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Monday, January 24, 2022

Monday Reading - Quite a Variety

  Visit Kellee and Ricki at UnleashingReaders and 

  
Jen at Teach Mentor Texts to see what they and others have been reading! Your TBR lists will grow! 
          
      Remember the ALA Youth Media Awards are happening this morning! Do you have favorite books you hope will receive a shiny medal?




       For Poetry Friday, I shared the review of and a poem from this anthology!


            
               Yes, it took me a long time, reading other books along the way, then turning back to this beautiful book set in various places and times, woven together by a story from ancient times, a story of Aethon, who wants to become a bird in order to fly to a paradise in the sky. As the different characters come into the story, we readers find that in their unique ways, each one yearns for another life, wondering how it would be "if only". If you wish to know of each one, read the summary on Goodreads. Anthony Doerr writes that it is a paean to books, yet it also feels like a story of humans, a zest for what they believe is better, and perhaps (or hopefully) discover that better is really what they already have. From one page: "Sometimes the things we think are lost are only hidden, waiting to be rediscovered." Usually when reading, one falls in love with a singular character, yet as I consider the five disparate characters who play into this new story, I realize that each one touched me. I would read a part from one, enjoying or fretting about each specific plight, but at the same time, wondering what was next for another. The secondary characters played essential roles, too, adding in the ways they helped bolster the lives of the main ones, each one's actions adding kindness to those lives. It is a very special book!
 
Thanks to Candlewick Press for the following two books!

         Jo Knowles, so loved for her numerous chapter books like See You At Harry's, an all-time favorite of mine, and Where the Heart Is, now has a picture book, out tomorrow! Little Worm is on his way outside when he discovers he has an earworm and wonders who put it there! As he sings "Shimmy, shimmy, no-sachay..." he meets various animals, first Owl. He asks if Owl put the earworm in but Owl replies, "No." And he sings his own song. Moving on, with Owl, Little Worm meets Chipmunk, Bunny, and Fox, all of whom have unique earworms to which they sing and dance, all together! Galia Bernstein's illustrations wonderfully show the animals prancing along with glee and song, so happily that Little Worm forgets he's looking for who gave him that earworm! He does find out but I'll leave that for readers to smile when they discover the answer at the end. It's a cute story that will make a great one for bedtime for the little ones.

         First published in Australia in 2020 by Walker Books, in the US in 2022!    
         Young Audrey finds a lion with a special-looking cake, imagines, and asks if it's his birthday. "Sometimes," said Lion. "But not today." Lion had a cake and Audrey asks what he is celebrating. He tells her Tuesdays and coconuts. She was okay with that so they ate cake. Moving through the pages, readers will see that celebrations can be for lots of things, not only birthdays. Edwina Wyatts tells this sweet story and Tamsin Ainslie illustrates with lots and lots of colorful details. Audrey and the lion have a happy time with all kinds of fun while celebrating.

And thanks to my library for these next ones!

         My younger granddaughter and I read this together, then we looked HERE to discover more! There are many links to discovering this special place and story!
          Jennifer Bradbury tells when some people decided that different religious groups could not longer live together in India, the country was divided into India and Pakistan. Nek Chand's family had to leave what had been their beloved land and move to India, because they were Hindu, not Muslim (who had to live in Pakistan). One day he was lonely for his home and discovered a patchy area of woods that reminded him of his old home. People wondered why he began picking through trash and carrying what he found, along with rocks, to "somewhere". That "somewhere" was that piece of land. And the rest of the story became his "fantastical" garden. It's a story to love about how one man created something new, something even though the city had other plans, the discovery of this place was kept alive! Now, worldwide, visitors come to see and love it. Sam Boughton's collage illustrations feels as if we can step right in. With gorgeous colorful pieces, he makes Nek Chand's world come alive, just as if we were really visiting. Wouldn't it be wonderful to visit!
       There is an added note, with photos, and a timeline at the back.

        Both sad and then "Something Good" comes from the discovery of the "something-bad" on the girls' bathroom wall. The serious story by Marcy Campbell tells how a school handles a big problem by working together. Corinna Luyken's emotion-laden illustrations can make one cry and then celebrate as page by page, we watch the children's reactions. It's a book that will be useful to have in schools.


One I own, but forgot to share! I'm sure you all know about this one!

              With colorful illustrations by Loren Long lighting up the music, and Amanda Gorman's melodic verse, a band full of varied characters stroll the town doing good deeds for many. The final double-page spread celebrates the "change" and we are invited to join them to "sing"! For inspiration, it seems that this book could start that song in every group! 

 



Next - Still reading poetry for the Cybil's, but I made a mistake on my #MustReadin2022 list. I started to read Tight by Torrey Maldonaldo and realized I'd already read it. But, it's so good, I'm doing a re-read. And I will start  Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan.


10 comments:

  1. So many are reading Doerr's book, I'm still hesitating.
    Wow the illustration in Change Sings are gorgeous. Enjoy!
    My post is here: https://wordsandpeace.com/2022/01/23/sunday-post-50-1-23-2022/

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    1. Thanks, I enjoyed your post, too. Perhaps you can take on Cloud Cuckoo Land someday? It's definitely memorable!

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  2. I'm glad you finished Cloud Cuckoo Land. He really is an amazing author.
    I had a sad time today as I went in search of the books you shared and finally found an ebook copy of Change Sings available from one of my libraries. I adore the artwork so I guess it is a bonus. I wanted especially to read Rock by Rock. I have read The Secret Kingdom: Nek Chand, a Changing India, and a Hidden World of Art by Barb Rosenstock and am fascinated by what an amazing man he was.

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    1. Hope you can find Rock by Rock but glad you found Change Sings, Cheriee. Imogene my granddaughter enjoyed learning about Nek Chand so much, I wrote his name on a sticky note so she could research further. I've noted those others, Cheriee. Thanks!

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  3. Ear Worm! sounds like fun. I chuckled when you said that you started a book and then realized you had already read it. I've done that before!

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    1. Thanks, Lisa, for sharing that you forget, too. I felt embarrassed. I do acknowledge that we read a lot of books so it seems real that some are forgotten. Yes, Earworm is really cute.

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  4. I find myself rereading as well! Sometimes when I read an ACR and then it is published -- I hear all the great response and forget I read it earlier. Glad I'm in good company! Thanks for sharing such a range of titles.

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    1. As I wrote above, I'm glad, too, to hear that others do forget. Hope you found a book or two that you'll enjoy, Clare! Thanks!

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  5. It was really exciting to see the ALA winners this morning! And all of these books look wonderful, Linda—Cloud Cuckoo Land looks like such an incredible book, with all of those compelling characters and plot lines! Rock by Rock sounds lovely, and I've heard great things about Something Good—the cover alone is gorgeous! And Change Sings looks wonderful as well, especially with Amanda Gorman as the author. And I can understand picking up a book accidentally, especially since you read so much each week—but it's great that it's worth reading again! Thanks so much for the wonderful post, as always!

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    1. Atinuke's work for Something Good, yes, is beautifully done. Thanks, Max. Hope you've found a book or two to add to those stacks you already have, plus college reading. Sleep time does not come easy.

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