Posts Tagged middle grade books

October New Releases!

For some of us, the air is starting to feel crisp. The days are getting shorter. And it feels like a good time to cozy up and read. Luckily, we have lots of new middle-grade options to choose from. Here are a few to pick.

 

The Winterton Deception 2: Fault Lines - Johnson, Janet SumnerThe Winterton Deception 2: Fault Lines

by Janet Sumner Johnson

After the incredible events of the last official Winterton Bee, Hope and Gordon Smith have discovered that having an extended family isn’t so bad . . . and maybe their famous relatives’ lives aren’t so charmed. But Hope is still hiding a secret, and it’s a big one.

When Elizabeth Springer goes missing just before the Winterton’s big Thanksgiving celebration–their first reunion since the spelling bee–Hope knows it’s time to come clean. Her secret may be the only thing that can save Ms. Springer. But none of the Winterton clan want to hear it. Worse, they accuse Hope of making up the whole thing as an attention-grab.

Poised to give up on her new-found family, Hope gets a cryptic coded letter with instructions on how to find James Winterton–her long-estranged grandfather. Whatsmore, the letter hints that the Wintertons had more secrets than just a hidden treasure. Now Hope and Gordon face the impossible task of convincing their family to follow a shifty clue to find the man they want to see least, in order to save the woman who’s been lying to them for years.

 

 


A Split Second - Marks, JanaeA Split Second

by Janae Marks

When Elise wakes up the morning after her birthday celebration, she’s surprised to find herself in her bedroom. Last she can remember, she had fallen asleep next to her best friends at her slumber party in her basement, and it was October. But now she’s alone, and her phone says it’s April 8. Elise doesn’t understand. How could she have woken up six months later?

No one else is acting like anything strange has happened, yet Elise can’t remember the last half year. To make matters worse, her friends refuse to talk to her and Elise doesn’t know why. She also has no idea how she got signed up for photography club or why her former best friend, Cora, is talking to her again. Is it a memory problem? Could it be magic? Every day that passes takes Elise further from the world she knew. Thankfully, Elise has Cora to lean on in this new reality, and the two come together to investigate why Elise woke up in the future–and, more important, how to get her back to her past and away from this nightmare.

 

 

 


Hungry Bones - Hung, LouiseHungry Bones

by Louise Hung

Molly Teng sees things no one else can.

By touching the belongings of people who have died, she gets brief glimpses into the lives they lived. Sometimes the “zaps” are funny or random, but often they leave her feeling sad, drained, and lonely.

The last thing Jade remembers from life is dying. That was over one hundred years ago. Ever since then she’s been trapped in the same house watching people move in and out. She’s a ‘hungry ghost’ reliant on the livings’ food scraps to survive. To most people she is only a shadow, a ghost story, a superstition.

Molly is not most people. When she moves into Jade’s house, nothing will ever be the same–for either of them. After over a century alone, Jade might finally have someone who can help her uncover the secrets of her past, and maybe even find a way out of the house–before her hunger destroys them both.

 


Eyes on the Sky - Kramer, J. KasperEyes on the Sky

by J. Kasper Kramer

Nothing ever happens in Roswell, New Mexico. Dorothy should know. She’s lived her whole life on a rural ranch nearby, surrounded by the difficult memories from her family’s struggles to make ends meet during the Great Depression years ago. At least her older brother Dwight is home safe from the war. Unfortunately he’s no better to talk to than her ancient pet sheep, Geraldine.

Thankfully Dorothy has her experiments, like launching rockets off the top of her windmill. But one stormy night, she sends a gigantic weather balloon into the stratosphere–and an incredible blast lights up the sky. Suddenly, all the newspapers feature a flying saucer crash in their headlines and the sleepy town of Roswell is alight with gossip and speculation. But what if the so-called extraterrestrial vessel is actually Dorothy’s weather balloon?

When FBI agents start asking questions, she begins to suspect that there’s something out there, something dangerous. Either the government is after her for causing a national scandal…or aliens are real!

 

 


 


Borderlands and the Mexican American Story - Romo, David DoradoBorderlands and the Mexican American Story

by David Dorado Romo

Until now, you’ve only heard one side of the story, about migrants crossing borders, drawn to the promise of a better life. In reality, Mexicans were on this land long before any borders existed. Here’s the true story of America, from the Mexican American perspective.

The Mexican American story is usually carefully presented as a story of immigrants: migrants crossing borders, drawn to the promise of a better life. In reality, Mexicans were on this land long before any borders existed. Their culture and practices shaped the Southwestern part of this country, in spite of relentless attempts by white colonizers and settlers to erase them.

From missions and the Alamo to muralists, revolutionaries, and teen activists, this is the true story of the Mexican American experience.

 

 

 

 

 


Bite by Bite: American History Through Feasts, Foods, and Side Dishes - Aronson, MarcBite by Bite: American History Through Feasts, Foods, and Side Dishes

by Marc Aronson and Paul Freedman 

Explore the fascinating history of America as told through the lens of food in this illustrated nonfiction middle grade book that lays out the diverse cultures that have combined to create the rich and delicious tapestry of the American country and cuisine.

As American as apple pie. It’s a familiar saying, yet gumbo and chop suey are also American! What we eat tells us who we are: where we’re from, how we move from place to place, and how we express our cultures and living traditions.

In twelve dishes that take readers from thousands of years ago through today, this book explores the diverse peoples and foodways that make up the United States. From First Salmon Feasts of the Umatilla and Cayuse tribes in the Pacific Northwest to fish fries celebrated by formerly enslaved African Americans, from “red sauce” Italian restaurants popular with young bohemians in the East to Cantonese restaurants enjoyed by rebellious young eaters in the West, this is the true story of the many Americas–laid out bite by bite.

 

 

 

 


The Night Mother Vol. 1 - Lambert, JeremyThe Night Mother Vol. 1

by Jeremy Lambert (Author) Alexa Sharpe (Illustrator)

The moon is stuck like a broken clock in the midnight sky, the sun a distant memory. No one in this quiet seaside town can remember how long this unnatural darkness has lasted. No one, that is, except for the curious girl who lives in the graveyard, caring for the dead: twelve-year-old Madeline Tock. In gratitude, the departed whisper their worries to her, sounding just like her overprotective but loving father: beware this endless night and she who causes it.

Because there’s someone else who can hear the whispers, too . . . someone whose gown is a map of the cosmos, hair a tangled constellation, eyes like the lights of faraway stars. The Night Mother. Her elemental duty is to gather the souls of the dead in her lantern, then send them to their eternal rest as beautiful moonlight. But when her hunger for power drives her to take souls from the living, Madeline bravely stands up to defend her town and those she loves. Can Madeline help bring back the sun, or will she be lured by the starry promises of this mysterious woman?

 

 

 


This Is My Brain!: A Book on Neurodiversity - Gravel, EliseThis Is My Brain!: A Book on Neurodiversity

by Elise Gravel

Acclaimed creator Elise Gravel (Killer Underwear Invasion!, Olga and the Smelly Thing from Nowhere, and many more) uses her trademark humor and punchy art to explore the fascinating human brain.

Though all our brains look the same, every brain works differently. This Is My Brain! shows readers that understanding how different brains feel and learn can help us connect with others . . . and keep our own brains happy! Through humorous, engaging text and brightly colored art, readers are introduced to the fundamentals of how our brains work, how our unique neurology influences how we think and act, and how the world is a better place when we understand each other’s brains and use them collectively.

 

 

 


Lost at Windy River: A True Story of Survival - Rathgeber, TrinaLost at Windy River: A True Story of Survival

by Trina Rathgeber (Author) Jillian Dolan (Colorist) Alina Pete (Illustrator)

It takes courage and bravery to survive in the barrens

In 1944, thirteen-year-old Ilse Schweder got lost in a snowstorm while checking her family’s trapline in northern Canada. This is the harrowing story of how a young Indigenous girl defies the odds and endures nine days alone in the unforgiving barrens. Ilse faces many challenges, including freezing temperatures, wild animals, snow blindness and frostbite. With no food or supplies, she relies on Traditional Indigenous Knowledge passed down from her family. Ilse uses her connection to the land and animals, wilderness skills and resilience to find her way home.

This powerful tale of survival is written by Ilse Schweder’s granddaughter.

 

 

 

 


The Rise of Issa Igwe - Miles, ShannaThe Rise of Issa Igwe

by Shanna Miles

Despite a lifetime of breaking the rules, twelve-year-old Issa Igwe never expected to land in witch prison. At least that’s what she calls The Siren School outside of its hallowed halls. It’s actually the country’s most prestigious boarding school for magically gifted girls, and Issa’s parents insist that she attend . . . even though the school’s creepy history is the stuff of legend.

When a devastating loss overturns Issa’s world, Issa decides to break one of her new school’s biggest rules of all: she’s going to use bitter magic to turn back time. To succeed, she must snatch sleep-inducing feathers from the backs of magical creatures, sneak out while avoiding the Night Children–whoever they are–and even raise the dead. Her nighttime explorations bring the school’s darkest secrets to light, and reveal a new power within Issa herself. It turns out that a rule-breaker might be just what The Siren School needs to undo an ancient evil . . .

 

 

 

 

 


Happy October reading!

Author Spotlight: Amalie Jahn + a GIVEAWAY

In today’s Author Spotlight, Jo Hackl chats with USA Bestselling author Amalie Jahn about her new middle-grade novel, Team Canteen (Pixel+Ink).  Amalie is the recipient of the Literary Classics Seal of Approval and the Readers’ Favorite Gold Medal for her debut YA novel, THE CLAY LION. Her first YA contemporary, THE NEXT TO LAST MISTAKE, won the prestigious IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award in 2020. She is a contributing blogger with the Huffington Post and Southern Writers Magazine. A TED speaker, human rights advocate, and active promoter of kindness, she lives with her husband, two children, and three extremely overfed cats.

Plus, there’s a chance to win a finished/signed copy of Team Canteen if you enter the giveaway. Scroll down for details. 

All about the book!

On the final night of summer camp, Tasha, Raelynn, Claire, and Billie get busted stuffing themselves with ice cream in the mess hall’s walk-in freezer. But when they slip away without being punished, they’re convinced the pink feather boa Billie put on to stay warm is magic.

Back at home, each member of Team Canteen tests the boa’s powers as they face their own challenges. When her little cousin moves in with her destructive dog, Tasha struggles to find her place inside her adoptive family. Claire’s scared the kids at school will find out how hard life’s gotten since her dad lost his job. Raelynn longs to be someone other than her sister’s twin. And with a hockey-obsessed family charting his every move, Billie’s worried he’ll never be able to share his dream of becoming a figure skater.

It’s going to be a rocky road from the start of the school year back to Camp Happy Hollow. Will the boa continue to protect Team Canteen, or will their friendship end up being the most magical find of all?

Amalie, many thanks for answering my questions.

Jo: Team Canteen combines the best parts of The Baby-Sitters Club and Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, turns them upside-down, and modernizes them for today’s kids. Why did you think the market needed a new series like Team Canteen?

Amalie: A lot of recent middle grade series are big stakes books. The Last Kids on Earth series is about zombies and the end of the world. All the kids in The Forgotten Five series have supernatural powers. All of Rick Riordan’s books are full of life and death situations. But I don’t write big stakes. I write small stakes. Quiet stakes. And I think sometimes small stakes are enough. Making it through middle school is tough. There are a lot of obstacles. Parents who don’t understand. Classmates who bully. Siblings who tease. Hormones. The struggle to fit in. And these problems are valid and worthy of discussion. Kids need to see real problems tackled on the page.

 

Jo:. Team Canteen is told in alternating chapters from four different perspectives. How did you handle the logistics of writing from so many different points of view?

Amalie: It was tough, honestly! At first, I started writing sequentially. A Tasha chapter, followed by a Billie chapter, followed by a Claire chapter, and so on. I felt like I needed to draft chronologically to keep the pacing and plotlines consistent. What I found pretty quickly, however, was that it was nearly impossible to get any traction with regard to each character’s voice jumping from head to head in that way. At about ten thousand words in, I decided to draft each character’s story independently from start to finish and not worry too much about how they would ultimately intersect with one another. Once each character arc was complete, I was able to go back through and layer in places where their stories connected. The text chains between them really helped with that.

 

Jo: You’ve spent the last ten years writing for young adults. What was different about writing for a younger audience?

Amalie: One of the most obvious differences I encountered between YA and MG was point of view. Although I’d written all of my young adult titles in first person, the majority of middle grade books I encountered were written in third. It didn’t take long to realize the difference in POV could be mostly attributed to voice. In addition to voice, it became apparent that YA and MG characters were compelled by different motivations. For example, the majority of my young adult characters’ choices were influenced by their desire to find their place in the world, but most of the MG characters from my research were more concerned with fitting in with immediate friends and family.

 

Jo: At the beginning of the book, Tasha finds a feather boa that the kids are convinced is magic because it keeps them from getting in trouble. What is the point of this unique talisman?

Amalie: Honestly, the boa was initially a plot device. A way to connect the four stories and drive the narrative forward with regard to keeping the kids involved in each other’s lives over the course of the school year. Ultimately, however, it became something far more. A confidence booster for the kids to help them face tough decisions and difficult situations. Sort of like Dumbo the Elephant and his magic feather. He could always fly without the feather, but having it gave him the confidence to do what he was always capable of on his own. And in the case of Team Canteen, their friendship was the real magic.

  

Jo: To which of your four main characters do you relate the most?

Amalie: It’s hard to say which one I relate to the most because there’s a bit of me inside all of them. Like Billie, I understand the pressure of living inside a family with rigid expectations for success. I see myself in Tasha and how jarring it can be when your sense of self is completely shaken. I identify with Claire and the reality of her family’s difficult financial situation. And I empathize with Raelynn and the stress of trying to fit into a world that doesn’t quite understand you. But mostly, I remember deeply what it was to live on the periphery. To be on the outside looking in, hoping to find a way to become cool and popular overnight. That feeling of otherness is what I relate most to, and I think—I hope—lots of readers will too.

 

Jo: Can you tell us a bit more about your motivation to write Team Canteen? 

Amalie: For the past several months, I’ve been working on not one, not two, but three adult manuscripts. And I have to be honest when I say that writing for adults isn’t tugging at me quite the way writing for young people does. There’s something special about knowing that the children reading my words may see themselves (or others) in the pages and take something meaningful with them long after the final chapter is done. The Team Canteen kids are a tribute to the kid I was and the kids I knew. Their friendships and their stories speak to the type of friendship I think every child longs for, and I count myself grateful to have had strong childhood relationships that endure to this day. We might not have always been the smartest or the richest or the funniest or the coolest, but we met each other where we were and that was enough.

 

No MUF interview is complete without a lightning round, so.. . 

Favorite cities (besides the one in which you live):  Barcelona and Venice

Favorite musical group or artist:  I’m a huge 90s alternative girl. The Cure. Tori Amos. The Dave Matthews Band. 

Would you rather be able to speak every language in the world or talk to animals?  

Oh I’m definitely talking to animals. 

Favorite ice cream flavor? Mint Chocolate Chip

Do you prefer mountains or beaches or somewhere in between?  I’ve been a beach girl my whole life but my family recently got a little fixer upper on the top of a mountain, and it’s become my peaceful happy place. 

Favorite childhood TV show?  The Muppet Show

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received?  First drafts don’t need to be perfect, they just need to be written. 

Jo: Thanks for chatting with us Amalie!

And now. . . .

For a chance to win a signed copy of Team Canteen, comment on the blog—and, if you’re on Twitter/X, on the Mixed-Up Files  Twitter/X account, for an extra chance to win!  (Giveaway ends September 26, 2024 MIDNIGHT EST.) U.S. only, please. Book will be mailed after publication.

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Author Spotlight: Ciera Burch

Today, we’re thrilled to welcome author Ciera Burch back for her second visit to the Mixed-Up Files! Her sophomore MG novel, Camp Twisted Pine, a paranormal fantasy that mixes thrills, chills, and local legend, is out tomorrow, September 17, from Margaret K. McElderry Books.

Melissa: Hi, Ciera! Welcome back to the Mixed-Up Files. It’s great to have you here again!

Ciera: Great to be back. Thanks so much for having me!

Melissa: The last time we chatted, your MG debut, Finch House, was about to be released. Now you have a second MG, Camp Twisted Pine, launching tomorrow. How have you prepared for the big day? Was the experience similar to—or vastly different from—your debut launch?

Ciera: Ha, yes, time really flies! It’s honestly been so much different this time around. With Finch House, I had a launch event at Politics and Prose {in Washington, D.C.} and so many friends and family members came out, with my friends even coming a few days before and staying over, making a whole event of the weekend up until launch day. This time, I’m doing pretty normal things like going to the dentist and grocery shopping. I’m very glad to have had both experiences, but as an anxious introvert, I’m loving a much more relaxed launch.

Camp Twisted Pine: A Summary

Melissa: Let’s turn our attention to Camp Twisted Pine. Can you give Mixed-Up Files readers your best elevator pitch?

Ciera: Of course! Camp Twisted Pine is about Naomi, a girl who loves nature in theory but isn’t super into experiencing it firsthand, who’s being sent, along with her younger twin brothers, to summer camp in the Pine Barrens, in New Jersey, for the first time as her parents deal with their impending divorce. While she’s there, she realizes that campers have been going missing and that it might be up to her to figure out what’s wrong and to help save them…especially when one of her brothers and her cabinmate (and crush), Jackie, go missing.

Melissa: As you’d mentioned, the novel takes place at a sleepaway camp in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. What made you choose this particular location? Does the area have a special significance for you?

Ciera: I’m from New Jersey, so Jersey has always had a special place in my heart. But the Pine Barrens especially do for being the site of my first and only taste of sleepaway camp, thanks to a field trip I went on in the sixth grade. It’s also a massive swath of protected land in New Jersey that’s super important to the ecosystem and landscape of our state, and I feel like it doesn’t get enough love, especially since it’s said to be home to a mysterious creature…

Back to Nature

Melissa: Along these lines, Camp Twisted Pine has been described as an “eco-fable,” with kudzu that comes alive and other nature-based anomalies. Can you speak more to this?

Ciera: I can! I think we all know at least a bit about climate change and its effects on the world, but we don’t often—myself included—think about other potential threats to nature, of which intrusive plants, like kudzu, are one. Nature provides us with so much and it’s so easy to overlook or not recognize changes in it, but even things that are natural themselves can cause harm to our favorite spaces if we’re not vigilant. There are different native plant species in all regions and to help protect them, we should all strive to learn more about the plants that inhabit the places we call home!

Melissa: As you mentioned, Naomi, the eleven-year-old protagonist of the novel, loves to study nature but isn’t wild about the great outdoors. Is this a trait you share with her?

Ciera: I think it can be! And absolutely was when I was younger. As someone who hates the heat and isn’t a fan of bugs or being itchy, nature and I never seemed to click, especially when my main experience of it, growing up in the suburbs, was going to parks or beaches. But as I got older and traveled more, and moved to D.C, which has a wonderful amount of green space and proximity to even more, I’ve discovered that I do really enjoy nature—the songs of birds and the babbling of creeks, and just the soft rustle of leaves on trees. It’s a nice refresh from the bustle of just living.

I still can’t say I’m a big bug fan, though. I’m a nature girl in the colder months much more than I am in the warmer ones.

Melissa: As a follow-up, Naomi is a logical person who appreciates things that are “real and true and provable.” How does she reconcile this when faced with the possibility of a child-stealing cryptid—aka the Jersey Devil—at camp?

Ciera: Oh, she has a tough time! Stories and facts are in two very different folders in her mind, so the idea that a chimera-like creature can move from the “story” folder to the “fact” folder is a little bit mind bending. It definitely makes her reevaluate her definitions of “real” and whether or not things that are real need proof, or at least tangible proof.

You Gotta Have Friends

Melissa: Friendship is an overarching theme in Camp Twisted Pine. By opening herself up to new friends—including Jackie, who wears a hearing aid and teaches Naomi ASL—Naomi learns more about herself and about her core beliefs. What else were you trying to say about friendship?

Ciera: It can be so hard to make friends, as kids and as adults, and I think it’s especially true when you’re so often in your head like Naomi is. It’s hard to put yourself out there and be vulnerable with people, but being vulnerable, at least a little bit, is a part of human connection, and opening yourself up to others can lead to some really fantastic relationships and experiences.

I also wanted to touch on the fact that people are different. Some people are braver or rasher than others, and some are quieter or take time to think things through. But our differences, while important, aren’t the whole of who we or other people are and shouldn’t be an immutable barrier to friendship or connection.

Melissa: Like your debut novel, Camp Twisted Pine includes spooky, supernatural elements. What draws you to this genre?

Ciera: I just love all things spooky, the things we imagine exist in the dark the second we turn the lights out! And I love thinking about how rich and complex and vast our world is, and the idea that there can be other creatures and worlds just as vast and complex hidden within ours, or in its very seams. There’s so much possibility and excitement in the unknown to me—in the supernatural.

A’ Camping We Will Go!

Melissa: And now for the question on everyone’s mind: Did you attend sleepaway camp as a child? If so, what was your biggest takeaway from the experience? Also, what were your favorite activities? Your least favorite?

Ciera: Yes, and no! As I’d mentioned, the trip I went on in the sixth grade to the Pine Barrens—funnily called Mount Misery—was a week long and we did sleep in cabins and do traditional camp-like things, but it was also still part of school. I did beg my mom (a lot!) to go to an actual sleepaway camp for the summer, especially because I was obsessed with Percy Jackson and Camp Half Blood, but she always refused.

My biggest takeaway from my sixth grade trip, however, was just being in the middle of so much nature. There were no cars around and I could see so many more stars and hear small animals skittering about it. It was a little scary, I’ll admit, but I also felt really, really human for, I think, the first time. Part of the earth and the universe, you know?

I really loved the bonfires and the stories about the Jersey Devil we told while eating s’mores, and taking pictures of everyone and everything, but my least favorite had to be the night hike, because it was long and exhausting and also pretty dark.

Up Next…

Melissa: What are you working on now, Ciera? 

Ciera: I’m currently working on another middle grade! It’s about 13-year-old Olivia who realizes, after her brother comes out and her friends begin to gush about their recent crushes almost constantly, that she doesn’t feel quite the same way as most other people and starts to turn quite literally invisible when no one will listen to her.

Melissa: Before I let you go, I want to circle back to something you’d mentioned in your previous interview: your love of ice cream! Is mint chocolate chip still your favorite or have you added another flavor to the roster?

Ciera: I’ve definitely added another flavor recently and it’s Strawberry Cheesecake!

Lightning Round!

Melissa: Finally, no Mixed-Up Files interview is complete without a lightning round, so…

Preferred writing snack? (besides ice cream) Seaweed!

Favorite camp prank? Turning out the lights on someone in the bathroom!

Best way to roast a marshmallow: Char it to a crisp or brown it slightly? Almost burnt, but not quite! Just brown enough!

Cryptids: Real or imaginary? Definitely real!

Superpower? Teleportation!

Favorite place on earth? My mom’s backyard! She lives right next to the woods and a river and deer hang out all the time.

If you were stranded on a desert island with only three things, what would they be? Notebook and pencils (totally counting them as one); a flare gun; a big, light blanket

Melissa: Thank you for chatting with us, Ciera. It a pleasure, and I’m sure MUF readers will agree!

Ciera: Thanks so much for having me again! Happy reading!

About Ciera Burch

Ciera Burch is a lifelong writer and ice cream aficionado. She has a BA from American University and an MFA from Emerson College. Her fiction has appeared in The American Literary MagazineUndergroundFive PointsStork, and Blackbird. Her work was also chosen as the 2019 One City One Story read for the Boston Book Festival. While she is originally from New Jersey, she currently resides in Washington, DC, with her stuffed animals, plants, and far too many books. Learn more about Ciera on her website and follow her on Instagram.

Melissa Roske is a writer of middle-grade fiction. Before spending her days with imaginary people, she interviewed real ones as a journalist in Europe. In London she landed a job as an advice columnist for Just Seventeen magazine. Upon returning to her native New York, Melissa contributed to several books and magazines, selected jokes for Reader’s Digest (just the funny ones), and received certification as a life coach from NYU. In addition to her debut novel Kat Greene Comes Clean (Charlesbridge), Melissa’s short story “Grandma Merle’s Last Wish” appears in the Jewish middle-grade anthology, Coming of Age: 13 B’Nai Mitzvah Stories (Albert Whitman). Learn more about Melissa on her Website and follow her on  TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.