Happy New Year everyone! The school year is flying by, and I haven't had a chance to write a review in a while, so it is time to catch up. One of favorite books of all time is
The Underneath by Kathi Appelt. I have given this book to many of you to read when looking for a new fantasy book. That is why I was so excited when I heard that Kathi Appelt published a new book, and it was a finalist for the National Book Award. We are half way through January now, and we will find out who the Newbery Award winner is at the end of the month. If I were on the committee I would choose Appelt's new book
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp. This book is another masterful fantasy, with multiple story lines. The whole time you are reading you wonder how it all will come together in the end, and that is the amazing surprise at the end! Pick up this short book to read this month, and we will see who wins the Newbery for 2014!
Booklist starred (May 1, 2013 (Vol. 109, No. 17))
Grades 5-8. Swamps provide great fodder for stories, and Newbery
Honor Award–winning Appelt uses every inch of the Sugar Man Swamp—and
its inhabitants—to tell her engaging tale. At the helm of the complex
ecosystem is the Sugar Man, a gigantic, fur-covered cousin to the yeti
and bigfoot, who rules benevolently but has been asleep for the past 60
years. He is to be woken, preferably with an offering of sugarcane, only
in the case of an emergency. Bingo and J’Miah, two raccoons who live in
an abandoned DeSoto car, are the official Sugar Man Swamp scouts, and
it’s their job to alert him to impending danger. Meanwhile, on the edge
of the Bayou Tourterelle, a 12-year-old boy named Chap has just lost his
beloved grandfather, and he and his mother must raise a “whole boatload
of cash” making sugar pies to prevent Sonny Boy Beaucoup and an
alligator wrestler from developing a theme park on their home turf. On
top of all that, there are wild hogs headed straight for the
swamp—“rumble, rumble, rumble!” This delicious, richly detailed story is
told in 104 short chapters, which swing the plot beautifully from one
thread to the next and keep the action moving. Appelt’s omniscient
third-person narration exudes folksy, homespun warmth while also feeling
fresh and funny. A satisfying romp with plenty of memorable characters
to root for—and some to boo.
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