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Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Life on the Moon and The Lovely Dark

Swanson, Matthew and Behr, Robbi (illus.) Life on the Moon
April 14, 2026 by Knopf Books for Young Readers 
E ARC provided by Netgalley

Leo Brightstar is going to live on the moon in the first colony with his father, a scientist, who has recently separated from Leo's mother, who will remain on earth to work in a zoo. Before he even gets settled, his father gets a message that there is a rover on the wrong side of the moon, and he has to investigate. Leo is left in their "dome", where an advanced smart speaker takes care of him. The dome gives him the rules: number one is that there is no life on the moon, and number two is not to ask questions! This is very difficult, and the dome does answer some, since Leo has many! There is a Constable, who is evil, and a Deputy, who visits Leo and tells him not to admit that his father is missing. The Deputy takes Leo to school, where Leo is reminded by his teacher Ms. Dulcet that children should not ask questions. Leo meets Bobby, and witnesses a large green bug, which is cleaned up by a space Roomba. Eventually, he steals a rover to go search for his father, and gets drawn into an odd world with space creatures. Bobby follows him out, which is great when Leo crashes the rover, but Bobby is eaten by a Hortle! Leo meets friendlier creatures, the Valrooten, the leader of which he names Mitchell. When Mitchell is eaten by a Hortle on his 100th birthday, Leo is sad, but the Valrooten all share a common hive mind, so he consoles himself by talking to Mitchell 2. Eventually, Leo locates Bobby, his father, and his father's friend Sally in a Hortle hairball, but decides that the colony government should not be trying to hide or kill the native species and vows to fight for them, and sends Bobby back to earth with a message. 
Strengths: I love the illustrations, and the way that the text is woven around them. The idea of living on the moon is always intriguing, and this has some more space adventure, rather like Bradford's Lunar, Landers' Blastaway or Swiedler's In the Red. The space creatures are a little goofy, but the message about saving indigenous creatures is a timely one. Bonus points for having Leo's parents separated instead of dead. 
Weaknesses: Like Swanson and Behr's Ben Yokoyama and the Cookie of Destiny, this book got a bit goofy. Even though Leo is supposedly 12, he seems much younger, and even with the illustrations, 320 pages is a long book for elementary students. I also found the ending confusing. 
What I really think: This is a good choice for reader who liked Lubar's Emperor of the Universe series, Barnett's The Two-Headed Chicken, or Angleberger's The First Cat in Space Ate Pizza

Fox, Matthew. The Lovely Dark
April 21, 2026 by Union Square Kids
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus

Eleanor lost her grandmother in the first wave of the COVID pandemic. She saw her ghost briefly right after her death, but hasn't seen her since, even though that would be a welcome occurrence. Her father is a history teacher in their Croyden neighborhood, where Ellie likes to hang out with her neighbor and best friend Justin. After Ellie recuperates from a bad round of flu, her parents tell her that her mother is expecting. Riding on the trains, Ellie and Justin both see children who look exactly like them, which is worrying, since Ellie's grandmother told her to watch out for "fetches". On a school field trip to see some Roman mosaics, there is a flood in the area, and Ellie and Justin both drown. They've recently heard the story of the Underworld and Orpheus and Eurydice, and after traveling on the river Styx, they find themselves trapped there. Ellie really wants to get back home to meet her new brother, but will she and Justin be stuck there?
 
My daughter Eleanor lost both of her grandmothers in the pandemic, so this is certainly a true to life premise. The use of mythology is interesting, and readers who liked DeStefano's The Girl with the Ghost Machine, Edge's The Many Worlds of Albie Bright, or Shusterman's Skinjackers series will enjoy this book. 

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