Shirley and Jamila Save Their Summer (Shirley & Jamila)
L**L
My 5th grade loved it!
Great book! Hoping the series continues!
K**R
Confusing story with too much text, but had nice illustrations
Meet Jamila and Shirley—2 polar opposites.This was a confusing story with too much text that was way too small to read. So you have to rely on the illustrations, which were nice.
J**E
Fantastic book for girls.
Fantastic book with this junior Sherlock Homes/Doctor Watson combo. Great message in the book with the pacing and reveal handled brilliantly. As soon as I had finished the book I was checking to see if there was more to come, and yes there is. A brilliant addition to the Middle Reader genre.
M**M
Terrible
Just terrible
B**D
The game is afoot!
Have you ever tried to write a mystery? You’ll never respect your favorite mystery writers as greatly as when you try to pen one of those puppies yourself. Kids love mysteries too. I remember when I was in sixth grade or so, I discovered my very first Agatha Christie at a Scholastic Book Fair (I believe it was Murder on the Orient Express). From there on in I was hooked. But younger kids these days can get their kicks with book series like “Cam Jansen” or “A to Z Mysteries”. One place where mysteries are almost wholly absent is in the graphic novel section of your library or bookstore. Certainly you might find a couple supernatural mysteries, and the occasional Nancy Drew/Hardy Boys adaptation but original mysteries are difficult to track down. Now that we’re seeing such an uptick in the sheer number of comics published in a given year by trade publishers, it’s strange to me that realistic mysteries aren’t abundant. But maybe it all goes back to my first sentence here. Good mysteries are shockingly difficult to write. That’s why I’m so thrilled to encounter Gillian Goertz’s new “Shirley and Jamila” series. Firmly rooted in reality, the book tips its hat low to Sherlock Holmes but maintains an originality entirely of its own. More of the same, please!!Two girls, one problem. Jamila Waheed is facing a possible summer of dreaded science camp. Shirley Bones, a girl she met once at a garage sale, is also facing the prospect of unwanted camps, so the two strike up a deal. Convincing their mothers, they will spend the summer together instead. But being friends with Shirley means contending with the fact that she’s not your average 10-year-old girl. Shirley's a child detective, and right now she’s working on a very serious case. Two kids have had their gecko stolen from the public pool. There are no witnesses, and it’s not the first time someone has stolen from them. Will Shirley and Jamila solve the case? Or are they truly too different to be friends at all?Since Goerz has taken some of the trappings of a Sherlock Holmes story and worked them into her tale, once I’d actually figured out the Sherlock connection I pretty much expected to find myself reading a middle grade equivalent of The Study in Scarlet. Instead, Goerz has fashioned for herself an entirely original mystery. Yet while she hasn’t replicated Doyle’s plots, she’s put a firm finger on the pulse of what makes everyone love Sherlock Holmes books. Shirley’s ability to deduce via details is exceedingly fun. There’s this marvelous part at the beginning where she and Jamila are sitting on a stoop and she’s telling Jamila impossible facts about the people walking by. Speaking of Jamila, as I was reading the book there was something that was kind of bugging me about it. Jamila’s one of those super rare Arab-American contemporary kid protagonists we don’t see a lot of in books these days. But if Shirley is Sherlock then that would make Jamila Watson, and nobody wants to be a Watson, right? Public perception of Watson is that he’s a nice but sort of doddering buffoon. And trust me, you don’t want your strong Arab-American female protagonist just tagging along after some white genius girl. So what Goerz does instead is head this problem off at the pass. The book is almost entirely Jamila’s p.o.v. She’s sporty and fun and genuinely interested in Shirley as a person. Shirley’s smart, sure, but she’s also entirely socially inept and has a lot to learn about being a good friend. What that means is that Jamila has as much to offer her as she has to offer to Jamila. It doesn’t hurt any when Jamila says straight to Shirley’s face “I won’t be some silent sidekick.”I’ve taken to reading a lot of comics to my kids lately. As I write this we’re in the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, and that means having to constantly find reading material. Thanks to the rise of e-books, that’s not as difficult as it could once have been, but there’s no guarantee of quality when you’re reading so many comics in a given year. More frequently than not, my kids and I will find that while the creators of a graphic novel might have a beautiful style and a fun premise, inevitably the story will get confusing or the layouts all tangled. If I can’t follow what’s happening from panel to panel, what chance does a kid have? The nice thing is that when something works, you feel it deep in your soul. A good comic is one where all the disparate elements (the storytelling, art, character development, action, etc.) come together in this perfect little dance. The more complicated the plot and art, the more difficult it is to keep the dance going. And Shirley & Jamila is a magnificent example of this. Nothing about this book is simple, and yet nothing about it comes off as too confusing for a kid reader. I never had a moment where I couldn't figure out where to rest my eye or a sequence where I didn't know what happened because of poorly laid out visual elements.Great credit should be given to Goerz’s art. But before I get into that, can I just say how dynamic her panels are? Some comic book creators bypass the problem of being incomprehensible by dumbing down their books’ designs. Goerz, in contrast, reminded me of a less frenetic Eleanor Davis (particularly The Secret Science Alliance). If you just pick up this book and flip through it, pay attention to how Goerz lays out each page. The design is nothing short of stunning. I swear, this is the kind of thing they should be teaching to up-and-coming middle grade comic artists. In my experience kids don’t necessarily appreciate this kind of thing when they’re young on a conscious level. They do, however, notice when it’s done poorly. I read this book in black and white in an early pre-publication form and while I appreciate that it’s going to be full-color, I kind of feel bad about it. When a book’s just black and white you get this really clear appreciation for its strong black lines. Just gorgeous.When I was a kid I loved Encyclopedia Brown. He was ten-years-old. Shirley Bones is also ten-years-old. I like to think that isn’t a coincidence. And if there were any way to convince Gillian Goerz to crank these books out at the same rate that Donald Sobol did, the world would be a better place. Is the final reveal to the mystery in this story strictly fair? Maybe not entirely. I mean, it’s satisfying, but Goerz didn’t hand you all the pieces and ask you to solve it for yourself. She pretty much has Shirley do a little side detection work and then practically throws in a new character near the end. Even so, I can’t really mind. Some kids might feel a tad cheated, but the bulk of them will leave wanting more Shirley, more Jamila, and more of these books. Better give the people want they want. Surely they’ll need more.Of course they will. And don't call me Shirley.For ages 9-12.
P**L
Perfect!
I picked up this book on a whim and I’m so glad I did. It’s a graphic novel about two girls- Shirley is a quiet girl that other kids find useful, but “weird.” She is the Sherlock of the pair. Jamila is a girl who dreams of being on the basketball court. She is the Watson to Shirley’s Sherlock. Both have loving mothers they feel are overprotective. Both are trying to get out of day camp. Both enjoy solving mysteries. They need each other, but they also need to learn how to be friends.This book has heckin’ diversity in its main cast of characters that is casual and not forced. It takes place in a large city in Canada, which is a nice change from, say, Brooklyn or New York. It shows positive, healthy relationships between daughters and mothers. It has a kid-friendly, relatable mystery. Kids won’t care, but I appreciate that the two main characters have Sherlock and Watsons traditional attitudes and mannerisms. The font and pictures are easy to read and follow.I give this a 10/10. I’m so glad there’s more coming!
R**R
Not what I expected
I was expecting a great book with all the 4 and 5 star reviews given out. Here’s what I wasn’t expecting…. disrespect of parents and peers, name-calling, sneaking behind parents backs, young kids with cell phones (sometimes sneaking those, too), arguing, complaining, the “name-dropping” of a child having two moms (that was totally irrelevant to the storyline - but gotta add to the diversity factor, even if it’s just one line), lots of poop talk, lots of name calling, laziness, rudeness, complete disobedience in honoring a commitment made to parents, more name-calling, more poop talk. Obviously, many people really like the book. I’m just adding what I saw, because if someone had mentioned some of these things were in the book, I wouldn’t have wasted the time reading it. It was rated so well, I read to the end…. Hoping it would improve…It didn’t.
N**.
5 Stars!
Stolen geckos! Kid Detectives! New Friendships! Any young readers and graphic novel fans in your life are going to love Shirley Bones and Jamila Waheed! Recommended.
K**O
A most excellent graphic novel
I absolutely loved this graphic novel. I loved the artwork and colouring. I have never been to Canada (Toronto) but feel like I have an idea of what it looks like from the detailed background in this novel. The dialogue was realistic, the depiction of the kids rang true and the diverse voices were natural. The plot was strong and entertaining. I really enjoyed it and can't wait to see more from this author.
G**
Good!
This book is great for 9-12!Nice story but wish there was more to it
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