Welcome to St. Hell: My Trans Teen Misadventure by Lewis Hancox

Book cover for Welcome to St. Hell: My Trans Teen Misadventure by Lewis Hancox. Shows an adult male with pointing a teenage girl in a school uniform with a speech bubble that says, "That was me in high school".

Welcome to St. Hell (GN H19126we) is perfect for fans of Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe, Fine: A Comic About Gender by Rhea Ewing, and Kisses for Jet: A Coming-of-Gender Story by Joris Bas Backer.

This graphic memoir caused all the feels! It starts with adult Lewis introducing his hometown of St. Helens, England (affectionately referred to as St. Hell throughout the book) and his pre-transition self, Lois. Quick note: Lewis introduces his pre-transition self as Lois and uses she/her pronouns to refer to himself during this pre-transition period. Lois spends the bulk of her high school career – age 11-16 – trying to be a “normal girl” to avoid bullying from her classmates. Once Lois enters college – ages 16-18 – she begins to explore her sexuality and gender: she publicly identifies first as a cis-lesbian and later as a straight, transman. During the recounting of his transition story, adult Lewis interjects with poignant interviews of his friends and family, which he mentioned he used as a tool of catharsis and healing.

Adult Lewis interjects himself into the recounting of his adolescent years to provide hindsight wisdom as well as some humor. As a child of the 90s, I appreciate the pop culture references from learning to code for the perfect Myspace page to the public’ collective obsession with Justin Timberlake. Lewis Hancox’s journey from adolescence to adulthood is portrayed with a brutally honest and refreshingly honest style, which made me tear up and laugh out loud. There is a portion of the book that covers Lois’ struggle with an eating disorder that folks should be aware of before picking up this book.

This is a must read for anyone who likes graphic memoirs and LGBTQIA+ stories!

Two black and white comic panels. The first panel shows Lewis Hancox an adult male with a speech bubble that says, "Whatever kinda hell you're goin' through, don't give up, okay? Coz in the end, it'll be reet! Copyright my dad". The second panel shows a drawing of a cityscape with the words, "And if it ain't reet, it ain't the end".

Call for Student Book Reviews

Have you read a book that you NEED to talk about because it was so good, bad, or it had a lot to process?!

 

Uncle Sam character pointing the reader with the words, "I Want You"

 

 

 

To write a book review for Dungeon Letters (the monthly Uni High Library newsletter) and the Uni High Reads Blog!

Email submissions to alexaep2@illinois.edu

 

 

 

 

 

What is requested for your review:

  • 200 – 300 words!
  • Two paragraphs
  • A few tags/keywords that describe your book (fantasy, romance, diverse, etc.)
  • Submit your review to Alexa (alexaep2@illinois.edu) (where it will be subject to editing)

Paragraph 1: Plot Description

  • Who, what, when, where
  • Characters – name only the ones you are going to analyze later (if you’re not going to talk about them later, avoid naming)
  • World – probably most important in fantasies but still necessary in realism
  • Pivotal points:
    • Darla makes a fatal mistake that puts everyone in danger
    • Perry the bear encounters a surprise upon his return to his hidey hole

Paragraph 2: Your Analysis

  • Opinion (NOT what you want): more like joy, anger, disgust, sad (my heart hurt)
  • Analysis (MORE what you want): sounds more objective; this will make up the bulk of and sometimes all of your review. Some questions to consider:
    • How well was the setting portrayed? Did the plot pace well or were there lulls? Were characters introduced and given nuance? Was the structure of the book helpful? Was the narration effective?
  • Concluding sentence on if people should read it!

Other Reviewing Tips

  • Consider your audience – you are writing for your peers, and you want to give them an honest opinion about what you’ve read
  • Be accurate – double check names, title, etc. consistently.
  • Be economical with sentences
  • Be professional (avoid sarcasm)
  • Avoid spoilers!

They Wish They Were Us by Jennifer Goodman

Are you looking for a murder mystery similar to The Good Girl’s Guide to Murder? How about a book with a group dynamic fraught with tensions and secrets like One of Us Is Lying? Look no further than Jessica Goodman’s They Wish They Were Us which just came in to Uni High Library ?

High school senior Jill Newman is part of Gold Coast Prep’s not-so-secret society, The Players, who rule over the student body and have access to everything they could ever want in life from test answers to favor with college admissions counselors. But when Jill was a Freshman, her charismatic best friend Shaila Arnold was murdered during a Player’s initiation ritual. Shaila’s boyfriend Graham confessed to the murder and the case was closed. UNTIL NOW! Just as Jill and the current senior Players are making plans to recruit the next group into the society, she starts receiving text messages telling her Graham is innocent, leading Jill to question everything she knows is true and has her confronting memories she has long-suppressed. Jill is desperate for the truth, but it’s definitely going to cost her. Her future? Her friendships? Her sanity? Quite possibly all three.

I enjoyed this book way more than I thought I would. I’ve been trying to read a wider variety of books lately because often times I end up pleasantly surprised (a good lesson to all readers, I think!). The plot was a tad predictable, I’m not going to lie, but I loved the strong female characters enough that it kept me engaged all the way through. It’s also one of those books that’s really easy to devour, which can be a fun change of pace when you’ve been reading Six of Crows or The Name of the Wind (yes this is a shameless plug for the March Book Madness event you should definitely participate in at the library!)

It’s not a perfect read. Making one of the not-so-major characters gay did feel a little bit queer-baity, but on the whole I think this book did it exactly what it set out to do, just possibly with a few too many difficult topics and situations thrown in for the sake of “representation” rather than for actual plot furthering or serious discussion.

Under the Whispering Door by TJ Klune

TJ Klune’s The House in the Cerulean Sea was the second book I read in 2021, and honestly everything else after it kind of paled in comparison. So you may be wondering why I decided that two months into 2022 was the perfect time to read his latest adult novel Under the Whispering Door? I could tell you it was because I’m a bit of a masochist and knew that Klunes’ book would more than likely leave me in tears, or that I was sick of avoiding book spoilers on the internet. But the truth is much simpler-I’ve been in a bit of bookish turmoil! I’ve been plowing through books, many of which are HIGHLY regarded in the literary community and they are just not landing for me. So I turned to an author that never lets me down and set out on the journey that is reading Under the Whispering Door.

In the book, Wallace Price is not what we would call a “good person”. In life, he was a lawyer whose only goal was to win cases and maintain order in his life. When he suddenly wakes up attending his own funeral, everything he thought he knew about himself, his existence, and the world gets completely shaken up. Mei is Wallace’s Reaper, meaning she is charged with getting Wallace from his funeral to Charon’s Crossing, a tea shop in the woods owned my the enigmatic and oh-so-charming Ferryman, Hugo. By day, Hugo runs Charon’s Crossing with Mei, providing tea and treats to travelers and regulars alike. But his real job as a Ferryman means he helps people cross over from this life into the next. And Wallace may just be his hardest case yet.

I adored this book, much like I’ve adored everything else by TJ Klune I’ve read. He has a way of speaking directly to my soul and telling it that everything is going to be okay! Also, it doesn’t hurt that all of his books are brimming with Queer identities and situations. Gotta love it!

This book is beautiful. From the cover design, to the delicately crafted sentences, to the equally parts heart-warming and heart-wrenching final pages. Packed with wonderfully real and emotionally complex characters as well as supernatural musings and mystical elements, this is not a book that you will soon forget about. Find Under the Whispering Door on Uni High’s shelves today! You won’t regret it!

CW: This book contains depictions and discussions of death, including death by suicide.

Cool for the Summer by Dahlia Adler

This past fall (not long ago when I’m writing this, but a lifetime ago by May when the book releases), I saw the author of this book, Dahlia Adler, discussing the book on a panel, and I was immediately interested. Bisexuality is kind of a tricky thing to cover in a novel-sized story– yes, every book and their mother has a love triangle, but how do you resolve that without it making it feel like the character is ‘picking’ being straight or gay?

Well, the short answer is you let them have their cake, and eat it too (not necessarily at the same time). In Cool for the Summer, the main character Lara has been pining after football star Chase for years, and the book starts with him asking her on a date! Mission accomplished! Book over! Right? Well, no. In the main timeline of the book, Lara and Chase do date– but the summer before, Lara found summer love, Grease-style, at the beach with Jasmine. The book is basically two romances in one, as both relationships develop in their own timeline.

The complication: after all-but-ghosting Lara, Jasmine shows up at her high school on the first day of the semester as a transfer student. What does she want? For that matter, what does Lara want?

I really loved this book. The plot is engaging, the pacing is tight, the writing is good. but above all, the characters are exceptional. Lara has a great friend group: her best friend Shannon is the HBIC, Gia is a thoughtful friend and a kind, nuanced take on “that girl you know who’s been dating the same guy for all of high school and is hoping to make it work in college”, and Kiki– well, Kiki makes a true crime podcast and is paying more attention than anyone might guess (Kiki is my favorite). Jasmine and Chase are both rich characters too: Chase is a total sweetheart who wears his heart on his sleeve, while Jasmine is complicated and hard for Lara to read in a really realistic way.

My personal favorite detail is some excellent Jewish rep: both Lara and Jasmine are Jewish, but on very different parts of the religiousness spectrum. Lara’s experience of going to Jasmine’s traditional Shabbat (sabbath) dinner really resonated with me. Despite feeling slightly out of place, she feels welcomed nonetheless, and like part of her identity is affirmed. I’ve had similar experiences, of attending more religious Jewish events and feeling that way, and it was really cool to see it portrayed so well in this book.

I do want to mention that the book isn’t shy about sex. On the romance novel spectrum of “chaste fade to black” to “extremely saucy” it’s somewhere in the middle, probably. For older teens this probably won’t be particularly out of line with other things you’re reading, but for our younger readers make sure you’re comfortable with that! If you don’t think you are, that is perfectly fine, and this book will be there for you if and when you want it.

All in all, I would highly recommend bringing this with you on any beach trips– I can’t think of many books that would be better to read on a beach towel! Especially if you happen to be headed to the Outer Banks. Even if you’re inside in the AC trying to stay cool for the summer, though, you should check it out if you like romance, books with multiple timelines, and great, nuanced queer representation.


Posted by Newman-Johnson Charlie at 12:20 pm

Posted in Uni High Reads

 

Victories Greater Than Death by Charlie Jane Anders

Victories Greater than Death by Charlie Jane Anders

 

I loved ‘All the Birds in the Sky’ and ‘The City in the Middle of the Night’, and was overjoyed to see that Charlie Jane Anders was taking her first stab at YA. I was even more excited to be able to get it as an ARC (Advance Reader’s Copy)! I read this book back in October, but scheduled it to publish today, April 13, when the book is coming out.

A quick plot synopsis: Tina has known since she was thirteen that she had a higher calling– literally. Some day, someone would be coming from the stars to whisk her away to resume her post as one of the most celebrated heroes of the Royal Fleet. See, Tina is a clone of the fallen Captain Argentian, who gave her life to save her crew. When the Fleet comes calling, Tina/Argentian is their greatest hope in their fight against the insidious Compassion, but Tina struggles with this expectation. With Tina and a ragtag band of other Earthlings along for the ride, the crew of HMSS Indomitable strike out across the stars to find the means to stop the Compassion’s scourge.

This is a fast-moving sci-fi adventure with a fun cast of teen protagonists from all over the world. Although the book is a little bit jumpy, hopping from incident to incident, there’s very little downtime, and the whole last hundred pages is one long hype-train roller coaster. I love some good space combat scenes! I also loved a lot of the questions the book posed about things like humanoid bias and the interactions of cultures. It’s definitely not hard sci-fi, but encompasses enough plausible specifics to explore interesting questions. Oh, and if you’ve played Mass Effect I think you’ll see some inspiration in this book.

From a queer/social justice perspective, this book has a lot to offer. First, the normalization of pronouns other than he/she was great, especially the default inclusion of pronouns in introductions. One great moment was someone says what her pronouns are before declaring the protagonists are her prisoners. Amazing. Homophobia doesn’t exist in the Royal Fleet, and why should it?  I love when authors are willing to leave behind problems that exist in our society and envision a better one– while homophobia can be a source of realistic conflict, there are enough other problems in space!

While there are some minor bumpy parts in the book, largely caused by the amount of exposition that gets packed in, it was a still an awesome read that I devoured in a single day– and I’m even more excited for the rest of the series, whenever it might be coming out! Also, if you read this and like it, the author’s other books are amazing, especially All The Birds in the Sky.

Winterkeep by Kristin Cashore

Winterkeep, by Kristin Cashore, is the fourth book set in the Graceling realms, and is releasing today, January 19th. It’s been almost nine years since the last book in the series came out. In reviewing a book deep into a series like this one, I’m reviewing for two groups of people: those who have read and liked the rest of the series, and those who haven’t checked it out yet. (Those of you out there who read Graceling and didn’t like it are cool too! But I’m assuming you’re pretty sure this isn’t your cup of tea). The first group is probably worried, as I was, that Winterkeep wouldn’t hold up. There’s been a lot of YA series necromancy lately, and it hasn’t always been good. The second group might be wondering if they need to read three other books for this one to make sense.

Fortunately, I have one unified recommendation for everyone: this book is worth a read!

Cover of Winterkeep, by Kristin Cashore

Set some time after the events of Bitterblue, Winterkeep (like Fire before it) takes place in a new land, with lots of new characters, but some familiar ones. The Kingdom of Winterkeep is much more technologically advanced than Monsea, the land the main character Bitterblue is queen of, and this allows the book to largely stand alone. While this might be frustrating for some loyal readers who want to see more of their favorite characters, it’s a tough balance: bringing old characters whose story arc has resolved in for a cameo risks reducing someone who was dynamic and interesting to a cardboard cutout. In choosing only a few old characters to keep, and ones who didn’t reach happy endings, Cashore is able to give them all a full character arc. It also means there’s not much that needs to be filled in from the past, and I think Cashore did a good job weaving in some explanation for anyone who is reading a Graceling book for the first time.

With that explanation of where the book sits out of the way, here’s a quick synopsis. After learning two of her envoys to Winterkeep have died at sea, and that it might not have been an accident, Queen Bitterblue of Monsea sets out for a personal voyage to Winterkeep. On the other continent, plotting and politics are afoot: the Keepish parliament is deadlocked in a political battle over industrialization, others besides the envoys have gone missing, and Lovisa, a POV character new to the series, is caught up in the intrigue. Her parents are, oddly, the heads of the bitterly opposed political parties, and everything going on seems to be swirling around them. Lovisa is intensely curious about what her parents are doing– but can she snoop without getting caught?

Winterkeep is a somewhat rare mashup of genres that I absolutely adore: it’s fantasy, but with all of the crucial aspects of a real mystery novel. Another recent book, Gideon the Ninth, had a similar blend, and ever since I’ve been on the lookout for more books like it (I’ve found a couple others, as well, if you want recommendations). I think there’s something really cool about a mystery story structure in a fantasy world: the investigation the characters undertake reveal things about the world through a close-up lens that would otherwise feel forced. In Winterkeep, for example, Lovisa’s curiosity is a perfect vehicle to get the reader a really good look at the intrigue that’s going on, and some of the clues are hidden in places that wouldn’t make sense in the real world (sentient animals, for example). The great double-twist on this is the characters all, at the end of the book, are empowered by what they learned solving mysteries to try to make the world a better place.

This deeper exploration was great, because I love the world of Winterkeep. While it was initially a little confusing as a long-time reader to leave Monsea and the Seven Kingdoms behind, Winterkeep is in many ways a more interesting place. The blend of science and magic is really cool! This was present a little bit in the earlier Graceling books, in the ways some characters were pushing the boundaries of medieval medicine and architecture, but Winterkeep is much more advanced. At the same time, though, there are magics unique to Winterkeep– particularly, sentient animals that can communicate telepathically, although humans are somewhat blind to their true nature.

The last thing I loved about the book is the balance it strikes between dark subjects, like childhood trauma, and a fierce, infectious hopefulness. Readers of Bitterblue will remember that Bitterblue had an alarmingly difficult childhood, and Lovisa hasn’t had it easy either. Both cope with this in very specific, realistic ways– one of Lovisa’s, in particular, really moved me. Neither character is  weak or helpless, and anyone who underestimates them discovers their mistake before too long, and both have found meaningful ways forward by the end of the book.

No book is perfect, and there are a couple things that did jar me out of the world a little bit. Some of the aspects of Keepish culture are a little bit too contrived and cute for me, and though they present interesting obstacles to characters, I found myself thinking, “Okay, but how did this even come to be?” If you’re looking for a mystery with good twists, or a fantasy novel with a cool world and good characters, or are intrigued by the idea of both, I strongly recommend you give this a try, whether or not you’ve read any of the other books. If you like it a lot, you can check the others out without too much being spoiled, and after Graceling, I think it’s the second-strongest book in the series.

And if you liked the other Graceling books, what are you still doing reading this?? Go request a copy of Winterkeep!

The TL;DR

What: Winterkeep, by Kristin Cashore

Who should read it: Fans of the Graceling Realms books, or fantasy readers intrigued by offbeat fantasy with some mystery

Why they should read it: Strong female leads, great twists, awesome world-building, and a hopeful ending


Posted by Newman-Johnson Charlie at 9:35 pm

Posted in Uni High Reads

 

Latinx Heritage Month Display

Happy Latinx Heritage Month! If you’re looking for a book about Latinx characters by a Latinx author to read this month, we’d love to recommend a few. From science fiction to realistic fiction to historical fiction, fantasy to romance, and poetry to prose, Latinx authors are (and have been) putting out amazing work in every genre and style you can imagine.

Digital Display of Latinx Heritage Month books-- booklist is below!

Here’s the titles and their current availability– almost all are available from the Uni Library!

Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo Ac37cl (on reserve)

The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo ac37po

What if It’s Us by Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera AL146wh

Labyrinth Lost by Zaraida Córdova C8123la

Salty, Bitter, Sweet by Mayra Cuevas Available from CPL

Jazz Owls by Margarita Engle En35ja

Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland Available from CPL/UFL

Shadowshaper by Daniel Jose Older Ol17s

Blazewrath Games by Amparo Ortiz Coming to Uni soon! and Available from CPL/UFL

Photographic : the life of Graciela Iturbide by Isabel Quintero 770.92 Q458ph

Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera R5243ju

They Both Die at the End by Adam SIlvera SI394t

Here’s a couple of our favorites:

Salty, Bitter, Sweet by Mayra Cuevas is an excellent romance-ish novel with some unique elements. Part-Cuban Isabella Fields has a passion for cooking, and isn’t going to let anything stand in they way of winning the internship of her dreams. Not even Diego, no matter how cute he may be. But what if her dreams don’t match the reality of being a chef? This was a really good, cute read, and the amazingly detailed cooking scenes make the book very vivid (and educational!)

Blazewrath Games by Amparo Ortiz also has a teenage female protagonist who knows what her dreams are– but Lana Torres dreams about being chased up a mountain by fire-breathing dragons! Ever since the first Puerto Rican dragons emerged from the island itself, Lana has wanted nothing but to be the Runner for Puerto Rico’s Blazewrath team, and it’s not too much of a spoiler to say that she gets her wish. Like Isabella, though, Lana soon finds her dreams were a lot simpler than reality. Set in a fresh fantasy world where only a few have magical abilities, but ‘Regulars’ know all about them, this novel is the perfect thing for Harry Potter fans who find themselves less into Harry Potter after, well, you know. If you liked Quidditch, you’ll love Blazewrath! I (Charlie) just finished this one this week (got it this week too, which says good things about it), and will have a more in-depth review up early next week.