by Dana Sullivan ; illustrated by Dana Sullivan ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 2020
Ambitious but overstuffed.
A boy and his dead dog navigate the difficult world of seventh grade.
In this graphic follow-up to The Deadening (2020), Derrick Hollis and his ghostly canine’s co-created Dead Max comics are a hit, and he’s been asked to pen an advice column for the school paper. He has also formed a band with best friend Doug and is looking forward to competing in a Battle of the Bands that he has also planned as a pet-adoption event. Derrick is also trying to negotiate a budding relationship with his crush, Kim. Sullivan’s sophomore effort is busy, both plotwise with its many disparate narrative threads and visually with his crowded, border-busting full-color panels. The art packs a confetti-colored punch into each panel, and while his characters encompass a spectrum of skin tones and heights and include characters with visible disabilities, his female characters are all similarly and unbelievably wasp-waisted and thin. For such a slender volume, it contains too many goings-on for any arc to be fully explored or resolved. For example, Derrick’s mother has a problem with alcohol (a seemingly important detail) that was introduced in the previous volume, but it hardly gets more than a sentence in this offering, and when he answers his peers’ queries in his column, he brushes their serious problems aside. Derrick and Doug are white; Kim and her best friend, Keisha, have brown skin.
Ambitious but overstuffed. (Graphic fantasy. 8-12)Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-63440-858-5
Page Count: 64
Publisher: Red Chair Press
Review Posted Online: June 15, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2020
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by Chantel Acevedo ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 6, 2022
Supernatural mystery meets generational drama with hopeful endings for all.
Eleven-year-old Frank must solve a supernatural mystery to save his new home.
As fifth grade comes to an end, Frank Fernández is looking forward to finally staying put in Alabama for a second year, as promised, after a childhood spent following his parents’ home renovation work all across the country. Frequent relocation has made Frank wary of forming friendships or making plans, but his hopes for more stability are temporarily dashed when his parents announce plans to renovate a lighthouse in the Florida Keys, near where his mother grew up and his father’s home country of Cuba. Papi promises this will be their last move, though: The lighthouse will be theirs. But from their first day on Spectacle Key, things seem to go wrong: Tensions rise between his parents, and Frank’s hopes of a forever home are under threat from seemingly supernatural forces. In order to put down roots, Frank and new ghostly friend Connie, a White girl with freckles, must discover what secrets the island is hiding, uncovering Frank’s own family roots along the way. Frank is a fan of horror—he names his new Great Dane puppy Mary Shelley. But though there is some mild peril to be found, rather than a ghostly thriller, this is an appealing, lightly spooky family drama with valuable lessons for those who would hide from a difficult past instead of confronting and healing generational trauma.
Supernatural mystery meets generational drama with hopeful endings for all. (Supernatural. 8-12)Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-06-313481-2
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Balzer + Bray/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: July 12, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2022
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by Aaron Reynolds ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 4, 2021
Funny delivery, but some jokes really miss the mark.
An animal ghost seeks closure after enduring aquatic atrocities.
In this sequel to The Incredibly Dead Pets of Rex Dexter (2020), sixth grader Rex is determined to once again use his ability to communicate with dead animals for the greater good. A ghost narwhal’s visit gives Rex his next opportunity in the form of the clue “bad water.” Rex enlists Darvish—his Pakistani American human best friend—and Drumstick—his “faithful (dead) chicken”—to help crack the case. But the mystery is only one of Rex’s many roadblocks. For starters, Sami Mulpepper hugged him at a dance, and now she’s his “accidental girlfriend.” Even worse, Darvish develops one of what Rex calls “Game Preoccupation Disorders” over role-playing game Monsters & Mayhem that may well threaten the pair’s friendship. Will Rex become “a Sherlock without a Watson,” or can the two make amends in time to solve the mystery? This second outing effectively carries the “ghost-mist” torch from its predecessor without feeling too much like a formulaic carbon copy. Spouting terms like plausible deniability and in flagrante delicto, Rex makes for a hilariously bombastic (if unlikable) first-person narrator. The over-the-top style is contagious, and black-and-white illustrations throughout add cartoony punchlines to various scenes. Unfortunately, scenes in which humor comes at the expense of those with less status are downright cringeworthy, as when Rex, who reads as White, riffs on the impossibility of his ever pronouncing Darvish’s surname or he plays dumb by staring into space and drooling.
Funny delivery, but some jokes really miss the mark. (Paranormal mystery. 8-12)Pub Date: May 4, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-7595-5523-5
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Little, Brown
Review Posted Online: March 15, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2021
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