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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Heather Tomlinson, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Fairy Tales! and a calendar of events

It's June! Glorious, busy June!

I am back from Iowa--it was beautiful and sunny and I ran into Kelly at the coffee shop and am happy, sleepy, and sunburned. It's fun to see that the people I went to college with are fundamentally the same. We're happier and better dressed, and can now afford MUCH better beer, but fundamentally we're the same. And it's awesome.

We have some fun events coming up here in blog-land. Events YOU can all play along with at home.

First off, Weekly Geeks has declared this week's geekery to be "catch up on reviews week" which I think is something we all need to do, right? So this week (until Friday) I'm aiming for 5 reviews a day. (Even though I am way more than 25 books behind-- I currently have 39 unblogged books, but given I have issues blogging 5 books a week, I'll aim for 5 a day. It's like vegetables. 5 a day!).

This weekend is MotherReader's 48 Hour Book Challenge. Go sign up for your chance to turn X-treme Reading into an X-treme sport. Also, take a vote in my sidebar for which books you'd like me to read!

AND! At the end of the month (June 28-29) is the 24 Hour Read-a-thon to benefit Reading is Fundamental. More information on the event and to sign up is here. And information on how to sponsor my reading extravaganza is here.

Anyway, let's get started on that 5-a-day business, ok?


Ever Gail Carson Levine

As far as I'm aware, this is an original tale. Olus is the Akkan God of the winds (part of a pantheon that reminds one of Greek or Roman mythology. At 17, he's the youngest of the Gods by a few hundred years and is lonely. He longs for a mortal friend, but fails in his attempts to make friends.

Kezi lives in the land of the Admat, and omnipotent, invisible God more similar to the religions of Abraham...

In his longing for friends, Olus has become a shepard and rents land from Kezi's father and falls hopelessly in love. However, Kezi is doomed to die. Not in the way that all mortals will die eventually, but she has been promised as a sacrifice to Admat and will die in 30 days.

Olus knows of ways one can become immortal, but Kezi would have to realize that there are other Gods than Admat, and she must become a herione and Olus must become her champion. Only then can they possibly save Kezi's life.

Told in short chapters of alternating viewpoints, this is a bit of a departure from such Levine classics as Ella Enchanted and Fairest but Levine knows how to tell a story. The language is more sparse than I'm used to and it lacks her usual humor, but Levine can paint a scene with a minimum number of words . I liked the illustrations used above the chapter numbers-- the numbering system looks like an ancient form of writing and it was fun to realize what was going on there. I think Levine fans will still love this. I also think it will really appeal to fans of Julius Lester's Cupid: A Tale of Love and Desire.

Book of a Thousand Days Shannon Hale

Once again Hale turns to the Brothers Grimm for inspiration, this time, not Rapunzel as the tower suggests, but Maid Maleen.

Set in a land inspired by Ancient Mongolia, Dashti is mucker, a nomad, looked down on by the city dwellers. But she is also an orphan and must find work to survive and becomes the maid to Lady Saren, only to find that Saren is about to be locked up in a tower for seven years after refusing the match her father has made.

Dashti goes to the tower where it is dark and foreboding. Although they have been left enough food to last seven years, that's only if they can keep it from the rats. Lady Saren is spoiled and given to tantrums. She is also completely helpless. Lord Kasar, the dreaded fiance appears frequently to taunt the captives. But Khan Tegus, Lady Saren's true love also visits and brings small comforts in the form of a branch that smells of the outdoors and a cat to help with the rats.

Shannon Hale is still on the top of her game. She can paint a culture and a people with just a few sentences. This book is also illustrated, which is nice. I'm reading it in ARC form, so I think some illustrations are missing but the ones that are included are nice. Most are made to look like the illustrations Dashti herself has drawn in her diary, but there is high artistic quality.

There is much to the book besides the days in the tower, although there isn't much to the Grimm tale, and that's where Hale's magic lies-- when she takes the tale way beyond its original borders, while still staying true to the source material.

full disclosure: I got the ARC from the publisher last summer at ALA, but I would have read it anyway, I mean, it's SHANNON HALE!


The Swan Maiden Heather Tomlinson

Doucette has always been jealous of her older sisters. Beautiful and haughty, they're able to work magic, while she is plain and stuck at home learning how to be a chastelaine. Embroidery and running a household is nothing on her sisters who can fly.

But then she finds the swan skin her mother has hidden from her, the swan skin her mother would give Doucette's future husband in order to keep her from running.

But, the true story comes when Doucette falls in love with a shepherd boy. In order to gain the right to marry her, he must perform 3 impossible tasks. But that might not be enough to keep them together...

Doucette is a character that's easy to identify with, but more so. Not only are her sisters perfect and beautiful, which is bad enough, but dude! They can fly! And Doucette is always falling down and tearing her clothing and always left behind.

And then when she gets what she thinks she wants, it doesn't necessarily help.

A wonderful addition to the genre that should be read by everyone who likes Shannon Hale or Juliet Marillier, but will also appeal to those who aren't already converts to the new breed to fairy tale retellings or original tales that maintain that old timeless quality.

13 Comments on Fairy Tales! and a calendar of events, last added: 6/20/2008
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2. Readergirlz, Self-Worth and Teen Dating

February is the month of Love. In the case of readergirlz, it's about heart and poetry. Readergirlz is celebrating this month with the novel, Bronx Masquerade by Nikki Grimes. Read an excerpt of her book here. To join in the interesting discussions, go over here. It's because of some of these eye-opening conversations that I was compelled to write this post. And it's all about love in a way. The

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3. Show Some Respect for No Name-Calling Week

Did you know that this week is No Name-Calling Week? I found out about this special week from Little Willow.

No Name-Calling Week was inspired by a book, THE MISFITS by James Howe. According to the No Name-Calling Week website, this project "seeks to focus national attention on the problem of name-calling in schools, and to provide students and educators with the tools and inspiration to launch an on-going dialogue about ways to eliminate name-calling in their communities."

The website provides lesson plans for elementary school age and middle school age children, as well as tips for planning an outreach program in the schools. These are great materials to have handy throughout the school year to teach children about bullying.

If you're interested in some book suggestions for your teens, you've got to check out Little Willow's Tough Issues for Teens Booklist. It is simply impressive.

And if you want some solid non-fiction reads to help your elementary age to high school age child deal with cliques and bullying, you'll want to go here and here.

0 Comments on Show Some Respect for No Name-Calling Week as of 1/22/2008 11:40:00 PM
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4. Poetry Friday: My Blank is Bigger than Your Blank...

I was wondering when my kids would hear something like this from one of their friends. Last year, my best friend from college told me horror stories and I was shocked.

"No way," I said. "There is no way kids say this type of stuff."

"Believe it and weep," said my best friend. Her son, who goes to a private school, had it thrown in his face a few times in fifth grade. The boys would wear their shields of pride, spouting tales of glory on whose parents made more money, who had a better car, and who had better toys.

"I'm sure it's because Son is in a private school," I said. My friend smirked.

"Believe what you'd like to, but I'm telling you, it's going to happen. Whether someone says it to your kids or whether your kids say it to someone else," she said.

Right, I thought. Not on my watch.

I've spent so much time making sure the kids felt pride in who they are and understood what it meant to respect other people. I've taught the kids that material objects didn't define who they are or who others are. And I was so sure this was enough.

But, third grader came home the other day in tears. Her good friend has been teasing her about how her parents make more money than my husband and I do. Obviously. Because...

"I live in a bigger house than you do," says my daughter's friend. "Not only that, but my parents buy me more expensive things than your parents do. There is no way they could afford to buy you a blankety blank."

Fill in the words for blankety blank. It really doesn't matter what the item was. All that mattered to me, was the look on my daughter's face. A mix of rage that a friend would put down her parents, with a bit of doubt that maybe we didn't have as much as her friend.

Maybe her friend's family has more than my husband and I do. Maybe they don't. But I'm not a keeping up with the Jones' type of gal. Not that there's anything wrong with it, if you're into that sort of thing. I just don't want my children to spend their life haunted by this social type of pressure. There are plenty of other things they'll have to deal with in life. Ultimately, I'd like to impart to my children how their soul defines who they are more than anything else. All I can say is, this will certainly be an interesting journey.

I recently discovered this poem, There Was a Child Went Forth by Walt Whitman. And it is perfect for my theory that a child learns from what he or she is exposed to.


There Was a Child Went Forth
by Walt Whitman

There was a child went forth every day,
And the first object he look'd upon, that object he became,
And that object became part of him for the day or a certain part of the day,
Or for many years or stretching cycles of years.

The early lilacs became part of this child,
And grass and white and red morning-glories, and white and red clover, and the song of the phoebe-bird,
And the Third-month lambs and the sow's pink-faint litter, and the mare's foal and the cow's calf,
And the noisy brood of the barnyard or by the mire of the pond-side,
And the fish suspending themselves so curiously below there, and the beautiful curious liquid,
And the water-plants with their graceful flat heads, all became part of him.

The field-sprouts of Fourth-month and Fifth-month became part of him,
Winter-grain sprouts and those of the light-yellow corn, and the esculent roots of the garden,
And the apple-trees cover'd with blossoms and the fruit afterward, and wood-berries, and the commonest weeds by the road,
And the old drunkard staggering home from the outhouse of the tavern whence he had lately risen,
And the schoolmistress that pass'd on her way to the school,
And the friendly boys that pass'd, and the quarrelsome boys,
And the tidy and fresh-cheek'd girls, and the barefoot negro boy and girl,
And all the changes of city and country wherever he went.

His own parents, he that had father'd him and she that had conceiv'd
him in her womb and birth'd him,
They gave this child more of themselves than that,
They gave him afterward every day, they became part of him.

Click here to read the rest of this poem

Birthday girls, Franki and Mary Lee over at A Year of Reading are hosting Poetry Friday today.

18 Comments on Poetry Friday: My Blank is Bigger than Your Blank..., last added: 1/9/2008
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5. Writer's Notebook Wednesday: Take Yourself Seriously

Two Writing Teachers are hosting today's Writer's Notebook Wednesday. Haven't heard of it? Here's what it's all about. Today's charge is based on my post from Monday.

"What are you going to do today, this week, this month, this year, to take yourself seriously? For the sake of your dream?”
- HipWriterMama

Go forth, take yourself seriously and submit your post here.

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