Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Reading My Library -- Approaching the End of Part III
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Kidlit Tuesday Picture Books
While browsing at the library and moaning at the self-imposed restrictions of the TBR Triple Dog Dare (no new books! The horror) I pulled down some of the pictures books from the library display shelves. This are sometimes new and sometimes just staff favorites.

Fossil, Bill Thomson. The pictures are vibrant and alive, just as in his earlier book Chalk, but my science soul was scandalized by the destruction of the fossils. Yes, I know he had to save the dog, but still!
Boy, Bird, and Dog, David McPhail. I was disappointed that this was an easy-reader instead of a picture book, since the simplistic vocabulary pulled me out of the story and art. The pictures were much gentler (and frankly, almost dull) compared to what I expected from the author of Edward and the Pirates.
Vote for Me!, Ben Clanton. The adult snickering behind the childish elephant and donkey candidates somehow didn't tickle my funny bone, and the story didn't really stand up without the secret humor. Also, it left me wondering about the metaphor when the mouse stole the election; the ending felt like a bit of a cop-out.

Boy + Bot, Anne Dyckman. This would be fun to read with a preschooler, as the boy tries to heal the turn-off robot and then the robot tries to repair the sleeping boy. The pictures are fresh but uncomplicated and the story funny without being pointed.
It's Duffy Time, Audrey Wood. Few works of literature remind us of the importance of the Before Breakfast Nap, although the After Breakfast Nap is more known. Duffy stresses the importance of both. A very relaxing book, recommended especially to nap lovers. Also kids might like it.
Sammy In the Sky, Barbara Walsh. I was prepared to resent this book, since I have a strong resistance to obvious bibliotherapy texts. But the intimate pictures of the girl with her dog and family won me over -- it's a story about how a child deals with loss, not an instruction manual on handling emotions raised by a pet's death. I was also impressed that the dog died at home, in this age of vet-handled mercy euthanasia. I guess I should have noticed it was written by a Pulitzer-prize journalist and illustrated by Jamie Wyeth and had more faith.
Happy, Mies van Hout. The picture promised beautiful and odd art, but the delivery left me wonder who the audience was for this emotional dictionary. The one word / one picture format implies tiny children, but they would be confused by the fish expressions, which are sometimes hilariously obvious but sometimes rather obscure. The delicate, sometimes grotesque paint lines extend even to the font of the words, making it sometimes harder to read the emotion than to recognize it on the picture. This would also detract from the fun of a read aloud. I think my kids would appreciate it now more than a decade ago, but they had already fled the library so I couldn't try it on them.
Boy, Bird, and Dog, David McPhail. I was disappointed that this was an easy-reader instead of a picture book, since the simplistic vocabulary pulled me out of the story and art. The pictures were much gentler (and frankly, almost dull) compared to what I expected from the author of Edward and the Pirates.Vote for Me!, Ben Clanton. The adult snickering behind the childish elephant and donkey candidates somehow didn't tickle my funny bone, and the story didn't really stand up without the secret humor. Also, it left me wondering about the metaphor when the mouse stole the election; the ending felt like a bit of a cop-out.
Sammy In the Sky, Barbara Walsh. I was prepared to resent this book, since I have a strong resistance to obvious bibliotherapy texts. But the intimate pictures of the girl with her dog and family won me over -- it's a story about how a child deals with loss, not an instruction manual on handling emotions raised by a pet's death. I was also impressed that the dog died at home, in this age of vet-handled mercy euthanasia. I guess I should have noticed it was written by a Pulitzer-prize journalist and illustrated by Jamie Wyeth and had more faith.
Happy, Mies van Hout. The picture promised beautiful and odd art, but the delivery left me wonder who the audience was for this emotional dictionary. The one word / one picture format implies tiny children, but they would be confused by the fish expressions, which are sometimes hilariously obvious but sometimes rather obscure. The delicate, sometimes grotesque paint lines extend even to the font of the words, making it sometimes harder to read the emotion than to recognize it on the picture. This would also detract from the fun of a read aloud. I think my kids would appreciate it now more than a decade ago, but they had already fled the library so I couldn't try it on them.
Monday, January 27, 2014
In Media Res
There's not much to talk about this week -- I read into the middle of several books but didn't really get to the end of any of them. But I'm enjoying all of them, so it's more a case of dawdling and smelling the flowers along the way than of avoiding the pages and wishing it were all over. Even my audio book is not quite as distasteful as it was for a while, which is odd because the thing that perked my interest back up was the kid actually getting to rob some graves. Ew.
I'll sign in at Book Journey and Teach Mentor Texts since I want to see what everyone else is reading this month. I managed to finish two whole books, plus a few picture books.
This week I've managed to finish:
- The Forbidden Rose, Joanna Bourne. Fun historical romance with French people talking in cute French syntax and spying and competence. Also fondly associated with reading the other books in the series during my New Zealand vacation.
- The Shadow Thieves, Anne Ursu. Where has Ursu been hiding herself? I assumed she was new when I fell in love with Breadcrumbs last year, but she's got a backlist. And now I've got a longer TBR list. This finishes off a batch of Reading My Library books, so I'm glad I've got their replacements ready.
- The Fossil, Bill Thomson. Beautiful but scientifically frightening.
- Boy, Bird, and Dog, David McPhail. More of an early reader than a book for sharing.
- Vote For Me!, Ben Clanton. Pick a candidate -- the elephant or the donkey. Get it?
What am I currently reading? Five books in my bag.
- Magic Rises, Ilona Andrews. This is a lot of fun.
- Untold, Sarah Rees Brennan. YA. Wow, I can't believe I am making myself savor this. I'm only reading a section a day. Sadly, it still won't last me until the third book comes out.
- Catching Fire, Suzanne Collins. YA. OK, Katniss, things are getting grim!
- The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, N.K. Jemison. I'm only a few pages in. Book club is on Tuesday.
- Fierce Reads Anthology. NOOK. Short stories aren't giving me a sense of urgency.
- Rotters, Daniel Kraus. Audio. The family that grave-robs together... I have no idea how to finish that sentence.
- Developing Standards-Based Report Cards, Thomas R. Guskey & Jane M. Bailey. Time to finish this for real.
Reading intermittedly, and deliberately slowly:
- Radio Fifth Grade, Gordon Korman. Is it cheating to do your homework (a trivia quiz) by running a trivia quiz on the radio?
- Out to Canaan, Jan Karon. The son is home, and is only 14. I was picturing him college aged.
- Keep Me Forever, Rosemary Laurey. Men are condescending.
- A General Theory of Love, Thomas Lewis. The chemistry of despair.
- The Pickwick Papers, Charles Dickens. I should get over my dislike of Pickwick and relax and enjoy all the other bits.
- How To Write Science Fiction & Fantasy, Orson Scott Card. Since I read a page or so whenever I finish something, this has been gathering dust.
2014 Challenges:
- TBR Triple Dog Dare: 4. Another ancient book read.
- Cybils: 8/77. I've ordered up some nonfiction picture books.
- Where Am I Reading? 7/51. I used the location of the Biggest Mall to pinpoint this one.
- What's In a Name?: 0/6.
- Book Bingo: Five Squares.
- Reading My Library: Finished Ursu's The Shadow Thieves.
- Best of the Best 2012: 48/25. Dragging through Rotters. Looking forward to Lover's Dictionary.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Book Sorting -- The Lines Between Kidlit and YA and Adult
I like to read books about kids. That's probably because I like kids, and also because I find some adult issues boring even though they are the main interest of many authors -- adultery, male identity crisis, where to find gorgeous shoes -- these are all things that modern books love to explore but leave me bored out of my gourd. That's probably why I also like genre books -- science fiction, romance, mystery, all these "genres" tend to have something interesting going on, even if they occasionally also throw in worries about who to sleep with, why does no one respect my (male) authority, and shopping.
Sometimes I separate my personal library by kidlit/adult books. (Every five or ten years I like to do a huge overhaul of my books. Doesn't everyone? Don't answer that if you don't at least alphabetize.) And if the protagonist spends most of the time as a child, I sort the book into kidlit because I would have liked it as a child and the author doesn't get a vote. (The Power of One, I'm looking at you.) And I get to decide where YA goes because they are my books. But I'm glad I'm not a public library, because then things get a bit stickier.

I finished Alabama Moon by Watt Key this month, and I'd like to thank past me for putting it on my TBR list; I think it's my favorite book by Key so far. It's the story of the transition into society of the boy Moon, who has been literally raised in the wilderness by his survivalist father. It throws in some crowd-pleasers like the stupid & evil cop (sort of a malicious Roscoe P.) but mainly follows Moon as he struggles to fit in a completely alien society with unknown rules and connections. Moon is eleven or twelve, and the themes are about connecting to family and trusting in friends, so I'd have no hesitation putting this on my kidlit shelves, but the library has it in YA. Is that because of the guns? The ideas of fearing the government? I have no idea. I think the publisher is a bit confused as well -- the reading level is ages 9-12 or grades 6-8. Those don't match up, but the complete range (age 9-14) seems right.
I also completed In Zanesville by Jo Ann Beard and while that managed to miss the spot for me I think that was more my problem than the author's. It recreates the adolescent world of a girl in the late seventies/early eighties with fine precision, but it's a world that was alien to me at the time and so I didn't enjoy revisiting it. I wasn't into boys and clothes as a teen, and I found the girls who were dull and sometimes antagonistic, so spending pages in the head of one of them was uncomfortable. It's also a book that seems written to remind people of their youth rather than to resonate with someone living their youth, which is why I guess the library puts it in adult fiction rather than YA despite the teen-age protagonist. On my shelves it would have gone straight in with the kid books, since I would have approached it with a science-fiction style of entering into an alternate reality, but when I was a kid I wouldn't yet have the memory baggage that made it an uncomfortable journey.
Sometimes I separate my personal library by kidlit/adult books. (Every five or ten years I like to do a huge overhaul of my books. Doesn't everyone? Don't answer that if you don't at least alphabetize.) And if the protagonist spends most of the time as a child, I sort the book into kidlit because I would have liked it as a child and the author doesn't get a vote. (The Power of One, I'm looking at you.) And I get to decide where YA goes because they are my books. But I'm glad I'm not a public library, because then things get a bit stickier.
I finished Alabama Moon by Watt Key this month, and I'd like to thank past me for putting it on my TBR list; I think it's my favorite book by Key so far. It's the story of the transition into society of the boy Moon, who has been literally raised in the wilderness by his survivalist father. It throws in some crowd-pleasers like the stupid & evil cop (sort of a malicious Roscoe P.) but mainly follows Moon as he struggles to fit in a completely alien society with unknown rules and connections. Moon is eleven or twelve, and the themes are about connecting to family and trusting in friends, so I'd have no hesitation putting this on my kidlit shelves, but the library has it in YA. Is that because of the guns? The ideas of fearing the government? I have no idea. I think the publisher is a bit confused as well -- the reading level is ages 9-12 or grades 6-8. Those don't match up, but the complete range (age 9-14) seems right.
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Quests Are Golden
Of course, it's also time to grab the next stack of Reading My Library Quest books, which I declared to be off-dare, so my misery was slightly mitigated. And a long-awaited hold book turned up. Really, someone who didn't know me would not have known I was on a dare as I checked out six new books... Oh, I forgot to mention that I snuck into the library late last week and grabbed a book of the hold shelf even though it wasn't officially Library Day. Don't tell anyone!
Horde, Ann Aguirre. I've had this on hold for months now; my son will steal it for a week or so and then I'll get to finish Aguirre's post-apocalyptic story. She's on my automatic-read list now.
Black Duck, Janet Taylor Lisle. This is from my online TBR list, and I have no memory of how it got there. At some point I thought it was a book I'd like to read, so I'll trust past-me's knowledge of my preferences.
Love, Ruby Lavender, Deborah Wiles. From the W shelf in the last corner of my library's J fiction section. I think this is the same illustrator as for the Clementine books, which I love. Also, it takes place in Mississippi. I have my eye on my geography challenge here.
100 Cupboards, Nathan Wilson. This books sounds very familiar to me; I'm pretty sure I've heard it recommended somewhere. Also, I like cupboards.
The Unseen Guest (The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place), Mary Rose Wood. I quite liked the first book in this series (of which there were five copies on the shelf), and I'm a bit sad that there were no copies of the 2nd book. I hope I like this 3rd book!
When Molly Was a Harvey Girl, Frances M. Wood. I'm not sure why this was on the next library shelf, since it's alphabetically before Maryrose Wood, but I liked the cover, I'm interested in the time period, and I think it takes place in New Mexico. Win win win!
The Floating Circus, Tracie Vaughn Zimmer. Another historical fiction, although I'm not sure exactly where it takes places. This book is from the absolutely last shelf of Juvenile Fiction -- after this I'm on to J nonfiction, which I think is mostly picture books. Progress!
Book credits banked: Four (Usually I reward myself by buying a book if my library total is less than my age, but since I can't actually buy anything right now I'm counting up these credits.)
Monday, January 20, 2014
Dream Day
This is a good reading week for me, in that I finished several books I was dragging my eyeballs on, and am currently reading books that I like to read, as opposed to want to have read. I also treated myself to some picture books at the library, since I'm not browsing for books during my TBR TRIPLE DOG DARE.
I'll sign in at Book Journey and Teach Mentor Texts since I want to see what everyone else is reading this month. I managed to finish five whole books, plus a few picture books.
This week I've managed to finish:
- In Zanesville, Jo Ann Beard. This is an Alex Award winner, or a book marketed for adults that librarians think teens would like.
- Conspiracy, Lindsay Buroker. NOOK. Fun adventure story in fantasy world setting.
- Alabama Moon, Watt Key. Kidlit. Or maybe YA. Young boy comes out of the wilderness to clash with civilization in the form of social services.
- Unspoken, Sarah Rees Brennan. YA. I reread this so I can read Untold. This one went slow not because I didn't like reading it, but because I enjoy Brennan's prose so much that I like to savor it.
- The Templeton Twins Have an Idea, Ellis Weiner. Kidlit. A Reading-my-library pick that I chose because I know my younger son enjoyed it. I see why.
- Boy and Bot, Anne Dyckman. I liked the misunderstandings when they turned themselves off.
- It's Duffy Time, Audrey Wood. Any book that properly understands the importance of napping is good by me. I recommend this book to Angela in Sarah Rees Brennan's Unspoken.
- Sammy In the Sky, Barbara Walsh. Intimate pictures show how a girl reacts to the loss of her pet.
- Happy, Mies van Hout. This didn't resonate with me -- the painted words were hard to decipher which would put me off reading the book with a child. Also, fish expressions are odd.
What am I currently reading? Five books in my bag.
- Magic Rises, Ilona Andrews. Latest in the Kate Daniels series, so I'm expecting lots of combat, sexy were-lion mates, and maybe some vampires.
- Untold, Sarah Rees Brennan. YA. I'm finally getting to start this! Hooray!
- The Forbidden Rose, Joanna Bourne. Spymaster series romance about Doyle and young Hawk. Oh, and Maggie.
- The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, N.K. Jemison. Book club book for online group. I have this on my NOOK for travel.
- Fierce Reads Anthology. NOOK. Short stories from Tor.com, mostly YA.
- Rotters, Daniel Kraus. Audio. Time for a father-son discussion of mysterious trips and spying on your old man.
- Developing Standards-Based Report Cards, Thomas R. Guskey & Jane M. Bailey. I found it! And the meeting changed topics anyway, so my homework was ignored.
- Radio Fifth Grade, Gordon Korman. The new teacher does not respect the radio.
- Out to Canaan, Jan Karon. The borrowed pickup truck has the engine of a Jaguar.
- Keep Me Forever, Rosemary Laurey. I like the progress of the rich gardener.
- A General Theory of Love, Thomas Lewis. How brain chemistry maps to emotions, especially affectionate ones.
- The Pickwick Papers, Charles Dickens. The legend of Bath.
- How To Write Science Fiction & Fantasy, Orson Scott Card. The importance of consistency when using crazy stuff.
2014 Challenges:
- TBR Triple Dog Dare: 3. Polished off two books on my NOOK. Well, one I have on both NOOK and paper, but still.
- Cybils: 8/77. No change, but I did get two more kids to read the picture books.
- Where Am I Reading? 6/51. I'm on track for this year, assuming I need 5 states a month.
- What's In a Name?: 0/6.
- Reading My Library: Finished Weiner's The Templeton Twins Have an Idea.
- Best of the Best 2012: 48/25. Dragging through Rotters. Looking forward to Lover's Dictionary.
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