Archive for the ‘New Releases’ Category

Just Floating In: Publication Day for You Are My Only by Beth Kephart!

Posted on Tuesday, October 25th, 2011 by the1stdaughter

Today is the official publication day for one of my favorite books this year!

You Are My Only by Beth Kephart

Congratulations to Beth and her marvelous new book!

Also, a huge thank you to everyone who helped to promote her book over the last couple of months! I’m not going to mention names because I know I’ll leave someone out, but thank you so so much! Besides, I think Pam gave the best thank you ever over at her blog.

You’ve made a larger impact than you may realize. You Are My Only was sent back to the presses for a second printing just recently and is now sold out on Amazon! Can you believe that? Simply amazing! Hopefully this means they’ll be going back for another printing, but until then for those of you who still need to pick up a copy (everyone who doesn’t have one yet) of You Are My Only check out these other locations that do have them in stock:

Barnes & Noble | Powell’s Books | Indiebound | Book Depository

Remember, Book Depository does have free shipping worldwide and so don’t put off picking this one up because you’re trying to avoid shipping costs. And of course, make sure to check your local independent booksellers to not only support Beth but your community as well!

Also, remember my giveaway I was running for a pre-order of You Are My Only? Well, instead of one winner I decided on two! The winners were Gaby & Kara who will be receiving an email today! Yay!

Congratulations again Beth and Happy Publication Day!!!

Just Floating In: New Releases in Children’s, MG and YA Books August 24th 2010

Posted on Monday, August 23rd, 2010 by the1stdaughter

Every Tuesday marks the release of some fantastic new books in the publishing world of Children’s, Middle Grade and Young Adult books. Each week you can stop by to see what new books you need to add to your shelves and also link up any reviews you have for the books listed!

Also, don’t forget to “link-up” your reviews of new releases at the bottom of the post! Feel free to link anything released in Children’s, Middle Grade or Young Adult genres in the last month. And make sure to include the title of the book and your site name!

I would also like to thank Bella from A Girl Reads a Book for the wonderful new “Hot Off the Presses” Image! She did a fantastic job and I immediately fell in love! If you need help with site set up or someone to make buttons/images, you definitely should get in touch with her. Thank you Bella!

Young Adult Books

Dangerous Neighbors by Beth Kephart

Published by Egmont USA

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/192

Publishers Summary: It is 1876, the year of the Centennial in Philadelphia. Katherine has lost her twin sister Anna in a tragic skating accident.  One wickedly hot September day, Katherine sets out for the exhibition grounds to cut short the haunted life she no longer wants to live.
Filled with vivid detail that artfully brings the past to life, National Book Award nominee Beth Kepart’s DANGEROUS NEIGHBORS is a timeless and finely crafted novel about betrayal and guilt, hope and despair, love, loss, and new beginnings.

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

Published by Scholastic Press

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/400

Publishers Summary: The third and final chapter of the phenomenal #1 New York Times Best-Selling Hunger Games Trilogy, is coming out August 24, 2010.

The Delcroix Academy: The Candidates by Inara Scott

Published by Hyperion Children’s

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/304

Publishers Summary: Dancia Lewis is far from popular. And that’s not just because of her average grades or her less-than-glamorous wardrobe. In fact, Dancia’s mediocrity is a welcome cover for her secret: whenever she sees a person threatening someone she cares about, things just … happen. Cars skid. Structures collapse. Usually someone gets hurt. So Dancia does everything possible to avoid getting close to people, believing this way she can suppress her powers and keep them hidden. When recruiters from the prestigious Delcroix Academy offer her a full scholarship, Dancia fears her days of living under the radar may be over. But Delcroix is a school for diplomats’ kids and child geniuses — why are they treating Dancia like she’s special? Even the hottest guy on campus seems to be going out of his way to make her feel welcome. And then there’s her mysterious new friend Jack, who can’t stay out of trouble. He suspects something dangerous is going on at Delcroix, and he wants Dancia to help him figure out what…But neither Jack or
Dancia could have imagined what’s really going on behind the gates of Delcroix Academy.

The Julian Game by Adelle Griffin

Published by Putnam Juvenile (An Imprint of Penguin)

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/208

Publishers Summary: All new girl Raye Archer wants is a way into the in crowd, so when ice-queen Ella Parker picks her to get back at her ex, the gorgeous Julian Kilgarry, Raye is more than game. Even if it means creating a fake Facebook identity so she can learn enough about Julian to sabotage him. It’s a fun and dangerous thrill at first, but Raye hadn’t counted on falling for Julian herself–and igniting Ella’s rage.
As Raye works to reconcile the temptress Elizabeth with her real-life self, Ella serves up her own revenge, creating an online smear campaign of nasty rumors and trashy photographs. Suddenly notorious, Raye has to find a way out of the web of deceit that she’s helped to build, and back to the relationships that matter.
Adele Griffin’s riveting novel explores the issues of generation Facebook: the desire to be someone else, real versus online friends, and the pitfalls and fallouts of posting your personal life online for all the world to judge.

Three Black Swans by Caroline B. Cooney

Published by Delacorte Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/288

Publishers Summary: Lives are in the balance in bestselling author Caroline B. Cooney’s newest young adult thriller, Three Black Swans.
Missy and her cousin Claire are best friends who finish each other’s sentences and practically read each other’s minds. It’s an eerie connection—so eerie that Missy has questions she wants to put to her parents. But she’s afraid to ask. So when Missy hears an expert discussing newborn babies on the radio, it makes her wonder about her family.
Missy just can’t let go of those nagging questions, and decides to use a school project about scientific hoaxes to try to uncover the answers. She enlists Claire to help. As part of the project the girls perform a dramatic scene that is captured on video at school. After the video is posted on YouTube, Missy and Claire realize that they’ve opened Pandora’s box and much more than they ever imagined has come out. Not only are their identities called into question, but so is the future of everyone involved.
In this riveting, heartrending story by thriller author Caroline B. Cooney, the truth changes the lives of three families—as the bonds of blood must withstand the strains of long-hidden secrets that are at last revealed.

The Nightmary’s by Dan Poblocki

Published by Random House Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages: Young Adult/336

Publishers Summary: Timothy July has been having nightmares. About his brother, who is in a coma after being wounded in Iraq; about his best friend, Stuart, who is behaving like a jerk; about the old biology specimens in jars lining the walls of his classroom; and about Abigail, the new girl who seems to be a magnet for trouble. Or perhaps she is the cause.
Suddenly Timothy’s nightmares are coming true. His brother, his face decaying, approaches Timothy on the street. Stuart ends up in the hospital, terrified that monsters are stalking him. And the specimen jars are tormenting not only Timothy but his teacher as well.
What is the secret in Abigail’s past that is the key to these horrors? And can Timothy figure it out before his nightmares become a deadly reality?
A follow-up to the well-received Stone Child, Dan Poblocki’s second novel will have his readers mesmerized until the last page—and sleeping with the lights on.

Middle Grade Books (Ages 8-12)

Vordak The Incomprehensible by Vordak T. Incomprehensible

Published by Egmont USA

Ages/Pages: 9-12/208

Publishers Summary: Slip on your acid-free gloves, make sure you have a duplicate copy of How to Grow Up and Rule the World (just in case something should happen to this one) and try to follow along as the incomparable, superior-in-all-ways Vordak the Incomprehensible teaches you a thing or two about villainy.  Now you, too, can try (and fail) to attain Vordak’s level of infamy.
From selecting the most dastardly name, to choosing the ideal henchmen, to engaging in witty repartee with disgustingly chipper superheroes, experienced supervillain Vordak the Incomprehensible guides readers step-by-step toward the ultimate goal of world domination (from his parents’ basement in Trenton, New Jersey).
With chapter titles like “Bringing Out the Evil” and “Building a Top-Notch Evil Organization,” numerous bold illustrations, and detailed quizzes to assess your level of dastardliness, this book provides everything necessary to rise above the masses, and then rub your ascent in their faces.
In return for this wealth of knowledge, Vordak requests nothing more than an honored place in the evil regime of he who achieves control of the world. (And, of course, the opportunity to assume command, should things not work out.)

Masters of Disaster by Gary Paulsen

Published by Wendy Lamb Books

Ages/Pages: 9-12/112

Publishers Summary: “Let’s face facts: We may be the most boring twelve-year-olds on the planet.”
Henry Mosley decides that he and his pals Riley and Reed have got to liven things up. They need to go on some earth-shaking adventures and make a name for themselves. Henry is the mastermind; Riley’s the cautious researcher who’s prepared for anything. And somehow fearful Reed always ends up with the scariest, craziest assignments.
Roped into wacky attempts to break world records, reenact scenes from books, solve a hundred-year-old murder, and carry out Henry’s other inspired ideas, Riley and Reed follow their fearless leader everywhere: into the wilderness (truly terrifying), inside a bull-riding ring, into a haunted house, off the neighbors’ roof, and into a cataclysmic collision with explosive life-forms. Gary Paulsen brings all his trademark humor to this fast-paced novel of fun and disaster.

The Wolf Tree by John Claude Bemis

Published by Random House Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages: 9-12/400

Publishers Summary: “Can you imagine eternal Darkness, sir?”
So asks the sickly stranger who staggers into Peg Leg Nel’s birthday party. Before the man dies, he tells Ray and his friends of a Darkness spreading like wildfire across Kansas, turning good people bad and poisoning anyone who tries to escape. It’s clear that though the evil Gog is dead, his devilish machine has survived and is growing stronger.
Now a full-fledged Rambler, Ray leads his friends on a mission into the heart of darkness. Vital to their success is tracking down the legendary Wolf Tree, rumored to be a pathway to the spirit world. Only with one of the tree’s limbs can the Nine Pound Hammer be repaired and the Gog’s terrible machine finally destroyed. The search for the Wolf Tree grows desperate as the Darkness spreads, threatening Ray, his friends, and all of humanity.
The Wolf Tree is the second fantasy adventure book in John Claude Bemis’s series The Clockwork Dark, and adds new layers of myth and magic to Bemis’s original take on American tall tales in The Nine Pound Hammer.

Little Joe by Sandra Neil Wallace

Published by Knopf Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages:8-10/192

Publishers Summary: It’s a cold December night and Fancy, the Stegner family’s cow, is about to give birth. Out pops Little Joe, a huge bull calf, and with him comes nine-year-old Eli’s first chance to raise an animal to show at next fall’s county fair. Over the next ten months, Eli, and Little Joe, learn some hard lessons about growing up and what it means to take on bigger responsibilities, especially when it comes to taking care of another living thing. But one thing Eli is trying not to think about is what will happen to Little Joe after the fair: it’s auction time, and he’ll have to sell Little Joe!
In this appealing and heartwarming story that’s reminiscent of James Herriot’s books, Eli comes to terms with some of the realities of life on his family’s farm, and in the outside world, as he raises his first bull calf for competition. Told in a straightforward and appealing text, brimming with lush details about the natural world of the farm, and with characters that are sure to appeal to readers, Eli’s story is one that may not be familiar to every kid, but the themes of growing up and learning some difficult lessons will appeal to kids and adults alike.

Children’s Books

Dick and Jane and Vampires by Laura Marchesani and Illustrated by Tommy Hunt
(I seriously want this book and so does my mom!)

Published by Grosset and Dunlap (An imprint of Penguin)

Ages/Pages: 5 and up/144

Publishers Summary: When innocent Dick and Jane meet a creepy, cape-wearing vampire, the unexpected happens: he becomes their friend! Dick and Jane and Vampires borrows from the classic stories and art we all know and love, but adds an of-the-moment twist: a vampire, illustrated in the classic Dick and Jane style.

Disappearing Desmond by Anna Alter

Published by Knopf Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages: 4-8/40

Publishers Summary: Desmond likes to disappear and hide in the cleverest of places. But when a new student named Gloria arrives at his school, Desmond finds himself being noticed for the first time. Full color.

Honk Honk! Beep Beep! by Daniel Kirk

Published by Hyperion Books for Children

Ages/Pages: 2-5/32

Publishers Summary: Honk, honk! Beep, beep! Father and child love going for a ride around town in their car. Along the way, they’ll see a crew of friendly faces in their own fun vehicles—big rigs, bulldozers, even trains! But everyone has somewhere to be and things to do, so make sure to buckle up! With playful text and bold illustrations, Daniel Kirk captures the fun of a cross-country drive.

In the Wild by David Elliott and Illustrated by Holly Meade

Published by Candlewick Press

Ages/Pages: 4-7/32

Publishers Summary: From the lion standing alone on the African savannah to the panda in a bamboo forest, from the rhinoceros with its boot-like face to the Arctic polar bear disappearing in the snow, the earth is full of curious and wonderful animals, each more extraordinary than the next. David Elliott’s pithy, lyrical verse and Holly Meade’s stunning woodcut and watercolor illustrations reveal a world of remarkable beauty and wonder –and offer an enticing introduction to both favorite animals and poetic forms.

Orlando on a Thursday by Emma Magenta

Published by Candlewick Press

Ages/Pages: 3-5/32

Publishers Summary: Everything is an adventure when Orlando and his mommy spend the day together: drawing a picture, taking a walk, even having a snack. Then comes Thursday –the day Mami has to be busy in town. Remembering this makes Orlando sad, until Papi reminds him about all the super, super things that can happen when they’re together on a Thursday! Emma Magenta’s gently quirky narrative and fresh, charmingly naïve illustrations evoke a true toddler sensibility, while weaving a cocoon of love and security around young Orlando in a story as comforting as a mug of warm, frothy milk. Changes and separations in a young child’s life are less worrisome with the help of playful rituals in this sweet, reassuring picture book.

Tell the Truth, B.B. Wolf by Judy Sierra and Illustrated by J. Otto Seibold

Published by Knopf Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages: 5-8/40

Publishers Summary: Big Bad Wolf’s first visit to his local library (as related in Mind Your Manners, B.B. Wolf) was such a success that he returns to tell his version of “The Three Little Pigs.” His outrageous spin on the tale draws skeptical remarks from his audience: “Isn’t that wolf’s nose getting longer?” asks Pinocchio. “It’s a cooked-up, half-baked tale,” snaps the Gingerbread Boy. And “Tell the truth, B.B. Wolf!” squeal the Three Little Pigs. Caught in his own lie, B.B. explains that he is a reformed villain: “Now I’m begging on my knees, Little Pigs, forgive me, please!” How B.B. turns his bad old deed into a good new one provides a happy ending to this fun-to-read fractured fairytale.

The Carnival of the Animals
by Jack Prelutsky, Illustrated by Mary Grandpre and Created by Camille Saint-Saens

Published by Knopf Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages:6-12/40

Publishers Summary: A great way to introduce children to classical music.
America’s first Children’s Poet Laureate has written all-new verses to accompany the composer Camille Saint-Saëns’s The Carnival of the Animals, and the illustrator of the Harry Potter books has turned these rollicking rhymes into a picture-book fun fest. Included is a CD of the music and of Jack Prelutsky reading the verses. A note to parents and teachers by Judith Bachleitner, head of the music department at the prestigious Rudolf Steiner School in New York City, suggests ways preschoolers can act out the music—tromp like an elephant, hop like a kangaroo, glide like a swan—or, for older children, be creatively inspired by this joyful work.

Dirtball Pete by Eileen Brennan

Published by Random House Books for Young Readers

Ages/Pages:4-7/32

Publishers Summary: A hilarious read-aloud picture book for boys and girls who just can’t seem to stay clean! (And the parents who love their little dirtballs regardless.)
It’s a fact. Dirtball Pete stinks to high heaven.
His sister, Amanda, says so, and her friend Janine totally agrees. Even with a good scrubbing from his mom, Dirtball Pete usually manages to revert to his dirtball self in no time. But today is no ordinary day—it’s THE FIFTY STATES AND WHY THEY’RE GREAT! day at school, and Dirtball Pete has a speech to recite in the school play.
Will he remember his lines? Will he manage to avoid his dog’s muddy paws? Will the stink of his pet ferret, Eggroll, cling to his Pennsylvania costume? And can Dirtball Pete make his mom proud even if he is a dirtball?
Eileen Brennan’s funny picture book has a refreshingly original voice and style and a lovable new character in Dirtball Pete, who, with his unassuming, carefree ways, will charm kids and adults alike.

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Is there a book missing? Are you a publisher, publicist, author or illustrator with a book coming out soon that you’d like mentioned? Please feel free to contact me via my email address the1stdaughter {at} gmail {dot} com or on my Contact Page.

WOW! What a week! Now it’s your turn! Have you reviewed one of these great new titles? Or one included in the compilation book above? Feel free to also link up any new release reviews from the last month. Just make sure to include the book title and your site name. Link up your review below so that we can all learn more about these great books and hopefully add to our TBR piles!

Purchasing products by clicking through the links in this post will provide us a modest commission through our affiliate relationship with IndieBound.

Just Floating In: New Releases in Children’s, MG and YA Books August 17th 2010

Posted on Tuesday, August 17th, 2010 by the1stdaughter

Every Tuesday marks the release of some fantastic new books in the publishing world of Children’s, Middle Grade and Young Adult books. Each week you can stop by to see what new books you need to add to your shelves and also link up any reviews you have for the books listed!

Also, don’t forget to “link-up” your reviews of new releases at the bottom of the post! Feel free to link anything released in Children’s, Middle Grade or Young Adult genres in the last month. And make sure to include the title of the book and your site name!

I would also like to thank Bella from A Girl Reads a Book for the wonderful new “Hot Off the Presses” Image! She did a fantastic job and I immediately fell in love! If you need help with site set up or someone to make buttons/images, you definitely should get in touch with her. Thank you Bella!

The Water Stone: Book Two of The Reign of the Elements by Riley Carney

Published by Booklight Press

Ages and Pages: Young Adult/310

Publishers Summary: Although Matt and his friends have enjoyed some peace following their discovery of the Fire Stone, Matt knows that his enemy, the evil elf Malik, will never stop seeking the Stones of the Elements and that he is refocusing his efforts to find the remaining two stones and the Immortality Scroll. Another threat also surfaces in the form of a plague from ancient years which threatens the lives of those in the city of Gremonte, including Matt’s friend and teacher, Alem. The only way to save them is to find a fabled dwarf city where the Water Stone, is rumored to be hidden. Matt and Sam, his alorath companion, and their friends, set off on another quest, following the clues of a long-dead dwarf adventurer, in a desperate race against time to save hundreds of lives before it’s too late.

The Pout-Pout Fish in the Big-Big Dark by Deborah Diesen and Illustrated by Dan Hanna

Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Ages and Pages: 2-5/32

Publishers Summary: Mr. Fish wants to help his friend Ms. Clam when she loses her pearl, but though he’s fast as a sailfish, as smart as dolphin, and as strong as a shark, Mr. Fish has a secret: he’s scared of the dark!
Very young children will swim along with Mr. Fish as he journeys deep into the ocean to new and mysterious places. They will discover, as Mr. Fish does, the power of friendship to light the way through the big-big dark.

Karma Bites by Stacy Kramer and Valerie Thomas

Published by Sandpiper (An imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Ages and Pages: Young Adult/348

Publishers Summary: Life seems to have it in for Franny Flanders.
Her best friends aren’t speaking, her parents just divorced, and her hippie grandmother has moved in.
The only karma Franny’s got is bad karma.
Then Franny gets her hands on a box of magic recipes that could fix all of her problems. It could even change the world! Finally, life is looking up.
But Franny is about to learn that magic and karma aren’t to be played with. When you mess with the universe, it can bite back in unexpected ways.

I’m 3! Look What I Can Do by Maria Carluccio

Published by Henry Holt and Co.

Ages and Pages: 2-5/24

Publishers Summary: From waking up in the morning to getting ready for bed and kissing good night, the day is full of first accomplishments for a young brother and sister. These three year-olds can eat with a fork and spoon; put away their toys; and get dressed–all by themselves. Cheerful illustrations follow these energetic twins through a day of many important milestones.

Scumble by Ingrid Law

Published by Dial Books for Young Readers

Ages and Pages: 8-12/416

Publishers Summary: Nine years after Mibs’s Savvy journey, her cousin Ledge has just turned thirteen . . .
But Ledger Kale’s savvy is a total dud–all he does is make little things fall apart. So his parents decide it’s safe to head to Wyoming, where it’s soon revealed that Ledge’s savvy is much more powerful than anyone thought. Worse, his savvy disaster has an outside witness: Sarah Jane Cabot, reporter wannabe and daughter of the local banker. Just like that, Ledge’s beloved normal life is over. Now he has to keep Sarah from turning family secrets into headlines, stop her father from foreclosing on Uncle Autry’s ranch, and scumble his savvy into control so that, someday, he can go home.
Starring a cast both fresh and familiar,
Scumble brilliantly melds Ingrid Law’s signature heart and humor with the legendary Wild West.

It’s a Book by Lane Smith

Published by Roaring Book Press

Ages and Pages: 6 and up/32

Publishers Summary: Playful and lighthearted with a subversive twist that is signature Lane Smith, IT’S A BOOK is a delightful manifesto on behalf of print in the digital age. This satisfying, perfectly executed picture book has something to say to readers of all stripes and all ages.



How to Train Your Dragon Book 6: A Hero’s Guide to Deadly Dragons by Cressida Cowell

Published by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Ages and Pages: Middle Grade/272

Publishers Summary: It’s Hiccup’s birthday, but that’s not going to keep him from getting into trouble. To save his dragon, Toothless, from being banished, Hiccup must sneak into the Meathead Public Library and steal the Viking’s most sacred book. But the Vikings see books as a dangerous influence, and keep them locked up and under heavy guard. To save his friend, Hiccup must brave the Hairy Scary Librarian and his dreadful army of Meathead Warriors and face off against the formidable Driller-Dragons. Will he make it out and live to see his next birthday?

The Teen’s Guide to World Domination: Advice on Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Awesomeness by Josh Shipp

Published by St. Martin’s Griffin

Ages and Pages: Young Adult/320

Publishers Summary: Josh Shipp has been serving up a healthy dose of “advice with an attitude” to millions of teens for over a decade, in front of packed auditoriums across the country. For the first time ever, Josh is pulling together all of his unique advice for “world domination” into a must-have survival guide. Hilarious, inspirational, and authentic, Josh offers golden nuggets of wisdom for everything that has you freaking out (pretty much all the stuff you can’t fathom addressing with Mom and Dad). So, summon your inner hero and learn to dominate the seven “villains” that are keeping you from awesomeness.

The Last Apprentice: Rise of the Huntress by Joseph Delaney

Published by Greenwillow Books

Ages and Pages: 10 and up/448

Publishers Summary: Things can never be the same again.
The Spook and his apprentice, Thomas Ward, have returned to the county after a long journey and a hard battle. But their troubles are far from over. Their home has been over-run by enemy soldiers. The Spook’s house is in ruins, the boggart protecting it has fled, and the malicious witches imprisoned in the gardens have escaped.
Tom, Alice, and the Spook must flee, too, across the ocean to the island of Mona. And it’s on Mona that this small band fighting against the dark will face an old enemy grown terrifyingly powerful. Will they be able to vanquish an evil that crawls beneath the ground itself? At what cost?
Will Tom and the Spook ever be able to return home?

The Death (and Further Adventures) of Silas Winterbottom The Body Thief by Stephen Giles

Published by Sourcebooks Jabberwocky

Ages and Pages: Middle Grade/240

Publishers Summary: And you thought your family was strange.
I am dying. . . I might get the chance to know you before death takes me…I would like you to be my guest at Sommerset. . .I have enclosed a check for $ 10,000. . . Should you accept my offer…
Uncle Silas has always been greedy, evil, insulting, and extremely rich! But a dying uncle with a vast fortune is definitely one worth getting to know. Even if it means spending 2 months on his secluded island home with a houseful of suspicious servants and a hungry pet crocodile.
But what is Uncle Silas really up to? Will Adele, Milo, and Isabella outlive Uncle Silas to inherit his money? And just who is that mysterious “guest” in his basement? Is it worth the money (or their lives) to stick around and find out?

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Is there a book missing? Are you a publisher, publicist, author or illustrator with a book coming out soon that you’d like mentioned? Please feel free to contact me via my email address the1stdaughter {at} gmail {dot} com or on my Contact Page.

Now it’s your turn! Have you reviewed one of these great new titles? Or one included in the compilation book above? Feel free to also link up any new release reviews from the last month. Just make sure to include the book title and your site name. Link up your review below so that we can all learn more about these great books and hopefully add to our TBR piles!

Purchasing products by clicking through the links in this post will provide us a modest commission through our affiliate relationship with IndieBound.

Just Floating In: New Releases in Children’s, MG and YA Books August 10th 2010

Posted on Tuesday, August 10th, 2010 by the1stdaughter

Every Tuesday marks the release of some fantastic new books in the publishing world of Children’s, Middle Grade and Young Adult books. Each week you can stop by to see what new books you need to add to your shelves and also link up any reviews you have for the books listed! This week I’m adding some from the past few weeks, as this is the first running and there were a few I wanted to make sure to mention.

Also, don’t forget to “link-up” your reviews of new releases at the bottom of the post! Feel free to link anything released in Children’s, Middle Grade or Young Adult genres in the last month. And make sure to include the title of the book and your site name!

Is there a book missing? Are you a publisher, publicist, author or illustrator with a book coming out soon that you’d like mentioned? Please feel free to contact me via my email address the1stdaughter {at} gmail {dot} com or on my Contact Page.

The Eternal Ones by Kirsten Miller (Review Coming Soon!)

Published by Razorbill (An Imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group)

Ages & Pages: Young Adult -416

Publishers Summary: Haven Moore can’t control her visions of a past with a boy called Ethan, and a life in New York that ended in fiery tragedy. In our present, she designs beautiful dresses for her classmates with her best friend Beau. Dressmaking keeps her sane, since she lives with her widowed and heartbroken mother in her tyrannical grandmother’s house in Snope City, a tiny town in Tennessee. Then an impossible group of coincidences conspire to force her to flee to New York, to discover who she is, and who she was.

In New York, Haven meets Iain Morrow and is swept into an epic love affair that feels both deeply fated and terribly dangerous. Iain is suspected of murdering a rock star and Haven wonders, could he have murdered her in a past life? She visits the Ouroboros Society and discovers a murky world of reincarnation that stretches across millennia. Haven must discover the secrets hidden in her past lives, and loves, before all is lost and the cycle begins again.

The Red Blazer Girls: The Vanishing Violin by Michael D. Beil

Published by Knopf Books for Young Readers (An Imprint of Random House)

Ages & Pages: 336

Publishers Summary: When there are mysteries to be solved, the Red Blazer Girls are on the case! The discovery of the Ring of Rocamadour has secured the girls’ reputation as Upper East Side super-sleuths, bringing many sundry job requests (no mystery too small, right?) and some unwanted attention from crooks. This time the girls must follow a trail of cryptic clues, involving everything from logic to literature, to trace a rare violin gone missing. But nothing is as it appears, and just as a solution seems imminent, the girls find themselves scrambling to save the man who was once their prime suspect. Bowstrings and betrayal, crushes and codes abound in this suspenseful companion to the Red Blazer Girls’ 2009 debut. Recent clues indicate that there’ll be more mystery and mayhem to come!

Brontorina by Randy Cecil and Illustrated by James Howe

Published by Candlewick

Ages & Pages: 4-8 & 32 pgs.

Publishers Summary: Brontorina has a dream. She wants to dance. But Brontorina is rather large — too large to fit in Madame Lucille’s dance studio. Brontorina does not have the right shoes, and everyone knows you can’t dance without the proper footwear. Still, Brontorina knows, deep in her heart, that she is meant to be a ballerina. James Howe introduces a lovable dinosaur whose size is outmatched only by her determination, and whose talent is outmatched only by her charm. Accompanied by Randy Cecil’s beguiling illustrations, here is an irresistible story that proves that no problem is too big when the heart and imagination know no bounds.

Three Scoops and a Fig by Sara Laux Akin and Illustrated by Susan Kathleen Hartung

Published by Peachtree Publishers

Ages: 4-8

Publishers Summary: Tired of always being “in the way” in the busy kitchen of her family’s Italian restaurant, Sofia cooks up a delicious new recipe of her own.



Infinite Days by Rebecca Maizel

Published by St. Martin’s Griffin

Ages & Pages: Young Adult & 336

Publishers Summary: “Throughout all my histories, I found no one I loved more than you…no one.”
Those were some of Rhode’s last words to me. The last time he would pronounce his love. The last time I would see his face.
It was the first time in 592 years I could take a breath. Lay in the sun. Taste.
Rhode sacrificed himself so I, Lenah Beaudonte, could be human again. So I could stop the blood lust.
I never expected to fall in love with someone else that wasn’t Rhode.
But Justin was…daring. Exciting. More beautiful than I could dream.
I never expected to be sixteen again…then again, I never expected my past to come back and haunt me…

Judy Moody Girl Detective Book 9 by Megan McDonald and Illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds

Published by Candlewick

Ages & Pages: 6-9 & 192 pgs.

Publishers Summary: Judy Moody is in a mood. A sleuthing, Nancy Drew kind of mood. So what’s a WBMS (world’s best mystery solver) to do? Go find a mystery, that’s what! And she doesn’t have to snoop for long: when Mr. Chips, a beloved crime-dog-in-training, goes missing, Judy Drewdy and her chums, agents Dills Pickle (Frank), Spuds Houdini (Rocky), and James Madagascar (Stink) find themselves smack-dab in the middle of a reallife, scare-your-pants-off whodunit. Was Mr. Chips stolen by dirty dognappers? And why are chocolate-chip cookies disappearing all over town? Watch out for red herrings–along with clever references to classic Nancy Drew mysteries–as Eagle Eye Moody and company are hot on the case! It’s an honest-to-jeepers mystery! Agent Judy Drewdy sets out to solve the case of the missing puppy when a canine-cop-in-training vanishes into thin air.

Fur and Feathers by Janet Halfmann and Illustrated by Allen Klein Laurie

Published by Sylvan Dell Publishing

Ages & Pages:  4-9 & 32 pgs.

Publishes Summary: When Sophia dreams that howling winds whisk the fur and feathers right off her animal friends, she shares some of her clothes with them. But her clothing doesn’t work well for the animals. Seeing their disappointment, she offers to sew each one the “right” coat. Animals line up to explain what they need and why. Polar Bear needs white fur to stay warm and hide in the snow. Fish needs scales, but with slime. Snake needs scales too, but dry ones. And how will Sophia make a prickly coat for Porcupine? The award-winning team of Halfmann and Klein (Little Skink’s Tail) reunite to bring animal coverings (and classification) to life in an imaginative way.

Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty by G. Neri and Illustrated by Randy DuBurke

Published by Lee & Low Books

Ages & Pages:9 and up & 96 pgs.

Publishers Summary: Eleven-year-old Roger is trying to make sense of his classmate Robert “Yummy” Sandifer’s death, but first he has to make sense of Yummy’s life. Yummy could be as tough as a pit bull sometimes. Other times he was as sweet as the sugary treats he loved to eat. Was Yummy some sort of monster, or just another kid?
As Roger searches for the truth, he finds more and more questions. How did Yummy end up in so much trouble? Did he really kill someone? And why do all the answers seem to lead back to a gang—the same gang Roger’s older brother belongs to?
Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty is a compelling dramatization based on events that occurred in Chicago in 1994. This gritty exploration of youth gang life will force readers to question their own understandings of good and bad, right and wrong.

The Big Red Book of Beginner Books by P.D. Eastman; Al Perkins; Robert Lopshire; Joan Heilbroner; Marilyn Sadler

Published by Random House Books for Young Readers

Ages & Pages: 5-8 & 344 pgs.

Publishers Summary: What’s a better present than a classic Beginner Book? Six of them—for less than the price of two! Following on the success of The Big Blue Book of Beginner Books and The Big Green Book of Beginner Books, we’ve taken the complete text and art of P. D. Eastman’s Sam and the Firefly, Robert Lopshire’s I Want to Be Somebody New!, Marilyn Sadler’s The Very Bad Bunny, Mike McClintock’s Stop That Ball!, Al Perkins’s The Digging-est Dog, and Joan Heilbroner’s Robert the Rose Horse and bound them together in one sturdy hardcover omnibus. This is a perfect introduction to reading that will whet young readers’ appetites for additional books in the Beginner Book series.

The Blue House Dog by Deborah Blumenthal and Illustrated by Adam Gustavson

Published by Peachtree Publishers

Ages: 4-8

Publishers Summary: A boy without a Dog—and a dog without an owner—find each other in this powerfully moving story of loneliness and redemption. When his elderly owner dies, Bones is left to wander the neighborhood. But someone is watching—Cody, a young boy who once had a dog he loved very much. Slowly, cautiously, Bones and Cody grow closer, as each learns to trust and love again.

Girl Parts by John M. Cusik

Published by Candlewick

Ages & Pages: Young Adult & 240 pgs.

Publishers Summary: David and Charlie are opposites. David has a million friends, online and off. Charlie is a soulful outsider, off the grid completely. But neither feels close to anybody. When David’s parents present him with a hot Companion bot designed to encourage healthy bonds and treat his “dissociative disorder,” he can’t get enough of luscious redheaded Rose –and he can’t get it soon. Companions come with strict intimacy protocols, and whenever he tries anything, David gets an electric shock. Parted from the boy she was built to love, Rose turns to Charlie, who finds he can open up, knowing Rose isn’t real. With Charlie’s help, the ideal “companion” is about to become her own best friend. In a stunning and hilarious debut, John Cusick takes rollicking aim at internet culture and our craving for meaningful connection in an uberconnected world.

Mr. President Goes to School by Rick Walton and Illustrated by Brad Sneed

Published by Peachtree Publishers

Ages: 4-8

Publishers Summary: When Mr. President becomes frustrated and overwhelmed by the many pressures of his job, he puts on a silly disguise and returns to the place where things are just a little bit simpler…kindergarten! While Mr. President is enjoying snack time and shaking it all about with his new classmates, he is also relearning important lessons in sharing, caring and compromise. Mr. President brings what he learned back to the White House and takes a fun new approach to getting his job done.

The Fabled Fifth Graders of Aesop Elementary School by Candace Fleming

Published by Schwartz and Wade (An imprint of Random House)

Pages: 176

Publishers Summary: Here’s a chapter book with all the kid appeal and absurd mayhem of Louis Sachar’s classic Sideways Stories from Wayside School! These hilarious fables, complete with morals, will make you wish you went to Aesop Elementary.
Welcome back to Mr. Jupiter’s inimitable class at Aesop Elementary. His rambunctious, special students are fifth graders now . . . and they rule the school! Bernadette Braggadoccio stirs things up when her probing investigative reporting for the school’s TV station reveals some scandalous stuff. But . . . don’t believe everything you hear. Is that new art teacher really a crazy lady with zillions of cats, or could there be more to this story?
For their last year at Aesop, the fifth graders are hoping for the coolest class pet—a unicorn, a pink-headed duck, or at least a giant squid. Imagine their disappointment when they get guinea pigs. But . . . appearances can be deceiving. These guinea pigs have some very unusual traits.
So whether readers knew Mr. Jupiter’s class back in fourth grade or are new to Aesop Elementary, they’ll be chomping at the bit to join these fabled fifth graders for the zaniest school year ever.

Toby and the Secrets of the Tree by Timothee de Fombelle and Illustrated by Francois Place

Published by Candlewick

Ages & Pages: 9 and up & 432 pgs.

Publishers Summary: Thrilling Conclusion of a two-part adventure!
Toby’s world is under greater threat than ever before. A giant crater has been dug right into the center of the Tree, moss and lichen have invaded the branches, and one tyrant controls it all. Leo Blue, once Toby’s best friend, is holding Toby’s beloved Elisha prisoner, hunting the Grass People with merciless force, and inflicting a life of poverty and fear on the Tree People. But after several years among the Grass People, Toby has returned to fight back. And this time he’s not alone: a resistance is forming. In the much-anticipated sequel to the award-winning TOBY ALONE, the compelling eco-adventure reaches its gripping conclusion.
A breathless, high-stakes quest to save the miniature world of the Tree –and reunite loved ones lost –unfolds with wit, suspense, and startling revelations.

Hide and Seek by by Katy Grant

Published by Peachtree Publishers

Ages: 8-12

Publishers Summary: Thirteen-year-old Chase, a geocaching enthusiast, must constantly rely on his wits to solve unexpected problems. This outdoor adventure and boy’s coming-of-age story is set in the remote, rugged mountains of North Arizona.


Artemis Fowl #7: The Atlantis Complex by Eoin Colfer

Published by Hyperion

Ages & Pages: 10 and up & 368 pgs.

Publishers Summary: The stakes only get higher for Artemis and the crew on their newest (underwater!) adventure.








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