Category Archives: Recommended Reading

Potato Pot-ah-to

So, I recently stumbled upon the fact that J.K. Rowling has been writing an adult murder mystery series under the pseudonym of Robert Galbraith.

Ironically, I have never actually read any of the Harry Potters except for the first few pages of the initial one, but I did see all the movies. Even though the lighting in the later ones was so dim that they were actually kind of hard to see…

But I was running low on new title suggestions, so I decided to read the first in the Robert Galbraith series. Two weeks later, I have just started the fourth.

Constantly in search of the key to writing a good book, I have asked myself, “Why do I like these books so much?”

Here are 10 reasons:

  1. The characters are well developed with plausible back stories.
  2. There is a high degree of romantic tension between two very likable characters.
  3. In every book (so far), the author keeps the reader guessing until the very end who the murderers are.
  4. There are interesting minor antagonists in addition to the murderer(s)
  5. The series takes place mainly in England, which is described in an easy-to-imagine way that makes the reader feel like they have actually been there (if they haven’t).
  6. The action in the story flows like a river — rapid in some places, and restful in others — but is always moving forward.
  7. All of the characters are believable (i.e. they think and act the way people would really think and act under similar circumstances).
  8. Humor is engagingly woven into the story in sometimes unexpected places.
  9. The characters are fallible in very human ways.
  10. There are not too many characters to easily keep track of.

In addition to everything else, the books are all available as audiobooks for easy hands-free reading, and if you don’t like to read, there is an HBO series that is based on the series (CB Strike).

The only drawback, in my opinion, is that the books are chock full of somewhat gratuitous violence, overly graphic descriptions of murder, and disturbing mental images. These days though, that does seem to pretty much be just the way it is? It certainly has not stopped me from reading them…

All in all, I am really enjoying this series. Best books I have read in a long time!

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Back from the Dead?

It’s been awhile, but today I was inspired to write in order to just put an idea out there, like a message in a bottle, in hopes that it will be discovered by someone who can run with it and make my dream come true.

It would be fantastic if there were a publishing house created to re-introduce older books that are out of print, but have not yet reached their copyright expiration. They could call it Vintage Printage. 🙂

In my opinion, there are some great books and series which would have a successful comeback if reprinted. With the original covers…?  Here are a few of my suggestions for books that I feel could enjoy another go before heading to their final resting place (Project Gutenberg). Feel free to list your own personal picks in the comments. 🙂

 

The Mushroom Planet Series
by Eleanor Cameron

 

Polly Kent Rides West in the Days of ’49
by David McCulloch and Charles Hargens
Polly Kent Rides West cover

 

Cathy’s Little Sister
by Catherine Woolley
Cathy's Little Sister cover

 

The Mad Scientist’s Club
by Bertrand R. Brinley
Mad scientists club cover

 


Wagon to a Star
by Frances Lynch McGuire
Wagon to a Star Dust Jacket

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Any book ever written by Betty Cavanna
(These are just a few…)

 

The Family Nobody Wanted
by Helen Doss
(Which may seem like a weird choice,
but I read it in second grade and never forgot it)The Family Nobody Wanted by [Doss, Helen]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All books Danny Dunn
by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkins
(Many are not shown…)

 

 

Wyoming Summer
by Mary O’Hara
Wyoming Summer cover

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Light a Single Candle
by Beverly Butler
Single candle cover

 

 

 

 

 

 

Katie and The Sad Noise
by Ruth Stiles Gannett
Katie and the Sad Noise

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Magic Elizabeth
by Norma Kasirer

 

 

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Summer Reading 2014

I’ve seen several new Summer Reading lists for children in the last few days. Some have various prizes for accomplishing them, for others the prize is just getting introduced to some great books.

Thought I’d share:

Reward based mega-list: http://www.capitallyfrugaldc.com/2014/05/29/business-sponsored-summer-reading-programs-2014/ 

American Library Association picks:
http://www.ala.org/alsc/2014-summer-reading-list

Scholastic Challenge:
http://www.scholastic.com/ups/campaigns/src-2014

From SummerReading.org:
http://www.summerreading.org/booklists.php

From a reliable teacher-website:
http://www.education.com/seasonal/summer-reading/

Annual Reading Rockets List:
http://www.readingrockets.org/books/summer

and of course, my favorite:

Classic Children’s Books (20 years or older, but still readily available):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_children's_classic_books

Happy Summer Reading! 🙂

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Summer Reading 2013

I am very pleased to announce that one of my favorite Oldies But Goodies has been selected by my local school system for their 9th grade gifted summer reading program: A Walk Across America, by Peter Jenkins

(along with Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers – not an Oldie But Goodie, but a fine read nonetheless). Great choice, Local School System!

Students (and adults) of both sexes will enjoy this book, a first-hand account of Peter Jenkins’ 1970’s true life adventure, in which he finds his dog, his bride and ultimately himself.

Additionally, a sister Oldies But Goodies novel is making news this season with its re-release from Ballantine Books. Formerly very difficult to find (believe me, I’ve tried and there’s NOTHING out there for under $75.00…) The Girl of the Sea of Cortez

by Peter Benchley is available for pre-order with a shipping date of August 20, 2013. Although Benchley is best known for Jaws, The Girl of the Sea of Cortez is (in my opinion) his masterwork. A beautifully visual read, it is the story of Paloma, a girl who lives near the Sea of Cortez in Mexico (a.k.a. The Gulf of California, located between the Baja Peninsula and the mainland. For more on this area of the world, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_California ).

Her love of the sea and the creatures in it is threatened by greedy outsiders without a care for the destruction they will leave behind. Not only is it a great book, it makes my environmentalist heart go pitter-pat.

Both Walk Across America and The Girl of the Sea of Cortez (and Outliers and Jaws, too, for that matter) are great books for a summer read at the beach, the pool, or curled up in bed with the air-conditioner blasting on you. Even if you don’t have plans to travel this summer, after you’ve read them, you will feel well-rested and dream of faraway places.

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Reading is Felonious

This August, in the throes of readying for the new school year, a recently hired colleague expressed concerns about where to keep her purse during the day. Her worries were understandable, as the school is in an urban area with a somewhat higher level of crime than the suburb from which she comes. I assured her that last year I had an enormous purse that would only fit under my desk, but no one had ever bothered it. I even kept a dish filled with nickels on top of my desk from students who purchased pencils, and no one ever stole any.

No, the students don’t take money. They steal books.

By June, it had cost me more than forty dollars to replace titles “borrowed” from my classroom library last year. Shiny new copies of The Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry and My Side of the Mountain had all disappeared from the bookshelf.

“Does anyone have these books?” I would ask my class, only to be met by total silence. But I already knew who had them. I’d recommended them to those students, myself. All bright children who I was pretty sure didn’t have any books of their own at home.

As far as I’m concerned, they are welcome to keep them, and if it costs me another forty dollars this year, I’ll pay it without flinching. I only hope that all of those books stay in print.

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Book Review: The Thirteenth Tale, by Diane Setterfield

The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel

I was first acquainted with The Thirteenth Tale when I won a contest on author Mindy McGinnis’s blog, Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire. The prize was a book of my choice, and Mindy (a school librarian by day) helpfully suggested several titles, including this one. Billed as “a classic gothic,” I was a little nervous that it might be Victoria Holt-like, but after checking it out on Amazon.com and Goodreads, I decided to risk it.

Margaret Lea works in her father’s antique book shop, emotionally isolated and obsessed to a fairly unhealthy degree with her dead identical twin. Vida Winter is a reclusive famous writer, emotionally isolated and obsessed to a fairly unhealthy degree with her own dead identical twin. In her dotage and facing a terminal illness, Vida has finally decided to share her mysterious life story, and she wants Margaret to be the one to write it down. Off on the moors (okay, that much was stereotypical), Margaret is fascinated by Vida’s twisted tale, but echoes of her own life story inevitably start to resonate. Shadows and foreshadows of Jane Eyre, a mystery of birth, and twins who just won’t stay dead grip the reader until the last few pages, where the author takes great (and satisfying) pains to wrap up every little detail. I couldn’t put it down.

Maybe I was just tired (it was four-thirty in the morning when I finished the book), but even with the care that the author took to tie up loose ends, there was one detail that remained unexplained for me. Whose initials were IAR? Not whose I thought they would be, which begs the question: Was it a typo, or was Emmeline a serial diary thief? If you read it, I’d be interested to know your thoughts.

Thank you, Mindy, good pick.

Layinda’s Blog Rating: ¶¶¶¶

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I Already Read That

Many, many times when I have suggested titles for students in their later years (by which I mean high school), I have gotten the, “Oh, I read that in fifth grade,” comment. It is frequently accompanied by the vaguely superior attitude that tends to distinguish a precocious reader.

In response, I have this to say: Reading something as a child is not the same as reading it in high school (or later). Yes, the words are the same, the characters are the same, and the plot is the same, but you, dear reader, are not.

The Chronicles of Narnia series, by C.S. Lewis, is a classic example of this. Easily digested as a fairy tale in one’s early years, in the hands of a teenager, it can boggle the mind with its innuendo and double meaning. So can The Hobbit. And Watership Down. And practically every other book not exclusively intended for the younger crowd.

Even when perfectly capable of understanding the words and following a complex plot, the preadolescent reader (even a gifted one) just doesn’t have the maturity to recognize the nuance and subtlety embedded in most literature.

Think I’m wrong? Dust one off and read it again.

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Summer Reading List

In the throes of the end of the school year, I was unexpectedly inundated with a lot of great new (at least to me) titles that I stoically forbade myself to read until summer vacation. As usual, my reading list is a tad eclectic, but so far, so good. I’ll probably be posting reviews of most of them, so here’s a preview:

I Capture the Castle
I Capture the Castle
by Dodie Smith

The Secret History of the Pink Carnation

The Secret History of the Pink Carnation
by Lauren Willig

Chains (Seeds of America)
Chains
by Laure Halse Anderson

The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel

The Thirteenth Tale
by Diane Setterfield

School of Fear

School of Fear
by Gitty Daneshvari

The Blueprint: A Plan for Living Above Life's Storms

The Blueprint
by Kirk Franklin

State of Wonder

State of Wonder
by Ann Patchett

Private Life

Private Life
by Jane Smiley

Silver Wedding

Silver Wedding
by Maeve Binchy

 

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Cover Up: New Looks for Old Books

Product Details Product Details

Ironically, after I rhapsodized about my Christmastime search for the perfect book, my younger son wasn’t as wild about Ribsy as I had hoped. At first.

When I’d found it at the bookstore, I was dismayed that the cover had been updated, but had no idea that it would impact my son. The dynamic black and white image of Ribsy on a yellow ground was replaced at some point by a generic short hair, and had I been wandering the bookstore aimlessly, I would not even have picked it up. Why, I wondered, would they replace the original Ribsy: large, lanky, and shedding exactly the sort of personality that would end up riding away in the wrong car?

Ribsy is not the only victim. Most of Beverly Cleary’s book covers have been updated, as have Elizabeth Enright’s, Edward Eager’s, Madeleine L’Engle’s and many others. Sometimes, the illustrators don’t even seem acquainted with the characters they’re trying to portray. It is easy to imagine an art director saying, “Hey, we need a scruffy dog on the cover. Go with red or blue — yellow’s been done.”

Even when the new covers aren’t bad, it would be a stretch to say they are an improvement. Consider All of a Kind Family, by Sydney Taylor,

Product DetailsMarguerite Henry’s Brighty of the Grand Canyon,

Product DetailsBrighty: Of the Grand Canyon (Marguerite Henry Horseshoe Library)or Elizabeth George Speare’s The Witch of Blackbird Pond.

The Witch of Blackbird Pond Publisher: Houghton Mifflin CompanyThe Witch of Blackbird Pond

I am a firm believer in, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” If the original cover attracted readers in the first place, why mess with success?

Interestingly, even when covers are changed, inside illustrations frequently remain the same, such as Jean Merrill’s The Toothpaste MillionaireThe Toothpaste Millionaire,The Toothpaste Millionaire

and Elizabeth Enright’s The Saturdays.

The SaturdaysThe Saturdays (Melendy Quartet)

One wonders about the point of having an updated cover, especially when it is labeled, “With pictures by the original illustrator.”

Thankfully, not all old titles have lost their looks. The recently reprinted Happy Hollisters The Happy Hollisters
books have maintained their original covers and illustrations, and the classic Nancy Drew  series (although updated from the 1940s) has remained unchanged for decades.

On some level, even the publishers must think that newer doesn’t necessarily mean better. For the 100th anniversary edition of Anne of Green Gables, Putnam went with the original cover,

Anne of Green Gables, 100th Anniversary Edition
as did Harcourt for the 50th anniversary of Edward Eager’s Half Magic.
Half Magic: Fiftieth-Anniversary Edition

Yearling seems to have realized that The Wolves of Willoughby Chase got it right the first time,

Product Details  The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (The Wolves Chronicles)

and Goodnight Moon‘s original cover (1947) is still going strong.

Goodnight Moon

The whole concept of updating could ultimately prove to be a slippery slope. Until the recent Twain tom-foolery, no one had considered changing the text, but now, who knows?

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Original Unabridged VersionThe Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, Alfred Kazin, Alfred Kazin (Afterword)

Perhaps soon, other old favorites will have not only language, but plot points updated to jibe with the newest generation of readers. Meg Murray might start to “disrespect” Mrs. Whatsit, whilst Charles Wallace sits staring at his gaming system instead of a giant pulsing brain.

After several attempts to get my son to read Ribsy, it occurred to me that perhaps he was trying to tell a book by its cover. “Let me show you what Ribsy really looks like,” I said as I went online to show him the original.  “Do you want to read it now?”

“Yes! He looks like a fun pup.” He ran to his room to get it, then shouted down the stairs, “Why didn’t you buy me THAT book?”

A Wrinkle in Time (Madeleine L'Engle's Time Quintet)

Half MagicProduct Details

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YA Book Review: Ty Roth’s So Shelly

So Shelly

Life has finally eased up enough for me to write a review of So Shelly (Delacorte Press), the highly anticipated and recently released novel by Ty Roth: young-adult author, high school literature teacher and all-around good guy.

Other than the book-jacket tease about two friends swiping a drowned teen’s ashes to spread as she would have wished, and that the personas of the three main characters are based on Romantic poets Byron, Keats, Shelley and his wife Mary, I had no idea what to expect. The mention of freedom fighters and the phrase “lurid but literary,” were intriguing tidbits from the Kirkus review, but when I opened the book, I was a blank slate.

The first thing that struck me was how funny the novel is. The story is a serious one, but the way that the narrator phrases things left me rotfl. Quickly absorbed in the compelling story-line, I didn’t want to put it down while I was reading and found myself dwelling on it at odd moments after I’d finished — my favorite kind of book.

The vocabulary is enjoyably advanced, with no glaringly absent adverbs or “dumbing down” for teen readers, and I was pleased in four cases to expand my own command of the language. (It must be confessed that I’m still wondering what a “stinky pinky” is, but am pretty sure that I don’t really want to know.)

So Shelly is not for the callow, with topics such as incest (involuntary and otherwise), teen pregnancy, abortion, sexual abuse and graphic violence (not necessarily in that order). Although frequently cringe-worthy, none of it is gratuitous in nature. Some reviewers have recommended the book for ages fourteen and up, but Ty himself has said that sixteen and older is the intended readership, and I wouldn’t disagree.

Ty has mentioned a few times on his blog and in interviews that future titles might be set in the same Lake Erie locale, with a focus on minor characters from So Shelly. If so, the one I hope to see more of is Tammy Jo Hogg, the overweight but pretty girl with the good PR skills who was used and abused by Gordon. (Well, really, who wasn’t?) I want her to grow up, become successful and then leave Gordon with the broken heart.

My only concern with the novel is what seemed to be a somewhat casual view of suicide. At the time of our interview, Ty was confident that modern teens are sophisticated enough to deal with the content of the book, and that to think otherwise is an insult to the reader. I hope he’s right. Other than that, great book.

Layinda’s Blog Rating: ¶¶¶¶(But only because I’m saving the 5 for Jim and Jack. 😉 )

Note: Although I am acquainted with Mr. Roth, this is an unsolicited review, and I paid for my own copy of So Shelly. Actually, two copies. Unwilling to sully my signed-by-the-author first edition, I also purchased the Kindle version.

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