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Nov 30, 2010

Tween Tuesday: Ook & Gluk by Dav Pilkey


My son Max will be reviewing Ook & Gluk for you today...
Remember to enter the Ook & Gluk Scholastic giveaway by filling out this form here. Check the sidebar for details!
5 chocolate chip cookies (it's a pretty funny book).

Cover Love: I liked the cover because it sort of shows you what will happen in the book. There are future things and past things on there.

Why Max Wanted To Read This: Because I liked the Captain Underpants books and when I found out Dav Pilkey wrote a new book I really wanted to read it. Here's the synopsis from Good Reads:
Here's a graphic novel that any young cave-boy or -girl enjoy. Ook and Glu are two typical cave-boys residing in Caveland, Ohio in 500,001 B.C. All that changes abruptly when the plucky pair slip through a time portal to 2222 A.D., where things seem to be even more brutish than the world that they left. Under the tutelage of martial arts expert Master Wong, they master the Kung Fu arts that will help them to establish a more peaceful old-new world order.

Max Kept Reading It Because: It started out with a little bit of humor that caught my attention so I wanted to keep reading it.

What Max Liked (& Didn't):
I liked how funny it was.
I liked how it looked like it was written by a kid.
I wasn't at all bothered by the misspelled words.
If I could be Ook (rhymes with Duke) or Gluk (rhymes with Duck) I would be Gluk.
In some parts I laughed out loud!

To Sum Up: It was original because it had humor and future and past and it made me laugh.

Book sent from Big Honcho Media (thanks Chelsey!)

Jana's quick review:
If you have a boy in your house, chance are they have read a Captain Underpants books. It is easy to get snobby about those books because they are kind of dumb and there are misspelled words. However, if you ever have a boy that has a hard time getting into any books until they pick up a Captain Underpants book you will discover that you LOVE Dav Pilkey and his crazy books!

Check out the book trailer (or show it to a young boy in your life!):



About the Author:
Dav Pilkey has written and illustrated numerous popular, award-winning books for children, including the Captain Underpants and Dumb Bunnies series; Dog Breath, winner of the California Young Reader Medal; and The Paperboy, a Caldecott Honor Book. He lives with his wife in the Pacific Northwest. Visit him online at www.pilkey.com(his website is full of fun activities for any Captain Underpants fan!).

Nov 29, 2010

Upper Elementary Giveaway & Meet Max


This is my son Max. He's in fourth grade and he is just starting to really like reading (thank God!). He has a big imagination so I did expect he would be more of a reader than my older son (he's in seventh). There is a huge difference in what a fourth grader reads and what a seventh grader reads. Max still loves the super silly and although he just started reading the first Harry Potter book he also has finished the Dragonbreath books and the two Big Nate books this fall. So, when I got the opportunity to get Ook & Gluk and host this giveaway I jumped at the chance. I decided to make this week Max Week! He will be reviewing the Dragonbreath and Big Nate books along with Ook & Gluk. I hope you will join us this week during Max's time on the blog.

Onto the giveaway! This is an amazing giveaway and just in time for Christmas. There are six books up for grabs from Scholastic.
All of these books are outstanding and this whole pack values at over $85! The showpiece is Ook & Gluk which Max will be reviewing tomorrow as our Tween Tuesday post. Today you can enter to win this prize pack by filling out this form. This contest is open to US mailing addresses only and will close on December 8. This is a pretty quick contest but I want the winner to have a chance to get this before Christmas!

Check back tomorrow for Max's review of Ook & Gluk and for more awesome Christmas ideas check out the Scholastic store!

Nov 24, 2010

Books I Am Thankful For: Part 1


For the next three days I am going to talk about specific books I am thankful for and why. Today's theme is: I am thankful for books that bring me closer to my boys.

Dr. Seuss's Sleep Book
Remember bringing your first baby home? How amazing and wonderful and scary it is? And for the first few days it feels like you are never alone with your baby because so many people are visiting you? When I did get a quiet moment with my first born it was to feed him and I always pulled this book out to read to him. It is such a quite book and when you are reading Dr. Seuss it is almost like singing because there is such a rhythm and rhyme to the story. I still love pulling this one out and it always reminds me of those first few weeks of being a new mom.

Home Price by Robert McCloskey
I love Homer Price, I loved this book when I read it when I was younger and bought my own copy to share with my kids when I got older. However as they got older it was harder to find time to read aloud a novel because bed times were different and we were busier. etc... A few summers ago I just felt the need for us to slow down a bit, so I started reading Home Price to them. We all loved it, especially the doughnut chapter. This was the last book I got to read aloud to them start to finish, so it will always hold a dear space in my heart.

Henry Huggins (the whole series) by Beverly Cleary
Home Price was the last book I read aloud to them, but around that same time we got a car with an ipod jack in it. I bought us the first Henry Huggins book on audio, loaded it on my ipod and we started driving around town listening to audiobooks. We listened to the whole series in about three months. My boys would ask to go the long way home so we could listen to more. My oldest was in fifth grade but he was still young enough to really love these books. It helped that they were read by Neil Patrick Harris and he does an amazing job! We even too a pilgrimage to the Beverly Cleary Sculpture Garden in Portland Oregon when we went out there for spring break after we had finished the books. It is a great memory for all of us!

Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney
My oldest son is not an avid reader. He would never just pick up a book...or so I thought. When he was in fourth grade he still had to keep a log of minutes he read. It was like pulling teeth! I had seen a good review of the first Diary and checked it out from the library. I had it in a pile in my room and one evening he was in there reading a different book. He came out a few minutes into his reading time and asked me if he could read Diary. I said yes, that I had actually checked it out for him...and for the first time my son felt what it was like to love a story. Any book that gets him to chose to read over anything else holds a very special place in my heart!

Out of all the countless books my boys and I have read together these are the ones that really stick out with a special place for me.

Nov 23, 2010

Tween Tuesday: Clementine: Friend of the Week


5 wonderful frosted sugar cookies.

Tween Tuesday is hosted by Sarah at GreenBeanTeenQueen. Check her out!!

Cover Love: I love all the covers for the Clementine books! Mostly because I absolutely love Marla Frazee's illustrations.

Why I Wanted to Read This: I adore Clementine, all of the books are wonderful! Her's the synopsis from Good Reads:

It's Clementine's turn to be "Friend of the Week"! She gets to be line leader, collect the lunch money, and feed the fish. Even better, the other kids will make her a booklet, full of the things they value about having her in the class. After reading her friend Margaret's booklet, Clementine begins to get nervous and a little jealous —she has to get a great booklet now. Fortunately, she has a lot of astounding ideas for getting the kids to write great stuff about her. Unfortunately, just as she's working on the best one, something terrible happens to her beloved kitten Moisturizer. Worst of all, exactly when she needs a friend the most, Margaret lets her down.

Or does she...

I Kept Reading Because:
Clementine is such a good voice and her stories are always totally fun.

What I Liked (& Didn't):
This is the fourth book in Clementine's series. I love the way Clementine's mind works and the things she does. These are awesome books for those higher second grade readers and third graders.

I love how she has a crush on Mitchell but does not want to have a crush on Mitchell so she just says "if I ever did had a boyfriend, he'd do things like..."

If I had a daughter, I would hope there would be some Clementine to her!

What I Would Like to See: Just more and more fun from Clementine!

To Sum Up: Clementine books are super fun with adorable illustrations. These are also great read alouds.

Book checked out from my public library.

Nov 22, 2010

Review: Marbury Lens by Andrew Smith

Cover Love: Weird, yet intriguing. Just like the book itself.

Why I Wanted to Read This Book: The synopsis sounded intriguing and it made me want to read the book. Here's the synopsis from Good Reads:
Sixteen-year-old Jack gets drunk and is in the wrong place at the wrong time. He is kidnapped. He escapes, narrowly. The only person he tells is his best friend, Conner. When they arrive in London as planned for summer break, a stranger hands Jack a pair of glasses. Through the lenses, he sees another world called Marbury.
There is war in Marbury. It is a desolate and murderous place where Jack is responsible for the survival of two younger boys. Conner is there, too. But he’s trying to kill them.
Meanwhile, Jack is falling in love with an English girl, and afraid he’s losing his mind.
Conner tells Jack it’s going to be okay.
But, it’s not.
Andrew Smith has written his most beautiful and personal novel yet, as he explores the nightmarish outer limits of what trauma can do to our bodies and our minds.


I Kept Reading Because: Much like Jack's addiction to visiting Marbury it was just as hard for me to stop reading.

Romance: Yes. Something to keep Jack grounded, sort of.

What I Liked (& Didn't): Did you notice that I give this book any cookies? That would be because I am super conflicted about what to give it.

I enjoyed this book, but it was super disturbing. But, also super interesting.
I really couldn't put it down, but I could never say that I loved it.

Andrew Smith is an excellent writer and there was much about this book to keep me interested. And questions that always needed to be answered. And a reason to pick it up again every time I had to put it down. It just gets under your skin and into your brain and you have to know what it going to happen. You just have to keep going.

I also question this being a YA book. There is a lot of swearing, some sex and a lot of disturbing images. But, I also think that there are a lot of young adult readers who would really be interested in this book. And most of them could handle it. This is one of those "boy" books that fills that void for readers between searching for something more grown up than middle grade books but are not ready for adult books.

I did really like Jack and wanted to see him get better, or have some hope. And there were glimmers of that, but there was so much going on in his life I am not sure he could really ever be whole again. No tidy bow for this book!

To Sum Up: Do not read this if you are in the mood for something light, but if you are interested in alternative universes and a young male main character that you want to see good things happen for, try this book. Just be ready to have your mind twisted around!

Book requested and received from Feiwel & Friends. (Thanks Ksenia!)

Nov 19, 2010

Video Friday: Computer Says...

This is what I love: when a students comes to me looking for a book and they say, "The computer says it's in..."
Well, let's take a look at what the computer actually says...maybe it's in at another school, maybe you actually have to look at the call number then look at the shelf for the book with a matching call number, or maybe it's just been turned in and is on a cart waiting to be shelved (I will give them the last one because the cart is normally behind the counter). I am ranting a bit, but mostly it doesn't bother me when they need my help finding a book, I just hate when they say, "the computer says..." It always reminds me of this "lady" from Little Britain (I tried to find one of her working in a library but there wasn't one. There was a different library sketch that is equally as funny though).


Nov 18, 2010

Review: Firelight by Sophie Jordan

4 soft & chewy chocolate crinkles!

Cover Love: Yes! Beautiful girl with just a hint of supernatural on her skin. I love this cover!

Why I Wanted to Read This:
Mostly the cover, it is so eye-catching. Then there was the online buzz this summer and the fact that it is about a species of beings that are descended from dragons...and I love dragons. Here's the synopsis from good reads:

A hidden truth.
Mortal enemies.
Doomed love.

Marked as special at an early age, Jacinda knows her every move is watched. But she longs for freedom to make her own choices. When she breaks the most sacred tenet among her kind, she nearly pays with her life. Until a beautiful stranger saves her. A stranger who was sent to hunt those like her. For Jacinda is a draki—a descendant of dragons whose greatest defense is her secret ability to shift into human form.

Forced to flee into the mortal world with her family, Jacinda struggles to adapt to her new surroundings. The only bright light is Will. Gorgeous, elusive Will who stirs her inner draki to life. Although she is irresistibly drawn to him, Jacinda knows Will's dark secret: He and his family are hunters. She should avoid him at all costs. But her inner draki is slowly slipping away—if it dies she will be left as a human forever. She'll do anything to prevent that. Even if it means getting closer to her most dangerous enemy.

I Kept Reading Because: It was really good. Engrossing story, a new breed of mythical creatures, a likable heroine and a hot guy! The recipe for a great story.

Romance?: Yes. A very nice romance.

What I Liked (& Didn't): There was a lot to like in this story. I liked Jacinda, she was a strong character who was taken out of her element. She tried to make the best of it and went through several scenarios on how to survive and still be a draki. She was determined to not let the apart of her die, no matter how much her mother wanted that...

Speaking of that, I didn't like her mother. I get that she was doing what she thought would keep Jacinda safe, but there was no argument she could make that what she was doing was actually best for Jacinda. She was really torn between her two daughters and their old life and a the hope for a new life. But, I don't think she made good decisions.

Luckily she wasn't around that much...she got a night time job and then had to take a little trip. I really dislike that whole "missing" parent aspect of a lot of young adult novels (the outright neglect of Grace in Shiver is always on my mind), but I at least like a plausible explanation and a night time job works for me.

Will!! I loved Will. What a swoon-worthy guy. I was so glad when Jacinda came to her senses and let herself go with him. I have no doubt she will get over her huge disappointment of him at the end and in book two he will come back as her true knight in shining armor.

I did like the cliffhanger! It sets up a good plot for the next book, which I am hoping comes out soon!

What I Would Like to See: I want Jacinda's mom to admit she was wrong. I also want Jacinda to embrace her power. If the pride needs her so bad I think there is some bargaining room there. They need her, so if they do what they plan to her, she can just let her draki die and then they won't have their fire breathers. she has way more power with the pride than she has actually thought about.

I want Will to come to the rescue and for them to live happily ever after!

To Sum Up: I am getting this for my library and when I have a reader ask for a romance with a supernatural element I will hand her Firelight.

Book requested and received from Ariana at HarperTeen! Thanks so much!


Nov 17, 2010

Food From Fiction: The Mockingbirds (Macaroni & Cheese)

Last week I reviewed The Mockingbirds and today I am going to talk about food, good old fashioned comfort food, from the book. After Alex is date raped she stops going to the cafeteria because she always sees the boy who raped her and his friends there. So, food kind of becomes an issue for her--or lack of it. Friends are constantly bringing her things to eat, but it's not until one girl, Amy, shows up with a pan full of homemade macaroni and cheese that I really started to drool.

The scene is written well, you can tell the food is there for comfort so it has to be a comforting dish, and what is better than macaroni and cheese. The author describes the taste and the gooey-ness so good that I wanted to make some ASAP!

I have never made homemade macaroni and cheese--the boxed kind has always been fine for me. So, I set about searching for a recipe that is like the one described in the book (1 block cheddar, 1 block monterey jack and 1 block cream cheese). Couldn't find one. I was getting very depressed. Then I decided that maybe, since she described it with such detail, the author actually has a recipe for this macaroni and cheese. I contacted her and she was so wonderful in providing me with the recipe for all my readers! Here it is in her own words:

Prep - Cut up slices of cheese from a block of cheddar, a block of monterey and a block of cream cheese.
Cook noodles al dente.
Rub some butter on the bottom of a baking pan.
Spoon in a layer of pasta.
Layer various cheese slices across. Add in some pats of butter. Sprinkle some pepper and garlic to taste. Repeat several times until all the pasta and cheese is added. Pour a little bit of milk into the pan. Bake for 45 minutes. Stir. Serve.
Exercise the next day. A lot.

I can't wait to try this out and I think it's one that my family would love as well!

Thanks so much to Daisy Whitney for sharing her recipe for us and for writing such a great book!

Nov 16, 2010

Tween Tuesday: A Tale Dark and Grimm

By Adam Gidwitz

4 delicious chocolate chunk cookies.


Cover Love: It is a perfect cover for the book. Dark & creepy--two children against the big bad world. Love it!

Why I Wanted to Read This: I had seen a lot of positive reviews on Good Reads and a few blogs so I really wanted to give it a try! Here's synopsis from Good Reads:

In this mischievous and utterly original debut, Hansel and Gretel walk out of their own story and into eight other classic Grimm-inspired tales. As readers follow the siblings through a forest brimming with menacing foes, they learn the true story behind (and beyond) the bread crumbs, edible houses, and outwitted witches.

Fairy tales have never been more irreverent or subversive as Hansel and Gretel learn to take charge of their destinies and become the clever architects of their own happily ever after.

I Kept Reading Because: It was very interesting. A quick read with a lot of great little stories inside one bigger story.

Romance?: Surprisingly little since this is a take off of several fairy tales.

What I Liked (& Didn't): First off, you should know that I am not a fan of A Series of Unfortunate Events. I like my stories tied up with a neat bow at the end. So, when I read all the comparisons to those books it made me a little hesitant. I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, it was dark and bloody and you felt very sorry for Hansel and Gretel, but it was also funny and empowering.

If I want to delve deeply into the undercurrents of this book I would say you could say it is about two children with a less than desirable home situation who pull themselves up and try and make a better way for themselves. I say try because it rarely works. But, they keep at it and grow and become strong by then end.

But as you read I say, don't delve too deeply, just ride the ride and enjoy the story, the writing and the narrator!

What I Would Like To See: Not sure. I liked the ending , I liked the growth and I enjoyed the story. I am not sure there are too many more places to go with this one.

To Sum Up: Get this into the hands of readers who like A Series of Unfortunate Events, but also kids who "get the joke" if you know what I mean.

Book requested and received from Dutton Juvenile. Thanks Allison!

Tween Tuesday is hosted by Sarah--the GreenBeanTeenQueen. Check her out!


Nov 15, 2010

Review: One Night That Changes Everything by Lauren Barnholdt

4 yummy peanut butter blossoms!

Cover Love: I do like this cover, however, it makes Eliza looks like she is having fun, and for most of the night she is really not having fun. But, she also makes it look like there is hope for Eliza.

Why I Wanted To Read This Book: I was in the mood for something kind of light, kind of fun and a high school romance. This fit the bill perfectly. Here's the synopsis from Good Reads:

Eliza is in a full-blown panic. Her notebook has been stolen—the one that lists everything she wants but is afraid to go after. And the absolute worst person in the world has it: her ex-boyfriend, Cooper.

Like it’s not enough Cooper was lying to Eliza for their entire relationship, now he and his friends are blackmailing her. They’re giving her just one night to complete the most humiliating tasks on her list or they’ll post her secrets online—including the ones that aren’t just about her.

Eliza’s sure of only one thing: she isn’t going down without a fight. Cooper may have what’s left of her dignity, but she’s not the only one with something to hide …


I Kept Reading Because:
I couldn't put it down! I read it in one day in between work and meetings and TV and sleep.

What I Liked (& Didn't):
At first I was reading along thinking about how Eliza probably overreacted and shouldn't have posted anything online about Cooper. (Especially since my 15 year old niece is going through some of this same stuff--posting things online can get you in trouble). Then we find out what Cooper did to her and ouch! My heart broke right along with Eliza and this was the beginning of the book--where I am not even very invested in the characters yet!

I love Eliza. There I times I want to smack her, times I want to hug her and times I want to cry with her!

I also love Cooper. Yeah, he should have stood up to his friends, but overall he's a good guy. I am not giving anything away on this because this is pretty apparent from the get-go.

Everyone seemed to do a little bit of growing during the course of the night. I liked that it wasn't life changing, just enough to be believable.

And, you can face your fears. Sometimes you might need a little push, but normally it all works out just fine!

What I Would Like to See:
I am sure this is a stand alone book and that's good. It ended in a good place--I was very satisfied!

To Sum Up: I would recommend this to young adult readers. There is quite a bit of swearing but overall, it was just a good, fun story!

Book purchased from Borders.

Nov 12, 2010

What Makes a Book a Fast Read?

I recently read A Tale Dark and Grimm by Adam Gidwitz. It was such a good book and the kind where I just kept turning page after page without being able to stop and go to sleep. It was just so easy to cruise through 10 or so pages without even realizing it! It makes me pose the question--besides PLOT, what makes a book a "fast" read?

*Short chapters. It is so easy when the chapters are short to read"just one more chapter." then another and another, you get the idea.

*Less dialogue. This is a personal choice, but it seems to me that some of the books that are quickest to read don't have scenes with tons of dialogue.

*Length. I always feel the book goes so much faster in the second half. If I can reach the middle quickly I can usually finish it even quicker.

*Big type & spacing. Sounds dumb (or logical), but the quicker I am able to turn the pages, the quicker I can read.

Now, the biggest problem here is that some of the books I could not put down (and that I loved) I would not consider "fast reads" although I might have finished them quicker than A Tale Dark & Grimm. For example, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. I blocked off the whole day after it was out and kicked my family out of the house and just read straight through. But it was not a fast read. Same with The Hunger Games and The Knife of Never Letting Go and Rot & Ruin. They were hard to put down, but by no means "fast" books.

However, whether it be a fast read or a can't put down book they are mostly all satisfying reads!

What makes a book a fast read for you?

Nov 11, 2010

Guest Post: Lisa Rowe Fraustino Author of The Hole in the Wall


I recently finished the book The Hole in the Wall, which was a very interesting, kind of mind-trippy book written by Lisa Rowe Fraustino. Lisa was nice enough to take time out of her schedule to write this guest post for me! Thanks Lisa!

After reading The Hole in the Wall Jana asked me: “What undiscovered ‘world’ (depths of the ocean, outer space or caves) would you like most to explore and why?”

If I could literally go somewhere no English professor has gone before, it would probably be to the future so I can find out things we don’t have the scientific ability to know yet. But since I can’t go to the Delta Quadrant on the Starship Voyager, I’m content to explore the world I walk every day and imagine discoveries that nobody was even looking for or ever expected to find right here, right now. That’s pretty much what happens to Sebby in The Hole in the Wall.

People often ask writers where we get our ideas, and I get that question a lot about The Hole in the Wall especially, since it has such quirky characters in such an unusual plot. So I thought I’d share with you a few “Invitations to Inspiration” I’ve used and taught others to do when they’re hunting down ideas for stories.

Keep a journal of your dreams.
And keep a dream analysis dictionary next to it. Use it to help you broaden your understanding of symbolism. Weave these images into your writing to add depth to your characters, mystery to your plots, and beauty to your style. Based on one of my dreams, an earlier draft of The Hole in the Wall began with Barbie describing a dream she had about Boots Odum coming into their kitchen through a hole in the wall. Though the scene doesn’t appear in the final book, it led to a lot of imagery that did stay.

Begin each day with a few minutes of fast freewriting.
Don’t try to focus this writing on anything in particular or struggle to express a thought clearly or vividly—just let the words flow for ten or fifteen minutes. This will loosen your creative flow before you settle down to craft. When I’m writing in the voice of a character such as Sebby, I sometimes do this exercise from the narrator’s point of view, not intending to keep the writing for the story, just to get inside the speaker’s head.

Take a walk around your neighborhood with your five senses fine-tuned.
Notice at least five things that you’ve never noticed before. Consider why you never noticed them despite living in the midst of them. Reflect on the significance of unheeded details, and use what you learn to develop a setting, character, or plot situation. My character Sebby notices things other people don’t, and it gets him into a lot of trouble!

In the end, you might say the undiscovered world I most like to explore is the imagination. As a writer, I spend a lot of time there playing “What if?” People like archeologists and scientists are always coming across new and unexpected things as part of their work, but we writers get to explore and discover through our fiction. Whatever you can imagine, you can make happen!


Aspiring writers are invited to visit “Dr. Lisa’s Class” at her web site, where today’s lesson is “Novel Revision” http://lisarowefraustino.com/?page_id=300 .

Nov 10, 2010

Review: The Mockingbirds by Daisy Whitney

4 delicious snickerdoodles.

Cover Love: I like that it is simple and understated, but I'm not sure it would have been what drew me to the book.

Why I Wanted To Read This Book: I read the synopsis somewhere and was very intrigued. Here's the synopsis from GoodReads:
Themis Academy is a quiet boarding school with an exceptional student body that the administration trusts to always behave the honorable way--the Themis Way. So when Alex is date raped during her junior year, she has two options: stay silent and hope someone helps her, or enlist the Mockingbirds--a secret society of students dedicated to righting the wrongs of their fellow peers.

In this honest, page-turning account of a teen girl's struggle to stand up for herself, debut author Daisy Whitney reminds readers that if you love something or someone--especially yourself--you fight for it.


I Kept Reading Because: It was a page turner. It was so well written. It had a good plot, strong, but not over the top characters and it was well paced.

Romance?: Yes. It is a part of the book, but not the biggest part of the book. And actually, I think that Alex could have ended up with one of two boys, both of whom I really liked.

What I Liked (& Didn't):
I was very glad that there were no super vigilant-y type characters. Nobody went way over the top in their defense or prosecution of Alex. I was afraid it would turn out that things would get out of hand and there would be a death or something. There was nothing like that. The author did a great job keeping the focus where it belonged--on Alex and her recovery.

And I really liked Alex. She was written so well, not annoying as a victim. She had her moments of self-doubt but she was a very normal seeming high school girl.

It made me so sad that the boy who date raped Alex truly didn't realize what he did was wrong. He would probably have called her later to keep hooking up--but he didn't have her full name. Again, he wasn't written as this over the top user of women, just a very horny high school boy. Not that he was a good guy, but he also wasn't an uber-villian.

And Themis Academy-GEEZ! The homework those kids are assigned made my head hurt! I wouldn't have lasted a day there in high school because I was never that driven.

The one thing I liked about The Mockingbirds is that because the case was never out in the open, hopefully the prosecuted people will actually learn from their mistakes and become way better people when they move on.

What I Would Like to See:
On Good Reads the title says "The Mockingbirds #1" so I am certain there will be another one. And that will be good, there are all kinds of things that could go on with this type of book. What I think would be very interesting is if they did a case where the accused is actually innocent. What would the repercussions for the accuser be then?

To Sum Up: I think this would be an important book for many teenage girls to read. You never know where or when something small (like drinking at a party) becomes something major. Due to some swearing and Alex's memories of the incident I probably wouldn't put it in my middle school library, but would if I was in a high school!

Book requested and received from Little Brown. Thanks Julia & Sara!


Nov 9, 2010

Tween Tuesday: Bring on the Laughs!

Tween Tuesday is hosted by Sarah at the Greenbeanteenqueen. Check her out!!

What is it about Dairy of a Wimpy Kid that makes them so popular?
Humor, pictures, humor, easy reading, a dubious main character...all of these?

Whatever it is these books appeal to so many kids! Boys, girls, younger, older, all of them. They are so much fun to read and it is so much fun to hand one of these books to a kid who has been anxiously waiting it's arrival.

I am running to the store at lunch to buy five copies for my library. I have many students on my hold list and once the others know it is available more will come.

I am not reviewing it today because my own copy will be ripped out of my hands as soon as my sons see it. The only problem will be who gets to read it first?!

Edited: I am adding this after I went and picked up five copies for my library. I have read two pages and have already laughed out loud. I love that Greg isn't sure the kid that pulls his pants all the way down when he pees could be his best friend because he's not sure he could get over that. How many of us find those little things that drive us nuts about a person and let it nag at us? Greg is so normal!

Fun fact: about two years ago when I posted very sporadically to this blog I wrote this post about how the publishing of the third book in the Wimpy Kid series was published without a blurb from most book blogs (now I realize that is mostly because most book blogs focus more on YA rather than MG). Anyway, Betsy Bird of Fuse #8 linked to it on her blog that day. I read that while sitting at my desk eating lunch and just about spit it out all over my desk. It was a weird thing.

Nov 8, 2010

Interview with Scrawl Author Mark Shulman

I don't know about you but the very coolest thing for me about having a book blog is seeing comments from authors on the posts about their books. When Jonathan Maberry posted a comment after my review of Rot & Ruin it made my whole week!!

So imagine my extreme excitement when Mark Shulman emailed me after I commented about Scrawl on the Macmillian Kids blog. We emailed back & forth a few times talking about some coincidences (like the fact that Greg Call did his cover and he lives in my town). When I posted my review of Scrawl I also sent Mark some questions to answer which he very graciously did!

1. I see you've written a lot of books but it looks like Scrawl is your first YA book. Is this right?
Scrawl is my first novel, although I’ve been writing my whole life. After a long spell writing for every kind of advertising, in 1999 I switched to love letters when I met and married a grade school teacher. Thanks to her, I started writing children’s books. I’m not a writer who likes to do the same thing again and again, and you can see it in my work. I’ve written picture books, nonfiction of all sorts, preschool, humor, trivia, and books with glow-in-the-dark monster and dinosaur heads. (Man, those were fun!) One day when I was talking to an editor, Neal Porter, about picture books, somehow he convinced me to write a novel. I didn’t know what I was doing, but that’s never stopped me before.

2. How long did it take you to write Scrawl? Was it a book you've had in progress for awhile?
The good news is that it took about ten months of writing for the book to come together. The bad news is that those ten months were spread over two years. I wrote the beginning of the book, where we meet Tod and the other quirky characters, in a quick few months. Then a number of shorter books with shorter deadlines got in the way, and it wasn’t easy to get started again. I started and stopped quite a few times. Finally I enlisted the help of a few talented people to un-stuck me, and they were invaluable in getting me rolling again. The last final push, where writing became fun and automatic, happened in another handful of months.

3.I read your post on Macmillian Kids blog--your high school had a special teen smoking area? Mind if I ask you what years you were in high school (since the drinking age was 18 I am assuming it was early 80's)? Do they still have that smoking area now?
I’m going back to my high school, up in Rochester, NY, in a month, as a visiting author. So I’ll be able to answer you then. I bet not. I graduated in 1980 – it was a six-year school back then, so I started in 1974 in seventh grade. I guess that makes me 179 years old.

4. You do a good job nailing Tod's voice, how much of a bully were you in high school?
I guess I did do a good job, because whenever I had any interactions with bullies, I was the guy getting pummeled, shoved, teased, and, worst of all, ignored. It was a tough school, though not as tough as I depicted it through Tod’s eyes. I could be accused of a lot of bull, but no bullying.

5. The cover art is pretty simple, what were your thoughts when you first saw it?

The first bit of art I saw wasn’t the cover. The designer scribbled a kid’s head on a small rip of paper and handed it to me. I knew right away that this was the perfect cover. Clean! Noticeable! Timeless! And best of all, it didn’t try to convince you what Tod looks like. I don’t like over-describing my characters, so this was ideal. I was wild about the cover idea from the second I saw it.

6. I like it because the book has a male protagonist and the cover will appeal to boys. Did you have a specific audience in mind when you wrote it?

Absolutely. I was writing to any boy, from about 10 up, who has to go through the ordeal of finding his place in the pecking order. Your social position seems to get firmed up around middle school, and my different characters react in different ways to the lot they’re assigned: some by accepting it, some by fighting it, some by lording their luck over the others. Tod has learned a lot about how the system works. He compares himself and the other poor kids to rats in a maze, and “the maze is rigged.” Tod has drawn a bad hand in life, and he pretends he doesn’t care, but the heart of the story is that he really does, and he ends up struggling to find a way out.

I should add that Scrawl in no way excludes girls. The strongest characters are the females – they hold their ground at every turn. And the boys had better learn to deal.

7. Do you read YA books? What are a few you've liked over the last few years?

I do read YA, at this point more than adult literature. I really believe the Middle Grade and YA books are more brave in many ways than adult writing, because younger readers allow more fantastical things to happen. YA literature can’t hide behind fancy vocabulary and vague intellectual references and complex thematic trickery. It’s got to be straight up and up close, like a chess game. I also read it for the story lines, which are likelier to pulse with action because kids are supposed to have limited attention spans. Well, I do, too. My wife is the literacy specialist in her school, so she’s always bringing home great books for me to look at. And finally, it’s my job!

Books I’ve really liked, and tried to learn a bit from, include Holes, by Louis Sachar; The View from Saturday, by E.L. Konigsburg; Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt, and Hoot, by Carl Hiaasen. When I was a teenager I read a lot of James Thurber, as well as adult detective fiction, from Dashiell Hammett to Sherlock Holmes, and there’s no reason not to include those books in my list of YA favorites.

8. Are you working on anything new?

Yes, a couple of books are trying to be the one I finish next. One is more steeped in action and gizmos. The other is more about all the conflicts that come with suddenly noticing that boys and girls are attracted to each other… or not. Maybe the two books will even come together.


9. What is your favorite TV show?

Right now, my two shows are Mad Men and Bored to Death. They’re entirely geared toward me: I am a writer, I worked in advertising, I live in New York, and I like to be entertained. Their titles imply insanity and boredom and death – a bittersweet confirmation of the three main hazards of being a writer. Or, of living in New York. Either one.


Thanks so much Mark! I loved you answer about YA literature and actually posted that on my library website as well. Nothing irritates me more when people look down on me because I read YA and middle grade books. If they'd just open their minds more they would see how much it has changed since they were young!

Good luck with Scrawl! I loved this book and I hope it does really well for you!

Nov 5, 2010

Most Hated Literary Characters

This list (the 50 most hated characters in literature) was a lot of fun to read. I read through it and here is the one I agree with most (I haven't read most of them):

Dolores Umbridge--I just hated her so much that it has affected my ability to re-read that book.

Who is your most hated literary character?

Nov 4, 2010

Publishing Trend: Teen Superhoeroes

I have noticed a lot of books being published that have teen or tween age kids gaining super powers. I have read most of these and really enjoyed them! Here's the ones I can recall lately (feel free to add to this list for me!):

Hero by Mike Lupica-I reviewed this one yesterday--good start to a probable series!

Archvillian by Barry Lyga-I read and reviewed this over the summer. Good humor and a good set up for a series. I am looking forward to the next one.

Eighth Grade Superzero by Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich-This one has been on my to-read shelf for quite sometime. It was out last winter and got some great reviews. I am going to get to it soon, I swear!!

13 Days To Midnight by Patrick Carman-a much darker version of a superhero story. I read and reviewed this one last spring. Not quite a classic superhero tale, but it has lots of good twists!

Powerless by Matt Cody--This one has a main character who doesn't have any powers. He encounters a group of tweens who do have superpowers. It's a good read that shows you don't need powers to be a superhero! I read this one and really enjoyed it but haven't yet reviewed it for my blog.

The Rise of Renegade X by Chelsea Campbell--I loved this one (read my review here)! I am really hoping it is a series because I really want to know what happens to Damien!

The Quantum Prophecy by Michael Carroll--This is a series about a new generation of superheroes. I haven't read this one yet but this series is super popular in my library. There are four books available.

What ones am I missing?

Nov 3, 2010

Review: Hero by Mike Lupica

3.5 yummy chocolate chip cookies.

Cover Love: Yes! It looks like we are soaring over the NY skyline. I dig it.

Why I Wanted To Read This: I love the a good teen superhero story! Here's the synopsis from Good Reads:
Fourteen-year-old Billy Harriman can feel the changes. The sharpening of his senses. The incredible strength. The speed, as though he can text message himself across miles. The confidence and the strange need to patrol Central Park at night. His dad had been a hero, a savior to America and a confidante of the president. Then he died, and the changes began in Billy. What Billy never knew was that his father was no ordinary man-he was a superhero, battling the world's evil. This is a battle that has been waged for generations and that knows no boundaries. And now it's Billy's turn to take on the fight. It's Billy's turn to become a hero.

I Kept Reading Because: I got caught up in Billy's story.

Romance?: Not really, but a good friendship with a girl (sidekick?).

What I Liked (& Didn't):
I felt the reveal was a little slow. As a reader I didn't know any more than Billy did (except a little more about what happened to his father). And in fact I feel I don't know anything more than Billy by then end! I wish I did.

I felt like this was a good setup to a series. We are introduced to a lot of potential good guys and bad guys. But, I didn't feel like there was a very big climax to this story. However, I will happily go onto the next book if this is a series.

I liked that the main character was a boy. Billy seems like a really typical young teen, with not a lot of confidence. I like that although he enjoys his new powers, they don't give him a huge bump in confidence. If anything they make him more confused, which I think is probably pretty accurate for a change like this.

This was not a slow read, but I felt the story moved along a little slowly. It didn't make me not want to read it though, but for the pacing, I didn't feel very rewarded at the end by learning anything special about Billy.

What I Would Like To See: I want more information about what all Billy can do with his powers! I also want more information on who the Bads are and what their agenda actually is.

To Sum Up: I will follow Billy into his next book. This was a good setup to what I am sure will be a great series. I will be buying this for my library also because superhero books are pretty popular with my students!

Book received from Philomel (ARC). Thanks Allison!

Nov 2, 2010

Tween Tuesday: Misty Gordon and the Mystery of the Ghost Pirates by Kim Kennedy

3 yummy chocolate chip brownie bars.

I always forget to add that Tween Tuesday is hosted by the GreenBeanTeenQueen--check her out!!

Cover Love & Why I Wanted to Read This:
I love the cover! After I got the book I found out the cover and the pictures were done by Greg Call, who lives in my town and did the Peter & The Starcatchers books as well. The cover was very intriguing and it is why I wanted to read the book! Here's the synposis from Good Reads:

Things in the New England town of Ashcrumb are getting weird. Or just weirder. Misty Gordon, whose antique-dealing parents drive a van that says “D.E.A.D.” on the side (for “Deceased’s Estate and Antique Dealer”), is accustomed to weird.

One day, when accompanying her father to the estate of a recently departed clairvoyant, Misty discovers a notebook and a pair of eyeglasses that enable her to see ghosts! And solve mysteries. With the help of her new powers and her best friend, Yoshi, Misty learns that her hometown was settled not by respectable colonists but by pirates! And the ghosts of the pirates are returning to reclaim a dangerous, powerful treasure they lost centuries ago. Who will find it first, Misty or the pirates?



I Kept Reading Because: The mystery was a good one. There was just enough for me to follow and keep me interested.

Romance?: Nope, but a good best friendship between Misty and Yoshi.

What I Liked (& Didn't):
I loved the setting of this book! New England in the fall (Halloween no less). It is a perfect setting for a mystery involving ghosts.

I liked that Misty and Yoshi were working together to solve the mystery. Misty didn't try to keep things to herself and I was glad. It always bothers me when young detectives hide what is going on--they should go out and get help, whether it is another grown up or just someone their own age.

It was a good mystery for Misty to solve, figuring out about the "descendants" and the pirates. I enjoyed figuring it out along with Misty.

The antique shop and her family's business is a good setting for more mysteries if this becomes a series. I also liked that there was a friendly ghost to help Misty out!

What I Would Like To See:
I want Misty to have more spunk! For most of the book I felt like the circumstances were just happening to her. I hope if there is another book she takes more control the mystery!

I would like to see another book about Misty. Kid are always asking for mysteries--we need more of them for middle grade readers.

To Sum Up:
I will be buying this for my library and recommending it when students ask for a good mystery! Enjoyable for middle grade readers.

Book received from Laura at Amulet. Thanks Laura!!

Nov 1, 2010

The Walking Dead Wrap-Up

Did any of you watch The Walking Dead last night. I was pretty certain I would have nightmares from watching it, but I went ahead anyway! Here are my thoughts:

Poor Rick: I really liked how when Rick woke up everything had already happened. Some of the zombie movies show us the disease first happening. I liked discovering it with Rick. And I LOVED Andrew Lincoln!

The Zombies: They were so well done! They were kind of a combination between fast and slow and smart (when the mom was turning the doorknob) and nobody there. The whole scene with the mom on the porch really made me realize why Tom (in Rot & Ruin) does what he does! Why would you want the shell of someone you love out roaming around?!

There does seem to be more going on with these zombies than your normal brain dead ones. A few of these seemed to have a bit of intelligence anyway.

And GROSS...lots of gross images to see. It was nice to see they affected Rick like they affected me.

Survivors:
So sad!! The scene with Morgan and his wife made me cry. Rick killing the crawling zombie also made me so sad.

I realize that Rick had a lot of information to process but don't you think that if you were approaching a city and there were no cars in the lanes heading into the city but tons of cars in the lanes heading out of the city that something might be amiss in that city? Of course, we had the benefit of knowing there was something wrong and he didn't. Because I loved him so much I will cut him some slack.

The tank scene might give me nightmares.

Cliffhanger: I am definitely coming back for me! A great start to a TV series based on graphic novels. Well done AMC!