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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: recommended reading, writing books, adult titles, YA, historical fiction, book discussion, middle-grade, Add a tag
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: quotes, recommended reading, Add a tag
But in the meantime, you must be content, I say, to be misunderstood for a while. We are all very anxious to be understood, and it is very hard not to be. But there is one thing much more necessary -- to understand other people.
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fast five, biography, picture books, recommended reading, US history, Add a tag
"A beautifully realized labor of love and affection brings to life one of our brightest founding fathers." – Kirkus Book Reviews, starred review
"With a jacket showing Benjamin Franklin as a cross between a mad scientist and a superhero standing amid wild lightning bolts and surrounded by all manner of electrical devices, this book shimmers with excitement, begging to be read." – The Horn Book, starred review
"It's a fascinating and comprehensive portrait, and an asset for student research." – Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Large in format and ambitious in scope, this appealingly designed book spotlights Benjamin Franklin and his times." – Booklist, starred review
HERE COME THE GIRL SCOUTS!: THE AMAZING, ALL TRUE STORY OF JULIETTE "DAISY" GORDON LOW AND HER GREAT ADVENTURE - Shana Corey
"Deft storyteller Shana Corey knows that good history writers pick rich details to paint a life story. That’s exactly what she does in ‘Here Come the Girl Scouts!’.” —The New York Times
"Corey tells Low’s story with few words, but a lot of energy. This is an exuberant celebration of Low’s work just in time for the Girl Scouts 100th anniversary.” —School Library Journal, starred review
"Corey’s gung-ho prose conveys Low’s gumption and optimism. Hooper’s folksy mixed-media art, much like Corey’s prose, portrays the Scouts and their history in a fresh, unstuffy manner.”—Publishers Weekly
“Girl power, all the way around.”—Booklist
THOSE REBELS, JOHN AND TOM - Barbara Kerley
"A witty and wise portrait of strength being born out of difference. " --Starred Review, Publisher's Weekly
"A graceful and good-humored account introduces the very human sides of the disparate duo who came together in the Continental Congress to give birth to American independence in an extraordinary achievement in 1774-1776. Humorous, respectful and affectionate: a solid invitation to learn more."
--Kirkus Review
“Forthright and dynamic....authoritative yet child-friendly.” — School Library Journal
“Light-hearted but eminently humane.” — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
WHAT TO DO ABOUT ALICE?: HOW ALICE ROOSEVELT BROKE THE RULES, CHARMED THE WORLD, AND DROVE HER FATHER TEDDY CRAZY! - Barbara Kerley
"Irrepressible Alice Roosevelt gets a treatment every bit as attractive and exuberant as she was....The large format gives Fotheringham, in his debut, plenty of room for spectacular art." --Starred Review, Booklist
"Theodore Roosevelt's irrepressible oldest child receives an appropriately vivacious appreciation in this superb picture book.... Kerley's precise text presents readers with a devilishly smart, strong-willed girl who was determined to live life on her own terms and largely succeeded." --Starred Review, Kirkus
"Kerley's text gallops along with a vitality to match her subject's antics, as the girl greets White House visitors accompanied by her pet snake, refuses to let leg braces cramp her style, dives fully clothed into a swimming pool, and also earns her place in history as one of her father's trusted advisers. Fotheringham's digitally rendered, retro-style illustrations are a superb match for the text."--Starred Review, SLJ
ANNIE AND HELEN - Deborah Hopkinson
“...What is breathtakingly shown here, through accurate, cross-hatched watercolor paintings; excerpts from Sullivan’s correspondence to her former teacher; and concise and poetic language, is the woman’s patience and belief in the intelligence of her student to grasp the concepts of language....elucidating the brilliant process of educating the deaf and blind pioneered by Annie Sullivan.” --Starred Review, School Library Journal
"Combining short excerpts from Annie Sullivan's letters with lyrical prose, Hopkinson succeeds in making the early years of the relationship between Helen Keller and the woman she called Teacher feel newly remarkable." -- Publisher's Weekly
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the writing life, recommended reading, Lucy Maud Montgomery, reading and writing, LMM Journals Read Along, Add a tag
- At what point did Maud decide she was writing for an audience and not just herself?
- Did she knowingly edit as she wrote, softening or omitting things?
- How much honesty and transparency is a person capable of in recording a life?
- In regard to her depression: do you think there were ways she could have asked for help with those she trusted or was the taboo of mental illness too strong?
- Would her books have changed if her life were different?
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the writing life, authors, journals, recommended reading, Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery, reading and writing, Anne of Avonlea, The Story Girl, LMM Journals Read Along, Kilmeny of the Orchard, Add a tag
An Overview:
*Have I forgotten someone or accidentally added someone else in? Mr. Mustard, Lem, Lou, Edwin, Ewan, Oliver.
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: adult titles, quotes, recommended reading, Add a tag
Sin, he reflected, is not what it is usually thought to be; it is not to steal and tell lies. Sin is for one man to walk brutally over the life of another and to be quite oblivious of the wounds he has left behind.
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: adult titles, found books, children's literature, recommended reading, Add a tag
So often we find books through recommendations, reviews, and general book buzz. But there are plenty of other ways to discover books to love.
A few months ago, I shared a quote from Lauren Destefano that sparked a conversation in the comments about ways we've come to certain titles unconventionally: at garage sales, from a friend's shelf, and the like. In celebration of Found Books, I'm sharing three with you today:
where I found it: The library shelf. The cover intrigued me. Karen Cushman's gorgeous endorsement (below) sold me.
I found The Raging Quiet enchanting, a celebration of the power of love, hope, and courage to overcome prejudice and ignorance, with characters I cannot forget: the independent Marnie, the kind priest, and Raven, who is no one I know or am ever likely to know but who was so real and true that I loved and feared for him. The book is a wonderful achievement, full of truth and compassion, and a delight to read.
THE UNNAMEABLES - Ellen Booraem
where I found it: a free book table at a recent writing retreat. I couldn't resist this description.
Medford lives on a neat, orderly island called—simply—Island.
Islanders like names that say exactly what a thing (or a person) is or does. Nothing less.
Islanders like things (and people) to do what their names say they will. Nothing more.
In fact, everything on Island is named for its purpose, even the people who inhabit it. But Medford Runyuin is different. A foundling, he has a meaningless last name that is just one of many reminders that he's an outsider. And, to make matters worse, Medford's been keeping a big secret, one that could get him banished from Island forever.
When the smelliest, strangest, unruliest creature Island has ever seen comes barreling right into his rigid world, Medford can’t help but start to question the rules he’s been trying to follow his entire life.
MY INDIAN FAMILY: A STORY OF EAST AND WEST WITHIN A MUSLIM HOME - Hilde Wernher
where I found it: Goodwill
I love cross-cultural stories and old books, so this one was a winner (my copy is a lovely green hardback). Ended up sharing this one with my mom and have spoken of it to a number of friends.
Share some of your Found Books below!
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Karen Cushman, the writing life, historical fiction, quotes, middle-grade, recommended reading, Add a tag
Your books have been set in medieval times, during the Gold Rush, the McCarthy era, and other time periods. As someone whose career has been built on historical fiction for children, why do you think the genre is important, both for you as a writer and for readers?
I think for readers historical fiction is important because it helps them to see beyond the boundaries of their own experience. It helps them to stretch and to see what life is like for others. This helps illustrate both how we are the same and how we are different, and can give readers more empathy.
As a writer the story always comes first. Then it seems to fit into one time period and a place. I also like to stretch beyond my own boundaries and to see our commonalities. One thing historical fiction does for writers is that it helps us to look at a time when we know how things turn out, which is very unlike our own.
Karen Cushman Interview :: Kirby Larson
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: what I am reading, GONE GIRL, creativity, voice, craft, recommended reading, Donald Maass, reading and writing, Cheryl Klein, reading update, Add a tag
One of the things I think has made Gillian Flynn's GONE GIRL so successful is voice.
Voice is always one of those tricky things. Scholastic editor Cheryl Klein defines it "by using the formula VOICE = PERSON + TENSE + PROSODY + (Diction + Syntax + Tone + Imagination + Details). Defining the imagination of Voice, Cheryl says, '[t]he imagination of a voice sets the range of subjects, images, diction, kinds of and examples of figurative language, and references that the voice can include.'”
Agent and author Donald Maass says voice is "the thing...every novelist already has... . It may be comic, deadpan, dry, pulpy, shrill, objective, distant, intimate, arty or a thousand other things. It comes through in the story that an author chooses to tell and the way in which they choose to tell it."
Here are some quotes I highlighted while reading GONE GIRL. You'll notice they're not big statements on the plot (except for the last one, which sums up the entire story in all its twisted wonder), but tiny observations -- metaphors used to paint a picture of characters, of setting, small things that were fresh and interesting and right. In other words, great examples of voice.
characterization and metaphor:
"They have no hard edges with each other, no spiny conflicts, they ride through life like conjoined jellyfish -- expanding and contracting instinctively, filling each other's spaces liquidly. Making it look easy, the soul-mate thing." (p 27)
setting and metaphor:
"It was the best time of day, the July sky cloudless, the slowly setting sun a spotlight on the east, turning everything golden and lush, a Flemish painting." (p 31)
characterization:
"His shirt wasn't wrinkled, but he wore it like it was; he looked like he should stink of cigarettes and sour coffee, even though he didn't. He smelled like Dial soap." (p 33)
characterization and metaphor:
"He spoke in a soft, soothing voice, a voice wearing a cardigan." (p 199)
and the quote that sums up the entire crazy ride:
"Our kind of love can go into remission, but it's always waiting to return. Like the world's sweetest cancer." (p 392)
Have you read GONE GIRL? What were your impressions? Any other authors or books that get voice just right?
Blog: Liz Carmichael's Portal (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Community, Recommended Reading, Freshly Pressed, Editors' Picks, Add a tag
No more of this “waiting until the end of the month” nonsense to see what was hot on Freshly Pressed! To keep our Freshly Pressed editors’ picks, um, fresh, we’ll highlight a few of our (and your) favorite posts here every Friday.
If One More Woman Complains About the Size of Her Body . . .
Caitlin Kelly’s post on Broadside hit a nerve with hundreds of you.
Whining about weight teaches the girls in our lives, who look to us their role models, that this is just what women do, that focusing miserably and endlessly on our individual body size and shape is our most pressing issue as women — instead of political and economic issues that affect us all, size 00s to 24s, like paid maternity leave or better domestic violence protection or access to birth control and abortion.
Caitlin’s post racked up the Likes, but also spawned some fascinating conversation in her comments section. We loved seeing your responses as much as we enjoyed reading this no-holds-barred post in the first place.
My Life, Plan B (or what to do when life doesn’t go as planned)
Mama Bear, the blogger behind Call Me She Bear, is almost 40 years old, and coming to terms with the fact that her life hasn’t turned out quite the way she’d been planning.
(I’m sure none of us can relate, right?)
What’s Mama Bear’s Plan B? Actually:
“Plan B is not a plan at all. It’s more of an intention. It’s an intention to let go of the tight grip on my big expectations, take things one day at a time, do what’s in front of me to the best of my ability, and trust that the blur coming up for me on the horizon will become clear to me and worthwhile when I get there.”
The gorgeous photos accompanying the post pushed it over the top. We can’t wait to read about how Plan B works out.
“I’m Spiritual, Not Religious”
We had a feeling some great conversation would come out of this post, and we weren’t wrong. After all, it’s hard to imagine that a bunch of opinionated bloggers wouldn’t have something to say about this:
To claim to be spiritual and not religious is like claiming to have taken a swim without getting wet. Anyone who embarks on anything spiritual will either receive the religious tradition from which it comes, or create their own religious tradition in the attempt to understand and practice it.
Not everyone agreed with blogger Eric’s take, but the discussion was both thought-provoking and civil — the very best of what the WordPress.com community is about.
Hanging Up the Tutu
Becca at 25toFly had quite the cheering squad among fellow bloggers this week, and when we read this post about her journey to find her life’s passion and re-define herself after leaving a career in dance, we understood why.
I had become the one thing that I had almost forgotten I’d sworn not to be, Miss play-it-safe. Sure, I’d find a job. That job would pay well enough for me to live as comfortably as I always have. People would see me as “successful,” but I wouldn’t stop thinking, “Is this it?” I would eventually become that forty-year-old woman still bragging about how many pirouettes she could do twenty years ago while shamefully dodging conversation about her soul draining day job.
Her new direction? Writing. You think it’s a good choice, and so do we.
Thanks to everyone who sent us recommendations this week — you introduced us to a bunch of great bloggers, some of whom have since been featured on Freshly Pressed. Keep it up! You can tweet links you love to us @freshly_pressed. (And be sure to follow @freshly_pressed to see all your fellow bloggers’ picks, even those that don’t make it to the Freshly Pressed page.)

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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: the writing life, authors, journals, recommended reading, Anne of Green Gables, LM Montgomery, Emily of New Moon, Jamie Martin, what I am reading, Marissa Burt, Mistress Pat, Serenity Bohon, The Story Girl, Add a tag
I first discovered her journals (available in five volumes) with my dear friend, Jamie C. Martin, back when I was teaching, was a soon-to-be mama, and was pursuing the writing life with as much vigor and passion as I was able to muster while figuring it all out alone.
If you've read any of Maud's books, the journals might come as a surprise. Much of the sweetness you'd expect from the author of Anne, Emily, Pat, and the Story Girl isn't present. Her life was a challenge in many ways. But for me, seeing Maud's daily struggles made her somehow more real and made her hopeful books that much richer.
I have always felt an affinity for this woman. We share a lot in common as teachers, mothers to two boys, pastor's wives, authors, women who have lived with depression. These journals are insightful, funny, painful, full of longing, and brimming with the anecdotal stories you'd expect from an author of over 500 short stories. Through these books I've learned about women's schooling in the late 1800's, a bit of Canadian history and geography, societal norms, women's fashion, beginning and sustaining a writing career (in the midst of babies and a male-dominated publishing world), advancements in technology, the impact on the individual of the first and second World Wars. I can go on and on.
It has been some time since I've read these journals, and I've found myself longing to re-read the books that so deeply spoke to me over a decade ago. I'm inviting anyone who's interested to read along. This is the only reading goal I'm setting for myself in 2013.
Expect to see a lot on LM on the blog next year.
Jamie? Marissa? Serenity? Want to join me?* Anyone else?
* Unfortunately, the journals are not easy to find. Try Amazon or your local library.
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: adult titles, quotes, recommended reading, Add a tag
Growth, after all, is not so much a matter of change as of ripening, and what alters most is the degree of clarity with which we see one another.
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: recommended reading, what I am reading, Add a tag




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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: recommended reading, boys and reading, mysteries, children's literature, Add a tag
With the passing of Encyclopedia Brown author Donald Sobol, I've been thinking about all the things I've learned in life from the Boy Detective. Here goes:
Penguins don't live in the Arctic (and if there's a stuffed one in an Arctic exhibit, a thief has probably filled it with stolen money).
Even-numbered book pages are always on the left.
Tennis players have one forearm that is bigger than the other.
Bugs Meany is the best bully name ever.
Don't mess with Sally Kimball.
What do you remember learning from Encyclopedia Brown?
And some links:
The Ten Most Ridiculously Difficult Encyclopedia Brown Mysteries
Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Sad Readers
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: links, recommended reading, fast five, Add a tag
I'm taking a blogging break during the month of July. Stop by weekly to access links to some oldies but goodies. I hope you find some things of interest to you. Enjoy!
Fast Fives
Favorite Childhood Series
Books That Made Me Laugh
Picture Books
Adult Book Club Finds
Books That Broke My Heart
Books About China and Japan
Novels about Teachers and Their Students
Books I Wish I'd Read as a Kid
Picture Books that Have Influenced our Family Conversations
E-Books on My Kindle
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: quotes, recommended reading, adult titles, Add a tag
A time splashed with interest, wounded with tragedy, crevassed with joy -- that's the time that seems long in memory. And this is right when you think about it. Eventlessness has no posts to drape duration on. From nothing to nothing is no time at all.
A great and lasting story is about everyone or it will not last. The strange and foreign is not interesting -- only the deeply personal and familiar...
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: favorite books, quotes, characters, recommended reading, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Add a tag
"Let me be something every minute of every hour of my life. Let me be gay; let me be sad. Let me be cold; let me be warm. Let me be hungry...have too much to eat. Let me be ragged or well dressed. Let me be sincere -- be deceitful. Let me be truthful; let me be a liar. Let me be honorable and let me sin. Only let me be something every blessed minute. And when I sleep, let me dream all the time so that not one little piece of living is ever lost."
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's literature, middle-grade, disabilities, recommended reading, Wonder, Schneider Family Award, R. J. Palacio, Add a tag

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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: recommended reading, book club, childhood books, Add a tag
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: family, quotes, recommended reading, mid-grade novels, Add a tag
We're reading through The Chronicles of Narnia for our family read aloud and have decided to approach the series chronologically instead of in the order it was written (meaning we've started with THE MAGICIAN'S NEPHEW instead of THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE).
I love the little asides CS Lewis throws into his writing. Here are a few I've savored so far:
"Children have one kind of silliness, as you know, and grown-ups have another kind. At this moment Uncle Andrew was beginning to be silly in a very grown-up way. Now that the Witch was no longer in the same room with him he was quickly forgetting how she had frightened him and thinking more and more of her wonderful beauty."
"We must now go back a bit and explain what the whole scene had looked like from Uncle Andrew's point of view It had not made at all the same impression on him a on the Cabby and the children. For what you see and hear depends on where you are standing: it also depends on what sort of person you are."
"And the longer and more beautiful the Lion sang, the harder Uncle Andrew tried to make himself believe that he could hear nothing but roaring. Now the trouble about trying make yourself stupider than you really are is that you very often succeed."
Poor Uncle Andrew! I'm so glad his perspective is included in these stories.
What bits of wisdom have you gleaned from your recent reads?
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Blog: C.A. Martin's Slumberland Studio (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Recommended Reading, Add a tag
I recently began reading Maria Tatar's "Enchanted Hunters" a facinating examination of the power of stories in childhood. I'm only about 1/3 of the way through but already feel my understanding of children's literature getting sharper.
So much of what Tatar covers in this book would seem obvious and yet it boggles my mind that no one has yet put it in such well crafted, straightforward, and comprehensive way as she does here. She discuss the evolution from familial hearth-oriented storytelling to bedtime reading to children, which on its own is an interesting topic. She makes many interesting points that in modern times, bedtime reading is essentially a conflict zone between parent and child (parent wanting child to go to sleep, child roused by the stories being told), rather than the sweet, nostalgic and idealized vision we have of story time being a period of quality bonding between parent and child. Beyond that, she also examines the irony between the origin of bedtime stories (many intended to frighten the child into obedience, i.e. The Sandman) and the modern genre of bedtime picture books aimed at lulling a child to sleep (in a word, BORING!).
She goes on to stress that many children will passively endure stories that end with "and now it's time for bed," but that what children really crave are stories of adventure, beauty, intrigue, and peril. It's so obvious to me now. Bedtime books exist because parents WILL buy them, NOT because children actually want to read them. This is the case for many genres of children's books. Up until now I had been feeling overwhelmed at the vastness of the field of kidlit, but now it's more apparent to me that within kidlit is an entire sub section of "adult kidlit", books supposedly aimed at children but actually created out of a nostaligia of an adult perspective on childhood, rather than one sincerely intended for childhood appeal.
This is the key to everything to me. I do NOT want to be a poser of a children's illustrator. I want to aspire to connect directly with children rather than some IDEA of what children should like. Think about it: as children, we are captivated by stories that give us that perfect balance of both beauty AND horror (traditional fairy tales, Wizard of Oz, Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, etc). I for one can absolutely remember the types of books I couldn't get enough of: ANYTHING by R.L. Stine!
I plowed through the Goosebump Series all through elementary school. I could not satiate my desire to live in a world where children were constantly at the mercy of their own courage to face dark and terrible things without the aid of adults. To little Courtney, that was as far from reality as it got! I was so close to my family and knew they'd always be there to save me, that the very thought of being alone drew me to those types of stories. I could escape into the pages of R.L. Stine and live in a world that horrified and mesmerized me, all from the comfort and safety of the living room couch.
Even as a child I remember being so THANKFUL that Mr. Stine was AWESOME enough to write those books for us kids---it was like he was saying to us. "Hey, you might be kids, but I know you can handle it." I respected him for respecting us. I didn't want boring, dumbed-down, cutesy and condescending stories---I wanted risk, and the promise that there was no promise of a happy ending. Because even at a young age, I knew that was the harshness of life.
Those early reading experiences were fundamental to me. They
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: favorite books, recommended reading, Add a tag
There are a million ways I could answer this question. What I say today will probably be different a year or ten years from now. Still, the books that have truly influenced me will always make up a part of who I am.
In fifth grade, I read THE YEARLING, a big, fat, lovely, tragic, challenging story about the end of childhood. I read it again last school year with my sixth and seventh-grade book club. It still hit me in the heart, but differently this time. As an adult, I could watch Jody's life change in a way I didn't understand when I was eleven. As a parent, I empathized with Penny, the father who would do anything to protect his son yet ended up in the position of causing him the most pain.
If you had to pick a book that has affected you deeply (with the permission to switch titles tomorrow!), what would it be?
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: boys and reading, boy books, recommended reading, Add a tag
This post originally ran as a guest post at Steady Mom on January 4, 2010.
Is there such a thing as a boy book?
As a mother and former teacher, I cringe at the idea of boy books, which imply there are titles meant for some children and not for others. While I feel strongly books are for everyone, I can’t deny there are books boys tend to gravitate to and others they typically avoid. Here is a list of middle-grade and young adult titles (and authors) that have a proven track record in the classroom.
The Bizarre: (middle-grade)
Boys love weird things. These titles that might grab your son’s attention:
Whales on Stilts! By M.T. Anderson
The Curse of the Campfire Weenies and Other Warped and Creepy Tales by David Lubar
The Wayside School series by Louis Sachar
Anything by Roald Dahl, author of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Anything by Bruce Coville, author of My Teacher is an Alien
Anything by Daniel Pinkwater, author of The Hoboken Chicken Emergency
Mysteries: (middle-grade)
The Hank the Cowdog Series by John Erickson
The Chet Gecko series by Bruce Hale (noir lizard detective)
The Mysterious Benedict Society series by Trenton Lee Stewart (MG/YA because of length and reading level)
Stories About Everyday Kids or Extraordinary Kids in Everyday Situations: (MG/YA)
Anything by Andrew Clements, author of Frindle (MG)
The Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, by Jeff Kinney (MG)
Holes by Louis Sachar (MG)
Anything by Jerry Spinelli, author of Eggs (MG)
Schooled by Gordon Korman (YA)
Adventure/Survival: (middle-grade)
Anything by Gary Paulsen, author of Hatchet
Anything by Roland Smith, author of Peak
Anything by Harry Mazer, author of Boy No More
Anything by William Durbin, author of The Broken Blade
Anything by Will Hobbs, author of Far North
Anything by Sid Fleishman, author of The Whipping Boy
Fantasy: (MG/YA)
The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster (MG)
The Secrets of the Cheese Syndicate, by Donna St. Cyr (MG)
The Redwall series by Brian Jacques (YA)
The Harry Potter series by JK Rowling (YA)
The City of Ember series by Jeanne Du Prau (YA)
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (YA)
What books have your boys enjoyed?
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Blog: Caroline by line (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mysteries, recommended reading, 100+ reading challenge, Add a tag
This summer I've spent a lot of time with Agatha Christie, mystery writer extraordinaire. I'm drawn to her books for two reasons:
- The Gypsies of Spain - Jan Yoors (NF)
- If I Stay - Gayle Forman (YA)
- Catalyst - Laurie Halse Anderson (YA)
- Fat Cat - Robin Brande (YA)
- Wintergirls - Laurie Halse Anderson (YA)
- Freedom Crossing - Margaret Goff Clark (MG)
- The Rights of the Reader - Daniel Pennac (NF)
- The Witch of Blackbird Pond - Elizabeth George Speare (YA)
- Th1rteen R3asons Why - Jay Asher (YA)
- The Last Treasure - Janet S. Anderson (MG)
- Twisted - Laurie Halse Anderson (YA)
- Outliers - Malcolm Gladwell (NF)
- Tipping Point - Malcolm Gladwell (NF)
- Henry and Ribsy - Beverly Cleary (MG)
- On the Banks of P
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Blog: Jessica Burkhart (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: recommended reading, summer reading, Add a tag
I've been getting lots of e-mails from Team Canterwood asking "What else should I read this summer?" So . . . I started thinking about doing a few blog posts with recommended reads. I picked a very special book for this month. (And it's *not* because the cover is pink!) ;)
I totally heart DEAR ANJALI by Melissa Glenn Haber. It's a beautiful, sad, funny story about a 12-year-old girl who loses something that could be many of your (including mine) worst nightmares--Meredith's best friend, Anjali, dies.
For more about the author, check out her Website here. This is a read you don't want to miss.
Go, Team Canterwood! :)
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Last night I finished Beholding Bee. Such a fresh idea, so well-written. It made me think about an idea I was noodling in a whole new way. I love that about books!
I don't keep books on my nightstand because I'd never fall asleep if I read in bed. But I do read earlier in the evening, when staring at the computer gets to my eyes. I'm currently re-reading some humorous MG stories, as research, including books by Wendy Mass and Carl Hiaasen.
And I also loved Beholding Bee!
The One and Only Ivan, Three Times Lucky, The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding, and Be-yond Ba-by Talk (a linguistic guide to your child's first few years). And on my Kindle, Voyager by Diana Gabaldon. Determined to finish that series before Luke turns one!
Oy! I have such a stack!
Me too. And this is Kimberly Fusco, right? I heard her editor, Michelle Frey, talk about her first book, TENDING TO GRACE at a conference in 2005. Kimberly had met Michelle at a conference one-on-one, and Michelle had said she'd look at the manuscript again with some work. I was fascinated with the way Kimberly buckled down and committed to the manuscript -- which led to an eventual sale.
Have you read that book? It's beautiful.
Love that books keep you up!
Reading is always research in some way. I love that I can both study and enjoy at the same time.
Lots of goodies! I haven't read THREE TIMES LUCKY yet, though I heard Sheila talk at the Decatur Book Festival. I'm three or four book in to Gabaldon's series and have a feeling I'd need to pick up that book of characters she has before I start up again.
By the way, how's motherhood treating you??
Jumping in here to say Tending to Grace is gorgeous! Did you know Kim wrote it as poetry first? That's why the language is so spare and luminous.
No! But I know she added Grace's stutter to the storyline after her critique with Michelle. It truly made the story.
Well, I must thank you all for making my day! We lost power tonight for several hours and my husband was reading to my daughter and me by candlelight - the new Schneider Award recipient, A Dog Called Homeless - the power came on and I saw these comments about BEHOLDING BEE and TENDING TO GRACE. I feel blessed to be a writer, and blessed to meet such talented people. And yes, each chapter in TTG began as a poem and I found the courage to write about stuttering because I was (and sometimes am still) a stutterer. And somehow I've become a rather fearless public speaker because I found a voice. Amazing how a little writing can transform your life. Thank you!
Hello and thank you for stopping by! I feel blessed to have heard your story (I met Michelle Frey at IRA last year and shared how much it meant to me) and to have read your work. You are an inspiration.
Can't wait to pick up A DOG CALLED HOMELESS.