Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs


Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs is . . . well, peculiar. It's been around for a while, but it looked a little scary to me. And it was. But not too scary for me as long as I didn't read too late at night. It was the same kind of scary as Neil Gaiman or Tim Burton (who is directing the film version). So if you like them, you might like this book.

The book is filled with real and very strange vintage photographs which gave the author some of her inspiration for the story. It's a little bit historical, a little bit suspense, and a big dose of fantasy. I wasn't sure about the book when I started it, but the first line drew me in: "I had just come to accept that my life would be ordinary when extraordinary things began to happen."

This book was really good and really original (which is hard to do). But a word of caution. Besides being a little scary, this book also has a few curse words. It is an excellent read and I recommend it, just not to everyone.

__________

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
by Ransom Riggs
Publisher: Quirk Books
Year: 2011
Ages: Young Adult
Content: some curse words, scary elements

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Mickey's Christmas Carol


You most likely know what this book is about. I like Mickey's Christmas Carol, both the book and the cartoon, because it introduces young children to a classic Christmas story. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens is familiar to us all through retellings and lots of different movie versions. Last year I finally read the original and even though Dickens can be difficult to read, I can tell you that A Christmas Carol is worth your time (and significantly shorter than his other books).

Or you can stick to the children's version like Mickey's Christmas Carol with your kids. Do you have a favorite version of Dickens's classic Christmas tale?
___________

Mickey’s Christmas Carol
By Disney Enterprises
Adapted from Charles Dickens
Publisher: Sandy Creek
Year: 2010

Info: Full color illustrations
Ages: Picture Books
Themes: Christmas, Classics

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Writing Magic by Gail Carson Levine


Gail Carson Levine is a great writer of young adult fantasy and fairy tales. I loved Ella Enchanted, which won a Newbery Honor in 1998. Writing Magic: Creating Stories that Fly is a creative writing book for young adults.

Levine is great at writing for young adults and this carries over to her nonfiction as well. This book is full of encouragement, writing tips, and writing prompts. It would make a great gift for a young would-be author along with some writing notebooks and pens.

My favorite notebooks for writing are Moleskine. Big sizes are great for writing stories and small ones are perfect for carrying around to jot down story ideas. There are prettier notebooks out there, but I've found that if my notebook is too pretty, I never write in it because I only want to write something amazing in it. And amazing writing never happens in the first draft.

__________

Writing Magic: Creating Stories that Fly
by Gail Carson Levine
Publisher: Harper Collins
Year: 2014
Age: Young Adult, Middle Grade
Themes: Writing, Nonfiction

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Snow by Roy McKie and P.D. Eastman



This has long been one of my kids' favorite books, whether we live among snow or not. It begins with an invitation to "Come out! Come out! Come out in the snow." It then follows two children through their snow adventures. It's full of the repetition and rhyming that kids love when read aloud.

Next week we're leaving our 80 degree Florida winter to hopefully see some snow in Utah. We'll see how much my kids like it in person. I enjoy snow best from inside a warm house.

__________

Snow
by Roy McKie and P.D. Eastman
Publisher: Beginner Books
Year: 1961
Ages: Picture Books

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Give the Gift of Books

There are lots of lists of gifts for book lovers. I would love a purse made out of a book cover or socks that look like a library check out card. But the best gifts for book lovers is more books.

While I was growing up, every Christmas we got a stack of books. I've continued this tradition with my kids. And even though books can be expensive, they don't have to be. Most of the books I get for my kids are from garage sales and a kid's consignment store.

The kids in your life will like different books than mine do, but here are five things to think about when choosing books as gifts.

1. Choose books that are a little ahead of their age. My first grader isn't quite ready to read chapter books on her own, but I loved the Ramona books and anticipate her enjoying them too sometime in the next year. If nothing else, we can read them together.


2. Get them books with characters they like. If you know a TV show or movie they like, get them a book that goes with it. Even if they're not a reader, they will be drawn to a character they already know. (My daughter loves Curious George.)


3. Look and Find books are great for kids to look at on their own. They're fun to read together, but they also get kids to spend time alone with a book before they can even read.


4. Get them a book you love. If you're excited about it, it can help them get excited about it. I love literature and love giving the BabyLit Board Books as gifts to my own kids and as baby shower gifts.

5. Get them a nonfiction book about something they like. My daughter wants to learn to cook and so a kids' cookbook is a great option for her. For kids who aren't as into fiction, there are lots of nonfiction titles to find about something they're interested in.

Bonus: If you have no idea what kind of book they'll like, give a bookstore gift card. My kids each got a bookstore gift card last year and it was a special experience for them to get to go and pick out whatever book they wanted.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Listen to the Silent Night by Dandi Daley Mackall



Listen to the Silent Night by Dandi Daley Mackall is one of my favorite Christmas books. The story imagines the night of Christ's birth and how it was likely "not such a silent night." And it's illustrated with beautiful paintings by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher.

My daughter's know it as the "book that sometimes makes Mommy cry." Having given birth myself, I can't help but tear up at the page where "Mary groaned in pain, Joseph by her side. A shout rang out--Baby Jesus cried!" It hits close to home--the pain of giving birth and the joy of the baby's first cry. It makes the long-told story and the people in it seem very real to me.

This is a great read aloud book for Christmastime. Are there any books your family reads together every Christmas?
___________

Listen to the Silent Night
By Dandi Daley Mackall
Paintings by Steve Johnson & Lou Fancher
Publisher: Dutton’s Children’s Books
Year: 2011

Info: paintings

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Wonder by R.J. Palacio



Apparently I am really late coming to this book. It was on the New York Times Bestseller list for two years. I've seen the cover all over the place but never even looked into what it was about. I wish I hadn't waited so long because it is worthy of all the attention that it has received.

Wonder is the story of August, a boy with craniofacial abnormalities that makes him look so different that he goes about his whole life with people staring, or conspicuously trying not to stare, at him. Young children even scream and run in fear of him. Most of us, even on our very ugliest days, cannot begin to imagine what that would be like.

August goes to school for the first time in middle school, a difficult time for any child. Not knowing what it was about as I got into it, I followed along with August as the narrator and then was surprised when it began switching to other young people who interact with him--friends, his sister, his sister's boyfriend. Though there is no way most of us could imagine being in August's shoes, we've all been in a situation where someone looks so different that we stare at or avoid eye contact with someone who looks different.

What I loved most about this book is that though there are a few simply horrible people who say and do awful things to August, most of the characters may stumble but they do the best they can to follow the precept from the book: "When given the choice between being right or being kind, choose kind" (Dr. Wayne Dyer). Besides being an entertaining read, it is a book that teaches compassion, bravery, and not judging someone by what they look like. It's geared toward middle grade readers, but it would be a great book for young adults and adults as well.

__________

Wonder
By R.J. Palacio
Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
Year: 2012
Ages: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Visit the author's website for more information.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Countdown to Christmas with Books!


For the last few years, my family has done a countdown to Christmas with books. I wrap our Christmas books and every day counting down to Christmas we get to open one and read it.

Normally we start on December 1 and have 24 books to countdown to the day before Christmas. This year we're going out of town for Christmas, so I wrapped enough books to start the day after Thanksgiving and end the day before we leave for our Christmas vacation. You could easily adapt it to fewer days if you don't have that many Christmas books--it took us a few years to collect so many.

Besides the fact that it's fun to open a present every day, it demonstrates to children that books are a gift.

Do you have any Christmas traditions surrounding books? What is your favorite Christmas book?

Friday, November 27, 2015

How the Grinch Stole Christmas! by Dr. Seuss




Are we allowed to talk about Christmas now? Good. I indulge in Christmas songs, books, and movies before Thanksgiving. But we do reserve decorating for Christmas until the day after.

Last night my three-year-old chose "Mr. Grinch" for her bedtime book. It was followed by a discussion about why Mr. Grinch doesn't like Christmas and why he takes all the presents. Her takeaway? Maybe Mr. Grinch likes Halloween because he's a monster. Great works of literature inspire different thoughts in everyone.

I can't imagine that anyone out there doesn't know the story of the Grinch. It's part of our cultural tradition around Christmastime. If someone is being a Grinch we know what it means just as we know what it means to be a Scrooge. But when was the last time you read the book? I think the cartoon that came from the book is much more familiar than the book itself. Did you know or remember that the drawings are done in only black, white, and red? A green Grinch came out of the cartoon. I hope everyone gets a chance to read the book this Christmas season--and that you get to sing "He's a mean one, Mr. Grinch" in the deepest voice you can manage.

__________

How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
By Dr. Seuss
Publisher: Random House
Year: 1957

Info: Black, white, and red illustrations

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Good Night Books



This is the time of year when it's especially hard to live far away from family. I've been known to complain about it. I've also been known to complain about the temperature still being in the 80s in November. But this is also the time of year to remember what we're grateful for. I'm grateful for books, obviously. I'm also grateful for all the experiences I've had by living in many different places. There are certainly downsides to moving a lot, but there is much to be thankful for too.

We celebrate some of the places we've lived with the Good Night Books. My sister who lives in Minnesota got us our first one so my kids could know a little bit more about where their cousins live. And we have collected more of them for some of the places we've lived: Florida, Oregon, Washington, and Utah. (We've also lived in Idaho, but they don't have that one yet.) Each book takes kids through a day around the state, eventually saying good night to the things and places that make the state unique.

Before moving to Florida I never even wanted to visit the state. But if we'd never moved to Florida, we would not know the friends we have now. We would have never picked an orange off a tree, dipped our toes in the warm water off the coast, witnessed awesome thunder and lightning storms, or cooked our Thanksgiving turkey on our charcoal grill.

What are you thankful for about where you live this Thanksgiving?

__________

Good Night Books
By various authors
Click here for more information
Info: board books, color illustrations
Ages: Young Children, Picture Books

Friday, November 20, 2015

The Peanuts Movie



I've been looking forward to the new Peanuts Movie for well over a year now. I finally was able to take my two girls to see it on Wednesday night.

There's always a little bit of fear that a new version of a beloved story won't live up to your expectations, but this didn't happen with The Peanuts Movie for me. The characters were just as I remember them, just a little CG-ified. My favorite scene was the school dance because the characters performed their signature moves from A Charlie Brown Christmas.

The Peanuts Movie was funny, sweet, and touching. I recommend it for kids and for parents who grew up loving Charlie Brown. It's one that we will definitely be adding to our DVD library.

Did you grow up on Charlie Brown and his pals? Who's your favorite character? (As a child I loved Snoopy, today my favorite is Linus.)

__________

http://www.peanutsmovie.com/




Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Sharing the Bread by Pat Zietlow Miller & Jill McElmurry



I feel a bit like Charlie Brown: "We have another holiday to worry about. It seems Thanksgiving Day is upon us!" I actually love Thanksgiving, but it snuck up on me this year. Christmas is at the top of my list, but Thanksgiving marks the beginning of the holiday season for me. We don't decorate for Christmas until after Thanksgiving, but I do listen to Christmas music well beforehand. If there were more good Thanksgiving songs, I'd listen to those.

There are also a lot more Christmas books than Thanksgiving books. I was looking at the library for a Thanksgiving themed books to read with my kids. The first one I got was written in the 1950s and I wasn't comfortable with the way it portrayed Native Americans. Recently I found this book, Sharing the Bread: An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving by Pat Zietlow Miller & Jill McElmurry.

There's only one brief reference to the first Thanksgiving when the young boy makes Pilgrim hats. But it focused on what I love about Thanksgiving: family, food, and gratitude. I appreciated how this old-fashioned Thanksgiving dinner had the whole family working together to make the meal. It's how I remember Thanksgiving as a child. My grandmother may have most of the side dishes, but Grandpa was always in charge of making his famous potato rolls. And on the other side of my family, Grandpa made the pies. Everyone shared in the work as well as enjoying the meal together.

Do you have any favorite Thanksgiving books?

__________

Sharing the Bread: An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving
By Pat Zietlow Miller & Jill McElmurry
Publisher: Random House Children's Books
Year: 2015
Ages: Picture Books, Young Children
Themes: Thanksgiving, holidays, food, family, stories in rhyme
Info: Full color illustrations


Monday, November 16, 2015

Look! A Book! by Bob Staake



One of our regular library check outs, Look! A Book!: A Zany Seek-and-Find Adventure goes way beyond Where's Waldo. My girl's love Bob Staake's fun drawing style and silly rhymes. "Look! A cat! A bat! A gooey splat! A goose! A moose! A pool of juice!"

Besides a main prompt of what to look for on each page, the book is filled with lots of other silly things to find. Doughnuts, pizza, candy canes, ice cream-eating wiener dogs! My girls love having this book read to them, but it's also a great one for them to sit and look at on their own.

Do your kids like seek and find books? This is the best one we've found yet. Little kids have fun finding things, but this book has so many details it can challenge older kids as well. Also look for Look! Another Book! Which is pretty self-explanatory.

__________

Look! A Book!: A Zany Seek-and-Find Adventure
By Bob Staake
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Year: 2011
Ages: Picture Book
Themes: seek and find books
Info: full color illustrations

Friday, November 13, 2015

The Piggy in the Puddle by Charlotte Pomerantz



When I was a child, I loved Reading Rainbow. And I loved seeing LeVar Burton, my beloved RR host, on my dad's Star Trek show. My sisters and I would put banana clips over our eyes to pretend to be Geordi La Forge. My girls have been enjoying watching episodes of Reading Rainbow on Netflix (and I'm enjoying the 80s flashbacks).

One of the episodes I remember the most highlighted The Piggy in the Puddle by Charlotte Pomerantz, pictures by James Marshall. (Can you hear it in LeVar Burton's voice?) It showed how they created the story with claymation and it was the first time I realized that animation doesn't just happen, someone creates it.

The title character, the piggy, jumps in a mud puddle and her family tries to convince her to leave it. It's a fun book to read out loud because of all the rhyming and alliteration.

Did you watch Reading Rainbow growing up?

__________

The Piggy in the Puddle
Words by Charlotte Pomerantz
Pictures by James Marshall
Publisher: Aladdin Paperbacks
Year: 1974
Ages: Picture Books, Young Children
Info: full color illustrations, Reading Rainbow book
Themes: animals, mud, pigs, rhymes

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare



As a young girl, I went through a huge historical fiction phase. I loved learning about, and imagining myself in, another time and place. One of my very favorites was The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare. My fourth grade teacher recommended it to me. At first I didn't read it because I thought it was about witches in the Halloween sense. But once I did read it, I couldn't put it down and I read it over and over again. Oh, how I wished to be Kit, and how much I loved Nathaniel Eaton.

Kit grew up with her grandfather on an island, but when she's sixteen he dies and she has to go live with her only living relative, an aunt who lives with her family in Puritan New England. You can probably guess that her free-spirited ways don't mesh well with her new community. And when she befriends an old woman who is thought by some to be a witch, things only get worse for her.

Besides romance and adventure, this book offers a glimpse into Puritan society, New England in the 1600s, and old witch hunts. It's a book about friendship, loyalty, accepting differences, and accepting yourself. I highly recommend it for girls ages 10 and up--including their mothers.

__________

The Witch of Blackbird Pond
By Elizabeth George Speare
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt: Sandpiper
Year: 1958
Info: Newbery Award Winner
Ages: Middle Grade Books, YA Books
Themes: historical fiction, New England, Puritans

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Here's How You Know It's Our House


My six-year-old daughter drew a picture of a Christmas tree. Next to it she drew a bookshelf with books for the kids below and ones for mom and dad up high. "That's how you know it's our house." That made this book-loving mom happy.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Snowflakes Fall by Patricia MacLachlan



I know, I know. Many of you don't want to think about snow yet. But for Florida kids, snow holds a special, magical place in their imaginations year round. Two of my three children have seen snow, but they remember more it through pictures than their actual memory. Today we have record breaking heat once again and all I really want is for it to be cool enough to wear pants. I'm settling for reading about snow inside my air conditioned house.

Snowflakes Fall was written by Patricia MacLachlan after illustrator Steven Kellogg told her of the sadness he felt after the Sandy Hook Elementary tragedy which was in his hometown. The writing feels like poetry; the illustrations are beautiful. Though the focus is on the snow, it covers all the seasons. It's about the uniqueness of each snowflake and every child, and about remembering them.

__________

Snowflakes Fall
By Patricia MacLachlan
Illustrated by Steven Kellogg
Publisher: Random House
Year: 2013
Ages: Picture Book, Young Children
Themes: snow, seasons, children, memory
Info: full color illustrations
Source: our public library
Special Note: if you purchase this book, a donation is made to a fund for Sandy Hook Schools

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Chu's Day by Neil Gaiman



Chu is a little panda with a very big sneeze. Chu's Day is written by Neil Gaiman and illustrated by Adam Rex. It's a short picture book that's fun to read aloud and made my kids laugh out loud. After reading it to my three year old one time, she went off and sat by herself and told herself the story.

This book also shows what amazing range Neil Gaiman has. I typically think of Neil Gaiman's work as a little bit dark with some mystical elements. This book is just more proof that Neil Gaiman is simply a very good storyteller.

__________

Chu's Day
By Neil Gaiman
Illustrated by Adam Rex
Publisher: Harper
Year: 2013
Ages: Picture Books, Young Children
Info: Full Color Illustrations
Source: our public library

Monday, November 2, 2015

The Story of Diva and Flea by Mo Willems



Mo Willems is one of my favorite children's authors. I wouldn't have guessed that this book was by him because he doesn't do the illustrations (they're done by Tony DiTerlizzi) and it's really nothing like his other books. Diva and Flea is the story of an unlikely friendship between a small dog and a large cat living in Paris. It's told in thirteen short chapters with color illustrations throughout.

Even though it wasn't what I expected, I enjoyed reading this book with my six-year-old. It's one she could read on her own in a year or two. It doesn't have the same humor as other Mo Willems books, but it retains his charm. I loved the illustrations and this may sound strange, but I loved the texture of the paper. This is definitely one to pick up as a printed book.

If you're looking for a easy chapter book to read together or for your child to read independently, this is a good one.

__________

The Story of Diva and Flea
By Mo Willems
Illustrated by Tony DiTerlizzi
Publisher: Hyperion Books for Children
Year: 2015
Ages: Early Readers, Middle Grade
Themes: friendship, dogs and cats
Source: our public library

Friday, October 30, 2015

Halloween Stories



I'm not big into Halloween, sorry if that offends you. I love watching my kids have so much fun dressing up. But the gross, gory side of Halloween is enough to keep it off my list of favorite holidays.

My favorite Halloween story is It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. (I also love the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving story. The Charlie Brown Christmas Special is my favorite Christmas story after that one in the Book of Luke. Do you see a theme here?) I love this story so much that this happened for Halloween this year:


That's me as Linus and my 16 month old son as Charlie Brown. I love those two or three years before they choose their own costumes when you can dress them up however you want. I tried to convince my three year old to be Snoopy, but she really wanted to be a princess. Oh well.

Do you have any favorite Halloween stories, books, or movies? Any that you recommend as fun and not too scary for little kids?

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Crenshaw by Katherine Applegate



I grabbed Crenshaw by Katherine Applegate off the library shelf because I had read and loved her Newbery winning book, The One and Only Ivan. I ended up loving Crenshaw just as much.

Crenshaw is young Jackson's imaginary friend who happens to be a large cat. Jackson hadn't seen Crenshaw in years, but when his family starts struggling with money again, his fears of having to live out of their van again resurface and so does Crenshaw.

My heart broke for Jackson and for his parents. Katherine Applegate is a great storyteller and this is an important story. Besides entertaining, this book would tell children who struggle with poverty that they are not alone. And it would help children who've never had to go hungry or want for anything learn empathy for others. I highly recommend it for you or for your middle grade readers.

__________

Crenshaw
by Katherine Applegate
Publisher: Feiwel and Friends
Year: 2015
Ages: Middle Grade Books
Themes: imaginary friends, poverty, homelessness
Source: our public library

Friday, October 23, 2015

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce


The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce is the book that inspired an Academy Award Winning short film that you can see on YouTube here.

It's a magical book, beautifully told and illustrated. It's a book for book lovers of all ages. The book and the short film are both wonderful, so watch the film now and find the book at a library or bookstore soon.
__________

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore
By William Joyce
Illustrated by William Joyce & Joe Bluhm
Publisher: Antheneum Books for Young Readers
Year: 2012
Ages: Picture Books, Young Children, Early Readers


The Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman



The Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman originally appeared in Rag & Bones: New Twists on Timeless Tales. Here it gets its own book and B&W illustrations.

From the title you can probably tell it is the story of Sleeping Beauty. But the sleeping sickness that takes over the castle begins to spread like a plague through the whole kingdom and even into neighboring towns. It is about to threaten the kingdom over the mountains, and so its queen goes on a journey to break the spell and cure the sleeping plague. She can make it through the land without falling asleep because she happens to be Snow White who survived a year of magical sleep herself. There are lots of fairy tale retellings, but this one is truly reimagined.

I loved this book. But it is not for everyone. Neil Gaiman's work is always interesting and beautiful, but also dark and haunting. If dark is not your thing (or your teen's thing), try a Shannon Hale fairy tale instead. But if you like things a little bit haunting, a little bit scary, and a little bit different, this may just be the perfect fairy tale book for you.
__________

The Sleeper and the Spindle
By Neil Gaiman
Illustrated by Chris Riddell
Publisher: Harper
Year: 2013
Info: B&W Illustrations
Ages: Young Adult
Themes: fairy tales
Source: our public library

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Book Character Halloween Costumes

At my daughter's elementary school they don't celebrate Halloween. But the Kindergarteners and First Graders have a Book Character Parade around Halloween time. I saw a lot of parents kind of fudge it and say since they published Frozen books after the movie came out, their kid came as Elsa. I don't think there's anything wrong with coming as a fairytale princess, but maybe not the Disneyfied version.

Here are some ideas of book character Halloween costumes that I found after looking at our bookshelf for five minutes.

Max from Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak

I really want to dress my son up as Max one year. But it would make kind of a warm costume and we're still well into the 80s here in Florida just a couple weeks away from Halloween.



Stephanie from Stephanie's Ponytail by Robert Munsch

This one would be extremely easy, but not easily recognized. Stephanie's schoolmates keep copying her hairstyles, so she goes to school with increasingly crazy ponytail creations in order to be original. The ponytail is all you'd need for this costume.


Olivia from the Olivia books by Ian Falconer

Olivia loves wearing read, so red from head-to-toe (especially red with white stripes) would make this costume. A headband with pig ears would add another element to the costume.


The Princess from The Paper Bag Princess by Robert Munsch

The Paper Bag Princess is left with nothing but a paper bag to wear after a dragon destroys her kingdom. All you'd need to do is cut head and arm holes in a paper bag. This one would be extra easy because you wouldn't need to give your kid a bath or comb her hair that day.


Sherlock Holmes

Okay, so this one would require some actual costume props. But it would make a really awesome costume for anyone if you had a deerstalker cap, a wool coat, and pipe.



Pete the Cat by James Dean and Eric Litwin
In his original book, Pete the Cat loves his shoes no matter if they're white, red, blue, or brown. If your kid has two of those colors of shoes, they could wear one of each. The book below is about Pete and his buttons. If you had a yellow shirt or coat they could wear that with four large buttons attached to it.


Pinkalicious by Victoria Kann and Elizabeth Kann
And last but not least, this is the book character my daughter chose last year and for this year again. It's pretty easy costume for most girls. Wear all pink! A crown would be nice, but not necessary. We also covered her face in pink blush and got pink hair chalk that showed up in person but not very well for pictures.


Have you ever dressed your kids up as a book character for Halloween?

Monday, October 19, 2015

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle


“You have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.” – Madeleine L’Engle

A Wrinkle in Time is one of my favorite books ever. I've put it on every list of books I think everyone should read and I've read it at least once a year since I was about ten years old. I miss it if I don't read it. Thought it is geared toward younger readers, I think every adult should read it too.

I've had a hard time explaining why I love this book so much. It undeniably has some strange elements to it. It's written in very simple language. It begins with a cliche--"It was a dark and stormy night." But I could relate to Meg--awkward, emotional, unpopular, feeling unloved. I think most young girls feel that way. (I'm not sure about the popular pretty girls, because none of them ever talked to me.) Yet in the end, Meg is the hero. She saves her family.

This book is simple enough for children, but has themes complex enough for me to choose it for my adult book club read. If you haven't read it, you should. It needs to be sitting on your bookshelf for your kids to discover and love someday.

What's your favorite book from  your childhood? Do you have a book that you read over and over again?
__________

A Wrinkle in Time
by Madeleine L'Engle
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Year: 1962
Info: Newbery Award Winner
Ages: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Themes: science fiction, good vs. evil, conformity, family, love
Source: my bookshelf

Friday, October 16, 2015

A Perfectly Messed-Up Story by Patrick McDonnell



Louie is happy as can be to be telling his story, until the reader messes up his book with jelly stains, fingerprints, and scribbles!

This was a fun, interactive book that proves that books are meant to be read and loved. The combination of illustrations and realistic looking photographs is fun too. My kids were touching the jelly stains to see if it was really there.

__________

A Perfectly Messed-Up Story
By Patrick McDonnell
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Year: 2014
Info: full color illustration
Ages: picture books, young children
Themes: books, reading, stories
Source: our public library

Boats for Papa by Jessixa Bagley



This book was one of our random library picks and we ended up enjoying it. On the surface it's a story of a boy (who happens to be a beaver) who builds boats, goes to the beach with his mother, and then sends the boats out into the ocean with a note for his papa. But, spoiler alert, the boats never make it to Papa. And it's really his mama who has been retrieving the boats each night and treasuring them.

This book subtly handles the issues of death and grief. I was impressed that both of my girls picked up on what was really going on in the story and they talked with me about the fact that some people die. Though the Papa in this book is a reference to a father, my own father was known as Papa by his grandchildren. He died when my oldest was only one year old. So we talked about their Papa after reading this book.

If you need to talk about grief and death with your children, this book is a good way to start a difficult conversation. Buckley the beaver is sad that Papa is gone, but he has his mama and is filled with love and appreciation for her. There is sadness, but there is also love in this book.

__________

Boats for Papa
By Jessixa Bagley
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
Year: 2015
Info: full color illustrations
Ages: picture books, young children
Themes: grief, mother and child, single parents, beach, boats
Source: our public library

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

The Princess in Black by Shannon Hale and Dean Hale



Princesses don't run. Princesses don't wear black. Princesses definitely don't fight monsters. Or do they? As the mother of girls who love princesses and superheroes, I loved reading this book with my girls. There has been a little bit of effort in recent years to include female superheroes (though they're still by far the minority), but I appreciated that in this book, you don't have to choose. You can be a princess and a superhero.

This book was written by wife/husband team Shannon Hale and Dean Hale. Shannon Hale is one of my favorite YA authors. And it's illustrated by LeUyen Pham. I rarely recognize an illustrator's work, but I'm beginning to recognize her and have another favorite picture book that she illustrated that I'll highlight soon.

This book is told in short chapters with large type so it would make a good first chapter book. With my early reader, I read some pages and she read some pages. She's reading pretty good, but she gets overwhelmed quickly, so I take the pages with lots of type and give her the ones with more pictures and fewer words. It's a fun, quick read. Give it a try with your girls. Or with your boys--there may be a goat boy who takes inspiration from the Princess in Black that they can cheer for if they shy away from princess stuff.

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The Princess in Black
By Shannon Hale and Dean Hale
Illustrated by LeUyen Pham
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Year: 2014
Info: color illustrations
Ages: Picture Books, Early Readers, First Chapter Books
Themes: princesses, superheroes, monsters
Source: our public library

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Out of the Dust by Karen Hesse (Newbery Winner)



Once upon a time I made a goal to read all the Newbery Medal books. It's a goal that once met, was easy to maintain as it requires I read one new book each year. There are some weird stories that won back in the early days, but there are some beautiful books sprinkled throughout, especially in the last thirty or so years.

Out of the Dust by Karen Hesse stands out to me as a great book among other great books. The novel is told in verse form by young Billie Jo as she and her family live through the Dust Bowl of the 1930s and as she goes through unimaginably hard challenges. Since it's told in verse, the writing is especially sparse and beautiful--every word has a reason for being there. And the story is engaging, at times heartbreaking, and ultimately inspiring.

This book is great for middle grade and young adult readers alike. It's a good introduction to verse, or poetry, because it tells a story. The story is interesting enough to keep their attention, and it teaches about a part of American History. Many adults will enjoy this book too--it was well received when the women in my book club all read it.

(I will warn that there is death in the book. Not that children and young adults shouldn't read about death. But I've learned to be aware of recommending books with death and loss in them to children who have experienced a recent death in the family. Wait till emotions are less raw.)
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Out of the Dust: A Novel
By Karen Hesse
Publisher: Scholastic
Year: 1997
Info: won Newbery Medal, told in verse
Ages: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Themes: family, Dust Bowl, the Great Depression, historical fiction, loss, coming of age
Source: my bookshelf

Friday, October 2, 2015

Banned Books Week and a Note on Censorship


This week is Banned Books Week. Some of my all-time favorites books have been challenged including Where the Wild Things Are and To Kill a Mockingbird. I am opposed to censorship. However, as a lover of children's and young adult literature, and as a mother, that doesn't mean I want my kids reading anything and everything.

One of the problems with censorship is that it gives the books being challenged a lot more media attention. And everyone knows that it's human nature to seek out what we're told we can't have. Mark Twain's books were often censored and he wrote a letter to his editor about one such censorship saying that more books would sell now that it wasn't available on library shelves.

Another problem with it is that I don't want anyone telling me what I can and cannot write or read, so I have no right to do the same to others. 




But that doesn't mean I want my kids (or even myself) to read books regardless of content. I often like young adult literature more than adult literature partially because of the writing and partially because, at least once upon a time, there was less content that made me uncomfortable. Sadly, I've encountered more and more young adult literature with content that I don't want to read. (One book had a college freshman with a very casual approach to underage drinking. Another was a fairy tale that had explicit sexual content for no apparent reason.) Which is why I think it's important to know what your children are reading.

To Kill a Mockingbird and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn have both been frequently challenged because of racial content. I would argue that they do not promote racism and it's an important topic to learn about and discuss with our children as they get older. There are many excellent books on the Holocaust. I don't want my six-year-old reading them, but a sixteen-year-old needs to learn about that dark part of our world's history--and learn from it. Books that contain themes of racism, war, abuse, violence, rape, drugs, crime, and even sex have an important place if they open up frank discussions on the topic for young adults who are emotionally mature enough. Those things are out there, and I'd rather my children learn about them from me and from good literature that warns us against them (not advocating them) than have them learn about it from peers and social media.

There is more and more explicit content in young adult books these days. And I put those ones down without finishing them and would never recommend them here. But there are some books that I will cover with content or themes to be aware of so that parents can make a choice about when they want to talk about those things with their children. I will always state if there are themes in the book that not all children are ready for emotionally, and then you can decide for your child if they are ready for that.

So to celebrate Banned Books Week, I'm not going to pick up or advocate books that promote things I disagree with. But I'm going to read Where the Wild Things Are to my children today without once worrying that it's too dark and disturbing for them.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Magic Tree House Series by Mary Pope Osborne



We just finished reading our first Magic Tree House book out loud together. In these books siblings Jack and Annie go on adventures and get to travel to different times and places. I've heard about them for a while and I wanted to start with #1, Dinosaurs Before Dark.

A quick perusal of the Magic Tree House website shows that the series was originally written by Mary Pope Osborne and she was joined by her husband Will Osborne and her sister Natalie Pope Boyce in writing later books and spinoffs. The first 28 books are short and have large type, so they're the best ones for early readers to start with. Later books are written at a higher reading level so young readers can advance along with the book.

It was perfect for reading out loud together. The chapters were short enough to keep even my three-year-old's attention. The chapter endings made my kids gasp and ask what was going to happen next.
The writing was simple and perfect for early readers. My first grader read a few pages with me and I think this series will be perfect as first chapter books for her to read on her own. If you're looking for good books to read aloud or for your early reader to start chapter books on, check out the Magic Tree House series.

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Magic Tree House: Dinosaurs Before Dark
By Mary Pope Osborne
Illustrated by Salvatore Murdocca
Publisher: Random House
Year: 2014
Info: B&W Illustrations
Ages: Early Readers, First Chapter Books
Themes: adventure, time travel, siblings
Source: our public library

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

The Importance of Bedtime Stories

I'm grateful to have a mother-in-law who makes reading books with my kids a fun part of every visit.

A recent article in The Guardian discusses the importance of bedtime stories in literacy. And they weren't just talking reading stories to your youngest children. The concern was that once children can read alone, their parents stop reading aloud to them. Continuing to read aloud to them helps cement a love of reading and is great bonding time.

I was lucky enough to have a mom who read out loud to us all no matter how old we were. Her voice introduced me to Little House on the Prairie, Where the Red Fern Grows, and other classic books for children. Her example helped me become a mother who reads to her children. We read a bedtime book to each of them each night and I've started reading aloud from a chapter book to help during the transition from being at school and being at home.

My children are still small, so bedtime stories are an easy part of our routine. But this article was a good reminder to continue to read aloud to them even when they learn to read on their own.

Is reading to your kids a part of your bedtime routine? If you have older children, do you still read books out loud with them?

Friday, September 25, 2015

Charlie and the New Baby by Ree Drummond


My daughters (ages 3 and 6) love the Pioneer Woman. They watch her Food Network show and tell me that everything Pioneer Woman makes is delicious. The bad news: My cooking will never measure up. The good news: They'll try new foods if it's a Pioneer Woman recipe.

Ree Drummond is the woman behind the wildly successful blog and cooking show. She also writes children's picture books starring her bassett hound Charlie. Charlie is King of the Ranch.

We love all the Charlie the Ranch Dog books that we've found at the library. This week, we chose Charlie and the New Baby. These books are fun to read aloud because you can read them in a lazy, country, ranch dog voice. Daddy does it best. The kids love reading along with the parts they know and joining in when Charlie dozes off, snorts awake, or howls.

The classic Charlie books are our favorites, but there are also some easy reader books that my first grader enjoys when she reads aloud to us.

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Charlie and the New Baby
By Ree Drummond
Illustrated by Diane deGroat
Publisher: Harper Collins Childrens
Year: 2014
Info: full color illustrations
Ages: picture book, young children
Themes: animals, dogs
Source: our public library

Welcome to Tesseract Books



A recent series of rejections and frustrations led me to think about what I really like to do. Well, that was obvious. I like to read. I like a few other things too, but reading is my passion. I occasionally read books for adults, but mostly I read children's literature. From the chewed up board books my toddler asks me to read time and time again (by bringing them to me and climbing in my lap), to the books I read aloud to my kids, to the middle grade and young adult novels I choose because I like them best.

Because I'm known as someone who loves books and always has, I'm often asked for book recommendations for kids. So here it is: my ultimate list of great books for children of all ages, and people of all ages who love children's literature.

Oh, wait. So far I have exactly zero books listed here. Better get reading.