I always like to kick my reading year off with something fun, something promising to kick off a reading year. Dactyl Hill Squad has been on my to-read list since it was announced, pretty much, so it seemed like an auspicious start.
It's just your average Civil War story centering on a group of orphans of color, one of whom can communicate with the dinosaurs that are used for transport and labor. One night, while protagonist Magdalys and her friends are out at a Shakespeare performance, they get separated from their guardian in a mob and--oh, sorry, did you just register the dinosaurs bit? Yeah. If your first response is to question how the dinosaurs survived and what major world-altering consequences that would have, this probably isn't the book for you because it's never really explained, just taken as a fact of the world, with an added dose of magic in Magdalys's ability to communicate telepathically with the giant beasts. If you're still in touch with your inner child or know a child of chapter-book-reading age whose immediate response is "Whoa, dinosaurs, COOL!" then pick this one up.
For that matter, Dactyl Hill Squad isn't really your typical Civil War story either, ignoring the obvious dinosaurs in the room. This one is set in New York and kicks off with the real-life-inspired Draft Riots, when white New Yorkers, upset at the prospect of being drafted to a fight that might end slavery, rioted and destroyed buildings in black neighborhoods, including the Colored Orphan Asylum, rendered here in fictional form. The key villain in the story is based on a real person, Richard Riker, who sent free blacks south to slavery on minimal or insufficient evidence. Notes following the story explain the historical inspirations for people, places, and events in the story, and I'm not too proud to admit that I wasn't familiar with a lot of his inspirations.
All of which is to say, yes, Dactyl Hill Squad does engage with issues of race, but at a level suitable for middle-grade readers and dealing with concepts that young readers of color already probably have some firsthand experience with. When Magdalys and her crew are taken in by the Vigilance Society, she's awed, "like she'd discovered a whole new kind of saint over the course of the night, these brilliant, fearless heroes who looked like her and were ready to do anything to make the world what it should be instead of what it was." This right here is why we need diverse representation in stories, so children can see heroes that look like them (and also so others can see heroes who *don't* look like them being awesome), whether that's swooping across rooftops on dactylback or making triceratops fart jokes. (Yeah. That happened. I giggled.)
I'm not the intended audience for this, as an adult, but I still had a blast as these heroes rode dinosaurs, dodged bad guys, and wisecracked with their friends the whole way. And I will absolutely keep this in my back pocket as a rec for reluctant readers.