Wednesday, July 08, 2026
Champions of the Galaxy
June 30, 2026 by Margaret K. McElderry Books
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Kola Adesola lives with his family in London in 2025. He’s been training for a space program for a year after his grandfather Gbadero, an aerospace engineer, has recommended him for a government project. His family struggles with his younger sister Simi’s sickle cell anemia, and she is in the hospital when the world shifts: a spaceship hovers over the Houses of Parliament, and the Onni, from the Ada’En system, announce that they have arrived to save the world. Kola’s space program is canceled, but after the Onni demand that children are to be sent with them to serve as champions and prove humanity’s worth in order to be saved, Kola is picked to represent the UK. Home schooled and a bit anxious, Kola doesn’t want to go, but the Onni have offered new technology as recompense, and he hopes they might have something to save Simi from suffering with her illness. Soon he is whisked away and put into a competitive “pod” with Achan, from South Sudan, Thea, from the US, and Dae Jin, from South Korea.They each have skills and complicated back stories, and fight a bit until they realize that is what the Onni want them to do. They are forced to undergo twelve trials, including one that forces them to eliminate one of the group. They refuse to do this, and the Onni are shocked. Their planet has been destroyed by an organization called the Alliance, and the twenty four remaining members of the society include Eika, the leader, and Thusor, who is in charge of Kola’s pod. The Onni group has been in charge of entertainment on their planet, and their top product was a show that traveled to different planets, arranging similar champion games. When more secrets come out about why they are taking children, and what plans are for Earth, Kola and his group have to use all of their wiles to save the planet. Will they succeed?
Strengths: If middle grade fiction has taught us nothing else, it's that only tweens can save the world. The arrival of the Onni is a new reason for them to become champions, which is a fresh twist. The idea that refugees from another planet are looking at what the residents of Earth have done to the planet and have decided to step in to save them is an interesting one, although after reading Falkner’s 2012 Recon Team Angel books, I know never to trust aliens who want to do something for your own good! Kola is an unlikely hero, which readers of science fiction seem to like, and his pod is a diverse group that is able to learn to work together. There are a few twists and turns that tweens might not expect, and there is a satisfying ending that could possibly lead to a sequel.
Weaknesses: I do not feel good about humanity’s chances of survival if we have to rely on today’s tweens. The message of the book was a bit unclear to me. Reality television is bad? People should learn to get along better? Never trust space aliens? This is more of a “me” problem; younger readers will just enjoy tweens saving the world.
What I really think: This is a good choice for readers who enjoyed science fiction adventures like Johnson’s Aku: Journey to Ibra, Richter's The Star of Moon Village, Brooks’ Nothing Interesting Ever Happens to Ethan Fairmont, or Bradford’s Virtual Kombat series.
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
Time Slip Tuesday- Lily Tripp: Diary of an Accidental Time Traveler
May 12, 2026 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR)
Monday, July 06, 2026
MMGM- Sleepless and Why Do We Sleep?


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Korman, Gordon. Sleepless
Weaknesses: I'm not personally a fan of multiple points of view, so would rather have had this from a third person omniscient perspective, but it wasn't confusing the way it was written. Just a preference.
What I really think: Korman just keeps getting better and better. Faker, Snoop, and Sleepless are probably my three favorite books that he has written, even though Restart will probably be considered his finest work. My condolences to him on the death of his friend, Barry Pekilis, to whom the book is dedicated.
Sunday, July 05, 2026
Just Ask Elsie
June 16, 2026 by Feiwel & Friends
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Elsie is attending a Sunday school class at the Unitarian Universality church, where the kids are learning about puberty. Most of it feels awkward to Elsie, and it's even worse when her mom and dad (who is transgender) want to discuss what was covered. When people at her school find out that she is attending this class, she's made fun of by some students, but others ask her questions. She gets notes in her locker, and after consulting with Nate, her biological father, posts answers on her locker. She tells her mom and dad, who ask if she inquired about posting these things, since she could get in trouble. She eventually does, and is told that her information conflicts with the school sanctioned curriculum, where students get just one hour of instruction at the end of fifth grade. Elsie, who is just starting to realize that she might be attracted to girls, feels that the administration is really objecting to the LGBTQIA+ content. With the help of one of Nate's friends, she starts a zine to address some questions, and during an assembly, encourages her peers to pepper the principal with sex education questions on a wide range of topics. This gets her in more trouble, but when her parents all come to school, they mention that perhaps the ACLU could get involved. In the end, the decision is made to allow Elsie to answer questions with the help of the school counselor, and post answers by the counselor's door, out of the way of the main hall.
Strengths: I can't say that I have ever read a middle grade book with a character who goes to a Unitarian Universalist church, even though I have many friends who do. The class is a good one, and there is a laundry list of topics that it covers right in the beginning. Elsie acknowledges that while the class is awkward, talking with her parents would be worse. She makes a very reasoned attempt to inform her classmates, and I appreciated that she reached out to all of her parents for help at different times. Having her applying to a different school worked well for the plot, and added some tension. Fifth grade seems like a time when children are starting to figure out to whom they are attracted, and Elsie's exploration of her own feelings seems age appropriate. The author is from Ohio, where there is very little sex education mandated on any school level. It is a difficult topic, and not everyone agrees that this is the responsibility of public schools, so this book could start some good conversations.
Weaknesses: I could never buy into Elsie's motivation for spreading information, especially since it might have imperiled her acceptance into a school she really wants to attend. The parents' interactions with the principal also didn't really ring true to me. There would have to be district policy about posting things, and the principal wouldn't have much control over what was taught. Younger readers will not have these objections and will appreciate Elsie's outspoken perseverance to educate her classmates.
What I really think: This is a good choice for readers who enjoyed Lukoff's Different Kinds of Fruit or McCullough's Code Red If you are considering purchasing this for an elementary or middle school library, I would make sure to read the book so you know what it contains.
Saturday, July 04, 2026
Liberty's Forgotten Hero: The Revolutionary Life of James Forten
Liberty's Forgotten Hero: The Revolutionary Life of James Forten
June 16, 2026 by Lee & Low Books
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Born in Philadelphia in 1766, James Forten had an interesting and very different view of a young United States. His father was a sail maker and political activist, and James saw how other Black people were treated differently. He went to London when he was young, and got a different perspective, and returned to the US to work with the abolitionist movement. He also had his own sail making business, and rallied Black men to defend Philadelphia during the War of 1812. Along with William Lloyd Garrison, he founded the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833, and supported the newspaper The Liberator. He died in 1842.
The illustrations are brightly colored and have a lot of details of daily life during this period of history like clothing, buildings, etc., and support the text well. My only quibble with them is that they seem a bit heavy and flat. They are digitally rendered, which may account for this. They are fine, just not a style I personally prefer.
This is a longer picture book that would have enough information for research. The inclusion of an afterword and a great timeline is very helpful. There is also a list of Forten's family and their accomplishments. I will purchase this for my middle school library and think it will get a lot of use along with other biographies like Meadow and Law's Jimmy's Rhythm & Blues: The Extraordinary Life of James Baldwin from a Harlem Boy to a Legendary Writer and Civil Rights Advocate, Zietlow Miller and Jordan's Unstoppable John: How John Lewis Got His Library Card--and Helped Change History, and Chamber and Baker's Shirley Chisholm is a Verb.
Friday, July 03, 2026
Poetry Friday- Slow Burn
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
In this short novel in verse, thirteen year old Baylor is sent by his mother to spend the summer with his noncustodial father, Rob, who has never really been part of his life. Rob has taken a seasonal job as a fire spotter in Arizona, and is living at a fire lookout tower in Arizona. It's close quarters, but the view is spectacular, and Baylor starts to think it might not be too bad of a summer, even with an outhouse! He gets a chance to talk to his father, and even learns how to use an Osbourne Firefinder and helps with spotting. There are plenty of difficult time; when the two are wrestling, Baylor gets the better of his father, who gets angry and painfully pulls Baylor's ear. There's also an awkward "facts of life" talk, when Rob (who is white) tells Baylor he doesn't want his son to make the same "mistake" that he did. Baylor's mother (who is Black) has always said that he was one of the best things in her life, even though being a young, single mother had its challenges. Since he's struggled a bit with being biracial, Baylor doesn't need more complications. There is a thunderstorm that is quite frightening, and the two do have to report a small fire, but Rob explains to Baylor that some fires are let burn in a controlled way to manage the environment. Rob and Baylor have a big blow up when Rob accuses Baylor of being a "mama's boy" and claims that he has not been involved in Baylor's life because his mother doesn't want Rob around. When a tree is struck by lightning and a fire starts, Rob is badly burned, and Baylor has to get help. Rob is okay, and the father and son have to figure out a way forward with their relationship.
Strengths: It is much more realistic and interesting to portray contentious relationships with middle grade parents, and there are many young readers who don't live with both of their parents. There are also a lot of children who are biracial, and Baylor does have some thoughts about his background, but they are not the point of the whole story, which more closely mirrors modern reality. Rob isn't the best father because he doesn't have practice, and he doesn't always have the best reactions to Baylor, but he stops short of being mean and abusive. The inclusion of fire spotting was interesting, and gives a unique background to the father and son bonding struggles.
Weaknesses: I would have liked to see more of Baylor at home with his mother, so that the contrast with his father's treatment of him would be more pronounced. We do hear that his mother and her family and friends are very supportive, but seeing him at home would have added another level of interest.
Thursday, July 02, 2026
Girl from the Ashes
July 7, 2026 by Scholastic Press
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Carter John is often in trouble, even though he doesn't mean to be. His teacher, Mrs. Williamson, doesn't understand that he has gotten taller, and his voice is deeper, so he just seems louder. He is also struggling with the fact that there is no recess in middle school, and he can't burn off his excess energy. His best friend, Gianna, sticks up for him. Her former best friend, Amanda, calls her "babyish" and makes fun of everything from her clothes and school supply choices to her smaller size. When Carter John and Gianna get to work together on a project about a historical figure, they are excited, and head to the public library to do research. They don't like the library as well as their school media center, because it is dark and purported to be haunted. They think about doing a report on Ron McNair, but Carter John gets kicked out for being loud. He runs into more trouble at school, and when he is serving a short detention in Mrs. Williamson's room, there is a fire, caused by a mysterious girl he has seen around. He puts it out, and gets blamed for it, although he knows he didn't do it. Mrs. Williamson warns Gianna's parents that Carter John is a bad influence on Gianna, but Gianna's parents understand the relationship that the two have. The mysterious girl shows up more and more, and her voice echoes with threats against anyone who crosses the two friends. They find out more information about their local library, which was called the Promise Branch library and was segregated in the 1950s. When it was desegregated in 1965, local people weren't happy, and a man set the branch on fire, trapping a young Cora Belle inside and killing her. Cora Belle was an avid reader who was frequently denied service because she was Black, just like Ron McNair. Carter John's grandparents introduce him to Cora Belle's relatives at church, and he finds out more about the history of the library. Fire follows him, and Amanda accuses him of setting a fire in her front yard. When Cora Belle shows up in Carter John's bedroom, she wants him to burn down the library, but he doesn't want to, knowing that having a library is beneficial. He goes to the library at night and has a confrontation with her. Luckily, Gianna comes to help out, and the parents believe the kids. There is a memorial made for Cora Belle, and her ghost is put to rest.
Strengths: I love the combination of horror and history, which Hill always does well. It amazed me how recent the history seemed, with the new branch of the Thompsonville library being built in 1965 and having issues with racism during the height of the Civil Rights Movement. There is information about Ron McNair and the Challenger Disaster as well, and Mrs. Hammond, the school librarian, talks about being a student when that happened. The book also addresses the way that students who may be neurodivergent are sometimes treated by teachers who don't fully understand the way they operate, and Carter John's experience with being reprimanded may resonate with middle school students. Gianna's struggles with Amanda will as well, since friendships often undergo changes in this age group.
Weaknesses: This wasn't very scary. Cora Belle wasn't as threatening as the ghosts in books by Dan Poblocki or Mary Downing Hahn, and the fires focused attention on Carter John's behavior more than the history. It didn't quite make sense for Cora Belle to want to burn down the library, since she was a big reader. There were several things that didn't come together as much as I would have liked.
What I really think: It would have been interesting to have a historical note about historical instances of segregated libraries. This is a good choice for readers who enjoyed Hill's The Forgotten Girl or The Girl In the Lake, or other historically connected spooky stories like Ireland's Ophie's Ghost, Cummings' Trace or Davis' The Lonely Below.
Wednesday, July 01, 2026
Monster Down Deep
Dominy, Amy Fellner. Monster Down Deep
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Cassie and her father live on the coast of Southern California, where her father is an aquarist for the small Mayim Aquarium. Her mother, who was also interested in the well being of the ocean and its creatures, was killed in a car accident when Cassie was three. There has recently been a yacht crash in the area that resulted in the loss of a lot of expensive jewelry, and the Royce family has offered a million dollar reward for the return of a particularly elaborate $50 million dollar necklace. Cassie, along with her Hunter Pro Series 2 metal detector named Sylvia (after marine biologist Sylvia Earle), is determined to find the item. What she finds instead is Blue, a very odd fish, whose point of view is shared in some chapters. Blue is caught in a fishing net and a lot of seaweed, and seems to understand when Cassie communicates with him. Cassie is not happy to see a “Mystery Thief", a boy her age who is also looking for the necklace, but gets to know TJ, who is staying along the beach with his uncle while his father and pregnant mother are back home in Carlsbad while the mother is on bedrest. Cassie spends a lot of time on the beach, nominally supervised by local artist Miss Mary, and when she sees Blue being menaced by a seven gill shark, she immediately goes to her father for help. Unfortunately, he is in a very important meeting with the new directors of the aquarium, but manages to save Blue. Since Blue is very unusual, he becomes a cause celebre in the news, but also isn’t treated well by the new directors. Will Cassie be able to continue to search for the necklace but also save Blue?
Strengths: Treasure hunts are always popular, and the ocean is an interesting place for them, which we see in novels like Rodriguez’s Treasure Tracks or Collard’s Double Eagle. Combining this activity with saving an unusual fish and an interesting small aquarium makes for an intriguing story. I was glad to see that Cassie didn’t fight with TJ the entire time, but learned to work with him. There is a little bit of friend drama with two of Cassie’s sometimes friends, both realistically named Emma! Cassie’s family is Jewish (as are many of Dominy’s characters, going back to her 2011 OyMG), as are the owners of the aquarium, and I enjoyed how the Jewish concept of tikkun olam was explained and demonstrated.
Weaknesses: This almost verged into fantasy, with Blue seeming to understand Cassie’s communication, but it remains a realistic fiction book. While it is admirable that Cassie wants to save Blue, releasing him back to a dangerous situation in the ocean while ignoring the recommendations of her father made me uncomfortable. It didn’t help that the dead parent trope was embraced even though it did nothing to enhance the plot. The ending is happy, but a little unbelievable.
What I really think: This is a good choice for readers who enjoyed aquatic preservation adventures like Dimopoulos' Turn the Tide, Baskin’s and Polisner’s Consider the Octopus, Kelly’s Three Blue Hearts, or Pyron’s Octopus Moon.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Fantasy Round Up
June 23, 2026 by Shadow Mountain
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
So, now we are seeing twentieth anniversary editions of books I bought when they first came out, like Cabot's The Princess Diaries. Since Mull's Fablehaven has been consistently popular, I was tempted by this new edition, but since it costs $40, I'll have to pass. The two copies I already have will have to suffice. If your library hasn't already bought the series, it would be worth looking into. Shadow Mountain is to be commended for still having the entire series available in hardcover. I've had to replace a few worn copies!
Abe, Julia. The Magical Library of Waterfall Way
Lyra is having a hard time finding an apprenticeship because she is not only an orphan, she is an Unremarkle. In the Alterran Empire, this means if she does not get a place, she will be banished. Her mentor thinks she can get her a place in the Guild of Pine Cone Collectors, which even waives a quest, but they, too, deny her entry when they find out about her lack of powers. When Lyra happens upon Guild of Scholars, she hopes that she can work in their library. Of course, there's a quest, and secrets along the way.
While I enjoyed Abe's Alliana: Girl of Dragons, this had too many fantasy tropes for me. Traditional fantasy has not been in demand in my school library for quite some time, and as much as I liked the idea of working in a magical library, I have other books that are similar to this if anyone asks for them, including Ham's The Missing Magic of Sparrow Xia, Townsend's Wundersmith books, Thomas' Nic Blake and the Remarkables, or Leathley's Meticulous Jones and the Skull Tattoo. If I had a bigger budget, I might buy this.
For Haven, an outcast living in the desert outside Raqmu, life is only about survival: sleeping in a shanty, scrounging for food, and fighting others for mere drops of water. However, she refuses to give in to hopelessness—Haven is a resourceful tinkerer who sneaks in and out of Raqmu to find spare parts for building gizmos that make life a little easier for herself and her guardian, Yassu.
One night, while scavenging the city's restricted junkyard, Haven uncovers a mysterious relic. Before she gets a chance to inspect it, the city's Guardians come after her! As Haven tears through the back alleys, she's helped along in her escape by Lan, a wealthy city girl who's seen how cruelly the Guardians treat Outsiders. Together, she and Haven form an unlikely bond—one that becomes dangerous when the Guardians track them down . . . and when Haven unwittingly awakens a sleeping giant with her stolen relic.
This full-color graphic novel is an exciting mash-up of dystopian futurism, fantasy adventure, and coming-of-age stories, with a dash of Avatar the Last Airbender for even more thrills!
Monday, June 29, 2026
MMGM- Ride or Die


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Weaknesses: This does start with a lot of drama; it might not be a bad idea to warn readers that it is worth getting through the first couple of chapters. The issue with the older sister didn't seem that serious that Brie would have had to change schools, but that didn't take up too much time in the story. Brie could have had to start a new school for other reasons, and Emily isn't the kind of person who needed any actual dirt on people. She'd just make some up.
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Rosetown Forever (Rosetown #3)
June 23, 2026 by Beach Lane Books
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
In this third book set in Rosetown, Indiana, in is now 1974. Flora Smallwood is living with both of her parents, Emma Jean and Forster, who now run the Rosetown Paper and Press shop. She and her best friend, Yury, are still sad that their favorite bookstore, A Wing and a Chair, is gone, since the wonder moved away to live with a friend. They have a new haunt, Day Road Farm, run by Farmer Hester, where they enjoy riding horses. Flora loves her town, and doesn't want anything else to change, but knows that there are often circumstances beyond her control. A rash of tornadoes hitting other small towns is a vivid reminder of this. At the end of fifth grade, she and Yury are faced with the rite of passage that is the oral report, but they both do perfectly well after asking the town librarian, Mr. Anderson for help and consulting the How and Why Library for information. They occasionally hang out at the local pharmacy, with its lunch counter and array of 1970s era shampoos like Prell, Breck, and Herbal Essence. Flora learns about the historical society and its attempts at keeping the town as it is, but she and Yury do like the new store that takes the place of A Wing and a Chair. The Slightly Cracked Teacup is an antique and oddity store that does have a few vintage children's books, and Alfie and Roy, who run it, welcome them as customers. When Yury's father has to live in Chicago for a while to train in orthopedics, Flora worries that things will change, but for the moment, most of Rosetown remains comforting and familiar.
Strengths: This is a very gentle historical fiction book that looks back fondly at the world fifty years ago. There are good details about what life was like before computers arrived, and the scope is narrowly focused on the experience of Flora and her friends, which will appeal to readers who are her age. Rosetown is very idyllic; I would have adored this as a child and would have searched out vintage children's books much earlier than I eventually did had I read this!
Weaknesses: This ended rather abruptly, in the way that many books published in the 1970s did. I'm not sure if this was on purpose or not! There could easily be another installment about the Bicentennial, but this is billed as the final book.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Saturday Morning Cartoons- Round Up
June 23, 2026 by Greenwillow Books
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Friday, June 26, 2026
Sawyer Lee and the Quest to Just Stay Home
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Sawyer lives in Ovelaville with his Aunt Cecilia because his parents are always traveling. His aunt is a big fan of accomplishing things, but Sawyer is so lazy that he doesn’t even want to take phone calls from his friends Gary and Angela, because he knows they will ask him to do things. Because Ovelaville’s annual Gourd Festival is such a big event, he ends up partnering with Angela on a gourd display, because arguing with her takes too much effort, and he figures she will do all of the work anyway, because her parents are very interested in the festival. Sawyer’s nemesis is Anderson, who is always going around doing good deeds, so when Gary starts hanging out with Anderson and taking on some of the more motivated boy’s characteristics, Sawyer is outraged. Not enough to actually do anything about it, but outraged nonetheless. The gourd display project gets underway, but halts when Anderson finds that Angela’s parents have gourd enhancer, and their gourds are pulped. They claim to have been framed, so Angela mounts an investigation while her father becomes unhinged. Anderson uncovers a lot of other “cheaters”, including Bus Driver Stu and half the town. Will Angela, with Sawyer’s lukewarm help, be able to locate the culprit?
This is a highly illustrated novel that your readers will probably like more than I did, since many of them also aspire to do absolutely nothing with their days other than be on screens. I did enjoy Gary’s transformation away from being a game playing zombie when he hung out with Sawyer, but Anderson ends up not being as nice as we think he is. I can see this being popular with Stanton’s Funny Kid series, Pastis’ Timmy Failure, or Patterson’s Middle School books.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Dinosaurs to Dragons and The Last Ember
What I really think: This is a good choice for fans of Townsend's 2017 Wundersmith: The Trials of Morrigan Crow, Steadman's Skandar series, or Rundell's Impossible Creatures.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
The Masterminds Trap (Last Chance Academy #2)
March 17, 2026 by Aladdin
E ARC Provided by Edelweiss Plus
Meg and her friends Tana, Ryan, and Zane are back after their adventures in A Study in Secrets, and are going on the trip that Meg won in the scavenger hunt. At the last minute, her father can't chaperone, and her Aunt Vivian (who is always very negative) goes instead. The group ends up at Moon Manor, a fabulous house in California, and proceed to spend nearly half the book solving mysteries and seeing the sights like the Crystal Cave, Balboa Fun Zone and the Japanese American National Museum. There's a bit of a secret about who orchestrated this trip, but it's soon found out, and before long the kids are back at school. The Leland Chase Academy is having financial troubles, and to solve this issue, the director is having all of the students do a showcase project to attract investors to the school. Meg doesn't know what to do, but working with some teachers, she decides to plan a walking trail. She won't have to actually build it, just come up with the plans. It's hard to concentrate on this when she needs to find the identity of the Mastermind, especially since he has threatened to end the showcase, which would lead to the closure of the school and Meg's loss of her friends. It's likely that the culprit is Charles Chase, the descendant of the founder of the school and also the boyfriend of a teacher, Miss Jillian. There seems to be a Chase treasure that could help save the school, but Meg's research into this is hindered by the necessity of keeping things secret from her friends. While everything works out, the book ends with a teaser for another possible mystery for the group to solve.
Strengths: Boarding school tales are always fun, and it was interesting to see Meg and her friends as they become more acquainted with each other. The virtual vacation in California was rather fun, and Florence (who was raised there) has an obvious fondness for the location. There are a lot of clues to follow, and a serious issue to address about the school. Add in a bit of friend drama, as well as a cat, and this will be a winner with readers who like clue oriented mysteries and scavenger hunts.
Weaknesses: I didn't like the way that the Mastermind threatened Meg in a rather serious way and the showcase didn't seem like enough to save a school.
What I really think: This is a good choice for readers who enjoyed Yee's The Misfits or Gerber's The Liar's Society. Florence's This is How I Roll and Sweet and Sour are wildly popular in my library, and since romance books have become more popular, I'd love to see her write a few more like these.












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