January 31, 2010

Sunday Salon: Catcher in the Rye Read-a-long

This past Thursday, J. D. Salinger, the author of The Catcher in the Rye, passed away. As I was watching people's reactions on Twitter, I realized something: I've never read Catcher in the Rye. Somehow, for some reason (actually many reasons, some of which I can actually recall but won't go into here), I managed to completely miss this book.

Which is why Amanda, Heather and Jackie at Farmlanebooks put our heads together (metaphorically, of course), and came up with an idea to have a Catcher in the Rye read-a-long. It's going to be pretty easy-going. We're planning on starting Sunday, February 14th and wrapping up around the end of the month. I'll make sure there are posts after February 14th where you can leave your spoiler comments, questions, and discussion points.

I'm not going to do anything formal with signing up and all that, but if you're interested in reading along with us -- either for the first time or the 20th -- please leave a comment and let us know!

I'm quite curious to see what all the fuss is about.

(Oh, and many thanks to Amanda and Jason for the lovely button.)

January 30, 2010

January 2010 Jacket Flap-a-thon

It's the end of January (finally). It wasn't a bad month, reading wise. It started out slow, but picked up near the end, I think. And that's a good thing. On a side note: do y'all like my commentary on the jacket flaps or not? Sometimes, I don't know what to say and so I'm wondering if I should just leave them to speak for themselves. Something to think about, anyway.

My three favorite jacket flaps from the books I picked up this month:

Odd and the Frost Giants (Harper): "In this inventive, short, yet perfectly formed novel inspired by traditional Norse mythology, Neil Gaiman takes readers on a wild and magical trip to the land of giants and gods and back. In a village in ancient Norway lives a boy named Odd, and he's had some very bad luck: His father perished in a Viking expedition; a tree fell on and shattered his leg; the endless freezing winter is making villagers dangerously grumpy. Out in the forest Odd encounters a bear, a fox, and an eagle -- three creatures with a strange story to tell. Now Odd is forced on a stranger journey than he had imagined -- a journey to save Asgard, city of the gods, from the Frost Giants who have invaded it. It's going to take a very special kind of twelve-year-old boy to outwit the Frost Giants, restore peace to the city of gods, and end the long winter. Someone cheerful and infuriating and clever... Someone just like Odd..."

The Year My Son and I Were Born (GPP Life): "With six other children at home, Kathryn Lynard Soper was prepared for the challenges another newborn would bring. But after Thomas's complicated birth, his diagnosis—Down syndrome—forced her to face her deepest fears and weaknesses, her ignorance and prejudice, and her limitations as a mother and as a human being. Her struggle, coupled with the demands of caring for a fragile baby and juggling her family's needs, sparked the worst episode of depression she'd experienced in decades. The Year My Son and I Were Born is Kathryn's brutally honest yet beautiful account of how she escaped a downward spiral of despair and emerged with newfound peace. Antidepressant therapy restored her equilibrium, and interactions with friends and family brought needed perspective. But the most profound change came through her growing relationship with Thomas. His radiant presence shone through her outer layers of self, where fear and guilt festered, and reached the center of her very being—where love, acceptance, and gratitude blossomed in abundance."

My Most Excellent Year (Dial Books):
"TCKeller: What's 'flap copy' anyway?
AugieHwong: It's what they put on a book jacket to tell you what's inside, you rock-head. We can use the one from Liza Minnelli's bio as a template.
TCKeller: Or not.
AlePerez: This is positively mortifying. They were just supposed to be classroom essays! I can't believe the entire world is about to find out how I played Anthony like a violin for five months.
TCKeller: I let you do that. Hey, why don't we open the flap with a quote about the 1918 Red Sox--
AugieHwong: No way, dude. If you're looking for a warm-up act, we open /with Bette Davis in All About Eve.
AlePerez: Hello? Jacqueline Kennedy would be a far more appealing, not to mention intelligent, choice. Besides, I outrank both of you.
TCKeller: Oh, yeah? I have a Carlton Fisk rookie card.
AugieHwong: I have Angela Lansbury's autograph.
AlePerez: I have a Secret Service agent.
TCKeller: Guys! Why don't we just forget the flap copy and start at the very beginning?
AugieHwong: A very good place to start...."

Other books read this month:
Calamity Jack
Dream Girl
The Street of a Thousand Blossoms
Saving Maddie
Wrinkle in Time
Front and Center
Mr. Darcy Broke My Heart
Unfinished Angel
Eats, Shoots & Leaves
Carter Finally Gets It

Running Total: 13
Adult fiction: 2
YA: 5
MG: 3
Non-fiction: 2
Graphic Novel: 1

January 29, 2010

Carter Finally Gets It

by Brent Crawford
ages: 13+
First sentence: "In the back room of the Pizza Barn, with only two weeks before the start of high school, my boys and I are at the Freshman Mixer."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

Carter is not exactly what you'd call a suave person. He's got ADD, and he has a stuttering problem, especially around girls he's attracted to. He rides a bike. He can't quite do a gainer off the diving board. He's on the football team, but in one of the less glamorous positions. And yet, here he is, starting high school, hoping it'll be all that he's ever wanted: (in his horny 14-year-old boy case) sex, preferably with a hot chick.

The book chronicles Carter's ups (such as they are) and downs (and, hoo-boy, are they spectacular) over the course of his freshman year as he tries (and tries again) to figure out how to go about this whole high school business. I have to say that as a mom, I cringed: if 14-year-olds are anything like Carter (and they probably are), then why am I letting my daughter out among them? But, as a reader? As a reader, I found myself warming to Carter and his doofishness. He's so adorably clueless that I think you can't help but love him (eventually) and cheer for him. It helps that Crawford is a captivating writer; he got 14-year-olds spot-on (which is part of the reason I'm anxious about my daughters....), and he treats his characters (all of them: from Carter's "boys", to his older sister and parents, to the upperclassmen that Carter interacts with) with intelligence, affection, and, most of all, humor.

Because, whatever else this book is (a coming-of-age story, a high school book, a guy book), it's funny. Carter, mostly inadvertently, is hilarious. It's a combination of things: Carter, the character; the situations he gets himself into; and the way Crawford writes about it all.

At any rate, I grew to really like Carter. I still may not let my daughter go to high school, though.

January 28, 2010

Eats, Shoots & Leaves

by Lynn Truss
ages: adult (but it's not inappropriate for anyone really interested in punctuation)
First sentence: "To be clear from the beginning: no one involved in the production of Eats, Shoots & Leaves expected the words "runaway" and "bestseller" would ever be associated with it, let alone upon the cover of an American edition."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

I am just geeky enough to truly love this book.

I loved it when it came out -- Hubby bought it for me in hardback (and its sequel) -- and, even though I haven't picked it up in years, I found that I still laugh hysterically at the examples, and I find myself still being a complete and total stickler when it comes to punctuation. (Am I the only one who edits my friends' Facebook statuses, if only in my head?)

So this is not quite a review. More of a love letter to Truss and her oh-so-funny look at punctuation. (And yes, I've gone back and checked and double-checked to make sure it's all right. And it's probably not.)

I think what I loved most was her examples. Sure, she pulled examples from literature, but she also would just throw things in as she went along. Like this (it's my favorite):
Assuming a sentence rises into the air with the initial capital letter and lands with a soft-ish bump at the full stop, the humble comma can keep the sentence aloft all right, like this, UP, for hours if necessary, UP, like this, UP, sort-of bouncing, and then falling down, and then UP it goes again, assuming you have enough additional things to say, although in the end you may run out of ideas and then you have to roll along the ground with no commas at all until some sort of surface resistance takes over and you run out of steam anyway and then eventually with the help of three dots ... you stop.
How can you not love that? Or this:
So it is true that we must keep an eye on the dash -- and also the ellipsis (...), which is turning up increasingly in emails as shorthand for "more to come, actually ... it might be related to what I've just written ... but the main thing is I haven't finished ... let's just wait and see ... I could go on like this for hours ..."

I also loved that, while it's funny and accessible, you actually learn things. Or, at the very least, you're reminded of things. Like the uses of apostrophes (or not). Or when to use the dash versus when to use parentheses. Or exclamation points! Or... (yeah, those things, too.)
Most famously of all, the apostrophe of omission creates the word "it's":
It's your turn (it is your turn)
It's got very gold (it has got very cold)
It's a braw bricht moonlicht nicht the nicht (no idea)
But, learning aside, the best part of the book is really the geeky part. Truss is persnickety about punctuation, and it makes me laugh.
Now there are no laws against iprisioning apostrophes and making them look daft. Cruelty to punctuation is quite unlegislated: you can get away with pulling the legs off semicolons; shrivelling question marks on the garden path under a powerful magnifying glass; you name it.
Sticklers, unite!

January 27, 2010

LIbrary Loot 2010-04

I'm going to top last week's pathetic loot because this week I didn't even bother going to the library because I'm sick as a dog (where on e, instead sending K with a friend. All they brought back were my holds, so that's what we have for the week.

This week's loot:

Middle Grade books:
The Lost Conspiracy, by Frances Hardinge

YA books:
In the Coils of the Snake: Book III -- The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy, by Clare B. Dunkle
Going Bovine, by Libba Bray

Adult Fiction:
Storm Glass (Glass, Book 1), by Maria V. Snyder

The roundup is either at Reading Adventures or A Striped Armchair. Obligatory FTC note: the links are provided through my Amazon Associates account. If you click through and actually purchase one of these books, I'll get a teeny, tiny payment. But, since no one ever does, and it's SO much easier using the associates account to put up these links, I'm going to keep doing it.

January 26, 2010

Mr. Darcy Broke My Heart

by Beth Pattillo
ages: adult
First sentence: "The taxi pulled up outside Christ Church, and I climbed out of the backseat, but the scorching July heat stole my breath and the threatened to press me back inside the cab."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Review copy sent to me by a publicist.

Claire is one of those long-suffering heroines that readers tend to either really identify with or supremely hate. Since her parents' deaths when she was 18, she has done everything in her power to help her younger sister, Missy. Claire sacrificed her education, getting a GED and foregoing college. She sacrificed a good job: most recently she was an office manager for a pediatricians' office, and has been recently laid of. She's been unlucky in men, settling for Neil, a sports enthusiast who, while nice enough, may not even know that Claire's off to Oxford, in her sister's place, for a week-long seminar on Pride and Prejudice.

It's only once Claire's across the pond that all she's sacrificed comes plainly into view. She meets James -- suave, polished, gorgeous, rich -- and immediately falls for him. In addition, she meets Harriet, of the Formidables (a society devoted to keeping Austen's secrets), who lets Claire on a big secret: she has the original copy of First Impressions, the novel P&P is based on. As Claire reads on -- noting the substantial changes from the final novel -- she finds similarities to her own life (funny how that happens), and ends up doing some major soul searching. It's a happily-ever-after, but not the one that you were expecting.

I should be jumping and cheering: the average Joe gets the girl! (Sorry. Spoilers there.) Claire goes with the normal, the everyday, and finds happiness. Yet... Claire is so insipid that I could hardly stand her enough to get through the novel. She eventually finds a backbone, but not before she goes through pages and pages of waffling. Sure, she's still grieving over the loss of her parents -- or rather, she's suppressed the grieving process in favor of responsibility -- but we're never really given much of a chance to connect with her on that level. But what really bugged me was the significant changes to the P&P story. Sure, it's nice to imagine that a copy of First Impressions could be out there, and sure it's plausible that the story would be radially different from the final P&P, but it just didn't work for me. At all. Period. I skipped those pages, cringing at the attempt to capture the magic that is Jane Austen.

As the characters in the novel eventually figure out: some things are better left untouched.

January 25, 2010

Something I've Been Meaning to Do Anyway

And along comes a challenge to help me with it. It's the POC Reading Challenge. It's an easy one, too: sign up for a level -- in my case, Level 3 (7-9 books) but I'm aiming for Level 4 or 5 -- and commence reading books. I'm going to keep a running tally here (starting now).

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, by Grace Lin
Peace, Locomotion, by Jacqueline Woodson
Shine, Coconut Moon, by Neesha Meminger
Sugar, by Bernice L. McFadden
Marching for Freedom, Elizabeth Partridge
Two Moon Princess, by Carmen Ferrerio-Esteban
Skunk Girl, by Sheba Karim
The Prince of Fenway Park, by Julianna Baggot
A Step from Heaven, by An Na
Mare's War, by Tanita S. Davis
Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice, by Phillip Hoose
Girl in Translation, by Jean Kwok
Marcelo in the Real World, by Francisco X. Stork
The Red Umbrella, by Christina Diaz Gonzales
One Crazy Summer, by Rita Williams-Garcia
Zora and Me, by Victoria Bond and T. R. Simon
Bamboo People, by Mitali Perkins
The Lost Hero, by Rick Riordan
Shooting Kabul, by N. H. Senzai
Out of My Mind, by Sharon Draper
Tortilla Sun, by Jennifer Cervantes

Front and Center

by Catherine Gilbert Murdock
ages: 12+
First sentence: "Here are ten words I never thought I'd be saying..."
Support your local bookstore: buy it there!

I adored both Dairy Queen and The Off Season. Really, I did. But... maybe it had been too long since I read those books. Maybe I really wasn't in the mood for D.J. (which surprised me, because she is one of my favorite characters). Maybe there was something just off about this book, because while I enjoyed it, I just didn't love it like I did the other two books.

We basically pick up where we left off in The Off Season: D.J.'s back at school after taking a month off to help her brother Win after his injury. It's not easy being back: for one thing, she can no longer hide on the sidelines. For another, basketball season is starting and there is major pressure on her to pick a college and verbally commit. Not to mention her coach breathing down her neck about showing "leadership skills". This is all overwhelming for D.J., who's used to just basically sliding by.

Perhaps it was this waffling D.J. that grated on me after a while. While I recognize that she's always been shy as a character, for some reason the arc of this book -- with D.J. finally realizing how to believe in herself -- was a bit much for one book. Granted, there was a sub-plot with a love triangle between D.J., her former boyfriend Brian, and her current boyfriend Beaner. Again, while it was enjoyable, there was too much waffling and agonizing for my taste. Then again, it may be just that it's been too long since I was in D.J.-land. I do wonder if I had read this right after the other two, then maybe I would have liked it more. Because I do think it's a fitting stopping point (not really an end...) to D.J.'s story.

January 24, 2010

Sunday Salon: Unsung YA Books

I'm a little late to this party, but since Kelly at YAnnabe made the suggestion that I throw my hat into the ring, I haven't been able to stop thinking about it. So, my two cents about the best YA books you've probably never read.

The Order of the Odd-Fish, James Kennedy: I keep plugging James's book, but you aren't reading it. Why? Seriously, people, read this book.

Nothing But Ghosts or House of Dance, Beth Kephart: if you haven't experienced the lyricism that is Kephart's writing, you really ought to.

Flygirl, Sherri L. Smith: a quietly feminist book, one that makes you want to stand up and cheer!

Secret Keeper, Mitali Perkins: a book about love, a book about India, a book about sisters. Almost perfect.

Two Parties, One Tux, and a Very Short Film about the Grapes of Wrath, Steven Goldman: Clever, snarky, and geeky extraordinaire. Can't go wrong with that.

Saving Juliet, Suzanne Selfors: Yeah, it's fluff. But it's fun fluff, and it's fun to see how it works with the Shakespeare.

Fly By Night, Frances Hardinge: Fuse #8 loves Hardinge, and for good reason: she's a fabulous writer.

There you have it: my thoughts. What's the best unsung YA book that you've read recently?

January 22, 2010

Unfinished Angel

by Sharon Creech
ages: 8+
First sentence: "Peoples are strange!"
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

Some books stick in your mind because they have a brilliant plot. Some because they have created a fabulous world. Others because they have great characters, ones that you want to take home to your mother.

And others, still, because the voice -- the way the narrator speaks to you, as a reader -- is so unique, so endearing, that you can't help but love the book.

The voice of Angel, the title character in this sweet little book, is wonderful. It's not just the word choices that Creech uses, though that is a lot of it. Some of the words that just endeared me to Angel: peoplealities, surprisements, mishmaseroni, glompsing (I really love this one!), struddles. How can you not love a character who uses words like that? But if it was just a sprinkling of fun words throughout the book, it probably would have been more annoying than endearing. No, it was everything about Angel: from his/her irritation with yet love for the people in her (I'm not sure if it was a his or a her, but it felt like a her to me...) Swiss/Italian village, to Angel's gradual acceptance of the crazy American girl -- Zola, who is just extramarkable -- and the village's slow awakening to the sense of community.

Sure, I got all of that out of this as an adult, but I think what kids will see, and probably come to love, is Angel. It's such an endearing character, and a captivating voice that it will keep practically anyone turning pages. The rest is just frosting.

January 21, 2010

My Most Excellent Year

A Novel of Love, Mary Poppins & Fenway Park
by Steve Kluger
ages: 12+
First sentence: "Since you'd never guess it from looking at me, nobody can tell that words like because, fart, there, and banana come out sounding like "becazz," "faht," "they-a," and "bananer" when I say them out loud."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

There are many things in my life that make me smile. Like:

Seeing these on the road:


Eating these:


Watching him:


And this book. This book made me unavoidably, undeniably, unabashedly happy.

It's the simple story of a year in the lives of three high school freshmen: Bostonian and die-hard Red Sox fan (is there any other kind?) T. C. Keller (also known as Tony C and Tick but never, ever Anthony); his brother (in all ways except biology since age six) and diva extraordinaire (can you recite All About Eve word-for-word? I thought not.) Augie Hwong; and newbie Alejandra Perez, daughter of the former ambassador to Mexico and closet singer/dancer (who just doesn't know how brilliant she is). It's not like there's a big crisis or a huge plot arc; this book is full of little things. Little things -- like T.C. and Augie being brothers; or the discovery of Hucky, a six year old deaf kid that T.C. befriends; or the talent show and subsequent Kiss Me Kate production; or the three love stories, where there were no burst of passion, no sparkles, no in love at first sight, but instead just honest-to-goodness learning how to love and forgive and compromise. (Yeah, I know, I generally have a problem with lasting high school love, but this was just so darn adorable, that I forgave them the high school part.)

Sure, it's unrealistic, but I plain didn't care. I wanted to move in next door to T.C. and Augie and Ale. Shoot, I wanted to be a part of their crazy, wonderful, lovable extended family. (Much like the Cassons; I want to be a part of their family, too.) And I didn't want this book to end. Which, really, is the best thing I can say.

January 20, 2010

Library Loot 2010-3

Both K and I are cranky today, so all we did was go in, find books (not many movies, much to our displeasure), pick up our holds, and get out.

It must be January.

This week's loot:

Picture books:
Puffling, by Margaret Wild and Julie Vivas
How Do You Wokka-Wokka?, by Elizabeth Blueme/Illus. by Randy Cecil
I Will Surprise My Friend! (An Elephant and Piggie Book), by Mo Willems
Dear Vampa, by Ross Collins
Never Smile at a Monkey: And 17 Other Important Things to Remember, by Steve Jenkins
Waiting for Winter, by Sebastian Meschenmoser
Emmet, by Leo Politi
Magic Box, by Kate Cleminson
Catfish Kate and the Sweet Swamp Band, by Sarah Weeks/Illus. by Elwood H. Smith

Middle Grade books:
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, by Grace Lin

YA books:
The Hollow Kingdom: Book I -- The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy, by Clare B. Dunkle
Close Kin: Book II -- The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy, by Clare B. Dunkle
Leviathan, by Scott Westerfield (M is in the mood for it now.)
The Singing: The Fourth Book of Pellinor (Pellinor Series), by Alison Croggon
Darkhenge, by Catherine Fisher


Non-Fiction:
Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, by Lynne Truss
Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith, by Deborah Heiligman

The roundup is either at Reading Adventures or A Striped Armchair. Obligatory FTC note: the links are provided through my Amazon Associates account. If you click through and actually purchase one of these books, I'll get a teeny, tiny payment. But, since no one ever does, and it's SO much easier using the associates account to put up these links, I'm going to keep doing it.

January 19, 2010

10 Questions for Rosanne Parry

I was completely captivated when I read Heart of a Shepherd last month, and was more than happy when the book made the Cybils shortlist for Middle Grade fiction. I totally agree with what Sherry at Semicolon wrote when she called it "a treat to be savored." It very much is. And because I wasn't willing to let the book go just yet, I thought I'd contact the author herself, and she graciously consented to be interviewed. There really isn't much more to say, other than if you haven't read the book, you should.

MF: Heart of a Shepherd is your first published novel! Congrats! It's not your first book, though, is it? Can you tell us a bit about the process of writing a picture book versus a novel?

RP: I think picture book writing has more in common with writing poetry than writing novels. You have to make every single word rich and precise and useful. Which I think, in the long run, helps me write what I hope are richer novels.

In my picture book, Daddy’s Home, we ended up changing the order of events so that the action was spread out through the child’s house, which is visually more interesting. In a novel, my words carry the weight of bringing the setting to life. I think picture books work best when some of the character and setting decisions can be made by the illustrator. For example, in Daddy’s Home the text does not mention the gender of the main character, the ages of the siblings, the race or economic situation of the family or the presence of a Mommy. All of that I left to my illustrator. David Leonard did such a lovely job conveying the warmth and exuberance of the preschool reader. I love what his art added to the book.

MF: What was your initial inspiration for Heart of a Shepherd?

RP: Ten years ago, I wrote a sonnet for poetry month as I try to do every year. At the time, my son was six and my dad was teaching him to play chess, so I wrote a practice piece about that. A few years later, I got an idea for a short story about grandfather and grandson playing a game of chess which eventually became the first chapter of Heart of a Shepherd. I set that story on a ranch in Eastern Oregon because I had recently visited a friend in Malhuer County.

MF: Heart of a Shepherd is an interesting combination of things one wouldn't think would "go" together: religion, East Oregon ranching and the Iraq war. How/why did that combination come about?

RP: I began writing about a boy and a grandpa on a ranch but there wasn’t enough energy in the two of them to sustain a whole novel, so I added the military family element and the two seemed to compliment each other well. I’ve found both the army officers and the ranchers I know to be surprisingly philosophical and to have a strong sense of stewardship for the people and animals in their care.

As for the inclusion of religion, that was a matter of being true to my characters and setting. Ranching and soldiering are not professions that attract atheists. These families are far more likely to be church-going than the general population. Malhuer County, where the story takes place, was settled primarily by Irish and Basques. These are people for whom Catholicism is not just their faith, but an important part of their cultural identification. Many stories don’t need to mention their character’s spiritual lives, but leaving that element out of this story was just unthinkable. Some people’s lives only make sense in the light of their faith and HEART was just that kind of story.

MF: I read that it took you seven years from idea to finished book. Can you tell us a bit about that process?

RP: Seven years is a tad misleading. I wrote a poem from which the initial scene of the book was drawn about ten years ago. I set the poem aside and did nothing with it for ages because I was working on another story at the time. A few years later I wrote the short story, which eventually became the opening scene of Heart of a Shepherd. I liked the story very much, but since I was in the middle of writing a different book, I set it aside once again.

Eventually, I wrote three more stories with Brother and his grandpa, but then I got completely stuck. Fortunately, Random House editor Wendy Lamb critiqued the stories at an Oregon SCBWI conference and was warmly encouraging of my efforts. She didn’t say what I needed to fix so much as what sparked her interest. The setting was one she seldom saw in submissions, and she enjoyed the warm and loving rivalry among the five brothers.

So I went back to the story, adding the military family element. All together, it took me two years of intensive study, research and writing to come up with a draft of Heart of a Shepherd I was satisfied with. From there I sent it to Jim Thomas at Random House and he made an offer on the manuscript in September of 2006, which was about seven and a half years from the starting point. Once the book was under contract it took another two and a half years to get it in print. It was a surprise to me that it would take so long, but I’ve since learned that it is a typical time frame. In fact, I’m very grateful to have an editor willing to give me the time I need to make my book just right.

MF: Do you have a favorite character or scene in the book?

RP: When I ask students what they want me to read out loud, they almost always choose the "boys against the girls" part. It’s a very fun scene to read aloud, especially to a group of kids. It was one of my editor’s favorites, and I can imagine that he was once a lot like Brother in this particular part of the story. For my part, I often feel like throwing things at him, so it’s a favorite for me as well.

MF: I found the book to be deeply religious, though that could be what I brought to the book. Is there anything you hope, in particular, readers will get out of your novel?

RP: I think that part of what makes reading such a rich experience and writing such a surprising profession is that people bring their whole life to every book they read so that it is a different experience for each reader. I got a lovely note from a teenager who said HEART helped her think of her family’s all-consuming ethnic restaurant business in a whole new way. Wow! I’d have never made that connection but family businesses whether it’s a farm or a store or a restaurant share some of the same stresses and benefits. It’s kind of cool to see what different readers bring to the experience.

If I have an agenda at all, it’s literacy. Young readers, and particularly those who struggle to read, need characters that speak to their life experience. Military families and ranching families are seldom depicted in children’s fiction. One of the most moving things that happened to me this year was the day I spent addressing an adult English language class at a local college. Mine was the first novel any of them had read in English, which felt like such a huge honor and responsibility. I was very proud of the team at Random House who packaged the book with a page lay out that is very inviting for a struggling reader and a cover that an adult can read on the city bus with dignity. Those details matter and I’m thrilled to have a publisher who is so attentive to them.

MF: Is being a writer something you've "always" wanted to do, or is it something you discovered later in life? Do you have any specific writing influences?

RP: I hated writing when I was a child, and I was not especially good at it, but I’ve always loved making up stories. When I was home full time with a house full of toddlers and preschoolers, I finally had the time to work at writing stories and I spent the next ten years learning to write like a storyteller.

MF: Who or what inspires you?

RP: The need to put four kids through college is pretty much all the inspiration I need.

MF: That certainly is inspiration! Do you have five books that you think everyone should read?

RP: Here are some books I’ve read recently which I really enjoyed.
  • When the Whistle Blows, by Fran Cannon Slayton
  • Marcello in the Real World, by Francisco X. Stork
  • The King of Attolia, by Megan Whalen Turner
  • Krik Krak , by Edwidge Danticat
  • Crash Into Me, by Albert Boris
  • poetry by ee cummings
  • Our Town, by Thornton Wilder
  • The Wee Free Men, by Terry Pratchet
MF: That's an impressive list! if you don't mind telling us, what's up next for you?

RP: Yesterday, I sent my next novel SECOND FIDDLE off to the copy editor. It will be out in the spring of 2011. It’s a story about three girl musicians living in Berlin at the end of the Cold War. They find a Soviet soldier who is being murdered by his own officers. They rescue him and run away to Paris. It has been great fun to write. I was in Paris myself almost exactly twenty years ago so it has been fun to revisit my memories of that trip.

MF: That sounds interesting; I can't wait to read it. Thank you so much for your time!!
RP: Thanks again for the interview.

January 18, 2010

A Wrinkle in Time

by Madeline L'Engle
ages: 9+
First sentence: "It was a dark and stormy night."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

I thought, as I started this deceptively small novel, what was it that captivated me about this book when I was a child? See, I have the copy I originally got -- was it a gift? did I buy it with my own money? -- and it's well-loved. I remember reading it over and over again, though I stopped sometime in high school, and honestly haven't picked it up (or thought much about it) before I cracked it open last week.

When I finished, though, I knew exactly what I loved about it. See, I was Meg. I was geeky, awkward, kind of smart (but not in everything), and felt I was unable to quite fit in. The idea that someone like me -- that Meg, of all the characters -- would be the one to save the day, would be the one with the answers, and (most importantly to my 11 year old self) would be the one to find love, gave me immense hope.

Going back to this book as an adult, one thing really surprised me: it's an incredibly religious work. Not in the same way that, say, Narnia is -- it's more blatant than that. There's the good-versus-evil element, of course, though L'Engle's vision of evil is more subtle than I remembered (Evil is sameness? I can see that...), but it's also the the references to Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which as Guardian Angels. It's sometimes small little things throughout, but it's also the big things, like this quote from Mrs. Who:
The foolishness of God is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men. For ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called, but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God has chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty. And base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring naught things that are.
Religious aspects aside, I still love the story. It's Meg's story, of course, and her growth and coming into her own. That still captivated me. I loved the Mrs.es, adored Charles Wallace, and enjoyed the story, though it wasn't as unputdownable as I remember it being when I was a child. Still, I'm glad I took the time to revisit the world and the Murrys.

January 17, 2010

Sunday Salon: Writer's Block

I have found, since probably sometime in January, that writing reviews aren't coming as easily as they have in the past. (Or at least I remember them coming in the past.) I can safely exclude the idea of blog burnout in this problem; I'm still like blogging, and I want to write the reviews. It's just that when I sit down to type up my thoughts, I find that I either 1) can't gather them up sufficiently (maybe they're on hiatus?) or 2) find myself typing the same old limpid platitudes (Oh, I have wanted to use that phrase for a while now. Who'd of thunk it'd be in reference to my own reviews?!) over and over again. Yes, we all know the book was compelling, engaging, thrilling, exciting, fantastic, fabulous, boring, . Find some new words, Melissa.

So, I ask you, my fellow book bloggy friends, what do you do when you have writer's/reviewer's block? Keep writing, even if the reviews come out sounding blah (at least to you)? Give up? Go on hiatus? Use the thesaurus more?

An an additional question: how do you go about writing your reviews? Is there something you do to make sure they end up sounding as good as they possibly can?

January 16, 2010

The Year My Son and I Were Born

A Story of Down Syndrome, Motherhood, and Self-Discovery
by Kathryn Lynard Soper
ages: adult
First sentence: "No. Oh, no."
Review copy sent to me by the author.
Support your local independent bookstore, buy it there!

Some books can just be summed up in a few words. The words for this one: Honest. Brave. Beautiful.

I've been working on this review for two days now, and I am still at a loss how to adequately sum up this book. It's a story of a mother learning to accept her newborn son's diagnosis of Down Syndrome. It's a story of a woman who's dealing with depression. It's a story of a person who has been dealt an unexpected set of cards trying to come to terms with her faith and her community.

It's not the story that makes this book compelling, though it's a compelling story. What drew me in, and kept me there even though I thought I couldn't relate, was the writing. There's always a self-indulgent aspect to memoirs: one has to think they're unique or important enough to write a memoir in the first place. But Soper takes an incredibly unflinching, honest tone, and uses spare, beautiful writing. Both of these combine to give the book an emotional wallop, making Soper's journey not only captivating, but accessible and understandable to those who haven't had the same journey. We come to care about Soper and her family. We become emotionally invested in them and their lives.

It's also an unexpected story, which gives it a raw edge. Soper doesn't take everything just fine. There are ups and downs, both emotionally and medically. It's a hopeful ending -- I almost wished for an epilogue; how is her son, Thomas now? -- but it's not a pat ending. There will be bumps down the road; Thomas will have medical problems, there will be discrimination, there will be trials. But, by the end, Soper (and the reader) have come to a new enlightened state, where everything is, if not happy, then at peace.

I do have one more word: remarkable.

January 15, 2010

Book to Movie Friday: Stranger than Fiction

I haven't done one of these in a while (again); blame it on the Cybils. I've hardly watched any movies for a while. But, last weekend, one of my favorite movies of all time (I know: I'm not especially picky) came up on my Netflix queue, and I figured I'd write about it, even if though it's not based on a book.


Adore it.

It makes me undeniably happy, mostly because it's a very literary movie. Sure, it's terrifically funny, and Will Farrell is amazing as the down-and-out Harold Crick, as is Emma Thompson as the weird-but-brilliant author, Karen Eiffel. (Not to mention Dustin Hoffman's and Queen Latifah's supporting characters.) But, you boil down this well-written, well-acted movie to is bare bones, and it's all about how fiction intersects with and affects our real life.

And I find that both amazing and wonderfully life-affirming.

I'm not sure exactly why, except that I love the idea of our lives being stories. I love that, while there may (or may not, depending on your beliefs) be an ultimate narrator and writer to our lives, that we have the opportunity to change the story, to convince that person otherwise. I love how each of our stories intersect with one another, and -- this has been a theme with me, personally for a while now -- how they affect each other for good or ill.

Throw all that in a movie that makes me think, makes me smile, and makes me want to go out and live, and you've got a perfect little movie.

Verdict: if you haven't seen it, you really should.

January 14, 2010

Saving Maddie

by Varian Johnson
ages: 14+
First sentence: "'Hurry up,' she yelled, dust blowing in her wake as she ran down the dirt trail."
Review copy given to me by the author.
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Release date: March 9, 2010

Joshua Wynn is a good guy. He doesn't drink, he doesn't smoke, he doesn't party, he doesn't have sex. He chooses leading his church's youth group over playing on the school basketball team. Granted, he's the preacher's kid, and there's an enormous amount of pressure on Joshua to be good. And Joshua's mostly okay with that.

That is, until Maddie Smith -- his best childhood friend who moved away when she was 13 -- moves back into town. She's 18 now, and she's not what Joshua remembers. For starters, she's not a believer any more, and Joshua (sort-of) decides that it's up to him to "save" her. Except, he's falling for her as well.

This is an incredibly thoughtful novel; Johnson maintains a fine balance between those who take their faith incredibly seriously, and those who don't, managing (for the most part) never to take sides as to which is better. He also avoids making Joshua a caricature, someone who is easily dismissed. Joshua is a complex character -- desires, insecurities, hangups, and all.

Which brings me to something else I found admirable about Saving Maggie: Johnson doesn't write down to teens (it reminded me a lot of John Green's books, and that's a compliment!). It's a strikingly honest book: honest about belief, faith and following. Honest about the conflict between desire and duty. And all this makes Joshua's struggle to find his own way -- as opposed to the way he's always just gone because that's what he was taught -- more powerful.

I also appreciated the ending (and you know how important endings are!) because it's not the traditional happy ending and because there's hope. It's an immensely hopeful book, one that asks the reader to look beyond appearances to the person inside.

But, most of all, it's a book that will make you think, about belief, about decisions and about others. And a book like that is always worth reading.

January 13, 2010

LIbrary Loot 2010-02

Storytime started today. I'm such a kid: I LOVE storytime. And not just because I get to spend time with K... no... I love the stories and the finger plays and the songs.

Good thing I get to go once a week, huh?

This week's loot:

Picture books:
Patricia Von Pleasantsquirrel, by James Proimos
Prudence and Moxie: A Tale of Mismatched Friends, by Debroah Noyes/Illus. by AnnaLaura Cantone
Freckleface Strawberry and the Dodgeball Bully, by Julianne Moore/Illus. by LeUyen Pham (eek! How did this get here?!)
Love That Puppy!: The Story of a Boy Who Wanted to be a Dog, by Jeff Jarka
I Can Do It Myself!, by Diane Adams/Illus. by Nancy Hayashi
The Tiptoe Guide to Tracking Fairies, by Ammi-Joan Paquette/Illus. by Christa Unzer

Middle Grade books:
Day of the Scarab: Book Three of The Oracle Prophecies, by Catherine Fisher
Troll Fell, by Katherine Langrish
Troll Mill, by Katherine Langrish
Troll Bell, by Katherine Langrish
The Stoneheart Trilogy, Book One: Stoneheart , by Charlie Fletcher
The Stoneheart Trilogy, Book Two: Ironhand, by Charlie Fletcher
11 Birthdays, by Wendy Mass
Max Quigley, Technically Not a Bully, by James Roy
Westmark, by Lloyd Alexander
The Illyrian Adventure, by Lloyd Alexander

YA books:
Carter Finally Gets It, by Brent Crawford

The roundup is either at Reading Adventures or A Striped Armchair. Obligatory FTC note: the links are provided through my Amazon Associates account. If you click through and actually purchase one of these books, I'll get a teeny, tiny payment. But, since no one ever does, and it's SO much easier using the associates account to put up these links, I'm going to keep doing it.

January 11, 2010

Odd and the Frost Giants

by Neil Gaiman
ages: 8-12
First sentence: "There was a boy called Odd, and there was nothing strange or unusual about that, not in that time or place."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

Let me just get this off my chest: I have learned, over the past couple of years, to adore Neil Gaiman. Really. The more I read by this man, the more I love his writing.

If you're looking for a good place to start reading some of his work, Odd and the Frost Giants is really about as accessible as Gaiman gets. Funny, yet slightly (but not too much), well, odd, there's a little bit of everything for everyone: some honest-to-goodness coming of age in there, a bit of mythology, a bit of adventure. In short, it's everything Gaiman usually delivers, just this time in a slim 117-page packet.

Odd is a boy who's a bit down on his luck. His father died trying to save a pony after a Viking raid. Odd tried to fill his place, but a tree fell on his leg, smashing it to where it was nearly unusable. His mother eventually remarried, but his step-father (who already has a bundle of kids of his own) isn't very kind to Odd. Then, the winter that doesn't want to let go, Odd decides to leave. Once he reaches the forest, he meets a fox, who leads him to a bear and an eagle -- strange companions, sure, but with an even stranger story.

That's when Odd finds himself on a journey he never expected to take: a journey to save Asgard, city of the gods, from the Frost Giants. There's no doubt that he'll succeed, but how he succeeds is ultimately quite surprising. (And satisfying.)

I couldn't put the book down, and when I closed it, my first thought was, "That was just about perfect." And, really, you can't say much more than that.

January 10, 2010

Bloggiesta Wrap Up

It was a short trip, and I was a bit hampered by the lack of a laptop (it's in the shop... again...), but I had a grand time with Bloggiesta.


What I did get done:

I got rid of the blogroll, inserted recent comments feature. It's not quite the way I'd like it... I'd really like it if the link with the commentor's name would go to the commentor's blog, but I'm not sure that's available on Blogger. If anyone knows how to do that, I'd love to fix it. I think, in the long run, that it'll be a better way to go than a blogroll.

I didn't get rid of my master lists that were over on the side (they're still there, under the label "master lists"!), but I decided that I needed some more versatility in the blog. Hence, blog labels! I even managed to put up a few genre-specific ones.

And I have a spiffy new blog header. The picture's from Powell's, on a trip I took last summer. I'm still not sure I absolutely love it, but it'll do, for now.

The only thing I didn't get to was cleaning up my feed reader. (I actually expanded it with some of the blogs from my blogroll.) I think I'm okay with that.

At any rate, I had a grand time Bloggiesta-ing!

January 9, 2010

Catching the Late Train (and other news)

Okay... since I found myself hanging out on Twitter yesterday, and being interested in all the tweaking that was going on, I've decided to climb on board and join Bloggiesta. The laptop's decided to crash today and so is off to the shop, so I don't know how much I'll actually get done, but I'm going to put a bit of effort into it anyway.

So, what I'd like to get done:
  • clean up the layout of my page -- got rid of the blogroll, inserted recent comments feature
  • decide if I want to get rid of my long master lists of books and go to labels on the sidebar, or some combination of both... took the plunge, and put up a labels, which includes a link to my master lists.
  • add genre tags to my blog (in addition to age-level tags) -- I added a few. Maybe I'll add more later.
  • change the blog header/colors (I've had this one for at least 6 months -- maybe a year -- and it's time to move on) -- done
  • clean up my feed reader
Other than that, I'll see what else I'm inspired by you all on Twitter to do.

Other news: I've also signed up for Mother Reader/Lee Wind's Comment Challenge 2010. My goal (other than at least 5 comments a day) is to visit at least one new blog and leave a comment there. I'm going to be picky about adding them to my feed reader, though.

And one last bit of news... I meant to share this earlier this week, when I found out, but Betsy at Fuse #8 is doing a Top 100 Fictional Chapter Books Poll. I've already sent my list in (which I stressed over... but what about?! and I forgot?! I wish I could send in two!), but you have until January 31st to come up with your top 10 and send it in.

Okay, I think that's about it... I'll continue to update this post with bloggiesta items throughout the day/weekend.

January 8, 2010

The Street of a Thousand Blossoms

by Gail Tsukiyama
ages: adult
First sentence: "A white light seeped through the shoji windows and into the room, along with the morning chill."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

The thing that kept coming to mind as I was reading this sweeping novel, was that this book is much like a picture album. The pictures go together because they're of the same family, and because they tell a story of the passing years. But, each individual picture has a story. Sometimes those stories are interesting, sometimes they're a little boring. Much like this book.

Tsukiyama tells the story of two brothers -- Hiroshi and Kenji -- over the course of nearly 30 years. When we first meet them, it's 1939, and they are orphans living with their grandparents (their parents died in a freak boating accident). The book follows them as they grow up: through the horrors of the war years; Hiroshi's rise as a sumotori and Kenji's discovery and mastery of the art of theater mask making; as both brothers find (and lose) love. It's more than a slice of life, it's history.

But, even though it's quite lyrical and beautifully written and incorporates Japanese incredibly seamlessly, I found myself going back and forth on this one. Some of the snapshots were fascinating. Some of the people I cared immensely about. But, sometimes I found myself unable to get into the language, or drifting off because the plot, such as it was, wasn't grabbing me.

That said, one of the things that Tsukiyama does beautifully is give us a slice of Japan. More than the people, it was the way Tsukiyama described the land, the culture, and the people, as well as the push and pull between tradition and modernity. For that alone, the book is worth reading.

January 6, 2010

Library Loot 2010-01

A new year, a new bunch of loot. Same old story: I go, I see books, and I get them, even though my TBR pile by the side of my bed is already too big. Oh, well. Such is the life of a reader. Right?

Picture books:
Do Not Build a Frankenstein!, by Neil Numberman
Green Wilma, Frog in Space, by Tedd Arnold
Archie and the Pirates, by Marc Rosenthal
Not all Animals Are Blue, by Beatrice Boutignon
Superhero School, by Aaron Reynolds/Illus. by Andy Rash

Middle Grade books:
The Unfinished Angel, by Sharon Creech
Odd and the Frost Giants, by Neil Gaiman

YA books:
In The Forests Of Serre, by Patricia A. McKillip
Front and Center, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock
My Most Excellent Year: A Novel of Love, Mary Poppins, and Fenway Park, by Steve Kluger


The roundup is either at Reading Adventures or A Striped Armchair. Obligatory FTC note: the links are provided through my Amazon Associates account. If you click through and actually purchase one of these books, I'll get a teeny, tiny payment. But, since no one ever does, and it's SO much easier using the associates account to put up these links, I'm going to keep doing it.

January 4, 2010

Dream Girl

by Lauren Mechling
ages: 12+
First sentence: "I was breezing down the airport corridor, minding my own business and thinking about the new look I'd have with the liquid eyeliner I'd picked up at the duty-free shop in Paris, when I saw it in the distance: the pink combination lock."
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!

Claire Voyante has a problem (and it's not her name). She has these dreams. Vivid, detailed... and they seem to come true. Or, at the very least, have a basis in real life. And ever since her eccentric grandmother, Kiki, gave Claire a black-and-white cameo, they've been in black-and-white. They're also somehow connected to Claire's new friend, Becca, and her ketchup-magnate family. It's up to Claire to figure out how and why... if she can.

This book is a little bit of everything. A little bit of romance, a little bit of upper-New York fashion plate, a little bit of eccentric relatives (besides the grandma, Claire's dad is a French professor, and Claire's mom writes a astrology column). Stir all that together with a lot of mystery, and you pretty much have this book down. That's not to say it isn't a fun book; on the contrary, it is quite fun. There's a lot to balance in the book, but I think it all works towards a cohesive whole picture: I loved Claire's life, and I thoroughly enjoyed being a part of it. Sure, it was a bit predictable, and I guessed the ending long before Claire got there, but file it under "guilty pleasure": this one was the right book at the right time.

Which makes me quite interested in the sequel, Dream Life. Thankfully, I won't have to wait long!

January 3, 2010

Calamity Jack

by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale/Illustrated by Nathan Hale
ages: 9+
First sentence: "I think of myself as a criminal mastermind... with an unfortunate amount of bad luck."
Review copy provided by the publisher.
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Release date: January 5, 2010

Remember Jack from Rapunzel's Revenge? No? That's okay, because this is his story.

It seems that Jack has always had a knack for scheming. From the get-go, he's been trying to find ways to swindle people. Sometimes, they deserve it, sometimes they don't. Then... he decides to take on Blunderboar, the biggest (literally: he's a giant), meanest guy in Shyport. Jack breaks into the tower (with the help of some magic beans), makes off with Blunderboar's magic goose, and manages to accidentally kill a giant while chopping the beanstalk down. (Does all of this sound familiar? It should.)

Insert brief interlude, while Jack goes out west, meets Rapunzel and has adventures.

Then, Jack brings Rapunzel back to the city, where things have changed. Blunderboar has gotten more powerful, literally razing parts of the city as well as taking Jack's mother into captivity. Along with a couple of new sidekicks, it's up to Jack and Rapunzel to save the city.

I liked this graphic novel well enough -- it's the Hales, after all. But I really wanted to love it as much as I loved Rapunzel's Revenge, and honestly, well, it's not as good as that one. It wasn't as funny -- or, at the very least, the funny fell flat in my opinion. There was a wee bit of a love triangle, which also did nothing for me. And, while I thought it was a clever spin on the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale and I liked the action and mystery in the plot, there just wasn't enough... oomph, I suppose, is the word I'm looking for.

But oomph or not, it's a decent sequel to Rapunzel's Revenge. And I can't argue with that.

January 1, 2010

Tis Cybils Time!

Happy New Year, everyone! And, since it's January 1st, that means the Cybils shortlists are up!! Click through to read the shortlists for everyone else. I'm going to sick my panel's -- Middle Grade fiction -- here. Enjoy. (Oh, and go read these books. They're wonderful!)


by Dean Pitchford
Putnam Juvenile
Nominated by: Dawn Mooney

Even though he's smart and capable, Newt is the neglected younger brother of a high school football star, mostly content with sliding through the cracks of life. Then a couple of events--his older brother ends up in a coma the night of the Big Game and Newt is forced to improvise a Halloween costume--coincide to spur the creation of a new superhero: Captain Nobody. Newt finds that he feels different when in his costume: stronger, more outgoing, more able to handle...well, everything (within reason, of course) that's thrown his way. Hilarious, fun, and completely charming, this is one superhero that the world can't do without.--Melissa Fox

Chains
by Laurie Halse Anderson
Simon & Schuster
Nominated by: melissa

Anderson has taken the historical facts of the American Revolution and given us a new perspective. Chains is told through the eyes of Isabel, a slave girl. Sold after her master dies, Isabel is thrust into the middle of the war where both sides claim they want what is best for her. She passes along messages to the Loyalists only to learn that the only one she can trust to help her gain her freedom is herself. Anderson has presented a story that with the proper foundation can be read, enjoyed and understood by the youngest to the oldest middle-grade student. War is always a tough topic but the details were intricately woven into Isabel's life. It can be read as a stand-alone book and yet Anderson has left it open enough for a sequel. --Sandra Stiles, Musings of a Book Addict

Anything But Typical
by Nora Raleigh Baskin
Simon & Schuster
Nominated by: Pam W Coughlan

There is much to love in Nora Raleigh Baskin's Anything But Typical. The writing--in particular the narrative voice--feels so genuine: vulnerable and heartfelt; simple yet beautiful. Almost poetic. The book stars Jason Blake, an autistic hero, who loves to write stories and participate in online forums. When his parents surprise him with a trip to the Storyboard writing convention, you might think he'd be happy instead of terrified. But for Jason the thought of meeting his online friend, PhoenixBird, in real life causes nothing but anxiety. Everyone has moments of insecurity and doubt, and to see these reflected so honestly in Jason feels more than right. --Becky Laney


Heart of a Shepherd
by Rosanne Parry
Random House Children's Books
Nominated by: jone

Twelve-year-old Ignatius Alderman discovers the "heart of a shepherd" as he helps his grandparents take care of the family ranch when his father is deployed to Iraq. Nicknamed "Brother," Ignatius is the youngest of five brothers, named for St. Ignatius, and searching for his own gifts, talents and career path. He's not sure that ranching or military service, the two traditions that dominate his family, are truly his gifts. And although he learns to live up to his responsibilities, it will take a major crisis for Brother to find his own right road to maturity.

The book is rather quiet, the pacing slow and deliberate, like Brother himself. Even when the crisis comes, it sneaks up on the reader rather than announcing itself with trumpets. In addition to its coming-of-age theme, Heart of a Shepherd also has lots of little details about ranching life and rural Oregon and the life of a soldier in Iraq and even about chess. These will capture the young reader who's interested in any of those subjects and make him pay attention to the larger themes in the book. This debut novel by author Roseanne Parry is a treat to be savored.--Sherry Early

All The Broken Pieces
by Ann Burg
Scholastic
Nominated by: Laurie Schneider

Matt Pin is haunted by his memories of Vietnam. He was born a bui doi, the dust of life -- son of an American GI and Vietnamese mother during the Vietnam War. He was airlifted out of Vietnam at ten years old, leaving behind his mother and brother. Through the course of this verse novel, Matt is forced to come to terms with his with his horrifying past and his American present.

The spare, poetic format of the story allows the reader to feel like they have entered Matt's head and heart. All the Broken Pieces is a gorgeous novel that captures the emotional and physical rubble left in the aftermath of a war. The free verse is incredibly well-written and not a single word is used when it isn't necessary. This powerful novel will satisfy even the most anti-poetry readers but many of the verses will remain in the heart and mind of the reader for days afterward. --Sarah Mulhern

Operation Yes
by Sara Lewis Holmes
Arthur A Levine
Nominated by: Laura Purdie Salas

Operation Yes is a story that revolves around cousins Bo and Gari. Bo's father is in charge of a military base in the south and Gari's mother is deployed to Afghanistan; so Gari must relocate from Seattle to live with her cousin. They are both in the same sixth grade class and their teacher teaches in a box about the importance of life outside the box. What makes this story a standout is how kids can overcome tough times and show adults what they are capable of when they work together. --Kyle Kimmal
by Barbara O'Connor
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Nominated by: Augusta Scattergood
Popeye is dreading the boring summer that stretches out before him...until Elvis arrives in a broken-down motor home and the two boys start exploring the back woods, investigating the mysterious Yoo-Hoo boats that come floating down the creek. Barbara O'Connor's book manages to be laugh-out-loud funny and still deal with more serious subject matter without veering into Depressing. This is a rather quiet book for anyone who's been bored and dreams of having small adventures. --Abby Johnson

I should also say how much I loved working with my panel. They were awesome!! And now, to wait until February 14th to see which one the judges pick as a winner...