6/12/09

When the Whistle Blows, by Fran Cannon Slayton

Of all the books that I read for the 48 Hour Reading Challenge last weekend, When the Whistle Blows, by Fran Cannon Slayton (Penguin, June 2009, 162pp), was the only one that made me cry.

Jimmy is the third, and youngest, son of a railway man in a small West Virginia town. It's the 1940s, and Jimmy is fascinated by the steam trains that roll through daily, hoping rides on them even though that's a dangerous business: "...there's always a right decent change of getting killed. Second, and about ten thousand times worse, my Dad might find out" (page 1). Jimmy wants to be a railwayman himself someday, but his father is against it, saying that the days of the steam train are numbered. The trains have a big part in the story--they are the lifeblood of the town, bringing work, and hope, and sometimes tragedy. They are the reason why Jimmy lives where he does.

The book follows Jimmy as he grows up, from 1943 (when he's about 11) to 1949, with the story of what happened to him on the same day of each year--the day before Halloween, the day of his father's birthday. The stories tell of small town boy things, like football (one of the most interesting fictional football games I've read about), mischief in spooky graveyard, and the start of hunting season, and at first they seem independent of each other--a series of vignettes of West Virginia life long ago. But as one reads, the story arc become clear--a boy finding out who his father is, and, in the process, learning about himself and what his place in the world might be.

As the reader is learning this, so is Jimmy. As he grows up, he begins to think about his father more, allowing Slayton to tenderly and deftly create an unforgettable portrait of father and son. Here's one of my favorite bits (although so as to not type a whole page and a half, I left some paragraphs out...)

"Happy birthday, Dad."

He turns around and looks at me. The deep creases around his eyes soften for a moment. He snorts again."
.......

"Understanding what his snorts mean has always been a [hard] question to figure. When I was younger, I always thought he snorted at me because I was bugging him. But lately I've realized that he doesn't just snort when he's bothered. Heck, he snorts all the time. He snorted at me last year when I finally got up the courage to tell him how bad I wanted to quite school and go to work on the railroad. I thought he was liable to kill me after that snort. But then the next semester when I showed him a report card full of A's and B's- even in Mr. Kaylor's chemistry class-he snorted the exact same way. "
------

It was when he snorted at the news that Mike and Viv were getting married that I finally figured out you couldn't tell what the heck my father was feeling from his snort. It just tells you that he's feeling something. I figure it's kind of like the whistle on an old Mallet engine: if you hear it, you know a train is coming" (pp 109-110).

When the Whistle Blows manages to be both exciting, and unrushed and thoughtful. It is a moving story, beautifully written. It might well become a classic coming of age story, capturing as it does a time and place long gone, while dealing in an engrossing way with the classic theme of growing up.

I almost want to recommend this book as a father's day gift, because it is such a lovely portrayal of a father/son relationship. But, like I said, it made me cry, so read it first, just in case it wouldn't be quite the thing.

Here are other reviews, at Jen Robinson's Book Page, 100 Scope Notes, and Becky's Book Reviews.

(source of book: arc from the author)

Two misc. things: Paris Pan Takes the Dare--Show You Care Launch Party, and ways to win Mare's War

Paris Pan Take the Dare, a middle grade book by Cynthia Liu, came out yesterday, and she is having a fabulous launch party to celebrate and raise money for a Title 1 school in Oklahoma. Head here, to Take the Dare, Show You Care for a chance to win prizes and help a worthy cause!

Here's the interview with Cynthia Liu at Cynsations where I found out about this!

I took the triple dare, so I should have a review of Paris coming soon....

Want your own copy of Mare's War, by Tanita Davis? I did, very much, and now that I've won my own copy (kidding), I can tell other people that she is giving them away in a series of fun contests at her author blog.

6/11/09

A blog recommendation for those who like science with their science fiction, plus today's new releases

I've added a new blog to my list, and vexingly, it's not showing the current post. So I wanted to just point it out a bit, because I think it's fascinating: Biology in Science Fiction.

Here are today's new releases in science fiction and fantasy for children and teenagers:

Dragonbreath, by Ursula Vernon. This is a comic book/text mix that is on my shopping list: "It’s not easy for Danny Dragonbreath to be the sole mythical creature in a school for reptiles and amphibians—especially because he can’t breathe fire like other dragons (as the school bully loves to remind him). But having a unique family comes in handy sometimes, like when his sea-serpent cousin takes Danny and his best iguana friend on a mindboggling underwater tour, complete with vomiting sea cucumbers and giant squid. It sure beats reading the encyclopedia to research his ocean report..."

Paris Pan Takes the Dare, by Cynthea Liu. "So what if it’s a rite of passage for every seventh grade girl in town to spend a night in the woods? Paris Pan only just moved here, the woods are super creepy, and she has enough weirdness to deal with in her own family. Finding out a girl died mysteriously years ago while on the Dare—right near Paris’s new house, no less—is bad enough, but the unmistakably ghostlike noises coming out of the broken-down shed at the edge of the Pan’s property? Definite deal breaker."

Simon Bloom: The Octopus Effect, by Michael Reismann Simon Bloom, The Gravity Keeper, Simon Bloom and his friends used the Book of Physics to narrowly defeat villainess Sirabetta. Now Simon’s nemesis, stuck as a helpless thirteen-year-old, wants revenge. In this exciting sequel, Simon and company must enter the mysterious undersea realm of the Order of Biology to find Sirabetta before she can restore her powers. Aided by old allies and some new ones, the kids struggle with fierce beasts, dangerous enemies, and their own evolving abilities.

YA:

Goddess Boot Camp (Oh.My. Gods), by Tera Lynn Childs. I enjoyed Oh. My. Gods considerably, and am looking forward to this sequel: "...teenage Phoebe continues to adjust to her new life on Serfopoula, the island where her stepdad runs a boarding school for the descendants of Greek gods. Phoebe still hasn’t learned to control her newly discovered divine powers, so she enters a remedial Goddess Boot Camp program. Fans of the first book will recognize the same chick-lit elements here: snappy dialogue, picture-perfect mean girls, and misunderstandings and reconciliations with a dreamy boyfriend. A mystery about Phoebe’s dad’s fate adds to the lighthearted, magic-packed fun that provides enough background for series newbies."

Me, My Elf & I, by Heather Swain. "It’s not often you see an elf in the middle of Brooklyn, let alone a tall, blond, gorgeous elf in the middle of one of the most prestigious performing arts high schools in the country. And yet, that’s just where Zephyr Addler finds herself: smack dab in the middle of a bustling New York City school, worlds away from the secluded woodland community she knows so well. But Zephyr knows that she has to figure out how to live in the world. And dress in the world. Thanks to a little friendly advice from her new friend Mercedes, Zephyr starts to get the hang of Brooklyn. That is, until Zephyr snags a role in a commercial, beating out the most popular girl in school, Bella Dartagnan. Now with Bella and her friends out to get her, can Zephyr out-maneuver the mean girls (and catch the eye of a certain cute boy) without losing herself?

Prada and Prejudice, by Mandy Hubbard. Here's one to add to my timeslip wants list. "To impress the popular girls on a high school trip to London, klutzy Callie buys real Prada heels. But trying them on, she trips…conks her head…and wakes up in the year 1815! There Callie meets Emily, who takes her in, mistaking her for a long-lost friend. As she spends time with Emily’s family, Callie warms to them—particularly to Emily’s cousin Alex, a hottie and a duke, if a tad arrogant. But can Callie save Emily from a dire engagement, and win Alex’s heart, before her time in the past is up?"

And here's one that not sci fi/fantasy, but that I have read and enjoyed and, I hope, will be reviewing tonight: When the Whistle Blows, by Fran Cannon Slayton

6/10/09

Waiting on Wednesday--A Conspiracy of Kings, by Megan Whalen Turner

Squee! Megan Whalen Turner's new book not only has a release date (this spring), but a Title, a Cover, and a Blurb!

Edited: the offical blurb is now available, and even better!

If you want to see what it really says (and how could you not want to?), head here to keestone's live journal, where the small blurb from Harper Collins' list of books from the Bologna Book Fair has been screencapped into a viewable form. Or you can just click on it...




SO exciting. Squee.

6/9/09

A Game of Catch for Timeslip Tuesday


The great thing about imaginary time is that it is malleable. And so I am going to back post this to 11:59 last night, so that it counts for Timeslip Tuesday!

Browsing in my library for books for the 48 hour reading challenge (not that I needed any more, exactly, but it's good to have a big pond to go fishing in), I picked up a slim book by Helen Cresswell, an English author with whom I have a nodding acquaintance--A Game of Catch (1969, American edition MacMillan 1977, middle grade, 44pp). I'm glad I did, not so much for my own sake (I'm too old to fall completely in love with a 44 page book), but because this is a book I want to recommend. This is one of those books, I think, that if you read it young, will become part of you the way that those very special books do, stunning you on first read, and their images and echoes coming back to you throughout your life.


"Hello!" cries Kate from the walls of the old castle she and her brother Hugh are exploring, not dreaming that there is anyone to hear. "I'm Kate!" and the echoes pick up her name....and she hears children laughing, and calling her name back to her.

The old caretaker also hears her, and warns. "...echoes is best left be."

"They stared at him. "Best left be?" repeated Kate.

"Echoes is funny things Best left where they belong. Particular in an old place like this. I don't believe in rousing up echoes, myself."

Kate shivered and pulled up her scarf around her throat." (page 3)

Out skating with her brother, a little while later, she finds the children who were calling her--a brother and a sister, two 18th-century children whose picture she had seen at the castle, caught for ever in a game of catch. And now they want her to play with them too, skating across the twilight ice to join her.

It is magical, understated, and riveting without being scary.* It makes pictures in the mind that are crystal clear and haunting (helped by the very atmospheric pen and ink illustrations by Ati Forberg). If you have a nine year old, or something like that,** who's looking for a short but somewhat challenging book, do look this one out.

A Game of Catch was re-issued in 1999, with this cover, which I don't exactly care for. I'm not sure if the original illustrations were included...and it would be a shame if they weren't.





*As I was typing the previous sentence, a line from The Shinning was going through my head--when the two ghost children say "Now you will play with us forever!" or something like that. Totally different. These are nice children.

**On Amazon it says 4-8. Ignore that, unless your child is one of those 8 year olds who is reading anything and is not thrown by new words. The vocabulary is too sophisticated (mullioned, anyone?) for a very young reader.

News-ish stuff

First News Item: Harper Collins is having a Supernatural Summer promotion, and why not, given the lovely little cluster of supernatural books they have on offer right now--Fragile Eternity, Wings, Once Dead Twice Shy, The Awakening, and Stargazer. There's a sweepstakes, blogs, videos, and more. I am reading Wings right now with much enjoyment.

There's also a Melissa Marr (author of Fragile Eternity) video contest!


Second News Item: Here's the short list for the British Fantasy Award for Best Novel:

Memoirs of a Master Forger, by William Heaney/Graham Joyce
Midnight Man, by Simon Clark
Rain Dogs, by Gary McMahon
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman
The Victoria Vanishes, by Christopher Fowler
Thieving Fear, by Ramsey Campbell

Guess which one I've read.

Third News Item: I'm a random winner of the 48 Hour Reading Challenge! Hooray for randomness! And congratulations to the other winners, both the driven four who stayed awake the whole time, and to my random companions. And here, at last, are the pictures that show what I accomplished.

My to-be-read pile before:




My to-be-read pile after: Obviously, I am prepared to do the challenge again this weekend. One reason I like summer more than winter is that the wood stove becomes available as a place to pile books.

New releases of science fiction and fantasy for kids and teens, June 9th edition

Here are today's new releases of science fiction and fantasy for children and teenagers, taken from the list at Teen's Read Too, with help from Amazon, Booklist, and Powells.

9-12 year olds:

Warriors: Code of the Clans, by Erin Hunter. This seems to be a guide to the the secrets behind the warrior code. Things explained include:
"An ominous sign from StarClan that signaled the need to patrol borders
The unexpected help from a warrior ancestor that cemented the importance of elders
A secret coup that led to a deputy's new role
A medicine cat's pleas that stopped a spree of interClan bloodshed."

There are new stories, five full-color interior tip-ins, and black-and-white art.


Green Dragon Codex (The Dragon Codices), by R.D. Henham. "When ten-year-old Scamp Weaver finds a locked chest in a forest clearing, he feels like his life is finally about to change for the better. But he doesn't bargain for just how much change the chest will bring. Inside he finds a dragon egg and a mysterious ancient scroll, which set Scamp and his best friend Dannika off on a harrowing adventure, chased by dragon hunters who want the contents of the chest for themselves. Life gets ever more complicated when the baby green dragon hatches. Will this cute, mischievous hatchling really grow up to be an evil green dragon?"


The Immortal Fire (Cronus Chronicles), by Anne Ursu. "After surviving the perilous Underworld and barely escaping a murderous Poseidon, cousins Charlotte and Zee know better than to expect their lives to return to normal. After all, vengeful gods do not like to be foiled by mere mortals...especially when those mortals are thirteen.So when a fire-breathing Chimera descends on their middle school, Charlotte and Zee are determined to fight -- not only for their lives, but for humankind. With nothing but a mysterious map and hints of a powerful weapon to guide them, the cousins journey to Mount Olympus, home of Zeus himself. But they're not alone. Their arch-nemesis Philonecron dreams of taking Zeus's place at the throne of the universe -- and now he has Poseidon's trident to help him do it. The only thing he needs now is a little help from Charlotte and Zee..."

The Outlandish Adventures of Liberty Aimes, by Kelly Easton. "Liberty Aimes has spent all of her ten years captive in her parents' crooked house on Gooch Street. Her spry father, Mal Aimes, is a crook who sells insurance, while her overweight mother sits at home in front of the TV, demanding that Liberty cook nonstop. Liberty’s only knowledge of the outside world comes from the secret stash of children’s books and fairy tales she discovers beneath the floorboards. One day, Liberty enters her father’s forbidden basement laboratory. There she discovers a world of talking animals and magic potions. With the aid of one such potion, Liberty escapes into the world in search of her destiny."


Phoenix Rising #3: World's End (Phoenix Rising Trilogy), by Erica Verrillo. "Elissa used to daydream about being a princess. Now the reality of what it brings is clear: stiff, courtly manners, dresses like cages, tortuously high shoes, and betrothal to an aging duke to secure her father’s kingdom! Elissa wants no part of it and makes her escape to be with her devoted friends, who the King has no use for. But the unseen hand of the Ancient One once again guides Elissa toward a fate she does not wish to acknowledge—the culmination of the prophecy of the Phoenix!"



Sisters of the Sword 3: Journey Through Fire, by Maya Snow. "Sometimes a samurai's most dangerous opponent is herself. Ever since their father's murder, Kimi and Hana have honed their fighting skills and prepared for vengeance against their vicious uncle Hidehira. They have become true warriors with the hearts of samurai. Now their fight has become more than just a personal vendetta. As Hidehira's quest for power continues, he is destroying the province and is poised to invade the rest of the kingdom. After both girls are nearly killed in a fire while fighting their uncle's soldiers, their mother insists on attempting to enlist the support of the Shogun. But at the Shogun's court, the sisters are torn apart by their differences, especially when they rediscover an old friend with a shrouded past. Danger lurks in the most elegant circumstances—behind the smiling face of an aristocrat as well as behind the mask of a ninja—and true peril awaits the sisters where they least expect it. . . "

Young Adult:

Assassin's Apprentice: Oathbreaker Part I, by S R Vaught & J B Redmond. "A murderer shoves a prince to his “death.” An assassin legally kidnaps a terrified boy. A ruling lord orders an atrocity so devastating it will change the course of history. So begins this highly original and engaging epic fantasy, a story of love, family trust, sworn promises and hard-earned friendships, in which two boys must put aside their childhood understanding of the world and accept their own incredible power to do right. "



Gifted: Better Late Than Never, by Marilyn Kaye. "Goth girl Jenna Kelley has the ultimate tool to stage a teenage rebellion: she can read people’s minds without even trying. When her alcoholic mother is hospitalized, a stranger shows up who says he’s her long-lost dad and promises a better future. Too good to be true? Her gifted classmates think so, but Jenna is so determined to have a real parent around and a somewhat normal life that she might have lost her ability to listen."




The Frost Child (Navigator Trilogy), by Eoin McNamee. From Booklist: "This concluding volume of the Navigator series begins 10 months after Owen killed the Harsh king, and the villainous Harsh are preparing their revenge. Mounting a mighty invasion, they plan to turn Earth into an icy wasteland, and once more, the Resistors must be awakened to defend the world."





Guinevere's Gamble (The Chrysalis Queen Quartet), by Nancy McKenzie. The second book in the Chrysalis Queen Quartet. "Much has changed over the last few months in Gwynedd, but Guinevere is still uncertain where her future lies. She recently made the unsettling discovery that she has been guarded all her life by a pagan tribe who believes she is destined to save them—they believe she and the great king will one day wed. But this prophecy is so at odds with her inferior position in the castle as Queen Alyse and King Pellinore’s lowly ward, she can’t believe it’s true. Now more complications arise as Guinevere and her cousin accompany Alyse and Pellinore to a meeting between Welsh kings, presided over by one of the High King Arthur’s knights. While there, Guinevere discovers she has a powerful enemy: King Arthur’s sister, Princess Morgaine. But why would Morgaine hate her?"

Gifted: Out of Sight, Out of Mind, by Marilyn Kaye. "Queen of Mean Amanda Beeson, 13, gets the shock of her life when she wakes up one morning to find herself in the body of one of her victims, Tracey Devon. Amanda discovers that Tracey, ignored at home and school, has the ability to become invisible. When Amanda finds herself in a special class that Tracey usually attends, it becomes clear that at Meadowbrook Middle School the definition of “gifted” has a whole other meaning. Can Amanda rescue her one-time target from obscurity and get her own life back on track? In order to do so, she will have to reveal her own startling gift and take her rightful place among Meadowbrook’s very secret clique."


Here's one originally scheduled for today, that snuck out early:

Cirque Du Freak: The Manga, Vol. 1, by Darren Shan. I am rather curious about this one.








And here's another contender in the most beautiful dress of 2009 category (here's the gallery at Jacket Whys:

A Sweet Disorder, by Jacqueline Kolosov. It's not science fiction or fantasy, being a historical romance set in the court of Elizabeth I, but it is a pretty dress!






Finally, here's a book that's not science fiction or fantasy, but it's written by a blogging friend, and I like WW II books very much, so I'm looking forward to it:

Mare's War, by Tanita S. Davis. "Octavia and Tali are dreading the road trip their parents are forcing them to take with their grandmother over the summer. After all, Mare isn’t your typical grandmother. She drives a red sports car, wears stiletto shoes, flippy wigs, and push-up bras, and insists that she’s too young to be called Grandma. But somewhere on the road, Octavia and Tali discover there’s more to Mare than what you see. She was once a willful teenager who escaped her less-than-perfect life in the deep South and lied about her age to join the African American battalion of the Women’s Army Corps during World War II." Congratulations, Tanita!

6/8/09

Non-fiction Monday Roundup!

Welcome to today's Non-Fiction Monday! Please leave your link in the comments, and I'll add them throughout the day.

Here's mine.


A long time ago, deep in the wild woods of northern RI, I was out looking for an archaeological site that I had heard of once. I didn't find it, but I did find a treasure--a lovely, cleanly sunbleached skunk skull. My youngest boy took it to his heart, and wanted to take it to his bed instead of a stuffed animal, but really, there are limits. Sadly, skunk skull is no longer with us. It probably fell out of the car at some point. And it is still missed.

But last week, the husband of a co-worker was out on a construction site, and found us a new skull! Clean and beautiful.

I offered it to my son..."SKULL!!!!!!!!" he cried, in total rapture.

If anyone finds any clean small mammal skulls, please think of us. We have room for more.

The best skull book for children (not that there are many to choose from) is The Skull Alphabet Book, by Jerry Pallotta, illustrated by Ralph Masiello. It is a clever and cunning book--they don't tell you what the animal is whose skull is pictured! You have to figure it out, based on a fun mix of visual and verbal clues. The visual clues come not just from the bones themselves, but from the amusing backdrops against which they are painted. for instance, C is for cat, and the cat's skull is posed outside a mousehole, next to a mousetrap. This makes it fun for little skull lovers like my boy (he's loved this since he was three), but also good for older kids who might be more interested in the variation of the bones themselves. And it's an excellent introduction to paleontology, even though the skulls are all from animals who are still with us, because palaeontologists have to learn to spot and interpret clues from the bones in much the same way.

So, in the spirit of The Skull Alphabet Book, can you guess what animal our new skull is? (It's about 10 centimeters long)

Update: another archaeologist friend has promised us a mouse, and, very excitingly, was talking to a wildlife biologist about my boy, who was so moved by the lost skunk skull story that he promised us a beaver!!!

Here are today's other Non-Fiction posts:

Heidi Bee Roemer reviews Visiting Volcanoes with a Scientist at The Wild About Nature Blog (a blog I'd not been aware of before, and that I look forward to re-visiting).

Lori Calabrese lets us know that today is World Ocean Day, and shares the news that her short story, Ocean of Caring, has been published this month. Congratulations, Lori!

At Wild Rose Reader, there is a book that instantly went on my "must buy for older son" list--What's Inside? Fascinating Structures Around the World, by Giles Laroche.

At the ACPL Mock Sibert blog (the Sibert being the ALA award for non-fiction) Darwin: With Glimpses into His Private Journal and Letters, by Alice B. McGinty, is up for discussion. Another one I want!

Shirley at Simply Science has Animals Christopher Columbus Saw by Sandra Markle. That looks rather good too...

Andrew Karre takes a look at high school athletes and concussion at the Carolrhoda blog. Mercifully irrelevant to my life right now, but very interesting.

It was another great week at INK: Interesting Nonfiction for Kids -- "Creative Nonfiction At Its Best" by Kathleen Krull; "Two Roads Diverged" by Sue Macy; "Let's Give 'Em Something To Talk About" by Linda Salzman; "Why 'Hands-On' Anyhow?" by Vicki Cobb; and "The Law of Unintended Consequences" by Rosalyn Schanzer.

Amanda at A Patchwork of Books looks at Extreme Scientists: Exploring Nature's Mysteries from Perilous Places, and I have yet another book for my list...

And at Wendie's Wanderings, you'll find that Even an Ostrich Needs a Nest (good-- now I have a book for my 6 year old's list!)

Another book for the birds, Cuckoo Haiku and Other Birding Poems, by Michael Rosen, illus. by Stan Fellows, can be found at Bookends.



At Books Together, there's a look at Mozart, the Wonder Child.

As for the skull shown above--I'm pretty sure it's a cat!

6/7/09

The Books I read in the last 48 hours

Mother Reader has posted the finish line roundup for the 48HRC, and my hopes for third place have been dashed. Oh well. I blame Edward and Bella. They put me to sleep last night, when I still had hours and hours left on my clock...

So my time was: 34 hrs and 53 minutes.

I will be posting pictures of my before and after tbr pile tomorrow, so come back and see all the books I can look forward to reading....there are still rather a lot of them.

Here's what I read:

The Magic Nation Thing, by Zilpha Keatley Snyder 164pp
Once a Princess, by Sherwood Smith 278pp
A Game of Catch, by Helen Cresswell 44pp (this will be this Tuesday's Timeslip book)
Ballerina, by Nada Curcija-Prodanovic 255pp
Thief! by Malorie Blackman 256pp
Check by Jowl: talks and essays on how and why fantasy matters, by Ursula Le Guin 135pp
Once Dead, Twice Shy, Kim Harrison 232pp
When the Whistle Blows, Fran Cannon Slayton (the only book of the lot that made me cry...) 162 pp
Royal Harry, by William Mayne 158pp
Isabelle's Boyfriend, by Caroline Hickey 184pp
Silksinger, by Laini Taylor 441pp
The Siren Song, by Anne Ursu (from 272pp to 430pp, which is 158 pages)
Faery Rebels--Spell Hunter, RJ Anderson 327pp
Alice in Wonderland (32 pages, read out loud)
Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur, Diplomat
, by Paula Gunn Allen (305pp)
Bodies Politic: Negotiating Race in the American North, 1730-1830, by John Wood Sweet (I only got to page 47)
Goose Chase, by Patrice Kindl 214pp
Oh. And Twilight. 314 pages of Twilight.

and finally, I listened to The Time Detectives: The Princes in Terror Tower, by Terry Deary

That's 14 books, and four parts of books (two large, two small), plus one audiobook. There are still 3o something books in the to-be-read pile. I need to do this for two more weekends.

Now I'm going to try to add up the pages. I got 3706.

Here a sample of my reading life this weekend: Saturday morning I read from 7:08 to 7:34. break to give child food. Read from 7:37 to 8:03. Break to give child milk (I can't pour and read at the same time, which is a weakness). I ended up with two sheets of paper and one envelope covered not only with this sort of thing, but with earlier attempts to add it up....

Here's what I'm most proud of: I didn't misplace a single book! I didn't have to waste any time staggering around looking under sofas etc!

Happy reading, everyone who still has time on their clock!

6/6/09

Twilight (48HRC)

As my 48 hours come to an end, I am reading Twilight. For the first time (haven't seen the movie either). I feel as though, even in my tiredness, I am Accomplishing something (and I didn't want to read a book that I might really want to think about and like. Although I guess I might fall hard for Twilight...)

It is rather fun to be reading a book for the first time but still to know everything.

I chuckled, for instance, when Bella arrives for the first day of school and says to herself, "Nobody's going to bite you!" (page 14).

I am paying close attention to the quality of her relationship with Edward, since I feel I know so much about it (I guess it's a bit like a wildlife biologist, having read about lions for years, finally seeing her first live ones). So far (p. 200) Edward hasn't done much that's objectionable, besides existing--just the dragging her by her jacket to the car so forcibly that she knows that if she falls over he'll just keep dragging. Bad Edward.

Update: I am at p. 278 now. I am feeling that whole pages of this part of the book (Edward and Bella emotionally and physically wallowing around in the woods) could have been replaced with a few well chosen words that subtly implied what is spelled out in far too many. However, I'm beginning to see double, so perhaps it just looks like too many words.

Update 2: It is now 1:42, and I have reachd p 314. Edward and Bella are not enough to keep me awake, so this is it for the 48HRC for me! I will tally my time tomorrow.

Good night!

Once a Princess, by Sherwood Smith (48 HRC)

For crying out loud. Here I am, approaching the end of the reading marathon that is the 48 Hour Reading Challenge, and desperately trying to clear the reading decks (13 books read, 32 or so to go) and I read a book that make me wants its sequel NOW. The book I just read is Once a Princess, by Sherwood Smith (Samhain Publishing, 278pp, YA), the first of the Saharia en Garde! duology. The book I want is Twice a Prince. If I was next door to a store that sold it, I would go buy it now (although it's not available in stores).

(The neighbors are setting off fireworks. Lots of fireworks. Big booming up in the sky ones. But they can't get me to stop my reading/blogging clock to go look. Ha!)

So anyway. Once a Princess has everything I love about Sherwood Smith--smart, strong, kickass girls, and intelligent people who obviously know things that I, and the narrator, don't know, and a beautiful balance between drowning the reader in too much information about it all and creating a very nicely detailed world, and fictional characters who are really hot.

This one has, as well, something new--a heroine who is a kick ass, beautiful, smart, tough woman who is over fifty.

Sasha and Sun, her mother, traded Khanerenth (another world place) for the states years ago, when she was a child. Her father didn't make the crossing with them, and they don't know his fate. For ten years, mother and daughter moved from place to place, living in fear that they would be pursued by their enemies.

Ten years later, Sasha is tricked into going home. There she's a princesses, caught in a web of political and magical machinations, not sure what the heck is happening (I'm not sure, exactly, either. Sometimes I found this bothersome, mostly I simply let it go over my head). And there she finds herself fighting for her life (very successfully), becoming an unwilling passenger on the vessel of privateer, while the king's chief enforcer hunts for her, and she wonders how to find her father, all the while finding the more than somewhat attractive privateer a serious distraction. (Side note: there is no bodice/pirate shirt ripping in this book. Book 2 might well be a different story...)

In the meantime, her mother, Sun, has followed her, and kicked some butt of her own. Sun finds herself the "guest" of the king, caught in a battle of wits, and (like Sasha) struggling to make sense of what is going on and who to trust.

A lot happens, lots of characters appear on stage and most of these become very real, no matter how small their part, and Sasha (and her privateer companion) become great folks to cheer for both politically and personally. Sun seems to be fading a bit out of the story by the end, as things on Sasha's side heat up--I hope we hear more about her in the next book.

Here is the cover. You may ignore it, but I just want to clarify that Sasha's tee-shirt does not say "Got Booty?" That is an unfortunate printing illusion. It says "Got Books?"



And I do. 32 more of them, calling from below...

48 hour read challenge second Saturday update

I have no exact idea how long I've read--I have just started my third piece of paper, with notes like 2:37 to 2:54, 2:57 to 3:46, etc. Four minutes being how long it takes to get drinks and snacks for children. I'm home alone with the boys for the day, which is fine, and they are being very self reliant, but they just can't yet successfully manipulate a gallon of milk/reach the snacks they want/make their own nutritious lunches. Oh well. Thank goodness for the audio book option--we played outside for an hour, while we listened to a Time Detectives book....

My six year old has been trying to read lots today too, thinking that I could add his minutes to my own....sweet.

Book highlight so far today: Silksinger. What exciting fun.

Best first chapter: "A New Girl Comes to the Ballet School." I love ballet school books, and this one is an obscure older one--Ballerina, by Nada Churcija-Prodanovic, about the state ballet school of Yugoslavia in the 1950s. I got it this past Christmas, and am glad to finally be reading (and enjoying) it now.

48 hour reading challenge check in

At 9:23am, Saturday, I hit 20 hours. It would have been ten minutes more if it hadn't been raining yesterday when I was waiting for the bus. I don't mind getting rained on myself, but I can't have that happen to a book.

Dissapointingly, I have only read 8 and a bit books....thanks mainly to reading a longish and thought provoking non-fiction book yesterday. I had warned my c0-worker in advance that I would doubtless be interrupting him all day, as thoughts were provoked. It proved to be the case, and slowed the reading down. This is discouraging, I still have over forty (give or take) in my to be read pile. And the to be read pile is on the wood stove, and if it keeps on being cold and wet we might need a fire, and then where will I put all the books? The obvious answer--in the fire-- is not an option. The floor is not an option either. It is covered at the moment in blocks and legos. Since I am walking around reading (exercise is so important ha ha), this is a nice little challenge for me.

I will be providing page count and book list after I read....

Isn't it fun to see so many different blogs taking part! Good for us! I'm glad I started early, so that I'll have Sunday to go visiting.

Thief, by Malorie Blackman (adding color to my son's bookshelf, also 48 HRC)

Good morning, everyone. I was up at ten to four today, to keep reading for the 48 hour reading challenge. This morning's book: Silksinger! It arrived yesterday, which was perfect timing.

Here's one I read yesterday--Thief!, by Malorie Blackman. This was recommended to me when I was searching for fantasy/sci fi books for young middle grade readers that had people of color in/on them.

Lydia's family has just moved from London to the north of England, and she is having a pretty darn darn rough time at the school she's just started. A malicious girl has set her up to look like a thief, and now stories are spreading that Lydia has done something even worse. Full of hatred and despair, she takes a desperate bus trip to nowhere in particular, and finds herself out on the moors, watching as a strange swirling storm approaches.

Ten minutes later, the Night Guard are firing at her for breaking curfew. The storm has swept her 37 years into the future, and her town has become a dystopia, under the rule of a cruel dictator.

In order to change the future, she must confront her own past-or she can never go home again.

This one is a good First Dystopia for 4th-6th graders It is a fairly simple story with lots of action, fairly simply told. I found it a tad didactic myself (hatred is bad, anger can have terrible, long lasting consequences), but I don't think I would have minded that when I was 9 or 10.

Viz diversity: the cover is the only thing that establishes Lydia as a person of color (sorry it's  crummy picture). This is, I think, good --inside the book, she is simply a person. But it led me to a thinking point about race. Racism is not given as a reason for the antagonism of her schoolmates, not even hinted at as a possibility, which seemed to me (not that I know squat about racism in the north of England in 1995) to be (perhaps?) wishful thinking...but I also am thinking it is a good thing to have people being mean to a person of color, and making false accusations about her, just because they are mean people, with nothing to do with race.

It is also 5 in the morning, and my mind is fuzzy. I decide I don't know if its wishful thinking or not, and that without any shadow of doubt Malorie Blackman knows infinitely more, because she is a black Brisith woman, and so I leave it in her capable hands.

Speaking of hands. Here is the current UK cover. You will notice that the black girl has been replaced by an ambiguous hand (uncolored, ungendered, unembodied).



Sigh.

Blackman is best know in the US, perhaps, as the author the Noughts and Crosses series (now up to 4 volumes).

6/5/09

Once Dead Twice Shy (48hrc)

Once Dead, Twice Shy (Madison Avery, Book 1), by Kim Harrison (Harper Collins 2009, 232 pp, YA)

Madison's life hasn't been the same since she died in a car accident. Perhaps if it had an been an ordinary car accident, things would have been different. But it wasn't. After the Dark Timekeeper who had planned it put the finishing touches on her death with his scythe attack, Madison ended up with his amulet, and that lead to four months of time spent with a Light Reaper, trying and failing to teach her a whole new light vs dark skill set. The light guys support free will, the dark guys are the agents of fate, nipping humans in the bud, as it were, before they have a chance to do unfated things.

Confusing at first.

This book is the continuation of a short story in the Prom Nights From Hell anthology, and feels very much like a sequel. I wish the story could have been included in this book, because there's a lot of ground to establish before Once Dead, Twice Shy hits its stride.

But after some initial uncertainty, I enjoyed this quite a bit. Madison, after all, is confused too...and I liked her, and wanted to know what happened. What happens is a lot of rushing around, with Madison trying to keep herself as alive as a dead girl can be, while protecting herself and her friend Josh from the Black Wings (bad soul sucker critters) and from other more powerfully manipulative forces. It's fast (once you get settled in it), it's interesting, and it has funny moments and action packed moments (lots of these), a rather pleasant side trip into photography, and a smidge of teenage romance and highschool angst.

An excellent choice for a 48 hour reading challenge (which is why I read it)!

48 Book Challenge --Pocahontas

It has been a peaceful day here at work, affording much time for reading. I have, however, only finished one book--Pocahontas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur, Diplomat, by Paula Gunn Allen (305pp). Allen, herself Native American, brings Pocahontas to life a Native American woman, whose life was so very much more than the words of the English colonizers that have been the basis for most studies of Pocahontas.

It is a really good book for anyone interested in world building, and how different ways of being in the world, and different metaphorical schema and ways of knowing shape the reality that people live.

It took me a long time to read it because it's a topic I know something about, so I had to keep stopping, and thinking, questinging my own ideas about reality, and arguing and agreeing with the text! Fun.



Sylvia Townsend Warner's sleeping beauty for poetry friday; Ursula Le Guin's new non-fiction book for 48 hour challenge

I chose to go with non-fiction for the busy morning getting out the door and read in the car part of the day (pancakes can be made while reading. I only got a little batter on the counter, the stove, and the floor).

So I have now read:

Ursula K. Le Guin Cheek by Jowl: talks & essays & why fantasy matters (sic) (2009, Aqueduct Press).

And it has even given me a poem, by Sylvia Townsend Warner (Collected Poems, p 249)

The Sleeping Beauty woke:
The spit began to turn,
The woodmen cleared the brake,
The gardener mowed the lawn.

Woe’s me! And must one kiss
Revoke the silent house, the birdsong wilderness?

Oh my gosh does this ever speak to me. I am outside by around 5am once the weather gets warm, and every day I feel a little sad when it is time for the others to get up (much as I love them).

Anyway, everyone who likes fantasy and children’s books should go get Cheek by Jowl because there is absolutely a ton of wonderful, thought provoking stuff in it that is completely relevant to our reading lives.

And also it is good reading, and Le Guin is funny.

“But then, should a chipmunk have to act out a tragedy?” p 71

Am now at work, and must engage with matters pertaining to the archaeology and history of Rhode Island.

Incidently, I noticed that my home computer records the time an hour behind EST, in case anyone was confused. I think this one will be the correct time...

48 hours of reading, post 1

When 7 o'clock came, and my clock officially started ticking, I was already reading--Alice in Wonderland out loud to my boy, who had decided the night before that his life would be incomplete without it. In fact, it is what compelled him to get out of bed so unseasonably early....

5 minutes, however, have been spent not reading.

Next up, Knife.

6/4/09

48 Hour Book Challenge Eve

At 7am tomorrow morning, I'm going to start reading. It is THE 48 HOUR READING CHALLENGE!!!!

I have a pile of 46 (forty six) books assembled, books I really want to read. I meant to put a picture up tomorrow morning, but typically I left the camera card at work. Sigh. So I'll have a picture up on Monday.

Obviously, it will make my life better once I have read these 46 books, and I can either put them away (not that there's shelf space), or take them to the library (donations and returns). But there are also the Prizes, not least of which is an ARC of Catching Fire....

Tomorrow, part of my reading time will be some work related books (I worked extra hard on the paperwork part of my job today, so that there is nothing to speak of on my desk that needs tending to). And then, reading till late Friday night, getting up early on Saturday, and reading as far as I can keep my eyes open till 7am on Sunday....tra la la.

But this year, unlike years past, the number of pages is irrelevant. So I shall be enjoying. I hope.

And I will be blogging periodically (this is countable for total time), and my 8 year old will be posting periodically for me on Saturday, so do come cheer me on!

Mind-Rain: Your Favorite Authors on Scott Westerfeld's Uglies Series

Mind-Rain:Your Favorite Authors on Scott Westerfeld's Uglies Series, edited and with an introduction by Scott Westerfeld (2009, BenBella Books).

This compilation of essays is a true gift to those who love this series. Imagine the most thoughtful, articulate writers you know, all focusing their considerable talents on a discussion of your favorite books. That's the reality of this collection of essays. Plenty of insights about the books that I had never thought of, some things to disagree with, some wonderful oh yes moments...

My favorite essay argues that Shay is the real hero of the series--"Best Friends for Never," by Robin Wasserman. Wasserman digs behind the actual words of the books to follow trains of thought and lines of evidence that lead to new and interesting conclusions. If this were an essay I was grading, I would give it as high a grade possible based on the clever and insightful analysis of what isn't explicitly said. Westerfeld, who has written introductionlets for each essay, muses that after reading this one, he might have to re-write the story from Shay's point of view.

Does Shay want more than friendship from Tally? In "Team Shay," Diana Peterfreund argues that yes, she does! Then there's Team David vs Team Zane, discussed in "Two Princes," by Sarah Beth Durst. On a more serious note, some essays touch on the issues of beauty and conformity, discussions for which the Uglies series provides a most excellent springboard.

And as a final bonus, there are Ted Chiang's short story "Liking What You See," and Charles Beaumonts "The Beautiful People," both of which Westerfeld credits as inspiring his own creation.

If I were teaching a lit crit class, I might be tempted to use these essays as examples of how different people can visit the same world, and all find some compelling aspect to explore more deeply. That being said, I've never taken, or taught, a lit crit class, except for a class about Chaucer, but I have taken plenty of history classes where the group was asked to read and write about the same primary source, and each of us found something of our own to say, as did the authors of these essays.

I feel, however, certain that fans of the series will love this book. How can you not love chatting about books you love with smart, insightful, people?

Here's another look at Mind-Rain at Becky's Book Reviews.

RIP David Eddings

I just read here that David Eddings has died. I know him through his first two series--the Belgariad and the Mallorean, which I started reading when I was about 12. Even though I found his treatment of gender and race vexing, I kept on going, finding the books strangely fascinating and very good escapist reading.


I last read the series a little more than nine years ago, at a time when I badly needed comfort reading that would go on and on and on, making few demands of me as a reader. In the space of two weeks, I had a new baby and brain surgery, in that order, and in the days that followed I found great solace in my Eddings re-read.* I still have all the books...I figure that when I'm about 99 or so, in a nursing home somewhere, they will be just the thing.

So, sigh. RIP David Eddings.

*on my maternity leave with my second child, and with no nasty other things to deal with, I read Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. And then, so help me, I started re-reading the Xanth books. Talk about sexism. I guess I just wasn't in the mood for feminist classics, like The Awakening, or The Yellow Wallpaper.

6/3/09

Waiting on Wednesday: The King Commands, sequel to Northlander, by Meg Burden

Northlander (Tales of the Borderlands), by Meg Burden (Brown Barn Books, 252pp) was a Cybils finalist in the 2007/2008 Cybils, in the YA Science Fiction and Fantasy category, so I was expecting it to be good. What I was a bit surprised to find, however, was that it was a lovely comfort read, and (maybe I'm shallow), it made me feel very much like my teenage self, more interested in which of the very cute and engaging suite of boys the heroine would end up with than the possible patches of thin ice in the plot.

Ellin is a Southlander, despised by the people of the Northlands. Even though she and her father have saved the life of the Northlander king, they have been cast into prison. Escaping home to the south doesn't end Ellin's problems. Now she's on the run from mysterious Guardians, determined to eliminate everyone who shows the slightest trace of magical gifts. And Ellin's own gifts have proved much more than slight....

Her escape from the Guardians take her north again, where she must determine where her loyalties lay--to her friends, the Northlander princes, or to those who helped her, but who are plotting deadly schemes of their own. Schemes that only Ellin can foil.

Amazon says that this is for 9-12 year olds. I disagree--the main characters are young adults, and there's a kiss that is more suitable for older kids.

Excerpt from Northlander, blithely lifted from the publisher's website:

It is only when Father and I are back out on the road, getting wet again now that it has begun to rain in earnest, that I allow myself to let my breath out in a whoosh. It's ridiculous, but I feel as if I've been holding it in since I heard about the Guardians.
"You knew about the Guardians?" I ask after a moment, squinting to see him in
the light of the small lantern we borrowed from the Alders.
Father doesn't look at me. "Wait 'til we're home," he says shortly, quickening his pace with an audible squelching of mud.
I sigh. "But--"
"Ellin!" he snaps. "Be still, and obey me without questioning, for once."
I nod and look at the ground, stung until it occurs to me that it wasn't anger I heard in his tone, but fear. The idea of my father being afraid makes me shiver. It takes quite an effort not to look over my shoulder or jump at shadows and regular nighttime noises.
The walk home seems to take longer than it ever has, and I breathe another sigh of relief when Father unlocks the door and we step inside. I don't even have time to enjoy being out of the rain, though, before he speaks.
"Yes," he says, sounding tired and holding his coat in his hands as if he's forgotten where to hang it. "I knew about the Guardians. I had hoped I wouldn't have to tell you yet."

Until I read this excerpt, I had forgotten that this was written in the first person present, something I often find jarring. I guess it works here!

Other bloggers who had something to say about Northlander: Bookshelves of Doom, and Wands and Worlds.

The Waiting on Wednesday part: Book Two in the Tales of the Borderlands series, currently titled The King Commands, is scheduled for release in Fall/Winter 2009. Goody!

Although, if you are the sort who doesn't like reading first books without the second in hand, don't worry about this one. Northlander is a complete story in itself.

June 2 releases of fantasy/sci fi for kids and teens

Here are the books that were released yesterday, taken from Teens Read Too, with help from Amazon and Booklist.

The 39 Clues: Beyond the Grave, by Jude Watson. "A Clue found in Book 3 sends Amy and Dan jetting off to find out just what's behind the fierce rivalry between the Tomas and Ekaterina branches of the Cahill family. Was a Clue stolen from the Tomas branch? Where is it now? And most important, can Amy and Dan get their hands on it before their rivals do? It's a wild race that will take Amy and Dan deep into the bowels of the earth . . . and right into the hands of the enemy."


The Dragons of Ordinary Farm, Tad Williams & Deborah Beale. From Booklist, quoted on Amazon: "...two siblings [are] shunted off to spend a summer with an odd, distant relative who is up to all manner of mysterious goings-on but flies off the handle when the kids naturally get a little curious. Tyler and Lucinda discover that their great-uncle Gideon is raising dragons, griffins, unicorns, and stablefuls of other mythical beasties." Time travel and alternate reality adventures await the two children....

Return of the Homework Machine, by Dan Gutman. From Booklist: From the Homework Machine series, this volume picks up the story with the same four main characters. Now sixth-graders, they discover that the creepy villain from the previous volume is searching for the mysterious computer chip that powered the homework machine.



Oath Breaker: Chronicles of Ancient Darkness #5: Oath Breaker, by Michelle Paver, illustrated by Geoff Taylor. "When he was outcast, Torak was the hunted one. Nine moons later he becomes the hunter, when he vows to avenge the killing of one of his closest friends. Racked by guilt and grief, he follows the killer into the Deep Forest, where the World Spirit stalks the hidden valleys as a tall man with the antlers of a stag. But there is a rottenness at the heart of the Forest, for its clans have succumbed to the lies of the Soul-Eaters. Here Torak must face fire, war, and overwhelming evil"

YA:

Carpe Corpus (Morganville Vampires, Book 6), by Rachel Caine. "In the small college town of Morganville, vampires and humans lived in (relative) peace—until all the rules got rewritten when the evil vampire Bishop arrived, looking for the lost book of vampire secrets. He’s kept a death grip on the town ever since. Now an underground resistance is brewing, and in order to contain it, Bishop must go to even greater lengths. He vows to obliterate the town and all its inhabitants—the living and the undead. Claire Danvers and her friends are the only ones who stand in his way. But even if they defeat Bishop, will the vampires ever be content to go back to the old rules, after having such a taste of power?"

The Demon's Lexicon, by Sarah Rees Brennan. From the Booklist: "What if the bad-boy hunk in your class was actually a sword-wielding demon slayer? That’s the enticing scenario offered up in Brennan’s debut, and although the results are periodically workmanlike, they will satisfy the legions currently clamoring for this brand of dark fantasy. Nick (the aforementioned hunk) lives with his empty-shell mother and older brother Alan, but they’re constantly on the move as they hunt—and are hunted by—evil magicians and their conjured demons. Their brutal routine is interrupted by the arrival of two teen siblings in need of help, one of whom has been “marked” by a demon for certain death and the other of whom fosters a growing desire for one of the brothers."

Elyon (The Lost Books), by Ted Dekker and Kaci Hill. "A continuation of the Circle Trilogy. "Darsal is trying to love the Horde as Elyon asked her to, but she's torn between this new mission and her original one . . . especially now that Johnis and Silvie no longer seem to be on her side. The Chosen Ones are facing their greatest threat--extinction--and only by Elyon's grace will they survive to tell the tale."

And also in the same series: Lunatic (The Lost Books): "Johnis, Silvie, and Darsal found the Books of History, and now it's time to return home--but five years have passed at home, and nothing is as it was. The Horde has taken over Middle, Thomas and the rest of the Forest Guard are in hiding, and a strange new force is challenging everything they thought they knew. Should the Chosen One continue to follow his heart . . . or is his heart finally leading them astray?

Emily the Strange: The Lost Days, by Rob Reger and Jessica Gruner. Not sure if this is exactly fantasy or not, nor am I sure I believe Amazon when they say it's YA. From Booklist: "Reger’s gothy cult heroine, who began life as a sticker for skaters and other underground types before moving into comics, now makes the leap into full-fledged YA noveldom. But not to worry: this is anything but a sellout. The book (structured as the girl’s diary) opens with Emily coming to with a fresh case of plot-device-grade amnesia. As she tries to figure out who she is, where she is, and just about everything else (aside from remembering an affinity for cats and the number 13), Emily gets involved in a power struggle among a cast of shady characters in the town of Blackrock."

The Waters & the Wild, by Francesca Lia Block. From the Booklist review: "...the perplexing and ethereal story of Bee, a 13-year-old who has begun seeing her own doppelgänger. “You are me,” her twin says before disappearing into the dark. She befriends two other kids who exist on the fringe: Haze, a stuttering loner who thinks he is the offspring of an alien, and Sarah, who believes she is the reincarnation of a slave from the 1800s. Together they work out that Bee must be a changeling, a “hideous elf” who was switched at birth with the real Bee."

And here's the new release from June 2nd I most want, even though its not sci fi/fantasy: The Locked Garden, by Gloria Whelan. From Booklist: "When her father, a well-known psychiatrist, accepts a position at a remote asylum in northern Michigan, Verna is reluctant to leave their home, which holds happy memories of her mother, who died two years earlier in 1898. Once settled into their cozy new house on the asylum grounds, though, Verna and her younger sister welcome their new life, particularly after the arrival of their young maid, Eleanor. Although she is a melancholia patient, Eleanor brings a warmth that contrasts sharply with the girls’ guardian, Aunt Maude, who can be “as menacing as a hornet’s nest.” Tensions rise as Aunt Maude grows furiously jealous of the affection Eleanor shares with the girls, who, in turn, plot to send Maude packing. Descriptions of the sprawling, grand asylum and its mysteriously locked wings may lead readers to suppose that they’ve begun a gothic novel. They’ll quickly realize, though, that the evocative setting is a backdrop to the sensitive, sometimes comedic family story filled with character lessons for Verna and compassionate questions about mental illness and its treatment. Grades 3-6."

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