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Varsha Seshan

Leeva at Last

posted on January 15, 2025

If you like Roald Dahl’s Matilda, you’re sure to enjoy Leeva at Last by Sara Pennypacker!Leeva’s parents, in a perfectly Roald Dahl-esque way are impossibly cruel. They have all kinds of rules for Leeva. She can’t go to school; in fact she isn’t even permitted to step out of her yard.When, one day, she breaks through the hedge around her yard and makes her way to the library that lies just beyond, a whole world opens for her. A world that is in equal parts fascinating and terrifying.Leeva is a lovely character with a question she must answer. The best place to find answers is, of course, a library. And she slowly does find answers to that impossible question: What are people for? As she meets more people (secretly, of course, for her parents must never know that she steps out), she finds more answers.At the same time, though, she discovers how much people hate her … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, early middle grade, Leeva at Last, reading, review, Sara Pennypacker

Top 10 Early Middle Grade Books – 2024

posted on January 9, 2025

Many of the titles on this list of my favourite early middle grade books from 2024 are book club reads. Some, the children enjoyed thoroughly; others, I enjoyed more than the children did! On the whole, I recommend these books for ages nine and up. In no particular order, here are my top ten early middle grade reads from 2024. No Talking Even though I don't usually like books that follow a boys vs girls sort of dynamic, I thoroughly enjoyed No Talking by Andrew Clements! For me, his books are particularly useful because there's just so much I can do with them at a book club. With easy, readable text that is humorous and engaging, they are perfect for all kinds of readers; plus, my book clubbers love them. No Talking was no different! Book activities Kushti Kid So many books by Vibha Batra have featured on my lists of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Bat and the End of Everything, Birds on the Brain, books for ages nine and ten, early middle grade, Kushti Kid, No Talking, Petu Pumpkin: Freedom Fighter, reading, review, The Misadventures of a Diamond Thief, The Mystery of the Silk Umbrella, The One and Only Ruby, The Wishkeeper's Apprentice, The Worst Witch to the Rescue

The Wishkeeper’s Apprentice

posted on October 23, 2024

What a charming book! Hopeful, whimsical and ever so sweet, The Wishkeeper's Apprentice is a book I loved as an adult and would have enjoyed as a child.Rupus Beewinkle is an overworked wishkeeper. He needs an apprentice because there are so many wish snags, and he simply isn't able to keep up. Unfortunately, the council refuses his request, and Rupus Beewinkle needs to take things into his own hands.Enter Felix, who is increasingly upset because his sister Rebecca is now too busy to spend time with him. If only Rebecca would love him the way she used to ...What better way to unite a wishkeeper and a wish-maker than a wish? Felix becomes Rupus's apprentice, and when he unwittingly reveals Rupus's address to the wishsnatcher, he must act before it is too late.The Wishkeeper's Apprentice is a magical story about family and love, with eccentric characters and an unusual … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, early middle grade, Rachel Chivers Khoo, reading, review, The Wishkeeper's Apprentice

Leonora Bolt: The Great Gadget Games

posted on September 25, 2024

I love it when I come across books that I can read with my book club! I've been reading about Leonora Bolt for a while, but The Great Gadget Games is the first one I've read in the series.Clearly, earlier in the series, Leonora Bolt was in the clutches of her evil uncle Luther. She's escaped and is now determined to save her parents too. The best way to do so is to take part in the great gadget games her uncle has organised. She is a super-inventor after all!From wild inventions to wacky ideas, Leonora Bolt: The Great Gadget Games is an explosion of imaginative escapades. Leonora, however, is more than just an inventor. As the story proceeds, I love how she knows how important it is to win, but realises that the best way forward is through teamwork. She isn't afraid to ask for help when she needs it, and she doesn't give up even when it seems as if it is too late to save her … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, early middle grade, Leonora Bolt, Lucy Brandt, reading, review, The Great Gadget Games

Gooney Bird Greene

posted on September 12, 2024

Gooney Bird Greene was the second book I read from Kahaani Box, and it's a fun story by an author whose work I admire. Lois Lowry has written such a range of books! I've read Number the Stars (one of my favourite reads from 2020), The Giver and Gathering Blue that I remember, and I have no idea if I've read others!Even though I'm not a fan of precocious protagonists, I usually find something to admire about stories featuring them. In Gooney Bird Greene, I loved the wordplay. Gooney Bird insists that she tells only true stories, yet her stories feature magic carpets, a cat being consumed by a cow, and diamond earrings from the Prince!The joy of the book is in all her revelations. Clever wordplay makes for great storytelling, and Gooney Bird is a storyteller who holds her audience in the palm of her hand. A humorous read that keeps us longing for more stories, just like the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, books for ages seven and eight, Chapter Book, early middle grade, Gooney Bird Greene, Lois Lowry, reading, review

An Alien in the Jam Factory

posted on November 21, 2023

There's something about book titles that can just grab your attention right away. An Alien in the Jam Factory is one of those.I often pick up books when I travel and when I was in Goa last month, I visited Literati for the first time. I browsed for quite a while before this book caught my attention, and I loved the premise.Scooter McLay is a genius. Thanks to his incredible inventions, McLay's jam is a phenomenal success. Whether it's wasp-repellent jam or the not-yet-very-successful Edible Jam Bubbles, each of Scooter's inventions sparkles. He has loving parents, he thoroughly enjoys inventing, and he's never going to let their rival Daffy Dodgy steal his secrets. It's all perfect. Except that he has no friends. No one is allowed into the top-secret factory. And for hygienic reasons, he cannot even have a pet.One day, however, an alien called Fizzbee crashes into the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: An Alien in the Jam Factory, books for ages nine and ten, books for ages seven and eight, Chrissie Sains, early middle grade, Jenny Taylor, reading, review

Gobi Goes Viral

posted on July 17, 2023

Gopi compares everybody around him to a vegetable. His world comprises a capsicum, a carrot, a tomato, a sweet potato ... The problem, of course, is that the moment he talks about it, he becomes Gobi, or worse, Fool Gobi. Trying to tell the bullies in class that it isn’t Fool, but Phool doesn’t help. Being bullied, however, is not the only problem Gopi faces at Primrose Academy. Even though he has got admission thanks to the RTE act, the hidden charges—for school books and the like—are crippling. If he does not pay his dues by the end of the week, he has no choice but to leave.Like the best of children’s stories, this is where a friend comes in—one who does not save the day, but instead helps Gopi save the day. Gopi’s life is worlds apart from Pari’s, but as they get to know each other, they make a plan, one that may just end up working out very differently from what they … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, books for ages seven and eight, Chapter Book, early middle grade, Gobi Goes Viral, reading, review, Vibha Batra

Munni Monster

posted on February 21, 2023

Mishti's life is good. She has a best friend (never mind if said best friend is a little annoying), parents who love her, and a grandmother whom she adores. Everything's perfect--until Munni, her grandmother's cousin, comes to stay--no, live--with them. And suddenly, things are not idyllic anymore. Munni is a weirdo. She is old, but behaves like a baby. She dares to come into Munni's private cave under the dining table. And Mishti has to sleep like a sausage between her parents even though she is "of age", to use a phrase she's just learnt.And that is the crux of the story. Munni is a monster, and Mishti must figure out how to get rid of her. She wishes Munni were dead.Munni Monster is a lovely book, empathetic and heartwarming. It worked for me so much better than Madhurima Vidyarthi's My Grandmother's Masterpiece. Cuteness in children's stories is not something I enjoy, and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: books for ages nine and ten, early middle grade, Madhurima Vidyarthi, Munni Monster, reading, review

Love That Dog

posted on July 29, 2022

Last month, I had the opportunity to pitch a middle-grade verse novel to an editor, and as these things sometimes happen, the pitch turned into a conversation. We spoke about One and The Weight of Water (I prefer the first; the editor I was talking to prefers the second). I had not yet read Clap When You Land, or I would have mentioned it. And then she asked me if I had read Love That Dog. I hadn't, but I thought I'd see if I could find it. I did--and I loved it!The book begins in a surprising way. I read on. I was just on page three or four of the book, and I was already laughing. I remember my reaction to William Carlos Williams's 'The Red Wheelbarrow'. And the protagonist Jack has the same reaction! Why does so much depend on a little red wheelbarrow? What? What does the poem even mean?And slowly, from lightheartedness to emotion, we move with Jack, and understand just how … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: early middle grade, Love That Dog, reading, review, Sharon Creech

Dungeon Tales II

posted on April 11, 2022

Munni finds an old book in her Mamaji's shop. What does it say? ungeon ales? What could that possibly be? There's only one way to find out - Munni must learn how to read, and properly. There's a tiny problem - girls are forbidden to read in her village. But can that little detail stop a protagonist like Munni? Stories within a story within a story - Munni reads a book about the Badmash Badshah, who has prisoners in his dungeon come tell him stories. And these stories comprise not ungeon ales, but the Badmash Badshah's Dungeon Tales.I loved the book. Layered with powerful themes and comprising a range of stories from the heroic to the horrific, Dungeon Tales is a glorious celebration of both rebellion and storytelling. I chuckled as I read tale after tale, rejoicing in triumphs, both tiny and tremendous. And the alliterative titles used to address the Badmash Badshah! I smile even … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children Tagged With: Dungeon Tales II, early middle grade, reading, review, Short Stories, Venita Coelho

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