Publisher's Hardcover ©2024 | -- |
Documentary films. Juvenile fiction.
Beavers. Juvenile fiction.
Wildlife conservation. Citizen participation. Juvenile fiction.
Political participation. Juvenile fiction.
Documentary films. Fiction.
Beavers. Fiction.
Wildlife conservation. Fiction.
Political participation. Fiction.
A Portland, Oregon, girl pushes through doubt for a cause she believes in.Olive Blackwood, a Black seventh grader, looks at the world with a director's eye, just like her deceased dad did. But, unlike Dad, when Olive is center stage, her anxiety takes over. Luckily, her outgoing best friend, Kayla, has star power, making it easy for Olive to quietly blend in. When she's paired with confident Jo (who is vegan and uses they/them pronouns) and subdued David for her film class's competition, Olive will need to learn to trust her instincts if she wants to win and get her teacher's recommendation for a prestigious summer film camp. After Olive films an angry woman who's chasing a beaver-and the beaver is later found dead-she makes a short movie urging viewers to advocate for wildlife protection. Its success and impact motivate Olive to go off-script and start directing her own life. The issues that contribute to Olive's anxiety are woven throughout the book and are portrayed in a realistic way that doesn't shy away from the uncomfortable. The activism themes highlight the different means kids may take to effect change while also using technology responsibly. The supporting characters are wonderfully developed catalysts for Olive's emotional journey; Olive's story arc with Kayla frames the adolescent challenge of growing up with, apart from, and alongside childhood friends.Two thumbs up for this necessary novel about anxiety and self-advocacy. (author's note) (Fiction. 9-13)
School Library Journal (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Gr 3–5— Twelve-year-old Olive Blackwood is an aspiring fantasy film director who dreams of attending an elite summer filmmaking camp. When her film teacher offers a personal recommendation to the group of students that creates a winning documentary trailer, Olive is thrilled—until she learns the groups and topic have been pre-selected. Around the same time, Olive witnesses a weird confrontation between an old woman with a frying pan and a beaver, then hears a news story about a beaver being killed. Olive is horrified to learn that killing beavers is legal in Oregon, despite the good they do for the environment. Through the course of the novel, Olive must battle anxiety to work with her groupmates on the documentary, build and repair personal relationships, and stand up for a cause she believes in. There's a lot going on in Thomas's second middle grade novel, and it's hard to pin down what the central conflict is. There is also a lack of nuance in the problems and the characters' responses to them. When Olive sees (and films) the old woman chasing the beaver, the old woman asks her to stop filming and call animal control. Instead of exhibiting curiosity about what might cause an elderly woman to chase a beaver, Olive repeatedly refers to the woman as a "crone" who is clearly in the wrong. Olive twice experiences misunderstandings with friends, and both times is given the silent treatment as an immediate response. At times situations are not fully explained, and at other times explanations feel forced and the dialogue rings false. VERDICT An important message about overcoming anxiety is muddled in a busy plot. Purchase for larger collections.— Lindsay Loup
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Chapter One Voilà! Our Spell Is Done
FADE IN:
EXTERIOR OLIVE'S BACKYARD. DAY.
Fully fenced backyard of charming bungalow house nestled in an urban neighborhood lined with tall trees. CLOSE-UP of OLIVE holding an opened velvet bag. KAYLA digs her gloved hand inside and pulls out rose-colored marbles. They both lay the marbles one by one in the grass, preparing for their "Reveal It Now" spell.
OLIVE (VOICE-OVER)
My best friend, Kayla, and I always do our best to follow the rules of magic. One of those rules, and my favorite, is that Magic Is Stronger When Done Together.
A winter chill hugged the air, but Olive didn't mind. She preferred doing spells outside when no one was around. And as usual, Mom was still at work. But even more important, Olive was on a super-important mission. Today she would choose the perfect story for her next film.
"Any ideas yet?" Kayla asked.
Olive pushed up her red glasses. "Still thinking." She shrugged.
There were several loglines bouncing around in her head:
- A reimagining of The Witches, where a young kid stumbles onto a wizarding convention and must save the good witches from their evil grandmother, even after being turned into a cat.
- A silent Halloween dinner with a daughter and her deceased father, when suddenly they're ambushed by candy corn-eating zombies.
- When a bully unleashes a destructive spell on a middle school, timid thirteen-year-old twins must step up to save their classmates.
But Olive wasn't ready to say them out loud yet. Before sharing, she wanted to choose her favorite one with 100 percent confidence. Even when sharing with her best friend.
"I have the perfect film for you," Kayla said.
Olive plucked another marble from the bag. "Yeah?"
"Nick and James claim that there are R.A.A.T.S. roaming the park near our neighborhood."
Olive paused. "Say, huh?"
"R.A.A.T.S. Rodents at a tremendous size." Kayla rolled the few marbles she had left in her hand. "You could do one of those found-footage movies. A town invaded by gigantic radioactive rats!"
Kayla's older twin brothers were always making up ridiculous stories. But it could make an interesting film. It reminded Olive of the R.O.U.S.--rodents of unusual size. These giant ratlike creatures live in fire swamps in one of her dad's favorite fantasy films from decades ago, The Princess Bride.
Olive mentally added it to her list.
She dropped the last marble to the ground and stepped back. Their large circle was complete! They interlocked their right pinkie fingers and chanted in unison, "This is just between us." Dancing around the marbles, the two sang:
"Hocus-pocus!
Bring in focus,
the film that should be done.
Boom, boom, kapow!
Let us know now,
the film that should be done."
Kayla shimmied gracefully. Olive awkwardly bounced along. They continued moving around the circle until they'd repeated the verses three times, and then ended with:
"Presto! Shazam!
Alakazam!
Voilà! Our spell is done."
Turning thirteen in April, Olive would finally be able to attend the Rose City Summer Film Camp. Ten lucky students would get to produce a short film, from developing the screenplay to final editing. Rumors buzzed that Gillian Vansant would be a guest speaker this summer. She'd attended the camp as a kid and recently got nominated for Best Director at the Oscars!
Getting into Rose City would be a huge step toward making Olive's directorial dreams come true. The most important part of the application was to submit an eight-minute short. And that was exactly why Olive was doing this spell.
"Well?" Kayla said.
Olive still wasn't sure which story to pick. But she did know the perfect location to film it. "Off to the cemetery!"
Olive wasn't allowed to wander in the nearby park after dark, even if she wasn't alone. Luckily, there was still an hour before sunset. That would give Olive and Kayla enough time to take the unfamiliar path on their way to the cemetery with the hopes of spotting R.A.A.T.S.
Though Olive doubted that the twins' story about rodents at a tremendous size was true, it couldn't hurt to make a quick investigation. Who knew what interesting footage she might capture?
At the edge of the park, Olive and Kayla stepped off the sidewalk and into a thick patch of trees. They zigged and zagged, stepping over roots, and avoiding low-hanging branches. Olive held her phone above her feet. With each heavy stomp, her winter boots snapped twigs and crunched leaves. She panned the phone toward the towering conifers and redwoods blocking out the sun. Deeper in, the usual neighborhood sounds faded.
Still filming, Olive asked, "Are you sure you know where we're going?"
Kayla nodded. "The twins gave me detailed directions."
Olive released a heavy sigh. She let her mind wander as it often did. Her best film ideas came to her this way. As she carefully stepped over another tree root, she imagined that this was the part in the movie where the best friends were separated. Her boot would get caught, causing her to fall and sprain her ankle. So the sidekick would have to go for help, leaving the injured hero alone in the woods to fend for herself. Against gigantic and hungry radioactive rats!
Something howled. Olive jumped, wobbling back into the present.
The trees had become sparser. Off in the distance a jogger was accompanied by a German shepherd. Olive laughed it off.
Kayla froze. "Did you hear that?"
Olive strained to listen. As she was shaking her head, a twig snapped.
Kayla's hand flew over her mouth. She pointed at something large and low to the ground.
Olive squinted, then jerked back.
A large humpbacked beast--at least three feet long--lumbered in the distance.
Was it...? No, it couldn't be. Could it? There's no such thing as rodents at a tremendous size! Right?
Her fingers shaking, Olive swung her camera's view toward the moving creature. Kayla leaned into Olive. Their gazes locked onto the screen. Moving her hands to keep the fuzzy critter in frame, Olive zoomed in as far as her phone would allow. She gasped.
It had four huge chisel-shaped buckteeth! On top and bottom. And they were orange!
The beast growled. Kayla and Olive shrieked.
As it waddled on, Olive registered the creature's tiny, rounded ears and thick reddish-brown fur. Once she caught sight of its broad, flat tail, that's when she knew. She'd seen this animal on the back of the state flag since kindergarten. It also happened to be their middle school's mascot.
"It's a beaver!" Olive said.
"He's so cute," Kayla cooed.
Olive giggled. "It's definitely at a tremendous size."
"What should we call him? Justin Beaver?"
Olive groaned. "Butternut? Gnawly? Webber?"
Kayla shook her head with each one.
"I know," Olive said. "Waddle!"
Kayla made the heart hand sign.
Olive turned back to her phone's screen. "Hey, where's Waddle?"
They stared out into the distance, but their new friend was gone.
Excerpted from Olive Blackwood Takes Action! by Sonja Thomas
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
An anxious aspiring filmmaker bands together with an unlikely friend group to protect their beloved state animal in this “stirring” (Booklist) contemporary middle grade novel perfect for fans of Jamie Sumner and Erin Entrada Kelly.
Twelve-year-old Olive Blackwood’s dream is to direct blockbuster fantasy movies, just like her dad wanted to before he died. She decides to apply to the highly competitive Rose City Summer Film Camp with the help of her best friend, Kayla. But Olive isn’t sure how she can cast the movie when the mere thought of talking to a stranger makes her nervous.
Then a surprise project in Olive’s film class presents her best chance at going to Rose City: the group who makes the best documentary trailer will receive a recommendation to the elite program! But Olive’s hopes are quickly dashed when she’s paired with the two worst students in class: loud Jo Willems has a flashy style of dressing just as intimidating as their outspoken opinions and David Moore is even quieter than Olive, fading into the background. It seems impossible for the three of them to find enough common ground to produce something noteworthy.
When Olive stumbles across an old lady chasing a beaver with a frying pan, she’s disturbed to discover it’s legal to kill beavers in Oregon—which has the animal on the state flag! Olive posts the video she took of the incident, and it goes viral. She wants to raise more awareness, and if she uses her documentary to do it, she could even get the coveted Rose City recommendation at the same time.
With the help of unexpected friendship, counseling, and a little everyday magic, can Olive make her voice be heard?