"Steeped in Canadiana and suspense, The Boundless reads like a blood-speckled love letter to the late 19th century True North strong and free."
- Quill & Quire (starred review)
Read More"Steeped in Canadiana and suspense, The Boundless reads like a blood-speckled love letter to the late 19th century True North strong and free."
- Quill & Quire (starred review)
Read More"Oppel's imagination and sense of adventure never disappoint, and readers should thrill to this rousing tale as it barrels ahead at full speed."
- Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Read MoreWith its imaginative plot, cast of colorful, well-rounded characters, and nonstop action, Oppel's latest is a delight to read from the first page right through the satisfying conclusion. Take note: This book will be popular!"
- School Library Journal (starred review)
Read More"A wild, cinematic ride: Canadian railway history, fantasy, a flutter of romance- and a thoughtful examination of social injustice-collide in this entertaining swashbuckler."
- Kirkus (starred)
Read MoreA tight and focused story about the dangers of wishing things back to normal at any cost. The language is straightforward, rarely derailed by extraneous details, but the emotional resonance is deep, and Steve's precarious interactions with the honey-voiced queen make one's skin crawl. Klassen's full-page black-and-white drawings—simple, but with maximum impact, in shades of light, dark, and darker-astutely capture the magnitude of a child's imagination.
– HORN BOOK (STARRED REVIEW)
Read MoreSet in a modern-day suburb, this quiet yet emotionally haunting book thoughtfully explores themes of safety, anxiety, and the beauty of the imperfect. Klassen’s black-and-white graphite illustrations complement the sensitive and powerful narrative, written in first person from Steve’s perspective.
– SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL (STARRED REVIEW)
Read MoreThe Nest opts for Stephen King-lite terror – though with a lot of interesting sub-currents about the nature of fear and of familial love. Caldecott and Governor General’s Literary Award–winning illustrator Jon Klassen contributes some appropriately gloomy incidental drawings, but this is Oppel’s show – his prose is brisk and visceral. Having become a YA star many years ago by bringing readers inside the minds of bats, Oppel has now concocted a kidlit horror classic by taking them inside a wasps’ nest.
– QUILL & QUIRE (STARRED REVIEW)
Read MoreOppel deftly conveys the fear and dislocation that can overwhelm a family: there’s the baby born with problems, the ways that affects the family, and Steve’s own struggles to feel and be normal. Everything feels a bit skewed, conveying the experience of being in transition from the familiar to the threateningly unfamiliar. Klassen’s several illustrations in graphite, with their linear formality and stillness and only mere glimpses of people, nicely express this sense of worry and tension. Steve’s battle with the enemy is terrifying, moving from an ominous, baleful verbal conflict to a pitched, physical, life-threatening battle. Compelling and accessible.
– KIRKUS (STARRED REVIEW)
Read MoreOppel infuses the natural world of the hive with chilling scenes of the queen’s heartlessness (“Before you know it, you’ll forget all about that crappy little broken baby”) while Klassen’s graphite drawings hauntingly depict the family’s stress (an early image, all angles and shadows, shows Steve’s parents standing solemnly over the baby’s crib), as well as increasing tension between Theodore’s complications and the wasps’ growing power. In exploring the boundaries of science, self-determination, and belief, Oppel uses a dark and disturbing lens to produce an unnerving psychological thriller.
– PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (STARRED REVIEW)
Read MoreIn his best work to date, Kenneth Oppel tells the story of Steve, a perpetually anxious boy with a gravely ill baby brother and persistent dreams of angel-esque creatures... It's a masterpiece.
– THE GLOBE & MAIL
Read MoreWith subtle, spine-chilling horror at its heart, this tale of triumph over monsters—both outside and in—is outstanding. Printz-winning, New York Times best-selling Oppel and Caldecott-winning Klassen are a match made in kid-lit heaven. Expect ample buzz.
– BOOKLIST (STARRED REVIEW)
Read More“The Nest opts for Steven King-lite terror—though with a lot of interesting sub-currents about the nature of fear and of familial love . . . a kidlit horror classic.”
— Quill & Quire (starred review)
Read More“Oppel deftly conveys the fear and dislocation that can overwhelm a family: there’s the baby born with problems, the ways that affects the family, and Steve’s own struggles to feel and be normal . . . Compelling and accessible.”
— Kirkus (starred review)
Read More“In exploring the boundaries of science, self-determination, and belief, Oppel uses a dark and disturbing lens to produce an unnerving psychological thriller.”
— Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Read More“With subtle, spine-chilling horror at its heart, this tale of triumph over monsters—both outside and in—is outstanding . . . a match made in kid-lit heaven.”
— Booklist (starred review)
Read More“A tight and focused story about the dangers of wishing things back to normal at any cost . . . the emotional resonance is deep, and Steve’s precarious interactions with the honey-voiced queen make one’s skin crawl.”
— Horn Book (starred review)
Read More“This quiet yet emotionally haunting book thoughtfully explores themes of safety, anxiety, and the beauty of the imperfect . . . [An] affecting middle grade psychological thriller.”
— School Library Journal (starred review)
Read More"Rachel and Sam are compelling, realistic protaganists trying to chisel and hammer their way around a growing distaste for their respective fathers' behavior, family loyalty, societal expectations, sex and young love."
- Shelf Awareness
Read More"Oppel handily inserts teen drama into the real-life Bone Wars of the nineteenth century while exploring the conflicting ideologies of the First Nations people and the scientists.... Sam and Rachel are well-drawn characters, Rachel especially breaking with feminine stereotypes.... Fascinating for readers interested in the romance, the paleontology, or the frontier history."
- Bulletin for the Center of Children's Books
Read More"Kenneth Oppel ventures into a new territory with his latest work, but does so with all the elegance and artistry that he has brought to each work in his oeuvre. His storytelling genius is on full display in this tale that combines the allure of its wild west setting with an intriguing scientific quest (for dinosaur bones!) and a unique and compelling love story. The native presence in the story is handled sensitively yet realistically and the characters are believable, nuanced and sympathetic. While this book has been described as ‘Romeo and Juliet meets Indiana Jones,’ it is that plus so much more.”
– Canadian Children’s Book News
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