Diversity in MG Lit #33 February 2022

 

Book cover Word TravelersKicking off the month with a new MG chapter book series somewhat in the vein of Magic Treehouse.    Word Travelers & the Taj Mahal Mystery (10/2021) and Word Travelers & the Missing Mexican Mole (2/2022) (Random House). It is written by rapper and wordsmith Raj Halder and illustrated by Neha Rawat. A diverse trio of word sleuths magically travels the world uncovering linguistic connections in words that came to English from around the world. This one is on the young side with an engaging pace and a glossary at the back. I hope we see many more of these in the future.
book cover Just Right JillianHere is a trio of MG friendship stories. Just Right Jillian is the debut novel of Nicole D. Collier. It’s about overcoming shyness and finding your voice. Wishing Upon the Same Stars is the debut novel of Jacquetta Nammar Feldman. It explores the challenges in moving from a community where everyone practices the same faith to a more diverse neighborhood. It features a friendship between an Arab and an Israeli girl. Reem Faruqui’s fifth book Golden Girl, is a novel in verse celebrating Pakistani culture. It has a glossary and an Aloo Gosht recipe which could not be more simple or delicious!book cover Wishing Upon the Same Stars
book cover Anybody Seen Frenchie?Good books about neurodiverse children are rare.  Here’s a title that includes two kids in Maine with divergent aspects of autism who form an enduring friendship, in spite of their differences.  Anybody Here Seen Frenchie? is written by Schneider Family Book Award winning author Leslie Connor
book cover Comb of WishesHere are two diverse fantasy titles for February: A Comb of Wishes by debut author Lisa Stringfellow  is about a mermaid-summoning girl who learns the price of wishes. Master storyweaver Pam Muñoz Ryan has a new tale, Solimar: the sword of the monarchs, a story full of magic and danger with the fate of a kingdom and of monarch butterflies in the balance.
book cover Rima's RebellionFans of historical fiction will find Rima’s Rebellion by Margarita Engle a fascinating journey to Cuba’s wars for independence in the 1920s.  And on a personal note I am particularly delighted to see a biography of Lise Meitner for young readers. book cover Hidden PowersMy grandfather’s cousin worked with Werner Von Braun and Enrico Fermi so I had heard a little bit about her life but I’m dazzled by Jeannine Atkins biography in verse which brings to life the work of the woman who got a PhD in physics in 1906, became a professor, engaged in ground breaking research, and discovered nuclear fission, all while struggling to survive as a Jewish woman in Nazi Germany. Hidden Powers: Lise Meitner’s Call to Science is riveting and accessible. It contains a bibliography, a timeline, and an impressive list of international scientists that Meitner worked with and mentored in her long and productive life.
As always this is only a fraction of the wonderful diverse books being published in February. My selection is strongly influenced by the ARCs that come to my at my independent bookstore. Please add any titles I’ve missed this month in the comments. If you have a diverse MG title coming out this year, please encourage your publicist to send me an ARC at. Annie Blooms in Portland Oregon.
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Rosanne Parry
Rosanne Parry is the author of 8 MG novels including best sellers A Wolf Called Wander, A Whale of the Wild and her newest A Horse Named Sky. She sells books at Annie Blooms Bookstore in Multnomah Village and writes books in her treehouse in Portland, Oregon.
2 Comments
  1. These sound amazing! How to choose which on to start with? Thanks for sharing!

  2. Thanks for bringing attention to all these titles. I love writing historical verse in the company of Margarita Engle. And Rosanne, thanks for your enthusiasm for a book about the amazing Lise Meitner, and how cool that some family stories were passed along. Enrico Fermi seems quite the intrepid scientist and some of his story his told by his wife Laura who wrote a memoir and scientific biographies. They were heartbroken to leave Italy when in danger from Nazism, and so courageous — Laura writes about the details of raising two children in new homes, first New York, then Chicago.