Monday, September 2, 2024

Monday Reading - Much to Share!

       

        Visit Kellee and Ricki at UnleashingReaders and Jen at Teach Mentor Texts to see what they and others have been reading! Your TBR lists will grow!     


       I'm not sure I feel able to assess Naomi Shihab Nye's work, yet I want you to know about her new book of poetry. This is for mothers, about hers, but for all of us who are, who have, and who miss, our mothers. It's bittersweet, it's full of love and sad yearnings, and it's extraordinary. Don't miss finding a copy for reading, then re-reading, connecting with her memories in ways you might not have imagined you would.


         Just last week, I shared Harvest House by Cynthia Leitich Smith. Now, I'd like to share William Kent Krueger's newest book in the Cork O'Connor series. It, too, has an underlying theme of the sad truth of so many, many Native women and girls disappearing. Yet, often law enforcement does not take it as seriously as other disappearances of white females. All the usual family members and other friends of Cork are in the story; some have changed - jobs or life circumstances - and it feels both bittersweet and comforting all at the same time. Krueger adds resources to learn more about these tragic disappearances.

           Thanks to Publishers Weekly for this copy, from WaterBrook at Random House! I won it in one of their giveaways!

            A new superhero brings a new adventure for middle graders to read and love. It's written by Meredith Davis,  whose new 'superhero', Noah Minor, shows up on the first pages while being dropped from a building's sixteenth story. A reporter sees it all, though the great-uncle denies he did it. However it happened, all that we know is that it's a "Minor Miracle" and here is dear Noah, now in middle school, reading to have an eye check. Plot twists often happen in stories, but the story by Davis seems to surprise often with ordinary events turning into surprises, not only for Noah but for his friends, Haley and Rodney. Each one appears to have a superpower, yet it's not always the kind that has them flying through the air, but the challenge to think ahead, to make better decisions, to take good care of friends, and family, too! Except for an introduction, Noah tells the story, his dilemmas, his worries, and the decisions that are really hard to make. Sometimes, they're not so good, and Noah has to become a superhero different from how he had ever imagined. Illustrator Billy Yong adds to the action with his graphic illustrations, adding much to the emotional impact of the action. It's a terrific book! 
         Here's a peek at the cast, showing off Billy Yong's style, too! 



          The scenario: "When a pilot suffers a heart attack at 35,000 feet, a commercial airliner filled with passengers crashes into a nuclear power plant in the small town of Waketa, Minnesota, which becomes ground zero for a catastrophic national crisis with global implications." I enjoyed reading the scientific background of what does happen, what can happen, if such a catastrophe occurs, but more than that, reading (watching?) the people, who they are, and what they do no matter the danger and/or sacrifice, they stepped up, they did not give up to help and to rescue. I enjoyed it, though kept thinking of the two times it has happened in our history, Fukushima and Chernobyl when the endings were not so favorable. It may only be fiction this time brought to readers by T.J. Newman.

Thanks to Charlesbridge for the following picture books!

         It's a wonderful thing that, according to Cindy Neuschwander, author, a young man named Volomo ran into Sir Cumference right before a huge snowstorm was about to hit! He explained how he'd built just the correctly-sized boxes so that each held a bushel of grain, to keep the varmints from getting into them, to know what's there or gone, too! The knight races back to the castle, and he and Lady Di return to ask for help if they're going to feed all the people in the countryside, 150! The story fills with tension as they estimate how much food is needed, what a snow sledge will hold (not enough) and the simple, but clear ways they solve all the problems, including the VOLUME that's enough and that they must carry back to the castle! This is the thirteenth Sir Cumference book, all written by Cindy Neuschwander and illustrated by Wayne Meehan in beautifully colorful pages, historical scenes of people working outside and inside, to solve problems! This, and others, are entertaining and educational, just perfect for those at home helping children understand some math concepts, or for a teacher in the classroom! (Do you see the connection with Volomo?) 

         If you'd like to know about the birth of these "Sir Cumference" stories, go HERE to read from Cindy, the author, about how they started!


            From the cover, this poignant book seems to be about a little girl who loves unicorns. First published in Spain, written and illustrated by Dani Gómez, and translated by Luisana Duarte Armendáriz, it is about loving unicorns, as young Emma did. She collects them, puts their pictures on her bedroom walls, and dresses up on Halloween with her dad as unicorns. "Giddy up, Unicorn!" happens often. But Emma grows up, year by year, and things do not remain the same. Gómez lets her illustrations tell the story, change by change. It isn't only a story for young readers about unicorns. It's a story that might bring a few tears to parents and show life in all its wonder, young, then older, then older still! It's a wonderful book!

 



          From Charlesbridge, first published in Spain and translated by Luisana Duarte  Armendariz, illustrations by Veronica Aranda beautifully bring Irene Verdu's sweet story to life. It's a treasure of a story all about finding kindness! A letter has fallen from the postman's mailbag and been whisked away without him noticing. It was raining and the letter landed on the wet street, losing the person's name to which it belonged. The wind thought it was a lovely letter. All it said was "I Love You". So, the wind sailed it into the air, onto Mr. Cat's roof and down the chimney. Mr. Cat found it, yes, grumpy Mr. Cat, and wondered who in the world could have sent it. He began walking through the neighborhood, asking away, with everyone saying "No, not I!" The rest of the story and the sweetest surprise ending shows you what a little act of kindness can do! Mr. Cat learns right along with all his neighbors!

           I cannot possibly tell all that one can discover about space telescopes, the history and the journey to the recent fabulous Webb Telescope. This, by Suzanne Slade, tells in the clearest language how it all began for us to know more than what our naked eyes can see or imagine. The journey she shares is filled with examples of pictures, diagrams, and photos, all the way to what we're seeing recently, that Webb image of the Tarantula Nebula, which holds thousands of young stars! Previously, they couldn't be seen because of space dust.
          There is an added bibliography, a link to building one's own scale model of the Webb telescope, and more! 
          Also, at the very end: “The promise of Webb is not what we know we will discover; it’s what we don’t yet understand or can’t yet fathom about our universe.” —NASA Administrator Bill Nelson


Next! I've had Olivetti by Allie Millington for a long while! Time to read it!




Thursday, August 29, 2024

Poetry Friday - Seasonal Happiness

       It's Poetry Friday, and Susan is hosting HERE on her blog, Chicken Spaghetti.  If you're thinking of having lunch anytime soon, I suggest that you run right over to Susan's post and have "Lunch with Laura". A certain poet named David Moody has prepared it! Thanks for hosting, Susan!



        I know, I know. Autumn does not officially start until September 22nd, yet here at home in Denver, night is arriving sooner. It's dark in the morning when I rise, and some leaves are changing. . . And, of course, schools have started! It's a lovely time to be outside, glorying in the late-summer blooms. The cosmos and the black-eyed susans, among others, fill gardens, aiming to have the last laugh!
       Here is my response to the challenge from the Poetry Sisters to join them in writing ekphrastic poems. Thanks to  Tanita, Laura,  Mary Lee,  LizSaraTricia, and Kelly. Make sure to stop by and read their posts! Find more poems from this prompt tagged with #PoetryPals. 



Trees start their whispers:

“Hey, leaves, okay to let go."

‘Til next year, Summer.”

Cicadas applaud.

 

Linda Baie ©



  

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Poetry Friday - Things to Remember

  It's Poetry Friday, and Rose Cappelli is hosting HERE on her blog, Imagine The Possibilities. She brings us a place where we'd all love to be, watching for the sun rise over the ocean. It makes me want to be there with her!



        This time in our country's history feels very important. Whatever you think about the politics, it seems right to look deeply in our hearts about who we are, what we really believe. I have a favorite poem by Joy Harjo that speaks to this and I want to share it with you, a gift of introspection.

              Remember

                              by Joy Harjo


Remember the sky that you were born under,
know each of the star’s stories.
Remember the moon, know who she is.
Remember the sun’s birth at dawn, that is the
strongest point of time. Remember sundown
and the giving away to night.
Remember your birth, how your mother struggled
to give you form and breath. You are evidence of
her life, and her mother’s, and hers.

                              the rest is HERE


       And, quickly, I want to give a shout-out for Naomi Shihab Nye's new book of poetry, Grace Notes. Possibly all you need to know is that she has a new book, but you can find my review here from Goodreads if you'd like to know more. 

Monday, August 19, 2024

Monday Reading! Lots of Great Books Here!

      

        Visit Kellee and Ricki at UnleashingReaders and Jen at Teach Mentor Texts to see what they and others have been reading! Your TBR lists will grow!    I'm back from Costa Rica, trying to catch up with those books I read right before and after! It was a great trip, now missing the beach!



       Ariel Lawhon writes historical fiction. This book is her latest, a complex story of a real-life heroine who worked for and led the resistance in France. It's a riveting story of love and war and frightening scenes but she never stopped doing the hard things in order to win! The saddest scenes are of the goodbyes. The happiest ones are the hellos! From her start as a free-lance reporter, viewing a whipping of an older woman by a Nazi named Wolff, bringing her eventually to Marseilles and a bartender with quiet, secret work, to a man who calls her "ma fille qui rit" (my girl who laughs), and to a life she never imagined but accepted. Lawhon weaves the chapters back and forth in time, following Nancy Wake's four code names she went by. Yes, there was a real Nancy Wake, fighting to get the Nazis out of France. It's a special and spectacular story! 

           Thanks to Candlewick Press for the following three books!

      Cynthia Leitich Smith offers a great follow-up to Hearts Unbroken. Out last year, but now time to prepare for Halloween, readers are back in the town that is preparing their "Harvest House", a spooky experience for everyone. When Hughie finds that the fall school play is out because of budget cuts, he's glad to be a volunteer to create the 'show' with his friend, Sam, and others. That is, he's fine until he discovers that the plans include someone will play the "vengeful maiden", a folktale from their Crossroads. Hughie is a great kid, willing to create and find ways to tell the person in charge that there are better ways to scare than using Native American tropes. He leans on friends and family for help while he navigates those who threaten. As Halloween draws closer, Hughie and friends begin to investigate what's really happening at night at the Crossroads and Smith leads us into what indeed might be ghosts because of a real-life event years earlier. It was not easy to predict the ending, but I enjoyed the way the friends stuck together, questioning and helping, no matter how challenging, or frightening! 


          Clover Robin's collaged illustrations show the reality of these amazing swifts, told in brief text by Justin Anderson, wowing me on every page as I learned about them. From the back matter: "There are about one hundred different species around the world." Anderson tells of four on that page, but the book features the Common Swift. Don't miss this story of those swifts who, yearly, fly from Africa to Northern Europe (without stopping!) to find a mate or re-unite with their mates. There's more about how they manage, what happens over various areas, raising their chicks. I know that there are swifts, but had no idea they had these powers, had the adaptations to survive in the air for days and days, AND DAYS! 
         If you're interested, go to this site to learn all about these "swift" things: https://www.swiftmapper.org.uk/  Anderson adds an index to his book, too.

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Poetry Friday - That Thing That Happens

 

created by Linda Mitchell

          It's Poetry Friday, and Janice Scully is hosting HERE on her blog, Salt City Verse. She is sharing a beautiful picture book of poetry and her own poem to her mother. Thanks for hosting, Janice!  

           We are back from our trip to Costa Rica, full of fun and family and ocean waves! Often on these trips, we celebrate birthdays. My granddaughter, Imogene, turned thirteen on the Monday we were there. Sometimes we travel further into August when we celebrate my son's and his son's birthdays, too! Time keeps going and going.

          This week, a memory came up on Facebook, and then I thought of the picture I took during our trip, and the poem I found and read on Imogene's big day. I thought many of you would enjoy it. I have kept it a while on my desktop and tried to find it online, and its author. I cannot. Obviously, I copied it from somewhere, but have no memory of the book it was in. If you know who wrote this, let me know, please! It is a delight for those of us who see our children, and perhaps grandchildren, grow up, and then grow up more. 

        (NOTE! Tabatha guessed who, or knew! The poem is from MY HEAD HAS A BELLYACHE by Chris Harris! Thanks, Tabatha!)

2012
                I'm unsure why they're sitting on the floor in the kitchen?


2024