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Results 51 - 75 of 664,870Blog: Ooh La La Design Studio (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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There are several reasons when you should use a flashback, and many why you shouldn't.
http://www.helpingwritersbecomeauthors.com/reason-story-flashbacks/
Blog: American Indians in Children's Literature (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Dan Gemeinhart, not recommended, Pub year 2016, Some Kind of Courage, Add a tag
Way back in January or February, a reader wrote to ask me about Dan Gemeinhart's Some Kind of Courage. I put it into my "Debbie--have you seen" series and am glad to be able to return to it, today, with this review.
Joseph Johnson has lost just about everyone he's ever loved. He lost his pa in an accident. He lost his ma and his little sister to sickness. And now, he's lost his pony--fast, fierce, beautiful Sarah, taken away by a man who had no right to take her.
Joseph can sure enough get her back, though. The odds are stacked against him, but he isn't about to give up. He will face down deadly animals, dangerous men, and the fury of nature itself on his quest to be reunited with the only family he has left.
Because Joseph Johnson may have lost just about everything. But he hasn't lost hope. And he hasn't lost the fire in his belly that says he's getting his Sarah back--no matter what.
Not a word, in that synopsis, about Native people, but if you look at the summary in WorldCat, you see this:
In 1890 Washington the only family Joseph Johnson has left is his half-wild Indian pony, Sarah, so when she is sold by a man who has no right to do so, he sets out to get her back--and he plans to let nothing stop him in his quest.See? "Half-wild Indian pony." The story begins in 1890 in a place called Old Mission, Washington. As the synopsis and summary tell us, Some Kind of Courage is about a boy who is going to try to get his horse back.
Here's how we first learn about Joseph's pony (Kindle Locations 302-303):
She’s half Indian pony, so she’s got some spirit, but she ain’t nothing but perfect with me.Later, we'll read of her being a "half wild Indian pony" (Kindle 2043). Indian ponies appear in Westerns all the time. I've never figured out why they're "ponies" rather than "horses" -- and while I understand they had more endurance than other horses, I'm not sure why--in Some Kind of Courage--an Indian pony would have more spirit or be called "wild." That's a small point, though, so I won't go on about it.
Of greater interest to me is that Joseph has been taught, by his now-deceased mother, not to use or think "Chinaman" about Chinese people. That, he remembers, is wrong (Kindle Locations 210-216):
Chinaman. I heard the word in my mind, then my mama’s voice. I’d said it once, the year before, after we’d passed a group of Chinese on the road to Yakima.
I’d been confused. Everyone called them Chinamen. I didn’t know there was another word for ’em.
“It ain’t a curse word, Mama,” I’d argued.
She’d pursed her lips. “Any word can be an ugly word if you say it ugly. And people say that word ugly, Joseph, nearly every time. It sounds hateful and I don’t like it. They’re people just like us, at the end of the day. In the Lord’s eyes, if not in His people’s.”His mother, apparently, has awareness of stereotyping and racism. They're people, she tells Joseph. But she doesn't seem to have applied those ideas to Native peoples. In chapter six, Joseph and Ah-nee hear voices. They turn out to be two Indian children (Kindle Locations 527-531):
It was Indians. Two of ’em. A boy, older and taller than me, his bare arms taut with muscles. And a girl, five or six years old, with her arms around him and a terrified look on her face. The boy’s eyes narrowed. He bared his teeth like a wolf and snarled a word low and mean in his native tongue. A shaft of sunlight through the treetops gleamed on the long knife blade held in his hand as he ducked into a crouch and lunged toward me.Bared his teeth like a wolf? Hmmm...
As we move into chapter seven, we read "the Indian" a bunch of times. When Joseph and the boy scuffle, Joseph thinks that he's in the grip of "an actual, real-life Indian" and he worries that he's going to get scalped. Is it realistic for him to think that way? Sure. Just like it was realistic for him to think "Chinaman" when he saw Chinese people. I wonder why his mother did not pass along any teachings about how to view Native people? Does it seem to you that she couldn't, because it wasn't plausible for her to think that way about Native people, but, that it is plausible she'd think that way about Chinese people? I don't know. That's a research question, for sure!
That Indian boy has a broken ankle. With Joseph and Ah-nee's help, the boy gets back to his family. They are, of course, grateful to Joseph. I like that, as Joseph looks at their camp, he sees kids chasing each other and playing. So often, Native children are absent from stories like this one! That little bit, there, is a big plus!
But, then, we're right back to stereotype land, when three Indian men approach Kindle Locations 603-604):
Their faces were deadly serious as they stood before us, looking like they were carved out of dark stone.The Indian boy, it turns out, is the son of a chief! His name? "Chief George." We get "chief" and "scalp" and "the Indian" (lots of times) and stoicism... and no tribe--much less--a tribal nation.
People like Gemeinhart's story. It was part of the discussions at Heavy Medal (School Library Journal's blog where people engage in mock-Newbery discussions ahead of the actual announcements of who wins that prestigious award). I think it falls heavily into stereotypical depictions of Native people. Because people like it, it will be bought and read and assigned, too, to children in school.
People may defend it because of the way that Gemeinhart deals with "Chinaman." For me, that defense will signal another time in which Native concerns are set aside in favor of what an author has done to elevate someone else. When will that sort of thing end, I wonder?
In short: I do not recommend Dan Gemeinhart's Some Kind of Courage. Published in 2016 by Scholastic, it'll likely do quite well, which is too bad for everyone who will have stereotypical ideas of Native peoples affirmed by Gemeinhart's writing. And of course, completely unacceptable for Native kids who are asked to read it.
Blog: The Miss Rumphius Effect (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Monday Poetry Stretch, Add a tag
Christmas is over, but Hanukkah is still going strong. The new year is just around the corner. I'd like to write about endings and beginnings, so a form written from two perspectives sounds like a good idea.
Tanka, meaning ‘short song’, is a 1300 year old Japanese form of lyric poetry. Non-rhyming, it is composed in Japanese in five phrases of 5/7/5/7/7 syllables.
In English, tanka are normally written in five lines, also without (contrived) rhyme, but in a flexible short/long/short/long/long rhythm. Due to dissimilarities between the two languages, it is preferable not to apply the thirty-one syllable standard of the Japanese poems, to tanka in English. Around twenty-one plus/minus syllables in English produces an approximate equivalent of the essentially fragmentary tanka form, and its lightness. To achieve a “perfect twenty-one”, one could write five lines in 3/5/3/5/5 syllables. If the resulting tanka sounds natural, then that’s fine. However, the syllable counting does not need to be so rigid. Though no line should be longer than seven syllables, and one should try to maintain the short/long/short/long/long rhythm, variations such as 2/4/3/5/5 or 4/6/3/6/7 or 3/6/4/5/6 syllable patterns can all make good tanka.
Tied up, it loosens,
untied, it's too long
my love's hair --
nowadays I can't see it --
has she combed it together?
Everyone now says
my hair is too long
and I should tie it up --
but the hair you gazed upon
I'll leave in tangles
Translated by Stephen Addiss in The Art of Haiku: Its History through Poems and Paintings by Japanese Masters (pp. 19-20)
I hope you'll join me this week in writing a somonka. Please share a link to your poem or the poem itself in the comments.
Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: 1894, book I bought, classics, J Fiction, Mark Twain, Add a tag
Tom Sawyer Abroad. Mark Twain. 1894. 108 pages.
First sentence: DO you reckon Tom Sawyer was satisfied after all them adventures? I mean the adventures we had down the river, and the time we set the darky Jim free and Tom got shot in the leg. No, he wasn’t. It only just p’isoned him for more. That was all the effect it had.
Premise/plot: Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, and Jim (now free) accidentally have an adventure together--in a hot air balloon--that takes them halfway across the world to Africa. The trip has its dangers certainly. But Tom is so smug and obnoxious that one of the biggest dangers is the size of his ego. The book's biggest weakness perhaps is its sudden and abrupt ending. I can almost imagine Mark Twain going, well, it was fun and interesting when it started...but I've got a new idea for a book now and I just don't care about this anymore. So let's type THE END and send it off to be published.
My thoughts: If the ending had been an actual ending, perhaps this one would have been worth my time--and your time. As it is, I can't really recommend it! Was it easier to get published back then? Was Mark Twain under contract? Did his editor not care either? Did he even have an editor? Instead of improving as it goes along, it does the opposite. Each chapter shows Twain's growing lack of interest in what happens on this balloon ride.
I don't think the fault is solely in the premise. I think it's just that when you start a book you should see it through to the end...or else not publish it.
© 2016 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: adult nonfiction, book I bought, books reviewed in 2016, 1998, Add a tag
Identifying Barbie Dolls. Janine Fennick. 1998. 80 pages. [Source: Bought]
First sentence: Collecting Barbie dolls is one of the most popular hobbies today.
Premise/plot: Janine Fennick's book is a nonfiction guide for adults (primarily) about collecting Barbie dolls and caring for your doll collection. She essentially divides Barbie dolls into three categories. (The book was published in 1998; I'd argue there needs to be a fourth category). Her categories are: "The Ponytail Era" (1959-1966), "The Mod Era" (1967-1972), and "The Collectible Era" (1973-present).
The first fifteen pages essentially act as an introduction to doll collecting itself. The remaining three chapters focus on a specific era of doll production.
The writing is both technical and practical. A fun, swinging narrative it is not. If you want to know the difference between a #1 Ponytail and a #2 Ponytail (the first two dolls) this book will tell you ALL you need to know. If you want to know what year Midge got bendable legs, this book is for you.
My thoughts: I'll be honest, though she discusses all three eras, the author's bias for the first two eras is obvious. I wouldn't mind knowing what she thinks of the current state of Barbie. (I am disappointed not with the Fashionista line, but, with the other offerings. Almost all Barbies produced in the past five to seven years have the exact same face, almost the exact same makeup, almost the exact same hair. There is no point anymore to buying *more* dolls. To have two or three dolls with the same face is one thing. Twins! Triplets! But to have sixteen? That's just CREEPY. Instead of buying more dolls, you'd almost be better off just buying fashion accessories. But clothes can be very taste specific. (I always LOVED, LOVED, LOVED sewing my own Barbie clothes. In fact it's probably the number one thing I miss about playing with Barbies.) I miss the 80s and 90s. Yes, the author doesn't really see the point of it all. But I did and do.
Probably the biggest strength of this book is the use of COLOR photographs. So many dolls, so many fashions shared in FULL color. Some of the Barbie biographies (for lack of a better word) just have black and white photographs. Yes, the narrative might be more entertaining. But it's the PICTURES OF BARBIE that makes you want to keep flipping through the pages.
I should also note that I am and always will be a believer that Barbie is meant to be played with and loved. This view puts me at slight odds with the strict collector looking for everything to be in a never been opened box.
© 2016 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
Blog: Monica Gupta (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Articles, Videos, Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, swachh bharat abhiyan progress, swachh bharat mission, स्वच्छ भारत अभियान, स्वच्छ भारत अभियान पर संवाद, स्वच्छ भारत अभियान पर स्लोगन, स्वच्छता की आवश्यकता को समझना होगा, Add a tag
स्वच्छता की आवश्यकता को समझना होगा – बैंको की लम्बी कतार तो हम सभी ने देखी और झेली है पर कूडा डालने के लिए भी कतार है ? ये कहां और किसलिए ? जनता को स्वच्छ्ता के प्रति उत्साहित करने का शानदार तरीका. कूडा मशीन में डालो और ईनाम पाओ … रिवर्स वेंडिंग मशीन की […]
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JacketFlap tags: 2000, adult fiction, adult mystery, Anne Perry, books reviewed in 2016, Historical, library book, mystery, Add a tag
Slaves of Obsession. Anne Perry. 2000. 368 pages. [Source: Library]
First sentence: "We are invited to dine with Mr. and Mrs. Alberton," Hester said in reply to Monk's questioning gaze across the breakfast table.
Premise/plot: William and Hester Monk attend a dinner, and, soon most of the guests will be caught up in a murder case. The victim--one of several--is Mr. Alberton. And it looks like he's been killed by someone he knew, someone he entertained in his own home. Monk isn't directly on the murder case, so to speak, but he's hired by Mrs. Alberton to find her missing daughter and bring her back home, no matter what. And the number one suspect in the case is the daughter's love-interest. So chances are, if you find one you may find the other. So Hester and Monk have their hands full in this one. It takes place on TWO continents. (The daughter has fled to the United States....)
My thoughts: I really am enjoying this series again. I really like seeing Hester and William settle down into married life. I really love seeing these two love and respect and cherish one another! Yet the romance in the book is never in-your-face or time-consuming. Instead it is in the background, subtle. The issue in this book is "slavery" and whether it's right or wrong to sell guns to the South. Does someone who sells guns for a living have a moral obligation to sell guns only to people whom he agrees 100% with? Does he have the right to refuse to sell guns to interested buyers because he finds their cause distasteful? Who is really capable of deciding which causes are good or bad?
© 2016 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
Happy Monday! There is only one new release this week with an interview, THE SECRET OF A HEART NOTE by Stacey Lee! Don't forget to check it out below!
Happy Reading,
Shelly, Sam, Jocelyn, Martina, Erin, Susan, Michelle, Laura, Anisaa, and Kristin
YA BOOK GIVEAWAYS LAST WEEK: WINNERS
Cursed by R.L. Stine: Melissa P.MORE YOUNG ADULT FICTION IN STORES NEXT WEEK WITH AUTHOR INTERVIEWS
The Secret of a Heart Note
by Stacey Lee
Hardcover
Katherine Tegen Books
Released 12/27/2016
An evocative novel about a teen aroma expert who uses her extrasensitive sense of smell to mix perfumes that help others fall in love while protecting her own heart at all costs.
Sometimes love is right under your nose. As one of only two aromateurs left on the planet, sixteen-year-old Mimosa knows what her future holds: a lifetime of weeding, mixing love elixirs, and matchmaking—all while remaining incurably alone. For Mim, the rules are clear: falling in love would render her nose useless, taking away her one great talent. Still, Mimosa doesn’t want to spend her life elbow-deep in soil and begonias. She dreams of a normal high school experience with friends, sports practices, debate club, and even a boyfriend. But when she accidentally gives an elixir to the wrong woman and has to rely on the lovesick woman’s son, the school soccer star, to help fix the situation, Mim quickly begins to realize that falling in love isn’t always a choice you can make.
At once hopeful, funny, and romantic, Stacey Lee’s The Secret of a Heart Note is a richly evocative coming-of-age story that gives a fresh perspective on falling in love and finding one’s place in the world.
Author Question: What is your favorite thing about The Secret of a Heart Note?
My favorite thing in writing Heart Note was coming up with novel ways to describe smells. My main character, Mim, with her super sensitive nose, processes the world through smell. Unfortunately, the English language is quite limited when it comes to describing smells. The same thing is true with taste. My inlaws often use Chinese words to describe a particular taste (we do love our food!), and when I ask for the English translation, frequently, none exists. For more exacting descriptions of taste or smell, we must rely on comparisons (e.g., this medicine tastes like a skunk died in my mouth; that perfume smells like cotton candy.)
For Heart Note, I used comparisons, but I also tried to stretch the language to 'suggest' smells, like, "there's a buttery roundness to the scent, like it's used to sunshine." Another thing I did was to read wine descriptions. Enologists are experts in the art of describing taste, and my descriptions often have a 'wine' feel: "It had a dominant of miso soup, osha beats, a lick of buffalo weed, not too spicy, with a silvery finish."
Purchase The Secret of a Heart Note at Amazon
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MORE YOUNG ADULT NOVELS NEW IN STORES NEXT WEEK
Endgame: Rules of the Game
by James Frey and Nils Johnson-Shelton
Hardcover
HarperCollins
Released 12/27/2016
The explosive final novel in the Endgame trilogy. Two keys have been found. The strongest Players are left. One final key remains to win Endgame and save the world.
For Sarah, Jago, Aisling, Maccabee, Shari, An, and Hilal, Endgame has reached its final phase. The third key, Sun Key, is all that stands between one Player saving their line—or perishing along with the rest of the world. And only one can win.
West Bengal, India: Maccabee is Playing to win. He has Earth Key and Sky Key and he is determined to find Sun Key. But in Endgame, fate can turn in the blink of an eye. He must Play carefully. He must watch his back.
Kolkata, India: An Liu is Playing for death. His goal: stop Endgame, and take the world down with him.
Sikkim, India: For Aisling, Sarah, Jago, Shari, and Hilal, their mission is to stop Endgame. Sun Key must not be found.
No matter what they’re Playing for, all of the remaining Players have one thing in common: they will end the game, but on their own terms.
Purchase Endgame: Rules of the Game at Amazon
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Yesterday was Christmas, and it was all that Christmas should be. On Christmas Eve we had our traditional buffet dinner at 4:00, so that Christopher could head off early to church to finish rehearsing for his role as pianist for the high-profile Christmas Eve "carols and lessons" service. This was a "bucket list" item for him - to play on this most holy evening - and his proud mother can report that he performed beautifully.
Christmas morning two little elves appeared in matching elf pajamas.
(I still can't stop some of my pictures from appearing rotated despite saving them a thousand times in a re-rotated position!).
Now it is the Day After Christmas, and I'm totally ready for it to be New Year's Day. I'm ready to start my Whole New Life. I'm planning for January to be Buy Nothing Month, where I purchase absolutely nothing except for food and a minimal amount of gas for the car, to offset the money hemorrhage of the holidays. I'm planning for January to launch a year of dazzling writing productivity where I've set myself the goal of submitting one substantial manuscript (creative or scholarly) every single month. I have my little notebook for 2017 all ready to start listing my year's goals in every aspect of my life. I wish it were 2017 right now!
So I decided: why not start my new year today? If Auntie Mame could sing of needing a little Christmas, right this very minute, candles in the window, carols on the spinet, I can proclaim my own need for a little New Years's, right this very minute. Instead of hauling out the holly and slicing up the fruitcake, I'm going to take a good long healthful walk, read a mentee's manuscript, and - gasp - face revisions on a major manuscript of my own. And spend nothing, not one cent! And eat leftover broccoli instead of leftover Christmas cookies! (Well, maybe just a few leftover Christmas cookies).
Happy New Year! May 2017 be a year of love and joy - and if you're enraptured by work like me, promise and productivity - for all of us.
Blog: Through the Looking Glass Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's book reviews, Picture Book Monday, Picture books, Winter books, Add a tag
A warm winter
Blog: Shannon Whitney Messenger (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Links, Marvelous Middle Grade Monday, Middle Grade, Add a tag
Super light week this week, what with the holidays. But there are still a few MMGMs floating around the blogosphere. So here are the links:
- A Bookshelf Monstrosity is talking about BLEED, BLISTER, PUKE, AND PURGE: THE DIRTY SECRETS BEHIND EARLY AMERICAN MEDICINE. Click HERE to see what they thought.
- Renell Aysling is sharing a list of books that made her love reading as a kid. Click HERE to check it out!
- Carl at Boys Rule Boys Read! has some special messages for everyone during these holiday weeks. Click HERE to read them.
- Justin Talks Books is highlighting DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: DOUBLE DOWN! Click HERE to see what he thought
- Greg Pattridge wants everyone to CLICK HERE TO START. Click HERE to read his review.
- The Mundie Moms are always huge supporters of middle grade. Click HERE for their Mundie Kids site.
- Shannon O'Donnell is back--and planning a weekly MMGM again. Click HERE to see what she's talking about this week.
- Karen Yingling also always has some awesome MMGM recommendations for you. Click HERE to which ones she picked this time.
- Joanne Fritz always has an MMGM for you. Click HERE to see what she's talking about this week
If you miss the cutoff, you are welcome to add your link in the comments on this post so people can find you, but I will not have time to update the post. Same goes for typos/errors on my part. I do my best to build the links correctly, but sometimes deadline-brain gets the best of me, and I'm sorry if it does. For those wondering why I don't use a Linky-widget instead, it's a simple matter of internet safety. The only way I can ensure that all the links lead to safe, appropriate places for someone of any age is if I build them myself. It's not a perfect system, but it allows me to keep better control.
Thank you so much for being a part of this awesome meme, and spreading the middle grade love!
Blog: Kelly Hashway's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: adult, holiday, Lies We Tell, Monday Mishmash, mystery, Add a tag
- Christmas I had a great Christmas and I hope you did too if you celebrate it.
- Proofing I finished proofing Lies We Tell. I'm very excited to venture into adult mystery/suspense. The book will release in April.
- Winter Break My daughter is home for Christmas break this week, so I'll be spending most of my time with her, which is why this Mishmash is shorter than usual.
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Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Best Books, Best Books of 2016, 2016 biographies, 31 days 31 lists, biographies, Add a tag
During the 2016 Boston Globe-Horn Book Colloquium Carol Boston Weatherford and Ekua Holmes spoke together about the art of writing about other people. During the speech they mentioned how part of their job is to break down “the canonical boundaries of biography.” Too often kids read the same biographies about the same people over and over again. The canon, such as it is. There were a bunch of perfectly good biographies out about those folks this year. I prefer the more obscure figures and the people who don’t usually get studied.
On that note, here are the folks from 2016 that got some stellar bios. The ones you probably shouldn’t miss:
2016 Unique Biographies for Kids
Ada Lovelace, Poet of Science: The First Computer Programmer by Diane Stanley, ill. Jessie Hartland
Ada’s Ideas: The Story of Ada Lovelace, the World’s First Computer Programmer by Fiona Robinson
It’s a twofer! Ask for one Ada Lovelace biography, get two! Which one do I like better? According to my notes . . . my notes say I liked both of them equally. We had some in 2015 as well, it occurs to me. Does that mean we’ll get even more in 2017? Stranger things have happened.
By the way, I heard the most amusing complaint the other day that Ada gets all the bios for kids and Babbage gets none. I’ll just let you process that one in your brain yourself.
Anything But Ordinary: The True Story of Adelaide Herman, Queen of Magic by Mara Rockliff, ill. Iacopo Bruno
Lots of reason to love this. Rockliff did a lot of original research to learn about this early female magician and her most magnificent and infamous trick. Iacopo Brunos’ art just add to the lustre, since he produces gorgeous art and gets very little public appreciation for it. Luscious.
Are You an Echo?: The Lost Poetry of Misuzu Kaneko by David Jacobson, ill. Toshikado Hajiri, translations by Sally Ito and Michiko Tsuboi
How many other lists can I get this on? At least one more, I think . . .
Cloth Lullaby: The Woven Life of Louise Bourgeois by Amy Novesky, ill. Isabelle Arsenault
You might remember Cloth Lullaby from such previous lists as 2016 Calde-nots (solely because the illustrator doesn’t reside here). It’s hard to pinpoint why exactly I like it so much, apart from the art. Maybe it’s the fact that it shows that art springs from inside you and comes out in all kinds of original, eclectic, interesting ways.
Dorothea’s Eyes by Barb Rosenstock, ill. Gerard DuBois
Photographers do get pic bios, but I’m still holding out for Weegee. Dorothea Lange will do in a pinch, though.
Esquivel! Space-Age Sound Artist by Susan Wood, ill. Duncan Tonatiuh
I love that I live in a world where a picture biography of a lounge music composer can even exist.
Fancy Party Gowns: The Story of Ann Cole Lowe by Deborah Blumenthal, ill. Laura Freeman
I had this sitting on my desk and someone walked past, saw the dresses, and then started cooing about the ones they knew. Very cool.
The First Step: How One Girl Put Segregation on Trial by Susan E. Goodman, ill. E.B. Lewis
A biography of a kid! Once in a while a child will be assigned such a thing. Ruby Bridges can only be discussed by so many children. Nice to have some (much earlier) alternatives.
Gabe: A Story of Me, My Dog, and the 1970s by Shelley Gill, ill. Marc Scheff
Technically this is an autobiography and not a biography but the psychedelic, nutty, dog-loving nature of this (which is to say, its awesomeness) compels me to include it.
I Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark by Debbie Levy, ill. Elizabeth Baddeley
The first, I am sure, of many such biographies to exist.
Indian Boyhood: The True Story of a Sioux Upbringing by Charles Eastman, ill. Heidi M. Rasch
A new edition of a title that was released more than a hundred years ago. Debbie Reese included an earlier republication on her list of Recommended Children’s/YA/Reference/Resource Books, FYI.
The Kid from Diamond Street: The Extraordinary Story of Baseball Legend Edith Houghton by Audrey Vernick, ill. Steven Salerno
Poor sports books. They just don’t really come out all that often. Particularly if they’re about women. This one was fun and light-hearted, something we could all read once in a while.
Martin Luther “Here I Stand” by Geraldine Elschner, translated by Kathryn Bishop
2017 will mark the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. If you’ve any kind of an older kid who wants to know more about that, start here.
Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service by Annette Bay Pimentel, ill. Rich Lo
A rather fascinating story of the Chinese-American chef who worked in what many might consider impossible circumstances. We do not HAVE a huge number of older Chinese-American biographies on our shelves. But we have this now, and that is good.
The Music in George’s Head: George Gershwin Creates Rhapsody in Blue by Suzanne Slade, ill. Stacy Innerst
Very fun and peppy. I would have loved an accompanying CD but I suppose it’s not too hard to find the titular song if you really look.
A Poem for Peter: The Story of Ezra Jack Keats and the Creation of The Snowy Day by Andrea Davis Pinkney, ill. Lou Fancher & Steve Johnson
A lovely ode to a lovely man.
Presenting Buffalo Bill: The Man Who Invented the Wild West by Candace Fleming
I still think the Newbery committee needs to seriously consider this book. Distinguished hardly even covers it.
Radiant Child: The Story of Young Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat by Javaka Steptoe
And speaking of major literary awards, oh, Caaaaaaaldecott committee . . .
Sachiko: A Nagasaki Bomb Survivor’s Story by Caren Stelson
Nominated for a National Book Award, it’s amazing. And, very unfortunately, very timely at this precise moment in history.
She Stood for Freedom: The Untold Story of a Civil Rights Hero, Joan Trumpauer Mulholland by Loki Mulholland & Angela Fairwell, ill. Charlotta Janssen
A Civil Rights activist has her story told, and published, by her own children. And what did YOU get your mom this holiday season, hmmmm?
A Spy Called James: The True Story of James Lafayette, Revolutionary War Double Agent by Anne Rockwell, ill. Floyd Cooper
Basically, you hand this book to the kids currently obsessed with Hamilton. LOTS of Lafayette for them to enjoy, and a hero worth remembering.
Step Right Up: How Doc and Jim Key Taught the World About Kindness by Donna Janell Bowman, ill. Daniel Minter
I wish I had reviewed this book this year. I’m not a horsey girl, and even I thik this is an amazing story. Basically it challenges our ideas of what an animal can and cannot learn while celebrating a pretty fascinating man as well.
Ticktock Banneker’s Clock by Shana Keller, ill. David C. Gardner
When I was a kid I had to memorize a song about Benjamin Banneker. These kids no one ever seems to study him. I’m just pleased that there’s a new bio of him out now. Let’s get more!
What Milly Did by Elise Moser, ill. Scot Ritchie
What did she do? Basically made it possible for you to recycle your plastic. You’re welcome.
When Grandma Gatewood Took a Hike by Michelle Houts, ill. Erica Magnus
And in other elderly woman news, Gatewood became famous for hiking more than any other person in the country. Crazy inspiring story, this.
Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions by Chris Barton, ill. Don Tate
Geez, I loved this book. I love books that celebrate real inventors and Barton makes the guy sound so approachable. You’ll love him by the time you get to the end.
The William Hoy Story by Nancy Churnin, ill. Jez Tuya
Not the first Hoy bio I’ve ever seen, but I’m happy we’ve a variety to choose from now.
You Never Heard of Casey Stengel?! by Jonah Winter, ill. Barry Blitt
How crazy is it that this is the first picture book biography of the guy I’ve ever encountered? Winter has a blast with the subject matter. I wonder if he’ll ever consider doing one of Yogi Berra . . .
Interested in the other lists of the month? Here’s the schedule so that you can keep checking back:
December 1 – Board Books
December 2 – Board Book Adaptations
December 3 – Nursery Rhymes
December 4 – Picture Book Readalouds
December 5 – Rhyming Picture Books
December 6 – Alphabet Books
December 7 – Funny Picture Books
December 8 – Calde-Nots
December 9 – Picture Book Reprints
December 10 – Math Picture Books
December 11 – Bilingual Books
December 12 – International Imports
December 13 – Books with a Message
December 14 – Fabulous Photography
December 15 – Fairy Tales / Folktales
December 16 – Oddest Books of the Year
December 17 – Older Picture Books
December 18 – Easy Books
December 19 – Early Chapter Books
December 20 – Graphic Novels
December 21 – Poetry
December 22 – Fictionalized Nonfiction
December 23 – American History
December 24 – Science & Nature Books
December 25 – Transcendent Holiday Titles
December 26 – Unique Biographies
December 27 – Nonfiction Picture Books
December 28 – Nonfiction Chapter Books
December 29 – Novel Reprints
December 30 – Novels
December 31 – Picture Books
Blog: prime time rhyme (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Here's a handy chart to help you add emotion to your manuscript through body language.
http://writerswrite.co.za/cheat-sheets-translate-emotions-into-written-body-language
Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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So Kailana (The Written Word) and I are teaming up again...this time to celebrate CHRISTMAS. 25 days of answering questions! You are definitely welcome to join in on the fun!
What I love most about Christmas...Christmas greetings!
Merry Christmas to you all!
© 2016 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
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छुट्टियों के दिन – छुट्टियों का आनंद- छुट्टियां शुरु हो गई और घूमने जाने का प्रोग्राम भी … कुछ लोग तो अपने अपने डेस्टीनेशन पर पहुंच भी चुके होंगें… कुछ लोगो का बन रहा होगा छुट्टियों के दिन – छुट्टियों का आनंद तो मैने सोचा कि कुछ सहेलिया घूम कर आई हैं उन्हीं से पूछती […]
The post छुट्टियों के दिन – छुट्टियों का आनंद appeared first on Monica Gupta.
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Blog: Becky's Book Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Peppa Pig and the Day at Snowy Mountain. 2014. Candlewick. 32 pages. [Source: Review copy]
First sentence: Peppa and George wake up one day and look out the window. IT'S SNOWING! Hurrah! They can't wait to go outside.
Premise/plot: Peppa Pig and her family (Mummy, Daddy, and George) spend a LOVELY day on Snowy Mountain skiing, skating, and sledding. Adventures and misadventures are had by all. Many characters are there on the mountain too. (For example, Madame Gazelle, Miss Rabbit, etc.)
My thoughts: I enjoyed this one. If you have seen an episode or two of the television series you know exactly what kind of comedy to expect. Peppa sings a song. Mummy and Daddy pig end up covered in snow. And there's a lot of laughing. For example, when Peppa and George want to sled down the mountain but don't have a sled, Peppa decides that DADDY PIG makes a good sled. Away they go.
Overall, this one is worth the read IF you already love Peppa Pig.
Text: 4 out of 5
Illustrations: 3 out of 5
Total: 7 out of 10
© 2016 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
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MERRY CHRISTMAS to all! Have a pleasant watch of Rick Steve's Christmas in Europe. Click the image to watch on YouTube.
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mwah tsup and kiss kiss ms vee.
love
kj