28 Days of Things I Love; #4

I love curling up with a good book!

I love the words that I learn the sentence structure, the descriptions.  I fall head over heals in love with characters.  Claire Marvel by John Burnham Schwartz is a perfect example of good writing and memorable characters.  I wanted to get home every day just to read another paragraph, another chapter yet not too fast lest the end come to quickly.

As a young girl I loved curling up in my room and reading the day away.  Today is no different-I squirrel away moments to read as I make dinner, while I wait in line, as I eat lunch at work and especially while I soak in a quiet bath.  I read with my two older children as they moved into middle school age and now read religiously with my youngest.  I’m slightly interested in ebooks yet I know I will always journey with a book in my hand.  I celebrate the printed word, especially stories as marvelous as Claire Marvel!

One quote:

I began to close the bag, then changed my mind.  “Want a Life Saver?”
She cocked her head skeptically. “Depends on the flavor.”
“Butter Rum,” I said.
Brightening, she nodded-a girlish bounce of her head that sent a thrill through me.  I peeled the damp foil back so she could take one.
“I forgot how good these are.” She was rolling the candy noisily around her tongue. (5)

I love this scene as it introduces both Claire and Julian.  In this moment standing in the rain she holds a yellow umbrella and he is soaked.  Their relationship in the beginning throes seems picture perfect except Julian hesitates unsure of himself and she waits expectantly.  Oh-the thrill of a good book!  This one is a keeper.

The History of Love; A Novel by Nicole Krauss

(2005)

My stepdaughter, Kaylee, read this book earlier in the year and passed it off to me to read.  I picked it up right before Christmas break because she was coming and I didn’t want to NOT have read it before her return.  I had no expectations as I hadn’t heard of Krauss or the title on any blogs before. I have had several comments from other bloggers that this is a book they read pre-blogging.  I’m glad I went into it fresh and was rewarded with amazing storytelling.  I love fiction that is able to take two seemingly different tales and weave them together like a fine Persian rug.

The History of Love begins with Leo Gursky and his lamentable life.  He’s a mixed character with such depth; he’s unhappy but happy to be alive every day.  He does things like drop change in line at the grocery store so the people around him are forced to really see him.  He volunteers to model for a nude art class.  He does not want days to go past where he is invisible.  He is a character I fell in love with by his sheer will to BE.
The other half of the story is told by fourteen-year-old Alma Singer who is attempting to solve the mystery of her family.  Her father died when she was seven, her mother has been sad ever since and her brother thinks he’s been touched by God.  Alma’s name comes from a book, The History of Love, which her father gave her mother years before and Alma endeavors to find out more about the book and the author, which might help her understand her own life or at least how to make her mother happy again.  
I thoroughly enjoyed both parts of this multifaceted story and at times couldn’t put the book down.  I plan to read more Nicole Krauss books as well as her writer husband, Jonathon Safran Foer.  Kaylee has a class at Oberlin that Foer teaches which is why she’d picked the book up in the first place.  
Have you read any books by this power writing couple?  If not, I highly recommend this one…
After finishing it I hugged it and then reopened it to reread the opening lines again.  I’m a little sad that stepdaughter is taking it away with her tomorrow.  
Here are the opening lines:

“When they write my obituary.  Tomorrow. Or the next day. It will say, Leo Gursky is survived by an apartment full of shit.  I’m surprised I haven’t been buried alive.  The place isn’t big.  I have to struggle to keep a path clear between bed and toilet, toilet and kitchen table, kitchen table and front door.  If I want to get from the toilet to the front door, impossible, I have to go by way of the kitchen table.  I like to imagine the bed as home plate, the toilet as first, the kitchen table as second, the front door as third; should the doorbell ring while I am lying in bed I have to round the toilet and the kitchen table in order to arrive at the door.” (1)

I love her creative use of sentence structure and her imagery.  I can so easily visualize Leo’s cramped NY apartment.  Thank you Ms. Krauss for creating and sharing Alma’s and Leo’s stories.

Hey, It's Franklin…

I just got this great little email announcing Franklin’s debut into the ebook market.  I love Franklin just like I love Arthur.  I read and show Franklin DVD’s in the library and sadly, many students are unfamiliar with this wonderful character.  This video clip shows author, Paulette Bourgeois and illustrator, Brenda Clark talking about their collaboration process.
Franklin, truly a 21st Century learning icon, can now be found on twitter. 

What Really Happened to Humpty?

[from the files of a hard-boiled detective]
by Joe Dumpty as told to Jeanie Franz Ransom
Illustrated by Stephen Axelsen
(2009)

Kids will love the humor in this book.  It begins:  “Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall.  Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.  Humpty Dumpty was pushed.” At least I think so.  Who am I? I’m Joe Dumpty, Humpty’s younger brother. 

Joe, the P.I., goes on to explain his case as to why he thinks his brother was pushed off the wall and step-by-step the mystery of Humpty is solved. The book is a cross between a regular picture book and a comic book, using a whole slew of fairy tale characters to retell the story.  Groovy  Girl loved identifying her favorite fairy tale characters in a different light.  Low carb diets, power walks, binoculars and cell phones give this tale a modern, fresh snap.

 By the way…the culprits… Little Miss Muffet and the Big Bad Wolf -the wolf says “I’m bad. It’s my middle name.”  That pretty much says it all.  I can’t wait to use this book when we talk about fairy tales.  This would be a perfect look at how to fracture the story and make it into something new.  We checked this out from the public library.

Jeanie Franz Ranson’s website.
The Reading Tub review

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake

(2010)
292 pages

     I’ve read a few  less-than-stellar reviews about this book yet I adored it!   Everybody has their own opinion, naturally soooo I’m here to share mine.  I think my favorite college professor would have had a field day with this book’s symbolism.  It delves headlong into the mother/daughter role and how a mother loves her children.  Even though it takes place in modern day I’m reminded of a 1950’s family at times.

Synopsis (from good reads):

     On the eve of her ninth birthday, unassuming Rose Edelstein, a girl at the periphery of schoolyard games and her distracted parents’ attention, bites into her mother’s homemade lemon-chocolate cake and discovers she has a magical gift: she can taste her mother’s emotions in the cake. She discovers this gift to her horror, for her mother—her cheerful, good-with-crafts, can-do mother—tastes of despair and desperation. Suddenly, and for the rest of her life, food becomes a peril and a threat to Rose.
    The curse her gift has bestowed is the secret knowledge all families keep hidden—her mother’s life outside the home, her father’s detachment, her brother’s clash with the world. Yet as Rose grows up she learns to harness her gift and becomes aware that there are secrets even her taste buds cannot discern.

My thoughts:

     Eating just that one bite of what should be a special birthday cake draws her closer to her mother than most girl’s her age ever get.  She tastes loneliness and despair=fairly typical feelings for some housewives with  lack of direction but Rose loses her appetite.  Rose continues to uncover her mother’s secrets including an affair=suddenly she tastes a lightness mixed with a new happiness. 

     Family dynamics are fully explored in Bender’s story as she looks at the triangle formed between a mother and her two children.  Rose knows her mother and is her mother’s aide.  She never tells her mother’s secrets, there’s a confidante aspect to their relationship.  Mothers and daughters often have a special and fairly difficult relationship and Bender portrays this through the food sensory idea.  What symbolizes a mother more than food??  The second part of the triangle is Rose’s brother, Joseph.  Joseph has his own magical talent which makes him completely introverted and seperate from his family but of course, he is the one his mother dotes on. Rose admires Joseph and wants to spend time with him while Joseph feels overwhelmed by human contact. 
    See daughter tries to help and please mother while mother obsesses about son.  Now Rose and Joseph’s father is a lawyer and spends his quiet time working at home and having minimal contact with his family-he’s nice but not emotionally there.  Dad has his own secrets.  Classic family psycho-drama well-told by Bender.

Good Quote:

Every now and then, I would crawl out of bed in the middle of the night to find her in the big armchair with the striped orange pattern, a shawl-blanket draped over her knees.  I, at five, or six, would crawl into her lap, like a cat.  She would pet my hair, like I was a cat.  She would pet, and sip.  We never spoke, and I fell asleep quickly in her arms, in the hopes that my weight, my sleepiness, would somehow seep into her.  I always woke up in my own bed, so I never knew if she went back to her room or if she stayed there all night, staring at the folds of the curtains over the window.  (20-21)

or

She put her cheek down to rest on our matched hands and closed her eyes.  She was wearing a new eye shadow, pale pink on her brow bone, and she looked like a flower resting there.  How much I wanted to protect her, her frail eyelids, streaked with glimmer: I put a hand lightly on her hair.  (100)

I loved the connection Rose establishes with her mother and food. How do we cook?  Do we cook frantically or do we stop and smell; cook with love.  That’s what Rose needs.  What Rose does with this knowledge later as she becomes more comfortable with food is passionate.  I also adored the close-up view of Los Angelos.  Bender gave me a real sense of  location as I walked the streets with Rose even though it’s been years since I’ve visited LA.  Now that I’ve gone through intimate details of this book it’s crazy that I’m giving it away-I should read it again as I’m sure with Bender’s wonderful writing I haven’t found every detail.  Oh, it’s really so good.  I hope you’ll try it yourself!

Enter my birthday giveaway here.
Shop Indie Bookstores

From Alice to Zen and Everyone in Between

(2008)
247 pages

The title of this book stood out to me as I glanced quickly through the new (er) section of my local library. 

Synopsis (from IndieBound):

Alice likes playing soccer and working on her go-kart with her dad. Her bedroom is decorated with a baseball theme. But when she moves to the suburbs, she learns from the boy down the street that she has no hope of fitting in at her new middle school unless she starts acting more “like a girl.” Zen seems kind of weird himself–how many boys read fashion magazines and dream of someday owning a spa? Alice learns that fitting in and being herself are two very different things–until she tries to fit in with people who like her for who she really is.

My Thoughts:

     While I liked the essence of this book I did not fall in love with the characters.  I found their actions to be slightly off-balance.  But then this a middle school read and I’m no longer in that category.
     Alice is happy to live in her new suburban neighborhood in a big, new house (which was purchased from her father’s ebay sale of a book signed by JFK-for $60,000) but she hopes for some other kids nearby. Walking the ‘hood one day, exploring with her backpack on she discovers Zen: 

“Are you running away already?”

Around the corner to the left of the stop sign, a big, bulky boy sat in a ratty lounge chair under the thick shade of an old tree. His hair was so blond it looked white. And it was unusually curly. He wore a hand-painted t-shirt and cut off jeans exposing the palest legs I had ever seen. In his right hand, he held a magazine, and in his left, a glass of lemonade with a bendy straw.
“Don’t you like Hemlockless Trail?”
I stopped and stared, not sure if I should talk to him.
“Isn’t it clever how the builders named the road after the very trees they cut down?”
I glanced back up the street, but I had no idea what a hemlock tree would look like.
“So didn’t you people just move into your cookie-cutter chateau? Which one is yours?’ (25)

And their rocky friendship begins.  They are total opposites as Zen helps her become (his idea) of a popular girl and she listens and accepts it all, giving up her tomboy image.   Alice is dumbfound by his lack of boy traits-she’d be happy with a boy for a best friend but this boy is not boyish at all!  Zen has his own standards and I do like his comments about Hemlock (less) Trail and cookie-cutter houses so he does have a sense of humor.  He likes to crimp hair and read fashion magazines but he also does some snarky things behind Alice’s back.  He could be Alice’s gay best friend but it doesn’t end up that way as once Alice is in school and in with the crowd she ignores Zen.   Ultimately this is a book about following your own path and staying true to yourself and while I got the message but my feelings were mixed.

     I did like Atkinson’s writing style and would try another book written by her.
  2.5/5 stars
Other compelling  reviews:

Literate Lives
Kiss The Book


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The Girl Who Fell From the Sky

(2010)
262 pages

Oh, what a relaxing break I’ve had!  My two sisters came to visit this weekend and we had a wonderful time together.  I am so happy my father, in his “mid-life” crisis, married a beautiful woman with 5 interesting children-two of which are women.  I grew up with three brothers so I have loved getting to know these sisters over the years.  They are both smart and caring women so it was just a great weekend. 

Now though it is time to catch up.  I finished this amazing book two weeks (yikes!) ago and it is time I finish my post about it.  This book was suggested by my friend, V for our reading long-distance book club. 

Synopsis (from Barnes and Noble):



Rachel, the daughter of a Danish mother and a black G.I., is the sole survivor of a tragic family incident. With her strict African American grandmother as her new guardian, Rachel moves to a mostly black community, where her light brown skin, blue eyes, and beauty bring a constant stream of mixed attention her way. As she attempts to come to terms with an unfathomable past, she confronts her own identity as a biracial young woman in a world that wants to see her as either black or white.

My thoughts:

     Told in alternating chapters it is Rachel’s story as she comes to terms with her family history, which includes the heavy themes of depression, alcoholism, identity and racial issues, which keep Rachel from feeling comfortable with her looks.  Rachel tells her story with the help of Jamie, a Chicago neighbor, Laronne, her mother’s kind employer, her father, Roger and Nella, her mother.  They interchangeably recreate Rachel’s life first,  with her mother, trying to understand late 1970’s America and second, her life with her African-American grandmother, living in Portland, Oregon.

     I enjoyed Durrow’s creation of Rachel as she incorporated every woman’s struggle of rebellion against family and the search for love in order to define oneself.  I appreciated Rachel’s flaws as much as her triumphs.  She wants so much, but mostly simply the need to feel love.  Durrow did a great job of intertwining Jamie’s (Brick) story with Rachel and loved the outcome. 

A quote:

“And look at your hair.  All this pretty long hair looking all wild from outside.”
“We’re gonna wash that tonight,” she continues.  “Your Aunt Loretta will help you.  Bet she know how to do something better with that mess of hair than what you had done before.  You’re gonna go to school Monday and be the prettiest girl there.”
She doesn’t say better than your mama.  She doesn’t say anything about my mother, because we both know that the new girl has no mother.  The new girl can’t be new and still remember.  I am not the new girl.  But I will pretend.  (5-6)

     Rachel is a realist but so in need of love and acceptance and Grandma is hard-to-please.  Struggle.  It’s this struggle added to the vivid cast of characters that make this worth reading.  Aunt Loretta, Drew and Brick were positive characters in this tragic tale.  I felt healed just a bit from reading Rachel’s story…as if I was able to forgive myself my own struggle as a teen through Rachel’s journey.  5/5 stars-Highly recommended 

**Winner of the Belliwether Prize for Fiction**

Other reviews:

Booksploring
Jennifer at The Literate Housewife
The Bluestocking Guide

The Year the Swallows Came Early

by Kathryn Fitzmaurice
(2009)

Sadly, this lovely little book was left languishing on my bookshelf all year.  I finally pulled it off, finished it and now can return it back to my school library shelf.  Next year I’ll be able to talk many students into reading this book. 

Eleanor “Groovy” Robinson is a precocious, eleven-year-old girl living near a California beach.  She loves to cook, keeps a journal of her cooking ideas and recipes and her best friend is a boy, Frankie.  The description from the very first page is striking: 

“We lived in a perfect stucco house, just off the sparkly Pacific, with a lime tree in the backyard and pink and yellow roses gone wild around a picket fence.”

     There is chaos among this “perfect” setting, of course, and  Groovy’s dad is soon picked up by the local police officer as they are walking out of a shop.  The rest of the story unfolds as Groovy comes to accept the reasons behind her father’s arrest, her anger and eventually her understanding and forgiveness.  Weaved throughout are Groovy’s dreams to go to cooking school and her great-grandmother, Eleanor’s gift, which has something to do with everything. 

     There are many things to love about this story including her mother’s faith in the daily horoscopes and that a good makeover can change everything.  Frankie’s story has a touch of crisis as well and it is interesting to watch the friends help and hold back; counting on each other to know the right thing to do.  The characters are very well done and the setting does seem so picture perfect. 

My favorite quote introduces Groovy’s great-grandmother:

You see, your great-grandmother was very smart.  She had so many books stacked up along the walls of her apartment that it was hard to walk without accidententally kicking over a pile of them.  Some of the piles were as high as my head.  She always said that good writers are even better readers, and she was a great reader.  She probably liked reading better than talking to most people. (81)

This wonderful character description could describe me or my friends!!

And my second favorite quote reminds me of my own childhood in a small town:

Here’s the good thing about living in a small town: You get to know most everyone.  Here’s the bad thing about living in a small town: You get to know most everyone. (154)

I know many students who will enjoy this book and its connection to family and dealing with a family  member’s arrest and jail time.

Highly Recommended for elementary-middle grades
5/5 peaceful stars

Stroll over to April’s Cafe of Dreams and find all kinds of great stories about author Kathryn Fitzmaurice.
At books are my thing, Tina says this about The Year the Swallows Came Early!
Click for the author’s website.

Abigail Iris

Abigail Iris; The one and only by Lisa Glatt and Suzanne Greenberg and illustrated by Joy Allen is a very well-written elementary chapter book for the 3rd and 4th grade student. It tells the story of one sweet Abigail Iris who really loves her family (she is “one of many”); she is a little jealous of her “only” friends. Abigail Iris has an older stepbrother and shares a bedroom with her older sister while her three friends are all sibling-free. “Onlies” get expensive shoes like Heelies, new clothes and exciting Spring Break vacations. Genevieve invites Abigail Iris to join her family on a trip to San Francisco! The drive to San Francisco, the stay at the Francis Drake Hotel and the adventures they have in-between show Abigail Iris why being “one of many” has it’s bonus moments as well. This book is wonderful teaching tool without being overly didactic. Peaceful girl and I read this book at bedtime and it created alot of great conversation about families, finances and traveling. The illustrations are whimsical and very much add to this perfect little chapter book. 5/5 stars
Find Lisa Glatt’s website here, Suzanne Greenberg’s site here, and Joy Allen’s creative site here!
Other great posts about Abigail Iris from Kiss the Book,
Semicolon, and Booktopia.

Teaser Tuesday-Liar

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:

“I know how to hunt with a knife. Grandmother’s taught me how to use a slingshot and bows and arrows.” p. 72 Liar by Justine Larbalestier

I’m not lying really-there were so many good lines to choose from on those two pages!