Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Book review - Pretty in Punxsutawney

Title: Pretty in Punxsutawney
Author: Laurie Boyle Crompton
Genre: romance
Similar books: 29 Dates by Melissa de la Cruz
                      Not Now, Not Ever by Lily Anderson
Rating:
nice enough

Summary (provided by publisher): A Groundhog Day meets Pretty in Pink mashup that tells the tale of a shy, introverted high school girl who must relive the first day of school over and over again until her first kiss can break the curse … she hopes.
Andie is the type of girl who always comes up with the perfect thing to say … after it’s too late to say it. She’s addicted to romance movies—okay, all movies—but has yet to experience her first kiss. After a move to Punxsutawney, PA, for her senior year, she gets caught in an endless loop of her first day at her new school, reliving those 24 hours again and again.
Convinced the curse will be broken when she meets her true love, Andie embarks on a mission: infiltrating the various cliques—from the jocks to the nerds to the misfits—to find the one boy who can break the spell. What she discovers along the way is that people who seem completely different can often share the very same hopes, dreams, and hang-ups. And that even a day that has been lived over and over can be filled with unexpected connections and plenty of happy endings.


My opinion: I wasn't sure the plot of this book would really land for me, given that I haven't seen either of the influencing movies. As it turns out, they are so culturally ubiquitous that I could guess much of the plot regardless. There were details referenced with which I was unfamiliar, but major plot points were fine. In some ways, the plot is the epitome of a shallow teen rom-com. While the parallels are intentional, it never transcends the genre standards. Andi meets a cute guy who's a bad match for her, explores friend groups, realizes there is more to others than the surface, etc. And while it's admirable to have your protagonist realize that her snap judgements are ignorant, it's a very shallow lesson. The romance is flat and expected, most of the characters without much nuance. It's entertaining, to be certain, but doesn't have much depth backing it. A light read.
Advanced Reader copy provided by NetGalley

Monday, February 4, 2019

The Great Owl Repaint Project part 6

This owl was almost separate from my big project. Mostly the original design was so quirky. The shape is truly odd and there are these funny star shapes around the eyes. It makes the original glaze that much more disappointing. They really could have gone wild on the design and I considered it myself. 
 
It looks so much like a cat

In the end, though, he really wanted to be part of the owl family. The new design is inspired by the Malay Eagle Owl. He's been dubbed Crazy Uncle Seawolf.



Check out the rest of the family:  Evangeline, Leif, Clara, Beatrice, and Rowan .

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Non-fiction book review - Carter Reads the Newspaper

Carter Reads the Newspaper by Deborah Hopkinson

Early in this book, Hopkinson refers to Carter Woodson as "a hero we often forget." I'd argue he's an hero we've never heard of. His was a name entirely unfamiliar to me and that is an absolute shame. What a compelling life story. This is a story of doing what is necessary to achieve your dreams, no matter how hard you have to work. Through his life, Carter  worked around, through, or with his limitations. He saw challenges as sources of strength. In this book we not only get Carter Woodson as an example of persistence, we get the brief story of Oliver Jones, a man who opened his home and kept himself and his peers informed by whatever means possible. Several times in this narrative, Hopkinson gently points out to the reader how much one can achieve simply by being aware of the larger world. This easily understood book will resonate with young children and middle graders alike.

More information: Carter Reads the Newspaper releases February 1.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Book review - Between Before and After

Title: Between Before and After
Author: Maureen Doyle McQuerry
Genre: historical fiction
Similar books: Lord of the Mountain by Ronald Kidd
                      The Hired Girl by Laura Amy Schlitz
Rating:
a bit of a mixed bag

Summary (provided by publisher): “The carnage began with the roses. She hacked at their ruffled blooms until they dropped into monstrous drifts of red on the parched yellow lawn … Only two things kept my mother grounded to us: my uncle Stephen and stories.”
Fourteen-year-old Molly worries about school, friends, and her parents’ failed marriage, but mostly about her mother’s growing depression. Molly knows her mother is nursing a carefully-kept secret. A writer with an obsession for other people’s life stories, Elaine Donnelly is the poster child of repressed emotions.
Molly spends her California summer alternately watching out for her little brother Angus and tip-toeing around her mother’s raw feelings. Molly needs her mother more than ever, but Elaine shuts herself off from real human connections and buries herself in the lives and deaths of the strangers she writes about. When Uncle Stephen is pressed into the limelight because of his miracle cure of a young man, Elaine can no longer hide behind other people’s stories. And as Molly digs into her mother’s past, she finds a secret hidden in her mother’s dresser that may be the key to unlocking a family mystery dating to 1918 New York—a secret that could destroy or save their future.
Told in dual narratives between 1918 New York City and 1955 San Jose, California, Between Before and After, by award-winning author Maureen McQuerry, explores the nature of family secrets, resiliency, and redemption. This is an historical coming-of-age Young Adult story about the complex bonds between mothers and daughters.


My opinion: Initially, I was very into this book. I loved the back and forth perspectives, the way information revealed in Elaine's story  influenced the events in Molly's story. I was certainly intrigued by the promise of a big secret in New York that would provide final context for the California story. And that's why the moment when Molly learns the truth about the boarding school was a bit of a disappointment. It took the impact out of the big reveal. 
The miracle aspect was unique. I liked that the focus was less on whether miracles are real and more on how destructive the claim of a miracle can actually be. Here are these lives that are totally disrupted and family secrets that are nearly revealed to the world based on intense public scrutiny. And the pressure of being a "miracle child" leads the boy to take an insane risk. A mixed bag of expected plot points and interesting explorations.

More information: Between Before and After releases February 5.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley.

Monday, January 28, 2019

Ballister is much cooler than Jack Sparrow

I was very excited this week to hear that there is a Nimona movie slated for 2020. 

It was the motivation I needed to finish a projects I've had in the works for a while now: an action figure of Ballister Blackheart. I used an figure of Captain Jack Sparrow as the base.
 I had to cut off his coat and most of his hair. I also whittled down his arm to give it more of a robotic appearance. Paint and some red fabric for a cape finished it off.


Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Non fiction book review - Creative Coding in Python

Creative Coding in Python by Sheena Vaidyanathan

I've read a handful of kid's Python books since my own introduction to the coding language. Of them all, this is probably my favorite. Each concept is explained in a straight-forward but not overly simplified way and then reinforced with exercises. And not only are there step by step projects, there are also challenges. These are ideas that you could solve using the introduced concepts, but the method is left up to the reader. Kids are encouraged to experiment, to make mistakes, and try again. It's easy to take these introduced ideas and imagine how one might build upon them to create more complex projects. A great choice for your middle grader who is showing and interest in programming.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Book review - Frequency

Title: Frequency
Author: Christopher Krovatinn
Genre: fairy tale retelling
Similar books: All Our Pretty Songs by Sarah McCarry
                      Sweetly by Jackson Pearce
Rating:
a darker version of a familiar story

Summary (provided by publisher):  Nine years ago, Fiona was just a kid. But everything changed the night the Pit Viper came to town. Sure, he rid the quiet, idyllic suburb of Hamm of its darkest problems. But Fiona witnessed something much, much worse from Hamm's adults when they drove him away.
And now, the Pit Viper is back.
Fiona's not just a kid anymore. She can handle the darkness she sees in the Pit Viper, a DJ whose wicked tattoos, quiet anger, and hypnotic music seem to speak to every teen in town…except her. She can handle watching as each of her friends seems to be overcome, nearly possessed by the music. She can even handle her unnerving suspicion that the DJ is hell-bent on revenge.
But she's not sure she can handle falling in love with him.


My opinion: When authors retell the story of the Pied Piper, they usually focus one one of two elements: the Piper's motivation or the mechanics by which he steals the children. Krovatin examines both of these ideas. We're presented with a Piper who's motivated by revenge and an increase in power. He also must follow the whims of a master. Krovatin also gives a lot of real estate to the motivations of the villagers. We see the fear that drove the original deal, their desperation and the need to protect their children from "bad elements". It's a desperation that leads them to offer that which they cannot give, so they betray their deal, sealing their eventual fate. As the plot becomes more complex, though, these complexities become more shadowy. We're introduced to a sort of magic, some elemental universal force that has twisted the piper into a dark force. But that exploration is pretty surface. This mythology takes us out of the real world into dark forces that are harder to relate to as a modern reader.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley.