We're living in a golden age of great fiction ... so many beautiful works being published every month, and it's become a real paradise for readers, whatever they like to read.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: HarperCollins, Ages 9-12, Young Adult, Young Adult Fiction, Book Lists, Chapter Books, featured, Rachel Caine, Cindy Pon, Henry Holt and Co., Disney-Hyperion, Teens: Young Adults, Lyndsay Faye, Leigh Bardugo, Best Kids Stories, Best YA, Soman Chainani, Alexander Bracken, Lilah Bowen, Month9Books LLC, Paul Trembly, Add a tag
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Young Adult Fiction, Book Lists, Chapter Books, The New York Times, Best Sellers, Delacorte Press, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Henry Holt and Co., Jay Kristoff, G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, Marie Lu, Teens: Young Adults, Leigh Bardugo, Amie Kaufman, Rainbow Rowell, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books, Best YA, Nicola Yoon, St. Martin’s Griffin, Add a tag
Our hand-picked list from the Best Selling Young Adult list from The New York Times remains the same this month. The best selling young adult titles include books by super-talents Rainbow Rowell and Marie Lu.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Best Books for Kids, Best Kids Stories, Soman Chainani, Best New Kids Books, Tui T. Sutherland, Daniel Miyares, Robert Beatty, HarperCollins, Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Dr. Seuss, Book Lists, featured, Random House Books for Young Readers, Disney-Hyperion Books, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, Mordicai Gerstein, Scholastic Press, Jacqueline Kelly, Henry Holt and Co., Chris Colfer, Add a tag
If you love books as much as we do, we know you'll love our selection of titles that highlights some of the best new kids books; including a never-before-seen picture book by Dr. Seuss and some highly anticipated sequels!
Add a CommentBlog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fairytales, Brilliance Audio, 2009, Henry Holt and Co., copy from Brilliance, family, lies, Add a tag
It’s not often I get to listen to an audio book. With my own young children around who aren’t quite ready for the books that I review, I end up listening catch as catch can. I was bound and determined to finish The Witch's Guide to Cooking with Children, not just for the story itself, but for the excellent performance by Laural Merlington.
When brainy Sol and precocious Connie move with their “dad” and their stepmother to Grand Creek, Sol isn’t too broken up about it. He is hoping that the move can give him a fresh start far away from “the terrible day”. True to form, Sol is already in possession of bus maps and some knowledge of their new town.
When they meet neighbor Fay Holaderry and her dog Swift they have no real reason to think that she’s anybody other than the sweet old lady she first appears to be. But Fay Holaderry has a deep, dark secret. She’s been taking misbehaving children out of families at the request of their parents for generations and generations. Yes, the methods have changed (big donation boxes outside of movie theaters have replaced the dark, spooky woods), but Holaderry’s still on her game, and thanks to a call from Sol and Connie’s parents, they are next on her list.
But Holaderry’s not counting on Sol’s genius or Connie’s pluck. Once they realize that their folks have it out for them, the combination of their personalities seems unbeatable! But can they outsmart a witch who has magic on her side and who has been cooking up children since the days of Grimm?
Keith McGowan has written a clever twist on Hansel and Gretel that modern kids will eat up! Since I listened instead of read, I did not get to see the accompanying illustrations. But I did get to enjoy Laural Merlington’s masterful performance in the Brilliance Audio edition.
Blog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: 2008, grandparents, abuse, moving, 1960s, Henry Holt and Co., copy from local library, dance lessons, Friendship, Add a tag
Here is a perfect example of the reason why I love going to the public library to browse books. Yes I get invited to a few previews every year, and yes I try to keep up with the professional journals, but nothing will ever replace browsing a shelf. I am taken with titles and covers and upon reading the blurbs I decide what to check out. On my last trip, I picked up this gem of a novel and am eager to share it with you.
Delores, or Itch as she's known to her family, has been living with her Gram and Gramps since her mom decided to leave. She's a girl who collects favourite words, does some serious thinking on her swing in the backyard, loves hanging out with her best friend Bailey, and is a bit of a kindred spirit with her Gramps. When Gramps dies, Itch is upset that Gram wants to move up to Ohio and leave every single memory of him behind.
Once in Ohio, Itch gets a bit of sunshine when she sees that the county fair starts that night. When she goes to check out the grounds on the way to the local Woolworth's, she is beckoned over by a girl in a sequins outfit and Shirley Temple hair who needs help with a zipper. Little does she know that this is the beginning of a complicated friendship between the two.
Once school starts, Itch is eager to be Gwendolyn's (or Wendy as she's known at school) official friend, which is hard since she is friends with popular girls Anna Marie and Connie and she attends lots of dance classes. But once Itch gets her mind to something, she stays true to it, and soon Itch and Gwendolyn are hanging out. Gwendolyn's other friends are surprised when Itch says she's been up to Wendy's room...most of her friends aren't allowed over. Itch wonders why that is, but soon she begins noticing some things about Wendy that just don't seem right. Will Itch have to courage to ask the hard questions and expose what is going on?
Michelle D. Kwasney has written a poignant story that packs a punch. Family structures, friendship boundaries, the realities of abuse are all explored with aplomb. The dialogue between the middle schoolers of the 1960s rings true, and Itch's relationship with her Grams grows so nicely throughout the book, readers will feel privileged to get to witness it. Gwendolyn and her mother's relationship is harder to look at, but Kwasney does it right. The frightening aspects of the abuse are not overdone, but they do not all appear off page either. The amazing thing is that this doesn't feel like a message book...it simply is a great story about two families.
Hi! I found you through Charlotte's Library and as soon as I saw the title of the book I knew I had to check it out. It sounds very funny and I like when people re-write fairy tales. I'm going to have to look this one up and see if I can get a copy anywhere near me!
Plus I have the added bonus of discovering a new blog to add to my google reader!