Posted on December 6th, 2018 by pajamapress
ASLC Litpicks
“Bass does an excellent job of uncovering the layers of many complex emotions: – prejudice toward German prisoners expressed by Canadians at home who had relatives fighting in Europe; – the bullying and hatred experienced by many families and school children who had been born in Canada but were of German heritage; – the emotions of young German soldiers who may have been conscripted to serve their country, but were not necessarily supportive of the Nazi regime….
Mature junior high readers, and senior high students will identify with Bass’s strong male characters whose loyalties are tested and with the complex friendships that develop as the plot unfolds….”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Karen Bass, Uncertain Soldier | Tagged book-review, Canada, canadian-history, canlit, Geoffrey-Bilson-award-winner, Historical Fiction, karen bass, kidlit, prisoner-of-war, World-War-II, wwii, ya-books, ya-fiction
Posted on November 14th, 2018 by pajamapress
The International Educator
“…Moon at Nine is a tense and riveting YA novel. Fifteen-year-old Farrin has grown up with secrets: ten years after the overthrow of the Shah, her aristocratic mother is still working against Iran’s conservative revolutionary government. But when Farrin befriends Sadira, the new student at her school, her own secret is even more dangerous. Because the girls discover their relationship is more than just a friendship—and in Iran, being gay is punishable by death.”
Click here for the full review
Posted in Deborah Ellis, Moon at Nine | Tagged book-review, canlit, chapter-book, deborah-ellis, kidlit, lgbtq, ya-books, ya-fiction, young-adult-books, young-adult-fiction
Posted on May 23rd, 2017 by pajamapress
“Despite the weight of the themes Road Signs is funny and full of heart, with skillful depiction of the hooks and barbs of sibling rivalry.”
Read the full review on page 64 of the Spring 2017 issue of Atlantic Books Today
Posted in Road Signs That Say West | Tagged book-reviews, canlit, contemporary-fiction, kidlit, strong-heroines, Sylvia Gunnery, ya, ya-books, ya-fiction
Posted on May 18th, 2017 by pajamapress
“As soon as I read the book description, I was pulled to the storyline about three sisters who take a road trip. In my family we are three sisters and I like stories that center on sisterhood. I liked that the trip was across Canada from Nova Scotia to Vancouver, including a stopover in my city of Montreal….
The best part of the novel was how the sisters experienced life together and grew closer by the end of the trip, although it was in subtle ways.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Road Signs That Say West | Tagged book-review, canlit, contemporary-fiction, kidlit, people-stories, sisters, strong-heroines, Sylvia Gunnery, ya-books, ya-fiction
Posted on May 11th, 2017 by pajamapress
“I often wonder if I was brave enough to simply get in the car and drive, if I would have had the adventures sisters Hanna, Claire and Megan had in Road Signs That Say West.
That is not to say their adventures were far-fetched or unlikely, because they certainly were not, I just feel as though I am bit more like Megan – practical and responsible (but less grouchy) or Claire, up for adventure, but who likely wouldn’t do it on her own, then say Hanna, who is spontaneous and free spirited.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Road Signs That Say West | Tagged book-review, canlit, contemporary-fiction, contemporary-ya-fiction, family, kidlit, road-trip, sisters, summer-books, Sylvia Gunnery, ya-books, ya-fiction
Posted on April 28th, 2017 by pajamapress
“…In Sylvia Gunnery’s novel Road Signs That Say West, Hanna persuades her younger sisters, Megan and Claire, to join her on a parent-free road trip across Canada….With a cast of interesting yet believable characters, Road Signs That Say West gives a realistic look into the lives and relationships of three very different yet inextricably linked sisters.
Road Signs That Say West is a novel that will absolutely find its way to the shelves of the junior high library I run. In a YA world full of fantasy, sci-fi, and dystopian fiction, I have a large number of readers looking for what we call people stories: complex stories about realistic characters and their lives. The sisters in this story are believable and familiar without the author’s resorting to clichés….
Road Signs That Say West reads quickly and cleanly, with simple yet engaging language. It’s broken up into sections; there are smaller passages within the chapters, and 6-8 chapters within each of the three parts. This structure makes the novel manageable for struggling readers without affecting the flow of the story or making it choppy….
On a personal note, there are few things I enjoy more than seeing my hometown mentioned in works of literature. Gunnery’s novel opens with a fitting quote from Islander Catherine McLellan’s song ‘Lines on the Road’. A few chapters in, there is a reference to the university in Charlottetown. A reader in Southern Manitoba will recognize the name Pinawa, and one in Saskatchewan might recognize Weyburn. Baddeck, Edmundston, Jasper, and Mount Robson are among the other places named as the girls travel west across Canada. The mentions of various cities and landmarks across the country is a perfect way to draw readers into the story.
Highly Recommended.”
—Allison Giggey
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Road Signs That Say West | Tagged book-review, canadian-literature, canlit, kidlit, road-trip, sisters, summer-books, Sylvia Gunnery, ya-books, ya-fiction, young-adult-books, young-adult-fiction
Posted on March 24th, 2017 by pajamapress
“…Less traumatic than the American Summer of My German Soldier, Uncertain Soldier tells the story of Erich Hofmeyer, a German prisoner of war held in Alberta in the winter of 1943-44….
Uncertain Soldier is a solid, intelligent interpretation of the politics of the time and the effect of opinion on morale. Through the richness of its characters, the novel gives voice to a gamut of attitudes, revealing the complexity of life during the 1940s far more thoroughly and effectively than what is taught in history classes. In contrast to the Canadian Sam’s violent insistence that ‘a few firing squads last war would’ve fixed it,’ Erich’s British grandfather astutely notes that ‘more mercy by the Great War’s victors might have prevented the fight that loomed’ (103). The parallel with history is made more powerful by its subtlety; most readers will not hear Sam’s vehemence as an echo of French military politician Ferdinand Foch, who noted at the time that the Treaty of Versailles was ‘not peace [but] an Armistice for twenty years,’ asking for harsher restrictions to be place on the defeated Germany. On the opposite end of the spectrum, Erich’s grandfather’s position is reminiscent of John Maynard Keynes’s insistence that the conditions were too harsh, that the Treaty was a ‘Carthaginian peace,’ a peace ensured by the complete annihilation of the vanquished, such as Rome’s conquering of Carthage. Historians still debate the political ‘what ifs’ of the first half of the twentieth century, and this uncertainty, manifested at all levels of society, is brilliantly woven into the fabric of Bass’s text.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Uncertain Soldier | Tagged book-review, Canada, canadian-history, canlit, Geoffrey-Bilson-award-winner, Historical Fiction, karen bass, kidlit, prisoner-of-war, World-War-II, wwii, ya-books, ya-fiction
Posted on March 6th, 2017 by pajamapress
“Rating: 1-5 (5 is an excellent or a Starred review) 5…
What did you like about the book? Farrin goes to a school for gifted girls, and when Sadira begins attending her school, the two fall in love. Amid all of the political upheaval in her country, Farrin is caught kissing Sadira and the two are punished. Farrin thinks she can’t survive without seeing Sadira, but can she survive if they stay together? Heart-stirring, believable, and ultimately heartbreaking, this is a must-read.
Anything you didn’t like about it? No
To whom would you recommend this book? Middle and high school teens…
Should we (librarians/readers) put this on the top of our “to read” piles? Yes”
—Kasia Piasecka, Falmouth Public Library
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Moon at Nine | Tagged book-review, canlit, chapter-book, deborah-ellis, kidlit, lgbtq, ya-books, ya-fiction, young-adult-books, young-adult-fiction