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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Bernice Thurman Hunter, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Spring has sprung

Spring is definitely HERE.
The weather is absolutely perfect today on this Easter Sunday.
I thought I'd take a few pics of the wonderfulness going on in my yard.

My first rose! I wish you could smell it. Its amazing.


Irises. I love how they look before they unfurl themselves too.


Azaleas. Pretty!


A little ladybug on the daisies. See her in there?


The tall skinny thing on the left is a fig tree that sprouted itself. How cool!
The others are a giant rose and a lilac.


Awww, daisies. Bless their hearts, they bloom all year round, even in nasty winter storms.


And Wendell, of course. He followed me all around the yard as I took pictures.
The other three were all secreted away in shrubberies or somewhere.


And there are things sprouting inside the house too! Right there on the kitchen counter.


Mother Nature is really something, isn't she?
~~~~~~
Hey, if you're a colored pencil person, go check out Nicole's blog where she talks about the new Caran D'ache Luminance pencils that she test drove for them. They look really neat! (And I love that red-on-red piece she did for them, wow.)

And if you're a kids book person, go check out what Rebecca has been up to with her Alphabeasties and other fun! Are those just the cutest thing, or what?

~~~~~~~
Wishing you all a Happy Easter with lots of chocolate but without the stomach ache.

2 Comments on Spring has sprung, last added: 3/26/2008
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2. Didja Miss Me?

Ah finals week. Stress stress stress stress... but, the final has been turned in and the group project given and now I have a whopping 6 days until fall semester starts.

Let's see... this weekend I went to Des Moines for my friend's wedding, which was lots of fun. While there, we went to the State Fair and you can read all about it all at Geek Buffet.

I had also forgotten what Iowa is like during primary season. Lots of Washington types were at the fair and Huckabee's Iowa headquarters was right by our hotel. Coming out of the airport, we saw a billboard that said "Are You Running for President?" Oiy. It might even be crazier than DC for your average-type person.

Anyway, I didn't review anything due to the stress of last week, so I'm quite behind! Let the catching up commence! So many books to talk about, I hardly know where to start. But let's start with some WWII YA novels, ok?


First up is The Girls They Left Behind by Bernice Thurman Hunter

Beryl/Natalie is a teenager in Toronto during the World War II. It's mostly written in diary form, but with a few-stand alone scenes scattered throughout--mostly towards the end of the book. The story deals with the feelings of always been left behind as she sees one more friend, relative, or neighbor off at the train station nearly every night--some of whom she will never see again. She drops out of school to work in an airplane factory and tries to go on with life, despite rations, black-outs, and no boys left to date.

Beryl (who hates her name and is trying to change it to Natalie, if only her friends and family would remember to call her as such) is a real voice dealing with the frustrations of always being left behind, of British girls snatching away the Canadian boys when they're stationed overseas, and in being laid off and having to go back to school when the war is over and the most of the boys come home. Her voice is very straight forward and matter-of-fact:

Dad had resurrected the Quebec heater from the garage and set it up in the kitchen so we would use less coal in the furnace. Coal was scarce these days because it was needed in factories like The Steel Company of Canada. Dad said the munitions factories practically ate it up by the ton.

I prefer more evocative prose and this language left me a little 'meh' on both the story and the character, but that's just me. I think it's still a good book about life on the home front and the hardships and heartbreaks the girls left behind had to endure.

Another book written with a similar voice that left me a little off is

For Freedom: The Story of a French Spy by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley

Based on the true story of Suzanne David, a teenager in Cherbourg, France, this is a first person narrative of a teenager turned Resistance spy. Suzanne is an aspiring opera singer who isn't that caught up in current events until Cherbourg beach is bombed while she's sitting on it. She watches one of her neighbors blow up and her best friend never recovers from the experience. Her strength in such an ordeal and the fact that her singing takes her throughout northern France leads the local resistance leader to recruit her as a spy.

Now, she's not reporting on troop movements or anything, but passing messages from one spy to another. There's the adrenaline rush as she walks past Nazi soldiers with a note about the Normandy landing in her hat, but the hardest part is being able to get to her scheduled meetings without her parents finding out. One of my favorite parts was when she had to pass a message but it was time to go to church and she had to find a way to get her parents to let her stay at home, as they had no idea what she was really up to.

A good story for younger teens/ tweens on the French resistance the role young people played. But, as with The Girls They Left Behind, the straight forward, matter-of-fact narration left me a little less engaged than I would have liked. But that's just me.

Also, Good as Lily (review here) and Clarice Bean, Don't Look Now (review here) are now both available!

5 Comments on Didja Miss Me?, last added: 8/23/2007
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