Fun Friday with a blast into the past, as a middle-school girl is launched back into the pages of Little Women - no cellphone, no jeans, no kidding!
It seems like the world of Little Women is so much simpler than modern life, but Emily finds that even in 1861, human nature keeps things interesting. And the personalities of those March girls!
So, can Emily change the parts she dislikes about her favorite book? Will her actions as "the middle March" fix it or spoil it?
You're sure to find the original Little Women at your local library or indie bookseller, but if you'd like to read Emily's favorite online -free!- in a variety of formats, visit Project Gutenburg here.
**kmm
Book info: Little Women and Me / Lauren Baratz-Logsted. Bloomsbury, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site]
Recommendation: Emily jumps into the assignment to change something in a classic novel – she can’t change her real-life family, can she? Being a middle sister is just so annoying…
Back in the pages of her favorite book, Little Women, Emily tries to decide on just one thing to change: Prevent sweet Beth from dying? Keep Papa out of the Civil War fighting? Have boy-next-door Laurence marry Jo instead of silly Amy?
Suddenly she is whirled into the book itself – as middle March sister Emily!! What a different world - life for 13 year-old girls in 1861 means corsets and needlework, not jeans and text messages.
As she lives through the events chronicled in the novel’s pages, Emily tries to fit into the story without giving herself away as a time-traveler. School isn’t mandatory for girls? Hooray! Reading aloud to grumpy, demanding Aunt March? Yikes! Long evenings at home with sewing instead of the internet? Urrr…
Key events in the story are just around the corner – can Emily change things enough to keep Beth alive or make Laurie realize that he loves his best friend Jo instead of her sister Amy? And what will happen to Emily when the last page of the book is turned?
Whether reading this before or after Little Women itself, readers will see 19th century life and Alcott’s classic tale in a deeper way through Emily’s humorous adventures and misadventures. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Friday, November 4, 2011
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Icefall (fiction)
As the glacier above the wooden fortress creaks and groans...
As the fjord begins to ice over, with no word from home...
As the royal children and their guardians realize that treachery is locked into their hiding place with them...
Our world Wednesday book takes us to the far North and far, far back in time, when the people who would become the Vikings battle winter's fiercest blasts sent by the gods, as well as attacks from mere mortals.
Singing odes of gods and kings, reshaping history to suit the ears of the victors, skalds tell countless stories from memory. Is it Solveig's destiny to walk the storytellers' path, instead of being a dutiful daughter to the king?
Another wonderful, unusual tale from Matthew J. Kirby, who brought us The Clockwork Three.
**kmm
Book info: Icefall / Matthew J. Kirby. Scholastic, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site]
Recommendation: Solveig wonders if winter will trap them in the mountain fort, waiting for word that her father has defeated an attacking king, listening to the glacier creak, worrying, worrying.
The king had sent her, her young brother the crown prince, and her older sister Asa away from the battle for their safety. When his best warriors arrive to protect them in the hidden fortress, Solveig knows that the berserkers would rather be fighting alongside her father instead of guarding them as the fjord ices over.
As the cold nights grow longer, the king’s storyteller gives them tales of the gods and of great battles. The skald finds that Solveig has an ear for story and a memory for detail – would she like to learn the storytelling arts? Finally, something worthwhile for this middle child – not pretty enough to marry off to forge an alliance, not a boy to be a warrior-prince.
A sudden outbreak of illness in the fort – a curse? Poison? The plague? Secrets told, promises broken, tempers flaring among the restless warriors. Will their father triumph over the invader who tried to steal Asa as his bride instead of negotiating? Will young prince Harald survive the winter? Will any of them?
A story from the days when storytellers kept history and hope alive through their ballads and odes, Icefall brings readers to the glacier’s edge, watching with Solveig over the stormy sea, hoping that the sails in the distance bring news of victory instead of danger. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
As the fjord begins to ice over, with no word from home...
As the royal children and their guardians realize that treachery is locked into their hiding place with them...
Our world Wednesday book takes us to the far North and far, far back in time, when the people who would become the Vikings battle winter's fiercest blasts sent by the gods, as well as attacks from mere mortals.
Singing odes of gods and kings, reshaping history to suit the ears of the victors, skalds tell countless stories from memory. Is it Solveig's destiny to walk the storytellers' path, instead of being a dutiful daughter to the king?
Another wonderful, unusual tale from Matthew J. Kirby, who brought us The Clockwork Three.
**kmm
Book info: Icefall / Matthew J. Kirby. Scholastic, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site]
Recommendation: Solveig wonders if winter will trap them in the mountain fort, waiting for word that her father has defeated an attacking king, listening to the glacier creak, worrying, worrying.
The king had sent her, her young brother the crown prince, and her older sister Asa away from the battle for their safety. When his best warriors arrive to protect them in the hidden fortress, Solveig knows that the berserkers would rather be fighting alongside her father instead of guarding them as the fjord ices over.
As the cold nights grow longer, the king’s storyteller gives them tales of the gods and of great battles. The skald finds that Solveig has an ear for story and a memory for detail – would she like to learn the storytelling arts? Finally, something worthwhile for this middle child – not pretty enough to marry off to forge an alliance, not a boy to be a warrior-prince.
A sudden outbreak of illness in the fort – a curse? Poison? The plague? Secrets told, promises broken, tempers flaring among the restless warriors. Will their father triumph over the invader who tried to steal Asa as his bride instead of negotiating? Will young prince Harald survive the winter? Will any of them?
A story from the days when storytellers kept history and hope alive through their ballads and odes, Icefall brings readers to the glacier’s edge, watching with Solveig over the stormy sea, hoping that the sails in the distance bring news of victory instead of danger. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
After the Kiss, by Terra Elan McVoy (fiction) - one kiss, one photo, several broken hearts
Modern technology - friend or foe?
Starting over again - easy or hard?
Broken trust - mend or abandon?
A novel in verse with two voices, two viewpoints, and countless ripples of intersecting lives and repercussions....
**kmm
Book info: After the Kiss / Terra Elan McVoy. Simon Pulse, 2010. [author's site] [publisher site]
Recommendation: Starting her senior year in a new city, Camille kisses a cute boy just once, starting a painful chain of events as a cellphone photo of “The Kiss” gets back to his girlfriend, Becca.
Camille journals her longing to be with her boyfriend back in Chicago (her dad’s job makes them move so often) or with her best friend in San Francisco instead of being on the fringes of this group of lifelong friends who hang out at the lake house on weekends, savoring one last school year together. At least the puppies at the animal shelter in Atlanta accept her and love her.
Becca’s poems reflect her world – her adoration of haiku-writing baseball catcher Alec, her shock at causing a fender-bender accident and having to get a coffeehouse job to pay the repair bills, and her helplessness after seeing the photo of “The Kiss.”
Camille does her writing after school in Becca’s coffeehouse, but neither one knows the identity of the other until one heartstopping afternoon. Can Becca’s future include Alec? Is happiness waiting for Camille in Chicago?
Alternating chapters of poetry and journal entries look for answers on how life can go on when plans don’t go according to plan. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Starting over again - easy or hard?
Broken trust - mend or abandon?
A novel in verse with two voices, two viewpoints, and countless ripples of intersecting lives and repercussions....
**kmm
Book info: After the Kiss / Terra Elan McVoy. Simon Pulse, 2010. [author's site] [publisher site]
Recommendation: Starting her senior year in a new city, Camille kisses a cute boy just once, starting a painful chain of events as a cellphone photo of “The Kiss” gets back to his girlfriend, Becca.
Camille journals her longing to be with her boyfriend back in Chicago (her dad’s job makes them move so often) or with her best friend in San Francisco instead of being on the fringes of this group of lifelong friends who hang out at the lake house on weekends, savoring one last school year together. At least the puppies at the animal shelter in Atlanta accept her and love her.
Becca’s poems reflect her world – her adoration of haiku-writing baseball catcher Alec, her shock at causing a fender-bender accident and having to get a coffeehouse job to pay the repair bills, and her helplessness after seeing the photo of “The Kiss.”
Camille does her writing after school in Becca’s coffeehouse, but neither one knows the identity of the other until one heartstopping afternoon. Can Becca’s future include Alec? Is happiness waiting for Camille in Chicago?
Alternating chapters of poetry and journal entries look for answers on how life can go on when plans don’t go according to plan. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Morpheus Road: The Light (fiction)
Happy Hallowe'en on this Mysterious Monday...
A monstrous creation becomes real.
The created stalks its creator with malign intent.
[cue eerie, spooky music and more than a few nightmares]
The graphic novel character that Marshall invented visits him in his dreams, then in the dark corners of night, and then...his best friend Cooper disappears and is presumed dead. Marsh knows that Coop's not dead - ghosts just don't lie about such things.
This is the first book in D.J. MacHale's frightening Morpheus Road trilogy. Marshall's adventures (and nightmares) continue in The Black (book 2) and The Blood (book 3) - find all three at your neighborhood library or independent bookstore. And be sure to have a flashlight near your bed at night - who knows when Gravedigger might visit your dreams?
**kmm
Book info: Morpheus Road: The Light / D.J. MacHale. Aladdin, 2010. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: Graphic novel fan Marsh creates “Gravedigger”– long black coat, pickaxe over his shoulder, grinning white skull. Drawing helps him forget just a little how his photographer mother died 2 years ago, trapped in the ancient temple she’d just captured on film. Her assistant brought back her photos and this golden glass ball covered in weird designs, but couldn’t bring her back.
Sketches packed away as school ends, Marsh looks forward to summer with his wild friend Cooper. But Coop has done one crazy thing too many, and his parents take him up to their old lakehouse – no cell phone, no computer, lots of time to get his act together.
When Marsh’s dad is out of town, eerie things start happening – a breeze that traces patterns in the powder on the counter when no windows are open, a gravelly voice on the phone that says “You must journey along the Morpheus Road,” Gravedigger luring him to the deserted gym with blood-covered walls…
Gravedigger is just a character from his own imagination, right? But that bony hand on Marsh’s shoulder felt too real, and Gravedigger keeps showing up, talking about the Morpheus Road.
Coop disappears from the lakehouse, so Marsh and Coop’s sister head up there to help search. When Sydney starts seeing Gravedigger too, then maybe Marsh isn’t just imagining this, and they all might wind up dead! 352 pages for those who love to be frightened... (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
A monstrous creation becomes real.
The created stalks its creator with malign intent.
[cue eerie, spooky music and more than a few nightmares]
The graphic novel character that Marshall invented visits him in his dreams, then in the dark corners of night, and then...his best friend Cooper disappears and is presumed dead. Marsh knows that Coop's not dead - ghosts just don't lie about such things.
This is the first book in D.J. MacHale's frightening Morpheus Road trilogy. Marshall's adventures (and nightmares) continue in The Black (book 2) and The Blood (book 3) - find all three at your neighborhood library or independent bookstore. And be sure to have a flashlight near your bed at night - who knows when Gravedigger might visit your dreams?
**kmm
Book info: Morpheus Road: The Light / D.J. MacHale. Aladdin, 2010. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: Graphic novel fan Marsh creates “Gravedigger”– long black coat, pickaxe over his shoulder, grinning white skull. Drawing helps him forget just a little how his photographer mother died 2 years ago, trapped in the ancient temple she’d just captured on film. Her assistant brought back her photos and this golden glass ball covered in weird designs, but couldn’t bring her back.
Sketches packed away as school ends, Marsh looks forward to summer with his wild friend Cooper. But Coop has done one crazy thing too many, and his parents take him up to their old lakehouse – no cell phone, no computer, lots of time to get his act together.
When Marsh’s dad is out of town, eerie things start happening – a breeze that traces patterns in the powder on the counter when no windows are open, a gravelly voice on the phone that says “You must journey along the Morpheus Road,” Gravedigger luring him to the deserted gym with blood-covered walls…
Gravedigger is just a character from his own imagination, right? But that bony hand on Marsh’s shoulder felt too real, and Gravedigger keeps showing up, talking about the Morpheus Road.
Coop disappears from the lakehouse, so Marsh and Coop’s sister head up there to help search. When Sydney starts seeing Gravedigger too, then maybe Marsh isn’t just imagining this, and they all might wind up dead! 352 pages for those who love to be frightened... (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
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Friday, October 28, 2011
Time-Traveling Fashionista, by Bianca Turetsky (fiction) - vintage dress in a Titanic time-adventure
Vintage clothes and old letters are tangible links to the past. What if the right vintage dress was a direct link to its original owner's past, like a wearable time-travel ticket?
Louise really appreciates the fine craftsmanship of vintage clothing, frequently wearing her carefully selected ensembles to junior high school (even if her mother disdainfully calls them "used clothes").
Who could imagine that a hand-delivered invitation to a dusty shop would take Louise so far away from her suburban Connecticut home?
First in a series - can't wait for the next!
**kmm
Book info: The Time-Traveling Fashionista / Bianca Turetsky. Little Brown Teens, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: Dreaming about the perfect dress for the seventh-grade dance is much more fun than studying the Titanic in history or doing math problems. Of course, it should be a vintage dress - Louise just adores vintage designer clothes.
When an invitation to the exclusive "Traveling Fashionista Vintage Sale" is hand-delivered, Louise and best friend Brooke go downtown to check it out. The shop may have eccentric owners and terrible crab dip, but its dresses are divine!
When Louise tries on a sparkling, silky pink gown, she swoons and blacks out, waking up... on board an ocean liner?
Everyone calls her "Miss Baxter" - from Mr. Baxter (her uncle and manager, says her maid Anna) to the very elegant passengers aboard. When others look at Louise, they see the beautiful young actress returning from a successful tour in Europe; when she looks at herself in the mirror, Louise sees her 12-year-old self, complete with braces and frizzy hair.
Stumbling through the plush carpeted corridors on Miss Baxter's high heels to the sumptuous dinners at the captain's table, Louise makes a few mistakes that her uncle explains away as stress. Once Louise discovers exactly which ship she's on, her stress level truly skyrockets!
Can she persuade the captain of the Titanic to alter his course? Will any of her new friends survive? Will Louise ever see her parents and modern times again?
First book in a fun series that will have readers prowling vintage clothing shops, looking for the perfect ensemble to send their imaginations back in time. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Louise really appreciates the fine craftsmanship of vintage clothing, frequently wearing her carefully selected ensembles to junior high school (even if her mother disdainfully calls them "used clothes").
Who could imagine that a hand-delivered invitation to a dusty shop would take Louise so far away from her suburban Connecticut home?
First in a series - can't wait for the next!
**kmm
Book info: The Time-Traveling Fashionista / Bianca Turetsky. Little Brown Teens, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: Dreaming about the perfect dress for the seventh-grade dance is much more fun than studying the Titanic in history or doing math problems. Of course, it should be a vintage dress - Louise just adores vintage designer clothes.
When an invitation to the exclusive "Traveling Fashionista Vintage Sale" is hand-delivered, Louise and best friend Brooke go downtown to check it out. The shop may have eccentric owners and terrible crab dip, but its dresses are divine!
When Louise tries on a sparkling, silky pink gown, she swoons and blacks out, waking up... on board an ocean liner?
Everyone calls her "Miss Baxter" - from Mr. Baxter (her uncle and manager, says her maid Anna) to the very elegant passengers aboard. When others look at Louise, they see the beautiful young actress returning from a successful tour in Europe; when she looks at herself in the mirror, Louise sees her 12-year-old self, complete with braces and frizzy hair.
Stumbling through the plush carpeted corridors on Miss Baxter's high heels to the sumptuous dinners at the captain's table, Louise makes a few mistakes that her uncle explains away as stress. Once Louise discovers exactly which ship she's on, her stress level truly skyrockets!
Can she persuade the captain of the Titanic to alter his course? Will any of her new friends survive? Will Louise ever see her parents and modern times again?
First book in a fun series that will have readers prowling vintage clothing shops, looking for the perfect ensemble to send their imaginations back in time. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Karma, by Cathy Ostlere (fiction) - lost in her parents' India during civil war
World Wednesday takes us from the prairies of Canada to the crowded streets of India as Maya travels to her parents' homeland on a grief-stricken mission.
Instead of learning more about her Sikh and Hindu heritage or meeting family for the first time, she's flung into the chaos, violence, and massacre that followed the assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984.
Look for this stunning verse novel at your local library or independent bookstore - you need to hear Maya's story for yourself.
**kmm
Book info: Karma / Cathy Ostlere. Razorbill, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: At 15, Maya is taking her mother’s ashes home to India, back to the grandparents she’s never met, traveling with her father in 1984, far from Canada where she was born.
Unheard-of for a Sikh and a Hindu to marry in India of the 1960s! Disowned by her family, his family warning of spiritual disaster, Maya’s parents emigrate to Manitoba, where Bapu hopes to be successful and Mata prays for children and peace.
The aloneness that the prairie winds swirled around her mother finds Maya in the crowded streets of poverty-stricken New Delhi, as she tries to make sense of everything in her journal, her diary in verse.
Suddenly, India’s Prime Minister is assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards, and Hindus begin killing Sikhs in revenge. Bapu disguises himself and leaves Maya at their hotel while he tries to find a safe way for them to get to his hometown.
When rioters set fire to the hotel, Maya flees blindly into a city filled with mayhem, heading to the train station to go – anywhere. An accident, an attack, a fright, amnesia, a lost girl… Others continue telling Maya’s story when her own voice is no longer sufficient, as she journeys and drifts in confusion.
Can she find her voice again? Can she find her father? Did he really plan for her to marry someone here in India? How can she keep going, knowing that she left Mata’s ashes behind? This powerful novel in verse takes mature readers to a far land in a time not so distant, when civil war almost fractured India and its horrors threatened a young girl’s hold on reality. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Instead of learning more about her Sikh and Hindu heritage or meeting family for the first time, she's flung into the chaos, violence, and massacre that followed the assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984.
Look for this stunning verse novel at your local library or independent bookstore - you need to hear Maya's story for yourself.
**kmm
Book info: Karma / Cathy Ostlere. Razorbill, 2011. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
Recommendation: At 15, Maya is taking her mother’s ashes home to India, back to the grandparents she’s never met, traveling with her father in 1984, far from Canada where she was born.
Unheard-of for a Sikh and a Hindu to marry in India of the 1960s! Disowned by her family, his family warning of spiritual disaster, Maya’s parents emigrate to Manitoba, where Bapu hopes to be successful and Mata prays for children and peace.
The aloneness that the prairie winds swirled around her mother finds Maya in the crowded streets of poverty-stricken New Delhi, as she tries to make sense of everything in her journal, her diary in verse.
Suddenly, India’s Prime Minister is assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards, and Hindus begin killing Sikhs in revenge. Bapu disguises himself and leaves Maya at their hotel while he tries to find a safe way for them to get to his hometown.
When rioters set fire to the hotel, Maya flees blindly into a city filled with mayhem, heading to the train station to go – anywhere. An accident, an attack, a fright, amnesia, a lost girl… Others continue telling Maya’s story when her own voice is no longer sufficient, as she journeys and drifts in confusion.
Can she find her voice again? Can she find her father? Did he really plan for her to marry someone here in India? How can she keep going, knowing that she left Mata’s ashes behind? This powerful novel in verse takes mature readers to a far land in a time not so distant, when civil war almost fractured India and its horrors threatened a young girl’s hold on reality. (One of 5,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy courtesy of the publisher.
Monday, October 24, 2011
A little scary or a lot scary (fiction)
Seems like Halloween is more than just a one-day event now, as folks often celebrate the whole month of October!
Get yourself in the spooky mood with these great books which range from deliciously shivery to keep-the-lights-on scary (links to my full recommendations):
Baseball, high school romance, and a zombie invasion! I Love Him to Pieces is No.1 in the graphic novel series "My Boyfriend is a Monster."
Pulled into Ghostopolis before he's dead, Garth must find his way back to the living world.
A seance, a missing brother, a mystery in The Haunting of Charles Dickens.
What does The Mermaid's Mirror show? Will Lena sleepwalk into the California surf and never return?
Is every vision thrust upon The Vespertine at sunset fated to become reality?
Swordfights, heroes, and soulless monsters - in modern-day Paris? Die For Me...
Lenah gladly traded her Infinite Days as a cruel vampire to regain her humanity, but her vampire companions want her back.
She carves charms against "the evil eye" for townsfolk, but something truly evil is swirling its way up the river, drawing Plain Kate along for the deadly voyage.
Hansel and Gretel's tale gets a frightening new twist in Sweetly.
An old evil with a young face, The House of Dead Maids tells a chilling backstory for Wuthering Heights.
Ready for Halloween!
**kmm
[image from http://www.fundraw.com/clipart/clip-art/3163/Man-Fighting-Skeleton/]
Get yourself in the spooky mood with these great books which range from deliciously shivery to keep-the-lights-on scary (links to my full recommendations):
Baseball, high school romance, and a zombie invasion! I Love Him to Pieces is No.1 in the graphic novel series "My Boyfriend is a Monster."
Pulled into Ghostopolis before he's dead, Garth must find his way back to the living world.
A seance, a missing brother, a mystery in The Haunting of Charles Dickens.
What does The Mermaid's Mirror show? Will Lena sleepwalk into the California surf and never return?
Is every vision thrust upon The Vespertine at sunset fated to become reality?
Swordfights, heroes, and soulless monsters - in modern-day Paris? Die For Me...
Lenah gladly traded her Infinite Days as a cruel vampire to regain her humanity, but her vampire companions want her back.
She carves charms against "the evil eye" for townsfolk, but something truly evil is swirling its way up the river, drawing Plain Kate along for the deadly voyage.
Hansel and Gretel's tale gets a frightening new twist in Sweetly.
An old evil with a young face, The House of Dead Maids tells a chilling backstory for Wuthering Heights.
Ready for Halloween!
**kmm
[image from http://www.fundraw.com/clipart/clip-art/3163/Man-Fighting-Skeleton/]
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