Saturday, July 30, 2022

WHEN WINTER ROBESON CAME by Brenda Woods


 When Winter Robeson Came by Brenda Woods

Historical Fiction, African Americans, Race Relations, Watts Riots 1965 Los Angeles, Novels in Verse

160 pages

Description

In August 1965, twelve-year-old Eden's older cousin from Mississippi comes to visit her in Los Angeles, and while the Watts Riots erupt around them, they continue their investigation of the disappearance of Winter's father ten years ago.

My Comments

Engaging, educational. I wish that Eden's character was older and that the cover didn't look so young because this book would be good for grades 7 and 8. Also, the cover is very young looking. Otherwise, this would be a great book for 8th grade since her older cousin is 14 and the time period fits into their curriculum.

Book Quotes

"I want to write music. I pause. I think.

You written any yet?

Some. They're not very good.

Why you gonna talk yourself down? There'll be plenty of folks to do that for you.

You haveta believe in yourself, cousin. That's my rule number one.

I ask, What's your rule number two?

Believe in yourself some more.

-page 85 (When Winter Robeson Came)

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

THE WALK ON (Series: The Triple Threat Book 1) by John Feinstein

 

The Walk On by John Feinstein
Series: The Triple Threat Book 1)

Realistic Fiction, Sports, Perseverance, Conduct of Life

359 pages

Description
Alex Myers, a student athlete who tries to take on the sports establishment in his new town, is a triple-threat athlete, great at football, basketball, and baseball. But he'll have to fight for a spot on the varsity team. Alex is a quarterback, but from the first day of football practice, it's clear that that position is very much filled by the coach's son, Matt. Alex has the better arm, but Matt has more experience and the coach's loyalty. But just as his star is rising, Alex gets blindsided, the state has started drug testing, and Alex's test come back positive for steroids. Alex know that's not right. But he doesn't know if it's a mistake or if someone wants to make sure he can't play.

My Comments
Great page turner not only for football fans. This is a sure bet for a wide range of kids. Not a difficult read even though the number of pages may seem daunting for some readers. Middle to high school.


SIGN OF THE CHRYSANTHEMUM by Katherine Paterson

 

Sign of the Chrysanthemum by Katherine Paterson

Historical Fiction, Adventure, Japan History,  Fathers and Sons, Coming of Age, Conduct of Life,

132 pages

Description
A teenager comes to know himself through contacts with social ills and political unrest while searching for his father in Japan's capital during the Heian period. (794-1185)

My Comments

Great story that moves along. I wish that there was a glossary to define many of the words. The beginning could be a bit confusing so it would be helpful to give some background and help with the topic specific vocabulary, but the story picks up quickly. There are a lot of worthwhile discussion possibilities despite the short length. Excellent.



Sunday, July 24, 2022

WHERE HAVE ALL THE BEES GONE? POLLINATORS IN CRISIS by Rebecca E. Hirsch

 

Where Have All the Bees Gone? Pollinators in Crisis
by Rebecca E. Hirsch

Nonfiction, Environment, Climate, Conservation & the Environment, Human Impact on the Environment

104 pages

Description

"Numbers of bees are falling, and that has scientists alarmed. What's causing the decline? Diseases, pesticides, climate change, and loss of habitat are all threatening bee populations. Some bee species teeter on the brink of extinction. Learn about the many bee species on Earth--their nests, their colonies, their life cycles, and their vital connection to flowering plants. Most importantly, find out how you can help these important pollinators"--Publisher.


My Comments

This is an incredibly engaging book packed with useful information for middle school through adult readers. The format allows for flipping through, but of course reading the entire book would be the best experience. So important! I wish that all students could be introduced to this book. It's a natural for a book talk and essential for nonfiction reading lists.

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

FOREST TALK: HOW TREES COMMUNICATE by Melissa Koch

Forest Talk: How Trees Communicate by Melissa Koch

Nonfiction,  Forest Ecology, Climate Change, Global Warming & Prevention

96 pages including glossary, index, websites and resources for further study and action

Description

"Trees are essential. They provide water, shelter, and food for millions of plant and animal species, including humans. They deliver proven health benefits, and they capture and store carbon, which combats climate change. Yet trees are in trouble. Forests are struggling to adapt to climate change, and deforestation is a major threat. Recently, researchers and citizen scientists made the surprising revelation that trees communicate with each other through an underground system of soil fungi and other methods. Complex social networks help trees survive and thrive by transferring resources to each other, sending defense signals, communicating with their kin, and more. Meet the tree scientists and learn more of their fascinating discoveries"--Publisher.


Booklist (February 1, 2019 (Vol. 115, No. 11))

Grades 8-11. This informative book introduces basic facts about trees and expands it with recent research, emphasizing how trees communicate with each other and why protecting them is vital to human health and welfare, as well as to the future of Earth’s ecosystem. Based on studies that began with Suzanne Simard’s work in the 1990s, the most fascinating section describes forest trees sharing water, carbon, and nutrients; communicating by chemical signals through the air and electrical signals though their roots; and connecting with certain other trees via underground fungal networks. In addition to scientific literature, Koch’s research includes interviews with three of the many scientists profiled, a geographer who uses remote sensing technology to study the regrowth of forests, a forest ecologist who discovered roots in the canopies of trees, and a forest economist who researches the effects of nature on children. Illustrated with colorful photos and diagrams, the chapters include many relevant sidebars and articles on significant individuals. An intriguing volume that describes the surprising hidden lives of trees and underscores their key role in our world.


Kirkus Reviews (December 15, 2018)

Readers discover the indispensable functions of trees and why they are so important to the health of humans and the planet. Beginning with a sketch of the nature and scale of the problems of deforestation and forest degradation, Koch (3D Printing, 2017) goes on to describe the many uses of trees, including being sources of ancient and modern medicines, providing oxygen, protecting against drought, and fighting climate change. The body of the book explores numerous topics in detail, including the health benefits for humans of walking in the woods, ecosystems in the forest canopy, and communication between trees, in a section that covers the pioneering work of Dr. Suzanne Simard. Other profiles focus on scientists and environmentalists such as Wangari Maathai. Transitions between sections are smooth; the narrative text is both clear and engaging. Color photographs give a personal feel to the individual stories, and diagrams depicting the water cycle, the “Wood Wide Web,” and more clarify natural processes. The international focus of the book demonstrates the interconnectedness of the issues affecting trees and humans alike. It ends on a hopeful note, offering readers concrete suggestions for things they can do to support trees and the environment. Packed with fascinating information, inspiring stories, and a call to action, this book delivers a powerful message in an effective package. (source notes, glossary, bibliography, resources, index) (Nonfiction. 12-15)


My Comments

Such an important book, a clear, concise, and comprehensive look at the importance of trees. This would be an incredibly valuable resource for research or independent reading for middle through high school. I highly recommend this book!





 

Monday, July 11, 2022

DAUGHTER OF VENICE by Donna Jo Napoli

 

Daughter of Venice by Donna Jo Napoli

Historical Fiction, Italian Renaissance, Romance, Sex Roles, Venice

270 pages

Description

Kirkus Reviews (October 15, 2001)

Compelling historical fiction explores the Byzantine rules governing the social order of 16th-century Venice. Fourteen-year-old Donata, a younger daughter of one of Venice's wealthiest noble families, has been raised to expect little; according to the complex conventions of her society, only the oldest daughter of the family can expect to marry and leave the household. And to leave the household is what Donata desperately wants. Intelligent and curious, she chafes at the rules that dictate that she remain uneducated and never have the freedom to explore her city. In the tradition of spunky heroines before her, she devises a scheme that will allow her to sneak out of the house disguised as a poor boy and wander Venice, where she meets, befriends, and inevitably falls in love with Noe, a Jewish copyist. At the same time, she successfully petitions her father to sit in on her brothers' tutoring sessions and thus begins a formal education. Napoli resists the easy anachronism; spunky though Donata is, she remains committed to her family and her society, seeking a solution to her unhappiness that, although somewhat unconventional, nevertheless remains essentially true to her culture and its restrictions. The first-person, present-tense narration allows the reader to encounter Venice along with Donata, from the stately palazzos to the streets populated by beggars and to the Ghetto beyond. Fascinating tidbits of information about Venice's society, politics, history, and economy find their way painlessly into the narrative. While readers will be rightly skeptical at Donata's speedy mastery of not only written Venetian but Latin as well, they will nevertheless find themselves absorbed in her story and the snapshot of her city that it provides. (Fiction. 10-15)


School Library Journal (March 1, 2002)

Gr 7-10-As the daughter of a Venetian nobleman in 1592, 14-year-old Donata lives a sheltered and prescribed life. According to custom, her oldest sister will marry, either she or her identical twin Laura will stay home as the maiden aunt to care for her brother's children, and the other will go to a convent with their younger sisters. The girls spend their days doing chores, winding yarn onto giant bobbins for the family's wool trade, studying music, or going to parties where their oldest sister is examined as a marriage prospect. All that changes the day Donata dons boy's clothing and goes exploring outside the walls of the family's palazzo. Evading a bully, she ends up in the Jewish ghetto where she befriends a young man, Noè, who makes her question the privileges of her class, and at the same time she gains permission from her father to start studying with her brothers' tutor. When her parents announce a surprise betrothal that will curtail her studies and leave Laura convent-bound, Donata takes an action that drastically affects the whole family. While a current trend in historical fiction presents a girl with modern sensibilities chafing under the strict rules of her time, nothing about Donata seems forced. Even when acting rebelliously, her actions and thoughts feel authentic to the time and world that Napoli portrays. Even Donata's love for Noè is tempered by the knowledge that she could never convert to Judaism. Napoli's many fans will not be disappointed by this engrossing and exotic novel.-Lisa Prolman, Greenfield Public Library, MA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.


My Comments

Napoli weaves the history and geopolitical elements into a compelling story with a wonderfully rebellious protagonist.

Sunday, July 10, 2022

CHILDREN OF TIME: EVOLUTION AND THE HUMAN STORY by Anne H. Weaver

 

Children of Time: Evolution and the Human Story by Anne H. Weaver

Nonfiction

170 pages

Description

School Library Journal (June 1, 2012)

Gr 4-8-Weaver bases six fictional scenarios on scientific discoveries about fossil remains of ancient human ancestors. Devoting her first chapter to a boy in New Mexico helping archaeologists uncover artifacts of the Clovis people, she explains how scientists carefully excavate and record remnants of ancient life. As Miguel thinks about the people who lived in his area thousands of years ago, his imagination carries him back much further to Africa. The following five accounts present exciting vignettes of what life might have been like at different points from 2,500,000 to 26,000 years ago. Over time the hominid groups developed language, made sophisticated tools, and participated in complex social organizations. Finding food was always paramount, but at times the hominids lost their battle with other animals. After each chapter, Weaver identifies the fossil remains on which she based her main characters and explains what scientists currently think about human development. Celeskey's illustrations, which accompany both the stories and the science explanations, rely heavily on shades of brown and orange and seem curiously static, even during dramatic scenes. Unfortunately, the first story is the weakest. Readers who persevere to the accounts of the distant past will discover more engaging narratives. Teachers in need of an alternate way to present information about human evolution might consider Weaver's approach. Catherine Thimmesh's Lucy Long Ago (Houghton Harcourt, 2009) is a more straightforward presentation.-Kathy Piehl, Minnesota State University, Mankato (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


My Comments

A little hard to get into, but starts moving once you get into the stories and explanations. You can read each chapter as its own story without reading the entire book. An excellent nonfiction choice for grades 6-8

WHATEVER AFTER: FAIREST OF ALL (Book 1) by Sarah Mlynowski

Whatever After: Fairest of All by Sarah Mlynowski

Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Humor, Elementary & Grade 6

170 pages

Description

Booklist (April 1, 2012 (Vol. 108, No. 15))

Grades 4-6. There’s “once upon a time” and “happily ever after,” but what happens when the story “gets all tangled up” in the middle? That question is at the heart of this debut title in a new fairy-tale-themed series. Ten-year-old Abby and her seven-year-old brother, Jonah, are living a normal life in a new town until they discover the mirror in the basement. When they knock on its surface three times, they’re whizzed away to fairy-tale land and find themselves at the home of Snow (yes, White). Just as Evil Evelyn, her wicked stepmother, is about to hand over the infamous poison apple, Jonah intervenes. But if Snow doesn’t eat the poison apple, then the prince can’t save her, and that means Snow’s love life is ruined, not to mention Disney’s whole movie. There’s lots of hilarious artistic license here (three of the seven dwarfs are women; one has pink hair), along with unexpected plot twists and plenty of girl power. Tween girls who may not be quite ready for Donna Jo Napoli and Gail Carson Levine’s fractured-fairy-tale novels will find this title is just right.


My Comments

Charming and funny! I just wish the author hadn't mentioned their ages as being 10 because that could turn off 6th graders because it can easily appeal to older readers just looking for a light, funny, entertaining read. Loved it!

 

Friday, July 08, 2022

A TALE DARK & GRIMM by Adam Gidwitz

 

A Tale Dark & Grimm by Adam Gidwitz

Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Horror, Humor

250 pages

Description
Follows Hansel and Gretel as they walk out of their own story and into eight more tales, encountering such wicked creatures as witches, along with kindly strangers and other helpful folk. Based in part on the Grimms' fairy tales Faithful Johannes, Hansel and Gretel, The seven ravens, Brother and sister, The robber bridegroom, and The devil and his three golden hairs.

Horn Book Magazine (January/February, 2011)

Instead of the oft-tried technique of expanding a single Grimms' fairy tale into a novel, Gidwitz takes several tales and weaves them together into one darkly humorous chapter book starring Hansel and Gretel. The brother and sister are two of the unluckiest children ever, as they fall into the clutches of a succession of terrible grown-ups, from their father who cuts off their heads to the baker woman who wants to eat them, and even the devil himself. In the bloodiest and most terrifying story, Gretel falls in love with a handsome young man who lures her to his home in the woods where he daily hacks young women to pieces for dinner. The author introduces the stories and interrupts them periodically in passages set off in bold type, speaking directly to the reader in a deliberately modern and informal tone: 'I'm sorry. I wish I could have skipped this part. I really do. Gretel cutting off her own finger?' The commentary can occasionally feel grating, but the combination of powerful stories and grade-school humor will probably introduce Grimm fairy tales to modern children just as Percy Jackson has popularized Greek mythology. SUSAN DOVE LEMPKE


My Comments

Can't put this book down, but warn kids that the stories are super scary!

SAINT IVY: KIND AT ALL COSTS by Laurie Morrison

Saint Ivy: Kind At All Costs by Laurie Morrison

Realistic Fiction, Friendship, Social-Emotional

329 pages

Description

School Library Journal (July 1, 2021)

Thirteen-year-old Ivy knows what she is good at: being kind to others. Like many middle schoolers, Ivy is grasping for an identity, and has decided that being kind is her "thing," the way sports or academics are for other kids. Ivy is not so good at being kind to herself, however, and her relationships with her family and friends suffer. Ivy is always ready to help others, but won't share or let herself be helped in turn. The lively narrative projects an authentic middle school voice and the Philadelphia setting is vivid, populated by nuanced characters and situations. Ivy's caring mother regularly asks Ivy to share her feelings, but then hides the risks of her surrogate pregnancy. One of Ivy's oldest friends, alienated by her determination not to share any vulnerabilities, decides that their friendship has run its course. Ivy is Jewish; her father has a male partner while her friend Lila has two mothers, and Ivy has Black and Latinx friends at school. The story shows the benefits of living in such a diverse community: Ivy's Nana encourages her to "embrace all the parts of herself," and Ivy embraces this in others too. When she first encounters Lila's blended family and wonders about their history, she quickly understands that she "doesn't need to understand the inner workings of Lila's family." Surrounded by all sorts of loving families and community members, it's no wonder that Ivy has found a knack for being kind. VERDICT Relatable realistic fiction for upper elementary and middle school readers navigating friendships, boundaries, and identity, with appeal for fans of similarly themed stories such as Varian Johnson's Twins, Shannon Hale's Real Friends, and Celia C. Pérez's Strange Birds.-Lisa Goldstein, Brooklyn P.L. © Copyright 2021. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


My Comments

Plot moves along well. Good depiction of middle school friendships. I would give this to 7th and 8th graders and some sixth graders depending on maturity level. Liked this one!



 

Saturday, July 02, 2022

ARU SHAH AND THE END OF TIME (Pandava, Book 1) by Rashani Chokshi

Aru Shah and the End of Time by Rashani Chokshi

Fantasy, Indian Mythology

Description
Booklist (March 1, 2018 (Vol. 114, No. 13))
Grades 4-6. Aru Shah is a lover of tales, and was hoping to survive seventh grade through spinning slightly altered tales about her life to classmates. When a group of friends confronts her at the Museum of Ancient Art and Indian Cultures about her lies, Aru Shah would do anything to get them to believe her. Even if that means taking their dare to light a lamp that—wouldn’t you know it?—might bring about the end of the world. Readers will be delighted by this adventurous dive into Hindu mythology and the chance to cheer along a heroic young protagonist. Chokshi makes it easy to connect with Aru by showing her learn from her mistakes (with the help of a sarcastic sorcerer pigeon), and readers will experience wonder as they are met with such surprises as a forest of giant fireflies. This series starter also doesn’t skimp on important lessons about friendship, family, and love. Chokshi is a talented writer who breathes fresh air into her mythological world.


My Comments

Exciting, nail-biting, high action, funny. I like how the author skillfully weaves an education of Indian mythology into the story. Well written in that way.


 

MAYA AND THE RISING DARK (Book 1) by Rena Barron

 

Maya and the Rising Dark by Rena Barron

Fantasy, Elementary

298 pages


Description Booklist (March 15, 2020 (Vol. 116, No. 14))

Grades 5-7. Twelve-year-old Maya loves her papa and the wild stories he tells about orisha gods and mystical West African creatures he “encounters” while away at work. But after a series of strange occurrences, including a brief freeze in time and space, and an attack by a pack of werehyenas from the Dark (think Stranger Things’ Upside Down), Papa reveals to Maya that there’s more to these old folktales than meets the eye. Though to Maya he is “Papa,” her father is also a celestial being called Elleguá—the Guardian of the Veil (between Maya's world and the Dark). The veil that he’s created and maintains has killed beings from the Dark, making Elleguá the target for the Lord of the Shadows' revenge. Together, Maya and her best friends Frankie and Eli journey through the Dark in their effort to save her papa—and Earth as they know it. This opening installment of what will be a much-anticipated series is fast-paced and adventurous, offering a fresh blend of culture, community, and folklore rooted broadly in the African diaspora.


My Comments

Intriguing beginning. Need to read again because I believe Maya was said to be in 4th grade although reviews say otherwise.