TOBY TOOTLES
Birthday boy Toby, a white rabbit, is in full celebration mode and ready to blow out his candles when something happens: He blows from the wrong end. His friends—a menagerie of animals—laugh and his sister calls him Toby Tootles. Humiliated, Toby spends time with his grandmother, a gray and white rabbit, and observes her having a few gassy gaffes herself. Unlike Toby, Grandma isn’t concerned and tells him that “gas happens.” When the pair are eating out at the end of the day, Toby needs to brea
THE ALGORITHM WILL SEE YOU NOW
Dr. Hope Kestrel is the “High Resident” at the Seattle-based hospital Prognostic Intelligent Medical Algorithms and the front-runner for a post-residency position. PRIMA is on the verge of a merger with Seattle Healthcare Associates, and its diagnostic technology is seemingly without error. But when a patient (called a Patron under the new system) is erroneously admitted onto her service, Hope begins an investigation that leads her and her new intern, Jacie Stone, into a web of lies and corpora
I AM DEBRA LEE
“Coming of age in the segregated South idolizing Angela Davis and Malcolm X, I used to be staunchly opposed to surrender,” writes Lee. “No justice, no peace!” While she and her friends sought a Black revolution, her father, a career military man, wanted something different for his daughter. “Of course, it all started with Dad,” she writes, “who’d mapped out my life from the womb—law school, law firm, and then the Supreme Court.” At first, Lee dutifully followed his “road map” to a notable Washi
SAVING THE NIGHT
Aitken notes that many wild creatures are confused by increased levels of nighttime illumination—after all, as he states, half of all invertebrates, 3 out of 4 mammals, and nearly all amphibians are nocturnal. At times, he gets a bit off message, allowing that many bats enjoy the “all-you-can-eat bugfest” around streetlights; he also discusses how 3 out of 4 sea creatures naturally glow in the dark and that miners have used fireflies and dried fish skins for light. However, his laments for the
ALL RISE
Using “She rose” or “Ketanji rose” as refrains, Weatherford retraces in pithy evangelical bursts the general course of her subject’s early life and career—from being elected “mayor” of her junior high school to shrugging off slights to her name and race, levitating past a guidance counselor’s doubts about her getting into Harvard (where she ended up editing the law journal as a graduate student), and, as a federal judge, coming to the attention of Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden on her wa
A-TRAIN ALLEN
Meet A-Train Allen, who takes his time getting to school in the morning but is known for speeding back home (it’s said that he can traverse the city faster than the subway—hence his nickname). A-Train Allen flies through the park, past the big kids playing basketball and the older men playing chess. As fast as he may be, he’s careful when he crosses the street. Barreling down the pavement, he responds to passersby with, “Got somewhere to be, got somewhere to be!” Depicting a busy, diverse city
THE INNOVATION TOURNAMENT HANDBOOK
The authors explain that, in the business world, an innovation tournament “convenes opportunities for creating value. These opportunities might be ideas for new products, approaches to process improvement, names for a new venture, or candidates for entirely new lines of business. And they can originate from individuals, teams, or organizations.” Adapting the underlying concept to a broader context, Terwiesch and Ulrich contend that the concept of innovation is simply “finding a new match betwee
RESCUE
Charlie Campbell, almost 13, is unhappy that his father will be moving out. Even soccer doesn’t feel like fun anymore. But Charlie adores dogs and dreams of becoming a veterinarian, plus he wants to avoid being at home listening to Mom and Dad arguing. So, he begs Dad’s friend Dr. Anderton to take him on as an after-school volunteer at his veterinary clinic. Charlie enjoys most aspects of the experience, but the highlight is meeting elderly chocolate Lab Buster, a retired service dog with hip p
PEW!
In 1835, Col. Thomas S. Meacham, a landowner in Sandy Creek, New York, wanted to give a gift to President Andrew Jackson—something that would “show off the talents of his farming community.” He decided to prepare a very large cheese, a 1,400-pound cheese to be exact. “Four feet in diameter, two feet thick” (the illustrations take a bit of liberty on exaggerating cheese size—unless everyone back then was only 4 feet tall), the cheese made its way along rivers and canals until it reached its fina
GERTIE, THE DARLING DUCK OF WWII
By choosing to nest in an exceptionally risky public spot—far above the dirty Milwaukee River—darling Gertie offers a perfect distraction to humans in the last anxious days of World War II. Protective heroes—bridge tenders who rescue the mallard and her six cute ducklings in bad weather—ensure a happy ending: After a brief period on display in a department-store window, Gertie and her family are released into a nearby park. From the first high duck’s-eye view, we are drawn into her story throug
MAKE MORE S'MORES
The marshmallow has been “slowly turned and gently roasted” over glowing campfire coals. The graham crackers and the chocolate squares are ready. Roscoe the raccoon assembles his first s’more, but when Grizzly Bear arrives and asks, “Is that for me?” of course Roscoe shares and begins to roast two more marshmallows, one for his s’more and one for Grizzly’s second. When two black bear cubs beg for a snack, Grizzly Bear agrees to wait for a second s’more. The cubs lick the plate clean, and Roscoe
HUSH-A-BYE NIGHT
This colorful, simple tale combines a rhyming narrative with a repeating “hush-a-bye” refrain: “Hush-a-bye, sun. / Hush hush-a-bye, sky.” “Hush-a-bye, eaglets. / Hush-a-bye, nest.” As the text singsongs, the full-page, double-spread illustrations show the Lake Superior shore, each page turn highlighting various animals and plants that inhabit the area as the sun slowly sets, the sky and water change color, and the family settles in to roast marshmallows. While the rhythm may be calming, it does
TAKE OFF!
As if the struggle to make passing grades and cope with severe test anxiety aren’t bad enough, Marisa has to endure homophobic comments and constant harassment from Aimee, a sneering classmate and former friend, not only in high school, but even on a day hike when she’s paired with her tormentor and fellow classmate Dawn during a weekend extra-credit survival camp. Worse yet, by blowing off several safety rules, Aimee manages to injure her leg and lose the backpack containing both the emergency
WHILE IT LASTS
Mark Rothko, who “has yet to pick up a brush or touch paint to canvas,” weeps after he catches a similarly young Clark Gable seducing their acting teacher in Portland, Oregon. A lightly fictionalized Arnold Schoenberg begins to compose the music that will make him famous, while his wife carries out an affair with a younger painter. Meanwhile, the 19th-century English boxer Daniel Mendoza and a lightly fictionalized version of “American primitive” guitar player John Fahey seek a past-their-prime
SPEAKING OUR TRUTHS
In three sections, “World on Fire,” “…That Happened,” and “The Journey Continues,” 20 young people ages 10 to 21 who are Black, Indigenous, people of color, and/or disabled creatively convey their experiences of distress, loneliness, stamina, healing, and more. The works reflect on the isolation and widespread fears brought about by the simultaneous stresses of Covid-19, social unrest and racist attacks, and the stresses of reintegration into in-person schooling. They also record peers’ cruelty
THE HOUSE ON ASHBURY STREET
In 1975, 7-year-old Nikki Gold lived with her single mom in a large multi-storied cooperative home during the waning but still influential hippie era in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco. Now, in 2005, Nikki works with kids and has come to know the value of therapy. She sought help to process the effects of an upbringing in which personal boundaries were unclear. However, therapy did not reveal everything about her past. New revelations begin to bubble to the surface after she vi
PARIS
In her debut book, Hilton, with the assistance of a ghostwriter, presents a tender and triumphant account of her life so far. The author is furiously candid about multiple instances of sexual abuse she suffered as an adolescent. Like many survivors, she took refuge in her menagerie of pets. Had things gone differently, she might have been able to finish school and become the veterinarian she dreamed of becoming. However, because her parents thought she was partying too much in high school, they
LOVE & OTHER SCAMS
Cat Bellamy is at the end of her rope. She’s broke, jobless, and on the verge of being kicked out of her London apartment. The only reason she gets by is because of her slightly morally dubious side gig—picking the pockets of pervy uncles at weddings and bros at the local bar. When her rich college friend Louisa Vincent asks Cat to be her bridesmaid, she feels more panic than joy—how will she ever afford fitting into Louisa’s super fancy lifestyle when she can barely afford dinner? When Louisa
GENTLEMAN BANDIT
English-born Charles Boles had gone west seeking fortune, failed, returned to the Midwest in time to serve with distinction in the Battle of Vicksburg and Sherman’s March to the Sea, and then gone west again. Somewhere along the way, he decided it was less strenuous work to hold up stages, and so he did. As Boessenecker recounts, an early exploit was a robbery of a stagecoach on the twisty seaside road near Mendocino, California, where, according to some passengers, he told the driver, politely
CORNER
Relocating to the corner, the restless black bird tries various positions on the softly textured, gray floor. The image of the creature lying on its back, feet spread on the walls, will elicit giggles of recognition. The bird brings over a bed, a bookcase, a rug, and a lamp, adding color and interest, and addresses a small potted plant with an inquiring “Hello?” Children will relate to the crow’s subsequent attempts to pass the time: reading, sleeping, watering the plant, eating what appears to