Thursday, August 18, 2022

Pick 6: survival

As a child I went through a period where I was obsessed with survival stories. My interest was piqued with My Side of the Mountain and absolutely cemented by Hatchet. For a solid year and a half I read every survival story I could get my hands on, mowing through Gary Paulsen, the I Survived series, and Will Hobbs. It was such a large part of my reading history that I still have affection for those books now and read new survival stories often. So here are six new survival stories published in the past six months.

6 new survival stories:

  1. Green Arrow: Stranded by Brendan Deneen
  2. Mountain Runaways by Pam Withers
  3. Across the Desert by Dusti Bowling
  4. Out of Range by Heidi Lang
  5. The Hike to Home by Jess Rankin
  6. Fire on Headless Mountain by Iaian Lawrence

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Non-fiction book review - Africa is Not a Country

 

Africa is Not a Country by Margy Burns Knight and Mark Melnicove

This is a topic that we probably need to address for every continent but is especially true for Africa. We have a special cultural blindness for Africa in the West and tend to paint all people in the continent with a single brush. Knight and Melnicove set out to correct this misconception in a simple but clear way. We are introduced to children in a variety of African nations going about their day - doing chores, going to school, interacting with friends and family. We see the parallels in their lives, of course, but also the marked differences in their dress, religion, level of technology, privilege. This is easy enough for even young readers to understand and would make an excellent addition to most any social studies collection. 

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Book review - Big Rig

 

Title: Big Rig

Author: Louise Hawes

Genre: realistic fiction

Similar books: The Stars of Whistling Ridge by Cindy Baldwin

                     The Hike to Home by Jess RInker

Rating:

a unique premise

Summary (provided by publisher):Life on the road with Daddy is as good as gets for Hazmat. Together, they've been taking jobs and crisscrossing the US for years. Now Daddy's talking about putting down roots—somewhere Hazmat can go to a real school and make friends. Somewhere Daddy doesn't have to mail-order textbooks about "nature's promise to all women." Somewhere Mom's ashes can rest on a mantel and not on a dashboard.
While everything just keeps changing, sometimes in ways she can't control, Hazmat isn't ready to give up the freedom of long-distance hauling. Sure the road is filled with surprises, from plane crashes and robo trucks to runaway hitchhikers and abandoned babies, but that all makes for great stories! So Hazmat hatches a plan to make sure Daddy's dream never becomes a reality. Because there's only one place Hazmat belongs: in the navigator's seat, right next to Daddy, with the whole country flying by and each day different from the last.

My opinion: I can't say as I've ever encountered a book like this one before. It's more than just the trucker detail (though that's certainly a first). It's a child clinging to a way of life that the world tells them is dying, even as her father seems determined to move on in her best interest. Certainly we've seen child characters go to great lengths, hatch grand plans, to convince their parents that they are right. That small piece of this is familiar. But largely this is the grand story of people on the road: the characters that they meet and the chaos they encounter. The primary characters are strong and dynamic. The secondary characters are complex enough to be interesting. The plot takes some pretty wild turn but we can forgive that in the name of entertainment. A solid read.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Monday, August 15, 2022

Pocket gnomes

 Earlier this summer I was messing around in my yard and decided to whittle a chunk of stick that I found into a simple gnome. I was pretty happy with how he turned out and decided to make more to sell at craft fairs as pocket gnomes. Now, that first gnome (the red hat in the photo) was made of out pine. And pine is a hardwood, so it wasn't exactly easy to carve in the first place. So for the rest of the gnomes I'm working with basswood. It's much easier to cut though it lacks the rustic air of that first gnome.



Friday, August 12, 2022

Book review - Star Knights

 

Title: Star Knights

Author: Kay Davault

Genre: fantasy graphic novel 

Similar books:  Star Beasts by Stephanie Young

                      Cucumber Quest by Gigi D.G.

Rating:

good fun

Summary (provided by publisher): What makes a hero?
Brave Star Knights are heroes who go on adventures. But Tad is just a frog, and frogs can’t save the day. Can they? Determined to out-hop his mud-dweller fate and pursue his dream of being a knight, Tad finds himself on a quest with a surprise group of adventurers, including the Star King!
It’s a race against time as Tad searches for a way to take the Star King to the moon so that he can bring peace to the forest—and prove that anybody can be a hero.
Even a frog.

My opinion: I enjoyed this book far more than I expected. I'm not always a big fan of fantasy, especially when it involves witches and transformative magic, though I find it easy to digest in graphic novel form. This is built on a familiar premise - a team of highly magical heroes with unique abilities that they use to protect the innocent and make the world a better place. But Davault quickly moves us out of expected territory. We realize pretty early on that all is not as it seems with the Star Knights. We have a clear social hierarchy that is bound to be turned on it's ear by the story's resolution. While the ultimate reveals are fairly predictable, the characters are charming and the story is compelling. There is the perfect level of tension for middle grade readers. Just a touch of fear without ever becoming properly frightening and a fair dose of humor as well. This is a solid choice for most middle grade readers.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Listen with me

 

Twice as Perfect by Louisa Onome

Let's start by establishing something: I am an adult, white, woman living in the United States. So a book about the teen daughter of Nigerian immigrants living in Canada is pretty far from my lived experience. And my initial response to not understand parts of this book was "okay, so this book is not intended for me". But on further reflection I realize: that's exactly why it is intended for me. A major theme of this book is how these teens struggle to fit into different cultures, how they feel expected to speak for an entire culture. They are weighed down by expectations from their parents and the world around them and it's desperately unfair that they have to act as a bridge. So, no I'm not an immigrant. I don't know Nigerian immigrants. But reading books like this one, books that delve deep into character and ask us to connect with these worlds on a personal level, can help members of the dominant culture understand the unfair ways that they treat people and help us be more sensitive. They endeavor to answer the impertinent questions and maybe prevent us from asking them of real people. And that is valuable. That makes this book absolutely for everyone, both those who will see themselves in it and those who don't know this world at all.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Non-fiction book review - Why the People

 

Why the People by Beka Feathers

Government is complicated, probably far more complicated than most of us realize. Complicated enough that when we realize it is not as simple as we were taught in middle school most of us don't bother trying. That's certainly to our detriment and Feathers is certainly trying to correct that void in our understanding. This book systematically breaks down not only the different forms of government but different variations on those forms. We come to realize, through this book, that the "right" form of government can be dependent upon circumstance and culture, how even ideal forms can go horribly wrong if managed by the wrong people. It's dense and complicated information so it's certainly too much to absorb in a short period of time. But it would make an excellent supplement to government curriculum. 

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley