Summary: Everyone knows the Moomins sleep through the winter. But this year, Moomintroll has woken up early. So while the rest of the family slumber, he decides to visit his favorite summer haunts. But all he finds is this strange white stuff. Even the sun is gone! Moomintroll is angry: whoever Winter is, she has some nerve. Determined to discover the truth about this most mysterious of all seasons, Moomintroll goes where no Moomin has gone before. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: disclaimer--this is the fifth book in the Moomin series, and while you don't necessarily have to read them in any order, I would suggest doing so in order to fully understand and appreciate the characters. However, today is midwinter, and I love Moomins, so therefore you get your introduction via Moominland Midwinter.
I love Tove's Moomin books. Though they have been around for decades, I only discovered them last year and quickly devoured them all, plus the comics (and have read them a few times again since). There is something so simple, yet so vastly deep about Moomin Valley and its inhabitants that captures one to the very core. And this is one of my very favorite books of the series.
Moomins are adorable plump trolls that have decided to no longer to live behind stoves as their ancestors did, and live instead in a peaceful land called Moomin Valley. As stated above, they hibernate all winter (this hearkens to the long and dark winters of the author's home in Finland). However, our protagonist Moomintroll finds he cannot get back to sleep and decides to go out and discover this new white world.
And this is where, starting from this book, the Moomin series changes a little. The first books are fun, silly romps that are utterly delightful, but in Moominland Midwinter, we start to get deeper, even existential thoughts. Moomintroll's feelings throughout this book are something that have been felt by everyone, I think, at some time in their lives. Moomintroll learns learns loneliness. He learns anger. He learns fear. But then he also learns patience. He learns bravery. He learns wonder.
Tove's books are filled with such fun, unique characters with species names (that often serve as the character name too) like Mymbles and Hemulens, Creeps and Snufkins, Joxters, Sniffs, Snorks, Whompers, Fillyjonks, and Tofts. We get to meet a plethora of fun characters in this book, a particular favorite being Too-ticky, a relaxed and chill person who knows what she's doing. All these characters gather in the wintry landscape, they work together, get on each other's nerves, aspire for greater things, and teach each other how to make it through the darkness.
Tove's illustrations throughout the book add so much life to the already lively text, a little doodle of a character here, and then a full page masterpiece there. I said I discovered Moomins last year, but in truth it was a few years before via a picture on the internet, though I didn't know it was Moomins until reading this book:
Overall I highly recommend this book, along with all the other books of the Moomin series, because there's just something about them that touches the inner core of what it means to be alive.
My Rating: 4.5 stars
For the sensitive reader: There is the death of a minor character, and this scene also contains The Lady of the Cold who could be scary. Another character called The Groke has been known to terrify kids for decades, and she has a big part in this book.
Home » Archive for April 2019
Book Review: The Sisters of the Winter Wood by Rena Rossner
Summary: Raised in a small village surrounded by vast forests, Liba and Laya have lived a peaceful sheltered life - even if they've heard of troubling times for Jews elsewhere. When their parents travel to visit their dying grandfather, the sisters are left behind in their home in the woods.
But before they leave, Liba discovers the secret that their Tati can transform into a bear, and their Mami into a swan. Perhaps, Liba realizes, the old fairy tales are true. She must guard this secret carefully, even from her beloved sister.
Soon a troupe of mysterious men appear in town and Laya falls under their spell-despite their mother's warning to be wary of strangers. And these are not the only dangers lurking in the woods...
The sisters will need each other if they are to become the women they need to be - and save their people from the dark forces that draw closer. (Summary and pic from goodreads.com)
My Review: This is just the kind of book that I‘ve really enjoyed lately. First off, I’m totally digging these fairytale retellings. This one is based on an old Russian fairytale, and I think it’s mixed with a few different fairytales including some cultural lore (according to the afterward), and I think it worked really well. The characters were interesting and mysterious, just as they should be in a good fairytale. I loved the magical realism as well, and I think that’s one of the things that made it really work. So many people who have lived throughout history, due to their lack of scientific knowledge and discovery, basically lived magical realism. Things that we are able to explain away today with science or with natural phenomena would have been magic to them, and I think that is the power behind fairytale—who knows where the natural phenomena or fairytale begins when everything is confusing and new? Some people died from a plague, some did not. Was this just magic or bewitching? Maybe. Fairytales just seem so authentic and real to people who have lived pretty much throughout history without the modern inventions and knowledge we have. And let’s face it—tons of things happen even now that we can’t explain. Is it magic? Is it science?
I enjoyed the writing in this book. Rossner is an adept storyteller and she has organized the book into being told first person by the two sisters. Each of the sisters has a very unique and telling style, and I enjoyed how the writing and the style of prose reflected each of the sisters.
The story is also very compelling. It is full of the age-old troubles of girls falling in love with boys they shouldn’t, family complications of all shapes and sizes, discovering oneself and embracing your destiny without losing sight of your own desires, and cultural strife between different ethnic groups living side by side. Really, this book encompassed a lot of themes and addressed them well. The fact that it was based on actual historical happenings gave it a feeling of authenticity, even though it was well within the realm of fantasy. I found it very interesting and enjoyable.
My Rating: 4 Stars
For the sensitive reader: There is some cultural strife and mentioned violence.
But before they leave, Liba discovers the secret that their Tati can transform into a bear, and their Mami into a swan. Perhaps, Liba realizes, the old fairy tales are true. She must guard this secret carefully, even from her beloved sister.
Soon a troupe of mysterious men appear in town and Laya falls under their spell-despite their mother's warning to be wary of strangers. And these are not the only dangers lurking in the woods...
The sisters will need each other if they are to become the women they need to be - and save their people from the dark forces that draw closer. (Summary and pic from goodreads.com)
My Review: This is just the kind of book that I‘ve really enjoyed lately. First off, I’m totally digging these fairytale retellings. This one is based on an old Russian fairytale, and I think it’s mixed with a few different fairytales including some cultural lore (according to the afterward), and I think it worked really well. The characters were interesting and mysterious, just as they should be in a good fairytale. I loved the magical realism as well, and I think that’s one of the things that made it really work. So many people who have lived throughout history, due to their lack of scientific knowledge and discovery, basically lived magical realism. Things that we are able to explain away today with science or with natural phenomena would have been magic to them, and I think that is the power behind fairytale—who knows where the natural phenomena or fairytale begins when everything is confusing and new? Some people died from a plague, some did not. Was this just magic or bewitching? Maybe. Fairytales just seem so authentic and real to people who have lived pretty much throughout history without the modern inventions and knowledge we have. And let’s face it—tons of things happen even now that we can’t explain. Is it magic? Is it science?
I enjoyed the writing in this book. Rossner is an adept storyteller and she has organized the book into being told first person by the two sisters. Each of the sisters has a very unique and telling style, and I enjoyed how the writing and the style of prose reflected each of the sisters.
The story is also very compelling. It is full of the age-old troubles of girls falling in love with boys they shouldn’t, family complications of all shapes and sizes, discovering oneself and embracing your destiny without losing sight of your own desires, and cultural strife between different ethnic groups living side by side. Really, this book encompassed a lot of themes and addressed them well. The fact that it was based on actual historical happenings gave it a feeling of authenticity, even though it was well within the realm of fantasy. I found it very interesting and enjoyable.
My Rating: 4 Stars
For the sensitive reader: There is some cultural strife and mentioned violence.
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Book Review: Comet in Moominland by Tove Jansson
Summary: When Moomintroll learns that a comet will be passing by, he and his friend Sniff travel to the Observatory on the Lonely Mountains to consult the Professors. Along the way, they have many adventures, but the greatest adventure of all awaits them when they learn that the comet is headed straight for their beloved Moominvalley. (picture and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I reviewed the fifth Moomin book in December, so I thought I should write a review of the first book. (Strictly speaking, this book would be the second, however, packaged as they are now, this falls first. The first Moomin book Tove wrote was called The Moomins and the Great Flood, and is more of a picture book than a novel, and is often considered a prequel. That being said, while it is a wonderful little story, the saga of the Moomins could be said to truly start in Comet in Moominland, and one doesn't necessarily have to read Flood.)
Moomins are plump little trolls that live in the lovely Moominvalley. Moomintroll, our hero, lives with his mother and father and best friend Sniff. When a comet threatens to destroy their fair hamlet, Moomintroll and Sniff set off to discover all they can so they will be prepared when it comes.
Along the way they meet characters that become staple in the Moomin series, Snufkin, Snorkmaiden, and Hemulen. They all join along for the adventure to the observatory, getting into scrapes and learning how to rely on each other when disaster strikes.
Tove was greatly affected by World War II, and that can be seen in Comet in Moominland as it revolves around an outside force that cannot be controlled by the characters, a terrifying thing that is coming and can easily destroy everything. Despite that terror, the characters learn to stick together, and when disaster is averted, they see the world with a strong new sense of hope where they can continue to live.
I love this book. We get to interact with such interesting characters that we can find ourselves relating to, even as they do ridiculous things and go on crazy adventures, like fighting an octopus, walking on stilts across what was once an ocean, and being reunited by a cake made by Moominmamma. As I've said before, the Moominbooks are a delightful series, with charming characters and unique situations, and I highly recommend them to everyone.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: our heroes are faced with many scary situations, but they bravely come through.
My Review: I reviewed the fifth Moomin book in December, so I thought I should write a review of the first book. (Strictly speaking, this book would be the second, however, packaged as they are now, this falls first. The first Moomin book Tove wrote was called The Moomins and the Great Flood, and is more of a picture book than a novel, and is often considered a prequel. That being said, while it is a wonderful little story, the saga of the Moomins could be said to truly start in Comet in Moominland, and one doesn't necessarily have to read Flood.)
Moomins are plump little trolls that live in the lovely Moominvalley. Moomintroll, our hero, lives with his mother and father and best friend Sniff. When a comet threatens to destroy their fair hamlet, Moomintroll and Sniff set off to discover all they can so they will be prepared when it comes.
Along the way they meet characters that become staple in the Moomin series, Snufkin, Snorkmaiden, and Hemulen. They all join along for the adventure to the observatory, getting into scrapes and learning how to rely on each other when disaster strikes.
Tove was greatly affected by World War II, and that can be seen in Comet in Moominland as it revolves around an outside force that cannot be controlled by the characters, a terrifying thing that is coming and can easily destroy everything. Despite that terror, the characters learn to stick together, and when disaster is averted, they see the world with a strong new sense of hope where they can continue to live.
I love this book. We get to interact with such interesting characters that we can find ourselves relating to, even as they do ridiculous things and go on crazy adventures, like fighting an octopus, walking on stilts across what was once an ocean, and being reunited by a cake made by Moominmamma. As I've said before, the Moominbooks are a delightful series, with charming characters and unique situations, and I highly recommend them to everyone.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: our heroes are faced with many scary situations, but they bravely come through.
Related Posts:
Book Review: Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster by Jonathan Auxier
Summary: For nearly a century, Victorian London relied on "climbing boys"--orphans owned by chimney sweeps--to clean flues and protect homes from fire. The work was hard, thankless and brutally dangerous. Eleven-year-old Nan Sparrow is quite possibly the best climber who ever lived--and a girl. With her wits and will, she's managed to beat the deadly odds time and time again.
But when Nan gets stuck in a deadly chimney fire, she fears her time has come. Instead, she wakes to find herself in an abandoned attic. And she is not alone. Huddled in the corner is a mysterious creature--a golem--made from ash and coal. This is the creature that saved her from the fire.
Sweep is the story of a girl and her monster. Together, these two outcasts carve out a life together--saving one another in the process. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: Call me strange, but several years ago I did some research on chimney sweeps for a book I wanted to write. Ever since then, sweeps have been on my radar, so when I heard about Auxier's book that had both a sweep AND a monster, well. There you go, I was sold.
This book was so tight. Auxier is a masterful storyteller, especially with his historical fiction. I read another of his books, The Night Gardener, and felt the same way. He is able to capture the history and feel of the past that makes it accessible and also understandable. In the circumstances for this book, it's 1800s London, and the vast use of climbing boys and girls to clean out chimneys.
I loved our main character, Nan. She is a climbing girl, and as such, is always going up chimneys for her job. This was a dangerous position to be in, however, and many young children were seriously injured or died. But Nan is a tough girl, and despite the danger, she loves her job, particularly when she can be on a roof and see all of London. I love how Auxier told her story and crafted her character, she felt very real to me.
Auxier weaves in memories of Nan when she was younger and in the care of a gentle, loving Sweep. Before he left, he gave her a gift to watch over her, a small piece of char, or coal, which we later discover is our monster--Charlie.
Charlie was adorable. He's a golem, a creature from Jewish mythology, that Nan works to protect and teach as he grows up much like a child. I loved his view of the world and how he saw things. I called him a monster earlier, the title calls him a monster, but he is not a monster in the sense most people see the word. He is gentle, childlike and caring. Nan and Charlie's friendship was so pure and so true and it tied this story together so well.
I also loved the quiet pacing of this story. There was still danger and high stakes as well as harsh circumstances, but the story was able to weave its way along in this almost old fashioned telling that I found very appealing. A very well deserving book that explores friendship, chimney sweeps, Jewish culture, and change.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nan live in a harsh world, and she and other climbers are put in dangerous situations. This story also deals with death.
But when Nan gets stuck in a deadly chimney fire, she fears her time has come. Instead, she wakes to find herself in an abandoned attic. And she is not alone. Huddled in the corner is a mysterious creature--a golem--made from ash and coal. This is the creature that saved her from the fire.
Sweep is the story of a girl and her monster. Together, these two outcasts carve out a life together--saving one another in the process. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: Call me strange, but several years ago I did some research on chimney sweeps for a book I wanted to write. Ever since then, sweeps have been on my radar, so when I heard about Auxier's book that had both a sweep AND a monster, well. There you go, I was sold.
This book was so tight. Auxier is a masterful storyteller, especially with his historical fiction. I read another of his books, The Night Gardener, and felt the same way. He is able to capture the history and feel of the past that makes it accessible and also understandable. In the circumstances for this book, it's 1800s London, and the vast use of climbing boys and girls to clean out chimneys.
I loved our main character, Nan. She is a climbing girl, and as such, is always going up chimneys for her job. This was a dangerous position to be in, however, and many young children were seriously injured or died. But Nan is a tough girl, and despite the danger, she loves her job, particularly when she can be on a roof and see all of London. I love how Auxier told her story and crafted her character, she felt very real to me.
Auxier weaves in memories of Nan when she was younger and in the care of a gentle, loving Sweep. Before he left, he gave her a gift to watch over her, a small piece of char, or coal, which we later discover is our monster--Charlie.
Charlie was adorable. He's a golem, a creature from Jewish mythology, that Nan works to protect and teach as he grows up much like a child. I loved his view of the world and how he saw things. I called him a monster earlier, the title calls him a monster, but he is not a monster in the sense most people see the word. He is gentle, childlike and caring. Nan and Charlie's friendship was so pure and so true and it tied this story together so well.
I also loved the quiet pacing of this story. There was still danger and high stakes as well as harsh circumstances, but the story was able to weave its way along in this almost old fashioned telling that I found very appealing. A very well deserving book that explores friendship, chimney sweeps, Jewish culture, and change.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nan live in a harsh world, and she and other climbers are put in dangerous situations. This story also deals with death.
Related Posts:
Book Review: Bird Box by Josh Malerman
Summary: Something is out there...something terrifying that must not be seen. One glimpse and a person is driven to deadly violence. No one knows what it is or where it came from.
Five years after it began, a handful of scattered survivors remain, including Malorie and her two young children. Living in an abandoned house near the river, Malorie has long dreamed of fleeing to a place where her family might be safe. But the journey ahead will be terrifying: twenty miles downriver in a rowboat--blindfolded. One wrong choice and they will die. And something is following them. But is it man, animal, or monster?
Engulfed in darkness, surrounded by sounds both familiar and frightening, Malorie embarks on a harrowing odyssey -- a trip that takes her into an unseen world and back into the past, to the companions who once saved her. Interweaving past and present, Josh Malerman's breathtaking debut is a horrific and gripping snapshot of a world unraveled that will have you racing to the final page.
My Review: I don't know if you are Netflix fans, but just before Christmas, Netflix released a film called Bird Box that I really wanted to watch. This is unusual for me, since I don't generally watch or read anything that falls into the horror/thriller category. It's just not my bag; I like being able to sleep at night. Eventually, I decide not to watch it, but imagine my surprise when, a few days later, I stumbled upon the book version sitting on one of my own bookshelves. I didn't even know there was a book version, let alone remember I owned a copy! It seemed meant to be, so I crossed my fingers and dove in.
Bird Box (the book) is a nerve-wracking, pulse-pounding, nail-biting, hand-wringing, edge-of-your-seat-the-entire-time kind of book. Not sure what I mean? Think The Walking Dead meets The Reapers Are the Angels meets The Quiet Place, with an unquantifiable foe that incites brutal, homicidal madness in anyone who sees it.
The story itself alternates between past and present perspectives. In the present, a woman named Malorie is desperate to survive, as nearly everyone she loves has been killed. The only way out of her current situation is to escape down river in a rowboat in search of a rumored safe haven. As if that weren't hard enough, she does so with two young children. Oh, and everyone is blindfolded. On a river. And did I mention they were BLINDFOLDED!! Yikes, right?!
In flashbacks to the past, a little more of Malorie's backstory comes to light -- the early days of "the problem," societal degeneration, her harrowing journey to the house that would become her home until she was forced to flee, and several things that happen in the interim. Thanks to the author's narrative technique, I understood little more than the characters themselves, and nearly nothing about the pressing threat, and served more as a silent spectator, pressed against the wall, in a truly frightening nightmare. As you can imagine, that is a pretty terrifying place to be. But also kind of deliciously so.
For me the most nerve-wracking part of the book was the obvious differences between past an the present. In the past viewpoint, Malorie shared a house with more than a half dozen people -- healthy ones, with a good stockpile of food. They should have been their four years later when, in the present, it's just Malorie and her children. Obviously something happened. But what? WHAAAT!??! I read this book cover to cover in around 5 hours and it seemed like I was waiting for the other shoe to drop the entire time. Drop it does and it's a doozy -- a veritable pelting of shoes, so be ready.
I won't say more, because to do so would be giving too much away, but I thoroughly enjoyed getting scared senseless while reading this book. I'd recommend this book to anyone with a strong stomach for suspense who isn't bothered by some cursing or violence, and likes any or all of the following: The Walking Dead (tv show), The Quiet Place (movie), and/or The Reapers are the Angels (book).
My Rating: 4 Stars.
For the sensitive reader: Some swearing and fair amount of violence.
Five years after it began, a handful of scattered survivors remain, including Malorie and her two young children. Living in an abandoned house near the river, Malorie has long dreamed of fleeing to a place where her family might be safe. But the journey ahead will be terrifying: twenty miles downriver in a rowboat--blindfolded. One wrong choice and they will die. And something is following them. But is it man, animal, or monster?
Engulfed in darkness, surrounded by sounds both familiar and frightening, Malorie embarks on a harrowing odyssey -- a trip that takes her into an unseen world and back into the past, to the companions who once saved her. Interweaving past and present, Josh Malerman's breathtaking debut is a horrific and gripping snapshot of a world unraveled that will have you racing to the final page.
My Review: I don't know if you are Netflix fans, but just before Christmas, Netflix released a film called Bird Box that I really wanted to watch. This is unusual for me, since I don't generally watch or read anything that falls into the horror/thriller category. It's just not my bag; I like being able to sleep at night. Eventually, I decide not to watch it, but imagine my surprise when, a few days later, I stumbled upon the book version sitting on one of my own bookshelves. I didn't even know there was a book version, let alone remember I owned a copy! It seemed meant to be, so I crossed my fingers and dove in.
Bird Box (the book) is a nerve-wracking, pulse-pounding, nail-biting, hand-wringing, edge-of-your-seat-the-entire-time kind of book. Not sure what I mean? Think The Walking Dead meets The Reapers Are the Angels meets The Quiet Place, with an unquantifiable foe that incites brutal, homicidal madness in anyone who sees it.
The story itself alternates between past and present perspectives. In the present, a woman named Malorie is desperate to survive, as nearly everyone she loves has been killed. The only way out of her current situation is to escape down river in a rowboat in search of a rumored safe haven. As if that weren't hard enough, she does so with two young children. Oh, and everyone is blindfolded. On a river. And did I mention they were BLINDFOLDED!! Yikes, right?!
In flashbacks to the past, a little more of Malorie's backstory comes to light -- the early days of "the problem," societal degeneration, her harrowing journey to the house that would become her home until she was forced to flee, and several things that happen in the interim. Thanks to the author's narrative technique, I understood little more than the characters themselves, and nearly nothing about the pressing threat, and served more as a silent spectator, pressed against the wall, in a truly frightening nightmare. As you can imagine, that is a pretty terrifying place to be. But also kind of deliciously so.
For me the most nerve-wracking part of the book was the obvious differences between past an the present. In the past viewpoint, Malorie shared a house with more than a half dozen people -- healthy ones, with a good stockpile of food. They should have been their four years later when, in the present, it's just Malorie and her children. Obviously something happened. But what? WHAAAT!??! I read this book cover to cover in around 5 hours and it seemed like I was waiting for the other shoe to drop the entire time. Drop it does and it's a doozy -- a veritable pelting of shoes, so be ready.
I won't say more, because to do so would be giving too much away, but I thoroughly enjoyed getting scared senseless while reading this book. I'd recommend this book to anyone with a strong stomach for suspense who isn't bothered by some cursing or violence, and likes any or all of the following: The Walking Dead (tv show), The Quiet Place (movie), and/or The Reapers are the Angels (book).
My Rating: 4 Stars.
For the sensitive reader: Some swearing and fair amount of violence.
Related Posts:
Book Review: The Katurran Odyssey by Terryl Whitlatch & David Michael Wieger
Summary: "The Katurran Odyssey" is a remarkable visual achievement, filled with spectacle, fantasy, and wonder on every page. This epic tale of faith, hope, and selfless heroism is illuminated by the stunning illustrations of Terryl Whitlatch, the principal creature designer for the Star Wars prequels, and is brought to dynamic life by the storytelling of screenwriter and author David Michael Wieger.Bo-hibba is a remote island in a faraway time and place that is populated by animals who are at once fantastic and startlingly real. The island's survival is threatened by the Long Winter, and not even the High Priest's ancient ceremony of renewal can put an end to the suffering from the hunger and the cold.
Katook, a small but courageous young lemur, lives in the village of Kattakuk. When he dares to enter a forbidden area on the island and witnesses a shocking act, the outraged priests banish him from the island forever. Forced to journey across the vast sea in search of a new home, Katook encounters great perils and marvels on his quest and undergoes profound tests of trust and friendship. At last, he finds the place where the secret of the Long Winter is revealed and where he must confront his greatest fear if he is to save his family and his island home.
Like such classic works of fantasy as Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings," Rien Poortvliet's "Gnomes," C. S. Lewis's "Chronicles of Narnia," Brian Jacques's "Redwall" series, and Brian Froud's "Faeries," "The Katurran Odyssey" creates a mythic world imbued with beauty, adventure, and transcendent imagination. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I've had this book for years, and it has also been years since I last read it, and I found myself wanting to delve into this unique world again and see if it held up to when I first read it. I love original worlds with their own cultures and gods, and I also love following the story of little outcast lemur Katook, and his friendship with the very vain quagga, Quigga.
What really makes this book is the art. Terryl Whitlach is a masterful animal artist, and has worked on several movies (including Star Wars, of which I have another book of hers detailing all her creature art for that world), and Brother Bear, another favorite of mine. She has a fantastic knowledge of animals (and even made up creatures) that is so inherent in her artwork that you just can't help but adore, the fluid motion and poses and the sheer number of animals she illustrated for this world.
And that's another cool thing about this book. Every animal in it (except one or two that are fantasy-related) are real animals, whether they are alive now or extinct. You can have extinct fare like thylacines, moas, and quagga aside much lesser known currently existing animals such as sables and gerenuks and fossah. It's truly a feast for animal lovers, and Terryl's art is just spectacular.
The story itself is fine. It's enjoyable, but it's not stellar. I do really like the world that was crafted, a world inhabited entirely by animals (and mostly in their animal states too, meaning four legged animals walk around on four legs. Some do wear clothes, but it's mainly the monkeys, as they fill the human niche of this land, writing books, riding larger animals as steeds, crafting buildings, etc). It's a typical hero's journey story, which I have no qualms with, but I think the art outshines the actual writing.
It did bring into question several things I didn't feel were fully addressed. Back to the monkeys riding other animals--is this slavery? Because we know these animals are cognizant, even our main character's friend, a quagga, explicitly tells Katook he will not be ridden. Another question I was left with was where is the predator/prey line drawn? Both were included in this world, but I couldn't tell if the predator animals were able to communicate/if they were seen as equals? In some scenes you see them walking about in the market with prey animals, in others, they are the attack dogs for royalty. It was just something that, for a world that went into as much detail as it did with the monkey cultures, I felt a little more of a solid line could have been drawn on some of these other important facets of worldbuilding.
But overall, the Katurran Odyssey is well worth the time as we go with Katook on his journey in this world filled with strange gods and cultures, masterful art and design, and a unique look at different animal species.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: the priests in Katook's village are pretty threatening and scary, and along his journey, Katook is thrown into peril after peril, kidnapped, enslaved, and hunted.
Katook, a small but courageous young lemur, lives in the village of Kattakuk. When he dares to enter a forbidden area on the island and witnesses a shocking act, the outraged priests banish him from the island forever. Forced to journey across the vast sea in search of a new home, Katook encounters great perils and marvels on his quest and undergoes profound tests of trust and friendship. At last, he finds the place where the secret of the Long Winter is revealed and where he must confront his greatest fear if he is to save his family and his island home.
Like such classic works of fantasy as Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings," Rien Poortvliet's "Gnomes," C. S. Lewis's "Chronicles of Narnia," Brian Jacques's "Redwall" series, and Brian Froud's "Faeries," "The Katurran Odyssey" creates a mythic world imbued with beauty, adventure, and transcendent imagination. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I've had this book for years, and it has also been years since I last read it, and I found myself wanting to delve into this unique world again and see if it held up to when I first read it. I love original worlds with their own cultures and gods, and I also love following the story of little outcast lemur Katook, and his friendship with the very vain quagga, Quigga.
What really makes this book is the art. Terryl Whitlach is a masterful animal artist, and has worked on several movies (including Star Wars, of which I have another book of hers detailing all her creature art for that world), and Brother Bear, another favorite of mine. She has a fantastic knowledge of animals (and even made up creatures) that is so inherent in her artwork that you just can't help but adore, the fluid motion and poses and the sheer number of animals she illustrated for this world.
And that's another cool thing about this book. Every animal in it (except one or two that are fantasy-related) are real animals, whether they are alive now or extinct. You can have extinct fare like thylacines, moas, and quagga aside much lesser known currently existing animals such as sables and gerenuks and fossah. It's truly a feast for animal lovers, and Terryl's art is just spectacular.
The story itself is fine. It's enjoyable, but it's not stellar. I do really like the world that was crafted, a world inhabited entirely by animals (and mostly in their animal states too, meaning four legged animals walk around on four legs. Some do wear clothes, but it's mainly the monkeys, as they fill the human niche of this land, writing books, riding larger animals as steeds, crafting buildings, etc). It's a typical hero's journey story, which I have no qualms with, but I think the art outshines the actual writing.
It did bring into question several things I didn't feel were fully addressed. Back to the monkeys riding other animals--is this slavery? Because we know these animals are cognizant, even our main character's friend, a quagga, explicitly tells Katook he will not be ridden. Another question I was left with was where is the predator/prey line drawn? Both were included in this world, but I couldn't tell if the predator animals were able to communicate/if they were seen as equals? In some scenes you see them walking about in the market with prey animals, in others, they are the attack dogs for royalty. It was just something that, for a world that went into as much detail as it did with the monkey cultures, I felt a little more of a solid line could have been drawn on some of these other important facets of worldbuilding.
But overall, the Katurran Odyssey is well worth the time as we go with Katook on his journey in this world filled with strange gods and cultures, masterful art and design, and a unique look at different animal species.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: the priests in Katook's village are pretty threatening and scary, and along his journey, Katook is thrown into peril after peril, kidnapped, enslaved, and hunted.
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Book Review: Lackadaisy: Volume #1 by Tracy Butler
Summary: St. Louis 1927.
Times change. Laws change. People still want booze.
For the better part of a decade, hidden beneath the inconspicuous Little Daisy Cafe, the city's best-kept secret has slaked the thirst of a prohibition-wearied populace.
Lackadaisy.
Unfortunately, the once raucous and roaring speakeasy now rests at a crossroads, its golden age seemingly at an end. Lackadaisy's remaining loyalists are left with few options.
But with all the cunning, tenacity, and sly ingenuity they can muster, they might just have a chance.
And if that doesn't work, fire does. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I have been following Lackadaisy since it first began posting as a webcomic many years ago. I fell in love with the world, the art, the anthropomorphic cat people in 20s era garb, and the delightful characters.
Lackadaisy is such a clever and witty comic, filled with cunning dialogue, quick thinking, and funny situations. Each character is rounded in their own way, and together make for some fun dialogue and situations. It's actually really quite difficult to pick a favorite character, to be honest, because they're just that well written. Tracy has also done her research into this era (and in the back of this book is a list of references that add depth to this world). Cats though the characters may be, they feel real.
The art is also stunning. Tracy has a remarkable grip on facial expressions (in particular, the character Rocky gets some stellar faces). She fully illustrates backgrounds with buildings and interiors, giving this world a very authentic feel. I love the different cats she uses for her characters, and how their styles fit their personalities. This comic, in my opinion, is a perfect marriage of writing and art.
The full comic (up to the most current page, that is, it's still a work in progress) is online at lackadaisycats.com, and I highly recommend it, and seeing how her art has progressed even further, each page a small masterpiece.
This first volume book includes several pages at the end filled with original character designs, test comics, silly side comics that delve a little bit more into back and side stories of the characters, and some art tutorials as well as some full color pages.
Comic though it is, I would suggest it for an older audience. The art and characters are fun, but a younger child might not be interested in the subject matter (as well as some of the items in the sensitive reader area below)
My Rating: 4.5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: this story takes place in the 20s during prohibition, so there is lots of alcohol bootlegging, alcohol consumption, rival bootleggers shooting each other down, and language.
Times change. Laws change. People still want booze.
For the better part of a decade, hidden beneath the inconspicuous Little Daisy Cafe, the city's best-kept secret has slaked the thirst of a prohibition-wearied populace.
Lackadaisy.
Unfortunately, the once raucous and roaring speakeasy now rests at a crossroads, its golden age seemingly at an end. Lackadaisy's remaining loyalists are left with few options.
But with all the cunning, tenacity, and sly ingenuity they can muster, they might just have a chance.
And if that doesn't work, fire does. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I have been following Lackadaisy since it first began posting as a webcomic many years ago. I fell in love with the world, the art, the anthropomorphic cat people in 20s era garb, and the delightful characters.
Lackadaisy is such a clever and witty comic, filled with cunning dialogue, quick thinking, and funny situations. Each character is rounded in their own way, and together make for some fun dialogue and situations. It's actually really quite difficult to pick a favorite character, to be honest, because they're just that well written. Tracy has also done her research into this era (and in the back of this book is a list of references that add depth to this world). Cats though the characters may be, they feel real.
The art is also stunning. Tracy has a remarkable grip on facial expressions (in particular, the character Rocky gets some stellar faces). She fully illustrates backgrounds with buildings and interiors, giving this world a very authentic feel. I love the different cats she uses for her characters, and how their styles fit their personalities. This comic, in my opinion, is a perfect marriage of writing and art.
The full comic (up to the most current page, that is, it's still a work in progress) is online at lackadaisycats.com, and I highly recommend it, and seeing how her art has progressed even further, each page a small masterpiece.
This first volume book includes several pages at the end filled with original character designs, test comics, silly side comics that delve a little bit more into back and side stories of the characters, and some art tutorials as well as some full color pages.
Comic though it is, I would suggest it for an older audience. The art and characters are fun, but a younger child might not be interested in the subject matter (as well as some of the items in the sensitive reader area below)
My Rating: 4.5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: this story takes place in the 20s during prohibition, so there is lots of alcohol bootlegging, alcohol consumption, rival bootleggers shooting each other down, and language.
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Book Review: The Sopping Thursday by Edward Gorey
Summary: An umbrella is missing. A man is distressed. A thief scampers over rooftops. A child is in danger. A harangued salesclerk weeps. A dog save the day.
The intriguing story of The Sopping Thursday is unlike any other Edward Gorey book, both because of its unique gray-and-black illustrations and because it has a happy ending (if one is to dismiss any worry about the child featured in the last frame). In just thirty images and thirty short lines of text, Gorey manages to create a complex tableau of characters and a plot worthy of film noir. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: What I love about Edward Gorey's books is the strange, almost dream-like way they are told. I read an article recently that talked about how he told disjointed stories because he left a lot up to the imagination of the reader. His stories will jump from point A to point 12 within one page, leaving you to try and figure out what happened in between and possibly wondering if we have moved onto a different story completely. However, they always somehow manage to tell a complete, if not disjointed tale, which is really the charm of Gorey's books. The jumpy storytelling could be jarring for some, but if you just go with it, you will be amused.
The Sopping Thursday is mostly about rain, umbrellas and one very noble dog named Bruno. As we go from one cleverly drawn page to the next, we jump in and out of different stories, a man looking for the perfect umbrella, a man who has lost his umbrella, a thief of umbrellas, and Bruno going on a quest to recover an umbrella.
Gorey's art has always had a spot in my heart. If you ever watched the old Masterpiece Mystery on PBS (and I believe they still use portions nowadays) there is an animated intro that is in Gorey's style, as his art lends well to the mysterious and dark. His art in Sopping Thursday is wonderful, with the rain on nearly every page, and the solid black umbrellas and the hound with the very Victorian-looking humans.
This story is surprisingly lighter fare compared to his other books which tend to have a more macabre trend (check out The Gashlycrumb Tinies if you want a taste), but it still has that unique Gorey flair, and anyone with an odd sense of humor will definitely enjoy.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nothing of note
The intriguing story of The Sopping Thursday is unlike any other Edward Gorey book, both because of its unique gray-and-black illustrations and because it has a happy ending (if one is to dismiss any worry about the child featured in the last frame). In just thirty images and thirty short lines of text, Gorey manages to create a complex tableau of characters and a plot worthy of film noir. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: What I love about Edward Gorey's books is the strange, almost dream-like way they are told. I read an article recently that talked about how he told disjointed stories because he left a lot up to the imagination of the reader. His stories will jump from point A to point 12 within one page, leaving you to try and figure out what happened in between and possibly wondering if we have moved onto a different story completely. However, they always somehow manage to tell a complete, if not disjointed tale, which is really the charm of Gorey's books. The jumpy storytelling could be jarring for some, but if you just go with it, you will be amused.
The Sopping Thursday is mostly about rain, umbrellas and one very noble dog named Bruno. As we go from one cleverly drawn page to the next, we jump in and out of different stories, a man looking for the perfect umbrella, a man who has lost his umbrella, a thief of umbrellas, and Bruno going on a quest to recover an umbrella.
Gorey's art has always had a spot in my heart. If you ever watched the old Masterpiece Mystery on PBS (and I believe they still use portions nowadays) there is an animated intro that is in Gorey's style, as his art lends well to the mysterious and dark. His art in Sopping Thursday is wonderful, with the rain on nearly every page, and the solid black umbrellas and the hound with the very Victorian-looking humans.
This story is surprisingly lighter fare compared to his other books which tend to have a more macabre trend (check out The Gashlycrumb Tinies if you want a taste), but it still has that unique Gorey flair, and anyone with an odd sense of humor will definitely enjoy.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nothing of note
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Book Review: Stonebearer’s Betrayal by Jodi L. Milner
Summary: A secret society of immortals, tasked to protect the world. A demon bent on revenge. A girl brave enough to fight for her family when the two collide. Archdemoness Wrothe stirs the ashes from a long dead war, rekindling a fire that threatens to burn the world. Only the legendary Stonebearers of the Khandashii have the power to stop her, if they catch wind of her plans in time. Katira didn’t believe the legends. She didn’t believe a person could alter the fabric of reality or live forever. She didn’t believe in the dark mirror realm or in the dangerous creatures prowling there either. That was before the first shadow hound came for her. (Summary and Image from goodreads.com. I was provided a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.)
Review: Katira is the daughter of a blacksmith and a healer, nearly betrothed to her best friend and love, and happy in the secure, small village where she’s spent her life. While her parents have never made any secret about her parentage (orphaned by fire and adopted by her rescuers), she is happy. Sure, the myths of magic and “wielders” are fun stories designed to spook and scare, but they can’t be real.
First time novelist, Jodi Milner, has crafted a high fantasy novel that is relatable and immersive, even for non-fantasy readers. I’ve always been wary of high fantasy (I prefer fantasy lite) because of the new rules and the names and the different magics — it’s overwhelming. However, I was much more than pleasantly surprised to find that Milner’s novel is so organic, so well-crafted that these qualms were wholly unfounded. The rules were parsed out as the reader needed to, avoiding the common pitfall of talking down to the reader or condescending to them in their explanations. It was easy to pick the novel right back up and slide into Katira’s world after a pause.
As for the story, it is well done. Amazingly so. While there are a few passages that made me feel like I’d skipped a paragraph, they are rare. In the last few years, I’ve noticed a trend among novels - it’s as though the storyline is the same, just the background and the scenery change. It was a breath of fresh air to read a book where the main character isn’t the “destined one” or the “only one to cure the evil”. Katira is brave, she’s resourceful, but she’s also scared and unsure and untrained. She’s naive, but she has a good heart. While the novel is set up for a series, and our main character could easily develop into the most powerful of all, she isn’t there yet. She’s nowhere close. It’s wonderful. It’s also nice to see the development of multiple characters, instead of just the one. While we are each the main character in our own stories, there’s never just one story being told. I feel like Milner embodies that.
Milner has created a character who I want to see develop. I want to see her growth, I want to see her succeed, I want to see her choices. Instead of a one-off novel a reader would read once and forget, we have been given a novel who invites the reader into a developing and expanding universe ripe with potential. As a non-fantasy reader, I can’t wait for the next book to appear.
Rating: Four and a half stars
For the Sensitive Reader: This is a solid PG book. There is some violence, some talk of yearning, but nothing I’d deem inappropriate.
Review: Katira is the daughter of a blacksmith and a healer, nearly betrothed to her best friend and love, and happy in the secure, small village where she’s spent her life. While her parents have never made any secret about her parentage (orphaned by fire and adopted by her rescuers), she is happy. Sure, the myths of magic and “wielders” are fun stories designed to spook and scare, but they can’t be real.
First time novelist, Jodi Milner, has crafted a high fantasy novel that is relatable and immersive, even for non-fantasy readers. I’ve always been wary of high fantasy (I prefer fantasy lite) because of the new rules and the names and the different magics — it’s overwhelming. However, I was much more than pleasantly surprised to find that Milner’s novel is so organic, so well-crafted that these qualms were wholly unfounded. The rules were parsed out as the reader needed to, avoiding the common pitfall of talking down to the reader or condescending to them in their explanations. It was easy to pick the novel right back up and slide into Katira’s world after a pause.
As for the story, it is well done. Amazingly so. While there are a few passages that made me feel like I’d skipped a paragraph, they are rare. In the last few years, I’ve noticed a trend among novels - it’s as though the storyline is the same, just the background and the scenery change. It was a breath of fresh air to read a book where the main character isn’t the “destined one” or the “only one to cure the evil”. Katira is brave, she’s resourceful, but she’s also scared and unsure and untrained. She’s naive, but she has a good heart. While the novel is set up for a series, and our main character could easily develop into the most powerful of all, she isn’t there yet. She’s nowhere close. It’s wonderful. It’s also nice to see the development of multiple characters, instead of just the one. While we are each the main character in our own stories, there’s never just one story being told. I feel like Milner embodies that.
Milner has created a character who I want to see develop. I want to see her growth, I want to see her succeed, I want to see her choices. Instead of a one-off novel a reader would read once and forget, we have been given a novel who invites the reader into a developing and expanding universe ripe with potential. As a non-fantasy reader, I can’t wait for the next book to appear.
Rating: Four and a half stars
For the Sensitive Reader: This is a solid PG book. There is some violence, some talk of yearning, but nothing I’d deem inappropriate.
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Book Review: Squids Will Be Squids by Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith
Summary: A collection of new and wacky fables with fresh morals, which are about all kinds of bossy, sneaky, funny and annoying people. A general moral offered by the book is, "If you are planning to write fables, don't forget to change people's names and avoid places with high cliffs". (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: Lane Smith and Jon Scieszka have a delightfully irreverent way of telling stories that I have loved since I was a kid. If you've read The Stinky Cheese Man, you'll know what I mean.
This particular book deals with fables related to the Aesop kind. And just as Aesop used animals in his tales, Smith and Scieszka follow suit, using animals like echidnas, sharks, wasps, gnats, walruses, and also inanimate objects like toast, froot loops, matches and straw.
If you haven't caught on yet, these aren't your classic fables. Each page brings us a new tale about certain characters that will teach us a lesson as fables are wont to do. For example, the tale about Straw, who goes to play with Matches, but whenever he suggests something to do, Matches hijacks the situation, greedily making it something that will favor him and making Straw realize what a selfish person Matches is. The moral? Don't play with matches.
The off the wall humor of these stories has long been one of my favorite sorts, and is probably where I get some of my dark humor to this day (that and Monty Python). All the stories follow this strange humor, and you never quite know where the tale will end up or what moral you'll get, but you know it will be ridiculous, which is the charm of Squids Will Be Squids.
Smith's art is also wacky and fun, and fits these fables perfectly. A lot look like they've been pieced together from cutouts, and the characters are zany and unique.
I find books like this tend to pair well with reluctant readers, as they let kids see that stories can be hilarious and make them laugh, and even lend to kids creating their own such fables.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: these stories can be a little irreverent, as I've noted above, but there's nothing too extreme.
My Review: Lane Smith and Jon Scieszka have a delightfully irreverent way of telling stories that I have loved since I was a kid. If you've read The Stinky Cheese Man, you'll know what I mean.
This particular book deals with fables related to the Aesop kind. And just as Aesop used animals in his tales, Smith and Scieszka follow suit, using animals like echidnas, sharks, wasps, gnats, walruses, and also inanimate objects like toast, froot loops, matches and straw.
If you haven't caught on yet, these aren't your classic fables. Each page brings us a new tale about certain characters that will teach us a lesson as fables are wont to do. For example, the tale about Straw, who goes to play with Matches, but whenever he suggests something to do, Matches hijacks the situation, greedily making it something that will favor him and making Straw realize what a selfish person Matches is. The moral? Don't play with matches.
The off the wall humor of these stories has long been one of my favorite sorts, and is probably where I get some of my dark humor to this day (that and Monty Python). All the stories follow this strange humor, and you never quite know where the tale will end up or what moral you'll get, but you know it will be ridiculous, which is the charm of Squids Will Be Squids.
Smith's art is also wacky and fun, and fits these fables perfectly. A lot look like they've been pieced together from cutouts, and the characters are zany and unique.
I find books like this tend to pair well with reluctant readers, as they let kids see that stories can be hilarious and make them laugh, and even lend to kids creating their own such fables.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: these stories can be a little irreverent, as I've noted above, but there's nothing too extreme.
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Book Review: The Girl in the Tower by Katherine Arden
Summary: The magical adventure begun in The Bear and the Nightingalecontinues as brave Vasya, now a young woman, is forced to choose between marriage or life in a convent and instead flees her home but soon finds herself called upon to help defend the city of Moscow when it comes under siege.
Orphaned and cast out as a witch by her village, Vasya’s options are few: resign herself to life in a convent, or allow her older sister to make her a match with a Moscovite prince. Both doom her to life in a tower, cut off from the vast world she longs to explore. So instead she chooses adventure, disguising herself as a boy and riding her horse into the woods. When a battle with some bandits who have been terrorizing the countryside earns her the admiration of the Grand Prince of Moscow, she must carefully guard the secret of her gender to remain in his good graces—even as she realizes his kingdom is under threat from mysterious forces only she will be able to stop. (Summary and pic from goodreads.com)
My Review: The first book in this series, The Bear and the Nightingale, was very much in the modern fairytale genre. I enjoyed the taking of old Russian folk tales and making them into a cohesive story. This book is the continuation of that story, but I think that although it continued with fairytale and folklore characters, it was very much in the fantasy realm. It kind of surprised me, actually, as the first book was very folkloric and this one had a completely different feel about it. There is a third book, and I will be interested to see what the third book is like compared to these two. I don’t always love fantasy, especially high fantasy; it just really isn’t my thing. This book was pretty much in the high fantasy realm, but because of the characters and folkloric characters I had come to enjoy from the first book, I was able to talk myself out of my knee-jerk reaction to high fantasy. It isn’t always fair, I know, but it is what it is.
So. About the book. I did like it. It was different than the first one, like I said, and it was different enough that it took me a minute to get into the swing of it. Also, it just jumped right back into the story, and since it’s been awhile since I had read the book, it took me a few pages to get up to speed and feel like I knew what was going on again. The characters had matured since the last book, too, and they were in quite different positions than they were before. Because of that, I felt like it was a completely different book. I liked the changes in a lot of ways, and I really liked how the main character, especially, had matured. Because of these differences, though, I think that a reader could comfortably pick up this book and still enjoy it and understand it even while not having read the first book.
I enjoyed the story in this book, and I really enjoyed the female protagonist. Sure, she had to pretend to be a male for most of it, but she was scrappy and smart and did many things that the men couldn’t do. I love me a strong female character. She wasn’t without faults, though, which I think makes her feel more authentic. She’s young, too, so obviously some of the things she is faced with will be challenging to her. Her magical horse is awesome, too. Everybody needs a magical horse, no? A good book is not made by just one cool character and her magical horse, though, and I am happy to report that the other characters in this book were fun as well. They didn’t get as much face time in the book, and I think that as with many fantasy books this one had so many characters that it is hard to go into detail with too many of them, which is too bad. Some are just left hanging. There is one character in particular that I wish had had more background (and I’m avoiding being specific here because I don’t want to ruin it) but he turns out to be a lot more than one would think at first glance and I think a lot more description and background could have been given to him. Maybe that’s coming in the last installment?
This book is full of excitement and sword fights and challenges for the throne and all kinds of fun fantasy things. Mix in the magical folkloric characters and you’ve got quite the heyday of epicness on your hands. If you are into fantasy books, especially ones that are steeped in folklore and tradition, I think you would really enjoy this book.
My Rating: 3 Stars
For the sensitive reader: This book is pretty clean, and even the battle scenes are not super graphic, although there is some peril.
Orphaned and cast out as a witch by her village, Vasya’s options are few: resign herself to life in a convent, or allow her older sister to make her a match with a Moscovite prince. Both doom her to life in a tower, cut off from the vast world she longs to explore. So instead she chooses adventure, disguising herself as a boy and riding her horse into the woods. When a battle with some bandits who have been terrorizing the countryside earns her the admiration of the Grand Prince of Moscow, she must carefully guard the secret of her gender to remain in his good graces—even as she realizes his kingdom is under threat from mysterious forces only she will be able to stop. (Summary and pic from goodreads.com)
My Review: The first book in this series, The Bear and the Nightingale, was very much in the modern fairytale genre. I enjoyed the taking of old Russian folk tales and making them into a cohesive story. This book is the continuation of that story, but I think that although it continued with fairytale and folklore characters, it was very much in the fantasy realm. It kind of surprised me, actually, as the first book was very folkloric and this one had a completely different feel about it. There is a third book, and I will be interested to see what the third book is like compared to these two. I don’t always love fantasy, especially high fantasy; it just really isn’t my thing. This book was pretty much in the high fantasy realm, but because of the characters and folkloric characters I had come to enjoy from the first book, I was able to talk myself out of my knee-jerk reaction to high fantasy. It isn’t always fair, I know, but it is what it is.
So. About the book. I did like it. It was different than the first one, like I said, and it was different enough that it took me a minute to get into the swing of it. Also, it just jumped right back into the story, and since it’s been awhile since I had read the book, it took me a few pages to get up to speed and feel like I knew what was going on again. The characters had matured since the last book, too, and they were in quite different positions than they were before. Because of that, I felt like it was a completely different book. I liked the changes in a lot of ways, and I really liked how the main character, especially, had matured. Because of these differences, though, I think that a reader could comfortably pick up this book and still enjoy it and understand it even while not having read the first book.
I enjoyed the story in this book, and I really enjoyed the female protagonist. Sure, she had to pretend to be a male for most of it, but she was scrappy and smart and did many things that the men couldn’t do. I love me a strong female character. She wasn’t without faults, though, which I think makes her feel more authentic. She’s young, too, so obviously some of the things she is faced with will be challenging to her. Her magical horse is awesome, too. Everybody needs a magical horse, no? A good book is not made by just one cool character and her magical horse, though, and I am happy to report that the other characters in this book were fun as well. They didn’t get as much face time in the book, and I think that as with many fantasy books this one had so many characters that it is hard to go into detail with too many of them, which is too bad. Some are just left hanging. There is one character in particular that I wish had had more background (and I’m avoiding being specific here because I don’t want to ruin it) but he turns out to be a lot more than one would think at first glance and I think a lot more description and background could have been given to him. Maybe that’s coming in the last installment?
This book is full of excitement and sword fights and challenges for the throne and all kinds of fun fantasy things. Mix in the magical folkloric characters and you’ve got quite the heyday of epicness on your hands. If you are into fantasy books, especially ones that are steeped in folklore and tradition, I think you would really enjoy this book.
My Rating: 3 Stars
For the sensitive reader: This book is pretty clean, and even the battle scenes are not super graphic, although there is some peril.
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Book Review: Dealing With Dragons by Patricia C Wrede
Summary: Cimorene is everything a princess is not supposed to be: headstrong, tomboyish, smart - and bored. So bored that she runs away to live with a dragon - and finds the family and excitement she's been looking for. (picture and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: I used to read this book a lot as a kid, and it always made me laugh, and I wanted to read it again since it's been many, many years. It's very tongue in cheek, which is delightful, poking fun at all the fantasy and fairy tale tropes, turning them smartly on their head. It also gives us a very unconventional princess in Cimorene, which is refreshing, and she's always been one of my favorite book characters. She doesn't want to be a princess and do needlework and be saved by princes, heck, she doesn't want to have anything to do with princes, so she hangs out with dragons instead.
In her upbringing, Cimorene would sneak away from her princess lessons and instead learn fencing, Latin, and magic. Her exasperated parents finally decide she will be married to a prince from another kingdom, but Cimorene isn't having that and instead goes and volunteers to become a dragon's princess, something that just isn't done (princesses are always captured, they never volunteer).
We also have Kazul, Cimorene's dragon. When it comes to dragons, she is a sensible one, and a perfect match to Cimorene. Together, they work to sort out the mystery of what the wizards in the land are up to, and I love the friendship between them.
Wrede's writing is just so cleverly fun, her dialogue and characters are cheeky. For fantasy fans, the world is a familiar one, but because of Cimorene, we get to see that world in a new light. Witches, wizards, princesses, dragons, curses, magic, they all take a new light in Wrede's world, and it's one that just makes me smile every time I read it.
My Rating: 4.5 stars
For the sensitive reader: not much of note, this book is clean and fun and very lighthearted.
My Review: I used to read this book a lot as a kid, and it always made me laugh, and I wanted to read it again since it's been many, many years. It's very tongue in cheek, which is delightful, poking fun at all the fantasy and fairy tale tropes, turning them smartly on their head. It also gives us a very unconventional princess in Cimorene, which is refreshing, and she's always been one of my favorite book characters. She doesn't want to be a princess and do needlework and be saved by princes, heck, she doesn't want to have anything to do with princes, so she hangs out with dragons instead.
In her upbringing, Cimorene would sneak away from her princess lessons and instead learn fencing, Latin, and magic. Her exasperated parents finally decide she will be married to a prince from another kingdom, but Cimorene isn't having that and instead goes and volunteers to become a dragon's princess, something that just isn't done (princesses are always captured, they never volunteer).
We also have Kazul, Cimorene's dragon. When it comes to dragons, she is a sensible one, and a perfect match to Cimorene. Together, they work to sort out the mystery of what the wizards in the land are up to, and I love the friendship between them.
Wrede's writing is just so cleverly fun, her dialogue and characters are cheeky. For fantasy fans, the world is a familiar one, but because of Cimorene, we get to see that world in a new light. Witches, wizards, princesses, dragons, curses, magic, they all take a new light in Wrede's world, and it's one that just makes me smile every time I read it.
My Rating: 4.5 stars
For the sensitive reader: not much of note, this book is clean and fun and very lighthearted.
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Book Review: Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing by Judi Barrett
Summary: In Ron and Judi Barrett's world, pigs, sheep, and other animals don sweaters, shirts, and hats, and young readers are invited to take a peek.
Why shouldn't animals wear clothes? Brightly colored, humorous illustrations that accompany the brief, large-print text reveal just why not. Eating out of a trough while sporting a crisp white shirt and neatly-knotted tie makes things "very messy" for a pig; a sheep wearing a heavy muffler, sweater, and hat over his heavy white fur "might find it terribly hot."
The text and illustrations allow readers to easily understand and interpret what's happening in the book and will prompt discussions about why animals are content to live in their own ready-made clothing — fur, prickles, or blubber, to name just a few. This book's unique and original approach will help emerging readers understand why animals and humans are different in a lighthearted manner, and it is sure to be read again and again. (Summary and image from scholastic.com, additional image from Simon & Schuster)
My Review: My kindergartner won Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing in a prize-drawing at her elementary school. When she brought it home I was absolutely thrilled. Judi and Ron Barrett (the author and illustrator) are the creators of my favorite children's book, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and its slightly less delightful (but still pretty darn cool) sequel, Pickles to Pittsburgh. Both books are incredibly imaginative with a unique illustrative style that compels you to examine each page. I should probably be embarrassed to admit this, but even though this book was originally published in 1970, I had no idea it existed until my daughter waved it in my face. Hence, my excitement.
The basic gist of Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing should be pretty darn obvious, but the hilarious illustrations are what make the book memorable. Each page showcases an animal meets fashion disaster...
Can we talk about how funny a chicken looks with an egg stuck in its pants? Hysterical. And quite controversial for the time it was originally published, I think.
Each fashion faux pas had my little one in stitches and while only a handful of words went with each illustration, she insisted on carefully studying each page. This was fine by me, as I just love Ron's particular method of drawing. I could look at it for ages. While Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing didn't have a story line to chew on like the aforementioned Cloudy or Pickles, it still made for a great bedtime or anytime book. I'll definitely be keeping it around.
In looking for a cover image for this book, I found that there is actually another one along the same vein called Lot More Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing. I look forward to the encounter.
My Rating: 4.25 Stars. It's not Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. But its pretty darn cute.
For the sensitive reader: Many different animals wear many types of clothes. They stay clear of the undergarment issue (I was SURE there was going to be a bra on a camel, but there wasn't) so unless you're offended by a chicken laying an egg in its pants you should be fine.
Why shouldn't animals wear clothes? Brightly colored, humorous illustrations that accompany the brief, large-print text reveal just why not. Eating out of a trough while sporting a crisp white shirt and neatly-knotted tie makes things "very messy" for a pig; a sheep wearing a heavy muffler, sweater, and hat over his heavy white fur "might find it terribly hot."
The text and illustrations allow readers to easily understand and interpret what's happening in the book and will prompt discussions about why animals are content to live in their own ready-made clothing — fur, prickles, or blubber, to name just a few. This book's unique and original approach will help emerging readers understand why animals and humans are different in a lighthearted manner, and it is sure to be read again and again. (Summary and image from scholastic.com, additional image from Simon & Schuster)
My Review: My kindergartner won Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing in a prize-drawing at her elementary school. When she brought it home I was absolutely thrilled. Judi and Ron Barrett (the author and illustrator) are the creators of my favorite children's book, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and its slightly less delightful (but still pretty darn cool) sequel, Pickles to Pittsburgh. Both books are incredibly imaginative with a unique illustrative style that compels you to examine each page. I should probably be embarrassed to admit this, but even though this book was originally published in 1970, I had no idea it existed until my daughter waved it in my face. Hence, my excitement.
The basic gist of Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing should be pretty darn obvious, but the hilarious illustrations are what make the book memorable. Each page showcases an animal meets fashion disaster...
- A porcupine with quills poking through its pink polka dot dress
- A camel with hats on its humps
- A snake slithering straight out of its britches
- A mouse stuck under a hat
- A sheep sweltering in a sweater
- A pig eating slop in his Sunday best
- A chicken with an egg stuck in its pants
- A kangaroo with way too many pockets
- A giraffe with way too many neckties
- A billy goat making a meal of his mufti
- A walrus in a sopping wet wardrobe
- A moose tangle up in his suspenders
- An opossum dressed upside down
- An elephant in an embarrassing situation
- Here's a little example of what I mean...
Can we talk about how funny a chicken looks with an egg stuck in its pants? Hysterical. And quite controversial for the time it was originally published, I think.
Each fashion faux pas had my little one in stitches and while only a handful of words went with each illustration, she insisted on carefully studying each page. This was fine by me, as I just love Ron's particular method of drawing. I could look at it for ages. While Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing didn't have a story line to chew on like the aforementioned Cloudy or Pickles, it still made for a great bedtime or anytime book. I'll definitely be keeping it around.
In looking for a cover image for this book, I found that there is actually another one along the same vein called Lot More Animals Should Definitely Not Wear Clothing. I look forward to the encounter.
My Rating: 4.25 Stars. It's not Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. But its pretty darn cute.
For the sensitive reader: Many different animals wear many types of clothes. They stay clear of the undergarment issue (I was SURE there was going to be a bra on a camel, but there wasn't) so unless you're offended by a chicken laying an egg in its pants you should be fine.
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Book Review: Why Mosquitos Buzz in People's Ears by Verna Aardema
Summary: "In this Caldecott Medal winner, Mosquito tells a story that causes a jungle disaster. "Elegance has become the Dillons' hallmark. . . . Matching the art is Aardema's uniquely onomatopoeic text . . . An impressive showpiece."
-Booklist, starred review.
Winner of Caldecott Medal in 1976 and the Brooklyn Art Books for Children Award in 1977. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: When a lone mosquito won't stop annoying Iguana, Iguana put sticks in his ears so he won't have to listen. This leads to a misunderstanding that he is ignoring Python, who freaks out and startles some hares. This chain reaction ultimately leads to an accident that ends in the death of a little owlet, and since the mother owl is grieving, she cannot call the sun and it won't rise.
What follows is getting to the root of the problem--who is to blame for the little owlet's death? This book works with repetition, which is one of the staples of children's storytelling, repeating the cause and effect backward to figure out why things happened so that the perpetrator can be punished and the mother owl can wake the sun again, and we also learn the reason for the title of the book.
I love classic folk tales like this, simple and straightforward, but also with a good moral, that one small thing can lead to bigger things, for good or ill.
The Dillons are masterful artists, a husband and wife team whose illustrations are almost always different in every book they do, keeping things interesting and never sticking to one style in particular. Their art for Mosquitoes was a unique take which fit the tale perfectly, and as a fun side note, I got to meet Leo and Diane Dillon several years ago, and they said while they liked doing this book and it won the Caldecott, they would never use the method of art they used to create the art in Mosquitoes again, since it was too difficult.
This book has been a favorite for years, and will continue to be a favorite of mine for years to come.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: as mentioned above, this story does deal with the death of a little baby owl.
-Booklist, starred review.
Winner of Caldecott Medal in 1976 and the Brooklyn Art Books for Children Award in 1977. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: When a lone mosquito won't stop annoying Iguana, Iguana put sticks in his ears so he won't have to listen. This leads to a misunderstanding that he is ignoring Python, who freaks out and startles some hares. This chain reaction ultimately leads to an accident that ends in the death of a little owlet, and since the mother owl is grieving, she cannot call the sun and it won't rise.
What follows is getting to the root of the problem--who is to blame for the little owlet's death? This book works with repetition, which is one of the staples of children's storytelling, repeating the cause and effect backward to figure out why things happened so that the perpetrator can be punished and the mother owl can wake the sun again, and we also learn the reason for the title of the book.
I love classic folk tales like this, simple and straightforward, but also with a good moral, that one small thing can lead to bigger things, for good or ill.
The Dillons are masterful artists, a husband and wife team whose illustrations are almost always different in every book they do, keeping things interesting and never sticking to one style in particular. Their art for Mosquitoes was a unique take which fit the tale perfectly, and as a fun side note, I got to meet Leo and Diane Dillon several years ago, and they said while they liked doing this book and it won the Caldecott, they would never use the method of art they used to create the art in Mosquitoes again, since it was too difficult.
This book has been a favorite for years, and will continue to be a favorite of mine for years to come.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: as mentioned above, this story does deal with the death of a little baby owl.
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Book Review: The Rule of One by Ashley & Leslie Saunders
Summary: Their past is a crime. Their future is a rebellion.
In their world, telling the truth has become the most dangerous crime of all. In the near-future United States, a one-child policy is ruthlessly enforced. Everyone follows the Rule of One. But Ava Goodwin daughter of the head of the Texas Family Planning Division, has a secret -- one her mother died to keep and her father has helped to hide for her entire life.
She has an identical twin sister, Mira.
For eighteen years Ava and Mira have lived as one, trading places day after day, maintaining an interchangeable existence down to the most telling detail. But when their charade is exposed, their worst nightmare begins. Now they must leave behind the father they love and fight for their lives.
Branded as traitors, hunted as fugitives, and pushed to do discover just how far they'll go in order to stay alive Ava and Mira rushed head-long into a terrifying unknown. (Summary from book - Image from amazon.com)
My Review: I love dystopian fiction. It's totally my jam. As such, I snapped this book up in a hurry when I found it at the library. I love the premise. Ava and Mira are twin girls born into a society that only allows one child per family. Initially, it bore a strong resemblance to the Netflix show What Happened to Monday as the twins learn to match in more than just appearance to avoid discovery and take turns venturing out into the world. The book was fairly fast-paced, so it wasn't long before their secret was uncovered and the girls were dodging evil government henchman and finding refuge and allies in unexpected places. Now wanted fugitives, the twins must disguise themselves and remain unnoticed in a surveillance state that has both advanced facial recognition software and the ability to track their very scent and heat signatures. In their race to safety, they learn of a rebel faction simmering under the surface of society, waiting for its opportunity to rise again. Will they flee or join the fight? Like, I said -- I love the premise. I just have a problem with the delivery.
The Rule of One had all the fundamental characteristics of a dystopian fiction novel, there just wasn't a whole lot of depth to it. While the authors gently touched on issues like gun control, climate change, privacy rights, illegal immigration, governmental overreach, and psychological warfare, they didn't seem to "dig in" to any one thing and it felt more like Dystopia Lite. Perhaps that's okay for a YA audience, but I still wanted something I could sink my teeth into and savor a bit and this just wasn't meal enough to satisfy. The overall conflict in this book resolved a bit too quickly for my tastes, especially towards the end where certain aspects of the story seemed rather far-fetched (in a Wow. That one needle sure found that other needle pretty darn fast, considering they were in that big old haystack kind of way). Again, it was probably not something that would bother your average YA reader, but it left my eyes a-rollin'.
The Rule of One ended with a little bit of a cliff hanger. It's sequel, The Rule of Many, doesn't come out until May 2019, and while I believe the premise of the novel could drive me to pick up the next book were it out right now, I'm not sure that my interest will hang around for three whole months. I probably would read the sequel if I happened upon it at the library, but I doubt I'll go searching for it.
My Rating: 3 Stars
For the Sensitive Reader: Some swearing (about 10-12 instances of the SH, D, F, B variety). There is some brief unwanted groping and innuendo when the girls come across some unsavory characters and some violence.
In their world, telling the truth has become the most dangerous crime of all. In the near-future United States, a one-child policy is ruthlessly enforced. Everyone follows the Rule of One. But Ava Goodwin daughter of the head of the Texas Family Planning Division, has a secret -- one her mother died to keep and her father has helped to hide for her entire life.
She has an identical twin sister, Mira.
For eighteen years Ava and Mira have lived as one, trading places day after day, maintaining an interchangeable existence down to the most telling detail. But when their charade is exposed, their worst nightmare begins. Now they must leave behind the father they love and fight for their lives.
Branded as traitors, hunted as fugitives, and pushed to do discover just how far they'll go in order to stay alive Ava and Mira rushed head-long into a terrifying unknown. (Summary from book - Image from amazon.com)
My Review: I love dystopian fiction. It's totally my jam. As such, I snapped this book up in a hurry when I found it at the library. I love the premise. Ava and Mira are twin girls born into a society that only allows one child per family. Initially, it bore a strong resemblance to the Netflix show What Happened to Monday as the twins learn to match in more than just appearance to avoid discovery and take turns venturing out into the world. The book was fairly fast-paced, so it wasn't long before their secret was uncovered and the girls were dodging evil government henchman and finding refuge and allies in unexpected places. Now wanted fugitives, the twins must disguise themselves and remain unnoticed in a surveillance state that has both advanced facial recognition software and the ability to track their very scent and heat signatures. In their race to safety, they learn of a rebel faction simmering under the surface of society, waiting for its opportunity to rise again. Will they flee or join the fight? Like, I said -- I love the premise. I just have a problem with the delivery.
The Rule of One had all the fundamental characteristics of a dystopian fiction novel, there just wasn't a whole lot of depth to it. While the authors gently touched on issues like gun control, climate change, privacy rights, illegal immigration, governmental overreach, and psychological warfare, they didn't seem to "dig in" to any one thing and it felt more like Dystopia Lite. Perhaps that's okay for a YA audience, but I still wanted something I could sink my teeth into and savor a bit and this just wasn't meal enough to satisfy. The overall conflict in this book resolved a bit too quickly for my tastes, especially towards the end where certain aspects of the story seemed rather far-fetched (in a Wow. That one needle sure found that other needle pretty darn fast, considering they were in that big old haystack kind of way). Again, it was probably not something that would bother your average YA reader, but it left my eyes a-rollin'.
The Rule of One ended with a little bit of a cliff hanger. It's sequel, The Rule of Many, doesn't come out until May 2019, and while I believe the premise of the novel could drive me to pick up the next book were it out right now, I'm not sure that my interest will hang around for three whole months. I probably would read the sequel if I happened upon it at the library, but I doubt I'll go searching for it.
My Rating: 3 Stars
For the Sensitive Reader: Some swearing (about 10-12 instances of the SH, D, F, B variety). There is some brief unwanted groping and innuendo when the girls come across some unsavory characters and some violence.
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Book Review: Tintin-The Black Island by Herge
Summary: Investigating a mysterious plane crash, Tintin discovers he's onto something big! The case leads Tintin to Scotland, where he learns of a monster that stalks a lonely island. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: The Tintin books are so much fun, and you don't even have to read them in any particular order. I'm a fan of most of the albums, but I really like this one, as it is just full of so many funny twists and turns and adventures.
For anyone unfamiliar with Tintin, he is technically a reporter, though aside from his very first adventure he never actually does any reporting. He's more of a sleuth and adventurer, traveling to different countries to solve a crime or a mystery along with his faithful dog, Snowy.
This particular tale involves counterfeiting and some villainous types that Tintin is more than familiar with. His detective skills take him to Scotland this go round, where he gets to don a kilt and head to a mysterious island.
One of my favorite things about Tintin is the humor--there are a lot of funny goings on in what could otherwise be scary situations. Someone that helps out with keeping this light is Snowy. Tintin's little fox terrier speaks throughout the comics (though his contributions are lessened when a new character, Captain Haddock, comes on the scene in later albums). It's never really known if anyone else can hear Snowy's words, but he provides a good comic relief.
It's also fun to see Tintin's relentless spirit, nothing can get him down, no, not even if he's been shot! Seriously, you would be amazed the number of times this kid ends up in hospital only to check himself out later that day. He is a serious go-getter, always determined to stop the bad guy and deliver justice to any who have been wronged. He's not always that clever, however, and Snowy often has to help him get out of trouble.
The art is always impeccable, Herge always does a grand job of illustrating these global ventures, and the detail is grand for the scope of what is being illustrated.
Any fan of a good mystery, a good adventure, and some good humor will enjoy Tintin.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Tintin gets into a lot of predicaments, like being shot, but they're dealt with lightly and he always comes out on top. Snowy is also a bit of a lush, and gets well drunk in this book.
My Review: The Tintin books are so much fun, and you don't even have to read them in any particular order. I'm a fan of most of the albums, but I really like this one, as it is just full of so many funny twists and turns and adventures.
For anyone unfamiliar with Tintin, he is technically a reporter, though aside from his very first adventure he never actually does any reporting. He's more of a sleuth and adventurer, traveling to different countries to solve a crime or a mystery along with his faithful dog, Snowy.
This particular tale involves counterfeiting and some villainous types that Tintin is more than familiar with. His detective skills take him to Scotland this go round, where he gets to don a kilt and head to a mysterious island.
One of my favorite things about Tintin is the humor--there are a lot of funny goings on in what could otherwise be scary situations. Someone that helps out with keeping this light is Snowy. Tintin's little fox terrier speaks throughout the comics (though his contributions are lessened when a new character, Captain Haddock, comes on the scene in later albums). It's never really known if anyone else can hear Snowy's words, but he provides a good comic relief.
It's also fun to see Tintin's relentless spirit, nothing can get him down, no, not even if he's been shot! Seriously, you would be amazed the number of times this kid ends up in hospital only to check himself out later that day. He is a serious go-getter, always determined to stop the bad guy and deliver justice to any who have been wronged. He's not always that clever, however, and Snowy often has to help him get out of trouble.
The art is always impeccable, Herge always does a grand job of illustrating these global ventures, and the detail is grand for the scope of what is being illustrated.
Any fan of a good mystery, a good adventure, and some good humor will enjoy Tintin.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: Tintin gets into a lot of predicaments, like being shot, but they're dealt with lightly and he always comes out on top. Snowy is also a bit of a lush, and gets well drunk in this book.
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Book Review: Virgil Wander by Leif Enger
Midwestern movie house owner Virgil Wander is "cruising along at medium altitude" when his car flies off the road into icy Lake Superior. Virgil survives but his language and memory are altered and he emerges into a world no longer familiar to him. Awakening in this new life, Virgil begins to piece together his personal history and the lore of his broken town, with the help of a cast of affable and curious locals--from Rune, a twinkling, pipe-smoking, kite-flying stranger investigating the mystery of his disappeared son; to Nadine, the reserved, enchanting wife of the vanished man; to Tom, a journalist and Virgil's oldest friend; and various members of the Pea family who must confront tragedies of their own. Into this community returns a shimmering prodigal son who may hold the key to reviving their town.
With intelligent humor and captivating whimsy, Leif Enger conjures a remarkable portrait of a region and its residents, who, for reasons of choice or circumstance, never made it out of their defunct industrial district. Carried aloft by quotidian pleasures including movies, fishing, necking in parked cars, playing baseball and falling in love, Virgil Wander is a swift, full journey into the heart and heartache of an often overlooked American Upper Midwest by a "formidably gifted" (Chicago Tribune) master storyteller. (Summary and pic from goodreads.com)
My Review: Leif Enger is the kind of writer who reminds you that it’s really, in the end, all about the writing. The story is obviously key as well, but if there’s a good story it doesn’t matter if the writing sucks. A writer, in the sense of Enger, is able to come up with a good story and then execute it to the point that the story is just awesome. It elevates it; takes it to a new level. I don’t know if you’ve read Peace Like a River, which was one of Time magazine’s top-five novels of the year in 2001 and was a bestseller. His second novel, So Brave, Young, and Handsome was also a bestseller in 2008. I’m just saying—the man is worth reading. If you haven’t read these books, I assure you that you can trust in him to write a good story and execute it in such a way that you just know he’s an exceptional writer.
I thought this book was excellent. I loved Peace Like a River, and when I began reading this book all those fuzzy warm feelings came back to me. Enger’s writing is old-timey and nostalgic, but it is also very real and doesn’t dance around harsh realities or struggles. Virgil Wander, in particular, has some dark times. The book itself is gently humorous. I loved Virgil Wander, the main character. His voice was just so specific that I felt like he was my friend, and yet I discovered things about him all the time. He wasn’t an entirely reliable narrator, which was so well done in this instance. I do love a good unreliable narrator. This one was no exception.
The characters in this book feel real. They have real problems and real flaws, but they are also endearing and good—just like real people, ya know? There are quirks that make this town in Minnesota feel so real and yet nostalgic. It’s an interesting mix of being able to watch the town and just knowing that you could show up and find these characters living their lives. I wouldn’t be surprised at all if they actually existed. They felt real. On the other hand, it’s so beautiful and nostalgic-feeling that you can’t help believe that it’s also a story—and a good one. The town is quirky, the people are quirky, the story is quirky, and you can’t help but just love it all and appreciate Enger gently guiding you through this little slice of America. I firmly believe that Enger could take any piece of America and any collection of lives and make them seem notable and story-worthy.
I think this is a great piece of fiction. I wish all fiction books were more like this—well-written, well-executed, and an interesting story that doesn’t weigh too heavily nor move too lightly for what it is. I highly recommend it.
My Rating: 4.5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: There is some language and discussion of love scenes, but nothing graphic.
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Book Review: Pinduli by Janell Cannon
Summary: Pinduli's mama has always told her that she's the most beautiful hyena ever. But Dog, Lion, and Zebra don't think so. Why else would they make her feel so rotten about her big ears, her fuzzy mane, and her wiggly stripes? Poor Pinduli just wants to disappear--and she tries everything she can think of to make that happen. Yet nothing goes her way. Nothing, that is, until a case of mistaken identity lets her show the creatures of the African savanna how a few tiny words--bad or good--can create something enormous.
Janell Cannon, the creator of the bestselling Stellaluna, introduces yet another endearing character in this triumphant story about self-image, self-acceptance, and treating others with respect.
Includes notes about hyenas and other animals of the African savanna. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: Hyena are often seen in a bad light, which makes me sad because I actually am rather fond of hyenas. The hyenas in this book are of the striped variety.
Pinduli is a cute little story about not worrying about what others think of us, but it is also a trickster story. Pinduli knows her mother says she is the most beautiful little hyena, but she lets others' opinions make her change her appearance until she becomes unrecognizable, and that is where the trick begins.
It also goes to explore how words can be dangerous and their effects can last far beyond where they were originally meant to fall. Each of the animals that insult Pinduli were in turn insulted by other animals in a chain that carries on since they themselves are insecure, and teaches that we should be careful what we say.
Cannon's adorable illustrations tell two stories--the full color pictures that follow the main story of Pinduli on her little adventure, and the pen and ink doodles on the other page that follow Pinduli's mother anxiously searching for her. She wonderfully captures the animals of Africa in her story, highlighting an animal that is lesser known and making her the hero of the story.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: nothing offensive
Janell Cannon, the creator of the bestselling Stellaluna, introduces yet another endearing character in this triumphant story about self-image, self-acceptance, and treating others with respect.
Includes notes about hyenas and other animals of the African savanna. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: Hyena are often seen in a bad light, which makes me sad because I actually am rather fond of hyenas. The hyenas in this book are of the striped variety.
Pinduli is a cute little story about not worrying about what others think of us, but it is also a trickster story. Pinduli knows her mother says she is the most beautiful little hyena, but she lets others' opinions make her change her appearance until she becomes unrecognizable, and that is where the trick begins.
It also goes to explore how words can be dangerous and their effects can last far beyond where they were originally meant to fall. Each of the animals that insult Pinduli were in turn insulted by other animals in a chain that carries on since they themselves are insecure, and teaches that we should be careful what we say.
Cannon's adorable illustrations tell two stories--the full color pictures that follow the main story of Pinduli on her little adventure, and the pen and ink doodles on the other page that follow Pinduli's mother anxiously searching for her. She wonderfully captures the animals of Africa in her story, highlighting an animal that is lesser known and making her the hero of the story.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: nothing offensive
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Book Review: Alma y Cómo Obtuvo Su Nombre / Alma and How She Got Her Name) - Juana Martinez-Neal
Summary: ¿Cómo terminó Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela con un nombre tan largo? Mientras Papi le cuenta la historia de cada uno de sus nombres, Alma comienza a sentir cómo cabe perfectamente en ellos.
What’s in a name? For one little girl, her very long name tells the vibrant story of where she came from — and who she may one day be. (Summary and image from penguinrandomhouse.com)
NOTE(for my English-speaking Friends): There is an English-language version of this book. However, as I bought this book in it's original Spanish version, I've opted to include a review in Spanish. If you don't speak Spanish, that's okay. Just skip down a little for my English review. If you speak both...well, as you will soon be able to tell, my Spanish isn't that great. Please don't laugh at me or send me hate mail. I'm trying/Estoy tratando.
Mi Evaluacíon: Me llamo Mindy y yo hablo español. Pues. Hablo un poquito. Con lo que sé y la ayuda de mi esposo y "Google Tranlsate," ojala que puedo decir lo que quiero decir en español y que no he masacrado el idioma. Empecemos!
Mi primer hija tiene el nombre de su bisa, su abuelo, y nuestro nombre familiar. Es un nombre muy antiguo, de Finlandia, y difícil de pronunciar. A veces, ella no le gusta el nombre. "Es horrible! Nadie puede decirlo," ella dice! Mi hija y la niña en este libro tienen algo en común.
Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela no le gusta su nombre. Ella piensa que es muy largo y no le cabe. Su padre se sentó con ella para explicar el origen de cada de sus nombres. Ella apprendió que cada nombre representa uno de sus antepasados. Alma entendió que ella tiene algo en común con cada persona. Aquí es un ejemplo:
Que linda, sí?
Cuando encontré este libro en una feria de libro, me enamoré al instante. Era tan hermoso y con un mensaje muy importante, yo tenía que tenerlo. No habia un version en ingles a la venta el dia, pero yo no me importé. Aunque mis niñas no hablan español (todavía), yo compré el libro para un cuento de acostar y esperanzé que podria traducir. Es un cuento bellamente escrito, con dibujos fascinantes en cada pagina. Pero, el mensaje es mas importante. Pienso qu el cuento muestra como apreciar nuestra historia y que nuestras diferencias eran lo que nos hacen especial. Ojala que yo podria decir mas, pero me falta las palabras. En conclusión, si tiene niñas o nietas (especialmente aquellas con nombres muy largas), tiene que comprar este libro en cualquier idioma que requieran.
Mi Clasificación: 5 Estrellas
Para el lector sensible: No hay nada a ofender.
My Review: My eldest daughter is named after her great-great-great grandmother, as well as my mother, and has our family last name. Both her first and last name are old-fashioned, Finnish, and difficult to pronounce. Occasionally, it gets to her and she says something along the lines of -- "I hate my name! It's horrible! No one can say it!" She and the little girl in this book have quite a lot in common.
Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela does not like her name. She thinks it's too long and she feels it does not fit her. When Alma complains to her father, he sits down with her to explain the origin of each of their names and she learns that each name represents one of her ancestors. As her father tells her about them, Alma discovers that she has something in common with each of her namesakes. For example, in the first picture (above) she learns that her grandmother Sofía loved books, poetry, jasmine flowers, and her son (Alma's father). In the second picture, Alma realizes that she loves books, flowers, and her Papa too! The name Sofía does fit her! And so on and so forth with the rest of her names. Beautiful, right?
When I found this book at our school book fair, I fell in love with it instantly. It was so beautiful and with such an important message that I had to have it. There wasn't an English version at the sale, but that didn't matter to me. Although my children don't speak Spanish (yet), I bought the book as a bedtime story and hoped I would be able to translate it. I made it work and my girls really enjoyed it. This book is beautifully written with fascinating illustrations on every page, but the message is the most important part. It teaches readers to appreciate their heritage and that what makes us different can also make us special. If you have a little girl (and most especially a little girl with a long family name), or if you are a girl with a long family name, you should probably pick this one up in whichever language version you require.
My Rating: 5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nothing to worry about.
What’s in a name? For one little girl, her very long name tells the vibrant story of where she came from — and who she may one day be. (Summary and image from penguinrandomhouse.com)
NOTE(for my English-speaking Friends): There is an English-language version of this book. However, as I bought this book in it's original Spanish version, I've opted to include a review in Spanish. If you don't speak Spanish, that's okay. Just skip down a little for my English review. If you speak both...well, as you will soon be able to tell, my Spanish isn't that great. Please don't laugh at me or send me hate mail. I'm trying/Estoy tratando.
Mi Evaluacíon: Me llamo Mindy y yo hablo español. Pues. Hablo un poquito. Con lo que sé y la ayuda de mi esposo y "Google Tranlsate," ojala que puedo decir lo que quiero decir en español y que no he masacrado el idioma. Empecemos!
Mi primer hija tiene el nombre de su bisa, su abuelo, y nuestro nombre familiar. Es un nombre muy antiguo, de Finlandia, y difícil de pronunciar. A veces, ella no le gusta el nombre. "Es horrible! Nadie puede decirlo," ella dice! Mi hija y la niña en este libro tienen algo en común.
Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela no le gusta su nombre. Ella piensa que es muy largo y no le cabe. Su padre se sentó con ella para explicar el origen de cada de sus nombres. Ella apprendió que cada nombre representa uno de sus antepasados. Alma entendió que ella tiene algo en común con cada persona. Aquí es un ejemplo:
Que linda, sí?
Cuando encontré este libro en una feria de libro, me enamoré al instante. Era tan hermoso y con un mensaje muy importante, yo tenía que tenerlo. No habia un version en ingles a la venta el dia, pero yo no me importé. Aunque mis niñas no hablan español (todavía), yo compré el libro para un cuento de acostar y esperanzé que podria traducir. Es un cuento bellamente escrito, con dibujos fascinantes en cada pagina. Pero, el mensaje es mas importante. Pienso qu el cuento muestra como apreciar nuestra historia y que nuestras diferencias eran lo que nos hacen especial. Ojala que yo podria decir mas, pero me falta las palabras. En conclusión, si tiene niñas o nietas (especialmente aquellas con nombres muy largas), tiene que comprar este libro en cualquier idioma que requieran.
Mi Clasificación: 5 Estrellas
Para el lector sensible: No hay nada a ofender.
My Review: My eldest daughter is named after her great-great-great grandmother, as well as my mother, and has our family last name. Both her first and last name are old-fashioned, Finnish, and difficult to pronounce. Occasionally, it gets to her and she says something along the lines of -- "I hate my name! It's horrible! No one can say it!" She and the little girl in this book have quite a lot in common.
Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela does not like her name. She thinks it's too long and she feels it does not fit her. When Alma complains to her father, he sits down with her to explain the origin of each of their names and she learns that each name represents one of her ancestors. As her father tells her about them, Alma discovers that she has something in common with each of her namesakes. For example, in the first picture (above) she learns that her grandmother Sofía loved books, poetry, jasmine flowers, and her son (Alma's father). In the second picture, Alma realizes that she loves books, flowers, and her Papa too! The name Sofía does fit her! And so on and so forth with the rest of her names. Beautiful, right?
When I found this book at our school book fair, I fell in love with it instantly. It was so beautiful and with such an important message that I had to have it. There wasn't an English version at the sale, but that didn't matter to me. Although my children don't speak Spanish (yet), I bought the book as a bedtime story and hoped I would be able to translate it. I made it work and my girls really enjoyed it. This book is beautifully written with fascinating illustrations on every page, but the message is the most important part. It teaches readers to appreciate their heritage and that what makes us different can also make us special. If you have a little girl (and most especially a little girl with a long family name), or if you are a girl with a long family name, you should probably pick this one up in whichever language version you require.
My Rating: 5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: Nothing to worry about.
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Book Review: Asterix the Gaul by René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo
Summary: The year is 50BC, and all Gaul is occupied. Only one small village of indomitable Gauls still holds out against the invaders. But how much longer can Asterix, Obelix and their friends resist the mighty Roman legions of Julius Caesar? Anything is possible, with a little cunning plus the druid Getafix's magic potions! Their effects can be truly hair-raising... (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: When I was a kid, I loved looking at my dad's extensive collection of Asterix books. Aside from one, however, I couldn't read them, because they were all in French. It wasn't until I was able to later find English translations at the library that I was able to more fully appreciate the delight that are the Asterix books.
This little village of Gauls refuses to give in to the Roman Empire, and that makes for the main conflict nearly every time. In this first story, we learn about Asterix, his best friend Obelix, and the other Gauls in the village, who have a secret that keeps them from having to succumb to the Roman army--a magic potion brewed by their druid Getafix that bestows the drinker superhuman strength for a time.
I've always loved the humor of Asterix. It's witty and clever, and the name puns are always great (Crismus Bonus, anyone?). This first installment is particularly fun, as Asterix turns trickster when he goes to save Getafix and they have a laugh all at the expense of the Romans. The dangerous situations are always treated lightly and are more comic than frightening.
The characters are also just so delightful. Asterix's friend Obelix is another favorite, and though he's not in this one as much as he is in the others, we get to appreciate his kind of dull-witted demeanor which counters Asterix's very sharp wit, but which doesn't dampen their tight friendship. We also get an introduction to the village bard Cacophonix (whose music nobody likes), Getafix the wise druid, and the chief, Vitalstatistix (see, these names, they kill me!)
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: lots of cartoon violence, the Gauls delight in and are constantly beating up Roman soldiers.
My Review: When I was a kid, I loved looking at my dad's extensive collection of Asterix books. Aside from one, however, I couldn't read them, because they were all in French. It wasn't until I was able to later find English translations at the library that I was able to more fully appreciate the delight that are the Asterix books.
This little village of Gauls refuses to give in to the Roman Empire, and that makes for the main conflict nearly every time. In this first story, we learn about Asterix, his best friend Obelix, and the other Gauls in the village, who have a secret that keeps them from having to succumb to the Roman army--a magic potion brewed by their druid Getafix that bestows the drinker superhuman strength for a time.
I've always loved the humor of Asterix. It's witty and clever, and the name puns are always great (Crismus Bonus, anyone?). This first installment is particularly fun, as Asterix turns trickster when he goes to save Getafix and they have a laugh all at the expense of the Romans. The dangerous situations are always treated lightly and are more comic than frightening.
The characters are also just so delightful. Asterix's friend Obelix is another favorite, and though he's not in this one as much as he is in the others, we get to appreciate his kind of dull-witted demeanor which counters Asterix's very sharp wit, but which doesn't dampen their tight friendship. We also get an introduction to the village bard Cacophonix (whose music nobody likes), Getafix the wise druid, and the chief, Vitalstatistix (see, these names, they kill me!)
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: lots of cartoon violence, the Gauls delight in and are constantly beating up Roman soldiers.
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Book Review: Stern Men by Elizabeth Gilbert
Summary: Before Elizabeth Gilbert wrote her beloved memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, she wowed critics everywhere with Stern Men -- a wise and charming novel set off the coast of Maine. Ruth Thomas is born into a feud fought for generations by two groups of local lobster men over fishing rights for the waters that lie between their respective islands. At eighteen, she has returned from boarding school -- smart as a whip, feisty, and irredeemably unromantic - determined to join the "stern men" and work the lobster boats. As the feud escalates, Ruth proves herself to be an unforgettable American heroine who is destined for greatness -- and love -- despite herself. (Summary from book - Image from goodreads.com)
My Review: Elizabeth Gilbert is the author of Eat, Pray Love -- a memoir I adored but likely read before I started this blog. As such, it isn't reviewed here, though you can read our review of her novel, The Signature of All Things. I picked up Stern Men because I loved my experience with her memoir, the plot looked interesting, and because it was lauded by the San Francisco Chronicle as "howlingly funny."
Stern Men starts out with a "once upon a time" kind of vibe. You know, the one where the omniscient narrator gives a quick history of the island and settles in to tell a story, already knowing how it ends. I really thought I was going to love the book at this point -- the history of and long standing war between two islands over lobster fishing and introduction of a peculiar cast of characters was particularly irresistible. The history finally comes to a head with Ruth Thomas, returned from school to the only home she has ever known. All right, here we go! Up to this point, though lovely, it felt like mostly set up, but this -- rubs hands together to warm up reading fingers -- is where the story will take off. Unfortunately the characters and backstory just kept coming and, interesting though they were, I started wishing for a glossary of characters to keep things straight in my mind. Eighty pages later, I was still waiting for things to get cracking and more confused than ever about who was who and what was what. On top of that -- the swearing. I consider myself a fairly desensitized person when I am reading for myself (it's a different story if I'm reading for my kiddos) but even I was bothered by the sheer volume of profanity. I realize that the language is probably perfectly in keeping with the salty lobster man stereotype, but it overwhelmed some of the characters to the point that I just wanted them to stop. talking. I had waded a third of the way through the book before I realized that I was forcing myself to read a book I no longer had an interest in reading. This 'howlingly funny' book...wasn't. I didn't feel like a basic plot had emerged, the promised feud hadn't escalated, and destined love hadn't even hinted at appearing. Ruth hadn't even set foot in a lobster boat yet, and I was sick and tired of waiting for all of it.
One of the many reasons I took a break from book blogging a few years back was that I felt weighed down by the number of books I felt compelled to read and review out of a sense of duty. I'd start one with hope but end up slogging through, my once unquenchable desire to read completely quelled by the onerous task of having to finish that book before I could move on to anything else. I call it being "book blocked". I promised myself when I returned to blogging that I would no longer read out of a sense of obligation. I'd give a book 100 pages of my time (maybe more if it was gigantic) and if I simply wasn't feeling it, that was that. There are just too many potentially amazing books in my stack to waste time stumbling over a book block.
If you haven't guessed at this point, I did not finish Stern Men. The characters and backstory were varied and compelling, but the lack of movement and sheer volume of profanity are what guided my decision. A less sensitive, more patient reader might find more to love, but I did not.
My Rating: 2 Stars
For the sensitive reader: I can't speak to anything past page 106, but there was a massive amount of profanity, especially of the F and GD variety, often spit out with machine-gun rapidity.
My Review: Elizabeth Gilbert is the author of Eat, Pray Love -- a memoir I adored but likely read before I started this blog. As such, it isn't reviewed here, though you can read our review of her novel, The Signature of All Things. I picked up Stern Men because I loved my experience with her memoir, the plot looked interesting, and because it was lauded by the San Francisco Chronicle as "howlingly funny."
Stern Men starts out with a "once upon a time" kind of vibe. You know, the one where the omniscient narrator gives a quick history of the island and settles in to tell a story, already knowing how it ends. I really thought I was going to love the book at this point -- the history of and long standing war between two islands over lobster fishing and introduction of a peculiar cast of characters was particularly irresistible. The history finally comes to a head with Ruth Thomas, returned from school to the only home she has ever known. All right, here we go! Up to this point, though lovely, it felt like mostly set up, but this -- rubs hands together to warm up reading fingers -- is where the story will take off. Unfortunately the characters and backstory just kept coming and, interesting though they were, I started wishing for a glossary of characters to keep things straight in my mind. Eighty pages later, I was still waiting for things to get cracking and more confused than ever about who was who and what was what. On top of that -- the swearing. I consider myself a fairly desensitized person when I am reading for myself (it's a different story if I'm reading for my kiddos) but even I was bothered by the sheer volume of profanity. I realize that the language is probably perfectly in keeping with the salty lobster man stereotype, but it overwhelmed some of the characters to the point that I just wanted them to stop. talking. I had waded a third of the way through the book before I realized that I was forcing myself to read a book I no longer had an interest in reading. This 'howlingly funny' book...wasn't. I didn't feel like a basic plot had emerged, the promised feud hadn't escalated, and destined love hadn't even hinted at appearing. Ruth hadn't even set foot in a lobster boat yet, and I was sick and tired of waiting for all of it.
One of the many reasons I took a break from book blogging a few years back was that I felt weighed down by the number of books I felt compelled to read and review out of a sense of duty. I'd start one with hope but end up slogging through, my once unquenchable desire to read completely quelled by the onerous task of having to finish that book before I could move on to anything else. I call it being "book blocked". I promised myself when I returned to blogging that I would no longer read out of a sense of obligation. I'd give a book 100 pages of my time (maybe more if it was gigantic) and if I simply wasn't feeling it, that was that. There are just too many potentially amazing books in my stack to waste time stumbling over a book block.
If you haven't guessed at this point, I did not finish Stern Men. The characters and backstory were varied and compelling, but the lack of movement and sheer volume of profanity are what guided my decision. A less sensitive, more patient reader might find more to love, but I did not.
My Rating: 2 Stars
For the sensitive reader: I can't speak to anything past page 106, but there was a massive amount of profanity, especially of the F and GD variety, often spit out with machine-gun rapidity.
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Book Review: La Princesa and the Pea by Susan Middleton Elya & Juana Martinez-Neal
Summary: The Princess and the Pea gets a fresh twist in this charming bilingual retelling, winner of the Pura Belpré Medal for Illustration.
El príncipe knows this girl is the one for him, but, as usual, his mother doesn’t agree.
The queen has a secret test in mind to see if this girl is really a princesa, but the prince might just have a sneaky plan, too... (Summary and Image from penguinrandomhouse.com)
My Review: I found La Princesa and the Pea on my third day volunteering at our school's book fair. What can I say? I like to be around books...and the 25% discount for volunteers doesn't hurt either. As I flipped through the pages, it seemed strangely familiar. The drawings. The cadence. I couldn't put my finger on it until I got home and started, well, paying closer attention to things like authors and illustrators. The author, Susan Middleton Elya has written several other books, including Eight Animals on the Town, a book that I regularly read to my kiddos. Juana Martinez-Neal illustrated not only La Princesa and the Pea but also Alma y Cómo Obtuvo Su Nombre, another book that I reviewed recently (and picked up at the same book fair on a different day). With all that literary street cred, it was practically a forgone conclusion I would like this book. And guess what? I totally did. In fact, I'm somewhere near love. I think you could say I am smitten. Yes, I am in deep smit.
La Princesa and the Pea is an adorable twist on a classic fairy tale, with the perfect little something up its sleeve. First, it's just plain fun to read. The author's prose has such a pleasing lilt and clever rhymes, that I don't mind reading it over and over....and I have to because my kids love it. Confession time, though. When I flipped through this book at the fair, I didn't actually read all the way through. I thought I knew how it would end. It's The Princess and the Pea for goodness sake. We all know how it ends, right? Wrong. The twist made me laugh so hard I had to re-read the page so my kiddos could understand me. I promise, you'll love it.
On to the drawings. The illustrator is Peruvian herself and drew a lot of her inspiration for characters, setting, and costume from the textiles, culture, and people of Peru. Along with the author's particular prose, this change in scenery and custom breathed so much life back in to what some might call a tired-out tale. As with other books by this illustrator, I found so much to look at on each page and noticed things in subsequent readings that I didn't pick up on initially. I love stuff like that....kind of like little Easter Eggs.
One of my favorite aspects of the book is that it uses both English and Spanish in the text (heavy on the English, light on the Spanish). If you or your kidlets don't speak Spanish, don't let that scare you. I feel like these books are what I would call intuitively bilingual. I'm pretty sure I just made up that term, but what I mean is that even if you don't speak Spanish it's pretty easy to figure out what a lot of the words mean using the pictures and other context clues (see picture for example). If that doesn't work, they have kindly provided a Spanish/English glossary and pronunciation guide so you can fake it till you make it. It only took one read through and a few translations reminders for my monolingual kids (ages 6 and 8) to understand the entire story.
Ultimately, if you have kiddos and even the slightest inclination to speak (or try to speak a bit of Spanish) I think you will love this book. It's pleasantly surprising and too dang cute.
My Rating: 5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: I had to dig deep for this one because really there is nothing to offend. I suppose if you have a really dirty mind, the very last page could contain the smallest of completely and assuredly unintentional innuendo. It'll likely go over everyone else's head.
El príncipe knows this girl is the one for him, but, as usual, his mother doesn’t agree.
The queen has a secret test in mind to see if this girl is really a princesa, but the prince might just have a sneaky plan, too... (Summary and Image from penguinrandomhouse.com)
My Review: I found La Princesa and the Pea on my third day volunteering at our school's book fair. What can I say? I like to be around books...and the 25% discount for volunteers doesn't hurt either. As I flipped through the pages, it seemed strangely familiar. The drawings. The cadence. I couldn't put my finger on it until I got home and started, well, paying closer attention to things like authors and illustrators. The author, Susan Middleton Elya has written several other books, including Eight Animals on the Town, a book that I regularly read to my kiddos. Juana Martinez-Neal illustrated not only La Princesa and the Pea but also Alma y Cómo Obtuvo Su Nombre, another book that I reviewed recently (and picked up at the same book fair on a different day). With all that literary street cred, it was practically a forgone conclusion I would like this book. And guess what? I totally did. In fact, I'm somewhere near love. I think you could say I am smitten. Yes, I am in deep smit.
La Princesa and the Pea is an adorable twist on a classic fairy tale, with the perfect little something up its sleeve. First, it's just plain fun to read. The author's prose has such a pleasing lilt and clever rhymes, that I don't mind reading it over and over....and I have to because my kids love it. Confession time, though. When I flipped through this book at the fair, I didn't actually read all the way through. I thought I knew how it would end. It's The Princess and the Pea for goodness sake. We all know how it ends, right? Wrong. The twist made me laugh so hard I had to re-read the page so my kiddos could understand me. I promise, you'll love it.
On to the drawings. The illustrator is Peruvian herself and drew a lot of her inspiration for characters, setting, and costume from the textiles, culture, and people of Peru. Along with the author's particular prose, this change in scenery and custom breathed so much life back in to what some might call a tired-out tale. As with other books by this illustrator, I found so much to look at on each page and noticed things in subsequent readings that I didn't pick up on initially. I love stuff like that....kind of like little Easter Eggs.
One of my favorite aspects of the book is that it uses both English and Spanish in the text (heavy on the English, light on the Spanish). If you or your kidlets don't speak Spanish, don't let that scare you. I feel like these books are what I would call intuitively bilingual. I'm pretty sure I just made up that term, but what I mean is that even if you don't speak Spanish it's pretty easy to figure out what a lot of the words mean using the pictures and other context clues (see picture for example). If that doesn't work, they have kindly provided a Spanish/English glossary and pronunciation guide so you can fake it till you make it. It only took one read through and a few translations reminders for my monolingual kids (ages 6 and 8) to understand the entire story.
Ultimately, if you have kiddos and even the slightest inclination to speak (or try to speak a bit of Spanish) I think you will love this book. It's pleasantly surprising and too dang cute.
My Rating: 5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: I had to dig deep for this one because really there is nothing to offend. I suppose if you have a really dirty mind, the very last page could contain the smallest of completely and assuredly unintentional innuendo. It'll likely go over everyone else's head.
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Book Review: El Deafo by Cece Bell
Summary: Starting at a new school is scary, even more so with a giant hearing aid strapped to your chest! At her old school, everyone in Cece's class was deaf. Here she is different. She is sure the kids are staring at the Phonic Ear, the powerful aid that will help her hear her teacher. Too bad it also seems certain to repel potential friends.
Then Cece makes a startling discovery. With the Phonic Ear she can hear her teacher not just in the classroom, but anywhere her teacher is in school--in the hallway...in the teacher's lounge...in the bathroom! This is power. Maybe even superpower! Cece is on her way to becoming El Deafo, Listener for All. But the funny thing about being a superhero is that it's just another way of feeling different... and lonely. Can Cece channel her powers into finding the thing she wants most, a true friend?
This funny perceptive graphic novel memoir about growing up hearing impaired is also an unforgettable book about growing up, and all the super and super embarrassing moments along the way. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: El Deafo is a cute autobiographical story about when the author went deaf as a child, and her adjustments to life with her hearing aids after that.
I love the way that Cece tells the story of her childhood. What's great about this little graphic novel is, yes it's about how she grew up deaf, but I feel a lot of us had similar experiences growing up that she had, finding friends, fitting in at school, trying to look cool, and other things.
However, I loved learning about Cece's unique view of life. One of my favorite bits was when she was in an all-deaf kindergarten, and her teacher was teaching them how to read lips. She told them that they not only needed to pay close attention to the person's mouth, but they also had to be a sort of detective, because many words look the same when they're said.
One day Cece sees a character on TV who has hearing aids like her. She's excited to see someone like her (which is why I always advocate for a wider variety of positive characters with different disabilities, races, etc in media, it's great for children to see others like themselves). However, this particular character is teased and called 'Deafo.' Instead of being offended, Cece decides she will create an alter ego, hence 'El Deafo.'
The humor is delightful, and the way Cece views and lives life is alternately lonely and full of fun. Though she is deaf, her story is also resonates with many, such as finding and losing friends, getting a crush, feeling left out, and ultimately coming to love what makes her different.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: there are a few instances where a character vomits, Cece get a bloody eye, some smoking and one mild swear word.
Then Cece makes a startling discovery. With the Phonic Ear she can hear her teacher not just in the classroom, but anywhere her teacher is in school--in the hallway...in the teacher's lounge...in the bathroom! This is power. Maybe even superpower! Cece is on her way to becoming El Deafo, Listener for All. But the funny thing about being a superhero is that it's just another way of feeling different... and lonely. Can Cece channel her powers into finding the thing she wants most, a true friend?
This funny perceptive graphic novel memoir about growing up hearing impaired is also an unforgettable book about growing up, and all the super and super embarrassing moments along the way. (image and summary from goodreads.com)
My Review: El Deafo is a cute autobiographical story about when the author went deaf as a child, and her adjustments to life with her hearing aids after that.
I love the way that Cece tells the story of her childhood. What's great about this little graphic novel is, yes it's about how she grew up deaf, but I feel a lot of us had similar experiences growing up that she had, finding friends, fitting in at school, trying to look cool, and other things.
However, I loved learning about Cece's unique view of life. One of my favorite bits was when she was in an all-deaf kindergarten, and her teacher was teaching them how to read lips. She told them that they not only needed to pay close attention to the person's mouth, but they also had to be a sort of detective, because many words look the same when they're said.
One day Cece sees a character on TV who has hearing aids like her. She's excited to see someone like her (which is why I always advocate for a wider variety of positive characters with different disabilities, races, etc in media, it's great for children to see others like themselves). However, this particular character is teased and called 'Deafo.' Instead of being offended, Cece decides she will create an alter ego, hence 'El Deafo.'
The humor is delightful, and the way Cece views and lives life is alternately lonely and full of fun. Though she is deaf, her story is also resonates with many, such as finding and losing friends, getting a crush, feeling left out, and ultimately coming to love what makes her different.
My Rating: Four Stars
For the sensitive reader: there are a few instances where a character vomits, Cece get a bloody eye, some smoking and one mild swear word.
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Book Review: Lovely, Dark, and Deep by Justina Chen
Summary: What would you do if the sun became your enemy? That's exactly what happens to Viola Li after she returns from a trip abroad and develops a sudden and extreme case of photosensitivity -- an inexplicable allergy to sunlight Thanks to her crisis-manager parents, she doesn't just have to wear layers of clothes and a hat the size of a spaceship. She has to stay away from all hint of light. Say goodbye to windows and running outdoors. Even her phone becomes a threat when its screen burns her.
Viola is determined to maintain a normal life, particularly after she meets Josh. He's a funny, talented Thor look-alike who carries his own mysterious grief. But the intensity of her romance makes her take more and more risks, and when a rebellion against her parents backfires dangerously, she must find her way to a life -- and love-- as deep and lovely as her dreams. (Summary from book flap - Image from goodreads.com)
My Review: Lovely, Dark, and Deep is about a young girl named Viola who is suddenly diagnosed with a rare condition. Basically, she's allergic to the sun and quite a few other light sources. And by allergic I mean hives, blisters, possible death. As you can imagine, this wreaks havoc on pretty much every aspect of her life -- school, home, love. All of it in shambles. This book is basically how she learns to deal with the mess, reorder her hopes/dreams/ambitions, and live life on her terms.
Right out of the gate, Lovely, Dark, and Deep had my full attention. The first chapter takes place at a Pop Culture convention, where Viola is dressed as River Tam -- a character from Firefly (my favorite lesser known/short-lived TV series). As if that isn't enough, in the middle of peddling baked goods for a good cause, she passes out and it caught by none other than THOR, or at the very least a guy who strongly resembles him. Possible love interest? Color me riveted.
When Viola received her official diagnosis (solar urticaria), my reading antennae perked up. Re-perked? For two reasons.
First, this is the sort of thing that you hear about from time to time, but it doesn't often show up in books. Or at least it hasn't shown up in any of the books that I have read before, and I like new material to chew on. I was also fascinated by the lifestyle repercussions for someone with this allergy and the lengths a person or family must go to make their home and daily routine safe from something so seemingly harmless as sunshine. It continues to boggle my mind.
Second, my eldest daughter also has a rare allergy. Long story short, she has physical urticaria, which means that if her skin gets too cold she will get hives, itch like crazy, and sometimes has to deal with swelling in her extremities. It can also happen with extreme heat or contact, though this happens less frequently. Her case is fairly mild (nothing like Viola's) and she is still able to do many things with relatively minor discomfort (and the occasional preemptive benadryl). However, we are still careful to avoid polar bear plunges and the like for fear of how her body might react to a sudden temperature shift. It was interesting to read about fictional someone with a real-life rare allergy.
In Lovely, Dark, and Deep, Vi's fury and frustration fairly radiated off the page as her condition continued to deteriorate and any semblance of a normal life kept slipping through her fingers. Normal clothes, gone. Cell phone, gone. Giant hat, required indoors and out. Sunscreen, everywhere. Dating, impossible. Cardboard in her windows. College dreams in pieces. It seemed fairly realistic that any teenager would try to test the boundaries of her illness, act rashly, and be angry at parents making decisions on her behalf, no matter how much in-her-best-interest they were. If occasionally the dialogue included some heavily melodramatic lines worthy of an eye-roll or two...well, I suppose that's part of the writing in the teenage voice and probably more authentic than not.
One of my favorite aspects of the story was Viola herself. She is a strong female character who is not only socially aware and concerned for others, but completely driven. Vi knows what she wants out of life and has meticulously planned how to get it. When her condition completely annihilates those plans, Vi inevitably flounders. She fights and rages and gives up and tries again and figures it out (eventually). I loved that about her. Allergy or not, Vi finds a way to make a life worth living.
One clever aspect of the book is the authors use of ink. As the story progresses and Vi's condition worsens, the first page of each chapter gets progressively darker. It's unnoticeable at first. I don't know that I even picked up on it until about halfway through the book. Towards the end of the book, it becomes rather hard to read black font on a charcoal page. I had to squint a bit, but thankfully it's only that first page of the chapter and not the chapters in their entirety. I think it was meant to discomfort the reader, like how Vi might feel trying to read in the absence of light. Eventually you get some relief, in the form of a white font, but the pages themselves continue to darken. It's all very artistic and I just loved the little extra something it added to the book.
It might come as surprise, but while I really enjoyed many aspects of the story, I'm not sure I loved the book. I just didn't feel the pull to pick-it-up-and-never-put-it-down that is the hallmark (for me) of a really excellent book. This could be partly my fault in choosing it in the first place. I've been trying to find age-appropriate books that my daughter would like to read and picking up books that I think *she* would like, but they aren't really what *I* want to be reading. I do think that Lovely, Dark, and Deep is thoughtful and well-written, but for me, it's a one and done kind of book. I have my own stack to work on. That having been said, I think that my 15-year-old daughter (The Great Hived One) would probably enjoy it, and I think she's of the age I can hand it over without too much concern.
My Rating: 3.5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: A handful of H-words. Some references to having regrettably "gone further than ever" with another boy in his car (that's the extent of the details given). Also some making out with "Thor".
Viola is determined to maintain a normal life, particularly after she meets Josh. He's a funny, talented Thor look-alike who carries his own mysterious grief. But the intensity of her romance makes her take more and more risks, and when a rebellion against her parents backfires dangerously, she must find her way to a life -- and love-- as deep and lovely as her dreams. (Summary from book flap - Image from goodreads.com)
My Review: Lovely, Dark, and Deep is about a young girl named Viola who is suddenly diagnosed with a rare condition. Basically, she's allergic to the sun and quite a few other light sources. And by allergic I mean hives, blisters, possible death. As you can imagine, this wreaks havoc on pretty much every aspect of her life -- school, home, love. All of it in shambles. This book is basically how she learns to deal with the mess, reorder her hopes/dreams/ambitions, and live life on her terms.
Right out of the gate, Lovely, Dark, and Deep had my full attention. The first chapter takes place at a Pop Culture convention, where Viola is dressed as River Tam -- a character from Firefly (my favorite lesser known/short-lived TV series). As if that isn't enough, in the middle of peddling baked goods for a good cause, she passes out and it caught by none other than THOR, or at the very least a guy who strongly resembles him. Possible love interest? Color me riveted.
When Viola received her official diagnosis (solar urticaria), my reading antennae perked up. Re-perked? For two reasons.
First, this is the sort of thing that you hear about from time to time, but it doesn't often show up in books. Or at least it hasn't shown up in any of the books that I have read before, and I like new material to chew on. I was also fascinated by the lifestyle repercussions for someone with this allergy and the lengths a person or family must go to make their home and daily routine safe from something so seemingly harmless as sunshine. It continues to boggle my mind.
Second, my eldest daughter also has a rare allergy. Long story short, she has physical urticaria, which means that if her skin gets too cold she will get hives, itch like crazy, and sometimes has to deal with swelling in her extremities. It can also happen with extreme heat or contact, though this happens less frequently. Her case is fairly mild (nothing like Viola's) and she is still able to do many things with relatively minor discomfort (and the occasional preemptive benadryl). However, we are still careful to avoid polar bear plunges and the like for fear of how her body might react to a sudden temperature shift. It was interesting to read about fictional someone with a real-life rare allergy.
In Lovely, Dark, and Deep, Vi's fury and frustration fairly radiated off the page as her condition continued to deteriorate and any semblance of a normal life kept slipping through her fingers. Normal clothes, gone. Cell phone, gone. Giant hat, required indoors and out. Sunscreen, everywhere. Dating, impossible. Cardboard in her windows. College dreams in pieces. It seemed fairly realistic that any teenager would try to test the boundaries of her illness, act rashly, and be angry at parents making decisions on her behalf, no matter how much in-her-best-interest they were. If occasionally the dialogue included some heavily melodramatic lines worthy of an eye-roll or two...well, I suppose that's part of the writing in the teenage voice and probably more authentic than not.
One of my favorite aspects of the story was Viola herself. She is a strong female character who is not only socially aware and concerned for others, but completely driven. Vi knows what she wants out of life and has meticulously planned how to get it. When her condition completely annihilates those plans, Vi inevitably flounders. She fights and rages and gives up and tries again and figures it out (eventually). I loved that about her. Allergy or not, Vi finds a way to make a life worth living.
One clever aspect of the book is the authors use of ink. As the story progresses and Vi's condition worsens, the first page of each chapter gets progressively darker. It's unnoticeable at first. I don't know that I even picked up on it until about halfway through the book. Towards the end of the book, it becomes rather hard to read black font on a charcoal page. I had to squint a bit, but thankfully it's only that first page of the chapter and not the chapters in their entirety. I think it was meant to discomfort the reader, like how Vi might feel trying to read in the absence of light. Eventually you get some relief, in the form of a white font, but the pages themselves continue to darken. It's all very artistic and I just loved the little extra something it added to the book.
It might come as surprise, but while I really enjoyed many aspects of the story, I'm not sure I loved the book. I just didn't feel the pull to pick-it-up-and-never-put-it-down that is the hallmark (for me) of a really excellent book. This could be partly my fault in choosing it in the first place. I've been trying to find age-appropriate books that my daughter would like to read and picking up books that I think *she* would like, but they aren't really what *I* want to be reading. I do think that Lovely, Dark, and Deep is thoughtful and well-written, but for me, it's a one and done kind of book. I have my own stack to work on. That having been said, I think that my 15-year-old daughter (The Great Hived One) would probably enjoy it, and I think she's of the age I can hand it over without too much concern.
My Rating: 3.5 Stars
For the sensitive reader: A handful of H-words. Some references to having regrettably "gone further than ever" with another boy in his car (that's the extent of the details given). Also some making out with "Thor".
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