For a couple of years now I've participated in Inktober on Instagram. Here are a few of my favorite drawings I've done this year.
Monday, October 25, 2021
Friday, October 22, 2021
Book review - The Ghost Tracks
Title: The Ghost Tracks
Author: Celso Hurtado
Genre: mystery/horror
Similar books: Small Town Monsters by Diana Rodriguez Wallach
This is Not a Ghost Story by Andrea Portes
Rating:
Summary (provided by publisher): Erasmo Cruz is from the wrong side of the tracks. His dad was a junkie who overdosed. His mom chose to run off rather than raise him. His only passion is the supernatural, and his only family is his grandmother, whose aches and pains, he soon learns, aren’t just from old age but from cancer.
Desperate to help his grandmother pay for treatment, Erasmo sets up shop as a paranormal investigator. After witnessing a series of inexplicable events, he must uncover the truth behind his clients' seemingly impossible claims. From hauntings to exorcisms, Erasmo soon finds that San Antonio is a much scarier place than even he knew.
My opinion: I'm not certain this book works as either a mystery or a horror story. While I can see what Hurtado is going for, exploring issues of belief and skepticism. Erasmo actually finds a decent balance between these two. He can keep a belief in the supernatural without following blindly while his friend follows stories whole-heartedly. My issue with the the plot on the whole is that it relies heavily on the physically horrific. We get an awful lot of disgusting detail: violence, gore, literal rot. It is, quite simply, gross more than it is frightening.
More information: The Ghost Tracks releases November 2.
Advance Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Picture books for everyone
Beneath the Trees: The Autumn of Mister Grumpf
This book fits neatly into the transition between picture book and graphic novel. The story is easy to follow, like a picture book, but relies heavily on the images to convey information. The characters tell us as much through facial expressions and body posture as they do through dialogue. Even the grumpy badger, the titular Mister Grumpf, is a pleasure to follow. This is a book that kids reading independently can enjoy but also a decent one to read together.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
Non-fiction book review - How the Wonders of the World Were Built
How the Wonders of the World Were Built by Ludmila Henkova
The wonders of the ancient world were something I learned about very briefly in school, mentioned in passing in a social studies class. We didn't learn about any of them in any depth at all apart from the pyramids. So I learned a fair amount from this book. Apart from the technology of the time, we get the context of the culture that created each wonder, the significance to the people, and the reason each was destroyed. Henkova is careful to give archeological and textual evidence for each fact provided. This book is a prime example of different disciplines coming together to explain ideas.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Tuesday, October 19, 2021
Book review - The Mystery of the Taj Mahal Treasure
Title: The Mystery of the Taj Mahal Treasure
Author: Raj Haldar
Genre: mystery
Similar books: Samantha Spinner and the Super Secret Plans by Russell Gins
The Eagle of Rome by Dan Metcalf
Rating:
Summary (provided by publisher): Eddie and Molly-Jean are next door neighbors and best friends. One Saturday, Eddie's mom sends him up to the attic to get his great-grandpa's most prized possession (a book, of course). Eddie and Molly-Jean are suddenly transported to India where they must use their word knowledge to solve a mystery and help a new friend save his school.
My opinion: A novel is a great way to teach something. By integrating vocabulary and word origins into the plot we not only teach something in a semi-subtle way, they also suggest that learning is fun and useful. The plot is a bit contrived and doesn't always make a lot of logical sense, but logic isn't really the point. Even knowledge of words isn't the focus. The characters are rewarded for intellectual curiosity. They check their book often, looking up things they don't know.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
Monday, October 18, 2021
Cat toys
I don't have any cats. But I do have a lot of t-shirt scraps and, I like to think, a healthy dose of creativity so I got it into my head to make some cat toys to sell at craft fairs. And because they're pretty easy to make I thought I'd share the process step by step with you.
1. Cut a circle from a scrap of t-shirt 4-6 inches in diameter. Cut some long strips of shirt about an inch wide and pull them until they curl into a cord. The cord will form your tentacles so cut them into 4 inch lengths. Pin several to your circle.
2. Stitch around the circle, basting the tentacles in place. Use that basting ring to gather the circle into a jellyfish shape.
3. Stuff the jellyfish with a little fiberfill and a scoop of catnip. Add a small circle of fabric in the opening and stitch it shut.4. Thread a couple of pompoms onto a cord. Stitch one end to the jellyfish and tie the other end to a dowel.
Friday, October 15, 2021
Book review - The Undying Tower
Title: The Undying Tower
Author: Melissa Welliver
Genre: dystopia
Similar books: Escaping Eleven by Jerri Chisholm
Keystone by Katie Delhanty
Rating:
Summary (provided by publisher):Decades after the discovery that a small percentage of the population has stopped ageing, the Avalonia Zone is in crisis. From overpopulation to food shortages, the ‘Undying’ have been blamed for the state’s problems, banished to the fringes of society, and punished for every minor infraction.
When sixteen-year-old Sadie takes the fall for an attack by a rebel group, The Alchemists, she suddenly finds herself wrenched away from her quiet life and from her ailing father.
Armed with little help and even less knowledge, Sadie is thrust into a cold and cryptic ‘correctional facility’ – The Tower. Here she’ll have to rethink everything she’s been told about the Undying population in an attempt to save the life she knows, protect a group of unlikely friends, and give voice to the voiceless in a society on the brink of catastrophic upheaval.
My opinion: I approve, in general, of experimenting with dystopian fiction. Welliver has taken some familiar plot elements and combined them in an intriguing way. We don't get a lot of books that explore the potential downsides, culturally, to extended lifespans. We have the familiar: a character raised in relative privilege, adjacent to power, desperate to help her father and unwilling to recognize the negative aspects of her society. The world is, as we would expect, devastated by war and climate change. Some of the explanations for isolation and subjugation are hard to accept but this is the first in a series, so there is room for those ideas to be further developed. The characters, though, are a bit inconsistent and underdeveloped. There plot is a bit tiresome with some unnecessary complications and belaboring of motivations and certain plot points.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley