Trendwatch 2013: A Mid-Year Assessment

Obviously I can’t read everything in a given year for the kiddos.  Someday SOMEDAY this will change. I shall sit upon a velvet cushion while faithful servants serve me peeled grapes as I devour all the books published in the current year.  And I’ll have a pony!  I mean, while we’re dreaming. In the meantime [...]

Obviously I can’t read everything in a given year for the kiddos.  Someday SOMEDAY this will change. I shall sit upon a velvet cushion while faithful servants serve me peeled grapes as I devour all the books published in the current year.  And I’ll have a pony!  I mean, while we’re dreaming.

In the meantime I just read bunches of bunches and then make my fellow NYPL children’s librarians read different bunches of bunches.  That way we cover everything pretty well.  The result, though, is that you start noticing weirdo trends.  Trends that no one else would necessarily spot unless they were in the same business.  Here then are some of the odder trends we’ve identified in children’s fiction for the publishing year of 2013:

Victorian England: No surprises there.  I think it was Cassandra Clare who once pointed out that there’s something wonderful about an era that has railroads and plumbing but no telephones.  It’s always been a haven of the middle grade authors and for a time there was a bit of steampunky nonsense that went along with it.  This year that’s abated a tad, but we’ve noticed that there are two distinct Victorian categories that defy logic or explanation.

Victorian Trend #1: Mudlarks

How to Catch a Bogle by Catherine Jinks

HowCatchBogle Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

Freaks by Kieran Larwood

Freaks Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

The Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, The Blue Death and a Boy Called Eel by Deborah Hopkinson

GreatTrouble Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

Specifically, mudlarks that are minding their own business, traipsing into the disgusting Thames, when they are inexplicably grabbed and sucked down into the muck by some kind of monster.  The grabbing part may not be the case for the Hopkinson title (haven’t read it quite yet) but it’s certainly true for the Jinks and Larwood titles.  I don’t know that I’d even heard the term “mudlark” before this year either.  Now I can’t get away from it.  For the record, I highly recommend the Jinks title.  Now that they’ve given it a proper book jacket (the one on the galley was lamentable) I expect it’ll have some fans.

Victorian Trend #2: Freak Shows

Beholding Bee by Kimberly Newton Fusco

BEHOLDING BEE Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

Wild Boy by Rob Lloyd Jones

WildBoy Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

Freaks by Kieran Larwood

Freaks Trendwatch 2013: A Mid Year Assessment

Larwood has the distinction of combining freak shows AND mudlarks together.  Get yer money’s worth this way.  I suppose including Fusco is a bit cheap since Bee is only threatened with a future in her carnival’s freak show, and it’s historical but not Victorian, but she does interact with the denizens to some extent, so I’m including it.  Of these three I highly recommend Wild Boy.  Yes, it is the second book this year with this title (the other being a nonfiction title by Mary Losure that was, somewhat oddly, also published by Candlewick in 2013) but it deserves notice.  Call it Furry Sherlock Holmes.  Sure the villain is glaringly obvious, but maybe just to adults.

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