Sheila at Book Journeys started It's Monday! What are you Reading?, a meme where bloggers share recent books read.
Then, Jen of Teach Mentor Texts and Ricki and Kellee at Unleashing Readers started one with a children's focus. My book TBR list grows each week. It's wonderful discovering new great books! Thanks Sheila, Jen, Ricki and Kellee! And Happy Reading Everyone!
The following two books meets
the challenge made by 2014Latin@s in Kid Lit (See the button on the right if you'd like to explore this terrific blog resource.)
Draw! – by Raúl Colon
I loved looking at this book, and while I didn't draw much when I was
young, I did spend hours imagining stories everywhere. This time, Raúl Colon
takes us into his childhood drawing world, sitting in his bed with a
sketchbook, taking us into the world of a safari, moving along with sketchbook
and supplies in hand. We enter what looks like a savannah, and there are the
elephants, zebras and giraffes. From a tree, there are lounging lions. And in
his imagination, there are a few frightening moments. Colon's drawings and
imagination will take students into their own imagination, I hope, so they can
draw! Beautiful double-page spreads that fill you up with color and action. I
can't wait to share the book with students.
Dancing Home – written by Alma Flor
Ida and Gabriel M. Zubizarreta
I am grateful to Alma
Flor Ida for sending me numerous books that she has written, both picture books,
chapter books, and cds of her reading some of them. I’ve shared many with our
Spanish teacher who in turn has shared with students.
Margarita, one of the
main characters, is about to have her life changed, and she believes it’s not
for the better. Her cousin Lupe is coming to live with the family because her
mother has remarried, and it’s a chance for Lupe to have a good education in
the U.S. Margarita likes to be called
Margie; she’s decided it’s more American, & she is American, born in Texas.
Her own parents are immigrants, and Margie is a little embarrassed that they
don’t always act like her classmates’ parents. She is also now worried that
Lupe will embarrass her even more because she doesn’t speak English at all.
This is a story of complications, immigrants trying to fit in, but still
feeling proud of the country of their birth. It’s a story of being teased
because one is different. And it’s a
story of family love. The chapters alternate voices with Margarita telling part
of the story, and Lupe telling the other. I enjoyed it very much, the sweet
voices of these young girls wondering if things will ever be okay, and finally,
through the help of a new friend, too, they do find a comfort in both their
heritage and their new country. It would make a good read aloud to bring up so
much illuminating conversations, to step into the shoes of others you might not
know much about, or to hear the voice whose experience parallels yours.