05/24/2021
Bourne (My Fishy Stepmom) conjures young heroes and a mean game of cricket in a roaring tale of hidden Caribbean mysticism set in Barbados. Spirited 11-year-old Josephine has grown accustomed to living with just her Guyanese fisherman father after her mother’s death, but she hates the way her dad avoids mentioning her mom—or discussing cricket, the sport they all loved—and his efforts to move on by dating. Alongside her best friend Ahkai, who’s on the autism spectrum and selectively nonverbal, Josephine successfully ousts each prospective partner—the latest with “operation slime”—until the arrival of mysteriously seductive Mariss, with whom her father falls in love. As the relationship deepens, Josephine notices strange household changes, including fading traces of her mother, that hint at an uncanny presence. While struggling to keep her father safe, preserve her mother’s memory, and make a cricket team that she’s told is only for boys, Josephine looks into a figure of Caribbean folklore. Twining fantastical elements with a steady pace and a contemporary setting, Bourne nets a relatable story of processing grief, trust in one’s family and community, and Black girl magic. Ages 8–12. Agent: Marietta Zacker, Gallt & Zacker Literary. (July)
* “A heart-wrenching adventure with big laughs and well-earned surprises.” –Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
* “Filled with humor and vibrant, likable characters, the suspense of this fast-paced, laugh-out-loud fantasy will keep the pages turning.” — Booklist, Starred Review
“Twining fantastical elements with a steady pace and a contemporary setting, Bourne nets a relatable story of processing grief, trust in one’s family and community, and Black girl magic.” –Publishers Weekly
“Jo is a funny, determined heroine with no end of schemes, and Bourne’s masterful modernizing of jumbie lore is thrilling. The story is riveting from beginning to end.” — Tracey Baptiste, New York Times bestselling author
“An entertaining read featuring many references to creatures from Caribbean mythology; sure to be a great addition to any library’s middle grade collection.” — School Library Journal
07/01/2021
Gr 3–7—Eleven-year old Black girl Josephine has one duty—protect her father. That's why she has successfully scared off all prospective girlfriends through pranks and trickery. Growing up in Barbados, Josephine thinks she's more than enough for her father and even schemes to distract him with their shared love of cricket. Things don't go according to plan and in a moment of frustration, she scratches her initials into a tree. She thinks nothing of it until her father's newest girlfriend Mariss appears and is impervious to any of Josephine's tricks. Turns out, Mariss is a River Mumma, a terrifying creature who can cause many good things to happen, but can and will easily take those things away out of spite or jealousy. Josephine and her best friend Akhai will have to figure out how to defeat Mariss, or it'll be her father who will pay the price. This novel features many references to fascinating creatures from Caribbean mythology, including the protective baccoo and the scary vampirelike soucouyant. As if those two creatures don't sound difficult enough to deal with, Josephine has to contend with what is probably the scariest of them all, the River Mumma. Josephine's determination in the face of great odds is one to be applauded, as it seems there's nothing too big for her. Josephine is not without her limitations, but she learns to do her best to overcome them, making her a character readers will want to root for every step of the way. VERDICT An entertaining read featuring many references to creatures from Caribbean mythology; sure to be a great addition to any library's middle grade collection.—Myiesha Speight, formerly at Towson Univ., Baltimore
Narrator Varia Williams brings much joy to this delightful story. Eleven-year-old Josephine dreams of playing on her school's cricket team and, in doing so, helping her father rediscover his love of the game—which MIGHT distract him from the dating he’s doing. But when she isn’t allowed to try out and Daddy brings home yet another date, Josephine takes her anger out on a powerful tree, unleashing a bigger problem. When Mariss shows up and charms everyone, Josephine is the only one who suspects the truth about her. Williams's exuberant Josephine and her conniving yet charming Marriss enliven this story, and her accents help pull the listener into the setting. An engaging, humorous, and slightly spooky listen for middle-grade readers. S.B.T. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
Narrator Varia Williams brings much joy to this delightful story. Eleven-year-old Josephine dreams of playing on her school's cricket team and, in doing so, helping her father rediscover his love of the game—which MIGHT distract him from the dating he’s doing. But when she isn’t allowed to try out and Daddy brings home yet another date, Josephine takes her anger out on a powerful tree, unleashing a bigger problem. When Mariss shows up and charms everyone, Josephine is the only one who suspects the truth about her. Williams's exuberant Josephine and her conniving yet charming Marriss enliven this story, and her accents help pull the listener into the setting. An engaging, humorous, and slightly spooky listen for middle-grade readers. S.B.T. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
★ 2021-05-17
In a small village in Barbados, folklore comes to life, putting Josephine and everyone she loves in danger.
Jo can’t stand to see her widower fisherman father with other women, going so far as relentlessly pranking them and scaring them all away. The two are an otherwise tightknit father-daughter duo who struggle a bit to make ends meet. Everything changes when Mariss comes along and simply can’t be scared away; though no one else seems to notice, Jo immediately finds this woman as terrifying as zombies, vampires, and spinach! Mariss moves in and unsettles their lives in peculiar and unexplainable ways. Bourne adeptly makes Jo’s anxieties both realistic and sympathetic. As Mariss has a hypnotic effect on everyone, carefully plotted pieces of something larger and more sinister come into focus. A last straw for Jo is that Mariss can negatively affect her cricket batting. She has to be a Mami Wata (water goddess) or a River Mumma (mermaid) or something else. Maybe. Jo’s investigation, with the help of her best friend and the library, is compelling and suspenseful as it delves into Afro-Caribbean mythology. Still, when it becomes clear that the stakes are her father’s happiness and, ultimately, his life, the mystery woman’s most threatening power may be how convincingly she’s able to gaslight an 11-year-old and isolate her from everyone and everything important to her.
A heart-wrenching adventure with big laughs and well-earned surprises. (Fiction. 9-14)