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Review of the Day: Evil Genius (Part One)

Review of the Day: Evil Genius (Part One)

August 18, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Evil Genius by Catherine Jinks. Harcourt, Inc. $17.00. On shelves now.

Few pleasures are quite as sublime as reading a book, enjoying it, and only afterwards realizing that you’re familiar with the author. Ask me who Catherine Jinks was before I read "Evil Genius" and you’d have met with a blank stare accompanied by some rapid-fire blinking. Only after I read and enjoyed her latest did I put two and two together. Catherine Jinks = "Pagan’s Crusade" = Catherine Jinks = "Evil Genius"! The "Pagan" series is probably one of the best too little appreciated historical fiction series of books for kids out there, so it came as little surprise that Jinks was also the author of this little jewel. "Evil Genius" is high-concept with a high quality product. From here on in, I’m putting Catherine Jinks on the top of my Must Read pile for as long as she keeps on writing.


Cadel Piggott; genius. No two ways about it. He’s just a kid, but you should see his resume. Getting caught by the police for hacking into mainframes by the time he was seven. Causing massive commuter blockages at eight. Managing to get his entire twelfth grade class flunked at the age of thirteen. It shouldn’t surprise anybody then that Cadel’s father is none other than criminal genius Dr. Darkkon, currently serving life in prison. That doesn’t stop the man from influencing Cadel with the help of the boy’s psychologist (and Darkkon’s right hand man) Thaddeus Roth. Now Cadel’s enrolled in Darkkon’s very own Axis Institute. While there he’ll be taking classes in Law ("loopholes"), Personal Presentation ("disguise"), Cultural Appreciation ("forgery"), and Computer Science ("infiltration"). Problem is, Cadel’s grown fond of a woman he met while running a fake online dating service. This tiny contact with someone outside his intimate circle proves to be just enough to get him to start questioning his very life. Before he knows it, he discovers secrets that might very well make it impossible to escape from the geniuses around him.


The immediate fear when reading the title of this book is that it’s going to feel like a kind of "Artemis Fowl" enterprise. They are, however, entirely different. For example, "Evil Genius", is waaaaay better. Sorry, but it is. While Artemis exhibits a slight moral awakening in a rather broad sense over the course of his series, in "Evil Genius" Jinks gives Cadel an entire arc of personal growth and development. From seven to fourteen, we see a series of internal changes. The book almost works on the assumption that a human being can become a good person in spite of their upbringing. Though, of course, whether you consider Cadel "good" by the end of the story is up for interpretation.


Words. Put them together in just the right order and watch as it becomes easy to distinguish the fantastic authors from the mundane pack. Jinks knows how to write, pure and simple. Take page four of the book. Upon meeting a secretary with teeth the color of coal the book simply states, "Her mouth looked as if it belonged to an older, harsher century." That is so good. To the point and remarkably descriptive. Actually, not to change subjects on you (summary: words = good) but how awesome are Thaddeus’s henchmen and henchwomen in this book? People like the huge woman with the nasty black teeth and the man with gills. James Bond himself couldn’t have encountered better.


There are times when Jinks pulls her punches (as when Cadel can’t bring himself too throw away the fake birth certificate he made in his forgery class) but these are few and far between. For the most part you feel a lot of what Cadel feels. And I loved that his entire life is turned upside down due to a single throwaway comment on page 254. As much as this book is a story of a boy becoming a man, it’s also a bit of a mystery. You’re simultaneously inside of Cadel’s head and, at the same time, removed from him. Yet the older he gets the harder it is to separate your feelings from his own. The result is that the shocks integral to the story (and there are a couple) feel surprising to you, even when you might have predicted them 100 pages earlier.


This will sound a little odd, but I also loved the concept of the hero being valuable. For most of the book, you get the distinct sense that there’s an almost monetary price hanging over Cadel’s head. At the academy he’s treated like platinum, with no one allowed to get anywhere near him. Later on, there are people with emotional ties to Cadel. People who both threaten and adore him in equal measure. I can’t go into details or I’d spoil the whole ending, but there’s a powerful message here regarding love. That villains can and do love is something not a lot of children and teen books examine, particularly when you’re dealing with evil geniuses, the easiest caricatures in the world.

(CONTINUED IN PART TWO)

Filed Under: Reviews

Review of the Day: Evil Genius (Part Two)

August 18, 2007 by Betsy Bird

(CONTINUED FROM PART ONE)

I mean, I had my reservations about the book too, don’t get me wrong. The man teaching guerrilla tactics at the academy is named Adolf and is nicknamed "The Fuhrer"? Seemed a bit much. And the wrapping up of the school and its gigantic cast of characters (I can’t have been the only one who kept confusing Dr. Deal with The Maestro, right?) is done in a lightning quick fashion. Considering that this is a 486-page book we’re talking about, this might not have been a bad idea. Still, keeping track of all those characters was certainly a full time job. More than once Cadel would think of a name in shock and I’d suddenly have to page through to the book’s endpapers to remember who that person was in the first place.


Still, when all is said and done, I liked "Evil Genius" very much indeed. The book is just dying for a sequel, but that doesn’t mean this first novel doesn’t stand entirely on its own. Jinks, no stranger to the series format, knows better than to end on a cliffhanger or with long dangling narrative threads. Everything is, if not wrapped up, at least successfully drawn to a close by the book’s finish. That said, I’m frantic to read the next in the series. Lookie! It’s called "Genius Squad" and it sports the tagline "Sometimes when it comes to fighting evil, one genius isn’t enough." For those kids enamored of the superhero genre and in need of something a little out of the ordinary, I couldn’t recommend a book any higher.


Notes on the Cover:
  Hm.  Sorry, Harcourt.  I liked the original cover better.  The one that looked like the image featured on the right here.  You still have Thaddeus and Cadel visible on the spine, true, but it’s not quite enough.  I liked the original book.  Th American one’s shiny and such, but surely there would have been a way to put the Axis Institute for World Domination image on the front without it looking like another title.  Oh, but look how shiny shiny.  Hard to tear my eyes away.  We’ll label this one a draw.


Other Blog Reviews:
Bookshelves of Doom, Becky’s Book Reviews, Blogcritics, SF Site, Strange Horizons, Oops . . . Wrong Cookie, and PopMatters.


MISC:

  • Check out the recent profile of Ms. Catherine Jinks as part of the Australian Bloggy Tour over at Tea Cozy.
  • The Kids Q&A with Ms. Jinks at the Powell’s site.
  • Also look at the website for the Axis Institute for World Domination.

  

Filed Under: Reviews

I’m Posting This Just After Having Watched “Superbad”

August 18, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Which, for the record, is fabulous.  Michael Cera is, at the tender age of 19, the moral core of America itself.  That boy could star in a movie about a guy who blinks at blank white walls and I would watch it.  And back on topics we go . . .

  • Alvina spills the dirt on the "agent lunch". Which is to say, lunches taken between editors and agents. Oh, to be a fly on a wall at one of those. I love that her first one was with Barry Goldblatt too. That would be an agent lunch to have. You know… if you write the term "agent lunch" enough it sounds like a weird children’s book title about a kid spy navigating the eerie world of a school lunchroom.  I’m sure it’s been done.
  • Okay. I need some help with this one. According to MediaBistro in a recent piece, "Egmont is planning to launch a U.S. business next year following a move into third place in the UK children’s publisher league table, ahead of rivals Random House and HarperCollins." Why should I pay attention? Because apparently Lemony Snicket was recently a "significant contributor" to the company’s performance. Whence the connection, wonder I? All very strange.
  • You may wonder what I do all day at work.  Some people are under the impression that children’s librarianship consists of reading children’s books all day.  I wish.  That’s why the good Lord invented subway rides, sillies.  So what do children’s librarians actually do in a given hour? Check out this latest refgrunt from Tiny Little Librarian to find out.
  • Author Darcy Pattison has conjured up a fun Name That Author game on her site. Correct answers are sent to you via an auto-responder.
  • I call dibs. Dibs dibs dibs dibs dibs. Via Sarah Miller I spotted this retelling of Rumpelstiltskin (not due out until March 2008) and I suddenly want it more than anything else in the world.


Dibs.

  • Great great great news! Listen to this: "BOW-WOW BUGS A BUG by Mark Newgarden and Megan Montague Cash has just won the first place gold medal in the Society of Illustrator’s annual children’s book competition. BOW WOW!" Woop! This is all very good news. Bow-Wow was undoubtedly the must-have wordless picture book of the year. Glad to see it’s getting some honors.
  • Drawn called this site "a world of awesome". You can’t say it any better than that, can you? Look at these little guys. Somebody give this creator a book contract.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Poetry Friday – The Collected Works of Susan Ramsey

August 17, 2007 by Betsy Bird


Thought I might have run out of poems, but darned if I didn’t find one through mom’s graduate school’s website.  Ha HA! 


The Sow Bear’s Sonnet

After that ballot travesty I swore
a four year moratorium on news.
I waddled into the woods to find a cave,
scuffed leaves into a heap and planned to snore
till next election.  But that crash and roar
hauled me up half-asleep, glass in my hair
and two ugly cubs rolling on the floor,
squalling and spreading wreckage.  Don’t you  dare
ignore me.  I am one grumpy mother.
Someone will get hurt — knock it off, you two.
Two wrongs don’t make a right and all those other
mama cliches.  Guess what?  Cliches are true.
Here, have a couple more:  I don’t care
who started it.  Stop.  We’ve been through this before.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Meanderings of a Diseased Brain

August 17, 2007 by Betsy Bird

Or something along those lines, anyway.  Here are your daily diversions.

  • If you’re anything like me, you wouldn’t naturally gravitate towards something bearing the moniker of The Calvin Festival of Faith and Writing in Grand Rapids. Then you take a gander at their line-up of speakers. Joan Bauer, Barry Moser, John J. Muth (HMOCL possibilities, you think?), Kadir Nelson, David AND Katherine Paterson, and more. Sheesh. That’s a group I’d pay good money to see. Figures that I’d be stuck in podunk Manhattan instead.

  • Speaking of kidlit engaged entities that I have never paid proper attention to, the NENE Award is rather fun. A Hawaiian children’s award sponsored by the Hawaii Association of School Librarians, Hawaii Library Association, and the Friends of the Library of Hawaii, it celebrates an interesting array of books. Now they’ve put out a 2008 Recommended Book List that I just think is superb. It’s not just the titles.  It’s the links. For each book they’ve three interesting links connected to the title in question. Makes me kind of wish I had my own website to do this kind of thing on. How does one go about getting a website these days anyway?

  • The Hawaii Library Association may be where the temperature is the warmest, but it’s the Montana Library Association that’s got people actually removing their clothing.  In the realm of hot Montana librarian flesh (and you just know someone has Googled that phrase in the past), we’ve the MLA’s newest calendar. 10 female and 2 male. Thanks to Kane/Miller for the link.

  • How fares your voice? Is it melodious? Odious? If you think you’ve got the chops, maybe you should consider auditioning for Full Cast Audio. This audiobook publisher is looking for folks to participate in the recording of these three authors: Tamora Pierce (Emperor Mage), Tim Green (Football Genius) and Bruce Coville (Dark Whispers). Thanks to ShelfTalker for the info.

  • There’s an interview with Ralph Nader on the blog Tales from the Rushmore Kid. He’s asked what his favorite book was when he was a child.  The answer is worth the price of admission right there.  I may have to add this puppy to my blog links. It’s run by children’s author Tina Nicols who recently won the SCBWI costume contest. I like that woman’s style/frightening dedication to costume craft.

  • Check out this little top that Siobhan found recently.


    Teacher walks into a classroom with that? Teacher gets attention. And yet, ironically, with its $84 price tag, no teacher I know is going to be able to afford it. *sigh*

  • Thanks to Adam Rex I see that a new image of my favorite little alien has just been created for auction.

  • Chad Beckerman has been kind enough to display the four titles selected by the Society of Illustrators Original Art Exhibition of his publisher on his blog. Does anyone know where I could find a full list of all the selected titles?

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Review of the Day: The Three Cabritos

August 16, 2007 by Betsy Bird

The Three Cabritos by Eric A. Kimmel, illustrated by Stephen Gilpin. Marshall Cavendish Children’s Books. $16.99. On shelves now.

Honesty is a good policy, right? I should be honest with you right from the start then. Ladies and gentlement, I feel no shame when I tell you that I worship at the hallowed shrine of Eric A. Kimmel. Oh, don’t look at me like that. It’s not such an unusual thing to say. Consider the following situation: You’ve a class of itchy, hot, sticky, whiny third graders who want to be anywhere but your Story Hour Room listening to picture books. You know and I know that they will like these books once they get into them, but for a group this finicky you’re going to need some real show stoppers. Picture books that wow them right from the get-go and don’t release their grip until the kids are on their way home. To whom do you turn in your hour of need? What name leaps immediately to your lips? Sweet Eric A. Kimmel, of course. You whip out your copy of Anansi and the Moss-Covered Rock, and voila. Instant happiness and calm. There’s something about Mr. Kimmel that can turn folktales, both classic and original, into readaloud pleasures. Now he’s set his sights on that old Billy Goats Gruff tale but with a South American twist. The result is "The Three Cabritos" and a nicer addition to my storytime revue I haven’t seen in months.

So there are these three cabritos, yes? Musical boys that they are, Reynald is small and fast and plays the fiddle. Orlando is the middle child and he plays the guitar. And Augustin is their big friendly brother, and he’s good with an accordion. Everything is all peachy keen until the three hear about a fantastic fiesta that’s being held in Mexico. The brothers are gung ho to go, in spite of their mother’s warning to beware of the big, scary, infinitely hungry Chupacabra that lives under the bridge of the Rio Grande. Being the fastest, Reynald meets the creature first, but persuades it to wait for his older brother, rather than eat him. Orlando does the same, and when Augustin arrives he proves to be more than a match for the dance prone bridge dweller. A quick Author’s Note and Pronunciation Guide for Spanish terms round out the story.

Well OF COURSE a Chupacabra would eat the three billy goats! What do all the legends of the Chupacabras say they eat, after all? Goats! So kudos to Mr. Kimmel for writing an alternative billy goat gruff story that makes perfect sense. I’ve seen versions done where the goats live in the inner city and where they are animals other than goats. To me, keeping the goat aspect of the story seems central to maintaining a connection to the original. Kimmel’s also in lovely form with this book, keeping the tone light and the story hopping. The words and pictures are so cheery, in fact, that you remain completely oblivious to the whole "take my brother" aspect of the story. So well done there.

Illustrator Stephen Gilpin grew on me considerably too as I read through this tale. At first glance, I may have dismissed his pictures as being too computer graphicky. I was under some kind of impression that they were the slick byproduct of a series of ones and zeroes. On closer inspection, however, I could see that they were nothing of the sort. Gilpin works primarily in graphite. The colors are put in later with computers, yes, but the essential structure is hand-drawn and mighty appealing. He’s also one of those illustrators that can draw the vertical pupils in a goat’s eyes without making the critter look evil or possessed. As for the Chupacabra, he’s rather cute. A gigantic blue furry guy who, when he dances (and he seems to do that a lot) looks positively impressed with his own hot moves. I wouldn’t worry too much about your kids getting scared off by the villain in this book. If anything, they may have too much sympathy invested in the bad guy to cheer on his demise.

Authors have a variety of choices when it comes to working a little Spanish into their titles. As I see it, you’ve one of two choices. You can pluck out little words here and there and translate them into Spanish (ala The Bossy Gallito/El Gallo de Bodas or Chato and the Party Animals). There’s that. Or you can just translate the whole kerschmozzle on the opposite page of a story and go entirely bilingual. Kimmel opts for the former, which is fine. The world certainly needs more bilingual books, but at this point we will take what we can get. Speaking of choices, I wonder if Kimmel took into special consideration whether or not the three brothers would be escaping the Chupacabra to get from the U.S. into Mexico rather than going from Mexico to America. That would just lend all kinds of interesting layers if it was the other way around, don’t you think? Treatises, college papers, and who knows what all could be written interpreting this little picture book and its take on the current border situation with our southern neighbors. For simplicity’s sake, the book doesn’t veer in that direction. Still, it would have been something to talk about otherwise, no?

With the possible exception of the unlikely appearance of a magical accordion (a detail that rankled just a tad), I’m a wholehearted promoter of this title. You may wish to think about pairing this book alongside fellow partially bilingual title Número Uno by Arthur Dorros. Or perhaps you want another story from the same folktale but with an entirely different look? Consider Three Cool Kids by Rebecca Emberley. As for this book, it features a mighty fine pairing of author and illustrator. A folktale deviation well worth investigation.

MISC: I should note too, while I’m at it, that I am a sucker for any illustrator who names his online shop something like Stephen Gilpin’s omnibus of fine vendibles.

Filed Under: Reviews

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