What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Reading Challenge, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 45
1. Yes We Crab Reading Challenge: Final Update


It's the end of February which means the end of Yes We Crab! I wanted to read 20 books this month and post once a week. My blogging goal failed, but I did make my reading goal of 20 books-yay!

Here's what I finished the month up with:

 My Dog's a Chicken by Susan McElroy Montanari, illustrated by Anne Wilsdorf
When a young girl isn't allowed to get a dog, she decides she'll turn a chicken into a dog. A pretty cute picture book for the K-2 crowd.

 A Big Surprise for Little Card by Charise Mericle Harper, illustrated by Anna Raff

-My new favorite book to read at Library-themed outreach events and storytimes! This is a unique look at libraries through the eyes of a library card. And it's adorable!

 Swap! by Steve Light

-I just love Steve Light's pen and ink illustrations. Did you ever play that game where you started out with something small then had to go all around to try and upgrade and swap your item for something bigger? That's what this reminded me of-only with pirates.

 Whoops! by Suzi Moore, illustrated by Russell Ayto

-A new pick for storytime. Three animals who can't make any sounds seek out a lady with a spell that might help-only things keep going wrong. This is a perfect read-aloud with a hilarious ending.

 Peep and Egg I'm Not Hatching by Laura Gehl, illustrated by Joyce Wan

-A very cute tale about having courage perfect for the preschool set. Plus it's illustrated by Joyce Wan so you know Peep and Egg are adorable.

 No, No, Gnome! by Ashly Anstee

-Who can resist gnomes? I love them! This is a nice gardening tale with a gnome twist. I'm saving for when I get all the requests for Spring/garden/planting books. 

 Snappsy the Alligator (Did Not Ask to Be in This Book) by Julie Falatko, illustrated by Tim Miller

-Move over Mo Willems and Bob Shea! Perfect for fans of books that break the fourth wall and have a great sense of humor. I'm planning on writing more about this one-it's a great storytime option and read aloud!

 The New Guy (And Other Senior Year Distractions) by Amy Spalding

-Contemporary YA Romance. Reviewed for Booklist

 A Tiny Piece of Sky by Shwan K. Stout 

-Historical MG-a great read for middle grade to compare historical events (thoughts and actions towards German-Americans in 1940s) to now. Reviewed for AudioFile.

 Love, Lies and Spies by Cindy Anstey

-Regency YA romance-a tounge-in-cheek look at the regency era. Reviewed for Booklist.

 Raymie Nightingale by Kate DiCamillo

-Another Kate DiCamillo novel-and it's brilliant! More to come soon when I write a longer review!

How did you do on your Yes We Crab Goals? Any great reads you found this month?












0 Comments on Yes We Crab Reading Challenge: Final Update as of 2/29/2016 8:35:00 AM
Add a Comment
2. February Reading Challenge: Yes We Crab!


Caldecott is over, family birthdays are over for a few months, and life is starting to get back into a routine that doesn't include piles of picture books every evening. (Well, at least picture books to take notes with-Toddler GreenBean ensures we have piles of picture books to read every night!!)

I really want to get back to reading for fun and reading chapter books again, but I feel so overwhelmed and I don't know where to start! Enter my wonderful friends and our February Reading Challenge-Yes We Crab!

Five years ago I met these lovely ladies at ALA Midwinter: Angie, Abby, Katie, Kelly and Drea  I often tell people that our fist meeting was like going to summer camp, meeting your best friend, and then having to go back home. Luckily, we get to see each other at least once and sometimes twice a year at ALA and we keep up with each other via Twitter, Email, Facebook. We are always sharing program ideas, library talk, and what we're reading. So when the others all said they wanted to do a reading challenge, we all jumped at the chance and Yes We Crab was born.

It's easy to join in! All you have to do is set a goal for yourself and follow along. Post your progress on Twitter with the hastag #yeswecrab and we'll cheer you along! Your goal can be about reading, about keeping up with blogging-anything! 

My Yes We Crab Goal: Read 20 books (and yes, picture books totally count!!!!) and write a blog post at least once a week. 

What's your February Reading Goal? Can we do it? Yes We Crab!

0 Comments on February Reading Challenge: Yes We Crab! as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
3. My GoodReads 2014 Reading Challenge Stats

good-reading-stats

Here’s a link to the books I’ve read this year thus far.

I’m certain I wouldn’t have read this many books so far this year without this challenge. I like to challenge myself – I like deadlines because they (sometimes) push me to actually GET SOMETHING DONE.

Can you believe the year is half over?!?


Filed under: Book Corner

0 Comments on My GoodReads 2014 Reading Challenge Stats as of 6/28/2014 12:17:00 PM
Add a Comment
4. Read Along Schedule: The Lucy Maud Montgomery Journals

Planning to join the LMM Journal Read Along? Here's what you need to do:

Find the books
Try your public library, or order through your local indie, Amazon, or Barnes and Noble. Now that they're available in paperback, they're more affordable and easier to track down.

Save the dates
Volume I: 
introductory post - Friday, February 1
discussion - Monday, February 25

Volume II:
introductory post - Monday, April 1
discussion - Monday, April 29

Volume III:
introductory post - Monday, June 3
discussion - Friday, June 28

Volume IV:
introductory post - Friday, August 2
discussion - Friday, August 30

Volume V:
introductory post - Wednesday, 2 September
discussion - Wednesday, 30 September
                
Read to share
Jot down anything that sparks your interest and join the discussion! And please spread the word. Twitter hashtag #lmmjournals


2 Comments on Read Along Schedule: The Lucy Maud Montgomery Journals, last added: 1/16/2013
Display Comments Add a Comment
5. 2012: A Year of Reading

Here's a look at everything I've read this year!

Clear Off Your Shelves Challenge
Debut Author Challenge
Re-Reads 
** Read Alouds
  
  1. The Story of Beautiful Girl - Rachel Simon
  2. Agatha Christie: An Autobiography - Agatha Christie (NF)
  3. Scarlet - A. C. Gaughen (YA)
  4. One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are - Ann Voskamp (NF)
  5. Swindle - Gordon Korman (MG)**
  6. Breadcrumbs - Anne Ursu (MG)
  7. Wonderstruck - Brian Selznick (MG)**
  8. The Wilder Life: My Adventures in the Lost World of Little House on the Prairie - Wendy McClure (NF)
  9. A Kingdom Strange: The Brief and Tragic History of the Lost Colony of Roanoke - James Horn (NF)
  10. Wonder - R. J. Palacio (MG)
  11. Circle of Secrets - Kimberley Griffiths Little (MG)
  12. A Lady Cyclist's Guide to Kashgar - Suzanne Joinson
  13. Chained - Lynne Kelly (MG)
  14. Starters - Lissa Price (YA)
  15. The Fault in Our Stars - John Green (YA)
  16. Toilet Paper Tigers - Gordon Korman (MG)**
  17. Zoobreak - Gordon Korman (MG)**
  18. Love in Mid-Air - Kim Wright Wiley 
  19. The Bee-Loud Glade - Steve Himmer
  20. The One and Only Ivan - Katherine Applegate (MG)
  21. Wildflowers in Winter - Katie Ganshert
  22. Touch Blue - Cynthia Lord (MG)
  23. Under the Never Sky - Veronica Rossi (YA)
  24. A Voice for Kanzas - Debra MacArthur (MG)
  25. The Gathering Storm - Robin Bridges (YA)
  26. A Summer to Die - Lois Lowry (YA)
  27. Where the Broken Heart Still Beats - Carolyn Meyer (YA)
  28. The No-Brainer Wardrobe - Hayley Morgan (NF)
  29. All Over But the Shoutin' - Rick Bragg (NF)
  30. New Found Land - Alan Wolf (YA)
  31. If I Lie - Corrine Jackson (YA)
  32. Sister - Rosamund Lupton
  33. Emily's Dress and Other Missing Things (YA)
  34. Hound Dog True - Linda Urban (MG)
  35. Second Sight: An Editor's Talks on Writing, Revising, and Publishing Books for Children and Young Adults  - Cheryl B. Klein (NF)
  36. Glory Be - Augusta Scattergood (MG)
  37. A Breath of Eyre - Eve Marie Mont (YA)
  38. The Mysterious Affair at Styles - Agatha Christie
  39. Sanctuary - Agatha Christie
  40. The Thank You Room - Serenity Bohon (NF)
  41. Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
  42. The Wild Wood - Julie Anne Nelson (YA)
  43. Selkirk's Island: The True and Strange Adventures of the Real Robinson Crusoe - Diana Souhami (NF)
  44. Crossed - Ally Condie (YA)
  45. The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to our Brains - Nicholas Carr (NF)
  46. The Ruins of Us - Keija Parssinen
  47. Where Things Come Back - John Corey Whaley (YA)
  48. Grave Mercy - Robin LaFevers (YA)
  49. Small Medium at Large - Joanne Levy (MG)
  50. The Mapmaker and the Ghost - Sarvenaz Tash (MG)**
  51. Chime - Franny Billingsley (YA)
  52. The Case of the Deadly Ha-Ha Game (MG)**
  53. Horton Halfpott: or, The Fiendish Mystery of Smugwick Manor; or, The Loosening of M'Lady Luggertuck's Corset - Tom Angleberger (MG)
  54. Cryer's Cross - Lisa McMann (YA)
  55. A Monster Calls - Patrick Ness (YA)
  56. Remarkable - Lizzie K. Foley (MG)
  57. Paper Covers Rock - Jenny Hubbard (YA)
  58. Code Name Verity - Elizabeth Wein (YA)
  59. Small Damages - Beth Kephart (YA)
  60. Temple Grandin: How the Girl Who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World - Temple Grandin, Sy Montgomery (MG/NF)
  61. Summer of the Gypsy Moths - Sara Pennypacker (MG)
  62. One for the Murphys - Lynda Mullaly Hunt (MG)
  63. The Power of Habit - Charles Duhigg (NF)
  64. Liar and Spy - Rebecca Stead (MG)
  65. Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can't Stop Talking - Susan Cain (NF)
  66. The Head in Edward Nugent's Hand: Roanoke's Forgotten Indians - Michael Leroy Oberg (NF)
  67. Fracture - Megan Miranda (YA)
  68. Inside Out and Back Again - Thanhha Lai (MG)
  69. Writing the Breakout Novel - Donald Maas (NF)
  70. Ender in Exile - Orson Scott Card
  71. The Unnameables - Ellen Booraem (MG)
  72. Gone Girl - Gillian Flynn
  73. How to Save a Life - Sara Zarr (YA)
  74. Auracle - Gina Rosati (YA)
  75. The Christian Life: A Doctrinal Introduction - Sinclair Ferguson (NF)
  76. All is Well - Kristin Embry Litchman (MG)
  77. The False Prince - Jennifer Nielsen (MG)
  78. One Thousand White Women - Jim Fergus
  79. The Absolute Value of Mike - Kathryn Erskine (MG)
  80. The Brides of Rollrock Island - Margo Lanagan (YA)
  81. The Girl of Fire and Thorns - Rae Carson (YA)
  82. The Great Unexpected - Sharon Creech (MG)

Stats for the year:
adult titles: 13.8%
I made a point to read more adult titles than I did last year, and I plan to continue to do this. These last few years I've let this aspect of my reading lag, and I've felt the ramifications of feeling undernourished as a reader. Never again!

non-fiction: 19.5%
  • faith: 2.4%
  • research : 2.4%
  • craft : 2.4%
  • pleasure read: 12%
Though not the genre with the highest percentage, this is truly the year of non-fiction for me. I'm not usually one who reads non-fiction for pleasure, yet look at all those books I read just because they piqued my interest! I'd love to keep this balance in my reading for the rest of my life.

middle grade : 34%
My fist love and my primary area of study, this is no surprise to me.

young adult: 31%
Almost every young adult title I've read has either been a debut or recent release. Interesting.

debuts: 18%
If you're looking closely at my list, you'll see the numbers and percentages don't jive. That's because two books that didn't qualify for the 2012 Debut Challenge were still debuts. 

picture books: ??
Foolishly, I've never kept a steady record of the picture books I've read. The last two years have been gap years for me, as my boys have started to move beyond this phase in their personal reading, and together we read middle grade. I've spent the last few months brushing up on titles I've missed and have enjoyed immensely what I've read. 

Goals for next year:
Only two. I'll discuss these during my next post.

What have you read this year? What patterns have you seen emerge?

10 Comments on 2012: A Year of Reading, last added: 1/4/2013
Display Comments Add a Comment
6. Plans for Poetry Month

April is poetry month, and the focus around here will be on (gasp!) verse novels. I've got plans, friends, and I hope you might join me!

reading goals: I plan on reading three verse novels during April, two young-adult historicals and one middle-grade contemporary.
    
blog posts: I'll run posts reading and writing verse novels, share quotes from verse novelists, include comprehensive lists of books out there, and share my thoughts on the books above. 

your part: Want to participate? Here are a few ways you can join in:

  • Commit to reading three verse novels during April. Sign up below, linking to a blog post where you list your three titles.
  • Consider writing a guest post about verse novels. The possibilities are endless: reviews on one of your three titles, what you do or don't like about verse novels, favorite stories in verse, quotes on poetry -- anything! Though my blog has a modest following (462 through Blogger and 485 through Feedburner), guest posts are a great way to draw attention to your own blog. Email me with ideas if you'd like to participate.
  • Spread the word! If you're reading along, be sure to link below. Talk it up through all your social media venues. Let readers know verse novels are accessible by writing about titles you love.
goodies: All who sign up and read their three titles* will be entered into a drawing. 
6 Comments on Plans for Poetry Month, last added: 3/26/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
7. Reminder: One Month Left...

Would you like to win a new hardcover copy of Tamora Pierce's newest short story collection, Tortall and Other Lands: A Collection of Tales?  If so, you're in luck.  There's still a month left to sign up to participate in the Tamora Tamora Pierce Reading Challenge.  You only have to read one book to qualify as long as you write some sort of wrap up when you have finished your challenge. 

For those of you who have signed up, how are you doing?  Are you going to make your goal by the end of Decemeber? 

I have three books left, Terrier, Bloodhound, and Tortall and Other Lands (on my Kindle).  Now if I can just finish them with all the other reading I have to finish by January...

A new linky will be up soon for those of you who are finished and want to write your wrap up posts. 

Tomorrow starts A Shady Glade Christmas, so don't forget to come back and check in for that. 

Happy reading everyone!

0 Comments on Reminder: One Month Left... as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
8. Update on Tamora Pierce Reading Challenge

So I have some good news for some of you. A couple weeks ago some of my readers stumbled across my Tamora Pierce Reading Challenge, only to express disappointment that they had discovered it so late.

I figured why not spread the joy, so the challenge has been extended until the end of the year! Which is good for me too, since because of other commitments (*cough* Cybils *cough*) I didn’t meet my goal yet, but am on track to finish by the end of the year. The challenge will now finish on December 31, 2011.

I’ve also found a prize for us. At the end of the year, one participant in the challenge will be randomly selected to receive a brand new hardcover copy of Tortall and Other Lands: A Collection of Tales, Ms. Pierce’s new book that came out last February.

If you want to win, you need to have signed up to participate in the challenge using Mr. Linky on the original page. And if you haven’t signed up yet, what are you waiting for?  Signups remain open for the length of the challenge.  It only takes 1 book to participate, and you can read that by January, can’t you?

1 Comments on Update on Tamora Pierce Reading Challenge, last added: 11/4/2011
Display Comments Add a Comment
9. Read Around the World: May Link-Up

Read Around the World Challenge

May Link-Up

readaroundtheworldchallenge150x150 Read Around the World: May Link Up

The Details:.
  • Anyone, even non-bloggers can participate. Open worldwide. If you don’t have a blog, just link to your Amazon, Good Reads or other review posting.
  • Link as many reviews as you’d like throughout the month. Each link to an actual review will earn you an entry in the drawing.
  • April’s Winner: I’m thrilled to tell you that Amy from Delightful Children’s Books
  • won the April contest and won a copy of Lucky’s Little Feather.
  • This month’s prize drawing will be done at 11:59 pm EST on May 31st so you have until that time to make entry/reviews counting for March’s prize drawing.
  • May’s prize: An assortment of ARCs (at least 3 books)
  • 0 Comments on Read Around the World: May Link-Up as of 1/1/1900
    Add a Comment
    10. Book Review: Resistance (Book 1)

    resistancecover 211x300 Book Review: Resistance (Book 1)Resistance (Book 1) by Carla Jablonski (Illustrated by Leland Purvis)

    Review by: Chris Singer

    About the author:

    Carla Jablonski is a novelist, performer, and playwright. She has written dozens of best-selling books for teenage and middle-grade readers.Her fiction has been translated into ten languages, and her plays have been performed in New York, Philadelphia, and Edinburgh, Scotland.  Her most recent books Thicker than Water and Silent Echoes were selected for the New York Public Llibraries “Books for the Teen Age” list.

    About the illustrator:

    Leland Purvis is a self-taught comics artist and writer. His major works include the anthology VOX, a creator-owned series called PUBO, and a graphic-novel biography of physicist Niels Bohr, Suspended In Language, written by Jim Ottaviani. Recent works include graphic novels in the Turning Points series from Simon & Schuster. He lives in Brooklyn, NY with his wife, a cat, and a turtle.

    About the book:

    Fighting on a secret front of World War II, Paul and Marie’s bucolic French country town is almost untouched by the ravages of WWII, but the siblings still live in the shadow of war. Their father is a Prisoner of War, kept hostage by the Germans. When their friend Henri’s parents disappear and Henri goes into hiding because of his Jewish ancestry, Paul and Marie realize they must take a stand. But how can they convince the French Resistance that even children can help in their fight against injustice?

    Resistance is the first voulme of a trilogy written by acclaimed teen author Carla Jablonski and illustrated by Leland Purvis.

    My take on the book:

    This is a really good introduction for middle school readers about life during the Nazi occupation of France. The beauty of the story is Jablonski’s choice to tell the story from the point-of-view of children. She does an excellent job of portraying the characters of Paul, Marie and Henri. Though often brave in their participation with the Resistance, you also see them squabble, bicker, complain and cry — just like your average kid. It’s the realistic portrayal of the children which I really appreciated. Although the children become part of the Resistance and are taking part in dangerous activities, you don’t see them acting like mini-adults. You see their weaknesses but also see the skills they bring to the Resistance (For example, Marie has an excellent memory and is very observant while Paul is a talented artist).

    Jablonski also does an excellent job of portraying the underlying tensions of life under occupation, where you’re never exactly sure who you can trust and once-trusted friends may now be your enemy. This aspect of the book is particularly compelling and I think a really good introduction for students about the idea of what exactly living under occupation is and how different lif

    0 Comments on Book Review: Resistance (Book 1) as of 3/1/2011 12:06:00 AM
    Add a Comment
    11. Reading the World Challenge 2011

    Well, here it is at last, this year’s PaperTigers Reading the World Challenge. I know some of you have been on tenterhooks but there’s one advantage to announcing it a little late. All your other challenges should be well assimilated by now, and adding one more shouldn’t be too much of a trial… Anyway, that’s my excuse and I’m sticking to it ;-)

    The Challenge for the last two years has revolved around geographical boundaries, as is perhaps to be expected of a World focused challenge – however, following deep consultation with Little Brother (9), we have come up with an extra geographical consideration this year. We have also decided to make the time factor as flexible as possible, in the hope that some teachers/librarians might be tempted to engage children in the Challenge during school term time. So without further ado, we present the PaperTigers Reading the World Challenge 2011:

    1. Choose six books from/about/by or illustrated by someone from different countries anywhere in the world, 3 of which must be in different continents.

    2. Choose one book from/about your city/district – as local and as relevant to your geographical setting as you can find.

    3. You should choose at least one book of each of the following: fiction, poetry and non-fiction.

    4. Have the books read aloud to you or read them yourself; share them as part of a book-group or in class. Combine your choices with other reading challenges.

    5. There is no time limit for this year’s Challenge, apart from completing it by the end of the year.

    Do join us, and keep us posted as to how you’re doing – we love reading all your posts. You can find lots of ideas in the PaperTigers Reviews and Reading Lists sections, as well as in many of our Personal Views – or do let us know your own suggestions.

    Happy Reading!

    And P.S. If anyone would like the code for adding the button to their blog, please email me – marjorie(at)papertigers(dot)org.

    0 Comments on Reading the World Challenge 2011 as of 1/1/1900
    Add a Comment
    12. Reading Challenge: Read Around the World

    readaroundtheworldchallenge Reading Challenge: Read Around the WorldOne of the things I love so much about children’s books is how they help children (and adults!) learn how to experience the world through the perspectives of others. With that in mind, one of my goals for Book Dads this year was to review more multicultural and ethnically diverse books. To help achieve this (and because I couldn’t find a current challenge elsewhere), I’ve decided to create the Read Around the World Challenge.

    THE BASICS:

  • The objective of the Read Around The World Challenge is to read to or with your kid(s) books written by authors from different countries.
  • Books read must be picture books, chapter books, and/or YA lit.
  • Print or eBook format is acceptable.
  • This is a Read Around the World Challenge and therefore is open to ANYONE worldwide.
  • You can join at anytime. Deadline to join is November 30, 2011 and the challenge runs from January 24, 2011 to December 31, 2011.
  • HOW TO PARTICIPATE:
    * Decide which challenge level you’ll be taking on (see below).
    * Make sure you grab the button above (right click to save it to your computer)
    * Write a post to let all your readers know you’re taking part in the challenge and at what level. Make sure to link back to this page with the button and/or text link.
    * If you have a blog, please use the Mr. Linky form below to enter into the challenge by entering the direct url/link to your challenge post url and either your name, blog name, or both in the form. Please only use the comment section to participate if you do not have a blog.
    * Submit your reviews as you complete them on the designated monthly post (Generally will be on the first Sunday of each month).

    CHALLENGE LEVELS:
    The Passport Reading ChallengeRead to or with your child a picture book, chapter book and/or YA lit book by an author from another country (Exclude your own of course).

    - Set a goal according to these levels:
    * Intercontinental Level — Read 10 or more books by authors from countries on 2 or more different continents
    * Savvy Traveler Level — Read 20 or more books by authors from countries on 3 or more different continents
    * Marco Polo Level — Read 35 or more books by authors from countries on 4 or more different continents
    * National Geographic Level — Read 50 or more books by authors count

    3 Comments on Reading Challenge: Read Around the World, last added: 1/25/2011
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    13. Verse Novel Challenge: The Final Month

    Just a reminder that those of you who signed up for my verse novel challenge have one month to finish your novels.

    What's the verse novel challenge? I'm glad you asked! Honestly, I started this challenge to become more well versed (sorry, couldn't help it!) in novels written as unrhymed poetry. My goal was to read a minimum of five novels-in-verse by the end of 2010I've read seven novels so far, and plan on reading two more.

    A number of you signed up to read along with me. One luck participant will win a future copy of my verse novel ARC, MAY B., once its printed (and things are more clear with the future of my book).*

    If you're interested in participating, there's still time to join! Just sign up here.

    And if you'd like to learn more about verse novels in general or are looking for some recommendations, stop by Valerie Geary's Something to Write About. She'll be focusing on verse novels all month.



    *By the contest's end, I will know what's going on. If for some reason MAY B. isn't to be released sometime soon, I will happily send the winner a verse novel of her choice.

    9 Comments on Verse Novel Challenge: The Final Month, last added: 12/10/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    14. Story Siren's Debut Author Challenge 2011

    I'm participating in the Story Siren's Debut Author Challenge for next year. Participants must read twelve middle-grade or young adult books by debut novelists by the end of December. This will be especially fun as almost all of the debuts are written by fellow Elevensies and members of The Class of 2k11.

    While I'm not listing the titles I plan to read ahead of time, I aim to tackle many more than the required twelve. Some novels I plan on purchasing, some I've downloaded to read through Simon and Schuster's e-galley* program, some I know will be so big they'll be easy to find at the library (even with our dismal local book purchase numbers), and some I'll borrow through the Class of 2k11 ARC* exchange.

    I'd love to be able to read everything coming out next year, but with close to 100 debuts, I know I won't make it. I will, though, share what I'm reading here. Please consider joining in!

    *Galleys and ARCs (advanced reader copies) are uncorrected proofs sent out to reviewers.

    10 Comments on Story Siren's Debut Author Challenge 2011, last added: 12/6/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    15. 2011 Debut Author Challenge


    So I participated in the 2010 Debut Author Challenge (I set a goal of 15 books and right now I'm at 24!) I love reading Debut books so of course I'm going to participate again next year! The challenge is hosted by The Story Siren and you can find more info on her site. Be sure to join in-the prize packs each month are very cool and you get to read lots of awesome YA!


    So what am I planning on reading?

    1. Unearthly by Cynthia Hand
    2. Across the Universe by Beth Revis
    3. Timeless by Alexandra Monir
    4. Choker by Elizabeth Woods
    5. How Lamar's Bad Prank Won a Bubba-Sized Trophy by Crystal Allen
    6. Rival by Sara Bennett-Wheeler
    7. A Touch Mortal by Leah Clifford
    8. Darkness Becomes Her by Kelly Keaton
    9. Entwined by Heather Dixon
    10. Clarity by Kim Harrington
    11. Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys
    12. Kat the Incorrigible by Stephanie Burgis
    13. Blood Magic by Tessa Gratton
    14. The Lipstick Laws by Amy Holder
    15. Divergent by Veronica Roth
    16. Awaken by Kate Kacvinsky
    17. Die for Me by Amy Plum
    18. The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson

    I'll add more to the list, but these are the ones that are on my radar!! What about you? What 2011 books are you looking forward to?


    7 Comments on 2011 Debut Author Challenge, last added: 11/24/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    16. Lisa Schroeder Interview and Giveaway

    How's it going, verse novel challenge participants? I have quite a treat for you today.

    I'm thrilled to share with you an interview with Lisa Schroeder. Stick around and enter to win a signed copy of her book, FAR FROM YOU.

    Far from You

    Can you tell us about FAR FROM YOU?

    It’s a book about 16 year-old Alice, who is struggling to come to terms with her step mother and new half-sister, as her dad has been able to move on after her mother’s death while Alice is still missing her terribly.


    What inspired you to write this story?

    With each of my stories there is usually a seed or two that sparks the book. And until I start writing, I’m not sure if it will work as a book or not.

    I had been thinking about the wonderful verse novel OUT OF THE DUST, by Karen Hesse, and how she did such a great job conveying the heat and the dust through her verse, and I thought, I bet a snowstorm would be a great thing to write about in verse as well. Especially since lots of dialogue doesn’t work well in a verse novel, and someone being trapped in a storm would allow for lots of inner reflection.

    I had also wanted to write a story about a girl who was a singer/songwriter, and a book with Alice in Wonderland elements had appealed to me as well. So I combined those three things and a book was made!

    How does verse serve this story best?

    For me, verse is all about atmosphere. I don’t know why other authors choose to write in verse, but I choose to do it because it helps me to create an atmosphere I can’t get with regular prose. After my agent read my first novel, I HEART YOU, YOU HAUNT ME, she wrote in her e-mail back, asking to set up a time to talk, that “the verse created such a unique atmosphere for the story.”

    It also allows me to get to the emotional truths of the story, and to accentuate them.


    You have successfully published three novels-in-verse. What is it about this technique that attracts you? Challenges you? Feels like the right fit for your writing?

    My strength is not beautiful, flowery prose. At times, I wish it were. I read Laini Taylor’s work, and the way she puts words and sentences together, and I’m in awe.

    I seem to do well trying to convey scenes, thoughts, emotions, etc. in a sparse, poetic way. I have always loved music, and in some ways, writing a novel-in-verse feels like writing a giant song to me. The rhythm and the flow and trying to say a lot in a few words – it’s challenging, absolutely, but my brain works well that way.

    I fought it, at first, when I HEART YOU, YOU HAUNT ME, my first verse novel, wanted to come out in verse. I thought, what am I doing? I don’t know how to write like this. But I decided to give it a try, and the novel poured out of me and I had a draft written in about six weeks. That little book, which my agent and I had a hard time placing because no one seemed quite sure what to do with it, is now in its 9th printing and over two years after it released, I st

    20 Comments on Lisa Schroeder Interview and Giveaway, last added: 7/20/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    17. Verse Novel Challenge: ALEUTIAN SPARROW

    For the five books I'm reading for my verse novel challenge, I'll not post reviews. Instead, I'll leave you with a feel for the work itself.

    Aleutian SparrowALEUTIAN SPARROW by Karen Hesse (Margaret K. McElderry, 2003)

    From the dust jacket:

    In June of 1942, seven months after attacking Pearl Harbor, the Japanese navy invaded Alaska's Aleutian Islands. For nine thousand years the Aleut people had lived and thrived on these treeless, windswept lands. Within days of the first attack, the entire native population living west of Unimak Island was gathered up and evacuated to relocation centers in the dense forests of Alaska's Southeast.

    With resilience, compassion and humor the Aleuts responded to the sorrows of upheaval and dislocation. This is Vera's story, but it is woven from the same faric as the stories of displaced people thoughtout history. It chronicles the struggle to survive and to keep community and heritage intact despite harsh conditions in an alien environment.

    In a luminous novel of unrhymed verse, Newbery winner karen Hesse brings to light this little-known episode from America's past.

    A peek inside:

    THINKING AHEAD
    Most of us dreamed of going Outside, hungry for a taste of
             life beyond the Aleutians.
    Few of us truly meant it, few of us ever really intended to
             leave the fog and the wind, the sun and the rain, the
             hunting and trapping and fishing, the easy welcome
             of neighbors.
    We never thought who we were was so dependent on where
             we were.
    But when we settle back into the quiet villages along the
             Aleutian beaches, who will we be after this?

    SEA CHANGE
    After three years of promises we are back
    Where the sun emerges from the galloping clouds,
    Where one moment the rain ices our hair and the next a
             rainbow arches over the volcano.
    Where early grass ripples in the wind and violets lead an
             advance of wildflowers across the treeless hills.

    It all comes back so quickly, the particular quality of the air
            where

    1 Comments on Verse Novel Challenge: ALEUTIAN SPARROW, last added: 6/16/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    18. Interview with Pat Brisson, author of THE BEST AND HARDEST THING

    The Best and Hardest Thing I first heard of Pat Brisson's newest book, THE BEST AND HARDEST THING, a YA novel-in-verse, from The Compulsive Reader. As I'm actively looking for books to read for my Verse Novel Challenge (and know some of you are, too), I thought I'd find out more.





    Can you tell us about THE BEST AND HARDEST THING?

    The Best and Hardest Thing is a novel- in-verse about Molly, 15-year-old sophomore who gives herself a makeover, after being described as “saintly” by a classmate, and sets out to attract the attention of senior Grady Dillon, a new guy in school. She winds up pregnant with very difficult decisions to make.


    What inspired you to write this story?

    I’m in a writers group with novelists and wanted to try my hand at one, too. As to the subject matter - some years back I was in a mentoring program at our local high school and was matched with a girl who’d had a baby when she was 14. That got me thinking about the situation and made me wonder what it would be like to go through an experience like that.


    Why did you decide to write this story as a novel-in-verse?

    As a picture book writer I was used to “writing short”, and couldn’t imagine how novelists hold so many characters, scenes, themes, etc in their heads for the duration of writing a book. I decided that a novel-in-verse was the way to go since it seemed like a lot of “writing short”.



    You have written numerous picture books and early readers. What has it been like to step into the world of young adult literature?

    It’s been exciting and challenging. I’m still trying to figure out how to reach out to that audience in ways other than the book, so I appreciate the chance to do this interview.


    And I'm glad I've had the opportunity, as well!  What books have shaped you as a reader and writer, from childhood to the present?

    Oh, my! I didn’t have many books as a child but I loved the Eloise books (and named the little sister in Bertie’s Picture Day and Hot Fudge Hero in her honor). I wasn’t much of a reader in elementary school or high school. I was an English major in college, but mostly read what was required, which was quite a bit but not of my own choosing.

    It wasn’t until I had children of my own and began to read picture bo

    9 Comments on Interview with Pat Brisson, author of THE BEST AND HARDEST THING, last added: 5/30/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    19. Verse Novel Challenge: LUDIE'S LIFE

    For the five books I'm reading for my verse novel challenge, I'll not post reviews. Instead, I'll leave you with a feel for the work itself.

    LUDIE'S LIFE, Cynthia Rylant (Harcourt, 2006)

    From the dust jacket:

    Cynthia Rylant returns to her home state of West Viriginia with this evocative collection of poems. In a powerful narrative that flows like a novel, we follow Ludie from childhood to falling in love and getting married, through the birth of her own children, and on into old age.

    This is the story of one woman's experiences in a hardscrabble coal-mining town, a story that brims with the universal themes of life, love, and family -- and all the joy, laughter, heartache, and loss that accompany them.

    A peek inside:

    Life was precarious.
    But Ludie was happy.
    Still pretty, in her loose cotton dresses,
    soft long hair,
    she knew who she was.
    And she had this sense
    that this was beautiful,
    this place and time.
    She loved wash day because she could be outside,
    a reason to be outside,
    the smell of maple leaves and honeysuckle in the air,
    a blue sky,
    the freshness of soap,
    and the satisfaction of crisp hot shirts on the line.
    She was not trapped here.
    She was not lost.
    And did she ever wish to be someone else,
    a woman in furs in New York City,
    or, closer to home,
    the mine owner's wife?
    She knew who she was.
    The cooking,
    the babies, the washing,
    waiting up for Rupe until two in the morning.
    No, she never wanted anything but this.
    She woke up every day
    and never wondered
    what she'd find to do with herself,
    never wondered
    why she'd been born in the first place,
    did not lie in bed
    and fret about the life she should have been living
    instead of this one.
    She would grow older
    and her children and grandchildren
    would try on this job and that one,
    this wife and that one,
    a different town,
    a different country,
    never really sure about who they were
    and what they were meant for.
    But until she was ninety,
    sitting on a porch and no one stopping by,
    Ludie would never doubt that
    she was worthy of life,
    God's child,
    and necessary.

    9 Comments on Verse Novel Challenge: LUDIE'S LIFE, last added: 5/13/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    20. Verse Novel Challenge Participants

    So far five of you have signed up for my Verse Novel Challenge.

    1. Read five novels-in-verse by December 31
    2. Create a post about the contest (and link to my original post)
    3. Report back in December on your books (nothing fancy...just share your titles and any thoughts you might like to add)
    4. One participant will win an ARC of MAY B., my debut historical novel-in-verse

    And the links:

    Stehpanie Cheryl
    Valerie Geary
    Rebecca Herman (no link yet)
    Sherrie Peterson (no link yet)
    Gabi

    Please join in!

    8 Comments on Verse Novel Challenge Participants, last added: 4/27/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    21. Verse Novel Challenge



    Every writer knows you are to read broadly in the genre you chose to write. I have a confession to make: before writing MAY B., I had read all of two verse novels -- Karen Hesse's OUT OF THE DUST and Sharon Creech's HEARTBEAT.

    And since then?

    I've only read three more: Virginia Euwer Wolff's TRUE BELIEVER, Susan Taylor Brown's HUGGING THE ROCK, and Jame Richard's THREE RIVERS RISING (come back May 3 for a chance to win a signed copy of 3RR).

    It's a bit embarrassing, really. I claim to love verse novels, but I've only read a few. I've sold a verse novel and plan to write more, but I've spent little time studying other authors who write in verse.

    So I'm starting a Verse Novel Challenge: I'll read at least five verse novels by the end of 2010 and post about them here. Want to join me? If so, write a post about the challenge and link back to this post. If you make it to five, I'll enter you in a drawing for a signed ARC of MAY B., which I should have to give away in early 2011. Leave a comment so I know who's participating.

    If you're not sure where to start, check out this wonderful list compiled by Susan Taylor Brown.

    Happy Reading!

    **CARVER: A LIFE IN POEMS will be my first book of the challenge.

    18 Comments on Verse Novel Challenge, last added: 4/22/2010
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    22. Clear Away the Clutter Challenge

    I've been meaning to post this for awhile now, but I've been busy with work. I've also been spending my free time trying to finish a project I'm working on rather than reading/blogging/writing reviews, but there you go. Plus, I've been waiting on new about a job... but more about that at another time.

    This post is my sign up for the Clear Away the Clutter Challenge, hosted by Kate from The Neverending Shelf. Which is how my TBR stack feels right now (neverending I mean).

    Anyway, you can check out all the details at the sign-up post, but the idea is that from March 1st to May 31st you read a stack of books you've designated to be "cleaned-out".

    I am going for the Organizer level, which is to clean out and read at least 15 books. So here's my list for the challenge:

    serafina67 *urgently requires life* by Susie Day
    Pish Posh by Ellen Potter
    They Never Came Back by Caroline B. Cooney
    Emily the Strange: The Lost Days
    The Great Race by Gary Blackwood
    Three Good Deeds by Vivian Vande Velde
    Click!: The Girl's Guide to Knowing What You Want and Making It Happen
    The Debs by Susan McBride
    Love, Lies and Texas Dips by Susan McBride
    Dayan's Birthday
    Both Side of Time by Caroline B. Cooney
    Blackthorn Winter by Kathryn Reiss
    The Humming of Numbers by Jodi Sensel
    Letters From Rapunzel by Sara Lewis Holmes
    Avalon Web of Magic: Cricles in the Stream
    The Robe of Skulls by Vivian French

    (Eh, too lazy to put up Amazon links right now. Will do it sometime later I think.)

    So if you want to join me, head over to the challenge post to sign up. Now, I'm off to get reading!

    0 Comments on Clear Away the Clutter Challenge as of 3/6/2010 2:22:00 PM
    Add a Comment
    23. The Clear-Off-Your-Shelves Challenge Ends...Officially

    It's over, and I've read one book that qualifies. Still, it was helpful having this challenge push me toward reading through the books I already own.

    Remember, though, that the Unofficial Challenge continues until November 30, 2010. I've made a list of the many books I own and haven't yet read. Once I've ploughed through book club titles, library finds, and things I've borrowed from friends, I'll be back to my own bookcases.

    How about you other Clear-Off readers?

    14 Comments on The Clear-Off-Your-Shelves Challenge Ends...Officially, last added: 12/3/2009
    Display Comments Add a Comment
    24. DLC match #13: Disney vs. Milne


    Disney Literature Challenge:

    WINNIE-THE-POOH
    THE HOUSE AT POOH CORNER
    by A. A. Milne

    If you want to learn something about the impact of voice on a story, read the old school Winnie the Pooh stories by A.A. Milne. Even though Disney lifted the plots and characters and a heap of dialog without much meddling, in spite of creating an animated storybook complete with text and narrator, there's still something missing.


    That something is the gentle earnestness of Milne's voice. For whatever reason, it just doesn't translate. Disney's Pooh is sort of dopily lovable, which endears him to millions of people -- even me, once upon a time. But no more. I accept no substitutes. (Besides, once you've worked at a place called Halfway Down the Stairs, Milne spinoffs are strictly verboten.)


    Verdict:
    Milne

    Score:
    Disney - 6
    Authors - 8

    ********************
    Currently re-reading:

    Living Dead Girl
    by Elizabeth Scott

    0 Comments on DLC match #13: Disney vs. Milne as of 1/1/1900
    Add a Comment
    25. Fall Into Reading 09: Update 1

    One of the things someone mentioned they would like to see during my blogoversary was a weekly post on what I'm reading. So for now through December I'm going to try and update my Fall Into Reading list every Saturday. This not only will tell you all what I'm reading, but it will also help my update my FIR list more often. Which has always been a struggle for me in past reading challenges.

    But I digress. Here's what my list currently looks like.

    Currently Reading:
    Eyes Like Stars: Theatre Illuminata, Act I by Lisa Mantchev Cleopatra's Daughter: A Novel by Michelle Moran
    The Recipe for Gertrude: Volume 1 by Nari Kusakawa
    The Robe of Skulls: The First Tale from the Five Kingdoms by Vivian French and Ross Collins Ghost Huntress Book 1: The Awakening by Marley Gibson


    Still To Be Read:
    The Splendor Falls by Rosemary Clement-Moore
    Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go by Dale E. Basye


    Finished this week:
    The True Adventures of Charley Darwin by Carolyn Meyer
    Babymouse #11: Dragonslayer by Jennifer L. Holm and Matt Holm
    A Practical Guide to Vampires by Lisa Trutkoff Trumbauer
    The Banshee by Eve Bunting and Emily Arnold McCully
    Halloween Night by Marjorie Dennis Murray and Brandon Dorman
    Queen of Halloween by Mary Engelbreit
    Cat Nights by Jane Manning
    Ghost Files: The Haunting Truth by The Ghost Society
    Magic Trixie by Jill Thompson


    Added this week:
    Oh My Goddess! Volume 32 by Kosuke Fujishima (finished)
    Oh My Goddess! Volume 33 by Kosuke Fujishima (finished)
    Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters by Jane Austen and Ben H. Winters (currently reading)
    Thumbelina: The POP Wonderland Series by Michiyo Hayano and POP (finished)


    I'm adding one more category here and that's Cybils nominees. I haven't read any yet, so I don't have any to add here, but I will be reading a lot in the next few weeks. I still don't know which ones I'll be able to get ahold of, so rather than adding the whole list and subtracking as I read, I'm going to add them to these updates as I complete each one. You can also check out my progress with my sticky post at the top of the page. There's a ticker up there to show you how many of the 62 nominees in my category I've finished.

    You can see how this week differs from my original list too.

    Here's to a full week of reading!

    Fall Into Reading 2009 September 22, 2009 - December 20 2009
    Hosted by Callapidder Days
    Sign Up Here

    1 Comments on Fall Into Reading 09: Update 1, last added: 10/18/2009
    Display Comments Add a Comment

    View Next 19 Posts