18. Liesl & Po by Lauren Oliver and illustrated by Kei Acedera. This charming fairytale for this economically-conscious age was the perfect segue into the writing and reading class for fourth and fifth graders that I begin teaching tomorrow. There's this certain mood and tone, a particular cadence and use of words that has become prevalent in children's literature and that I absolutely adore. It's almost a kiddie version of my beloved nineteenth-century narrator. Except a wise-cracking, cynical-but-I-still-believe-in-magic kind of kid narrator. I recognize it from classics like The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe , Lemony Snicket's books, and Catherynne M. Valente took it to linguistical heights with The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making . Liesl & Po begins: "On the third night after the day her father died, Liesl saw the ghost. ... It was as though the darkness was a sheet of raw cookie dough and someone had jus
Life, Books, and SFF