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Book Review: Raptor by Paul Zindel

Raptor by Paul Zindel

Hyperion Books For Children, 1998

ISBN: 0786823747

Available: New and Used

 

When Zack and his Native American friend Ute explore the cave where Zack’s paleontologist father was mysteriously injured, they discover a strange nest with very large eggs. Zack, thinking they might be worth a lot of money, takes an egg with him despite Ute’s warnings that he should leave it be. Ute is right, of course. As soon as she and Zack get the egg home, it hatches into (surprise!) a baby raptor, and not thirty minutes later, its mother comes by looking for junior. And all of that happens in the first fifty pages! Teens will love the fast pace of this book. It opens with a gruesome raptor attack, so there’s no waiting around for dinosaur action, and there’s a thrill in every chapter. I also loved Zack’s eating a live grub to impress Ute’s wise old grandmother. Why, you may ask, is a supposedly extinct raptor roaming around the Utah desert? Well, that’s the book’s big mystery and I won’t spoil it for you.  Situations are extremely contrived, the characters are painfully flat, and the writing is awkward, overdone and melodramatic. The scenes involving raptors attacking people were well described, fun to read and surprisingly gruesome. Personally, I rooted for the raptors to chomp Zack and Ute and end this silly novel early on, but teen readers, especially boys, will eat this story up.

Contains: gore, violence, adult alcohol use.

Review by Horror Master

Book Review: The Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning Maze by Rick Riordan

The Trials of Apollo, Book Three: The Burning Maze by Rick Riordan

Disney-Hyperion, 2018

ISBN-13: 978-1484746431

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audibook, audio CD

 

The Trials of Apollo is probably my favorite of all Rick Riordan’s series, and the third series starring Greek gods and demigods. To be fair, I have read them with my kids starting when they were in elementary school and hero Percy Jackson was not that much older than they were, and the characters from the original Percy Jackson books are now college-aged, with much more complex stories and relationships.  The Trials of Apollo is unique in that it backtracks to a point in the earlier series The Heroes of  Olympus, where Zeus picked Apollo as his scapegoat for the terrible events that take place in the series due to Apollo’s self-centered and impulsive behaviors. Apollo’s punishment was to be literally thrown to Earth as a mortal 16 year old boy, Lester Papadopolous. Narrated in first person by Apollo, The Trials of Apollo reveals the god’s thought processes as an powerful, gifted immortal who has had adult (if immature) relationships and feelings, who is suddenly forced to deal with the limitations of being a less-that-perfect human mortal, who is dependent on others. Apollo’s absence, because he is the god of prophecy, means that no new prophecies can be created to guide heroes on their quests, and the oracles have been taken captive by Roman god-emperors as part of a larger plan of world domination. I suggest reading the books in this series in order, and it wouldn’t hurt to read the previous two series (Percy Jackson and the Olympians and The Heroes of Olympus) first to get a complete picture of the characters and world presented in the books.

In the series’ first book, Apollo is not especially likable, due to his character flaws and refusal to admit that he now has limitations, but as the story goes on, he begins to gain some perspective in spite of himself, and we do get to see that he has deep regrets for some of his past actions. There are funny moments and times when he steps up to do the right thing, and he becomes a more sympathetic character.  The disparities between his perceptions of himself as an adult and long-lived immortal and the reality of being a mortal teenage boy are really interesting. While Riordan touched on sexual orientation in The House of Hades, in the series The Heroes of Olympus,  Apollo’s long history of relationships with members of both sexes is addressed frankly and nonjudgmentally, and flows naturally from the character. Riordan gives us the expected entertaining modern interpretations of characters from Greek mythology and pop culture references, as well. At the end of the book, the characters finally receive a prophecy, which sends them, in the second book, to Indiana.

As a longtime Indiana resident, I found The Dark Prophecy to be really entertaining, and it’s also where Apollo really starts to tap into what it means to be human. He continues to encounter the results of his actions on others when he was a god, and being faced with them forces him to rethink the way he has acted and treated others in the past. Watching his character evolve in The Dark Prophecy, as well as seeing how other characters deal with change, makes this an outstanding book. Apollo is still selfish, immature, and arrogant, but he has developed more compassion, understanding, and loyalty.

In this book, The Burning Maze, he has managed, with help, to defeat (at least temporarily) two of the three god-emperors (who are textbook cases in human cruelty and capriciousness) attempting world domination, and restore two of the five oracles. He’s clearly weaker than the other demigods and mythological characters he encounters, and they’re not doing so well themselves. Traveling through the Labyrinth to southern California, accompanied by the satyr Grover (he appears in earlier books as Percy Jackson’s friend) and Meg, a demigod daughter of Demeter who Apollo is bound to serve, they arrive to find it a desert, with wildfires and drought having destroyed most vegetation. The Erythnean Sibyl, the oracle they have come to free, is being controlled by the god-emperor Caligula, who is probably the most vain, erratic, cruel, narcissistic, and sociopathic of the three emperors Apollo and the demigods must face. He also prefers to delegate much of the work to others– in this case, the sorceress Medea. Medea appeared in the previous series as well, where she was cleverly presented and defeated. She’s not as creatively used here, and I wish Riordan had picked a different villain to do the dirty work in this book. Grover and Meg are perfect additions to this story about the destruction of nature by human carelessness, fire, and climate change, and their relationships with the dryads of the desert plants are well done. Meg’s warrior dryads, the Meliai, and Caligula’s furry henchmen, the pandai, are fun additions to the cast of characters, and add a touch of humor as well as menace to the story.  Apollo’s references to popular culture lace the story and act as reminders of his influence on music and literature.

This story has the most evidence of character growth on Apollo’s part, as he starts to see some of the complexities involved in human relationships, and the selflessness that some people have when it comes to protecting the ones they love or the world around them. At one point, he even asks himself if he would take immortality back if it meant abandoning his companions. Because of this, though, the two divergent aspects of his life don’t contrast as effectively, so even though his character shows more growth and reflection, we don’t see as much tension between the perspectives of Apollo-as-god and Apollo-as-mortal, and the story doesn’t seem as dynamic.

Something I appreciated in this book was that it returned us to characters who seemed to have their stories neatly tied up in the series Heroes of Olympus to show us that the “happily ever after” ending of a series is not always the ending of the story. Piper and Jason, a happy couple at the end of that series, turn out to have had some rocky times since it ended, and their subplot and its devastating consequences have a significant effect on Apollo’s continued character growth. That character growth seems to be the major focus of the book, though– while there is plenty of fast-paced action, I didn’t feel like it moved the story forward as much as previous books did. As with Piper and Jason’s relationship, The Burning Maze also does not have its ends tied up neatly, with the characters scattering in various states of grief, despair, determination, and hope as Apollo prepares to move on to fulfill the next piece of the prophecy.  This time, I really wish the story had been tied up a little more neatly, as the next volume is not scheduled to be released until fall of 2019, and I would have liked for the book to end on an up note. Still, Riordan has left me wanting more of Apollo and his trials and adventures, and I look forward to seeing where he takes the story next. Recommended for middle school and older.

Contains: Violence, murder, torture, cruelty, adult situations

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

 

Musings: I Kill the Mockingbird by Paul Acampora


I Kill the Mockingbird by Paul Acampora
Square Fish, 2015
ISBN-13: 978-1250068088
Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition

I will preface this by saying it is not horror. It is, however, an amazing middle school/YA title that book lovers of all ages ought to know about, and I personally loved it.

I Kill the Mockingbird  examines the effects of hope, love, grief, and literature on the lives of three teenagers who decide to become literary saboteurs as a tribute to their recently deceased English teacher, Fat Bob, who intended to assign just one book(his favorite) as summer reading: To Kill a Mockingbird. Lucy, Michael, and Elena are best friends and book lovers looking forward to summer reading, but as school lets out, the other students are unenthusiastic. Lucy devises a plan to get people reading To Kill a Mockingbird, and enlists Michael and Elena to help. The three of them decide to secretly create and publicize a conspiracy to make it impossible to find a copy of the book, traveling by bus to libraries and bookstores to hide all copies of To Kill a Mockingbird, and leaving flyers behind that advertise a website they’ve built to create buzz about their conspiracy. Taking advantage of Twitter, Facebook, and other social media channels, their little conspiracy rockets out of control as they build a following all over the country, with copycats hiding the book in other communities and demand for copies of To Kill a Mockingbird rising. Lucy’s summer also involves more personal grief, uncertainty, and growth, as she deals with her feelings when her mother returns home after a protracted and nearly fatal battle with cancer and considers whether she’s willing to risk her friendship with Michael by taking it a step further.

It’s wonderful to see how the lives and families of these three friends are so integrated and familiar with each other, and to see how independent and motivated these kids are, in a world where relationships seem to be fragmented by distance, overscheduling, and social media. And as a book lover, and someone who really believes in getting people (and especially kids) engaged in reading, this was an absolute joy to me. While the plot is well-paced, and the book is a quick read, books, reading, and discussions of the ideas in books (and especially in To Kill a Mockingbird) also have a major role. However, while these are integral, they are not didactic– exactly the kind of thing you would hope to see in the lives of book-loving teens and their families. Near the end of the book there is also a really fascinating part where the characters debate whether burning books, even library rejects, is ever acceptable. The practical application of this is never tested, though, leaving us to struggle with our own answer to that question.

The characters were complicated and enjoyable, the plot was original, and the story of these three teens as they grow and change, and change the world, during the summer between the end of middle school and the beginning of high school, just lifted my heart. I Kill the Mockingbird is a thoughtful, funny, sad, and inspiring book that offers no easy answers, and just might make you crack open a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird yourself.

As a final note, the publisher suggests this as an appropriate book for ages 10-14. On its own, I agree that this is appropriate for this age group, and would include older teens as well. However, I can see this book inspiring kids to try To Kill a Mockingbird, and some 10 year olds are still in fourth grade. Even Fat Bob, the eighth grade teacher in this book, suggests that it can be best read and understood after eighth grade. I suggest that discussion of this would be warranted with elementary aged children interested in taking this further.