Here I go again…. Another title that would have lounged on a library shelf never to cross my mind had it not been for the Cybils:
Blessing's Bead is a mix of historical fiction brought into the modern day through a familial connection across the years and miles of Alaska. The first section of the book tells the story of Nutaaq who travels with her family to an annual trading fair. While there, Nutaaq’s sister meets a Siberian boy and is married. Before she sails for Siberia, she promises Nutaag that when they meet at the next fair, she will bring a beautiful blue bead for each member of their family. Nutaaq never gets to see her sister again as the flu epidemic of the early 20th century changes their course in history.
The second section of Blessing's Bead tells the story of Blessing, a girl sent to live with her grandmother in northern Alaska while her mother battles her personal demons in modern day Anchorage. Raised away from the Inupiaq culture, Blessing feels alone and different. But when Blessing finds a blue bead, she learns the story of her great-grandmother, Nutaaq, and comes to understand what it means to be Inupiaq.
The story’s strength lies in it’s metaphorical examination of the harsh setting in relation to the realities of the characters. It is an atmospheric treat to visit Alaska through the eyes of both Blessing and Nutaaq. The author further assists with her addition of an author’s note on cultural and linguistic accuracies at the end.
Blessing's Bead is a good read, but it really should have been two books. The characters in either section are strong enough to hold their own story and they desperately needed more development. Although the ending creates a beautiful connection between the generations, and I suspect this is the reason the author chose to tell the two stories in one, it could have been accomplished as companion books.
The lack of character development is always a deal breaker for me when choosing books for young people. For the right student, this is a beautiful story, but the average ten-year-old will have some difficulty without the character connections.
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Genre: Historical & Realistic Fiction
Age: 9 - 12
Pages: 192
Themes: Multicultural, Coming of Age, Strength of Character
Publisher: MacMillian
Date: November 2009
ISBN: 978-0374308056 BUY Blessing's Bead HERE
Find teaching discussion & activity guides, excerpts and author info on the publisher's website: HERE
Debby Dahl Edwardson lives with her family in Barrow, Alaska. She always wanted to be a writer, but worked several other jobs before becoming one. You can read more about it on her website.
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Even with all the buzz surrounding One Crazy Summer, I didn’t really expect to like it and I certainly wouldn’t have ever picked it off the shelf as a fun read. I thought I’d quietly read the 50 pages (like I promised my Cybils pals) and move on to the next one. Of course I always read the last chapter (because I’m an ending freak), so I thought I’d spend maybe an hour with One Crazy Summer and move along to the next title on our massive 146 book list. Four hours later, while soaking in a nice warm bath, I found a tear rolling down my cheek as I closed the book on a historical time period I never thought I’d care to know much about.
I’m still not certain that I can appreciate the Black Panther movement of the 60’s, but I know that I can appreciate a protagonist with a voice so compelling I’m forced to read forward. That’s eleven-year-old Delphine, who, along with her two sisters, flies out to Oakland California to meet a woman she barely remembers when her father thinks it’s high time for his girls to get to know their mother. The three girl’s mother turns out to be a poet involved with the Black Panthers and she’s not much nicer than their paternal grandmother has told them. In fact, for all the character development of Delphine and her sisters, the author never got me to invest in their mother. Even as Delphine and her sister forgave their mother her faults, I muttered about a too tidy ending.
Could I ever invest in a character like Delphine’s mother? Could I feel some sympathy if the situation were extreme enough? Maybe author Williams-Garcia simply understood that most folks wouldn’t be shedding any of those tears for Delphine’s mother. I'm sure Ms. Williams-Garcia knew it was Delphine and the crazy summer she grew into a young lady of strength her mother could never have that makes One Crazy Summer an award-nomination worthy title.
-------------------- Resources -------------------- Genre: Historical Fiction
Age: 9 - 12
Pages: 224 Themes: Self-Reliance, Courage, Honor, Non-traditional Families, Black Panther Movement & Civil Rights Era
Character Traits: Excellent
Plot & Engagement: Good
Plausibility: Some loss at ending, but excellent for discussion
Awards: Nominated for 2010 National Book Award & 2010 Cybils
Publisher: Harper Collins Website Extras HERE
Date: January 2010
ISBN 0060760885 BUY One Crazy Summer HERE
Great author video discussing her books with students at Vermont College of Fine Arts
By the time she was twelve, author Rita Williams-Garcia was already sending stories to magazines in hopes of publication. If she's not writing, she's daydreaming and plotting. You can read more about her on her website.
They told me I only had to read the first fifty pages. That's like telling a shark he can only nibble the big toe. So, I'm finding that I end up reading them all the way through, no nibbling for me. Alas, trying to get a review on here becomes even more strenuous as I want to talk about them all, want to regurgitate the good ones in full, pass along some teaching ideas. The depth of review is going to suffer (as it already has since my return to work full-time). I doubt there will be many teaching ideas, but at least we'll all get a peek at what's turning out to be some great titles.
Crunch is a pleasant, feel-good story of a family living through a gasoline crunch (kids today are too young to remember when there was such a thing so educators might want to drop a little background knowledge on them before starting the book). Crunch follows the stock "get rid of the parents to move the plot" format. Protagonist Dewey's parents are stuck hours away without any gasoline in sight while Dewey and his siblings are left to care for each other and run the family bicycle shop (which is, of course, booming due to the gas shortage). Ms. Connor throws in a mystery (who is stealing from them?) and a cast of pleasurable characters. An easy, feel-good realistic story for the 4th - 6th crowd. -------------------- Resources --------------------
Genre: Realistic Fiction
Age: 9 - 12
Pages: 336
Themes: Family, Mystery, Perseverance, Honor
Publisher: Harper Collins
Date: March 2010
ISBN 978-0061692291
Borrowed from school library BUY Crunch HERE
For a discussion guide, an author interview and a few other treats, visit the publisher's website: Here.
Here's a television interview:
Leslie Connor was born on the family room floor and has been in a hurry ever since then. You can read more about her on her website.
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Publisher's Synopsis:"Sometimes your life just needs a little jolt. This is what Evie's new friend Francesca tells her, and soon enough, Evie's life has had something more like an earthquake. Francesca thinks life is dull unless you go after everything you want and say everything on your mind all the time--and sometimes that includes giving other people a little behind the scenes help to give them what she thinks they want.
Evie can't always tell if she's horrified or fascinated by everything Francesca convinces her to do, but ultimately, she comes to see friendship--and life--in a whole new light."
This Is Me From Now On manages to be a realistic, easy read while imparting some important messages concerning self-worth and being true to one's self. It is filled with all the awkwardness and uncertainty of middle school as it tells the story of worrisome Evie and free-spirited Francesca in authentic and engaging voices. Though Evie is the protagonist, I liked Francesca so much more. She seemed more mature and less judgmental, though Evie does grow on you.
An easy and fun read for middle school girls.
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Genre: Realistic Fiction
Age: 9-12
Pages: 272
Themes: Friendship, Self-Reflection, Uniqueness
Thank You to author Barbara Dee for my copy
Publisher: Aladdin
Date: April 2010
ISBN: 978-1416994145 BUY This Is Me From Now On HERE
Author Interview:
Barbara Dee grew up in Brooklyn, NY where she loved to read and write. She met her husband while attending Yale University. You can read more about her on her website.
Author’s Synopsis:"What secret is Uncle Silas hiding?
Adele, Milo and Isabella Winterbottom haven’t heard from Uncle Silas in years – unless you count the occasional insult. So curious eyebrows are raised when the cousins receive a mysterious invitation from their disagreeable relative. But Silas is dying, and a dying man with a vast fortune usually wishes to find an heir.
Or so the children believe.
But when they meet dear, old Uncle Silas and his hungry pet crocodile, the trio suspects that he may have a more sinister reason for inviting healthy, young relatives to his secluded island estate – a place where nothing is as it seems ..."
For readers who enjoy the Series of Unfortunate Events books or Roald Dahl’s style, I suspect The Death (and Further Adventures) of Silas Winterbottom: The Body Thief will become another favorite. Uncle Silas is an evil villain living on a remote island complete with pet crocodiles. In fact the entire Winterbottom family tree is a lesson in Gothic dysfunction - nasty, greedy and downright criminal.
Stephen M. Giles lives close to the beach, collects old people and spends days wandering in his imagination. You can read more on his website.
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