete with several unexpected twists. A good starting point for discussion on racism, prejudice, and the history of Civil Rights in America.
Mark's Book Picks Score: 4
Reading Level: 5.0 • Interest Level: 3-6 • AR Points: 5 • Lexile Level: 780L • Publisher: Random House • Pages: 227 • Copyright: 2020 • ISBN: 978-1-9848929-7-3 • Available in Perma-Bound Binding