I started this blog in 2011 when I took my first master's level poetry class with Dr. Sylvia Vardell at Texas Woman's University. Critiquing poetry and young adult literature is addicting! Teachers, be sure to note the curriculum connections I create at the end of each of many of my reviews!

Saturday

Ship Breaker (Printz YA Award Winner)

(Book Cover compliments of Titlewave.com)




Bibliography
Bacigalupi, P. (2010). Ship Breaker. New York: Little, Brown. ISBN 0-316-05621-9

Plot summary
Set in a post-oil, global-warming-wrecked future, Nailer, a fifteen-year old child laborer on a ship breaking crew on the Gulf of Mexico experiences betrayal, loyalty, despair, and hope for a better future when he spares the life of a wealthy girl on a hurricane-battered, high-tech clipper ship.

Critical Analysis
In the dirty waters of a future Gulf of Mexico not far from Orleans II, Nailer and the other young members of the ship-stripping “light crew” struggle to “make quota” and survive in a dirty, dangerous occupation that is certain to end their young lives early. After miraculously surviving a near drowning in a hidden chamber of oil inside a tanker ship, Nailer begins to dream of finding his own “Lucky Strike” that will get him out of reach of his drug-addicted, physically abusive father and the dirty, broken world in which he barely survives. When a hurricane destroys the beach community and maroons a high tech clipper ship, fate offers Nailer a way out. Fortified by his true friendship with crewmate Pima and her mother, Nailer decides to risk his life to save “Lucky Girl” Nita, the wealthy “swank” and sole survivor on the clipper ship.  Barely escaping being murdered by his father and other dangerous men and half-men bent on salvaging the clipper, Nailer pledges to protect Nita and begins a treacherous journey to the flooded city of Orleans to find her family leading them into the path of violent criminals, perilous sea storms, and repeated tests of loyalty.

Filled with details that make readers wince, Bacigalupi’s dark, raw writing holds no punches. But Nailer’s complex commitment to family, determination to do what’s right, and unwillingness to embrace revenge balance the grim tone of the story. His journey to find a better life for himself and others in the face of impossible odds will resonate with readers. The authenticity of the characters draws us into the story and makes Bacigalupi’s nightmarish details and surreal landscape believable.  Readers will finish the book wondering about their own future when cheap energy is gone and they are forced to face the uncertain sustainability of life.

Rapunzel's Revenge (Graphic Novel)

(Book Cover compliments of Titlewave.com)


Bibliography
Hale, Shannon and Dean. Illustrated by Nathan Hale. Rapunzel’s Revenge. New York: NY Bloomsbury. ISBN 1-59990-070-X

Plot summary
A graphic novel fairy tale set in the Old West, Rapunzel escapes from her tower, takes on a sidekick named Jack, and fights her way back home to face Mother Goethel and free the oppressed people under Goethel’s rule.

Critical Analysis
While this fresh spin on a traditional tale starts with “Once upon a time,” the story veers promptly off the familiar fairy-tale path and into the old wild West filled with wild creatures, dangerous outlaws, double crossers, and hangin’ trees. Having been raised by powerful Mother Goethel in an impenetrable grand villa, Rapunzel scales the walls on her 12th birthday and discovers the impoverished, barren landscape outside the lush villa where the citizens (including Rapunzel’s real mother) are enslaved in Goethel’s mines. When spunky Rapunzel confronts Goethel, her life of luxury at the villa ends, and she is imprisoned for years far away in a barren tower in a magical forest. The plot thickens as fast as Rapunzel’s braids when she determines to escape and rescue her real mother using her now 20-foot long lasso-like braids as weapons. Her journey back to Goethel’s realm leads her into the companionship of thieving side-kick Jack (beanstalk and magical goose owner) and into the path of increasingly dangerous henchmen hired and controlled by Goethel’s dark magic.

Shannon and Dean Hale’s use of first person narrative bring readers into the heart of “Punzie” where we witness her compassion and insatiable determination that accompany her outwardly sassy wit. Filled with outlandish characters, rollicking western dialogue and euphemisms, and the bright colors and detailed artwork of Nathan Hale, this fairy tale twist gives readers of all ages a rootin’ tootin’ ride and a satisfying ending where justice is served and the gal gets the guy.

The Graveyard Book (Newbery Award winner)

(Book cover compliments of Titlewave.com)


Bibliography
Gaiman, Neil, and Dave McKean. The Graveyard Book. New York: HarperCollins Pub, 2008. ISBN 0060530928

Plot summary
18-month old “Bod” (short for Nobody) is overlooked during the murder of his entire family and toddles uphill to the community graveyard where he is sheltered, protected, loved, and raised to age 16 by the ghosts living there.

Critical Analysis
There was a hand in the darkness, and it held a knife.” Thus begins the spine-chilling opening scene of the murder of an entire family in their home at night…except for the toddler who miraculously ambles unnoticed out of the house and uphill to the unexpected safety of the archaic, local graveyard inhabitants. With the murderer Jack still pursuing the whereabouts of the baby, the ghosts decide to trust the raising of the baby to the kindly ghost couple Mr. and Mrs. Owens who name the baby Nobody Owens. Gaiman’s adept skills at spine-tingling horror pairs beautifully with the likeable, complex graveyard characters who lived during a myriad of centuries. Under the tutelage of the enigmatic Silas who is both living and dead, and the loving care of the highly-entertaining ancient occupants, “Bod” receives an education in academics, loyalty, and supernatural skills like the Slide, the Fade, and the Dreamwalk. Bod’s innocence about the world outside the graveyard and his obedience to his guardian’s requirements to stay within the safety of the ghostly confines keeps him safe for years until he meets an unexpected human visitor to the graveyard. 

Like Mowgli in Kipling’s Jungle Book, Bod’s growing curiosity about the human girl sets in motion a series of adventures and jaunts outside the safety of the graveyard reigniting the pursuit of the murderer Jack. Gaiman’s dark humor and genuinely creepy settings will keep young readers turning pages as well as the desire to see Bod and his “family” ultimately defeat the evil that pursues him. Peppered with spirits, werewolves, and murderers, this unique coming-of-age story will delight both young and adult readers alike.