Tag Archives: Amazon.com

Going Bananas

I have been waiting impatiently since last week for a box to arrive from Amazon.com. One might presume that it is a book order, and it is, but not the sort of book order one might think. It is a BANANAGRAMS order!!! 

I got the game Bananagrams for my birthday last month, and I love it. First of all, it comes in a zippered banana. Inside are letter tiles similar to Scrabble, but weightier in the hand and ivory smooth. Each person selects some tiles and forms their letters into a crossword. Everyone takes more tiles from the center, as needed, and the other players are forced to do the same until someone’s letters are gone and he/she has an uncontested network of words.

The game is fun, but I also like the companion puzzles included in the instructions. They are simple challenges, such as starting with five words and adding an A to each to make five new words, etc. They are only about a “one” in the difficulty factor, tempting crumbs which lead to the advertisement for the Bananagrams book.

Much to my joy, when I went on Amazon to look for it, I also discovered More Bananagrams, and another game by the same company called Pairs in Pears, which I ordered, too. (There’s another one called Appletters, but I’ll have to wait until Christmas for that.)

All of the items were eligible for Free Super Saver Shipping, but of course, that takes longer.

And so, I wait.

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Oldies but Goodies: Great Books for Fourth Graders

After posting about The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew yesterday, I am feeling inspired to share the rest of my recommended reading list for fourth graders.

As when I have listed “Oldies but Goodies” before, several favorites have bitten the literary dust, but still might be found at libraries or garage sales, so keep an eye out for them: Old Bones: The Wonder Horse, by Mildred Mastin Pace, the All of a Kind Family series, by Sydney Taylor, and Trumpet of the Swan, by E.B. White, of Charlotte’s Web fame. Chancy and the Grand Rascal and McBroom’s Ghost, both by Sid Fleishman, were also unavailable except from Amazon’s second party sellers, although with Mr. Fleishman’s unfortunate recent passing, these could be back in print in the near future. Two are only available from the Kindle store: Eight Cousins and A Rose in Bloom, both by Louisa May Alcott, are 99¢ each.

As I was writing this, my older son suggested that I add two recent titles that he enjoyed reading in school last year, The Tale of Despereaux (2006), and The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane (2007), both by Kate DiCamillo. Unfortunately, I discovered that they are both already out of print, with Amazon so low in stock that it won’t let me select them for the list. While “Edward Tulane” is available on Kindle, “Despereaux” is not. (I guess that the “fifteen minutes of fame” applies to successful authors, as well, these days.) 

If you click on the link, you will see the list. If you click on any of the titles, you will be taken straight to that page on Amazon.com to see the descriptions and reviews: 

Amazon.com Widgets

I do want to note that The Great Brain series (reminiscences of actual events from the author’s childhood), which I love, does have some questionable content near the end of the first book. A friend loses a leg and decides to end it all, and enlists the narrator’s help. The narrator is game, and they are attempting to do it when The Great Brain arrives and tells them why that is a terrible idea and then teaches the boy how to get along with only one leg. The book makes it very clear that focusing on improving one’s circumstances is the path to take.

Enjoy!

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