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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: far from you, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. soup of the day double dip: lisa



Hooray hooray!

It's double dippin' day here at alphabet soup! Two fabulous Live Journal friends are celebrating book releases. We've made lots of soup to congratulate them, so be sure to dip your spoons into both posts.

First, let's hear it for Lisa Schroeder ([info]lisa_schroeder ), on the release of Far From You (Simon Pulse, 2008)! Yay, Lisa!! We've been hearing a lot about this book, so we're thrilled it's finally out!

    
      FAR FROM YOU by Lisa Schroeder
       (Simon Pulse, 2008), ages 12+, 368 pp.

This is Lisa's second novel for teen readers, a tale of love, loss and survival presented in a series of lyrical, poignant, free verse poems. Sixteen-year-old singer/songwriter Alice, who is still bitter about losing her mother to cancer, reluctantly goes on a family road trip with her stepmother, Victoria, and her newborn half-sister, Ivy. When a life-threatening snowstorm strands them in the car for four days, Alice's buried feelings of anger, scorn, jealousy, and resentment rise to the surface. What will get her through this ordeal -- her love of boyfriend, Blaze, her music, or an angel on earth?

I enjoyed Lisa's first novel, I Heart You, You Haunt Me (Simon Pulse, 2008), and really look forward to reading this new book. Liv's Book Reviews refers to both books as "unique, eloquent, flowing and emotional." She also mentions that Far From You is wider in scope than I Heart You, You Haunt Me, examining issues of death, divorce, and survival, in addition to referencing matters of Christian faith without being preachy. Above all, this is a story of romance, with what Kirkus calls "genuine emotion" and an "accessibility and heartache" that will attract many readers.

Now that winter is officially here, bundle up, fluff up your angel wings, and fly on over to your nearest indie bookstore, or if you prefer, click through. Lisa's sensitive, emotive writing will surely warm your heart as you connect with the characters and journey through this satisfying story.

And now, please raise your spoons in honor of Lisa, then slurp to your heart's content. You might finding yourself waxing poetic, or hugging the person nearest you. It's all good!


Today's Special: Snowflake Tomato (fortified with love and courage)

Special vlogs featuring excerpts from the novel can be found at:

Liv's Book Reviews
What Vanessa Reads
Lisa's Little Corner of the Internet.

Don't forget to visit Lisa's website for more about her books.

                               

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2. Turning Kids onto Great Books.

So, today, as you are hopefully aware, is Talk Like a Pirate Day.

When being told of this, the kids today wanted pirate books. I was more than happy to oblige.

It reminded me of a great day with the same bunch of kids when I was wearing my Babymouse t-shirt.

Girl 1 (age 8): Miss Jennie, what's that on your shirt?
Me: It's Babymouse!
Girl 2 (age 8): Miss Jennie, what's Babymouse?
Me: You guys have never read Babymouse?
Girls 1 and 2: Uh-uh.
Me: Come with me! You'll love it!
We walk over the stacks where I find copies. When the other kids see I'm handing out books, they all come over. I end up handing out all 10 or so copies of various Babymouse titles that we have on the shelf...

Ten minutes later:


Boy 1 (age 7. Very macho): Miss Jennie! I want that pink book that everyone else is reading!!!!

Me: tries very hard not to laugh

End scene.

Sometimes, peer pressure is a force for good.


Here's a vacation photo of me (looking a little demented-- can we blame that on the sun? Look how burned I got that morning!) in front of the "Reading Room for Youngsters" in the Beijing Underground City. When China feared nuclear war with the Soviet Union, they didn't build bomb shelters in their elementary schools and backyards. They built and entire underground city-- a series of rooms and tunnels that could house 300,000 people. It has tunnels leading the Great Wall and the Forbidden City, ventilation shafts, and parts can be sealed off in case of contamination. And now, for 20 yuan (about $2.56 US) you can have an English-language guided tour. Very, very cool. There was also a Battle Field Library and a Recreation Room of Old Persons.

Also, I'm at Geek Buffet today, blogging about being an adult, your inner child, and the amount of sugary cereal in my pantry.

But, here's a book review:


Violet Bing and the Grand House by Jennifer Paros

Violet Bing does not like change, or things that are not exactly just so. As such, she has refused to go on vacation with her family and is shipped off to spend some time with her great-aunt Astrid instead.

When her aunt suggests that make some sandwiches and ride their bikes to the beach, Violet's reaction is typical:

Violet thinks she likes her sandwiches with white bread that is nice and soft. She likes them to have the smooth kind of peanut butter and not too much of it, and her jelly must be grape because sometimes strawberry as pieces of strawberry in it. And also, along with not being all that good at ride a bicycle, she can't swim because she does not want to put her face in the water. Putting her face in the water seems like a bad idea because you cannot breathe while your face is in the water.

And so Violet uses her catch-all excuse that she just doesn't have the time.

It's a nice little story about a getting a girl to try new things. Really though, it's Paros's illustrations that make the book for me. Line drawings, sometimes labeled, and Violet in her triangle dress add much to the enjoyment of this story.

And let's review another book:

Horseradish: Bitter Truths You Can't Avoid by Lemony Snicket

This is quite a nice little book of Snicket's bon mots. Kinda like a depressing Deep Thoughts. Or cross-stitch samplers for the demented.

As I'm sure you know, the key to good eavesdropping is not getting caught.

Labor Day is a holiday honoring those who work for a living. Laborious Day is a lesser known holiday honoring those who cannot stop talking about their work.

The way sadness works is one of the strangest riddles of the world.

A fun tie-in for fans of Snicket.

6 Comments on Turning Kids onto Great Books., last added: 9/23/2007
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