The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by by Stieg Larsson

Lots of reviews exist about this book so I’m not going to rehash the plot.  It was my first pick for 2010 and I enjoyed it.  It kept me up reading and I plan to read the next two in the series at some point. 
The back blurb says:  “At once a murder mystery, family saga, love story, and tale of financial intrigue wrapped into one satisfying complex and entertainingly atmospheric novel.”

(What the heck is an atmospheric novel, really?

 It contained all that ( I enjoyed the family saga and financial intrigue) plus two very intriguing characters, Mikael Bloomkvist and Lisbeth Salander.  I’m not a big fan of scary thrillers so this veers way, away from my normal reads but  again,  I did enjoy it.  My husband noticed my sleep issues while I was immersed in the book.  I had trouble falling asleep and woke randomly through the night. Maybe knowing that will make many of you want to read it.  Some people love getting scared and while this is a mild thriller it was enough for me. 
There is also the sexy issue-my son noticed on the back this comment-“A sexy, addictive thriller.”-Glamour.  He didn’t think I should be reading anything sexy or addicting!!  It does have s-e-x in it, which is generally not a huge deal but this goes to the extreme with bondage and abuse occuring.  This is the issue that really CREEPED ME OUT!!
I struggled through the several areas where this occurs.  I don’t want to give much away as I know there are many out there who have not picked up this series just as I have yet to read Twilight.
It was addictive because I enjoyed those two characters but sexy, well, not for me!!  How many have read this thriller??  Have you read the whole series yet?  A friend told me the second one is the best.  Agree or Disagree?  As this was one I read from my own shelves I must tell you I passed it on to my husband…after he reads it we will pass it on to someone else.  (I’m not interested in any of my kids reading it for quite a few years.)
I’m on to something lighter-Bill Bryson’s The Life and Times of Thunderbolt Kid, which is just plain funny and a unique historical trip.

Happy funny reading-

Here is the fairly interesting article for NY Times reviewer, Alex Berenson.-I like how he brings up the Swedish issue-is this a common occurence in their culture-the author made it seem so!

Toby and the Snowflakes by Julie Halpern

Some books just make sense to me and I loved this book.  It’s like the meaning of life in a picture book.  Most kids don’t know it when you read it to them but some kids get the bigger picture.  This is the kind of book you could use for all ages because its simple message of friendship resonates with all.

 Toby and the Snowflakes
by Julie Halpern
illustrated by Matthew Cordell
(husband and wife writing team)
2004
Toby’s best friend has moved away yesterday and he is sad.  He’s left only with his friend’s baseball glove.  When he goes outside (after bundling up with scarf, hat, mittens and coat) to check the mailbox one snowflake drifts by (a magical chance meeting)  The snowflake introduces himself and Toby proceeds to make some new, albeit cold friends.  A day later when the snow begins to melt and the snowflakes give Toby a simple life lesson…  “We snow, we disappear, we come back again.  It is the nature of the snowflake.”  Nature of the snowflake, indeed it is the nature of all living things-the meaning of life!!
 This book is a treasure and if you have little ones still at home, go get it from the book store or the library and read it tonight while there is still snow on the ground.  Thank you to Julie and Matthew for an life-affirming picture book!!  While searching around on Cordell’s website I see he has illustrated quite a few other books including Trouble Gum, another new favorite of mine.  Check out his website here and his wife, Julie Halpern’s here. She is a fellow elementary librarian and they live in Chicago.  This is their first book together but I’m hoping for many more!! 
I read this all week with pre-k through 2nd grade and I could have read it to all classes and had them get something out of it.  We discussed The Main Idea of the story: friendship and why it is a fiction book: the snowflakes speak to Toby-big red flag:) I paired it with another great snow book; Snow Sounds by David A. Johnson.  I can’t believe Toby was published in 2004 and it is now, let’s see, 2010 but I guess the time was right!!  Great, great book!!!
Happy Reading!!

Running Out of Time by Margaret Peterson Haddix

After enjoying Haddix’s new Missing series I was determined to read more of her collection.  The Shadow Children was a great series but after that I didn’t pick up anything else this prolific writer had written. 

Running Out Of Time (1995) is  her first book and proved to me Haddix’s early ability to craft other worlds.  In this instance, the “other” world is Clifton, Indiana, a historical village set in 1840 as a tourist attraction, except the children living there don’t know their being watched.  The parents do as they signed up just because they liked the idea of living in a simplier time.   What they didn’t sign up for is being lab rats in a large research experiment. 

When Jessie’s mother realizes too many children have diptheria within the village she has to trust her middle daughter with the secret of the century.  Jessie learns from her mother, a nurse at one time, that the year is not 1840 but 1996 and her  mother expects her to travel outside the confines of the village, through an underground tunnel system, past guards who may kill her to find one man who might be able to save the sick children.   Jessie’s journey, her confusion and delight of the world we take for granted is exciting to read.  If you are a fan of Margaret Peterson Haddix or haven’t discovered her yet then begin your journey with this book.  Personally, I’m not a fan of reality tv but this book reminded me of that general idea-being watched in your world.  I’m amazed how she created this concept before reality television became such a hit!  Click here for Haddix’s website.
Reading this book means I have now read 2 books for Reading from my own shelves challenge.  (cheer from massive crowd…)
I look forward to reading other Haddix books, filling in the years between her two major series titles.
Click here for my thoughts on Haddix’s Found and Sent.
P.S. Since this is from Reading from my shelves challenge hosted by Diane @ Bibliophile by the Sea I must tell you how I passed this book on…happily, I put it back in my school library shelves.  I plan to book talk it to 4th and 5th grade students next week!  Yeah, it is off my shelf!!!

Happy Reading!!

Teaser Tuesday-Dreamland by Sarah Dessen

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!                           

       My teasers: 

    “Ouch,” he said, and before I could even move he reached out and touched my bandage, running a finger across it.  Then he looked up at me and said, “You okay?”     from Sarah Dessen’s Dreamland, pg. 50-51

     Makes me want to find out more…:)

Civil Rights Chapter Books

I cried this morning (Sunday) in my kitchen when I finished Yankee Girl by Mary Ann Rodman.   The only one around to witness my tears as I set the book down on the counter was my 14-year-old slightly jaded son.  He saw my moment though and said “why are you crying, Mom?” to which I replied “It was a good book”.  He hugged me.  [smile]

                                                            Yankee Girl
By Mary Ann Rodman
2004         

I love how powerful literature can be and this is a perfect example.  Mary Ann Rodman reconstructs her own childhood during the Civil Rights Movement in Jackson, MS.  In this recreated story Alice Ann Moxley is the main character and her father is an FBI agent.  Because of his job the family moves from Chicago to Jackson in 1964.  Alice tries hard to make friends from her first day and she can’t quite get it together.  She wants to be friends with “the cheerleaders,” you know, the popular, pretty girls of 6th grade but they won’t have anything to do with her  ‘cuz she talks like a Yankee.  She does make friends with her next door neighbor, Jeb, which is fine but well, he is a boy, after all and not the close companionship she was seeking.  Through Jeb she learns the ins and out of Southern “rules” like you don’t introduce yourself to the “help.” Jeb repeats all these “rules” like he’s talking about what he ate for lunch-it’s second nature to him and he doesn’t really understand why Alice doesn’t just know these things too.

Two weeks before school begins Alice’s family learns her school will be integrated for the first time.  Reverend Taylor’s daughter, Valerie joins Alice’s class and with charm and grace endures all manner of horrific taunting from her classmates .  Since the cheerleaders didn’t accept her attempt at friendship, Alice figures she’ll try to make friends with Valerie.  Hmm, not so easy in Mississippi, 1964. Valerie doesn’t want to be friends with any white kids she plainly tells Alice. Some of the antics pulled by the cheerleader group are sick but believable if you’ve read any of the accounts of The Little Rock Nine at Central High in Little Rock, AR.

I loved Alice’s character, even as I wanted to shake her!  Somehow every young girl goes through this terrible trial and error of friendship. The complexity of trying to be liked and included; the essential human need to be part of group overshadowed Alice’s journey until she figures out what is truly important and she figures it out much earlier than many do in life. Through Alice and Valerie’s fathers we experience many of the days tragedies up-close as Alice’s father is called to work frequently and Reverend Taylor works alongside Dr. King.
 Highly Recommended-High Elementary-Middle School Fiction
5/5 peaceful stars

Several weeks ago I read another interesting historical fiction set in 1917 Alabama.  I read this one with my long distance friends and reading buddies (V and A-when are we going to talk about this book??).  I think the two pair well together.
The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had
by Kristin Levine
2009
Synopsis:
Harry “Dit” Sims and Emma Walker are the unlikelist of friends.  Emma, the educated twelve-year-old daughter of Moundsville’s new postmaster, is all wrong as far as Dit’s concerned.  Dit was told the new postmaster would have a boy his same age, not a girl.  But the rest of the town  is more surprised by the family’s color  than whether Emma’s a boy or a girl.  No one said the new postmaster and his family would be black.
It’s 1917, Moundville, Alabama and Dit finds friendship with Emma to be a completely new arena for him.  While I enjoyed their friendship it did not capture my attention as much as Yankee Girl.  I enjoyed Dit and Emma and liked how they grew in cultural knowledge of each other.  I just did not get as involved in their friendship as much.  I don’t know what makes the difference-what it is about the story that makes you fall in love with characters??  Levine’s story is well-developed but at the end when Emma’s family moves back East I was left feeling empty;  life in Moundville changed only temporarily. 
Both books are wonderful and worth the read.
Highly Recommended-High Elementary-Middle School Fiction
4/5 peaceful stars
Kristin Levine’s website click here.
Happy Reading!!


Magic Words

6:00 this morning I received this special announcement…Snow Day!!!  Yahooo!  I immediately crawled back in bed and tried to finish my first fiction book of 2010.  I didn’t quite make it to the end-I fell back to sleep, which isn’t a bad thing either!
A few months ago I recieved one of those lovely padded envelope packages we so look forward to opening.  This one came from a marketing person and held 4 books for me to look at and review.  Two of them are chapter books, Runt Farm #1 and #2 and as of yet, I have not read them.  Recently Peaceful Girl and I read through both the board book and the picture book that were included in the package.

Dear Baby; What I love about you! 
by Carol Casey and illustrated by Jason Oransky
2008
The pages are bright and very attractive; eye-catching for the youngest book readers.  The lines are catchy and make you smile as you read. It begins: “I love the way you laugh and smile…I love your sassy baby style” accompanied by happy baby illustrations. I don’t have any more tiny ones around this house but I can just picture snuggling a little one close and reading this to them.  This is a very sweet book to read with a new baby and would make an excellent baby gift, especially with the  guest sign in spot at the back of the book.
Highly Recommended for baby snuggling
                                                     5/5 peaceful stars
Scarecrow Finds a Friend
Written by Blume J. Rifken
Illustrations by Carol W. Wenzel
2008
Scarecrow Finds a Friend is a lovely read with very unique illustrations to match.   Scarecrow is finished protecting the farmer’s crops and is happy to smell the delicious smells of Thanksgiving approaching.   As he takes a little nap in the field he reminisces about the fun he had on Halloween.  He remembers Tally, the friendly witch granting him one wish; to go trick-or-treating like the farm children do.  As Scarecrow is thinking about his past fun with the witch, Tally shows up again needing a wish for herself.  Scarecrow returns the favor and helps Tally get her powers back.  Scarecrow’s plan is to get the
wishbone  from the Thanksgiving turkey to help Tally.
The story is simple, seasonal and delightful to read.  I enjoyed how it used the age-old tradition of making a wish using a wishbone.  I remember the excitement over the wishbone, and even as I became  a vegetarian the wishbone still held its power.  We never even paid attention to the fact that our specific wishes didn’t come true-it was just fun to pull and hear the snap.
Luckily, Tally’s wish does come true and she is able to fly again.  I love the illustrations of Tally,  truly magical, adding to the special friendship theme of the story.
Highly recommended-elementary
5/5 peaceful stars
Thanks to Paula Krapf for sending me these copies. 
 





2010…and I'm freezing!!

I feel like I’ve been playing hooky but really I’ve been scattered.  I lost my phone for a day (left it at church-in the nursery) and my house is freezing, which makes my fingers too numb to type-Yes, it is that cold!  I spent the weekend (except when I had to go out…to church) hunkered down on my sofa, wrapped in a sleeping bag, watching movies or playing Jeopardy on the new PS3 game system.  What fun!!

Monday brought the first day of school, which is dreadful usually, but students were coming to the new school and that made the first day back from break very exciting and tolerable!  It is pure joy to walk into my new library!!  Classes have been going very smoothly and it is a fantastic to have seven working computers!!! 

I finished one last book in 2009 and have yet to review it.  I give it to you here:

The Blind Faith Hotel
2008
I picked this up off the YA library shelf at random-something about the cover struck me as interesting. 
It is the story of three siblings, Nelia, Zoe, the narrator and Oliver.  Dad works on a fishing boat off the coast of Alaska and Mom is ready to find her own path, away from Dad.  She is busy packing up from their rental home, getting ready to move everybody to her family home someplace in the Midwest.  The crisis through most of the book is Zoe and Oliver missing their dad and we are never quite sure why the mom chooses to take the kids and run.  Through Zoe’s memories we get a general understanding of an unstable family existence with dad missing often to chase the fish.  Zoe is mad at her mom for moving them to this tiny town where her mother has a history-this is the town where her mother grew up and Zoe doesn’t want her mother to be happy away from her father.  There are a few hidden family mysteries along the way and Zoe gets in to some trouble.  She ends up working at a local prairie preserve with Hub, a grizzled old man whose own story ends up connecting him to Zoe as well.  At the preserve she also meets an intriguing, young man, Ivy, who runs wild and helps Hub out.  Through Ivy’s family story Zoe learns to face her own life with clearer vision.  I did really enjoy the prairie information and thought that added a very interesting and different twist to the story.  Understanding how the grasslands are affected by urban sprawl and Zoe’s newfound passion for the natural world around her did enhance her character, for me.
My thoughts: While I liked the story line and Zoe’s voice was strong, I didn’t fall in love with any character.  They seemed fairly wooden and since we don’t find out the true issues behind her mom’s choices to abandon dad until 3/4 of the way through the book-it made me wonder “why” too frequently.  Zoe’s anger at her mother seems unfounded without having that good reason earlier on. 
Another review can be find by clicking here.

Housecleaning-End of the Year thought for 2009

I finished my last book for 2009-The Blind Faith Hotel by Pamela Todd-review is not finished. I’ve gone through both my blog and my Good Reads account to verify what books I read this past year. I read 70 total books this year with most titles concentrated in the elementary, middle and YA levels.
Of course, going through my lists I reminisced over my favorite reads this year.

Here is my list-In no particular order:

Gone by Michael Grant-think all adults dead and teenagers need to run things.
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson-American Revolution and slavery-one girl’s story.
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins-A new America with sections, each section sends two players to the “games”.
Catching Fire (sequel) by Suzanne Collins-next phase of The Hunger Games-Team Peeta!!!
The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan-young boy learns he is part human/part god, son of Poseidon.
The Help by Kathyrn Stockett-Amazing tale of Mississippi during Civil Rights movement.
Red Glass by Laura Resau-immigration issues dealt with win Sophie’s family shelters young Pablo.
Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout-many stories about New England small town, quirky characters, great blend of stories.
Umbrella Summer by Lisa Graff-tear-jerker about Annie and the death of her brother, good neighbor award.
The Luxe Series by Anna Godbersen-the jet set in 1899-great plot twists, would make a delicious movie.
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate by Jacqueline Kelly-1899, Callie Vee and her grandfather find their own connection while discovering a new plant species in early Texas.
The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein-esoteric dog thoughts, evolving through one man’s life.
Found/Sent by Margaret Peterson Haddix-what happens when a select few play around with the boundaries of time.

My reading increased from last year and will have to increase even more for me to accomplish the challenges I’ve signed up for in 2010.
We always have a family party on New Year’s Eve.  A few times we have dressed up in fancy clothes to ring in the year.  This year we had a fun finger-food dinner (pig’s in the blanket that Peaceful Girl and I made, asparagus with lots of crackers, bread and brie) and we played a rousing game of Scattegories while we munched.  Several of us love this game-lots of giggling with serious thinking in between!! We also do a whole list of predictions for the next year and add to our own bucket lists.

How do you spend your New Year’s Eve??

Which one should I read first??

This challenge hosted by Bibliophile By the Sea struck a chord with me today because after dinner (eggplant lasagna) I started sorting through my tbr piles-you know the real piles…not the long-ass list I keep on Good Reads. I’ve now compiled “The List” and I have to say it felt good just picking out the ones that really need to be read! Like it is a crime I haven’t read a few of these in a more timely manner! Each book I held reminded me of the story behind why I have the book in the first place making it a little book trip down memory lane.  Here is “The List” then I’ll explain some of my memories!

1. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
2. The Year the Swallows Came Early by Kathryn Fitzmaurice
3. The Girl’s Guide to Hunting and Fishing by Melissa Bank 
4. I don’t want to be crazy by Samantha Schutz
5. Home to Italy by Peter Pezzelli
6. Every Sunday by Peter Pezzelli
7. The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley
8. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
9. One year to an organized life by Regina Leeds
10. Never Change by Elizabeth Berg
11.  The Omnivore’s Dilemma; A natural history of four meals by Michael Pollan
12. The Worst Hard Time by Timothy Egan
13. Confessions of a Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella
14. Inheritance by Natalie Danford
15. The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing; Traitor to the Nation by M.T. Anderson
16. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
17. The Reluctant Tuscan; How I Discovered my Inner Italian by Phil Doran
18. Change of Heart by Jodi Picoult
19. Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
20. Gilead by Marilyn Robinson
21. The Shadow Catcher by Marianne Wiggins
22. The Mysterious Edge of the Heroic World by e.l. konigsburg
23. I Don’t Know How She Does It by Allison Pearson
24. Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska
25. Oh. My. Gods. by Tera Lynn Childs
26. Fablehaven by Brandon Mull
27. The Toughest Indian in the World by Sherman Alexie
28. Dreamland by Sarah Dessen
29. Just Listen by Sarah Dessen
30. Lock and Key by Sarah Dessen
31. Along for the Ride by Sarah Dessen
32. A Curse Dark as Gold by Elizabeth C. Bunce
33. The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
34. Austenland by Shannon Hale
35. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
36. The Life and Times of Thunderbolt Kid by Bill Bryson
37. Twilight by Stephanie Meyer (gasp!!)
38. We Are All Welcome Here by Elizabeth Berg
39. Red Scarf Girl by Ji Li Jiang
40. The Zookeeper’s Wife by Diane Ackerman
41. The Sorceress; The secrets of the immortal Nicholas Flamel by Michael Scott
42. Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life by Wendy Mass
43. Running Out of Time by Margaret Peterson Haddix
44. A Crooked Kind of Perfect by Linda Urban
45. Operation Yes by Sara Lewis Holmes
46. Double Identity by Margaret Peterson Haddix
47. Peace, Locomotion by Jacqueline Woodson
48. The Reader by Bernhard Schlink
49. Peter and the Shadow Thieves by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson
50. The Snipesville Chronicles; Don’t Know Where, Don’t Know When by Annette Laing (gift from author)

A few of these were passed on to me (#’s 1, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 11), quite a few are from my school library and should be back at school instead of on my reading table (#2, #43-47) and a few like the Picoult and Berg books were purchased second hand and shuffled aside for newer choices.  The Sarah Dessen choices are all my step-daughter, Kaylee’s and will be passed pack to her as I finish. A few of the books, like The Shadow Catcher, I bought because I enjoyed something else the author had written (Evidence of things unseen).#24 and #39 were both purchased at the Holocaust Museum two years ago when we visited D.C.-why didn’t I read them on the car ride home?? 

I feel giddy with the idea of making some much needed room on my book cases-the key will be not to just add books back in.  I could have added a few more but I like a nice round number like 50-and when I get these read I’ll be closer to the +100 plus challenge.  Please leave a comment as to which one you think I should begin with come January 1st!!

Another useful reading challenge

I found out about this challenge while reading Jenners post over at Find Your Next Book Here, which sent me over to  Bibliophile By the Sea.
This challenge is about reading books that you already have on your bookshelves (I’ve got plenty of those!) and then passing them on to someone else (great recycling). It runs from January 1, 2010 until December 31, 2010.
 If so, feel free to join in:
  •  grab the button
  •  decide how many books you want to read from your shelves (minimum of 20 – no maximum)
  •  find a new home for the books once you read them
  •  post the titles and the authors of books you’ve read and passed on
  •  project runs from January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010
  •  crossover challenge books are allowed 

I have several bookshelves that beg, plead, implore to be unburden so I take this challenge and add to it that I will not purchase any new books until…I have read the books I choose for this particular challenge.  It probably will take me all year, but that’s okay.

Stay tuned for the list of books I will extract from my bookshelves.  If you have lots of books needing to be read perhaps you want to join this challenge as well.