REVIEW: Echo Mountain

Our last featured blogger review of the 2020 Cybils season looks at Middle Grade Fiction finalist Echo Mountain by Lauren Wolk: This is the wonderful story of a spunky, persevering and brave twelve year old girl named Ellie. The setting is the wild woods of Maine in the 1930โ€™s. Her parents lost their home in the Great Depression and were …

REVIEW: Class Act

Class Act

Elementary/Middle Grade Graphic Novels finalist Class Act by Jerry Craft is the focus of today’s featured blogger review: Fitting in, showing someone you like them, making and challenging assumptions, and finding your own way in life–all of these very real concerns for tweens and teens are beautifully represented in the students of Riverdale Academy Day School. Click here to read …

REVIEW: A Wish in the Dark

A Wish in the Dark

Elementary/Middle Grade Speculative Fiction finalist A Wish in the Dark by Christina Soontornvat is the subject of today’s featured blogger review: This says on the cover that itโ€™s a reimagining of Les Miserables. Itโ€™s not a blow-by-blow recreation, but we do have the two central characters, one who has broken the law for understandable reasons, and one who believes that …

REVIEW: Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything

Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything

Our featured blogger review for today looks at Young Adult Speculative Fiction finalist Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland: Raquel Vasquez Gilliland deeply understands her characters, and there was something about Sia’s voice and Gilliland’s writing that felt so real, so raw, so engrossing. Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything should be …

REVIEW: Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You

Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You

Today’s featured blogger review looks at High School Nonfiction finalist Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You, by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi: From the back, you can see this is not a history book, this is a book about the here and now–a book about race, and that’s a great overview of racism throughout the ages. What I liked about …

REVIEW: The Land of the Cranes

Land of the Cranes

Middle Grade Fiction finalist The Land of the Cranes, by Aida Salazar, is the subject of today’s featured blogger review: This MG novel in verse is GORGEOUS and devastatingly sad. Iโ€™m so glad I listened to it because the narration by Dani Gonzalez is incredible and adds so much to the experience. Click here to read the full review by …

REVIEW: When Stars Are Scattered

When Stars Are Scattered

Today’s featured blogger review takes a closer look at Elementary/Middle Grade Graphic Novels finalist When Stars Are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson, Omar Mohamed, and Iman Geddy: This book just gobsmacked me. It’s a powerful tale of two brothers in a refugee camp. Born in Somalia at the onset of a civil war, Omar, the eldest, watched his father get killed. …

REVIEW: Prairie Lotus

Prairie Lotus

Our featured blogger review for today spotlights Middle Grade Fiction nominee Prairie Lotus by Linda Sue Park: This is a brilliant story that takes place in a town based off of Laura Ingalls Wilderโ€™s Little House books, only it is told with eyes wide open to the discrimination that many different ethnicities faced in the times. Click here to read …

REVIEW: The Grand Escape

Cybils veteran Karen Yingling of Ms. Yingling Reads is our featured blogger for today–besides being a middle school librarian and book reviewer for School Library Journal, she’s also been a category organizer for Cybils and is a Round 2 judge for Junior/Senior High Nonfiction. Recently, she reviewed Senior High Nonfiction finalist The Grand Escape: The Greatest Prison Breakout of the …

REVIEW: Fish Are Not Afraid of Doctors (Maud the Koala)

Welcome to our first featured blogger book review of the 2018 Cybils season! Yay! If you’re new to Cybils, all you have to do to get our book review posts in your inbox is sign up for our Books newsletter (scroll down to the bottom of the blog and the signup window will pop up)–it’s that easy. Three times a …