adventure

Timeslip Tuesday: Time Cat

Cover of Timeslip Tuesday: Time Cat

It's Timeslip Tuesday again at Charlotte's Library, when Charlotte reviews time travel fiction for kids and invites others to do the same! Today I'd like to talk about one of my favorite books from childhood: Time Cat: The Remarkable Journeys of Jason and Gareth, by Lloyd Alexander.

Jason is an ordinary boy with, he thinks, an ordinary cat named Gareth. Until, that is, Jason wishes aloud that he had nine lives and Gareth speaks up! Cats don't really have nine lives, Gareth explains, but: "I can visit nine different lives. Anywhere, any time, any country, any century." What's more, he can take Jason, too.

Thus begins Jason and Gareth's rather whirlwind sampling of world history from a cat's and a boy's eye view. From Egypt in 2700 B.C.E. to America in 1775, the two adventure across every inhabited continent. They confront emperors, march in battle, face imprisonment, and lollygag with Leonardo da Vinci.

Meanwhile, Jason—and readers—learn about cats' role in the various cultures they visit. Cats in ancient Egypt are revered; those in medieval Germany are feared as creatures of the Devil. Some places they're regarded as good luck, other places bad; sometimes they're treated with affection, other times detested.

Time Cat is an unusual, entertaining, and informative middle grade adventure, much more light-hearted than Alexander's Prydain or Westmark sequences. What's more, it gets away from Alexander's plot and character formulas that have caused more than one person to ask: Why did Lloyd Alexander write the same book over and over again? Take a peek!

Spies v. Pirates

I know you've been lying awake at night wondering, "Spies versus pirates: who would win?"

After five days of my latest junior high fiction display, I'm here to tell you: spies all the way.

PiratesAndSpies.jpg

I can barely scrabble up enough spy books to keep the display semi-stocked. Meanwhile, not a single one of those pirate books has budged all week.

In fairness to pirates, our multiple copies of Kenneth Oppel's Airborn and Skybreaker are all checked out, as is Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson's Peter and the Starcatchers series.

Then again, so are 85% of our Alex Rider books, all our copies of Ally Carter's Gallagher Girl series, all our Young James Bond, and Jennifer Barnes' The Squad series.

I think the spies still come out ahead.

Cover of Mortal Engines

Mortal Engines

Philip Reeve

Thousands of years in the future, the world's great cities roll across the continents in search of resources. They snap up smaller cities, stripping their resources and enslaving their people.

Tom, an Apprentice Historian, has always accepted this "Municipal Darwinism" as a fact of life. But when a strange turn of events finds Tom - together with a mysterious and enraged girl assassin - unceremoniously dumped off his beloved London, Tom's whole world is turned on its head.

What follows is an action-filled, steampunk page-turner with plenty of intrigue, suspense, and a touch of romance. This first volume of the Hungry City Chronicles is a terrific read for middle school and up, especially those who have enjoyed Kenneth Oppel's Airborn.

» Philip Reeve's Website

Books Boys Like: There's Something About Everest

Cover of Books Boys Like: There's Something About Everest

The past ten years have seen a veritable avalanche of books about the world’s tallest mountain. Why the sudden interest? Is it because of National Geographic’s movie Everest, or the deadly climbing disaster of 1996 chronicled in Jon Krakauer’s book Into Thin Air? Or because 2003 was the fiftieth anniversary of Tenzing Norgay and Sir Edmund Hillary’s historic summit? Or because in that same year a 15-year-old girl named Ming Kipa set the new record for youngest person to summit? Whatever the reason, there is no shortage of books, for all age levels, about the dangerously fascinating mountain that is Everest.

One of my favorite books of 2007 is Peak, by Roland Smith (Harcourt, 2007). This well-written page-turner for junior high readers follows the adventures of Peak Marcello, the 14-year-old son of climbers. After getting caught free-climbing – and then tagging – skyscrapers in Manhattan, Peak is whisked off to Asia, where his father leads climbing expeditions on Everest. At first, Peak is thrilled at the chance to be the youngest person ever to summit, but he soon learns the task ahead is more difficult than he imagined.

I’m not talking about physical dangers; in fact, readers may be surprised that a relatively inexperienced climber such as Peak could make it as far as he does without much in the way of illness or injury. (Some other climbers in the expedition are forced to stop due to HAPE and other climbing-related afflictions.) But Smith compensates with a solid exploration of the political issues surrounding Mount Everest. The commercialization of Everest (Can anyone who can pay play?), Chinese control of Tibet, and the incredibly dangerous – and under-appreciated – work of Sherpa guides all get ample discussion.

In a similar vein is Gordon Korman’s fictional Everest series (The Contest, The Climb, The Summit – Scholastic, 2002), for readers grades 5 and up who enjoy a fast read.

True Books About Everest

  • Climbing Everest: Tales of Triumph and Tragedy on the World’s Highest Mountain, by Audrey Salkeld (National Geographic, 2003) –Children’s Literature calls these profiles of Everest’s most famous climbers “thrilling reading” for grades 4 and up.
  • Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mount Everest Disaster, by Jon Krakauer (Villard, 1997) – This thick nonfiction page-turner has a lot of teen appeal.
  • To the Top of Everest, by Laurie Skreslet with Elizabeth MacLeod (Kids Can, 2001) – One of the first Canadians to summit offers his cheerful and photo-filled account for grades 3 and up.
  • To the Top: The Story of Everest, by Stephen Venables (Candlewick, 2003) – Photo-filled history of human interest in Everest, including the author’s personal summit story, for grades 4 and up.
  • Within Reach: My Everest Story, by Mark Pfetzer and Jack Galvin (Dutton, 1998) – A teen’s mountain-climbing diary, with special focus on the Everest disaster, for junior high on up.

Define Adventure

Luke Skywalker’s green, troll-like advisor (thank you, Trivial Pursuit Genus I) once said, “Adventure…excitement…a Jedi craves not these things.” And while I’d never be so much of a fool as to argue with Yoda, I do often get patrons seeking adventure in the form of books.

Whenever I have a patron looking for an “adventure book”, the first question I ask is, “Spies, pirates, or survival?” I mean, when you think about it, “adventure” is possibly the most nebulous genre label out there. According to Random House, an adventure is “an exciting or very unusual experience.” That covers just about everything, from kidnapping to war to getting carried off by a twister to a magical land full of short people. Who’s publishing books about boring people these days, anyway? (Wait – don’t answer that.)

My trichotomy isn’t perfect, I realize. It basically ignores books that fall into some other neat genre category – historical fiction, fantasy, etc. But it covers what teachers are expecting, and let’s face it: when a child or parent asks, “Where are your adventure books?”, it has school assignment written all over it. (I’ll leave my opinion of required genre reading for another post.)

Anyway, this how I distinguish spies, pirates, and survival:

  1. Spies – Helicopters, guns, and international intrigue. Generally contemporary.
  2. Pirates – Shiver me timbers, this speaks for itself. Generally historical.
  3. Survival – Kid versus nature, wild animals and/or crazy people in any day and age.

The plan is to follow up this post with some examples in each category, with particular emphasis on books boys like! Let’s see if I can stick to it.

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