|
I hate it when you change my mind Sean Sammis
December in Review: 12/31/10
This month started off slowly for reading as I was focused on my term papers. It's the first month in ages where I reviewed more books than I read. I read
30 and reviewed 31. January will be dedicated to reading the short list books in the Graphic Novels category for the Cybils. I have been reading them from the long list so hopefully I will have already read a few of them!
I read fewer personal collection books in part because I lost of week of reading at the start of the month and because I was reading books off my wishlist. Those wishlist books, with the exception of Kraken and The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Periolous Journey which I'm still reading, were from the library.
I mostly reviewed picture books and tween books. The average rating was 4. Exactly half of the books reviewed were five star ratings. Like in November, I didn't have any abandoned books either in the review pile or the read pile. My ROOB score was -2.23, a little less good than last month but not my worst month.
Books reviewed this month
Rating out of 5 stars (as posted on GoodReads)
Five Star books:
- The Adventures of Tittletom by Ellis Credle (library book)
- Bad Kitty Gets a Bath by Nick Bruel (personal collection)
- Beautiful Yetta by Daniel Pinkwater (library book)
- Boats: Speeding! Sailing! Cruising! by Patricia Hubbell (library book)
- Harriet's Halloween Candy by Nancy Carlson (library book)
- A History of Cadmium by Elizabeth Bourne (personal collection)
- The Little Giant of Aberdeen County by Tiffany Baker (review copy)
- The Long Retreat by Robert Reed (personal collection)
- Looking for Jake by China Miéville (library book)
- Make-Believe by Michael Reaves (personal collection)
- The Octonauts and the Frown Fish by Meomi (library book)
- Raiders' Ransom by Emily Diamand (library book)
- The Secret of the Old Clock by Caroline Keene (library books)
- Sector 7 by David Wiesner (library book)
- Waking Up Wendell by April Stevens (library book)
- What Can You Do With a Rebozo? by Carmen Tafolla (library book)
Four Star books
- Alex and Lulu by Lorena Siminovich (library book)
- The Fairy's Return by Gail Carson Levine (library book)
- Forever by Rachel Pollack (personal collection)
- Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000 by Eric Wight (library book)
Three Star books
- Afternoon on the Amazon by Mary Pope Osborne (personal collection)
- Boundaries of Home by Doug Aberley (library book)
- Brownie and Pearl Get Dolled Up by Cynthia Rylant (library book)
- The Chick and the Duckling by Mirra Ginsburg (library book)
- Knitty Kitty by David Elliott (library book)
- Maid of Murder by Amanda Flower (review copy)
- The Tarot Cafe #3 by Sang-Sun Park (library book)
- Ten Little Fish by Audrey Wood (library book)
- When Pigasso Met Mootisse by Nina Laden (personal collection)
Two Star books
- One to Nine by Andrew Hodges (library book)
- Waiting for the Phone to Ring by Richard Bowes (library book)
One Star books
Books and stories read this month (reviews coming)
Personal Collection
- The Batman Handbook by Scott Beatty
- Bite Me by Christopher Moore
- Information Seeking in Electronic Environments by Gary Marchionini
- Naked Heat by Richard Castle
- Night-Night Little Pookie by Sandra Boynton
- The Portable MLIS edited by Ken Haycock and Brooke E. Sheldon
Library book
- Alison's Zinnia by Anita Lobel
- All Action Classics #3: The Odyssey by Homer and Tim Mucci
- The Ballerina with Webbed Feet by Pam Van Scoyoc
- Copper by Kizu Kibuishi
- The Country Child by Alison Uttley
- It Does Not Say Meow by Joanna C. Galdone
- Kitty Cat, Kitty Cat, Are You Waking Up? by Bill Martin Jr.
- LMNO Peas by Keith Baker
- Monster Trucks by Mark Todd
- The New Gay Teenager by Ritch C. Savin-Williams
- The Nightmarys by Dan Poblocki
- The Noisy Way to Bed by Ian Whybrow
- Olivia Helps with Christmas by Ian Falconer
- One Halloween Night by Mark Teague
- Pump Six and Other Stories by Paolo Bagigalupi
- The Sign Painter by Allen Say
- "Stand Back," Said the Elephant, "I'm Going to Sneeze!" by Patricia Thomas
- Theodosia and the Eyes of Horus by R. L. LaFevers
- Tinkerbell and the Wings of Rani by Teresa Radice
- Waking Up Wendell by April Stevens
- Weblogs And Libraries by Laurel Anne Clyde
- The World at Night by Alan Furst
- The Z was Zapped by Chris Van Allsburg
Review copy
- Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff
blog | books
Comments (2)
Permalink
Maid of Murder: 12/31/10
At the start of the year I was asked to review Maid of Murder by Amanda Flower. I agreed to the review because a college librarian as amateur sleuth sounded interesting. Plus she has a brother who is a long time mathematics graduate student, a character I can also relate too.
India Hayes, academic librarian and reluctant bridesmaid must solve the mystery of who killed her childhood friend at the wedding.
I really expected to like this book but I found the pacing too slow. A cosy mystery is one part banter, one part red herring and one part crumb trail of clues. Maid of Murder was too heavy on the banter and family drama. The personal issues drowned out the mystery parts of the book.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Amanda Flower | mystery | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000: 12/30/10
Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000 by Eric Wight is the second book in this series of chapter book / graphic novel hybrids. The first in the series was short listed in the Cybil's last year. That's how my son and I first came across the series.
This time Frankie needs only a handful of points to move up to the next level in scouts. Since he didn't complete the knot tying badge his only other option is to win the Pine Run 3000, a model car race held once a year.
Plot wise the book is very similar to Babymouse Burns Rubber, a graphic novel nominated for this year's Cybils, being a combination of actual race events and imaginary scenes. Of the two race themed graphic novels, I preferred Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000.
My son has had this book on his wishlist since he read the first in the series. He loved this book, tearing through it in about an hour.
Other posts and reviews
books | Eric Wight | graphic novel | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
Waking Up Wendell: 12/29/10
A recent favorite book of my daughters is Waking Up Wendell by April Stevens. It has earned its way onto the multiple reads pile and was for about two weeks the nightly bedtime story.
The story begins in a tree outside Number 1 Fish Street. The birds wake up the dog who in turn wakes up the owner who puts the dog outside where he can wake up the resident of Number 2. And so it goes through a chain of events through each house and each resident until at last Wendell is awoken.
The book's first winning detail is its attention to sound. Each home is associated with a sound, a disturbance, be it a bird, a dog, a sewing machine, or a hungry cat, for example. All these sounds are written out as onomatopoeias that are easy and fun for young readers (such as my daughter) to read and perform.
The second great aspect of the book are its characters. Although they are all drawn as swine, they stand in for the diversity people and families who might live on any street. There are so many different characters to relate too. Sometimes we just stop to make up stories for the different houses.
And finally there's the simple fact that it's a counting one to ten book. At one end of the street is Number 1 Fish Street and at the other end of the block is Wendell's home, Number 10 Fish Street. The counting aspect of the book gives children a way to predict what happens next.
books | April Stevens | childrens | 2007
Comments(0)
Permalink
The Fairy's Return: 12/28/10
Earlier in the year before Harriet started reading, she went through a princess phase. She's still mad about princesses but now she prefers to draw them instead of reading about them. She also went through a period where she wanted to be read to during her long baths. So we read through Gail Carson Levine's short chapter books.
The Fairy's Return by Gail Carson Levine is her unique take on the Golden Goose fairy tale. There's Robin, the baker's son and the very bored Princess Lark, and a fairy trying to do good but not necessarily getting it right.
Harriet's not familiar with the original story but she thought it was funny that the boy and the girl both had bird names. Of all the books from this series we read, this one didn't hold her attention as well as others did.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Gail Carson Levin | fantasy | childrens | 2002
Comments (2)
Permalink
Boundaries of Home: 12/27/10
Boundaries of Home by Doug Aberley was another of my GIS research books. It came up when I was reading about public participation GIS, a term coined by the author actually five years after the book was published.
As the book was written before GIS became widely available for public consumption through DGI (distributed geographic information), Aberley seems down on maps. He describes them as something for mass consumerism and not something that's taken seriously by the public. In the introduction he describes how the public has lost all context of where they live beyond being a small dot on a fold-out map.
The book goes on to explain how small community groups and individuals can create personal maps either by drawing maps based on walks through the neighborhood and surrounds or by augmenting professionally made maps (like the USGS quadrangles).
The USGS quadrangle suggestion was something that struck home with me. Back when we were still living on the peninsula we bought the map of our area (the northern half of San Mateo County) and marked with pins. We still have the map (minus the pins) in our downstairs hall way, and it was one of the things I referred to when the San Bruno neighborhood was on fire after the PGE pipeline explosion.
Now though, there is a faster, more immediate way to custom map one's neighborhood, Google Maps. As the book predates Google Maps by twelve years, I found the frustration over map access, especially for cooperative mapping, interesting in its historical context.
Other posts and reviews
books | Doug Aberley | nonfiction | 1993
Comments (2)
Permalink
What Are You Reading: December 27, 2010: 12/26/10
I'm ping-ponging up and down California this week. Blogging from the road is tricky as is reading on the road. Most of what I finished last week came before the holiday madness. I went through a small pile of library books (mostly picture books) and one review book.
My current reads are an even mixture of library books and my own personal collection. Kraken was a Christmas gift. It's huge and dense and I plan to read about ten pages a day and thus slowly work my way through it.
My reviews from last week are mostly library books. This year seems to be have been the year of the picture book on my blog. I hope to diversify more next year.
Finished Last Week:
- The Ballerina with Webbed Feet by Pam Van Scoyoc (library book)
- Copper by Kizu Kibuishi (library book)
- Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff (review copy)
- Monster Trucks by Mark Todd (library book)
- The Nightmarys by Dan Poblocki (library book)
- The Sign Painter by Allen Say (library book)
- Tinkerbell and the Wings of Rani by Teresa Radice (library book)
- The World at Night by Alan Furst (library book)
Currently Reading:
- Frost Moon by Anthony Francis (review copy)
- Kraken by China Miéville (personal collection)
- The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Lee Stewart (personal collection)
- Pump Six and Other Stories by Paolo Bagigalupi (library book)
- West Coast Journeys by Caroline C. Leighton (personal collection)
What Are You Reading
Comments (20)
Permalink
The Little Giant of Aberdeen County: 12/26/10
Truly Plaice, a very large and physically imposing young woman, narrates The Little Giant of Aberdeen County by Tiffany Baker. She and her "perfect" sister, Serena Jane are separated after the death of their father, the mother having died in childbirth.
The story though isn't so much about Truly as it is about Aberdeen County and the other people who live there. It reminds me a bit of Cicily Alaska, fictional town in Northern Exposure.
It took me a long while to warm to Truly as a character. That's part of the point of the book though. She physically can't fit in with the feminine norms of her town. As a child her father resorts to dressing her in overalls as they fit her better, there just aren't any dresses large enough for her growing frame. Truly doesn't try to fit in just to be accepted and she in turn befriends a few other oddballs and outcasts.
Ultimately it was the other characters in the book that won me over completely. Truly I can take or leave but her kith and kin are fascinating.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Tiffany Baker | fiction | 2009
Comments (0)
Permalink
The Octonauts and the Frown Fish: 12/25/10
The Octonauts and the Frown Fish is the third in the series by Meomi. In this one, the Octonauts come across a fish with a giant frown. They want to help to cheer the fish up.
They take the fish around to the best under the sea entertainment spots. Still the fish frowns. If anything, the fish's frown gets bigger! They even try building an exosuit for the fish so he can join them out of the water.
The Octonauts books are wonderful first and foremost for their adorable but highly detailed illustrations. Next the stories themselves are delightful. Best of all, the guest star for the book (in this case, the Frown Fish) is always a real thing. The Frown Fish is a type of catfish (synodontis Nigriventris).
After my son reads an Octonaut book, he and I look up the featured animal together. I've included the link for the page where we read up about the Frown Fish. I'm not going to tell you what makes him so special to avoid spoiling the story.
We checked the book out from the library.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Meomi | childrens | 2008
Comments (0)
Permalink
On My Wishlist: December 25, 2010: 12/24/10
Here it is Christmas Eve. I'm watching The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (the old TV show, not the more recent movie) and I'm working on my blog. I am completely out of mind tired from a long day. Tomorrow we have another full day with family.
In the mean time, I've added these books to my ever growing list:
Everything but the Horse by Holly Hobbie (Recommended by Manga Mania Cafe)
Goodreads description:
This gorgeous, resonant tale is a beautiful recollection from Holly Hobbie's own childhood about her love affair with horses.When Holly's family moves from the city to the countryside, she's scared of this new world at first, but gradually comes to love the animals she encounters. Soon she is drawing the horses in the local pastures obsessively, hinting to her parents what she wants more than anything. But will her one wish ever come true?
The Candymakers by Wendy Mass (Recommended by Manga Mania Cafe)
GoodReads Description:
Four children have been chosen to compete in a national competition to find the tastiest confection in the country. Who will invent a candy more delicious than the Oozing Crunchorama or the Neon Lightning Chew?
Logan, the Candymaker's son, who can detect the color of chocolate by touch alone? Miles, the boy who is allergic to merry-go-rounds and the color pink? Daisy, the cheerful girl who can lift a fifty-pound lump of taffy like it's a feather? Or Philip, the suit-and-tie wearing boy who's always scribbling in a secret notebook?
This sweet, charming, and cleverly crafted story, told from each contestant's perspective, is filled with mystery, friendship, and juicy revelations.
Beryl: A Pig's Tale by Jane Simmons (Recommended by Manga Mania Cafe)
When Beryl decides to look for a family that will love her just the way she is, from her pig nose to her curly tail, she bravely sets off on a journey that will ultimately change her life forever.
Away from the cruel and ill-tempered pigs on the farm where she grew up, Beryl finds her preconceived notions of wild pigs — and everything else — put to the test. And with the help of the many unlikely friends she meets, Beryl discovers, at the cost of some heartache, that there just might be a place she could call home after all. If she could only get there
Invisible Things by Jenny Davidson (Recommended by Amanda's Books and More)
Sixteen-year-old Sophie knows there is more to the story of her parents' death. And she's on a mission to find the truth. To aid her in solving the decades-old mystery, Sophie has enlisted her best friend, Mikael, whose friendship has turned into something more. It's soon clear that Sophie's future is very much wrapped up in the details of her family's past, and the key lies with information only one man can provide: her parents' former employer, the elusive billionaire Alfred Nobel.
As the threat of war looms in Europe, dangers to Sophie and her loved ones grow. While her determination to solve the mystery doesn't waver, forces beyond her control conspire to keep her from her purpose. Then, news of her great-aunt Tabitha's death sets off a chain of events that leaves Sophie questioning everything.
The more Sophie learns, the more she realizes that nothing—and no one—in her life is what it seems. And coming to terms with the dark secrets she uncovers means imagining a truth that she never dreamed possible. Full of gorgeous settings, thrilling adventure, and romance, invisible things is a novel that dares to ask, what if?
Mapping Desire by David Bell (Recommended by Sara Ahmed)
GoodReads description:
Editors David Bell and Gill Valentine have brought together contributors with a wealth of approaches to ways in which the spaces of sex and the sexes of space are being mapped out across contemporary culture. Among the many sexual geographies covered are: Lesbians at home and on the streets; gay men on fantasy islands; bisexual identities; The heterosexualization of the workplace; bachelor farmers and spinsters; surveillance and sexuality; prostitution; queer politics; sexual citizenship, and the transformation of intimacy.
The book is divided into four sections: cartographies/identities; sexualized spaces: global/local; sexualized spaces: local/global; sites of resistance. Each section is separately introduced. Beyond the bibliography, an annotated guide to further reading is also provided to help the reader map their own way through the literature.
Pleasure Zones by Jon Binnie and Ruth Holiday (Recommended by Sara Ahmed)
GoodReads Description:
The essays collected in this volume apply queer theory in a consideration of the human body as a vehicle for understanding relationships between people and place. The book examines the body as an entity constructed by gender, sexuality, race, class, nationality and disability.
The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia by Mary Stefaniak (Recommended by Tina Says)
GoodReads description:
Narrator Gladys Cailiff is eleven years old in 1938 when a new, well-traveled young schoolteacher turns a small Georgia town upside down. Miss Grace Spivey believes in field trips, Arabian costumes, and reading aloud from her ten-volume set of The Thousand Nights and a Night. The real trouble begins when she decides to revive the annual town festival as an exotic Baghdad bazaar.
Miss Spivey transforms the lives of everyone around her: Gladys's older brother Force (with his movie-star looks), her pregnant sister May (a gifted storyteller herself), and especially the Cailiffs' African American neighbor, young Theo Boykin, whose creative genius becomes the key to a colorful, hidden history of the South.
C by Tom McCarthy (Recommended by The New Dork Book of Reviews)
GoodRead's Description:
C follows the short, intense life of Serge Carrefax, a man who - as his name suggests - surges into the electric modernity of the early twentieth century, transfixed by the technologies that will obliterate him.
Born to the sound of one of the very earliest experimental wireless stations, Serge finds himself steeped in a weird world of transmissions, whose very air seems filled with cryptic and poetic signals of all kinds. When personal loss strikes him in his adolescence, this world takes on a darker and more morbid aspect. What follows is a stunning tour de force in which the eerily idyllic settings of pre-war Europe give way to the exhilarating flightpaths of the frontline aeroplane radio operator, then the prison camps of Germany, the drug-fuelled London of the roaring twenties and, finally, the ancient tombs of Egypt.
Reminiscent of Bolaño, Beckett and Pynchon, this is a remarkable novel - a compelling, sophisticated and sublimely imaginative book uncovering the hidden codes and dark rhythms that sustain life.
The Glorious Adventures of the Sunshine Queen by Geraldine McCaughrean (Recommended by Manga Mania Cafe)
GoodRead's Description
Cissy Sissney has always longed for a life filled with adventure, and her wish is unexpectedly granted when she is sent to live aboard the Sunshine Queen—a shipwrecked paddle steamer that houses the Bright Lights Theater Company. When the showboat is carried back out to sea, the motley crew on board embarks on a wild and hilarious journey. But along the way, one of their own falls into grave danger…and Cissy learns that the stakes of fame are higher than she could possibly have imagined.
Renowned storyteller Geraldine McCaughrean weaves a rip-roaring river adventure that’s chock-full of sidesplitting humor and daring escapades. Readers won’t be able to resist riding along on the Sunshine Queen’s thrilling journey in this fun and accessible tale.
The Lady in the Lake by Raymond Chandler (Recommended by Dashiell Hammett)
A couple of missing wives one a rich man's and one a poor man's become the objects of Marlowe's investigation. One of them may have gotten a Mexican divorce and married a gigolo and the other may be dead. Marlowe's not sure he cares about either one, but he's not paid to care.
On My Wishlist
Comments (2)
Permalink
Harriet's Halloween Candy: 12/24/10
Here it is Christmas Eve and my review randomizer has picked a Halloween book review for posting!
Harriet and I read Harriet's Halloween Candy by Nancy Carlson a week before Halloween. What I didn't expect was how prophetic it would end up being.
In the book, Harriet has a great haul during trick-or-treating and her little brother doesn't. Their mother insists that she has to share with her brother. At first she does it reluctantly until she nearly makes herself sick with them. Then she realizes she has far more than she could ever eat and decides to share them fairly with her brother.
As it turns out, my Harriet found herself in a similar situation except with her big brother. They both went trick-or-treating for the first time this year. Sean though got too shy with all the crowds and decided to beg out of it after only two stops. So Harriet ended up with about ten times the amount of candy. At first she didn't want to share but by midway through November she decided, like the Harriet in the book, that sharing with her brother was a good idea after all.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Nancy Carlson | childrens | 1982
Comments (2)
Permalink
Tarot Cafe Volume 3: 12/23/10
I had said in my review of the second volume that I was done reading The Tarot Cafe by Sang-Sun Park. Rhiona suggested I should keep going and the artwork style (my biggest complaint about the series) would be explained. My husband shortly there after checked out the first four volumes. I decided to read number three to see if I liked it any better than two.
Volume Three is like volumes one and two: a mixture of episodic stories based around the fortunes the main character tells and some on going plot points introduced in the first volume and carried on through the second and now third volumes.
There's a lot of lost love, broken taboos, revenge and rampantly high emotions. There's also still the artwork where everyone looks like everyone else. I always feel like I should take notes to keep track of who's who because I can't tell visually and the plot's just not keeping my attention.
I swear: I'm done. I know I'm only at the halfway point but I don't care. The series and I don't get along.
books | Sang-Sun Park | manga | 2004
Comments (0)
Permalink
The Secret of the Old Clock: 12/22/10
About two years ago when we first started taking Harriet to the library she insisted that I read the Nancy Drew series. Now what a then two year old toddler knew about a series that started in 1930, I don't know. But I have a policy in this family: if my children recommend a book to me, regardless of my personal opinion on of the book, I read it. I return, I get to recommend books to them. The system works remarkably well.
The book Harriet chose for me was The Bungalow Mystery, the third in the series. Since then I have been reading through the series as I have the chance. I'm not reading them in order but I a have found the process of reading them (after refusing to read them as a child) enlightening.
What I hadn't realized when I started this journey through Riverdale, was that the books had been rewritten or heavily edited (depending on the book) starting in 1959. The series starts with The Secret of the Old Clock.
This post will be two reviews in one. When I first read The Secret of the Old Clock by Carolyn Keene back in February, I checked out a copy of the rewritten 1959 edition. I held off on reviewing it because the Wikipedia article outline a number of big differences. I wanted to read the original before I decided what I thought of the story. In September I found (again through the library) a reissue of the original 1939 text. I was glad to (re)read while the text was still fresh in my head.
The basic plot, regardless of which version you read is this: Nancy hears of a potentially missing will that would benefit a pair of sisters hard hit by the Depression. The current beneficiaries are a well to do family with no social graces and a pair of obnoxious daughters. Nancy's investigations take her into the countryside to a summer cottage and right into danger.
The original version is twenty pages longer and has a more chapters (of shorter lengths). These extra establish the poor behavior of the Topham sisters so that Nancy's desire to see them lose their inheritance is understandable. In the rewritten version most of these establishing scenes with the sisters are cut out, making Nancy's behavior seem spiteful and irrational.
The next big change is how the Horner (changed to Hoover) sisters are described as living. In the original they are described living hand to mouth on the funds they earn from their egg farm and from their dressmaking. They are typical Depression era characters. Changing their family name to Hoover in the 1959 edition brings to mind the Hoovervilles (coined the same year as the book was first published) but feels out of place for a book written at the start of the Depression.
Finally there is drunken groundskeeper who rescues Nancy after the thieves have locked her up in the closet. In the original his dialogue is written in typical for the time period Negro dialogue. Yes, he's written as a stereotype but so are most of the other characters in the book.
Changing him into an old, white (but still drunk) man in the 1959 doesn't make things better. He needs to be there to keep the dialog open. Even the beloved Nancy Drew series falls prey to tropes and stereotypes. We can use these moments to open a dialog with our children. Make it a teachable moment instead of sweeping it under the rug.
On behalf of Nancy though, she treats the guard better than she does the Topham sisters. Nancy is presented as being polite, resourceful and respectful person until she is mistreated or sees someone else being mistreated.
If you decide to read (or reread) the Nancy Drew books, do yourself a favor and get copies of the Applewood Books which are reprints of the originals texts, not the 1950s and 1960s rewrites.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Carolyn Keene | childrens | mystery | 1930 | 1959
Comments (0)
Permalink
Forever: 12/21/10
"Forever" begins like an epic fantasy poem. Forever is one of sisterhood of virtues personified. Forever, as her name implies, is death. Every so often the sisters play a game where the loser has to spend a day on Earth in the body of a human being. This time, Forever loses.
The remainder of the story reads like a paranormal mystery. A young woman is struck with a feeling of dread every day at 3:14. She becomes obsessed with understanding the reason behind this odd feeling. She seeks helps from different specialists but none can offer her a reason or a diagnosis. She goes on with her life and ultimately is faced with both the answer to her life long mystery, and a new dilemma that could result in great personal sacrifice.
Normally this type of story bugs me but Rachel Pollack pulls it off. Even with the extended prologue of the sisters and their bet, the ending came as a rewarding surprise.
Other posts and reviews:
fantasy science fiction magazine| short story | Rachel Pollack | scifi | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
Alex and Lulu: Two of a Kind: 12/20/10
Alex and Lulu by Lorena Siminovich is the story of best friends. Alex is a noisy, adventurous dog and Lulu is an artistic, thoughtful cat. One day Lulu begins to doubt their long standing friendship. It's up to Alex to convince her that they can be different and still be friends.
The book is presented as a colorful book of opposites with the plot of friendship holding the book together. Harriet liked the opposites part of the story and she liked the cute dog and the equally cute cat.
Lulu's concern though went right over her head. Her reaction to that part of the story was one of confusion. "Of course they are different! I'm different from my friends. Everyone is different. What is she worrying about?" she explained.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Lorena Siminovich | childrens | 2009
Comments (0)
Permalink
What Are You Reading: December 20, 2010: 12/19/10
My grades are in and I did very well. Now that I'm not doing research, I'm catching up on a combination of my to be read pile and my wishlist reading. Of course with children, I am also reading (or being read to) picture books and similar. My daughter has been reading Curious George to me a couple pages a night.
The one review book that I'm still working on is Food, Girls & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff. It's a pretty easy read and I'm enjoying it. The main character's personality reminds me of Garth, the protagonist from In Mike We Trust by P. E. Ryan. Of course the story's completely different but the two share some themes: a lack of familial communication, problems at high school, trying to fit in while being true to one's self and so forth.
My two favorite reads from last week are The Batman Handbook by graphic novelist, Scott Beatty and Bite Me by Christopher Moore.
Finished Last Week:
- A Barnstormer in Oz by Philip José Farmer (library book)
- The Batman Handbook by Scott Beatty (personal collection)
- Bite Me by Christopher Moore (personal collection)
- The Country Child by Alison Uttley (library book)
- LMNO Peas by Keith Baker (library book)
- Olivia Helps With Christmas by Ian Falconer (library book)
- The New Gay Teenager by Ritch C. Savin-Williams (library book)
- Night-Night Little Pookie by Sandra Boynton (personal collection)
Currently Reading:
- Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff (review copy)
- The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Lee Stewart (personal collection)
- The Nightmarys by Dan Poblocki (library book)
- West Coast Journeys by Caroline C. Leighton (personal collection)
What Are You Reading
Comments (20)
Permalink
Bad Kitty Gets a Bath: 12/19/10
We are a family of Bad Kitty fans. We have every single book in the series, having followed it from the very first picture book. With Bad Kitty Gets a Bath, Nick Bruel changed from picture books to hybrid graphic novels.
The title says it all: Bad Kitty gets a bath. She's stinky and dirty from a run in with the dog. Bad Kitty, with her normal bad attitude, needs extra special care when bathing, like a suit of armor, an ambulance waiting in the driveway, plane tickets to go into hiding until Bad Kitty forgets about the bath and a clean set of underwear for example.
Despite all this silliness and ridiculous illustrations, the book is also a useful guide for washing cats. They do occasionally get dirty and need baths beyond what they can do for themselves. So this book while being entertaining is also instructive.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Nick Bruel | childrens | graphic novel | 2009
Comments (4)
Permalink
Make-Believe: 12/18/10
I am so far behind in reading my issues of Fantasy and Science Fiction. It's betting beyond funny and into pathetic. It's October while I'm writing this review for a story from the March / April issue. I'm midway through the May/June issue. You can see, it's getting bad. My short story to be read list is getting as long as my books to be read list.
"Make-Believe" by Michael Reaves begins with a man giving an acceptance speech. In that speech he recounts how and why he became a writer. He reminisces about an event when he was five.
Now if this were a classic Twilight Zone episode, here's where Rod Serling would make his appearance. He'd say something pithy about childhood, memories and this play-date being in the Twilight Zone or some such.
Let me put it this way; I like the Twilight Zone. I like ghost stories. "Make-Believe" has elements of both. It was my kind of short story. It was a good combination of suspense, horror and goofy sentimentality.
fantasy science fiction magazine| short story | Michael Reaves | scifi | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
On My Wishlist: December 18, 2010: 12/18/10
I'm posting late again. I've been busy with baking and I had a nice sleep in. It's been a long time since I've had such a long sleep in. It's raining outside and I don't have any homework due. Neither does my son. So there's just nothing to motivate us to go out and do anything.
In the mean time, I've added these books to my ever growing list:
The Goddess Test by Aimee Carter (Recommended by Sarah Reck)
Goodreads description:
I learned about the book from Sarah Reck's blog. On her 2011 debut authors challenge post she wrote: "I absolutely have to recommend Aimée Carter's The Goddess Test. Aimée is a very good friend of mine, and this debut is a must-read!" And that's why I added it. Plus, I like the title.
The author description on Goodreads:
Aimée Carter was born and raised in Michigan, where she currently resides. She started writing fan fiction at eleven, began her first original story four years later, and hasn’t stopped writing since. Her first novel for young adults, The Goddess Test will be published by Harlequin Teen in May 2011. The sequel, Goddess Interrupted, will follow in February 2012.
Solid by Shelley Workinger (Recommended by All the Days Of)
GoodReads Description
Eighteen years ago, a rogue Army doctor secretly experimented with a chromosomal drug on unknowing pregnant women. When he was killed not long after the children were born, any knowledge and evidence seemed to die with him except for the living, breathing, human products of his work.
Almost two decades later, the newly self-proclaimed "open-book" military unearths the truth about the experiment, bringing Clio Kaid and the other affected teens to a state-of-the-art, isolated campus where they soon discover that C9x did indeed alter their chromosomes, its mutations presenting as super-human abilities. The military kids, who come from across the nation and all walks of life, come into their own as lighter-than-air 'athletes'; 'indies' as solid as stone walls; teens who can make themselves invisible and others who can blind with their brilliance. While exploring her own special ability, forging new friendships and embarking on first love, Clio also stumbles onto information indicating that the military may not have been entirely forthcoming with them and that all may not be as it seems.
WebMage by Kelly McCullough (Recommended by All the Days Of)
Magic is about to get an upgrade. Ravirn is not your average computer geek. A child of the Fates-literally-he-s a hacker extraordinaire who can zero in on the fatal flaw in any program. Now that twenty-first-century magic has gone digital that makes him a very talented sorcerer. But a world of problems is about to be downloaded on Ravirn, who's just trying to pass his college midterms.
Great Aunt Atropos, one of the three Fates, decides that humans having free will is really overrated and plans to rid herself of the annoyance by coding a spell into the Fate Core, the server that rules destiny. As a hacker, Ravirn is a big believer in free will, and when he not only refuses to debug her spell but actively opposes her all hell breaks loose. Even with the help of his familiar Melchior, a sexy sorceress (who's also a mean programmer), and the webgoblin underground, it-s going to be a close call.
Restoring Harmony by Joëlle Anthony (All the Days Of)
The year is 2041, and sixteen-year-old Molly McClure has lived a relatively quiet life on an isolated farming island in Canada, but when her family fears the worst may have happened to her grandparents in the US, Molly must brave the dangerous, chaotic world left after global economic collapse—one of massive oil shortages, rampant crime, and abandoned cities.
Molly is relieved to find her grandparents alive in their Portland suburb, but they're financially ruined and practically starving. What should've been a quick trip turns into a full-fledged rescue mission. And when Molly witnesses something the local crime bosses wishes she hadn't, Molly's only way home may be to beat them at their own game. Luckily, there's a handsome stranger who's willing to help.
Restoring Harmony is a riveting, fast-paced dystopian tale complete with adventure and romance that readers will devour.
They Came From Below by Blake Nelson (Manga Mania Cafe)
GoodReads description
Seventeen-year-old Emily and her best friend Reese can't wait for summer vacation on Cape Cod. Every year, it's the same thing: high hopes that they may finally hook up with some cool guys...and it never happens. But this year, they're sure it's going to be different. So it's totally amazing when out of nowhere they meet two unbelievably adorable boys who are just too cute to be true! Which, they soon discover, may be the case. A lot of odd things happen when Steve and Dave are around. Reese figures it's because they're not from around here. So where are they from, France? Well, not quite.
Summoned from the depths of the sea by the dire threat of global pollution, friendly aliens "Steve and Dave" have manifested themselves in human form and come ashore in a last desperate effort to save the oceans.
The Whipping Boy by Sid Fleischman
For kids to get their dose of action and thrills, they need not always go to the local multiplex for the latest bang 'em up film. They could try such books as The Whipping Boy, which relies not on exploding spaceships and demonic robots but mythic story, humorous characters and, ready or not, a moral. The plot involves the orphan Jemmy, who must take the whippings for the royal heir, Prince Brat. Jemmy plans to flee this arrangement until Prince Brat beats him to it, and takes Jemmy along. Jemmy then hears he's charged with the Prince's abduction as this Newbery Medal winning book turns toward a surprising close.
The Sherlockian by Graham Moore (Curling Up by the Fire)
n December 1893, Sherlock Holmes-adoring Londoners eagerly opened their Strand magazines, anticipating the detective's next adventure, only to find the unthinkable: his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, had killed their hero off. London spiraled into mourning crowds sported black armbands in grief and railed against Conan Doyle as his assassin.
Then in 1901, just as abruptly as Conan Doyle had "murdered" Holmes in "The Final Problem," he resurrected him. Though the writer kept detailed diaries of his days and work, Conan Doyle never explained this sudden change of heart. After his death, one of his journals from the interim period was discovered to be missing, and in the decades since, has never been found.
Or has it?
When literary researcher Harold White is inducted into the preeminent Sherlock Holmes enthusiast society, The Baker Street Irregulars, he never imagines he's about to be thrust onto the hunt for the holy grail of Holmes-ophiles: the missing diary. But when the world's leading Doylean scholar is found murdered in his hotel room, it is Harold using wisdom and methods gleaned from countless detective stories who takes up the search, both for the diary and for the killer.
The Kid Table by Andrea Seigel (The Bookish Gal)
It's there at every family event. A little smaller, collapsible, and decked out with paper napkins because you can't be trusted with the good ones. But you're stuck there. At the Kid Table. Because to them- to the adults- you're still a kid.
Ingrid Bell and her five teenage cousins are in exactly this situation. Never mind the fact that high school is almost over. They're still eating mac and cheese with a toddler. But what happens when the rules change? When Brianne, the oldest cousin, lands a seat at the Adult Table, the others are in shock. What does it take to graduate from the Kid Table?
Over the course of five family events, Ingrid and her cousins attempt to finish childhood and send the infamous table into retirement. But as Ingrid turns on the charm in order to manipulate her situation, the family starts questioning her motives. And when her first love comes in the form of first betrayal (he's Brianne's boyfriend), Ingrid is forced to consider how she fits into this family and what it means to grow up.
Sarah Emma Edmonds Was a Great Pretender: The True Story of a Civil War Spy by Carrie Jones (Recommended by the author)
Carrie Jones had an excited post about the cover art for her picture book on her Facebook Wall. I love picture books and Civil War History. I have to read this book.
Blood Price by Tanya Huff (Recommended by Books Glorious Books)
It began with blood and death amid the streets of late-night Toronto. Vicki Nelson, formerly of Toronto's homicide detail, now a private investigator, witnessed the first attack by the force of dark magic that would soon wreak its reign of terror on the unsuspecting city. And as death followed unspeakable death, Vicki became more and more deeply enmeshed in an investigation which would see her renewing her stormy relationship with her former police partner, Mike Celluci, even as she teamed up with writer Henry Fitzroy, in a desperate attempt to track down the source of the seemingly unstoppable attacks. For Fitzroy, the illegitimate son of Henry VIII, had knowledge of realms beyond the mortal acquired over the centuries during which he'd mastered his own insatiable needs the life-from-death cravings of a vampire.
Henry Fitzroy had long since learned to survive without killing, learned the skills needed to blend in with the human race. But unless he, Vicki, and Mike could find the key to conquering the magic-raised menace stalking the streets of Toronto, Fitzroy's true identity might soon be exposed and his life might prove forfeit to the uncontrollable fears of humankind. And without Henry Fitzroy, mere mortals like Vicki and Mike would not long survive against the ancient force of chaos that had been loosed on their world.
On My Wishlist
Comments (18)
Permalink
The Long Retreat: 12/17/10
Robert Reed, how I love his stories. A Robert Reed story in Fantasy and Science Fiction for me means, a time to curl up in a comfy chair for a leisurely read.
Reed's story in the January / February 2010 issue is a delicious mood piece that feels like an Escher print brought to life. Lt Castor is the ailing emperor's most loyal servant. They are in an endless retreat against invading armies but there is no where to run to.
The ending, if such a thing is possible given the set up of the story, is satisfying and dare I say, perfect. Before you read the book, don't read the blurb before the story. While not exactly a spoiler, it does take away from the fun of Reed's story.
Other posts and reviews:
fantasy science fiction magazine| short story | Robert Reed | scifi | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
Book Blogger Hop for December 17, 2010: 12/17/10
The grades are in for my papers. Both were very good! I'm just now waiting for the final class grades to be posted. In the meantime I'm back to freelance writing to make a little extra money to help with bills.
Today is my daughter's winter concert. She's been practicing for weeks. She has Winter Wonderland completely memorized. Grandpa Charlie's up in town and will be seeing the concert with us.
Next week my son is off from school so I will be trying to write while keeping him entertained. Then it's the holidays and I'll be busy with my family.
This week's question is about plot versus characters. I've spent the last few hours mulling the question in terms of the books I'm currently reading. While I want to say that both are important but thinking about the books I've enjoyed, I realize that I don't mind a completely nonsensical plot as long as the book has memorable characters.
books | book blogger hop
Comments (48)
Permalink
The Adventures of Tittletom: 12/16/10
While I was searching through the Link+ site for books off my wishlist I was inspired to try again to find a book Ian remembered reading as a child during his year in England. With that in mind The Adventures of Tittletom by Ellis Credle from the description posted on worldcat.org looked like it could be Ian's book.
Ian described the book as being about a boy who had misadventures and an attitude that was "such." He lived in a rural place and put rice in a boot at a wedding. As it turns out, The Adventures of Tittletom wasn't the book I was looking for. It was however, the last book I checked out that wasn't the right book. I found the right book on Google Books but I'll save that story for another post after I finish reading it.
The Adventures of Tittletom is a funny chapter book about a boy with more names than I care to count but everyone calls him Tittletom. He's the only boy in a family of sisters.
Each chapter is a different adventure. There's a story about a goldfish who gets loose and has to be tracked down. There's another one about a goat who only likes children.The last couple are about a skunk and a trip into town that doesn't go as planned.
The chapters are episodic and filled with adorable illustrations. The whole thing can be read in about half an hour.
books | Ellis Credle | childrens | 1949
Comments (2)
Permalink
Knitty Kitty: 12/15/10
Grandmothers are so typically described as sitting in rocking chairs, wearing shawls and knitting as they rock even though the grandmothers my generation had in our families weren't like that and my children's grandmothers are certainly not like that. Yet, the trope is alive and well, especially in children's books such as Knitty Kitty by David Elliott.
The grandmother here is a matronly calico who sits in a pink and green polka dotted armchair, knitting as she watches three rambunctious kittens. As they play she knits a hat, a scarf and some mittens, presumably to keep them warm.
Mittens don't stay on kittens, no matter how lovingly they were made. These kittens have other ideas for the clothing knitted for them. How grandma reacts to their creative use of her gifts highlights for me and my children that bond that families share.
However on a whole my two didn't relate to most of the book. They liked the illustrations and the rhyming text but a knitting grandmother wasn't something they could relate to. Their grandmothers walk dogs, teach school, volunteer in libraries; they are athletic and energetic. In this way the book failed to connect.
books | David Elliott | childrens | 2008
Comments (0)
Permalink
Beautiful Yetta: The Yiddish Chicken: 12/14/10
Daniel Pinkwater is another author my local library has introduced me to. Two of his books were sitting on their recommended children's books recently: The Neddiad (review coming) and Beautiful Yetta: The Yiddish Chicken. Now since one is a middle grade book and the other is a picture book, I didn't notice that they were by the same author until I sat down to write my reviews.
Beautiful Yetta is about a Yiddish speaking chicken who breaks free from her cage and escapes the truck brining her into the city. While she's trying to figure out a safe place to be she saves a wild parrot from a hungry looking cat. The book is written in English, Yiddish (with transliteration) and Spanish.
The book is set in Brooklyn and at the end of the book Daniel Pinkwater includes a little background on the story. There are in fact wild parrots (just as there are in South Pasadena and San Francisco) and kosher butchers. He says he doesn't know if chickens speak Yiddish but thought it would be fun to suppose they could.
I read Beautiful Yetta before I read The Neddiad and I was skeptical at first. It's not that I don't believe in chickens or parrots in urban areas; I've seen both. It just seemed like an incredibly odd choice of story. Now having completely enjoyed Melvin the Shaman from The Neddiad I've come to realize that odd ball characters and plot lines are what he specializes in. I can certainly say that Yetta has stuck with me both as a story and as a character.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Daniel Pinkwater | childrens | 2010
Comments (2)
Permalink
Waiting for the Phone to Ring: 12/13/10
"Waiting for the Phone to Ring" by Richard Bowes is another installment in what will be a roman clef. I wrote in my review of "I Needs Must Part, the Policeman Said" that it was my favorite stories from the December 2009 issue. I can't say the same of "Waiting for the Phone to Ring."
In fact, like about half of the reviews I've read, I really can't remember the story. It made no lasting impression on me. There's a vague sense of a man being visited by his past twice in the same day after years of being alone. But that's not enough to go on to write a review.
I'm going to go further and say I'm getting tired of F&SF's commitment to long series of stories. I'm bored to death of Fred Chappell's Shadow series. I'm growing weary of Cowdrey's obsession with New Orleans, the Civil War and the Bayou. I suspect that Bowes will be another one of these authors whose appearance in an issue will make me cringe.
Other posts and reviews:
fantasy science fiction magazine| short story | Richard Bowes | scifi | 2010
Comments (2)
Permalink
What Are You Reading: December 13, 2010: 12/12/10
My first semester as an MLIS student ended last week. The first couple of days I spent pretty much in a stupor not doing much of anything. Then I got back to freelance writing until Friday when my son had the day off and my daughter came down with a stomach bug which she promptly shared with the rest of us.
Last week's reading can be summed up as the remaining MLIS books, a couple fun reads and a small pile of picture books. This week I'm working on some wishlist books that are due at the library soon as well as a novel I've promised to a friend, namely, Bite Me by Christopher Moore. It is probably the most insane book I've read by him which is saying a lot since they're all a little off. It's set in San Francisco and is hilarious.
My reviews from last week include some catching up on my part. I have one review I had been meaning to post for an entire year! Some day I would love to be caught up on my reviews but for the foreseeable future I expect to see more of these year-old posts.
Finished Last Week:
- Information Seeking in Electronic Environments by Gary Marchionini (personal collection)
- Naked Heat by Richard Castle (personal collection)
- The Noisy Way to Bed by Ian Whybrow (library book)
- "Stand Back," Said the Elephant, "I'm Going to Sneeze!" by Patricia Thomas (library book)
- Theodosia and the Eyes of Horus by R. L. LaFevers (library book)
- Waking Up Wendell by April Stevens (library book)
- The Z was Zapped by Chris Van Allsburg (library book)
Currently Reading:
- A Barnstormer in Oz by Philip José Farmer (library book)
- The Batman Handbook by Scott Beatty (personal collection)
- Bite Me by Christopher Moore (personal collection)
- The Country Child by Alison Uttley (library book)
- Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff (review copy)
- The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Lee Stewart (personal collection)
What Are You Reading
Comments (18)
Permalink
Sector 7: 12/12/10
David Wiesner is another "new to me" authors introduced to me by the children's wing of my library. Sector 7 was on display along the walls above the picture book shelves. The gorgeous cover got my attention immediately and I had to take it home to peruse.
Wiesner is a children's book illustrator and an author of "wordless picture books." From my time judging graphic novels for the Cybils, I've come to think of them as graphic picture books, which I know, is redundant. Nonetheless, I like the term because his illustrations and the stories they portray are as complex and interesting as the graphic novels I've read and sometimes more so!
Sector 7 begins with a field trip to the Empire State Building and a ride to the top (something I would love to do some day). From there things become fantastic as the main character befriends a cloud and goes off to visit the factory or school or city or whatever it is where clouds come from. The adults who run the place want to send the boy home but he manages to have an influence on the clouds before he's returned. The results are magical and absolutely charming.
My son who a year ago wouldn't touch a wordless book, devoured this one. We both went through the book twice on our own and once together. We had fun comparing notes and our versions of the story. My son is actually asking for me to check the book out again.
Other posts and reviews
books | David Wiesner | childrens | 1999
Comments (7)
Permalink
Boats: Speeding! Sailing! Cruising!: 12/11/10
I am a sucker for a well illustrated picture book. Seriously, I think I embarrass my children sometimes as I will gleefully check out picture books just for myself. Add in my fascination with all things marine and Boats: Speeding! Sailing! Cruising! by Patricia Hubbell was irresistible.
The book is like a Richard Scarry word book but done in a style reminiscent of the old tourism posters. The illustrations are built from clip art, etchings and drawings. The drawings would look great framed.
Besides the fantastic artwork, the book teaches a wide range of vocabulary related to ships. There are types of ships, parts of ships and all sorts of interesting words.
It's apparently the fifth in a series of books but it's the only one I've read. I am keeping my eyes out for others in the series when I'm at my library.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Patricia Hubbell | childrens | 2009
Comments (0)
Permalink
On My Wishlist: December 11, 2010: 12/11/10
I'm posting this one while feverish. I picked up some sort of stomach bug from my daughter and she's passed it along to the rest of us. Yesterday she and I were sick and now my son and I are sick and she's well. I've spent some of the day reading wishlist books. I just finished Naked Heat by Richard Castle. It was about the right pace for my addled brain.
In the mean time, I've added these books to my ever growing list:
Seaglass Summer by Anjali Banerjee (Recommended by Musings of a Book Addict)
Goodreads description:
Eleven-year-old Poppy Ray longs to be a veterinarian, but she's never had a pet. This summer, she's going to spend a month with her uncle Sanjay, veterinarian and owner of the Furry Friends Animal Clinic on an island off the Washington coast.
Poppy is in for big surprises. She loves tending to the dogs, cats, and even a bird, and she discovers the fun of newborn puppies and the satisfaction of doing a good job. But she learns that there's more to caring for animals than the stethoscope and cotton swabs in her Deluxe Veterinarian First-Aid Kit. She's not prepared for quirky pet owners, gross stuff, or scary emergencies. With help from a boy named Hawk, a chunk of seaglass, and a touch of intuition, Poppy gains a deeper understanding of the pain and joy of working with animals.
Imaginalis by J.M. DeMatteis (Recommended by Musings of a Book Addict)
GoodReads Description
What if your dearest friends were trapped in a world that was dying?
Mehera Beatrice Crosby has one great love and it's not following the latest health fads (like her school friend Celeste), and it's definitely not Andrew Suarez (even if he does have a ridiculous crush on her). It's Imaginalis, her favorite book series.
When she learns that the long-awaited last book in the series has been canceled, Mehera is devastated until strange events begin unfolding, and she realizes that her Imaginalian friends are counting on her to rescue them from their fading existence. Soon Mehera finds herself traveling between her world and the kingdom of Imaginalis. But what will happen when she accidentally brings the villain of the series, Pralaya, back to Earth, along with Prince Imagos and his Companions? Has Mehera doomed both worlds beyond repair, or is there a way to save Mehera's world and Imaginalis, too?
Happyface by Stephen Emond (Recommended by Writing From the Tub)
New York in the 1920's is the world of Prohibition, speakeasies and an underground run by the underworld. Vampires and mobsters vie for power in the seedy underbelly of Manhattan.
Enter Happyface's journal and get a peek into the life of a shy, artistic boy who decides to reinvent himself as a happy-go-lucky guy after he moves to a new town. See the world through his hilariously self-deprecating eyes as he learns to shed his comic-book-loving, computer-game playing ways. Join him as he makes new friends, tries to hide from his past, and ultimately learns to face the world with a genuine smile. With a fresh and funny combination of text and fully integrated art, Happyface is an original storytelling experience.
Chester's Masterpiece by Melanie Watt
Chester's finally ready to write his own masterpiece he just needs to get pesky writer-illustrator Mélanie Watt out of the way. Chester's solo attempts at storytelling are messy, to say the least, but he's determined to go it alone. But where's his story going? After several alternative (but always unhappy) endings, Chester is confronted by a problem he never bargained for. A wry comment on the creative process and how good stories are constructed, this is the most uproarious Chester book yet.
Lots of Dots by Craig Frazier (Recommended by The Friendly Book Nook)
GoodReads description
In this exuberant book, acclaimed graphic designer Craig Frazier does more than simply showcase a vast variety of dots, he encourages young readers to look closely at the world around them. Through his energetic images, the ordinary becomes extraordinary. Buttons are dots. Wheels are dots. Ladybugs have dots. And so do the fried eggs on your plate. Lots of Dots is lots of fun!
Saturn Apartments, Volume 1 by Hisae Iwaoka (Recommended by Books & Other Thoughts)
Far in the future, humankind has evacuated the earth in order to preserve it. Humans now reside in a gigantic structure that forms a ring around the earth, 35 kilometers up in the sky. The society of the ring is highly stratified: the higher the floor, the greater the status. Mitsu, the lowly son of a window washer, has just graduated junior high. When his father disappears and is assumed dead, Mitsu must take on his father's occupation. As he struggles with the transition to working life, Mitsu's job treats him to an outsider's view into the living-room dioramas of the Saturn Apartments
The Englishman who Posted Himself and Other Curious Objects by John Tingey (Recommended by PhiloBiblos)
The first impression of W. Reginald Bray (1879-1939) was one of an ordinary middle-class Englishman quietly living out his time as an accountant in the leafy suburb of Forest Hill, London. A glimpse behind his study door, however, revealed his extraordinary passion for sending unusual items through the mail. In 1898, Bray purchased a copy of the Post Office Guide, and began to study the regulations published quarterly by the British postal authorities. He discovered that the smallest item one could post was a bee, and the largest, an elephant. Intrigued, he decided to experiment with sending ordinary and strange objects through the post unwrapped, including a turnip, a bowler hat, a bicycle pump, shirt cuffs, seaweed, a clothes brush, even a rabbit's skull.
He eventually posted his Irish terrier and himself (not together), earning him the name "The Human Letter." He also mailed cards to challenging addressessome in the form of picture puzzles, others sent to ambiguous recipients at hard to reach destinationsall in the name of testing the deductive powers of the beleaguered postman. Over time his passion changed from sending curios to amassing the world's largest collection of autographs, also via the post. Starting with key British military officers involved in the Second Boer War, he acquired thousands of autographs during the first four decades of the twentieth centuryof politicians, military men, performing artists, aviators, sporting stars, and many others.
By the time he died in 1939, Bray had sent out more than thirty-two thousand postal curios and autograph requests. The Englishman Who Posted Himself and Other Curious Objects tells W. Reginald Bray's remarkable tale for the first time and includes delightful illustrations of some of his most amazing postal creations. Readers will never look at the objects they post the same way again.
Carousel Tides by Sharon Lee (Recommended by Inside of a Dog)
Kate Archer left home years ago, swearing that she would die before she returned to Maine. As plans go, it was a pretty good one - simple and straightforward. Not quite fast enough, though. Before she can quite manage the dying part, Kate gets notice that her grandmother is missing, leaving the carousel that is the family business untended.
Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk by David Sedaris (Recommended by Writing from the Tub)
If animals were more like us, if mice kept pets and toads could cuss, if dogs had wives and chipmunks dated, sheep sat still and meditated, then in the forest, field, and dairy you might find this bestiary, read by storks, by rats and kitties, skimmed by cows with milk-stained titties. "I found the book to be most droll," might quip the bear, the owl, the mole, Others, though, would be more coarse. "Bull," could say the pig and horse. As to the scribe, they'd quote the hen: "Trust me, he's no La Fontaine."
Helen of Pasadena by Lian Dolan (Recommended by Teresa's reading corner... )
Helen Fairchild is leading a privileged Pasadena existence: married to a pillar of the community; raising a water polo-playing son destined for the most select high school; volunteering on the most fashionable committees. It only bothers her a tiny bit that she has never quite fit in with the proper crowd, never finished that graduate degree in Classics, and never had that second baby. But the rigid rules of society in Pasadena appeal to Helen, the daughter of Oregon fiber artists, even if she'll never be on the inside. And then along comes a Rose Parade float, killing her philandering husband and leaving Helen broke, out of her 'forever' house and in desperate need of a fresh start.
On My Wishlist
Comments (16)
Permalink
One to Nine: 12/10/10
I remember hearing about One to Nine: The Inner Life of Numbers by Andrew Hodges. I want to say I heard it on KQED, my local public radio station but I'm having trouble verifying my memory. I know it was an extended review that I heard somewhere was the reason behind me adding it to my wishlist. As I am married to a math professor and have a calculus teacher mother in law and, frankly, like math, I had to read the book.
The book has a chapter devoted to a different number, the first nine natural numbers. So chapter one tries to cover everything numerically interesting about one. Then the book repeats the process with two, three, and so forth, all the way through nine.
I hoped I might pick up something new, a numeric tidbit I didn't know. Or maybe I'd learn a little history about the numbers. What I got instead was an encyclopedia of numerology presented as prose. It was dense, disjointed reading.
What I also discovered is that at least for a layman's book on numbers, I had heard of nearly everything presented in the book. So it wasn't the new and exciting look at numbers I was hoping for. That said, it is still a great reference on things one to nine.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Andrew Hodges | nonfiction | 2007
Comments (0)
Permalink
Book Blogger Hop for December 10, 2010: 12/10/10
I got my term papers turned in on time. I spent the first half of the week just recovering from a month of heavy duty research and writing. Now I'm back to freelance writing a few articles a week to help make ends meet.
So today's question is about book blogs. Why am I subscribing to bucket loads of them. The basic answer is I like books and I like learning about them and reading about them.
But lets look at what kinds of book blogs I subscribe to. They fall into four categories: blogs by book bloggers (fans of books and reading), blogs from places that have books (libraries and book shops), author blogs and publisher blogs. There's a gray area of over lap between these types of course. Librarian blogs tend to be more like book blogs, talking about books read but sometimes they also include discussions about reading issues, like banned books, reading advocacy, the digital divide and so forth. Likewise, author blogs aren't all about their own books but also about their personal lives, the books they like to read and other miscellanies.
So to readdress the question of why do I read book blogs, a broader answer would have to be, I like learning and thinking about books in ways I might otherwise not.
The only posts I routinely skip are the book blog tour posts. I really don't care to read about the same book over and over again. When a read-a-thon pops up, I typically mark my RSS feeds as read without reading them. I don't care how many books were read in the course of the read-a-thon or how many pages or how tired everyone's feeling.
books | book blogger hop
Comments (42)
Permalink
Brownie and Pearl Get Dolled Up: 12/09/10
Cynthia Rylant has close to two hundred published children's books. We "discovered" her by way of the Backyardigans and have since then been checking out her books as we see them at the library.
Rylant has a new series of books staring Brownie and her cat, Pearl. Eight picture books are planned and a couple of them were released this year. Brownie and Pearl Get Dolled Up is the second of the series.
Brownie decides to play dress up with her cat. Dressing up includes lots of sparkles and other outlandishness. For me the book was ok. Dress up never was my thing as a child and there's no way I'd ever try to dress up a cat. But Harriet adored the book. We read it together about five times and I think she read it to herself at least another five.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Cynthia Rylant | childrens | 2009
Comments (0)
Permalink
Looking for Jake: Stories: 12/08/10
In April 2009 I stopped scheduling my reviews ahead of time. The scheduling process was making reading and blogging feel like homework. Since it's currently an unpaid hobby for me, I decided I had to stop being a slave to the calendar even if it meant falling behind on reviews. To keep things interesting on the review side of things, I started picking which book or short story to review next by random. This process has the advantage of giving every recently finished book or story the chance of being reviewed immediately. The flip side of it, though, is that some things can and do fall through the cracks.
Take for instance, Looking for Jake, a short story collection by China Miéville. It feels to me like I just read it. His stories have that effect on me. But at the same time, I can remember observing the strange coincidence of reading "'Tis the Season" while listening to Christmas music. We were sitting outside on a chilly November day at the Soledad Starbucks. We were on our way home from Thanksgiving and were planning our first Christmas at home. Here it is now, a year later.
Looking for Jake is an excellent collection of short stories. Although Miéville is probably best known now for his long and complicated adult science fiction novels, I think he excels in shorter forms.
The title story is set in the same world as Perdido Street Station. It gives some background into how London came to be the way it is in the novel. I'm glad I had read the novel before reading the short story. Had I not, though, there was still enough there to make a compelling story.
There is also a nod at Un Lun Dun in "Reports of Certain Events in London." I hadn't read the novel yet so seeing the connection when I did later in the spring was a lot of fun.
One of my favorites though is "Details" which to this day has me wary of the cracks in walls and the other random details one sees in the course of a day. Imagine if those flaws in life were actually part of a greater evil. That's the gist of the story. It's so simplistic in its execution and yet so deliciously creepy!
"An End to Hunger" set back in the days of the Nintendo 64, while dated by its technological references is still a fun read. It was also the very first China Miéville piece I had ever read (and like Stardust with Neil Gaiman, had completely forgotten about). So it was a nice surprise and a recovered memory of a new year's morning almost a decade earlier reading short stories at my in-laws' house.
I recommend this collection to short story lovers, urban fantasy lovers and China Miéville fans who haven't tried his short fiction yet.
Other posts and reviews
books | China Mieville | scifi | fantasy | 2005
Comments (2)
Permalink
A History of Cadmium: 12/07/10
I read "A History of Cadmium" by Elizabeth Bourne shortly after I finished reading Duma Key by Stephen King. So the two stories are thematically linked in my memory. Both deal with history, bad memories, tragedy and artwork.
Cadmium, like her mother and aunt (in the friend of the family sense) is an artist, specializing Expressionist oil paintings. She's now pregnant and is feeling a new connection to her late mother and the life she and her aunt lived all those years ago.
Of course, this being a story in Fantasy and Science Fiction, there's something more going on with the paintings, and one in particular. The what and why of the painting's unusual behavior helps bring to light some dark truths, long buried in the past.
It's a short, moody and utterly delightful story, one of my favorites from the May / June issue.
Other posts and reviews:
The Best SF
fantasy science fiction magazine| short story | Elizabeth Bourne | scifi | 2010
Comments (0)
Permalink
Afternoon on the Amazon (Magic Tree House #6): 12/06/10
A couple years ago, possibly three, my son was given a starter set of Magic Tree House books. One of those books was Afternoon on the Amazon by Mary Pope Osborne.
Jack and Annie are sent via the tree house to the Amazon to track down clues to find and understand Morgan Le Fey. They have to run from killer ants, crocodiles and other dangerous creatures. The book lacks the plotting of later volumes. Jack and Annie mostly just run for their lives throughout the book so it doesn't have much in the way of character development.
It is what it is and when my son was first learning to read he loved it.
Other posts and reviews:
Other Magic Tree House books reviewed here:
books | Mary Pope Osborne | childrens | 1995
Comments (0)
Permalink
What Are You Reading: December 06, 2010: 12/05/10
Last week I was completely focused on finishing my term papers. My reading, therefore, was severely curtailed. The books I did read were mostly picture books that I read to my daughter. I also finished up a couple of my text books. The one book I read strictly for fun was the All Action Classics version of The Odyssey.
This week I will hopefully be working on my freelance article writing again. I do, though, have a couple books I want to read: Bite Me by Christopher Moore and Naked Heat by Richard Castle. I should also try to finish Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff. It's one of a small pile of ARCs I'm terribly behind on.
Finished Last Week:
- Alison's Zinnia by Anita Lobel
(library book)
- All Action Classics #3: The Odyssey by Homer and Tim Mucci
- Information Seeking in Electronic Environments by Gary Marchionini (personal collection)
- Kitty Cat, Kitty Cat, Are You Waking Up? by Bill Martin Jr.
(library book)
- One Halloween Night by Mark Teague
(library book)
- Information Seeking in Electronic Environments by Gary Marchionini (personal collection)
- The Portable MLIS edited by Ken Hayckcok and Brooke E. Sheldon (personal collection)
- Weblogs And Libraries by Laurel Anne Clyde
(library book)
Currently Reading:
- Bite Me by Christopher Moore (personal collection)
- Food, Girls, & Other Things I Can't Have by Allen Zadoff (review copy)
- The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey by Trenton Lee Stewart (personal collection)
- Theodosia and the Eyes of Horus by R. L. LaFevers (library book)
What Are You Reading
Comments (8)
Permalink
Raiders' Ransom: 12/05/10
The first shelf I always check at the library is the recommended reads shelf in the children's wing. I have yet to be disappointed by what the staff have put there. My latest find this way is Raiders' Ransom by Emily Diamand, a near future young adult dystopian set in what remains of the flooded British isles.
The book begins with the raid on an outlying village and news that the Prime Minister's daughter has been kidnapped. Lilly's village is blamed and she feels like she has to do something to set things right. She sails off with her fishing cat to take a ransom to the raiders and rescue the Prime Minister's daughter.
Raiders' Ransom is set in the 22nd century in a world where the oceans have risen and technology has failed. The ecological disaster and failed technology is fairly typical in dystopian fiction. So often though the characters have no working memory or understanding of how this dystopia came about. Raiders' Ransom is different: Lilly and the others know what happened. They might not know everything but they have a much better sense of what has happened than the average dystopian character.
The only thing that confused me at first about the book was the alternating points of view. Most of the book is told from Lilly's point of view but some of the chapters are told from Zeph's. He a child growing up with the raiders. His chapters help explain what has become of the flooded areas and gives an interesting look at the history of the raiders and the fate of London.
There's a second book out, Flood and Fire. I am hoping to see it on the recommended shelf soon at my library. I'm itching to see what happens next.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Emily Diamand | scifi | childrens | 2009
Comments (2)
Permalink
The Chick and the Duckling: 12/04/10
My daughter is a beginning reader. One of the books she recently picked to read to me was The Chick and the Duckling by Mirra Ginsburg.
The book is about two eggs who hatch: a chick and a duckling. The duckling takes charge and chick wants to do everything the duckling is doing. That works fine until the duckling discovers swimming!
As the book is designed for beginning readers, it has a lot of repetition and simple, easy to sound out words. For me sitting through the story, it's pretty dull, but for Harriet it was perfect. She was able to read it and found the story (such as it is) humorous.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Mirra Ginsburg | childrens | 1972
Comments (0)
Permalink
Ten Little Fish: 12/03/10
My son has grown up with Audrey, Don and Bruce Wood's books. They are a family of children's book authors and illustrators. He rediscovered them on his own in first grade and has read through his school library's collection. His most recent read was Ten Little Fish by Audrey Wood and illustrated by Bruce Wood.
The book begins like most books with "ten little" in the title. There are ten fish in school and one goes away. Wash, rinse, repeat. Typically though at one, the remaining member either finds where the others have gone, as in Ten Little Lady Bugs or the other ones come back like in Ten Timid Ghosts. Ten Little Fish is different, ending instead with the last fish finding a way to start a new school of fish.
Of the Woods books I've read, Ten Little Fish is my least favorite. It's not the biology lesson that bothers me, it's more just a reaction to there being too many "Ten Little" books. I know counting books are popular with children; I see that in my own two. I know counting helps teach numeracy. But could we have eleven little? Or twenty little? Or binary little? Or something a little different? Please?
Other posts and reviews:
books | Audrey Wood | childrens | 2004
Comments (0)
Permalink
On My Wishlist: December 04, 2010: 12/03/10
This week has been all about my term papers. It's been a lot of writing and very little reading except for reading picture books to my daughter or having my son read to me from an excellent joke and brain teaser he brought home from his school library.
In the mean time, I've added these books to my ever growing list:
Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry (Recommended by The Book Vixen)
Goodreads description:
In her strongest work to date, Lois Lowry once again creates a mysterious but plausible future world. It is a society ruled by savagery and deceit that shuns and discards the weak. Left orphaned and physically flawed, young Kira faces a frightening, uncertain future. Blessed with an almost magical talent that keeps her alive, she struggles with ever broadening responsibilities in her quest for truth, discovering things that will change her life forever.
As she did in The Giver, Lowry challenges readers to imagine what our world could become, and what will be considered valuable. Every reader will be taken by Kira's plight and will long ponder her haunting world and the hope for the future.
The Messenger by Lois Lowry (Recommended by The Book Vixen)
GoodReads Description
Strange changes are taking place in Village. Once a utopian community that prided itself on its welcome to new strangers, Village will soon be closed to all outsiders. As one of the few people able to travel through the dangerous Forest, Matty must deliver the message of Village's closing and try to convince Seer's daughter to return with him before it's too late. But Forest has become hostile to Matty as well, and he must risk everything to fight his way through it, armed only with an emerging power he cannot yet explain or understand.
Out of Time (Recommended by Ex Libris)
New York in the 1920's is the world of Prohibition, speakeasies and an underground run by the underworld. Vampires and mobsters vie for power in the seedy underbelly of Manhattan.
A mysterious accident sends Professor Simon Cross and his assistant, Elizabeth West back in time to face demons real and imagined.
Simon Cross has spent his life searching for vampires and now that he’s found one, it just might take from him the only woman he’s ever loved. Simon’s life has been a ritual of research into the occult and stoic solitude. He prefers it that way. Until he meets Elizabeth West.
A gambler’s daughter, Elizabeth knows a bluff when she sees one. Behind Simon’s icy glares and nearly impenetrable armor beats the heart of a man in desperate need of love.
Trials of murder, intrigue and danger push Simon and Elizabeth to the edge of sanity.
Imagine a Night by Sarah L. Thomson, Rob Gonsalves
Imagine a night when you can ride your bike right up the stairs to your bed. Imagine a night when your toy train rumbles on its tracks out of your room and roars back in, full sized, ready for you to hop on for a nighttime adventure. Imagine a night when a farmer plays a lullaby on his fiddle, and his field of sunflowers begins to dip and sway to the rhythm. Imagine a night when ordinary objects magically become extraordinary...a night when it is possible to believe the impossible.
With the intrigue of an Escher drawing and the richness of a Chris Van Allsburg painting, renowned Canadian artist Rob Gonsalves depicts that delicious time between sleep and wakefulness, creating a breathtaking, visual exploration of imagination and possibility that will encourage both children and adults to think past the boundaries of everyday life, and see the possibilities beyond.
Imagine a Day by Sarah L. Thomson, Rob Gonsalves
GoodReads description
Imagine a day when your swing swings you higher than the highest treetops. Imagine a day when you can ride your bike up a path of falling leaves into the very tree they are falling from. Imagine a day when you release a handful of blue balloons into a cloudy, gray sky to create a postcard-perfect day. Imagine a day when the ordinary becomes the extraordinary...a day when anything is possible.
Imagine a Day is the companion book to the critically acclaimed Imagine a Night, which School Library Journal declared "a fascinating foray into the imagination." Renowned Canadian artist Rob Gonsalves once again stretches the limits of visual exploration with his breathtaking paintings and encourages parents and children alike to look beyond the limits of the everyday world and imagine.
The Occult Roots of Nazism by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke (Recommended in The Zookeeper's Wife)
Nearly half a century after the defeat of the Third Reich, Nazism remains a subject of extensive historical inquiry, general interest, and, alarmingly, a source of inspiration for resurgent fascism in Europe. Goodrick-Clarke's powerful and timely book traces the intellectual roots of Nazism back to a number of influential occult and millenarian sects in the Habsburg Empire during its waning years. These sects combined notions of popular nationalism with an advocacy of Aryan racism and a proclaimed need for German world-rule.
This book provides the first serious account of the way in which Nazism was influenced by powerful millenarian and occult sects that thrived in Germany and Austria almost fifty years before the rise to power of Adolf Hitler.
Old Polish Traditions in the Kitchen and at the Table by Maria Lemnis and Henryk Vitry (Recommended in The Zookeeper's Wife)
In this book we have not collected any particularly elaborate, ingenious or rare recipes. What we have chosen are recipes for dishes that appear on the Polish table very often, while not forgetting about cooking for feast days to which we have devoted two chapters on Christmas and Easter.
We would like our recipes, chosen by us and entwined into a tale of Polish customs, to encourage readers to try them out often, thus continuing Polish culinary traditions.
Secret City: The Hidden Jews of Warsaw, 1940-1945 by Gunnar S. Paulsson (Recommended in The Zookeeper's Wife)
Though the Nazis forced most of Warsaw's Jews into the city's infamous ghetto during World War II, some 28,000 Jews either hid and never entered the Warsaw Ghetto or escaped from it. This book-the first detailed treatment of Jewish escape and hiding during the Holocaust-tells the dramatic story of the hidden Jews of Warsaw.
Born to Kvetch by Michael Wex (Recommended in The Zookeeper's Wife)
As the main spoken language of the Jews for more than a thousand years, Yiddish has had plenty to lament, plenty to conceal. Its phrases, idioms, and expressions paint a comprehensive picture of the mind-set that enabled the Jews of Europe to survive a millennium of unrelenting persecution: they never stopped kvetching about God, gentiles, children, food and everything else.
Extraordinary by Nancy Werlin (Recommended by Tiger Holland)
Phoebe finds herself drawn to Mallory, the strange and secretive new kid in school, and the two girls become as close as sisters . . . until Mallory's magnetic older brother, Ryland, shows up during their junior year. Ryland has an immediate, exciting hold on Phoebe, but a dangerous hold, for she begins to question her feelings about her best friend and, worse, about herself. Soon she'll discover the shocking truth about Ryland and Mallory: that these two are visitors from the faerie realm who have come to collect on an age-old debt. Generations ago, the faerie queen promised Pheobe's ancestor five extraordinary sons in exchange for the sacrifice of one ordinary female heir. But in hundreds of years there hasn't been a single ordinary girl in the family, and now the faeries are dying. Could Phoebe be the first ordinary one? Could she save the faeries, or is she special enough to save herself?
On My Wishlist
Comments (26)
Permalink
What Can You Do With a Rebozo? 12/02/10
What Can You do with a Rebozo by Carmen Tafolla is one of Harriet's current favorite books. She picked it for its colorful cover with a little girl holding up a red rebozo over her head. The girl on the cover reminds my daughter of one of her best friends.
A rebozo is a sturdy and colorful Mexican shall that women use for a number of purposes from covering their heads to slinging their children. The book has a number of other uses from super hero capes, to blankets, to slides and all sorts of ideas.
What Can You do with a Rebozo is on our frequent check out list. Harriet has taken to using her purple "night-night" blanket as a makeshift rebozo.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Carmen Tafolla | childrens | 2008
Comments (0)
Permalink
Book Blogger Hop for December 03, 2010: 12/02/10
Here it is December. Friday is my day to finish writing the last two or three pages of my GIS (geographic information system) term paper and then Saturday is my day to edit it and my Patron 2.0 term paper. Patron 2.0 takes a patron-centered approach to examining the current state of research on library adoption of Web 2.0 technology, sometimes called Library 2.0.
But we're not here to talk about my term papers. We're here to talk about popular books that don't live up to the hype. Like Jennifer, the meme host for the Book Blogger Hop, I don't read that many super popular books. A big part of not reading the popular books when they're popular is the fact that I already have a massively large to be read collection. I would rather read at my own pace than drop everything to keeping up with the Joneses. Instead, I put the book on my wishlist and I read it when it bubbles to the top of my wishlist.
The next part of the question asks for a specific title. I can't give one. I tend to be an eclectic reader and my tastes tend to be different than popular opinion. Whenever I'm posting a negative or lukewarm review, I always make the effort to explain why it didn't work for me and who I think it would work for.
books | book blogger hop
Comments (32)
Permalink
When Pigasso Met Mootisse: 12/01/10
When Pigasso Met Mootisse by Nina Laden introduces children to painters Picasso and Matisse. But to be silly Picasso is a pig drawn in a Cubist style. Matisse is a bull and drawn in the style of Matisse's work at the end of his career.
Let's step aside from the historical figures and look at the book by itself. It's the story of a rivalry between two headstrong artists with very different but equally strong opinions of what good art is. They get so sick of the competition that they seek some peace and quiet. Except that they end up as across the street neighbors and have to come to an understanding.
By itself it's a colorful, humorous, over the top book with a heartwarming ending. Harriet likes the story for all those reasons. But it's such a silly story that she doesn't want to believe that the book is based (albeit loosely) on real people.
Other posts and reviews:
books | Nina Laden | childrens | 1998
Comments (2)
Permalink
© 1997-2013 Sarah Sammis
|