Busy Book Fair Day

It’s conference time in the Cedar Valley and during this time it is tradition for the library to hold a book fair!  I thought today would be a slow start today and I would have plenty of time to blog…that didn’t happen so here I am posting at 9:56!  I’m glad it was busy (my feet hurt though) and I’m ready to go home.

Here are highlights from what people were reading and buying at the fair.

Diary of a wimpy kid; dog days by Jeff Kinney-hands-down most popular book bought by kids
Boys are dogs by  Leslie Margolis
Allie Finkle’s Rules for girls, Best Friends and Drama Queens by Meg Cabot
I spy fly guy by Tedd Arnold for the younger set

Nonfiction rocked a lot as well:
See how they run; campaign dreams, election schemes, and the race to the White House by Susan E. Goodman (okay, so nobody bought this one but lots of people looked in it.)

Tomorrow’s another day at the fair.
Tomorrow is probably won’t be as busy
then I will be able to write in the middle of the day!!

Be Peaceful…
Michelle

A little late-blooming romance!


I just finished Julie and Romeo by Jeanne Ray (2000) and it was charming! I picked it randomly off our public library shelf, I was looking for something light to read and this was perfect! Julie is in her sixties and alone, attending a small business seminar when she runs into her family’s arch-enemy, Romeo Cacciamani and after striking up a small conversation-they go for coffee. She doesn’t know why she chooses to do this after years of hearing the horrors of his family but she does. An interesting chain of events occurs as Julie and Romeo fall in love, yep, all from a cup of coffee, that’s just how it happens!! I love Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and this is a sweet adaptation~I really enjoyed the characters and the story line was very believable. I loved the couple’s dates at CVS and later, Julie’s ex-husband, Mort throwing a pot at Romeo in the flower shop!! I will read more from this author and I found out from my friend, Tina that Ray’s daughter is Ann Patchett, of Bel Canto fame! Find more information and a list of Jeanne Ray’s books here.

Summertime sweet


Ahhhh, the joy of being a teacher definitely resides in the summer time break (don’t tell the 500 students at my school!). Let the summertime reading begin. My hammock is set up and the lemonade is chilled.

After I finished The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and Al Capone shines my shoes by Gennifer Choldenko, I decided it was time to go back to my beside-the-bed pile of soon-to-reads! I pulled up The Rest of her life by Laura Moriarty. I remember purchasing this book at my lovely library’s used book store. It appealed to me because it was about the tenous releationship between mothers and daughters.

In this particular tale, Leigh is the narrator, a woman, wife and mother who still struggles with how her mother raised her. Her mother was cold, bitter and a complainer, not the hug-loving, cookie-baking mama Leigh wanted. But like I tell my own children-“you get what you get and you don’t throw a fit”. Leigh has never recovered from the many mistakes her mother made while her older sister, Pam is more empathetic to her mom and how rough she had it; trying to raise the two girls on her own, working sometimes more than one job and moving constantly as her mother continues to lose jobs due to her somewhat abrasive personality.

When the book opens we meet Leigh, a high school English teacher married to Gary, a professor at the local univesity somewhere in Kansas. Their oldest daughter, Kara driving in town accidentely hits a pedestrian in a crosswalk, while rescueing a lost dog and trying to call the animal rescue shelter at the same time. Written in 2007, this shows what young drivers deal with in our modern techno world. All I had to do when I learned to drive is figure out the exact moment to let out the clutch! This tragedy is what motivates the story and how the family deals with the stress of the situation is very interesting.

When I purchased the book I didn’t realize that I would be reading the book at them same time my 14-year-old son would be applying for and getting (gasp!) his permit to drive! The book took on special meaning because of this coincidence (?). This is a great read; worth it for the wonderful relationships Moriarty has created. Leigh’s best friend, Eva and her daughter Willow add to the list of characters meant to shake things up. I know really want to read Moriarty’s first book, The center of everything.

I brought home from school 45 chapter book, 4 professional books, and 20 picture books so I’m picking randomly out of my crates for what to read next. all that should get me through until i find a copy of Catching Fire!!!

Tom Perrotta's The Abstinence Teacher

I love checking out author pages and as I am really enjoying Tom Perrotta’s new(ish) book, The Abstinence Teacher, I thought I would check out his site where I found this gem of a timeline. I can relate to much on this as he was born just a year before me and it is interesting to read of the stuggles he had getting published and all the odd jobs made me laugh.

I always enjoy books with a timely topic and this one is a perfect mix of Christian Coalition/Liberalism butting heads over sex!!! Fiesty!!
I just finished Maxinne Swann’s Flower Children, which I felt was bland and not character-driven. This book is a good one to follow it with because already I know and like Ruth Ramsey, the main character and sex education teacher and I am not even a third into the book.
oh, time to go walk the new puppy!!

Peace like a river


This is a book I’ve been meaning to read for several years and I loved the characters. Leif’s tale just trots along taking his reader on an unexpected journey through one moment in their lives. Life is like that where one incident can overshadow all other expectations for a person. We see it today in the crazy debates about Obama’s patriotism, wearing a lapel pin or not.