Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Life

 Shirley J.                              Juvenile Fiction                        Life as seen through animals' lives    

Life by Cynthia Rylant    48 pages

 Cynthia Rylant talks about life by using animals to illustrate her points.   Life starts small then grows.   She explores what it means to truly LIVE through the perspective of animals as it relates to the human viewpoint.   Whether appreciating small victories, muddling through hard times or celebrating our victories, Rylant encapsulates large difficult concepts and breaks them down to relatable small samplings presented through the behaviors of animals and told in such a way there is no mistaking whether an animal or a child experiences the idea being discussed life is beautiful.    I recommend this one for listeners up to kindergarten age.

All the Animals Where I Live

 Shirley J.              Juvenile Fiction                           The telling of the author's move to the country

All the Animals Where I Live by Philip C. Stead   48 pages       

This is such a dreary melancholy book.   The illustrations are washed out and sad looking, the story itself is much that way, too.   It must have been a positive, uplifting premise in the author's mind, surely, but, it did not play out on the page that way.   Everything just seems sad and has a detached feel to it.  It is the story of the author moving from the bustle of City life out to the country.    It talks about his country home and all the animals that live near his home that he meets along the way as he goes walking.   The trouble is the feel and tone here are not happy-go-lucky, YAY!  I live in the country and there are all these great animals to see and interact with.   No, the story has the same pale, washed out feeling as the illustrations.  I don't recommend this one.   There are far better uplifting choices along the same story lines out there.

Tea for Ruby

 Shirley J.           Juvenile Fiction                 Being polite, practicing your manners and tea with the Queen

Tea for Ruby by Sarah Ferguson, The Duchess of York     40 pages

Ruby has impeccable manners.   She is polite to a fault.   Etiquette is her favorite thing and always doing just the right thing the right way pleases her ever so much.    When Ruby receives an invitation to have tea with the Queen she especially wants to polish up her poise to be on point!   She practices all her good behaviors  being the best possible person she can be to everyone she encounters.    She curtseys, she inquires as to others health, she listens, she bows, she does her best to mimic the proper princess moves and attitudes she has observed in order to prove herself worthy to the Queen when she attends the tea she has been invited to.   She cannot wait!    A sweet story of a little girl trying to be her very best self.   I recommend this one to listeners up to 8 year olds.

             

Life on Mars

 Shirley J.     Juvenile Fiction      An astronaut explores the planet Mars carrying a present for whoever/whatever he encounters there

Life on Mars by Jon Agee      32 pages            

Really cute story about a young astronaut who is sure there is life on the planet Mars.  On a solitary mission he walks all over the planet just knowing in his bones there is life there and he wants to find it.  He even brings a present for said life, a box of cupcakes!  He journeys here and there but does not meet any new life forms until he comes across a lone flower.   There are no other flowers just this one.  He picks it from the ground and puts it away to take back to earth to prove there is something alive and growing on Mars.   Little does the astronaut know that a huge alien creature has been stalking him the whole way, of course, the reader and those listening to the story know.   They see it in the illustrations but it stays behind the astronaut and he never sees it.   Finally, the young astronaut returns to earth sad not to have made a discovery of other life on Mars, though, he is happy with the flower he can show everyone when he gets back.    He is still carrying the wrapped box bedecked with ribbons that hold the cupcakes.  Since there was no one to give them to he decides to open the box himself and enjoy the cupcakes inside but lo and behold!   The box is empty!    That was some skilled Martian to spirit those cupcakes away while the astronaut carried them and had no idea what happened.   I recommend this book for listeners up to kindergarten, maybe first grade.   

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

August totals

 




Only ten books read by three people in August with  2566 pp read.  

Shirley read the most books with five, but Julie read the highest number of pages with 1320.

Great job everyone!

Holly Claus the Christmas Princess

 Shirley J.            Juvenile Fiction                    When a little boy writes and asks Santa what He would like              for Christmas, Santa says a child and Santa's Christmas wish is answered with a baby girl 

Holly Claus the Christmas Princess by Brittney Bryant   48 pages

A little boy feels sorry for Santa one Christmas.   Everyone always writes to Santa with their wish list, but, this little boy instead wrote and asked Santa what He would like for Christmas.   Santa was so surprised and happy that he told the little boy how he and his wife longed for a child of their own and if he could have one wish it would be for a baby of their very own.   Someone was listening in the wish making realm and lo and behold the Clauses were blessed with a beautiful baby girl of their own.   Nothing can remain all happy or all good for long it seems.  An evil wizard casts a cuse on the baby and all the immortals for woe to fall on all of them until the day that Holly gives him her pure heart and agrees to marry him!  HORRORS!  The book is beautifully illustrated and a good story to add to any Christmas collection.  I recommend this one to listeners up to age 9.   It is a little longer and a little more intense than the whimsical stories. 

The Very Fairy Princess Valentines from the Heart

 Shirley J.             Juvenile Fiction                         Gerry worked hard making just the most special                                                                                              valentines for all her friends and family

The Very Fairy Princess Valentines from the Heart by Julie Andrews Edwards and Emma Walton Hamilton    32 pages

Gerry has worked hard to make just the perfect valentine for everyone in her class and can't wait to see their faces when they see them but wait!  What????   When she gets to school she finds she has picked up her Dad's work folder instead of her precious lovingly made valentines for all her friends!  Disaster!!!!  So, she comes up with a creative alternative.   Dad finding her valentines gets them there just in time though Gerry has things well in hand.   Very Fairy Princesses are good in a crunch and always at the top of their creative potential after all.   I recommend this book to listeners up to 8 year olds.  A valuable lesson taught her that grand gestures often make up for or are better than written ones!  Way to make folks feel good, Gerry.  


The Very Fairy Princess: A Fairy Merry Christmas

 Shirley J.              Juvenile Fiction                                    Gerry's Christmas Adventures

The Very Fairy Princess: A Fairy Merry Christmas    32 pages

Gerry, the very fairy princess, is ready for the holidays.   Decorations galore, snowflakes, santas, gingerbread men, snowmen, reindeer and glitter and sparkles a plenty!  She is so ready and when Mom suggests the family give each other gifts they have made this year, Gerry, puts on her thinking cap and comes up with just the perfect present for everyone on her list!  A very merry Christmas is had by all!  I recommend this book to listeners on up to 8 year olds.


Monday, September 11, 2023

The Very Fairy Princess: A Spooky, Sparkly Halloween

 Shirley J.            Juvenile Fiction                                               Gerry saves Halloween!

The Very Fairy Princess: A Spooky, Sparkly Halloween by Julie Andrews Edwards and Emma Walton Hamilton     32 pages

Gerry comes up with the perfect Halloween costume - a beautiful sparkly angel outfit complete with wings and glittery, halo.   She is all ready for the Halloween parade at school, her bff is all set too until "OH NO!"  A spill threatens the day when one of their costumes is ruined!  Or is it?   Gerry the very fairy princess saves the day once again with her exuberant ingenuity!   What are friends for?   I recommend this book to listeners up to 8 year olds.   A teaching lesson on how to give of ourselves when friends are in need.   






The Very Fairy Princess: Attitude of Gratitude

Shirley J.                 Juvenile Fiction              Gratitude Day at school time to compliment and do nice things for others, family, friends, even strangers - Gerry learns some valuable lessons in kindness.

The Very Fairy Princess: Attitude of Gratitude by Julie Andrews Edwards and Emma Walton Hamilton   32 pages                                                                                                                                                         

An excellent Thanksgiving story to remind us all to be kind and greatful for our bountiful blessings in life.  A great teaching story for youngsters to see the good things in life and to share our bounty with others by both giving and doing for others be it a helpful hand when they need it or a kind word to let them know how terrific you think they are.    A kind word and/or a kind gesture does wonders for us all, we must remember how much we love to receive so we can be as generous in sharing and caring with others.    Gerry is a very vigilant fairy princess in that she is quite complimentary to others and generous to a fault in her giving to make others' day.   I recommend this book to listeners up to 8 year olds.                                                                                                          
               

 

The Very Fairy Princess: Here Comes the Flower Girl!


 Shirley J.             Juvenile Fiction                       Gerry gets to be the flower girl in her Aunt's wedding

The Very Fairy Princess: Here Comes the Flower Girl!  by Julie Andrews Edwards and Emma Walton Hamilton      32 pages    

Gerry is ecstatic!  She gets to be flower girl in her Aunt Sue's wedding!  While she has visions of hundreds of guests, a billowy white  gown and extravagant decorations, it turns out Aunt Sue has something a lot smaller in mind.  ie. just family and in the backyard of Gerry's house.   At first, Gerry is disappointed but then she realizes having it at her house allows her creative license with the decorations!    Even with rain on the big day Gerry finds sparkle in the happiness and love.   Another cute story showing how to make lemonade out of lemons.   I recommend this one to listeners up to 8 years old.

The Very Fairy Princess Takes the Stage

 


Shirley J.       Juvenile Fiction            A little girl who feels she is a fairy princess performs ballet

The Very Fairy Princess Takes the Stage by Julie Andrews Edwards and Emma Walton Hamilton   32 pages

Julie Andrews and her daughter, Emma have written a series of children's books titled, The Very Fairy Princess Series.   The series stars a little girl named, Gerry, who loves sparkles and glitter and wearing fairy wings.  She does feel she is a fairy princess which is why she loves wearing a crown and her special sparkly wings.  In this story, Gerry is performing in a recital with her ballet class.   She so expected to get the starring role of Crystal Princess because she is always so sparkly herself, however, her teacher gives her the role of court jester instead.  While hurt she does her best to do her best at it after all the girl who got the part of Crystal Princess looked divine in the costume.  Making the best of things can turn out awfully grand when your heart is in the right place and sometimes good things follow.   A sweet story and an enjoyable series.   A good read-aloud series, too.   I recommend this to listeners up to age 8.   It is a good lesson in being o.k. when you don't get your way.  

Sunday, September 10, 2023

California Golden

California Golden by Melanie Benjamin 352pages

 

I’m not much of an outdoorsy person. In fact, I rather loathe it.  Bu that doesn’t stop me from reading about the great outdoors.  I would like to hang ten and try surfing, but like I just said…and without my glasses/contacts I couldn’t even see the darn wave.

 

Most of the time, when I hear “great outdoors,” I think woods and insects. The critters I can handle, but not those pesky insects. However, in Melanie Benjamin’s newest novel, the great outdoors refers to the surfs and sand of California and Hawaii. Benjamin’s description of the waves, the sun, and the freedom one feels in the water is unparalleled. I felt as if I was there.

 

Carol Donnelly is one of the first female competitive surfers in the sport. She is a marvel to behold on board. But Carol is trapped in 1950s- ‘60s societal expectations of marriage and motherhood, and she resents her children for it.  Her daughters, Mindy and Ginger drop out of school to partake in the surf culture and, sadly, to gain their mother’s attention.

 

Carol teaches her daughters to surf. Mindy is a natural while Ginger can barely hang onto the board. When Mindy wins a competition in California, Carol seethes with resentment. And to top it off, Minday gets work as an extra in the surfing movies that were so back then. Mindy first gains notoriety as the Girl with the Curl. The 1960s come alive when Mindy goes to Whiskey A-Go-Go and is seen at all the LA hotspots.

 

She finds love with a Hawaiian surfer. But with Vietnam escalating, the pair breaks it off. It is only when Mindy is on a USO tour in ‘Nam, does love return in a rather unexpected way.

 

Meanwhile, Ginger falls in love with an abusive surf bum. Author Benjamin creates the life of authentic beach bums, unlike the glamorous life portrayed in the movies. Unwashed and malnourished and high isn’t the life Ginger had dreamed of as a little girl, but she loves Tom with every fiber of her body and mind.

 

Readers don’t know much about Carol after she loses the competition. She had an accident which forced her retirement from surfing and eventually was the root cause of her Parkinson’s Disease (I’m not sure how a head injury could cause Parkinson’s, but what do I know.).

 

Reader’s journey through the two very different lifestyles of each sister. However, an unexpected pregnancy causes major strife and happiness with the family.

 

California Golden is different than most of Benajmin’s wonderful books. While most of her novels are character driven, this didn’t have a strong plot. California Golden receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

 

Who Killed Jerusalem?

Who Killed Jerusalem? by George Albert Brown  576 pages

 

How could I resist a novel whose main characters are Ickey Jerusalem and Ded Smith? Especially with this elevator pitch: “A rollicking murder mystery based on William Blake’s characters & ideas updated to 1970s San Francisco.” You’re right; I couldn’t. But what made me think that I would, all of a sudden, understand and adore Blake since I could do neither of those things when I was in college twenty-five years ago? What I was thinking! Unless it was the characters’ names, the setting is one of my favorite cities and I won the book from Bookishfirst.com.

 

Here's what synopsis from Amazon:

 

In 1977, Ickey Jerusalem, San Francisco's golden-boy poet laureate, is found dead in a locked, first-class toilet on an arriving red-eye flight.

Ded Smith, a desperately unhappy, intelligent philistine with a highly developed philosophy to match, is called in to investigate the poet's death. Thus begins a series of hilarious encounters with the members of Jerusalem's coterie.

Ded soon realizes that to find out what happened, he must not only collect his usual detective's clues but also, despite his own poetically challenged outlook, get into the dead poet's mind. Fighting his way through blasphemous funerals, drug-induced dreams, poetry-charged love-making, offbeat philosophical discussions, and much, much more, he begins to piece together Jerusalem's seductive, all-encompassing metaphysics.

But by then, the attempts to kill Ded and the others have begun.

Before Ded's death-dodging luck runs out, will he be able to solve the case, and perhaps in the process, develop a new way of looking at the world that might allow him to replace his unhappiness with joy?

 

I loved Chapter One, in which author Brown drops us right into the middle of the action. Ickey died a gruesome death there in the plane’s bathroom.  But by Page 5, I was so lost I found myself reading words and wondering WTH?

 

And I will admit to reading every blast word of this 576-page tome and only understanding about a fifth of it. Afterwards, I jumped on Amazon and perused the review section. This is what I wanted the book to be, from a review by Maddogish:

 

The book is loosely based on William Blake's poetry, characters and ideas... fortunately you do not have to be familiar with any of Blake's work to love this book. If anything it opens the world of poetry in an accessible manner so that maybe more people will learn to love epic poetry and romantic era classics. The book centers on the mysterious death of San Francisco Poet Ickey Jerusalem and his wild and crazy group of cohorts. An insurance adjuster, Ded Smith who is known as Dr. Death for his uncanny ability to determine cause of death and solve murders, is on board the flight when Jerusalem is found dead. He is initially asked to help the police with interviewing the suspects as a friendly courtesy, but when it is discovered that Ickey took out a life insurance policy a month before his death, Ded is called in to rule if the case a suicide or murder in an official capacity. While he investigates each of the suspects and the crime itself, he finds himself caught up in a web of philosophy, intrigue and murder. The poet not only collected delightfully weird friends the stand out on the page; he had seemed to develop strange ideas on life and existence in general. I can honestly say the author had me guessing until the end who the killer was, while at the same time weaving so much philosophical information and poetry that I found my self in awe of how he tied all of it together. This is a truly magical and unique book that will take readers on an epic journey.

 

But all I got was a series of headaches, a lot of re-rereading, so much that it took almost a month for me to get through this novel. I'm going to put it back on the shelf and tackle it again in a few years. Best of luck to anyone who tries to decipher this novel. Who Killed Jerusalem? receives 2 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

 

Monday, September 4, 2023

Code Name Sapphire

Code Name Sapphire by Pam Jenoff 368 pages

 

No one writes about World War II quite like Pam Jenoff. She manages to find the forgotten stories of how important women were to conquering Hitler and the Nazis.

 

In this novel, Jenoff tells the story of three Belgian women from three different viewpoints. First there is Micheline, the elusive leader of the Sapphire network. Their mission: to spirit downed British pilots back to England so that they may live to fight another day. Micheline is tough, but she must be to do her job. It’s a credit to Jenoff that the pilots’ stories are not included.

 

Next is Hannah, a Jew, who has joined Sapphire in the hopes of escaping to America. She manages to secure a place on a ship headed for America, but upon arrival, the ship and its human cargo are turned away (for those that don’t know, this is a true story. To read more, try “Refuge Denied,” by Sarah A. Ogilvie).  Upon Hannah’s return, she turns to her wealthy cousin, Lilly, to protect her.

 

One night, a horrible mistake occurs, and Lilly, her husband and her son, are arrested, split up, and placed on trains bound for a camp. Lilly arrives first and has grown accustomed (if that is possible), to life in the camp. Her husband and son soon joined her. (I found that bit unrealistic that the family was housed together, as all other books I’ve read about the camps, men, women and children were separated.)

 

Then, Lilly and her family are once again, placed on a train and headed further east to another camp. Hannah enlists Micheline to help her stop the train and rescue the Jews bound for Auschwitz. Now comes the time when I must shut up or risk spoilers. It’s a harrowing escape story that will keep readers up until they reach the end of this novel.

 

Code Name Sapphire receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.


The Air Raid Book Club

The Air Raid Book Club by Annie Lyons 336 pages

 

I love books about books, readers and bookstores. Author Annie Lyons has given us a wonderful little slice of heaven in this book.

 

The story begins in a suburb of London in 1938. Hitler is on the rise and war looks inevitable. Readers get to meet Gertie Bingham right away, and I immediately fell in love with her. Since 1911, she and her husband, Harry, have owned and operated Bingham Books. She is considering retiring, and since Harry’s death two years earlier, it’s getting harder and harder. At first, I thought Gertie was in her late seventies, perhaps early eighties, but she is only in her early sixties. She does have a faithful companion in her dog, Hemingway, who is aging as well, but she’s tired.

 

As she considers this life change, readers get to meet the villagers who frequent the bookstore. Young and old frequent the shop and since her village is so small, Gertie becomes close to all of them.

 

As Hitler continues his assault on Europe, one of her dearest friends, Charles, asks Gertie to help by fostering a young Jewish girl. At first, she is reluctant, but eventually she gives in, and it changes her entire life.

 

Hedy speaks some English and at fifteen years old, she is terrified of her new surroundings. Eventually the two settle down into a routine, Hedy loves the bookstore and books as much as Gertie did.

 

The bombs begin to fall, and the people of the village spend more and more time in the air riad shelters, Hedy and Gertie bring books to read aloud until the all-clear sirens begin to shrill.

 

I don’t feel that the title of this read gives the right impression. It’s less about what happens in the shelter and more about re-discovering life. Author Lyons does a wonderful job of balancing the unimaginable tragedies of war with finding happiness in a world that seems bent on destroying everything that is good.

 

I loved all the characters whom Gerti welcomed into her bookstore and her village. The one who made me smile the most, however, was five-year-old Billy, who called everyone by their full name!

 

The Air Raid Book Club receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.