I read Orbiting Jupiter by Gary D. Schmidt the other night. I could NOT put it down. The pages turned themselves. Then I got to the end. And threw the book across the room.
I can't tell you much about the book, really. The advance press tells you all you need to know about the story.
There is this. Married to a caseworker who spent most of his working life in Children and Youth, I hate books with social workers in them, because most social workers are portrayed as uncaring. The social worker in THIS book is freaking awesome. Really, she's wonderful. Thank you for that, Gary D. Schmidt.
Foster parents also get a bad rap. These foster parents are so wonderful. Thanks again, Mr. Schmidt.
Indeed, there is so much about this book that I loved. I still threw it across the room. Read it please and tell me if you agree I had the right to do that.
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Blog: Books 'n' stories (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: First Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: First Book Favorites, Doug Swieteck, The Port Chicago 50, Baseball, Japan, Book lists, Books & Reading, Michelle Markel, Apollo 11, Gary D. Schmidt, Melissa Sweet, Aaron Meshon, Steve Sheinkin, Brian Floca, Add a tag
This month on Five First Book Favorites you’ll find books that help kids understand civil rights and fair wages, explore different cultures… or even explore the moon!
For PreK – 1st (Ages 2-6)
Take Me Out To The Yakyu By Aaron Meshon
The narrator of this delightful book is a boy who loves baseball – in two different countries! He goes to games in the U.S. with his American grandfather (pop pop) and games in Japan with his Japanese grandfather (ji ji). Bold, colorful illustrations show, side-by-side, the trip to each stadium. It’s a wonderful invitation for kids to compare and contrast two different experiences and also reflect on the countries and cultures of their own families.
For Grades 1-3 (Ages 5-8)
Brave Girl: Clara and the Shirtwaist Makers’ Strike of 1909 written by Michelle Markel and illustrated by Melissa Sweet
Clara Lemlich immigrated to New York with nothing aside from her family, clothes, and a few words of English. When her parents were unable to find work, she took a job as a garment factory worker – earning a few dollars a month for countless hours bent over a sewing machine. With a blend of vivid watercolors and stitched fabrics, this book tells the story of how Clara led her coworkers on strike to protest their horrendous working conditions. Bosses of the factories paid for Clara to be beaten and arrested repeatedly, but nothing could stop this gritty, five-foot tall woman from securing a better life for millions.
For Grades 2-5 (Ages 6-10)
Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11 by Brian Floca
The moment Apollo 11’s Eagle touched down on the Moon, it became a defining moment for a nation that had lived up to a President’s lofty goal. With stunning illustrations, this poetic story allows you to join Armstrong, Collins, and Aldrin as they prepare for liftoff, follows them at every stage of the mission, and doesn’t let go until they are safely back home. Brian Floca has created a work of art worthy of inspiring young readers to dream beyond what is easy, and strive for what is hard.
For Grades 5+ (Ages 10 and up)
The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights by Steve Sheinkin
Loading 500-pound bombs into a Navy warship is, to say the least, a dangerous job. On July 17th, 1944, the fears of the untrained men who held this job became reality when an explosion claimed the lives of 320 men, the majority of whom were black. During this time, the Navy, like every other part of the United States Military, was segregated,frequently leaving black men to be treated as second class citizens serving menial roles. This masterfully crafted nonfiction book follows the fifty men who refused to go back to this life-threatening and degrading work, and the court case that followed.
For Grades 6+ (Age 11 and up)
Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt
There are few characters you will ever root for more than Doug Swieteck. On the surface, he is a good for nothing, skinny thug with a reading disability. Just ask his teachers and they’ll tell you. However in the depths of Doug Swieteck, where this book takes place, you find a boy who is trapped – one brother a bully, one a vacant shell of his pre-war self, and an abusive alcoholic for a father who has left a horrific mark on his youngest son. The secrets Doug is holding back from the reader are gut-wrenching, but with the help of a few strangers-turned-friends and a newfound passion for art, this fourteen-year-old will inspire every person lucky enough to pick up his story.
The post Our Five Favorite Books This February appeared first on First Book Blog.

Blog: Teaching Authors (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reading, Poetry Friday, audio books, Reading Lists, Kindle, Summer Reading, Gary D. Schmidt, Reading as a Writer, Francisco Stork, National Day of Listening, The Book I'm Reading, Lincoln Hoppe, Add a tag
.
Howdy, Campers!
Carmela, JoAnn, Jill, Laura and Esther have each checked in about the books they've checked out this summer.
My turn!
Here's what I've read recently:
~ THE FAULT IN OUR STARS by John Green on my Kindle (loved it)
~ WE ARE CALLED TO RISE by Laura McBride ~ adult book (wonderfully written...but why are adult books so sad?)
~ TEA WITH GRANDPA written and illustrated by Barney Saltzberg ~ (SPOILER ALERT: I've bought copies to give to grandparents who Skype their grandkids)
What I'm currently reading:
~ DIVERGENT by Veronica Roth on my Kindle (not crazy about the writing so far).
But I am CRAZY CAKES for audiobooks. I live in Southern California, so maybe that explains it. Or maybe I should say I live in my car in Southern California. :-)
So here is my list of 3 WONDERFUL audiobooks in the order I read them. And yes, you can say "read them" if you listened to them. Because I said so.
ONE:
Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco Stork, read by Lincoln Hoppe (read a review here)
Lincoln Hoppe is an AMAZING voice actor. I think I want to marry him.
Hang in there with this audiobook. At first it felt soooo slow...I wasn't sure I was going to keep listening. But, boy, am I glad I did. I mean, wow.
From the Random House website:
"Reminiscent of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time in the intensity and purity of its voice, this extraordinary audiobook is a love story, a legal drama, and a celebration of the music each of us hears inside."
TWO:
From Wikipedia:
"Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy, published by Clarion Books, is a 2004 historical fiction book by Gary D. Schmidt. The book received the Newbery Honor in 2005 and was selected as a Michael L. Printz Honor that same year. The book was based on a real event. In 1912, the government of Maine put the residents of Malaga Island in a mental hospital and razed their homes."
“Schmidt’s writing is infused with feeling and rich in imagery. With fully developed, memorable characters. . . This novel will leave a powerful impression on readers.” ~ School Library Journal, Starred
THREE:
Here's what the National Book Award website says:
“In this stunning novel, Schmidt expertly weaves multiple themes of loss and recovery in a story teeming with distinctive, unusual characters and invaluable lessons about love, creativity, and survival.”
His main character, Doug Swieteck, first appeared in Schmidt’s Newbery Honor book, THE WEDNESDAY WARS.
Listen to an 8 minute NPR on-air interview of Schmidt about OKAY FOR NOW here.
There. Those are my Fab 3.
What I look forward to listening to next:
~ THE WEDNESDAY WARS by Gary D. Schmidt, read by Joel Johnstone. I think I may have this read years ago; I can't wait to listen to it. (I'm inspired by Esther and am reading a string of books by the same author...something I almost never do. Gary D. Schmidt is a brilliant and deeply affecting writer.)
by April Halprin Wayland
Are we twisting,
risking all,
listening to what the writer
wires us,
what the teller
sells us?
Twisting, uncertain,
wheeling...to the final curtain?
And...if you know any flat-out beginning picture book writers in the Los Angeles area, my six-week class, Writing Picture Books for Children in the UCLA Extension Writers' Program starts August 6th. (The student who benefits most from this class has never heard of SCBWI.)
poem and drawing (c)2014 April Halprin Wayland. All rights reserved.
posted by April Halprin Wayland...who's amazed that you've read all the way to here. Thank you.

Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Newbery Medal, Eventful World, Langston Hughes, Katherine Applegate, Bryan Collier, David Diaz, Gary D. Schmidt, Pura Belpré Award, Caldecott Medal, Coretta Scott King Book Awards, I, Too, Benjamin Alire Saenz, Andrea Davis Pinkney, Brian Pinkney, The One and Only Ivan, Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, This is Not My Hat, 2013 ALA Youth Media Awards results, 75th anniversary Caldecott celebrations, Am America, Hand in Hand: Ten Black Men Who Changed America, John Klassen, Martín de Porres: The Rose in the Desert, Add a tag
Earlier today the American Library Association announced the 2013 Youth Media Awards Winners. Click here to read the press release.
Highlights include:
John Newbery Medal Winner (for the most outstanding contribution to children’s literature):
The One and Only Ivan written by Katherine Applegate (HarperCollins Children’s Books, 2012)
Randolph Caldecott Medal Winner (for the most distinguished American picture book for children):
This Is Not My Hat, illustrated and written by Jon Klassen (Candlewick Press, 2012).
Coretta Scott King (Author) Book Award Winner (recognizing an African American author of outstanding books for children and young adults):
Hand in Hand: Ten Black Men Who Changed America, written by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney (Disney/Jump at the Sun Books, 2012).
Coretta Scott King (Illustrator) Book Award Winner (recognizing an African American illustrator of outstanding books for children and young adults):
I, Too, Am America, illustrated by Bryan Collier, written by Langston Hughes (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2012)
Pura Belpré (Author) Award Winner (honoring a Latino writer whose children’s books best portray, affirm and celebrate the Latino cultural experience):
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, written by Benjamin Alire Sáenz, (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2012)
Pura Belpré (Illustrator) Award Winner (honoring a Latino illustrator whose children’s books best portray, affirm and celebrate the Latino cultural experience):
Martín de Porres: The Rose in the Desert, illustrated by David Diaz, written by Gary D. Schmidt (Clarion Books, 2012)

Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: The Wednesday Wars, Gary D. Schmidt, Top 100 Children's Novels Poll, Uncategorized, Add a tag
#37 The Wednesday Wars by Gary D. Schmidt (2007)
53 points
Don’t know if this qualifies as a children’s—it’s kind of on the border between middle grade and YA, but it’s one of my favorite books of all time so I’m including it. There’s so much going on, and Schmidt has the wonderful capacity to make the reader laugh out loud and cry—all on the same page. – Heather Christensen
Two words: cream puffs – Jessalynn Gale
The plot from my review reads, “Mrs. Baker hates Holling Hoodhood. There’s no two ways about it, as far as he can tell. From the minute he entered her classroom she had it in for him and he’s trying not to become paranoid. Now because half the kids in his class are Jewish and half Catholic, every Wednesday Holling (a Protestant through and through) is stuck alone with Mrs. Baker while the other kids go to Hebrew School or Catechism for the afternoon. And what has this evil genius dreamt up for our poor young hero? Shakespeare. He has to read it and get tested on it regularly with the intention (Holling is sure) of boring him to death. The thing is, Holling kind of gets to like the stuff. Meanwhile, though, he has to deal with wearing yellow tights butt-gracing feathers, avoiding killer rats and his older sister, and deciding what to do about Meryl Lee Kowalski, ‘who has been in love with me since she first laid eyes on me in the third grade,’ amongst other things. Set during the school year of 1967-68 against a backdrop of Vietnam and political strife, Holling finds that figuring out who you are goes above and beyond what people want you to become.”
It won a Newbery Honor in 2008, beaten by the fantastic Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! by Laura Amy Schlitz. A good year. Since that time Schmidt wrote the companion novel Okay for Now.
PW said of it, “Unlike most Vietnam stories, this one ends happily, as Schmidt rewards the good guys with victories that, if not entirely true to the period, deeply satisfy.”
Said SLJ, “The tone may seem cloying at first and the plot occasionally goes over-the-top, but readers who stick with the story will be rewarded. They will appreciate Holling’s gentle, caring ways and will be sad to have the book end.”
Booklist liked it quite a bit saying, “Holling’s unwavering, distinctive voice offers a gentle, hopeful, moving story of a boy who, with the right help, learns to stretch beyond the limitations of his family, his violent times, and his fear, as he leaps into his future with his eyes and his heart wide open.”
Horn Book went on with, “Schmidt rises above the novel’s conventions to create memorable and believable characters.”
Kirkus concluded with, “Schmidt has a way of getting to the emotional heart of every scene without overstatement, allowing the reader and Holling to understand the great truths swirling around them on their own terms.”
And best of all was this section from Tanya Lee Stone’s New York Times review, “Still, while ‘The Wednesday Wars’ was one of my favorite books of the year, it wasn’t written for me. Sometimes books that speak to adults miss the mark for their intended audience. To see if the novel would resonate as deeply with a child, I gave it to an avid but discriminating 10-year-old reader. His laughter, followed by repeated outbursts of ‘Listen to this!,’ answered my questio

Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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#44 Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt (2011)
45 points
Can’t get this book out of my head. There’s not one big lobbing story arc here. It’s a rollercoaster. Very high highs immediately followed by the lowest of lows. Coming in rapid fire. At one point I involuntarily yelled “noooooooooooo” right out loud. You know characters have captured your mind and heart when that happens. – Aaron Zenz
“Let me just say this right up front: Gary Schmidt was robbed. He deserved the 2012 Newbery. He earned it. This book was far and away the best book of the year. To not award it the gold was bad enough, but to completely snub it and not even give it an honor? Unforgivable. And I’ll sing it ’til my dyin’ day.
Schmidt has created an unforgettable character in Doug Swieteck. Bold, unsure, angry, loving, cocky, and humble, this young man is as dynamic as they come. As the book’s narrator, his voice is absolutely perfect. He is one of my favorite characters I’ve read in a long, long time. Even when he was snarky, I loved this kid. I found myself wondering what he grew up to do with his life. That doesn’t happen too often, so this boy really stayed with me. Great voice, and I’m not lyin’.
Schmidt can sure paint a villain. So what if his dad is a jerk who hangs out with stupid Ernie Eco too much? So what? (I’m still not sure whether I forgive Schmidt for Doug’s dad. What a… yeah. Wow.) I also admire the way characters changed as Doug grew. Or was it Doug who was changing and viewing them differently? There is not a flat character in the book (save one, but we never really meet him, just hear about him). Each member of Doug’s family has a surprise or two up his or her sleeve, as does Doug’s father’s boss, “”Mr. Big-Bucks-Ballard”", who emerges as an admirable and noble character.
Okay for Now is moving, funny, infuriating, and completely wonderful.” – Kristi Hazelrigg
Yeah, I could have cut Kristi’s words down, but why do so? She puts the whole book in such a great light.
I bet you were wondering whether or not this would make the list or not. After all, if this year’s Newbery frontrunner Wonder by R.J. Palacio made our list, would memories allow last year’s frontrunner to make an appearance? You betcha. Our memories aren’t that short and the book was just that good.
The plot from my review reads, ” ‘You’re not always going to get everything you want, you know. That’s not what life is like.’ It’s not like the librarian Mrs. Merriam needs to tell Doug that. If any kid is aware that life is not a bed of roses, it’s Doug. Stuck in a family with a dad that prefers talking with his fists to his mouth, a sweet but put upon mom, a brother in Vietnam, and another one at home making his little brother’s life a misery, it’s not like Doug’s ever had all that much that’s good in his life. When he and his family move to Marysville, New York (herein usually referred to as ’stupid Marysville’) things start to change a little. Doug notices the amazing paintings of birds in an Audubon book on display in the public library. The boy is captivated by the birds, but soon it becomes clear that to raise money, the town has been selling off different pages in the book to collectors. Between wanting to preserve the book, learning to draw, solving some

Blog: Not Just for Kids (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I know I'm late for the lovefest for this book, but I say 'better late than never.' I am so glad I read it. I really enjoyed The Wednesday Wars, in which the character of Doug Sweiteck first appears, but I have to admit that I don't remember much about the story. However, I am confident there will be no memory lapses with Okay for Now. And the credit for that goes to John James Audubon. Like

Blog: Beth Kephart Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Gary D. Schmidt, Okay for Now, 2011 National Book Awards, Add a tag
There are just some authors who deserve our readerly love, our supreme fandom, our pass-it-on fire. Gary D. Schmidt, I discovered yesterday, is one of them. Don't hate me because it took me this long. Just let me join the Schmidt Fan Club. I'll be its secretary, if the job is still open. I'll wear, well: What are the Gary D. Schmidt colors?
Because I read Okay for Now yesterday, the 2011 National Book Award nominee. I read it in a day, sometimes leaving my perch on the couch simply because I could not contain my admiration for this story about a kid growing up in upper New York state under less-than-desirable circumstances. He calls his home The Dump. His dad has done some damage. His oldest brother has been fighting in the Vietnam War. His other brother is sometimes like his father. There's a girl, though, and she's lots of fun. There's a mom with an Elizabeth-Taylor-besting smile. There are the town folk and the teachers who, once they give Doug Sweiteck a chance not to be his brother or old man, are some of the most tender and wonderful people around.
It's 1968, and at first there's not much for Doug to do in this sleepy old town but to go to the library, which is only open Saturdays. Doug doesn't go there to read. He goes, after awhile, because of that big book of Audubon bird paintings that lie (only half) protected in a case on the library's second floor. He's going because a funky old man has started to teach him how to draw these majestic, frozen creatures. The birds are terrified, or they are huddled by the shore. They are proud, or they are fearless, or they are wounded. Doug understands them, intuitively. And he's got some talent with a pencil. And maybe the bird and the man and the talent he is discovering will save Doug from The Dump life, or, at least, give him a reason to grow beyond his bruising circumstance.
Schmidt tells his enormously tender story with humor tailor-made for a kid. He respects his readers, is sure they will understand the nuances, the complications, the simple fact that no one is a label, no one is stuck. And, without ever stepping beyond the realm of younger reader book-dom, Schmidt gives us some of the most casually beautiful descriptions I've seen:
She had hair as white as clouds, and about as wispy too, and big. It was all gathered like one of those huge thunderheads that rises on hot summer days. The top was in sort of a bun and tied tight with red rubber bands. And in that top bun—I'm not lying—there were three bright yellow pencils stabbing through. She wore a bluish kind of gown that shimmered—it looked like something that someone about to go to an opera would wear (not that I've ever been to an opera, or would ever be caught dead at one. Can you imagine Joe Pepitone ever going to an opera?). With the cloud on top and the shimmering blue beneath, she looked like a rainstorm that could walk around all by itself. Which wouldn't have been so bad on a day that wanted to be a hundred degrees.Before I had a chance to write this blog post this morning, I Facebooked my applause for this book. The Schmidt fans flocked. Yes, yes, they said. Yes, I say, too. This is a book (and there are plenty of Schmidt books) that you want the kids you love to read.

Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Okay for Now
By Gary D. Schmidt
Clarion Books (an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
$16.99
ISBN: 978-0-547-15260-8
Ages 10-14
On shelves April 18th
There are three kinds of literary sequels for kids out there. First, you have the sequel that is so intricately tied into the plot of the first book that not a page goes by that you don’t feel you’re missing something if you skipped Book #1. The second kind of sequel nods to the first book and brings up continual facts from it, but is a coherant story in its own right. The third kind of sequel makes mention of facts and/or people in the first book but if you read the story on your own you might not even be aware that there was previous book in the first place. Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt would be the third type of sequel, I think. Ostensibly a sequel to his Newbery Honor winning title The Wednesday Wars, the hero of Okay for Now, Doug Swieteck, was a bit part character in the first book, and now has come entirely into his own in the second. For fans of the first, you will enjoy the second. And for people who begin with the second, you won’t miss a thing really if you haven’t read the first. All you’ll know is that you have a great book on your hands. A great great book.
“You’re not always going to get everything you want, you know. That’s not what life is like.” It’s not like the librarian Mrs. Merriam needs to tell Doug that. If any kid is aware that life is not a bed of roses, it’s Doug. Stuck in a family with a dad that prefers talking with his fists to his mouth, a sweet but put upon mom, a brother in Vietnam, and another one at home making his little brother’s life a misery, it’s not like Doug’s ever had all that much that’s good in his life. When he and his family move to Marysville, New York (herein usually referred to as “stupid Marysville”) things start to change a little. Doug notices the amazing paintings of birds in an Audubon book on display in the public library. The boy is captivated by the birds, but soon it becomes clear that to raise money, the town has been selling off different pages in the book to collectors. Between wanting to preserve the book, learning to draw, solving some problems at school, the return of his brother from Vietnam, and maybe even falling in love, Doug’s life in “stupid” Marysville takes a turn. Whether it’s a turn for the better or a turn for the worse is up to him.
It’s such a relief sometimes to read a great writer for kids. Not a merely good writer, but a great writer. Mr. Schmidt is one of the few. You haven’t gotten even two pages into the story of this book before Doug tells you about his brother hitting him. He writes that he, “Pummeled me in places where the bruises wouldn’t show. A strategy that my . . . is none of your business.” Beautiful. Right there we know that not only is our narrator telling us his story, but he’s also hiding secrets along the way. In fact, throughout the book Doug will repeat ideas or thoughts or phrases that he’s been ruminating over, seemingly unaware that he’s working those same thoughts into the narrative. Doug isn’t so much an unreliable narrator to us as he is an unreliable narrator to himself.
Schmidt’s dialogue is also always on point and interesting, but of pa

Blog: Bugs and Bunnies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: book review, historical fiction, stories, race, Gary D. Schmidt, Malaga Island, Add a tag
Turner Buckminster had lived in Phippsburg, Maine, for almost six whole hours.
"It's what I always write about: what it is that makes a child move from childhood to adulthood. It's when a child starts to say, 'This is my decision. I make this call.' It s the message a child has to get - that there's a moment when you have to become your own person."
- from Calvin.edu interviewFor the Kids:

Blog: Bugs and Bunnies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, writing, Author Spotlight, children's author, Gary D. Schmidt, Add a tag
Gary D. Schmidt writes children's non-fiction, and young adult novels, which he types out on a 1953 Royal typewriter.
"...I've got some responsibilities to my audience, and I need to take that responsibility very, very seriously because what I want to talk to them about are things like hope, and community, and you can't be screwing around when you're talking to kids about hope."

Blog: Crossover (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture Books, Bloom, Valentine's Day, I hate pink, Maria Von Lieshout, I hate pink, Maria Von Lieshout, Add a tag
I dislike beginning my reviews with the word "I." So forgive me for introducing this review with one. It would be unfair if I didn't get my biases as a reviewer out in the open before discussing Maria Van Lieshout's Bloom: A Little Book About Finding Love. Here's the deal: I am not a romantic. Valentine's Day, and hearts, and flowers, and pink simply do not appeal to me. Needless to say, when Bloom: A Little Book About Finding Love found its way into my mailbox, I was reluctant to crack open the cover. All that pink! And the flowers! Fortified by a triple espresso and the fact that I'm wearing black today, I began to read...
and...
was pleasantly surprised.
The hero of Bloom, a charming young pig, does indeed fall in love. With flowers. And a flying, dancing flower, "the most beautiful thing [she's] ever seen!" Bloom wants to dance and fly and enjoy the beauty in life. But then the mean old flying flower leaves her and she's bereft. It's a sad tale of love found and love lost until we realize Bloom has the attention span of your average three year old. Another pig comes along, sees through the drama with the cheekiest expression on his/her face, and attracts Bloom away from her misery and into a field of flowers.
Visually, Bloom: A Little Book About Finding Love is a treat. Maria Van Lieshout's line drawings are expressive and funny, and the book's design (by Molly Leach) reminds me of Annette Simon's work in its play with type and layout. I especially appreciate Van Lieshout's rendering of Pig #2. This pig--the white one--could be a parent or a friend who sees through Bloom's diva moments and has the patience and love to distract her from the pathos. Bloom is ideally suited for children ages three to six, be they the drama king (or queen) or the friend who brings each dramatic moment down a notch or two.
Happy Valentine's Day!
--------------------
Don't miss these two reviews:
A Fuse #8
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast
You can find a trailer for Bloom at the Bloom website.
Am I right that this one didn’t place at all last time? I’m glad to see it so far up the list, at any rate!
You’re dead on, Jess. Part of the reason I couldn’t get ten posts up today. I was too exhausted after having to write some original posts. Whew!
I am so thrilled to see this here!!! and so high!!! When I saw Okay For Now, I thought that would’ve placed higher on account of being fresher in people’s minds, given that Wednesday Wars didn’t place last time.
I ranked this #2, and it was the one book I most wanted to appear here (given that my #1 choice was always going to show up).
I need to read that NYT review. She’s dead on – this was my favorite book read a few years ago, and the next year my son and his friends were all assigned it in fourth grade and they thought it was the best book they’d ever read.
Needed that boost of joy tonight. Hooray!