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Varsha Seshan

Top Nine Middle Grade Books I Read in 2020

posted on January 3, 2021

I love middle grade reads, so this is my longest list this year. In no particular order, here are the books to which I gave a five-star rating in 2020.This is a book for keeps.More often than not, in India, books that address homosexuality are categorised as young adult or adult books, but with this book more than any others before, I disagree. To Night Owl from Dogfish is clearly a middle grade book. The characters, the themes, the tone - everything, for me, is middle grade. Avery and Bett learn that their dads are going to get married, and they start exchanging emails, laying plans to ensure that they don't get to know each other. They don't want two families to become one, thank you very much. They don't want to become sisters.Their fathers want to send them to summer camp together. They want to refuse to go and when that fails, they determine not to talk to each other. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Across the Line, All of Me, Eva Ibbotson, Holly Goldberg Sloan, Kate Darnton, Katherine Rundell, Listen to the Moon, Lois Lowry, Meg Wolitzer, Michael Morpurgo, middle-grade, Nayanika Mahtani, Number the Stars, Out of My Mind, Sharon M Draper, The Good Thieves, The Misfits, The Star of Kazan, To Night Owl from Dogfish, Venita Coelho

The Good Thieves

posted on June 1, 2020

Book cover Text: The Good Thieves Katherine Rundell Award-winning author of 'Rooftoppers' Image: A huge castle rising from a lake, four children in a boat rowing towards it.

I've said it before and I'll say it again - you cannot go wrong with Katherine Rundell. The Girl Savage, Rooftoppers, The Wolf Wilder, The Explorer, and now, The Good Thieves. I've loved all of them. I love the poetry in the storytelling, the feisty characters and the power of relationships. Katherine Rundell's work just sucks me in each time and holds me in the story until I've read the last sentence.A rich conman Sorrotore has swindled Vita's grandfather out of his home, an old castle that is falling apart. Sorrotore insists that he bought the castle cheap - he paid 200 dollars for it, and her grandfather's account reflects the payment. Yet, he never sold it. He would never sell something so precious to him, and however pressed he was, he would never sell it for a paltry two hundred dollars.However, lawyers are expensive and the family cannot afford to fight a long legal battle, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Katherine Rundell, middle-grade, reading, review, The Good Thieves