
Joy Preble
Author of Dreaming Anastasia: A Novel of Love, Magic, and the Power of Dreams
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pon relocating to a new community, a child struggles to make a holiday celebration special.
“I love Hanukkah. I love how it is always the same,” says Nate. But his family’s recent move changes everything. When his beloved menorah goes missing, his two fathers (Daddy and Abba) take him to a Judaica shop, where they meet shop owner Amy and her cat, Kugel. While Nate attempts to find the right menorah, Kugel runs into the street. Nate mounts a search campaign, passing out flyers and, at show more last, coming up with an ingenious way to find the cat. In the process, he discovers the inspiration for his own special menorah. Preble’s elegantly told, engaging story celebrates the joy of observing long-standing traditions and making room for new ones; her tale also draws deft connections with the Hanukkah story: “The Maccabees didn’t give up, Nate,” Abba tells him. “And neither did you.” Anchin’s warm, detailed, and expressive illustrations draw readers in. The artwork depicts a variety of Jewish experiences, including multiple types of head coverings, a wide variety of creative menorah designs, and a shop featuring a large assortment of Jewish ritual objects. Nate is tan-skinned, Daddy is pale-skinned, and Abba is brown-skinned.
A heartwarming holiday tale about finding friends and creating new beginnings. (author’s note, glossary and explanation of Hanukkah history and traditions, latke recipe) (Picture book. 3-6)
-Kirkus Review show less
“I love Hanukkah. I love how it is always the same,” says Nate. But his family’s recent move changes everything. When his beloved menorah goes missing, his two fathers (Daddy and Abba) take him to a Judaica shop, where they meet shop owner Amy and her cat, Kugel. While Nate attempts to find the right menorah, Kugel runs into the street. Nate mounts a search campaign, passing out flyers and, at show more last, coming up with an ingenious way to find the cat. In the process, he discovers the inspiration for his own special menorah. Preble’s elegantly told, engaging story celebrates the joy of observing long-standing traditions and making room for new ones; her tale also draws deft connections with the Hanukkah story: “The Maccabees didn’t give up, Nate,” Abba tells him. “And neither did you.” Anchin’s warm, detailed, and expressive illustrations draw readers in. The artwork depicts a variety of Jewish experiences, including multiple types of head coverings, a wide variety of creative menorah designs, and a shop featuring a large assortment of Jewish ritual objects. Nate is tan-skinned, Daddy is pale-skinned, and Abba is brown-skinned.
A heartwarming holiday tale about finding friends and creating new beginnings. (author’s note, glossary and explanation of Hanukkah history and traditions, latke recipe) (Picture book. 3-6)
-Kirkus Review show less
A YA whodunnit? With angels? Stoner angels? Yeah, it's a Joy Preble Novel. THE SWEET DEAD LIFE is proof positive that Joy Preble is a master of voice, funny as hell, and an author you don't want to miss.
Jenna Samuels has been holding things together for a while, with her idiot brother, Casey, supplying pretty much the only income for their family (but nonetheless letting his idiot friends drive their car and making all kinds of trouble) and her mother is battling what seems to be an unending show more depression, sometimes not coming out of her room for days. Her dad went M.I.A. years ago, and things aren't looking good for his turning up anytime soon.
Of course there's the more immediate issue that Jenna is having wacky symptoms and when her brother tries to drive her to the ER they get in a car crash and she's the only one who survives. Or so she thinks. She wakes up in the hospital and he's fine. And also, like, magically good-looking. And it's not long before she realizes two things: 1, she's being poisoned and 2, her brother is, well, an A-word. What she doesn't know, of course, is why.
THE SWEET DEAD LIFE is fun and exciting, exactly what you'd expect from a dynamic writer like Joy Preble. Contemporary mystery lovers as well as paranormal aficionados will be clamoring for a sequel. (And luckily, there's one on the way!) show less
Jenna Samuels has been holding things together for a while, with her idiot brother, Casey, supplying pretty much the only income for their family (but nonetheless letting his idiot friends drive their car and making all kinds of trouble) and her mother is battling what seems to be an unending show more depression, sometimes not coming out of her room for days. Her dad went M.I.A. years ago, and things aren't looking good for his turning up anytime soon.
Of course there's the more immediate issue that Jenna is having wacky symptoms and when her brother tries to drive her to the ER they get in a car crash and she's the only one who survives. Or so she thinks. She wakes up in the hospital and he's fine. And also, like, magically good-looking. And it's not long before she realizes two things: 1, she's being poisoned and 2, her brother is, well, an A-word. What she doesn't know, of course, is why.
THE SWEET DEAD LIFE is fun and exciting, exactly what you'd expect from a dynamic writer like Joy Preble. Contemporary mystery lovers as well as paranormal aficionados will be clamoring for a sequel. (And luckily, there's one on the way!) show less
Leo (Leonora) and Max follow cryptic clues left by Leo's sister, Paris, that have them driving around Las Vegas and eventually to Santa Monica in their attempt to find her.
I wanted to like this book but never felt invested in the characters particularly because (to me at least) their actions became more improbable as the story progressed. I admire the author's intent, and her first paragraph in the acknowledgements summed it up well, but the pacing faltered, the romance felt unnatural, and show more the ending was a little too neat. show less
I wanted to like this book but never felt invested in the characters particularly because (to me at least) their actions became more improbable as the story progressed. I admire the author's intent, and her first paragraph in the acknowledgements summed it up well, but the pacing faltered, the romance felt unnatural, and show more the ending was a little too neat. show less
Like many people, I'm fascinated by the Romanovs - their lives, the modern mythology that has sprung up around their bloody demise, and of course, the conspiracy theories concerning the possible survival of the Tsar's youngest daughter Anastasia. This novel for young adults weaves all of these things together in an exciting and unusual twist on the Romanov story.
Anne is at a ballet performance with her friend Tess when she first sees him: the young man with the piercing blue eyes who can't show more seem to take his eyes off her. To Tess's delight, the next day he turns up at her school. But Anne has more important things to think about - like the terrible dreams of a witch with huge hands and iron teeth, and of a family being massacred, that are haunting her sleep. Everything starts to fall into place when Ethan reveals that she has been watching the fall of the Romanovs, that Anastasia was indeed saved from her family's massacre, swept up by the witch Baba Yaga and kept safe in a magical hut ever since, and that Anne is the girl he has been looking for, the one person who can rescue the Grand Duchess and set her free. Of course Anne thinks he's crazy, but as strange things start happening they must join together in a dangerous race in which more than one life hangs in the balance.
Sound complicated? Well, yes, it is a bit. There's a lot of detail to take in as the novel goes on, from the Russian fairytale of Baba Yaga and Vasilisa the Brave to the complex dynamics of the tsar's family. The novel is told from three perspectives, which helps a little, as each contributes their own knowledge and understanding to help the reader piece things together. Anne is the modern girl learning about the Romanov history and the Baba Yaga folklore. Ethan is the young man who was there when the Romanovs were slaughtered and has been searching for the key to Anastasia's freedom ever since. And Anastasia herself is given a voice in the form of three letters to her family, almost like journal entries questioning their choices and straightening her own experiences in her mind. To begin with I found the quick changes between Anne and Ethan a little jarring - and the 'handwritten' script of Anastasia's letters was quite hard to decipher at times - but I soon adjusted to the point where I hardly noticed the switch.
All in all, I enjoyed it. Once or twice I figured out what was going on before the characters did - including the main motivation behind everything that was happening - which may have dampened my excitement somewhat. Occasionally it felt like too much had been crammed into one story, with things going too fast for the reader to really keep up and process what was happening. But I thought the premise was very original, and I enjoyed the glimpse into an aspect of Russian folklore that I'd never come across before. It was surprisingly moving by the end, and the characters were engaging and likeable, if a little flat sometimes. Recommended to Romanov geeks and anyone who likes their YA fiction flavoured with something a little out of the ordinary... show less
Anne is at a ballet performance with her friend Tess when she first sees him: the young man with the piercing blue eyes who can't show more seem to take his eyes off her. To Tess's delight, the next day he turns up at her school. But Anne has more important things to think about - like the terrible dreams of a witch with huge hands and iron teeth, and of a family being massacred, that are haunting her sleep. Everything starts to fall into place when Ethan reveals that she has been watching the fall of the Romanovs, that Anastasia was indeed saved from her family's massacre, swept up by the witch Baba Yaga and kept safe in a magical hut ever since, and that Anne is the girl he has been looking for, the one person who can rescue the Grand Duchess and set her free. Of course Anne thinks he's crazy, but as strange things start happening they must join together in a dangerous race in which more than one life hangs in the balance.
Sound complicated? Well, yes, it is a bit. There's a lot of detail to take in as the novel goes on, from the Russian fairytale of Baba Yaga and Vasilisa the Brave to the complex dynamics of the tsar's family. The novel is told from three perspectives, which helps a little, as each contributes their own knowledge and understanding to help the reader piece things together. Anne is the modern girl learning about the Romanov history and the Baba Yaga folklore. Ethan is the young man who was there when the Romanovs were slaughtered and has been searching for the key to Anastasia's freedom ever since. And Anastasia herself is given a voice in the form of three letters to her family, almost like journal entries questioning their choices and straightening her own experiences in her mind. To begin with I found the quick changes between Anne and Ethan a little jarring - and the 'handwritten' script of Anastasia's letters was quite hard to decipher at times - but I soon adjusted to the point where I hardly noticed the switch.
All in all, I enjoyed it. Once or twice I figured out what was going on before the characters did - including the main motivation behind everything that was happening - which may have dampened my excitement somewhat. Occasionally it felt like too much had been crammed into one story, with things going too fast for the reader to really keep up and process what was happening. But I thought the premise was very original, and I enjoyed the glimpse into an aspect of Russian folklore that I'd never come across before. It was surprisingly moving by the end, and the characters were engaging and likeable, if a little flat sometimes. Recommended to Romanov geeks and anyone who likes their YA fiction flavoured with something a little out of the ordinary... show less
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