Tag Archives: Da Vinci

Friday Reads – The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry by Ransom Riggs

Leopold “Larry” Berry is average, perfectly average, if you believe the results of his aptitude test given by the pricey college admissions counselor his father hired. And in the Berry household “average” equates to “failure”. The boy is a dreamer, spending his free time tinkering with his late mother’s old car and recreating scenes from an old TV show he found on VHS. Absolutely hopeless!

What Larry’s dad doesn’t know is that the old TV show, “Max’s Adventures in Sunderworld”, is not merely a corny, poorly-filmed fantasy series. It’s also one of his only connections to his mom, who died when Larry was 12. But Larry is starting to suspect that Sunder is more than make-believe; could it be a real world that exists below (or next to? inside of?) his hometown of Los Angeles? Lately, it seems the line between Sunder and the real world is blurring. Larry is seeing things that don’t (or shouldn’t) exist in his world. Worried that he is losing his mind, Larry confesses his experiences to his best friend Emmett, and the two set off to find out why Sunder is revealing itself to Larry. Will they find something truly extraordinary? Or will it just be another in a long list of extraordinary disappointments?

This is the first book in a new Young Adult fantasy series, Sunderworld by Ransom Riggs, the author of the Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children series. The second book will be released in fall 2025.

Riggs, Ransom. (2024). The Extraordinary Disappointments of Leopold Berry. Dutton Books for Young Readers.

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Friday Reads – The Mona Lisa Vanishes by Nicholas Day

Did you ever wonder why the Mona Lisa is so famous? Surely it’s because Leonardo Da Vinci was such a talented artist. Or perhaps the actual Mona Lisa was so beautiful and beloved that artists clamored to paint her portrait? Or… perhaps the painting gained its stature as one of the most recognizable pieces of art worldwide because of a little incident that took place 113 years ago this week, on August 21, 1911. A mysterious man in a white smock hid inside a closet at the Lourve until the museum was closed, and when the coast was clear, he took the Mona Lisa off its wall, removed its frame, and walked out the door.

And thus begins Nicholas Day’s “The Mona Lisa Vanishes: a Legendary Painter, a Shocking Heist, and the Birth of a Global Celebrity.” Curious to find out more? I certainly was!

Day weaves a compelling tale of how lax security at the Lourve and a bungled police investigation led to an international fascination with a small painting most of the world had never seen. Intertwined with the intrigue of the art heist is the rather absurd life story of Da Vinci himself and how he came to paint the Mona Lisa – one of the few endeavors he seems to have carried out to completion. Brilliant but easily distracted, Leonardo Da Vinci was famous for his flakiness as much as his talent.

Aimed at middle-grade readers, this fast-paced work of narrative nonfiction should hold the attention of mystery-lovers of all ages. Fans of the “A Series of Unfortunate Events” books by Lemony Snicket may recognize the illustrations of Brett Helquist throughout.

Day, Nicholas. (2023). The Mona Lisa Vanishes. Random House Studio.

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