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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Suzanne Selfors, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Book Review: Mad Love by Suzanne Selfors

Mad Love
Publisher: Walker Books for Young Readers (January 4, 2011)
Hardcover: 336 Pages
Genre: YA Fantasy/Mythology (Cupid)
Book from Publisher*

From Goodreads. When you're the daughter of the bestselling Queen of Romance, life should be pretty good. But 16-year-old Alice Amorous has been living a lie ever since her mother was secretly hospitalized for mental illness. After putting on a brave front for months, time is running out. The next book is overdue, and the Queen can't write it. Alice needs a story for her mother—and she needs one fast.

That's when she meets Errol, a strange boy who claims to be Cupid, who insists that Alice write about the greatest love story in history: his tragic relationship with Psyche. As Alice begins to hear Errol's voice in her head and see things she can't explain, she must face the truth—that she's either inherited her mother's madness, or Errol is for real.

Review by Kate
MAD LOVE, by Suzanne Selfors, is an adorable story about a girl who is shut down from the world until a little help from a non-stereotypical Cupid enters her life. When I was first offered to read this, I read through the synopsis and I thought it was a fresh idea and wanted to give it a shot. Well, after reading I know I got a lot more than I expected.

I had no idea that I would get so attached to these characters. Selfors made her characters have many layers and each chapter brought something new about them. I loved (loved!) Alice as the MC. She is a strong teenage female character, but her emotional flaws concerning her personal life and her mother made her very real. The strange dynamic between Alice, Tony, and Errol was interesting to say the least. Each of the male roles was clearly defined in Alice's life, but they were always stepping on each others toes.

The mythology of Cupid and Psyche was right up my alley. I love Greek mythology and the inclusion of that in the book made me love it even more. Errol set out to have the greatest love story written and as the story unfolded I truly think it was. Selfors brought the idea of Cupid to life in hot-teenage boy form and I applaud her for the creativity. The way his arrows brought about passionate love was hilarious and ingenious to say the least. And the antidote was equally amusing.

Behind the romance, a few mental issues were approached in some of the characters. Alice's mother's mental illness was an important part of molding Alice into the girl she is. Her ability to grow up so quickly showed a lot of strength for such a young girl. And Alice's summer-neighbor Realm battled an eating disorder that others just put off as being angsty. Although the illnesses weren't the main focus of the story, the powerfulness of these diseases added another layer to the characters and story.

Overall, such a great book! This book has romance and love in many different ways. If you are looking for a little bit of mythology and cute boys, this is the book for you!


Suzanne Selfors Website

*FTC Disclosure: I received this finished copy from the publisher. I do not receive payment of any kind in exchange for a review. I do not receive monetary

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2. Fortune's Magic Farm review

I review great read aloud books for kids all the time, but typically they're in the picture book genre, rather than middle grade fiction or something else. I don't really know why that is, I guess I just come across more picture books to rave about for read alouds than books for the older kiddos...this title though, definitely a nice middle grade fiction read aloud. Suzanne Selfors, a new-to-me author, has come up with a charming story that will be great to read as a family.

Fortune's Magic Farm is the story of ten-year-old Isabelle, a girl living in Runny Cove where the sun never shines, everything is gray, and it's always so wet that mold grows everywhere (even on the people of Runny Cove). Residing in a boarding house with her grandmother, Isabelle is forced to labor at the only place of employment in town, the umbrella factory, where she is overworked and underpaid.

When Isabelle finds an apple, a very rare item to see in Runny Cove, and then hears that several of her friends found apples as well, she knows something strange is happening. A mysterious boy arrives to tell her that she is needed at Fortune's Farm, across the ocean, and Isabelle, finally seeing a chance to escape Runny Cove, goes with him to what she finds is the most glorious place in the whole world. Trees and animals and sunshine and rainbows and happiness are in abundance at Fortune's Farm and Isabelle is to play a very important role in maintaining that level of wonder.

What she feels she needs to do is go back and rescue her friends from Runny Cove and from the terrible umbrella factory, where they too are overworked and underpaid. She is told, however, that no one can ever know of Fortune's Magic Farm, that she must never tell. Isabelle must find a way to save her friends and protect the place she has grown to love so much.

There is SUCH description in this book! Selfors has a knack for helping the reader to truly picture what she is describing...the nasty umbrella factory, the moss covered floor in Isabelle's room at the boarding house, and the wonderful landscape of the farm. The description makes this an awesome choice to read aloud, as well as the fun, quirky, and sometimes silly plot. It will make adults cock their heads and be confused as to whether it's ridiculous or great, but kids are going to love Isabelle's story.

My one complaint? The cover and illustrations. The cover lends absolutely nothing to the story. Yes, all the elements are there...an umbrella with light underneath, a gray world outside it, but SO much could have been done to invite the reader into this magical story and it fell short. It's also very "girl-oriented." Boys are going to love this story too, but I don't think they're picking it up off the shelf! The illustrations, though few, are the same.They are all done in black and white! I think black and white drawings are a great idea for the beginning of the book, but once Isabelle makes it to Fortune's Farm, color would have really accompanied the plot well.

Cover and illustrations are just a small part of this lovely little book that I enjoyed very much. A great choice for libraries and for parents wanting a fabulous read aloud for their kids.

To learn more or to purchase, click on the book cover above to link to Amazon.

Fortune's Magic Farm
Suzanne Selfors
272 pages
Middle Grade fiction
Little, Brown
9780316018180
March 2009

1 Comments on Fortune's Magic Farm review, last added: 4/16/2009
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3. Book Review: To Catch a Mermaid, by Suzanne Selfors

Boom Broom awoke to find his little sister, Mertyle, looking for spots.


"It's a good day for spots," she announced, examining her knobby knees with a magnifying glass. While Boom rubbed sleep from his eyes and stumbled out of bed, his sister made up another ridiculous excuse for not going to school.

Overview:
Delving further into To Catch a Mermaid, the reader discovers that Boom Broom is a twelve-year-old with a lot on his shoulders. Ever since a freak twister touched down in Fairweather Island a year ago right in the Broom's front yard, and carried off Mrs. Broom, the family had never been the same. Mr. Broom refuses to leave the attic except for bathroom breaks, or to grab food prepared by the hired cook. The cook is a proud Viking descendant named Halvor who only prepars fish, fish, more fish, and thick black coffee. Mertyle, Boom's little sister, refuses to leave the house, inventing one sickness after another so she wouldn't have to go to school. Boom refuses to let the twister alter his life and tries to carry on, but he still has to deal his family's eccentricities, and with neighborhood bully Hurley Mump and his equally bully-ish family.

Then one day, Boom is sent out to get fish for dinner. He brings home a very odd fish salvaged from a reject seafood bucket down at the docks. When he and Mertyle discover the fish is no fish, but a real, live merbaby, things start to get interesting...

For Teachers and Librarians:
The author crafts a totally believable story around a freak twister, a grieving family...and a merbaby. This book is an excellent addition to a fantasy fiction unit. A project on mythical creatures could morph from there. A study of weather patterns on islands would be an interesting extension. From there, you could expand into a comparison of weather on cold water islands vs. warm water islands. A discussion centered around not letting fear or grief get control of your life could spring from reading this book, too. There's a lot of material to be mined from this complex and vastly entertaining story. But past all of that, it's just a great story. Imagine...finding a merbaby who grants your most fervent wishes...

For Parents, Grandparents and Caregivers:
Suzanne Selfors got the idea for To Catch a Mermaid while jogging one day in Vancouver, British Columbia, as she watched children play in tidepools:

I realized that one of the universal joys of childhood is discovering things. What would be a neater thing to discover in a tidepool than a baby mercreature? And so, the story was born. - Suzanne Selfors - Class of 2K7 Interview

Your kids will delight in a fantastic story about a wish-granting merbaby, and the hilarious and intense situations that follow. This is a book with something for everyone - humor, suspense, action and adventure, and mystery. Give it to your kids to try, and they won't be disappointed!

In a different direction, kids who have lost a parent, through whatever circumstances, have a lot of sorting out to do. Perhaps this book could help them work through some of those feelings. Everyone in the Broom household is trying to figure out how to live life after Mrs. Broom is swept away, but none of them is doing a very good job. Until that fateful discovery of the merbaby. Eventually, each of the Brooms learns something about themselves, and each of the Brooms finds a way to move on, and each of the Brooms learns to depend on each other. It's a roundabout way to figure things out, but this book might open some doors...

For the Kids:
A twister carries off Boom Broom's mother, right off of their front lawn. A year later, his dad won't leave the attic because he's afraid of the wind, his sister invents illnesses so she won't have to leave the house, and the family hires Halvor the Viking descendant to cook for them. But he only cooks fish, and fixes thick, black coffee. One day, when Boom is sent to get fish, he comes home with an odd one. Soon, though, he realizes it's no fish - it's a merbaby! Imagine! Finding a merbaby!  And, it grants wishes! But, Boom, his friend Winger, and his sister Mertyle get a lot more than they bargained for when things start to get hairy - literally - and Mertyle is in danger. Can Boom save his sister? Will his father ever leave the house? Are they doomed to eat fish and black coffee forever? Pick up the book and find out...

For Everyone Else:
If you love a good fish story, this is the book for you. If mythical creatures intrigue you, this is the book for you. If you're a Viking descendent, you'll learn a thing or two about Vikings and mermaids. If you're looking for an interesting twist on a twister story, this is the book for you. Really, you can't go wrong. Check it out.

Wrapping Up:
Mystery, suspense, adventure, humor, action - what's not to like? To Catch a Mermaid has all the makings of a classic.

Title: To Catch a Mermaid
Author: Suzanne Selfors
Pages: 256
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Publisher and Date: Little, Brown Young Readers, 2007
Edition: 1st
Language: English
Published In: United States
Price: $14.99
ISBN-10: 0316018163
ISBN-13: 978-031601866


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4. Author Spotlight: Suzanne Selfors

Suzanne Selfors started writing seriously in the fall of 2002, on the very day her youngest child stepped on the bus for school. She has had the writing bug, however, ever since fourth grade, when she wrote, cast and directed a play for her school. 


Having written two previous novels for adults, her debut middle grade children's novel, To Catch a Mermaid, was published in 2007. She followed up with Saving Juliet, a young adult novel published in 2008.

Mrs. Selfors studied at Bennington College in Vermont, then graduated with honors from Occidental College in Pasadena, California, in Documentary Film Production. She then received an MA in Communications from the University of Washington.

Born in an army hospital in Munich, Germany in 1963, she now lives in Bainbridge, Washington, where she grew up. She, her husband and two kids live in a historic house there built by her pioneer Norwegian ancestors.

Sources:

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5. Local Press

Hey you!

Thought I'd post a couple of nice shots from my local paper, The Lake Placid News. First one is an article written by my bud, Ed Forbes, about my recent trip to Nueva York.


Look at that passion!
And the second piece is an ad placed by the beloved (that's right, beloved) Bookstore Plus.
Are they the best, or are they the best? Two choices. One answer.*





*The answer is B.

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