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MADreads Reviews

Book reviews by library staff and guest contributors

Shot by Cupid's arrow

Posted by Molly W on Jul 25, 2024
Gene
Luen Yang

Valentina Tran's favorite day of the year is Valentine's Day. She is named after the holiday and it's no wonder that her imaginary friend is Cupid. Val and Cupid are cuddly and sweet buddies when Val is younger, planning out hand decorated cards and heartfelt messages for friends and family. As Val grows older and learns more about her family history she starts to hate Valentine's Day. Her pal Cupid takes a dark turn and manifests as a terrifying spirit version of the martyred Saint Valentine. No matter what she does, Val cannot shake the haunting.

If a story is never told, where does it go?

Posted by Molly W on Jul 25, 2024
Julia
Alvarez

An esteemed author who writes under the pen name "Scheherazade" decides to retire to the Dominican Republic and build a cemetery and sculpture garden to mark stories that she and others started to write or tell and didn't finish. To provide closure, the stories are "buried" and marked with fantastical sculptures. Those with open hearts and minds are allowed entry into the garden. Skeptics with closed minds must stay outside the gates. Once inside, guests to the cemetery are allowed to wander and listen and learn.

Sloths never get anywhere soon

Posted by Molly W on Jul 25, 2024
A review of Mama in the Moon by
Doreen Cronin
and Brian Cronin

This quiet picture book by the author of the rollicking Click Clack Moo: Cows That Type prepares young readers for bedtime in a calm and comforting way. Baby sloth and his mama live high up in the tree. They sleep in the light of the moon holding each other tight. 

The magic of a book that can read to you!

Posted by Rebecca M on Jul 24, 2024
A review of Audio-enabled Books by

I had a local friend recently ask me why Madison Public Library didn’t have Tonies for check out - if you’re unfamiliar they are small plastic figures that pair with an integrated system for audio stories - and I knew all of the answers. New systems are expensive to start on a large scale, and our collections management team thinks really critically about system wide implementation before investing in a new product…. But as a parent? I have all kinds of other thoughts. With two little kids at home, we have a LOT of STUFF floating around.

Full on magical

Posted by Jane J on Jul 16, 2024
A review of Half a Soul by
Olivia
Atwater

Take a regency romance, add a touch of faerie magic and some mystery and you get the delightfully charming Half a Soul by Olivia Atwater.

Too Good to Miss - July 2024

Posted by Jane J on Jul 12, 2024

Every month there are new titles purchased for the Too Good to Miss collections at our libraries. If you're not familiar with TGTM (as we call it here in library-world), it's a special collection of popular books that are truly too good to miss. Some are new and popular titles, others are older titles that might not have had as much media attention as a bestseller or celebrity book club selection but are still great reads that deserve another look.

Top 10 Sports Books

Posted by Kathy K on Jul 12, 2024
A review of New Sports Books by

Booklist puts out many different top 10 lists. If sports are your cup of tea, then check out the following titles:

Collective strength

Posted by on Jul 11, 2024
Phillip
Stead

In a battle between the blustering north wind and the warm shining sun, who do you think would win? Would anyone win? In this Aesop's fable, re-imagined by author/illustrator Philip Stead, three sisters go out in their patched-up coats—colored yellow, blue, and red—to take a walk before the weather changes. At first, the sun shines sweetly upon them, but then the grouchy north wind takes over, blowing cold, harsh air across the sisters' path and the whole world! Will the north wind manage to turn the sisters' coats to rags after all? Or will the sun's rays prevail?

Friends can come from anywhere

Posted by Jennifer on Jul 5, 2024
A review of Dalmartian by
Lucy
Cummins

Some people in my family believe in aliens and UFO's. I am not one of them. But after reading Dalmartian, I might just change my mind.

Changing states

Posted by on Jul 3, 2024
A review of In Between by
April Sayre, with
Jeff Sayre

As a person who loves seeing the return of all our plant and animal pals when the weather gets warm again, I was happy to find the late April Pulley Sayre's In Between among the picture books at Central Library. Filled with beautiful close-up photographs of all kinds of plants (some native to Wisconsin!) and animals—from grey hairstreak butterflies to baby squirrels to sleepy gulls—Sayre tells a gentle poem-like story of different kinds of in-betweenness, illustrating each one with a perfectly apt creature portrait.

Four dead husbands and an amazing estate

Posted by Molly W on Jun 25, 2024
A review of The Heiress by
Rachel
Hawkins

The star of this Gothic thriller is Ashby House, a magnificent estate high in the Blue Ridge mountains and home to Ruby McTavish Callahan Woodward Miller Kenmore. Ruby, also known as Ruby "Killmore," reigns over Ashby House and neighboring community Tavistock, North Carolina, with benevolence and a lifetime of scandal. Abducted as a toddler in the 1940s and married four times to husbands who died under mysterious circumstances, Ruby's life is shrouded in mystery and intrigue and lots of speculation.

What the dead forget

Posted by Jane J on Jun 25, 2024
P. Djeli
Clark

Clark introduces readers to a new fantasy world in this latest novella and I'm so here for it.

Eveen is a an undead assassin. When she died she was offered a chance at an undead life - though she has no memory of how that came to be or why she would have made such a choice. As part of her deal she owes her goddess years of service as an assassin. As the goddess's assassin she has to follow 3 rules:

Butterflies mean excitement

Posted by Molly W on Jun 20, 2024
A review of Piper Chen Sings by
Phillipa Soo and
Maris Pasquale Doran

Piper Chen loves singing. She sings to the moon and the stars. She sings to her dog and the birds and the frogs. She dances and drums her way through her world.  

Putting petty to work

Posted by Jane J on Jun 17, 2024
A review of At First Spite by
Olivia
Dade

Athena Greydon was engaged to Johnny Vine. As a wedding present for him, she bought the 10-foot-wide house attached to his. Four weeks before they're to be married, however, Johnny's older brother, Dr. Matthew Vine III, convinces him not to go through with the ceremony. Now, not only has Athena lost a fiance', but she's given up her job and home in preparation for her married life in Harlot's Bay. She's left with few options.

Las emociones no tienen color

Posted by Holly SP on Jun 11, 2024
Alicia Acosta and
Luis Amavisca

Cuando Zorro llega al parque vestido en azul, sus amigos le preguntan por qué está triste - pero, ¡la verdad es que no está triste, sino muy contento! Sus amigos le ofrecen ropa del color de la alegría, y cuando se empieza a enojar, le ofrecen primero ropa del color del enojo y luego del color de la calma. Por fin el pobre Zorro grita, "¡BASTA!" tirando la ropa por todas partes, echándole color al escenario gris.

Playing fetch in a new way

Posted by Molly W on Jun 11, 2024
A review of Lost Stick by
written and illustrated by
Anoosha Syed

Louise and Milo find a stick at their favorite park. They play fetch with Stick over and over again. Milo doesn't understand why Louise loves throwing Stick so much, but he is determined to bring it back each and every time. Then Louise pretends to throw Stick and Milo races off only to discover that he's gone too far astray while searching. He doesn't realize that Stick was never thrown! Not only is Stick "lost" to Milo, but Milo is lost as well. 

Deserving of every accolade

Posted by Jane J on Jun 10, 2024
A review of The Will of the Many by
James
Islington

I've been hearing great things about The Will of the Many for a while - which made me more reluctant to read it. I have this kind of reverse metric when it comes to buzzy books. If too many people are raving about a book, how good can it really be? That and it's a chonker of a book (639 pages!) had me on pause. I finally gave in when one more person, who likes many of the same things I do, gave it a rave. And now I'm both glad I waited and kicking myself for waiting so long.

The magic of Perla and Isabel Allende

Posted by Molly W on Jun 10, 2024
A review of Perla: The Mighty Dog by
written by Isabel Allende

Perla's two superpowers are making people love her and roaring like a lion. She is a little, scruffy dog, but her powers are mighty. She makes the Rico family fall in love with her at the shelter even though they were hoping to find a guard dog. Then she learns to roar like a lion to demonstrate what an excellent guardian she will make. 

An ode to the couch

Posted by Jennifer on Jun 7, 2024
Adam
Rubin

I don't know where picture book authors get their ideas from. But I can tell you that if you asked me for what I might want to write about, the couch, is probably one of the last things I would have come up with. Luckily for everyone, Adam Rubin thinks a bit differently than me.

Narrated by a typewriter

Posted by Molly W on Jun 5, 2024
A review of Olivetti by
Allie
Millington

Yes, you read that correctly. This novel is narrated by a typewriter. And it is everything I wanted and needed. Also, did you know that books are despised by typewriters because they are attention hogs?!? Makes sense.