

Orion and the Starborn
Summary: An adopted boy discovers not only is some of his family still alive, but he isn't even human.
I read this several years ago and then again as a read-aloud with my son. My son is a good reader, but he also tends to only read graphic novels. I am not opposed to graphic novels, but I do want to get him into a wider range of books. He tends to fully invest in a book and finish it quickly. And frequently because he can read a graphic novel so quickly, he will reread it two or three times before we return it to the library. I am also heavily invested in reading on my kindle, and while he has occasionally read on my kindle, he prefers paper. But more than anything, I just love reading out loud. I tend to read when he is sketching or folding clothes or doing some other task that a keeps him present but not intellectually engaged.
Orion is a twelve year old boy at the start of the book. He was adopted by an older Korean woman whom he calls Halmoni (Korean for grandmother). Orion is smart and great at fixing things. He and his best friend compete in a robotics competition and he fixes people's bicycles. But he also constantly needs his inhaler and is clumsy. Walking home one night in suburban Atlanta, someone tries to kill him, and someone else shows up to protect him. And that starts a whole series of events leading Orion to be brought back to his home planet to live an assumed identity. He discovers that there is an empire with three small planets who have powers that people on Earth would consider magic, but are connected to stardust in the nebula near the planets.
As Orion seeks to fit in with his new friends and the family that is hiding him while trying to figure out who is trying to kill him, he is also trying to figure out is real identity. Orion and the Starborn plays with the "chosen one" and "adopted but really someone important" tropes that are common in middle grade fiction. These are common because they are developmentally exactly what middle grade students need as they are trying to discern their identities and separate themselves from their parents and family of origin. One of the most helpful features of sci-fi or fantasy (and Orion and the Starborn blends their elements) is that they allow the reader to see how culture and the rest of existence could be different in ways that are similar to cross cultural travel.
There is just the right amount of tension and suspense to keep a middle grade reader engaged, but also not get too scary or graphic. My son does not like violence or scary things in his books, but he does like puzzles and figuring out what is going on. The mystery of who Orion really is and the tension of knowing that someone is trying to kill him and that there is many things he does not understand because he did not grow up in this new world and culture kept my son engaged.
As always, as an adult, I love that KB Hoyle writes with depth. I have read all of her books, most more than once and while these are books that kids can understand, they invite multiple readings with lots of reference, subtle allusions, and depth that most kids (and adults) will not get on a first reading.
We are now about 1/3 of the way into the second book and we will be impatiently waiting for the rest of the series to be published.
https://bookwi.se/orion-and-the-starborn-2/
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Summary: An adopted 12-year-old boy suddenly discovers he is not who he thought he was.Middle-grade books regularly have the concept that the main character is not who they thought they were, especially if they are orphans. This is a classic literary feature because it fits into middle-grade development. Of course, most readers will not be orphans who may secretly be important, but readers can still think about what it would mean to be someone else.Orion Kim is 12 years old. He is handy with tools and can fix many things, but he is not very coordinated or popular. Very early in the book, he finds out that his grandmother is not his grandmother due to someone attempting to kill him and someone else defending him. Not long after, he finds out that he is not from Earth, but he is “starborn,” and he is taken away from the only home he has known (on Earth) and hides from his attacker on an alien world.There are classic literary devices that work because they are classic. For example, middle-grade readers may already be familiar with characters attending a new special school to learn about their new powers. Or a group of characters working together to discover the things the adults around them won't tell them. This is not to say that Orion and the Starborn is cliche; I don't think it is. But as a nearly 50-year-old who has been reading middle-grade books for decades, I can see the literary references beneath the story.I read Orion and the Starborn because I am a fan of KB Hoyle's writing. I have read her Dystopian series (Breeder Cycle) and her fantasy series (Gateway Chronicles) twice and the stand-alone retelling of the fairytale Little Mermaid (Son of the Deep). The books stand up to re-reading. And they have a depth to the story. My kids are a little young for the books, but I think this is probably the series I would start with because it is pitched just slightly younger than the other two series. Depending on how advanced a child is and whether an adult is reading the book with the child or the child is reading independently, I think this is probably a series that I would start around age 10 to 14. My kids are pretty sensitive to scary things, even minor tension they do not like. But I think by the time the next book or two in the series comes out, I will be able to read it to them.
Originally posted at bookwi.se.
Summary: An adopted boy discovers not only is some of his family still alive, but he isn't even human.
I read this several years ago and then again as a read-aloud with my son. My son is a good reader, but he also tends to only read graphic novels. I am not opposed to graphic novels, but I do want to get him into a wider range of books. He tends to fully invest in a book and finish it quickly. And frequently because he can read a graphic novel so quickly, he will reread it two or three times before we return it to the library. I am also heavily invested in reading on my kindle, and while he has occasionally read on my kindle, he prefers paper. But more than anything, I just love reading out loud. I tend to read when he is sketching or folding clothes or doing some other task that a keeps him present but not intellectually engaged.
Orion is a twelve year old boy at the start of the book. He was adopted by an older Korean woman whom he calls Halmoni (Korean for grandmother). Orion is smart and great at fixing things. He and his best friend compete in a robotics competition and he fixes people's bicycles. But he also constantly needs his inhaler and is clumsy. Walking home one night in suburban Atlanta, someone tries to kill him, and someone else shows up to protect him. And that starts a whole series of events leading Orion to be brought back to his home planet to live an assumed identity. He discovers that there is an empire with three small planets who have powers that people on Earth would consider magic, but are connected to stardust in the nebula near the planets.
As Orion seeks to fit in with his new friends and the family that is hiding him while trying to figure out who is trying to kill him, he is also trying to figure out is real identity. Orion and the Starborn plays with the "chosen one" and "adopted but really someone important" tropes that are common in middle grade fiction. These are common because they are developmentally exactly what middle grade students need as they are trying to discern their identities and separate themselves from their parents and family of origin. One of the most helpful features of sci-fi or fantasy (and Orion and the Starborn blends their elements) is that they allow the reader to see how culture and the rest of existence could be different in ways that are similar to cross cultural travel.
There is just the right amount of tension and suspense to keep a middle grade reader engaged, but also not get too scary or graphic. My son does not like violence or scary things in his books, but he does like puzzles and figuring out what is going on. The mystery of who Orion really is and the tension of knowing that someone is trying to kill him and that there is many things he does not understand because he did not grow up in this new world and culture kept my son engaged.
As always, as an adult, I love that KB Hoyle writes with depth. I have read all of her books, most more than once and while these are books that kids can understand, they invite multiple readings with lots of reference, subtle allusions, and depth that most kids (and adults) will not get on a first reading.
We are now about 1/3 of the way into the second book and we will be impatiently waiting for the rest of the series to be published.
https://bookwi.se/orion-and-the-starborn-2/
_________
Summary: An adopted 12-year-old boy suddenly discovers he is not who he thought he was.Middle-grade books regularly have the concept that the main character is not who they thought they were, especially if they are orphans. This is a classic literary feature because it fits into middle-grade development. Of course, most readers will not be orphans who may secretly be important, but readers can still think about what it would mean to be someone else.Orion Kim is 12 years old. He is handy with tools and can fix many things, but he is not very coordinated or popular. Very early in the book, he finds out that his grandmother is not his grandmother due to someone attempting to kill him and someone else defending him. Not long after, he finds out that he is not from Earth, but he is “starborn,” and he is taken away from the only home he has known (on Earth) and hides from his attacker on an alien world.There are classic literary devices that work because they are classic. For example, middle-grade readers may already be familiar with characters attending a new special school to learn about their new powers. Or a group of characters working together to discover the things the adults around them won't tell them. This is not to say that Orion and the Starborn is cliche; I don't think it is. But as a nearly 50-year-old who has been reading middle-grade books for decades, I can see the literary references beneath the story.I read Orion and the Starborn because I am a fan of KB Hoyle's writing. I have read her Dystopian series (Breeder Cycle) and her fantasy series (Gateway Chronicles) twice and the stand-alone retelling of the fairytale Little Mermaid (Son of the Deep). The books stand up to re-reading. And they have a depth to the story. My kids are a little young for the books, but I think this is probably the series I would start with because it is pitched just slightly younger than the other two series. Depending on how advanced a child is and whether an adult is reading the book with the child or the child is reading independently, I think this is probably a series that I would start around age 10 to 14. My kids are pretty sensitive to scary things, even minor tension they do not like. But I think by the time the next book or two in the series comes out, I will be able to read it to them.
Originally posted at bookwi.se.