Open on my shelf today:
Any Sign of Life by Rae Carson
DuckTales Classics edited by Justin Eisinger and Alonzo Simon
Spell Sweeper by Lee Edward Fodi
Total read in March: 18
Open on my shelf today:
Any Sign of Life by Rae Carson
DuckTales Classics edited by Justin Eisinger and Alonzo Simon
Spell Sweeper by Lee Edward Fodi
Total read in March: 18
Housecat Trouble by Mason Dickerson
If you're familiar with Binky the Space Cat, think of this book as that for a slightly older audience. Buster is a regular housecat, largely interested in when he will be fed next and afraid of most everything. He is wholly unprepared to face the creatures that begin to take over his house. Those creatures may be difficult for a young reader to understand. If you pay attention to the details, though, it becomes clear that they represent darkness and depression. Badness in the life of humans. We then interpret this plot as saying that it is the job of cats to keep people engaged with the world and happy. Since it can be read on a couple of levels it will grow with a reader to a degree.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Open on my shelf today:
The Best Liars in Riverview by Lin Thompson
DuckTales Classics edited by Justin Eisinger and Alonzo Simon
Spell Sweeper by Lee Edward Fodi
Total read in March: 17
Open on my shelf today:
Daughter by Kate McLaughlin
DuckTales Classics edited by Justin Eisinger and Alonzo Simon
Spell Sweeper by Lee Edward Fodi
Total read in March: 16Title: Mirror Girls
Author: Kelly McWilliams
Genre: history/magical realism
Similar books: Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley
The Invincible Summer of Juniper Jones by Daven McQueen
Rating:
My opinion: We get plenty of books about kids on opposite sides of the racial divide during the civil rights movement but I can't say as I'd ever considered what that would look like when the kids in question are biracial twins raised apart. Charlie and Magnolia, then, represent the difference between biological ties and experience. Root magic and spiritualism also play a strong role in the girls understanding their family history, their ties to the land, and what is poisoning the place. Those parts are strong but the characters are underdeveloped. More complex characters would make for a more compelling read but there's enough to consider in this book to make it worth reading.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Open on my shelf today:
The Summer We Forgot by Caroline George
DuckTales Classics edited by Justin Eisinger and Alonzo Simon
Spell Sweeper by Lee Edward Fodi
Total read in March: 15
I first encountered the idea of a cabinet of curiosities on the podcast of the same name and I've wanted to make one ever since. If you've followed this blog at all, you probably realize that I have a tendency to make odd crafts. A dedicated cabinet would be the perfect place to keep them. Then I ordered a violin online and it came in the perfect sized box, especially when I realized that the flats canned vegetables come in fit in that box almost exactly.
I may eventually paint my cabinet, but for now I'm just happy to have a place to keep my weirdness.