Fiona the Flute Fairy


Music Fairies #3: Fiona the Flute Fairy: A Rainbow Magic Book by Daisy Meadows

There is no fairy series more ubiquitous than the Rainbow Magic fairies.  They are aimed at beginning readers and feature fairly large text and frequent illustrations.

The plot is mind-numbing – Jack Frost and some Goblins have a band and will enter a talent contest in order to win a recording contract.  This will mean disaster for the fairies and Fairyland!  Human girls must help the fairies find their stolen instruments to save Fairyland.  I chose this particular Rainbow Magic book because the fairy on the front cover appeared to be a person fairy of color and I figured that was a good thing.  Unfortunately, the front cover is the only indication whatsoever that the fairy is anything other than white.  The internal illustrations don’t even feature a skin tone that is in anyway different from the white characters.  I can’t find fault with trying to increase diversity in the series, I just wish it reached a bit deeper than the cover.

I found the story so simple and dull I couldn’t really recommend it to anyone, but I have known many girls who read their way through as many of these books as they could get their hands on, so I expect plenty of kids do actually like them.  They are likely best for very young students who are reading above level all the way up to second graders reading on level.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

 

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Imagine You’re a Fairy

Imagine You’re a Fairy! by Meg Clibbon

This is a very slim non-fiction volume, but it’s an excellent place to start for the young fairy fanatic.  It’s sparkly in places and is filled with fanciful illustrations.  In addition to providing some very important information fairies, it also can serve as a guide for those looking for fairy-inspired fun.  There’s a job list, which of course consists of fun tasks like organizing a midnight ball and making magic fairy bars for a snack.  There are some recipes (for the aforementioned fairy bars of course, but also for fairy dust, and for spell casting).  A fairy vocabulary page encourages word games and could be used to inspire young authors who are working on their own fairy stories.  Best of all, there are fairies of color and even a male fairy shown, so the book at least contains a bit of diversity.  Highly recommended for little fairy lovers in Grades 1-3.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity –None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Leprechauns drink poteen, but I doubt young readers will understand this to be an alcoholic beverage.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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This year, what you want to know, starting with…Fairies!

Last June I asked you what you wanted me to read and many of you were good enough to answer.  This year I’m going to do my best to read books from those categories.  But I’m still open to more ideas so leave a comment with your picks if you like.  If you asked for reading-level specific picks and your child is now reading at a totally different level, I’d be happy to alter my selections, just let me know below!

First up, Laura asked for fairy books, so fairy books she shall receive.  As it would turn out, fairy books have a very large presence in the world of YA paranormal romance.  Not in the least what I was looking for, and certainly not what commenter Laura seeking out for her fairy-loving seven-year old.  I’m working around this for now, not deliberately seeking out anything young adult although teens, I’ll have to check into this crazy fairy romance love you’ve got going on at some point.  My selections are aimed at children especially focused on middle grades and up, which seemed to be what Laura was looking for.  I only managed to force my way through one of the ubiquitous Rainbow Magic fairy books.   I didn’t do it for Laura, I did it for the rest of you. Now hopefully you won’t ever have to.

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Snow Sounds: An Onomatopoeic Story

Snow Sounds: An Onomatopoeic Story by David A. Johnson

I was totally sucked in by the cover of this book. The illustrations do an amazing job of conveying that feeling you get during a blizzard of being wrapped up in a soft haze. Plus, who doesn’t love onomatopoeia! I grabbed it off the shelf right before we went into story time. Then right before nap, I flipped through it. And promptly decided not to read it to the baby, not yet anyway.

As I said, the book is beautiful.  The first few pages show a boy awaking to a snowstorm.  Each page is punctuated only by the noises of the day; the smoosh, slush of the snowplow, the crinkle of the cat investigating a christmas present. But then (on a page that also shows the flush of a toilet) we can see the back of a woman in a blue dress with a white apron.  Is it his mom? Maybe.  But I don’t know a lot of moms who are dressed down to an apron and white stockings when their child is getting ready in the morning.  Nope, that particular outfit triggers thoughts of a maid, which is pretty odd in this day and age.  We continue watching the trucks clear the road and the child prepare for school (and I am thinking I’ll have trouble peeling my child away from this book, with the cat and the snowplows and snow blowers, he will love this).  Then the child, who is quite small, not quite waist height, is bundled up and sent outside (by the maid or whoever the woman in uniform is) and he then shovels the very long walk to the street by himself.  The school bus pulls up and he races off to school.  The maid/mom chases after him with a present, which is unwrapped on the final page.

So the book is lovely, but I guess I just don’t think it makes sense.  I assume if a child takes a present on the bus it’s for someone else, but the way the book is set up, it looks like it was for him after all?  Why would  a mother have her child open his present on the bus?  Why would a house with a maid on staff not have staff to clear the walk? What was the guy with the snowblower doing if he wasn’t clearing the walk?  I fear I am far too logical.  If you are not similarly afflicted, you will absolutely like the great sounds and charming pictures.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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East

East by Edith Pattou

Rose was born to replace a sister she never knew.  She was meant to be an East born child, mild and docile and staying close to home.  But Rose was born facing North, a wanderer, bound to find danger. The White Bear was once not a bear.  He was once a prince, who showed kindness to a stranger.  But the stranger was a troll princess and soon he was caught in an enchantment, his freedom gone.  Rose’s parents have kept her birth-direction a secret, hoping to keep her from harm.  but when she is 15 the great white bear comes to them and asks that she come live with him.  In return he will return her sister (who is very ill) to health and make her family wealthy beyond their dreams. Feeling betrayed by her parents, Rose agrees and soon finds herself living in an enchanted castle.  She grows fond of the bear, but one night, her curiosity about their circumstances gets the best of her and she makes a choice that endangers both of their safety and the enchantment.

When I decided to read this, I had a copy of Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow at home as well, and I was very tempted to read that instead, because it’s by Jessica Day George whom I love.  But I figured that you all already know I love her and that it would be good for all of us if I branched out.  I am thrilled I decided to read East.  It has a lot to recommend it, not least of which is a fairly strong and determined female character.  In this book there is no question that the girl is doing the rescuing while the boy (while clearly in love with her and choosing her) is far more powerless and passive.  In fact, most of the women in this book are the ones who wield the power, for better or worse.

There a few things I didn’t love, but I find that to be true with so many fairy tales.  My main issues with this one are further detailed below, but the basic idea that a girl’s curiosity leads to terrible consequences for someone she loves isn’t one that I support.

Age Recommendation: This was filed Juvenile at my branch of the public library while the rest in the system have it as Young Adult.  I would say it’s Young Adult because there is an underlying theme of romance and love, but there’s really not so much as a kiss, so it’s likely chaste enough for middle grades readers who are reading above grade level.  I’d say advanced fourth grade readers up through teens would enjoy this.  Honestly the most off-putting thing is an important part of the fairy tale – that someone is getting into bed with Rose each night and she doesn’t know who it is.  And that there are terrible consequences for her finding out.  Her mother is made out to be the bad guy because she sort of bullies Rose into peeking at her bed mate, but mothers out there, I know you’re with me on this, what kind of mother wouldn’t insist her daughter knew who was sharing her bed???

Great for: This is a perfect pick for readers who have torn through more traditional fairy tales. Encourage them to try this rather than yet another retelling of Cinderella.  The ice and snow theme should also appeal to all of the Frozen fans out there.  While based on a different fairy tale, East should contain similar enough elements to capture their curiosity.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Not really sex, nudity or dating, but there’s an awful lot of talk about birth – what happened when Rose’s mother gave birth, what direction her father’s mother was facing when she gave birth to him, about laboring, pregnancies and morning sickness cures, the pains of childbirth, it goes on and on.  There’s also a pretty detailed description of Rose’s birth, with her father being able to see her foot and that she was facing the wrong way.  Rose’s father delivered her.  A love charm is mentioned.  A woman prepares to marry a man who does not love her and is forced to stay with her.  A man jokes that he would make a good husband to Rose.  One of Rose’s sisters becomes engaged to a much older man.  Rose tells someone that she loves him.  Rose has children.
Profanity – “damnable”,  a man swears in Portuguese.  A man shouts curses at his crew.
Death, Violence and Gore – A woman goes to some type of fortune teller who predicts that her sister’s husband will die at sea and that she will have a child who dies a cold, horrible death, suffocating under ice and snow.  A couple’s eight year old daughter died.  Several people die in an influenza epidemic.  It is suggested that a family arm themselves.  A family has had two children die.  A troll is sacrificed.   There’s a mention of a ewe dying after birthing a two-headed lamb.  A woman’s husband died.  A little girl tells tales about a creature that steals your bones.  A man is badly injured, bleeding heavily, with limbs at strange angles from his body due to breakage.  Some of his cuts are so deep that you can see the bone.  Rose must stitch up wounds and set bones.  Rose knows the look of an animal ready for death – she’s seen it on a lamb with a broken neck and a mother cow who has lost too much blood.  Someone dies at sea.   A man’s son and wife died at the hands of murderers.  A character murdered a man, thinking he was someone who killed someone who was close to him.  Rose must carry several knives.  A wind is said to be strong enough to flay the skin off a human.  A story is told about a girl whose parents were lost at sea.  A seal is killed for food, first harpooned, then bludgeoned with a club, spattering blood on the ice. Rose is attacked by an animal and bleeds.  Seals also must be skinned for eating.  There is black water that makes flesh fall away from bone.  People are whipped, one to death.  People are kicked as punishment.  People are beaten.  Rose is hit across the face repeatedly until her lip bleeds.  The troll queen contemplates killing a troll child.  There is a killing field where humans are left naked to freeze to their deaths.  A character who we are fond of is killed.  Many are killed in a massive avalanche, others are injured. People die of cold or of withdrawal symptoms during an escape.  Another woman dies after a fall and her corpse is disposed of.   Trolls kill people who wander into a forest unawares.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – There is a drink called slank which seems to be a kind of alcohol.  At any rate a woman who drinks lots of it falls asleep.  A man drinks too much wine.  He believes he has hallucinated due to intoxication.  A captain spends much money on ale and is clearly drunk.  He drinks pretty much continuously during the chapters in which he is featured.  A man is said to be overfond of mead.  A man suffers withdrawal symptoms but recovers from alcoholism.
Frightening or Intense Things – A troll queen takes a boy.  A bear carries a child in its mouth.  A poem Neddy writes describes a woman as the queen of the dead, with hair of snakes who takes her victims to Hel.  He uses imagery of blood and bones as well.  Bad luck begins when a girl is born.  Neddy also writes about a white bear dispensing death.  A family is nearly starving.  A girl is ill.  An offer is made, one girl must go to save the other.   People are kept as slaves.  A mother sends away one daughter to an unknown fate for the chance to save another.   Someone sneaks in bed beside Rose and she knows not who it is.  There’s an evil queen.  People are terribly ill.  Some characters are on board a ship in dangerous weather.

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Absolutely Truly

Absolutely Truly: A Pumpkin Falls Mystery by Heather Vogel Frederick

Everything was about to be perfect. Truly’s father was finally coming home from Afghanistan and leaving the service, so they’d bought a home in Austin, Texas just a block away from her cousin/best friend.  It was supposed to be their forever home.  But only a few days before his scheduled return, Truly’s dad’s unit was hit by an IED (Improvised Explosive Device).  He lost his arm, his best friend and his post-service job as a pilot.  Now that he’s home everything is different. They have to move to remote Pumpkin Falls, New Hampshire to take over Truly’s grandparents book store, but way worse is the fact that her dad simply isn’t himself anymore.  Truly finds that it’s much easier making friends than she’d thought, but it might not be so easy getting her dad back.

This was a really enjoyable book.  There’s a scavenger hunt/mystery that’s supposed to be the main story, but it’s not terribly compelling.  What is interesting is Truly’s wild family (five kids!), the people of the town and her dad’s slow recovery.  It’s the kind of book I would be shoving at kids left and right because it has a certain old-fashioned charm about it, with enough modern stuff to hold their attention.  I was thrilled to see a book about a military family as well.  Lots of kids these days have parents returning from service so it’s good to have a book that shows the transition back to life stateside can be pretty hard for the service member as well as the family.  It would make a good pairing with Miracles on Maple Hill which also features a father who is changed after war.

Another likable thing, there’s a big interest in wrestling, which is something I don’t see come up often in books.  Truly’s brothers all wrestle and the meets are well-attended.  It’s good to see an independent sport shown in a popular light.  Another plus, while Frederick doesn’t have main characters of color, she does include a Jewish family and she uses last names that indicate other people in town are not white.

Recommended for: Grades 4-8. Advanced third graders would probably be fine to read it, the content is pretty safe, but they might not find as much interest in it. Readers of old-fashioned style books will like this contemporary offering that doesn’t feel shallow.

Small note: Truly’s dad uses a prosthesis which is very advanced technology. I’m not sure how widely available it is right now, so if you are dealing with a student (or child) who has been through this, you might want to be prepared to discuss this. It might be hard to field questions about why he has a “better” or more advanced prosthesis than others.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Truly’s cousin is into boys.  A girl is “obsessed” with a boy.  There’s a reference to romance novels and a description of their covers featuring “shirtless-men-kissing-beautiful-women”.  There’s some talk of underwear but not in a sexual way.  There’s a comment that an adult man is flirting with an adult woman.
Profanity – “stupid”,  “moron”, “heck”, “twerp”, “shut up”, “lame”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Truly’s father is wounded in the war by an IED, Improvised Explosive Device.  He lost an arm.  His best friend was killed.  One boy’s father died when he was young.  There are some snowball fight related antics.  Truly threatens to “deck” someone.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – Truly’s father has been different since he returned from Afghanistan. His loss of an arm meant loss of job offers as well.  Truly reflects that he has spent much of her life deployed or going to bed early because of his military schedule.  There’s a risk of a loan coming due and people being unable to pay.  A character is in a perilous position after falling in icy water, but it turns out okay, help gets there in time.  Her younger sister is afraid of their father’s hook.

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Light the Lights

Light The Lights! A Story About Celebrating Hanukkah And Christmas by Margaret Moorman

When winter comes around, Emma knows it’s the season of lights.  First she celebrates Hanukkah with her family, polishing the menorah with her father, eating latkes and playing with her cousins.  Then they celebrate Christmas with cookies and tree decorating.

It’s a sweet story that keeps the focus on the traditions rather than the religion.  There isn’t a single mention of Judah Maccabee or of Jesus Christ.  So from that perspective it’s probably not a bad bet for a classroom read aloud.  Another aspect of the book that I appreciated was that even though Emma’s father is Jewish and her mother Christian, they all celebrate the holidays together as a family, with the parents supporting each other and taking part in the holiday rituals.

It’s not an amazing story or the most beautiful illustrations you’ll ever see, but it fills a need for the woefully underrepresented niche market of blended faith families.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Eight Winter Nights: A Family Hanukkah Book

Eight Winter Nights: A Family Hanukkah Book by Laura Krauss Melmed

This is a cute Hanukkah book told in rhyme.  Each page features several short verses telling about some aspect of the holiday and celebration.  The length and format means that parents can pick and chose poems when reading to impatient readers, making this accessible to even the youngest audiences.   The end of the book includes a very simple version of the miracle of Hanukkah, fairly sanitized (a band of fighters battle an army) as well as a glossary of terms used in Hanukkah traditions.  My one small complaint is that they don’t actually explain the how to play the dreidel game, despite naming the Hebrew letters.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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The Best Christmas Pageant Ever

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever by Barbara Robinson

The Herdmans are just about the worst kids ever.  They’re mean and nasty and dirty and they smoke and curse.  The one place that is safe from their influence is the church.  They have nothing to do with the church.  But Charlie opens up his big mouth and tells a few fibs about all the treats they get at church and sure enough the Herdmans show up.  Just in time for the Christmas pageant.  Through threats, intimidations and pure eagerness, they secure all of the main roles, with the rest of the children left to watch.  But as it turns out, the Christmas story is entirely new to them, from Mary being turned away at the inn, to King Herod in all his infamy to the Wise Men who bring strange gifts.

In the end, the town ends up seeing the story of Christmas through the Herdmans’ eyes and what could have been a disaster just might be the best pageant they’ve ever had.

Although slightly dated (see the yuck section below), I think this will still amuse and entertain many young readers.  It is likely on a third grade reading level and is appropriate for that age group.  Those who are slightly younger may enjoy it as a read aloud.  It will have far more resonance with children who have a strong familiarity with the story of the birth of Christ, as knowing the Church interpretation is part of what makes the Herdmans’ take on the issues more entertaining and revealing.

Just yuck: There’s a lot of harassment of fat kids.  There’s a comment that a girl tugging on  her pierced ears makes you shudder “like looking at the pictures in National Geographic of the natives with their ears stretched all the way to their shoulders”.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – One girl’s mother objects to her hearing about people being pregnant.  There are “dirty books” in the library.  One boy’s father hangs out in his underwear.  The kids are accused of talking about sex (they’re not).
Profanity – Bad kids talked dirty and cussed their teachers and took the name of the Lord in vain. “hell”, in the biblical sense.  Bibles are scribbled upon – this is blasphemous right? “My God”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Bad kids hit little children.  There is a vicious cat who eats someone’s pet mice.  There’s a mention of South American fish that can strip your bones clean.  A woman broke her leg.  A boy ends up black and blue because of the kid he sits next to.  Gladys hits people hard.  Someone shoved a pussy willow so far down someone’s ear until it sprouted.   Many children are threatened with violence.  A girl is pinched.  Some kids get bows and arrows or dart guns as gifts. In the bible, people want to kill Jesus.  There’s a mention that Herod should be burned alive.  It’s suggested that Herod should be hanged. Herod killed many people.  Herod killed his own wife.  There’s some speculation about what would have happened if Jesus had been murdered. Mother said she’d ignore any violence except blood.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Bad kids smoked cigars, sometimes in church.
Frightening or Intense Things – A toolhouse burns down, as kids light things on fire.  A girl considers stealing a baby.

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My True Love Gave to Me: Twelve Holiday Stories

My True Love Gave To Me: Twelve Holiday Stories edited by Stephane Perkins

I was dying to read this from the moment I knew it existed.  After all I was a huge fan of Let it Snow! another YA holiday story collection.  It did not disappoint.  I think the only real disappointments were that the stories weren’t longer and that there were only 12 of them.  This will be an absolute hit for teens looking for a bit of winter-y romance.  I almost never say this, but I would buy this one.  I can see myself re-reading favorites every year.

As per my usual story collection reporting I’ve covered each story separately just in case people want to use them individually.  I had too many favorites to count, but sadly and terribly unexpectedly David Levithan provided one of my least favorite submissions – one of the more bittersweet tales, dropping the f-bomb as only Levithan does and even more disappointing as it’s the only same-sex story in the collection.

My plot summaries may seem a bit lacking, but I did very much want to preserve the stories for people to read and it’s remarkably difficult to summarize something that short without giving away the whole plot!  Sorry!

Good diversity stuff: There are some characters of color.  There are some same-sex relationships, although only one of those is the primary relationship of a story.  There are many, many different family structures with varying degrees of functionality.

Age recommendation: Well, there’s no out and out sex, although there are a few minor references to it, the actual action between leads isn’t particularly graphic.  There’s definitely underage drinking and drug use and with absolutely no negative consequences for those involved.  And there’s the f-bomb in a few places.  So I would say this is fine for most teenagers, and with parental discretion, there are probably some tweens that would really enjoy it as well.

Midnights by Rainbow Rowell

One of my favorites which is unsurprising given my love for Rowell. Every New Year’s Eve has a midnight, but Mags doesn’t think she can possibly stand one more.  This time, she’s going to hide outside.  Whatever happens tonight, she wants it to be intentional.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – There is talk of people wanting kiss other people and how you can tell if someone wants to kiss you.  People kiss.
Profanity – “shit,” “Jesus Christ,”
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – A girl’s parents take away the alcohol when she has parties. A few years later, people bring alcohol, drink it, hide it.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

The Lady and the Fox by Kelly Link

Delicately otherworldly, I longed for this one to be a longer story! If one thing holds true at the holidays, it’s that there must be magic, real magic. Miranda’s story also takes place over the span of years, Christmases rather than the New Year’s Eves of the prior story. There’s a bit of fairy tale, a bit of real life and many kinds of love.

Sex, Nudity, DatingTwo men are kissing in the kitchen.  Two 14 year olds kiss on the cheek under mistletoe.  There’s a joke about orgies in the cupboards. Two women have an affair, ending in one’s divorce. A girl breaks up with a boy.  A couple kisses, it is described in some detail with tongues and bum cupping.  His erection is mentioned.  His hands are in places they shouldn’t be.  There’s more kissing.
Profanity
“good god,”  
Death, Violence and Gore
There’s a joke about attempted murder in the pantry.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking
There are champagne glasses.  People are tipsy.  A girl tries champagne for the first time at 13.  People are drinking.  Two teenagers are given joints by an adult.  They smoke it.  Someone is hungover.
Frightening or Intense Things
A kid wonders if the unknown person is not Santa Claus but perhaps an axe murderer.  A girl’s mother is in jail.

Angels in the Snow by Matt de la Pena

A bit of a tough transition from the last story, this one is modern romance.  It also offers one of the few characters of color (Random aside: interestingly enough, it seems as though every character of color is involved in a mixed-race romance). Shy is cat-sitting for his boss in a posh New York apartment that couldn’t be further from his California home and his Mexican family.  In this cold, sterile place, alone at Christmas, without money for the plane ticket home, or even for food for dinner, he doesn’t really know what to do.  But while the snow rages outside, he meets a neighbor and quickly finds things are looking up.

Sex, Nudity, DatingA man has his father warn his sister to “stay away from dudes.”  There is hand-holding. There is kissing while lying down.  A woman’s shirt is unbuttoned and her bra is undone by a man.  There is a brief mention of prostitutes.
Profanity
“shit,” “ass,”
Death, Violence and Gore
A character seriously considers mugging someone.  A character’s mother has passed away, there is a reference to her in the casket.  A man slaps his son.  
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking
There are bottles of vodka.  There is booze at a graduation party.  An adult drinks beer.  A character drank tequila at 15.  At a family gathering a relative gives underage drinkers hits off a Patron bottle. Teenagers drank wine from shot glasses.  Two college students drink wine.
Frightening or Intense Things
A character must go without food.

Polaris is Where You’ll Find Me by Jenny Han

I know Jenny Han’s books and I like Jenny Han, really like her, but after three happy stories this one felt a bit too bitter. Natalie is Santa’s Korean adopted daughter.  But without any other humans at the North Pole to socialize with, she’s left to the company of the elves.  One of whom she has a terribly big crush on.  But to everyone she knows she’s just Natty, a little girl not a young woman.  Will she find love this Christmas?

Sex, Nudity, Dating – A teen has a crush on a male elf.  A couple kisses.
Profanity – “jav-lar” – sorry, missing the mark above the a, but it means roughly “damn” in Swedish, “darn,”
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

It’s a Yuletide Miracle, Charlie Brown by Stephanie Perkins

Favorite.  Absolute favorite.  Marigold has spent the past month lurking around a Christmas tree lot trying to gather the courage to speak to a guy who works there.  Not because she likes him, but because she needs him to help her with a project.  When she finally gets up the courage to talk to him, things do not go as she’d planned at all.  They go much, much better.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – A man moved in with his girlfriend.  There is some passionate kissing, including a girl wrapping her legs around a guy’s waist.
Profanity – “hell,” “shit,” “God,” “damn it,” “smartassery,” “Jesus,”
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

Your Temporary Santa by David Levithan

I was so excited for the Levithan offering, but this fell flat for me, especially coming off a story so filled with happiness, to go to one with so much pain and anger was rough. When your boyfriend asks you to play Santa so that his little sister can hold on to one last childhood dream you say yes, right?  Even if it means that you may be getting deeply involved in something far more complicated.  Even if it means that you may be overstepping just a bit?

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Lana suggests that someone’s boyfriend has offered him sexual favors.  A character gets into bed with his boyfriend.  There is kissing.
Profanity – “dumbfuck asshat,” “goddamn fucking”, “shit,” “bullshit,” “pissed,”
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Connor’s mother is supposedly “tranq’d up”.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

Krampuslauf by Holly Black

This was very cool and unexpected.  The initial premise didn’t impress me, but where Black went with it, that I liked. It’s been done before, the age old story of the rich boy with the fancy girlfriend at prep school and the secret townie girl on the side.  But it hasn’t been done this way before; a trailer park elegant New Year’s Eve party,  a confrontation, unexpected guests, chaos, madness and of course, much, much, magic.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – People are dating.  One guy is dating two girls.  A guy is bare-chested. One character had a much older girlfriend. A guy is called hot. A girl goes into a bedroom with a guy and returns wearing only her underwear. A couple is “sucking face.” There’s talk of “nailing” a girl. People kiss each other.
Profanity – “assholes”, “shit”, “godawful,” “scum-sucking dirtbags”,  “damning”, “crappy”, “douchenozzle,”
Death, Violence and Gore – A girl can knee a guy so hard his testicles rupture. A girl dreams her skin is flayed off. A guy grabs a girl’s wrist and twists her arm. Guys punch each other, some have bloody noses. A girl presses a knife to a guy’s throat. Krampus will whip you until you bleed.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – A girl’s grandparents taught her to roll cigarettes.  People assume the girls have access to drugs and booze, which they mostly do, despite being in high school. A lot of alcohol is purchased for use at an under-age party, including vodka, Korbel, Andre and beer. A smoking area is created outside. Teenagers drink. People bring pink champagne, skittles vodka, bourbon,prosecco and a pie made with hash. A girl tells a story about how her aunt got so drunk she peed the bed. There is a mysterious clear alcoholic beverage served. Someone is smoking.
Frightening or Intense Things – Zombies are mentioned.  The devil comes up. Evidently a Krampuslauf celebration should involve terrifying people, using torches and whips and making children cry.  A character’s mother left.

What the Hell Have You Done, Sophie Roth by Gayle Forman

Another great one, Forman did a wonderful job of capturing the identity struggles common to so many college freshman. Sometimes Sophie is not entirely clear how she ended up at a rural university in the middle of the country so far from her native Brooklyn, especially when she finds herself at a caroling party full of midwesterners wearing very sincere holiday sweaters.  She’s feeling lonely and Jewish and misunderstood and mutters a Ned Flanders joke she doesn’t expect anyone to hear, much less get, but as it turns out, she’s got an audience: a very tall, very attractive, black man.  As the evening goes on, she finds she has to question a lot of assumptions she’s made, but that she might be happier if she does.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – There’s a joke about procreation and a mating ritual.  There are some insinuations about Rudolph’s red pulsating nose.  Someone mentions a former girlfriend.  A sweater orgy is mentioned (just as a joke).  There is kissing.
Profanity – “hell”, “Bumfuckville”, “shit”, “Kiss-My-Ass”, “shit-eating”, “piss-off”,
Death, Violence and Gore – Sophie makes a joke about ending up at the bottom of a limestone quarry.  A girls’ grandmother had a stroke and died prior to the start of the story.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

Beer Buckets and Baby Jesus by Myra McEntire

Heartwarming,  but probably dangerous.  McEntire, please don’t go around convincing girls that the troublemakers really have hearts of gold and will show them with the love of a good woman!  That’s a recipe for trouble for sure! Vaughn’s pranks have gone too far when he accidentally burns down a church barn.  Now he has to help out with the Christmas pageant so that he doesn’t end up spending the holidays in juvie.  It would be almost unbearable except for the fact that he’s pretty much in love with the pastor’s daughter Gracie.  When some scheduling problems and an entirely unforeseen blizzard arise, Vaughn is determined to prove himself worthy of her.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Herpes is mentioned but in relationship to glitter, not actual herpes.    A girl touches a guy’s leg.  A joke is made about “free-swinging adults”.  Someone has a secret girlfriend.  There’s a question about Ben-gay in a jock.  There’s a lot of talk about whether people like each other.  A guy pictures a girl in a bikini.  Some speculates that waitresses will look like prostitutes if they wear certain costumes.  There’s a mention of conjugal visits at prison. There’s talk of kissing and tongues.
Profanity – “shit”, “ass”, “screwed”, “hell”, “hells yeah”, “crap”,
Death, Violence and Gore – A woman feel and broke her foot.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – There’s a joke about weed at a Miley Cyrus concert.  A dinner theater serves beer in feed buckets.  Gracie’s mom died when she was little.
Frightening or Intense Things – A church barn is set on fire by accident.  Vaughn’s father was an angry man who eventually left.  His mother needs medication to be functional, but is often not functional.

Welcome to Christmas, CA by Kiersten White

This one started out so very sad but I’m an absolute sucker for any story that involves both romance and cooking. Maria feels less than festive to be living in Christmas.  She’s counting the days until she can get away from her mom, her mom’s boyfriend and the diner where she works. On one of her endless drives to school and back, she learns the diner has a new chef, a fact that barely registers because she really doesn’t care.  But the new chef has a knack for knowing exactly what to cook for each customer plus a killer recipe for gingerbread.  By the end of the story Maria has figured out that even if she does leave, there may be some things worth holding onto.

Sex, Nudity, DatingMaria’s mom lives with her boyfriend.  A woman is pregnant with her boyfriend’s child.  A girl asks a guy if he’s using a pick-up line.  She finds him pretty.  There’s hand holding.  There’s kissing.
Profanity
“effing”, “Dios mio”, Maria gives someone the finger, “crappy”, 
Death, Violence and Gore
An elf figurine holds a knife and later, poison.  A woman is a victim of domestic violence.  She frequently has bruises and is forced to give all her earnings to her boyfriend.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking
There’s a reference to chain-smoking.  Someone is asked if he dealt drugs; he did not.  A woman hands out free beers, but likely to of-age drinkers.
Frightening or Intense Things
A guy spent time in juvie, he does not say why other than that he was not violent.  Maria doesn’t remember her father.  Her mother is very proud of this, that she left soon enough so Maria didn’t have to feel scared.

Star of Bethlehem by Ally Carter

One of the most frustrating in the set.  I loved the beginning.  I loved where it went.  And then the end.  The big reveal.  HUGE disappointment. HUGE.  Arg. In a post-9/11 world finding a story about passengers trading flights is unexpected to say the least.  The act is so simple, Hulda does not want to go on her flight.  She wants to go to New York.  And two girls trade places and it is done.  So while Hulda is in New York, another girl finds herself in Oklahoma, taking Hulda’s place at a ranch in the middle of nowhere. But she has many secrets of her own and it’s only a question of time before people find out.

Sex, Nudity, DatingA boy kisses a girl.
Profanity
None.
Death, Violence and Gore
A woman’s daughter and husband died in a car accident.  A girl’s mother is dying.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking
A woman is under the influence of painkillers, but it might be for medical reasons.
Frightening or Intense Things
None.

The Girl Who Woke the Dreamer by Laini Taylor

One of the darkest of the stories, although not sad, it was a rough transition from the conclusion of the prior story which felt very teeny-bopper in tone.  It is Advent, when men declare their intentions by leaving  a gift for the girl of their choosing.  In a place where girls are worked like slaves, an advantageous marriage is all some of them could ever hope for.  But when Neve is chosen by the sinister preacher who has already buried three wives, she will not submit.  She issues a prayer to something older than God, asking for protection.

Sex, Nudity, DatingThere’s an insinuation that girls would work a contract on a ship but that no one could hate life enough to do it.  The type of contract is not specified but the implication is that it is sexual in nature.  Freedom for a girl just means freedom to marry.  Someone tells Neve and the twins “what went on betwixt husbands and wives” and they blush. There’s talk of wondering what a boy’s skin tastes like and blushing and purring with longing.  A man says the bedroom is dark, a girl knows him to mean that he pictures another man’s wife as he “grunt(s) atop” his own.  Girls are given gifts by beaux for 24 days and then confirms the marriage with a dance. 
Profanity
“blasted”, “Hell’, “damned”, “bastard”, 
Death, Violence and Gore
The main character was very close to twins who died. Children were orphaned by the plague.  There’s a reasonable amount of talk about being eaten by crows after death.  In a preacher’s tales of Hell, demons will peel you like fruit and devour you.  A boy is lashed.  A man’s wife dies of fever.  A man has buried three wives.  A mysterious force kills sailors.  A church is filled with saints’ bones.  A woman lost her toes.  Neve doesn’t want to bury her children (she has none yet), digging tiny graves. A girl fears a man will come in the night, again nothing is said, but the implication is that she fears rape.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking
People want to drink.
Frightening or Intense Things
None.

 

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