Book Review: The Lucy Variations by Sara Zarr

The Lucy Variations cover imageAll her life sixteen-year-old Lucy has been told she has a gift, a special talent for the piano. Yet she no longer plays after walking off the stage at a competition the year before. Now her younger brother Gus seemed poised to take her place, both in the world of music and with her family, as her mom and grandfather put their time and effort into pursuing recognition for him.

Lucy’s conflicted about how she feels. On the one hand, she’s glad to have the pressure of always achieving, always competing gone. On the other, she misses playing the piano, but she’s not sure how to go back to it without getting entangled the way she was before.

When a new teacher begins giving her brother lessons, Lucy seems to connect with him and she starts to seek his advice. But playing again, and forging a bond with a married man, proves to be more complicated than she thought.

The Lucy Variations by Sara Zarr takes the reader inside the world of international piano competitions, but it’s also a look at family dynamics when everyone is so focused on what the children achieve. Lucy doesn’t feel as though she can be honest with her mom, because she feels that she’s letting her mom and grandfather down by not continuing down the path they have paved for her.

After she gets into a conflict with her best friend, Lucy also has to ask herself if some part of her likes being in the spotlight and performing. She also has to question her reasons for seeking approval from older men in her life. It forces her to think about what’s most important for her and then find a way to regain the joy she gets from music. Lucy’s journey of self-discovery is relevant for anyone, not just teens on the cusp of adulthood or those enmeshed in competitive undertakings of any kind.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Book Giveaway and Author Michaela MacColl Talks About Conducting Research for Novels

Recently I reviewed Michaela MacColl’s new book Nobody’s Secret, which features a young Emily Dickinson solving a mystery that takes place in her hometown of Amherst, Massachusetts. Today, I’m happy to host MacColl with a guest post talking about her trip to Dickinson’s hometown to conduct research for her novel. MacColl’s meticulous research helps her historical fiction novels come alive. She especially evokes a sense of place where her stories are set. In previous books we’ve gotten a feel for London during the time when Queen Victoria was young and still a princess (Prisoners in the Palace), and the wilds of Africa where a young Beryl Markham learned to be brave (Promise the Night).

I have one copy of Nobody’s Secret to give away to a reader who leaves  a comment here about what they like about historical fiction. Just be sure to chime in before midnight (PDT) on Thursday, June 13 for a chance to win (U.S. or Canadian addresses only please). And if you’d like to visit the next stop on MacColl’s blog tour, stop in at The Children’s and Teen’s Book Connection on Friday.

Michaela MacColl photo

Author Michaela MacColl

Thanks for having me back to the Mother-Daughter Bookclub. I’m so pleased to be able to introduce my newest novel, Nobody’s Secret, a literary mystery with Emily Dickinson. I wanted to do a guest post that would particularly resonate with your readers. So let me tell you about a research trip I took with my 15 year old daughter.

When I can, I always like to visit my settings. I spent a wonderful week in London researching my first book. So when I decided to write about Emily, I had to go to Amherst Mass. She was born there, and except for a year at school in South Hadley (ten miles away) and a few trips to Boston and Washington DC, she stayed there her entire life. Her family home has been turned into a museum.

My daughter is an artist and a fan of Emily Dickinson’s. I invited her to come on my research trip so we could spend some time together–but also to show her a lovely college town. We got a room at the Amherst Inn, a bed and breakfast in a big Victorian house overlooking the museum.

The Homestead photo           Amherst Inn image

(The Homestead, the Emily Dickinson Museum)

We spent several days exploring gardens and haunting bookstores. (Visiting a place is the absolute best place to find hard to find books of local interest). Both Rowan and I are particularly fond of graveyards and happily Emily’s childhood house overlooked a cool one. She is buried there with a cryptic inscription on her tombstone. And a mural honoring her.

Emily Dickinson headstone photo       Emily Dickinson mural photo

Rowan helped me look around the tombstones finding good names I might use in Nobody’s Secret. It was at the cemetery that Rowan first noticed what would become a motif during our visit. Large black crows.

Emily wrote about a crow:

Fame is a fickle food

Upon a shifting plate

Whose table once a Guest but not

The second time is set.

Whose crumbs the crows inspect

And with ironic caw

Flap past it to the Farmer’s Corn –

Men eat of it and die.

And I memorialized our trip by dedicating the novel to Rowan, “who likes more crows in her murders.”

Book Review: Steam Train, Dream Train by Sherri Duskey Rinker & Tom Lichtenheld

Steam Train, Dream Train cover imageSherri Duskey Rinker and Tom Lichtenheld, the duo that brought us the award-winning Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site, have created another bedtime picture book that’s sure to be a hit with parents and preschoolers alike.

Steam Train, Dream Train is the story of a train with a very unusual crew: bears, elephants, monkeys, kangaroos and other animals. When the train pulls into the station, crew members load it up with all kinds of things kids love to play with. The monkeys bring in monkey bars (and juggle while hoola-hooping and skate boarding), kangaroos bounce balls onboard, polar bears truck in ice cream and a camel balances a bike, a kite and more.

It’s a visual circus of activity in a kid’s fantasy world. Since everything takes place at night, illustrations are muted and calm, yet still portray the fun everyone seems to be having loading the boxcars. They have the grainy look of kids crayon drawings. The combination of words and drawings is sure to stir the imaginations of little ones as it lulls them to sleep.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Book Review: Rapture Practice by Aaron Hartzler

Rapture Practice cover imageAaron Hartzler grew up in Kansas City as the oldest son in a strict Baptist family. From early on he was happy to help as his mom spread the word to neighborhood children about the rapture, when Jesus would return to Earth and his followers would be lifted up. Yet, he also questioned the constraints he lived under. He wasn’t allowed to see movies, listen to most music or read books that his parents questioned. He couldn’t believe that his grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins—who had no such restrictions—would go to hell for their actions.

As Hartzler grew, he began to rebel against the tight rules his parents asked him to adhere to without question. He writes about his experience, and his efforts to maintain a relationship with his parents while finding his own path toward religious belief in his memoir, Rapture Practice.

Hartzler writes with candor about the Christian school he attended when he was growing up, the friendships he formed there, and the ways he got around his parents’ rules. This is his story, which means he doesn’t speculate about or describe how his brothers and sister reacted to the same rules as he did or tell scandalous stories about teachers and administrators. He seems to accept the fact that some people do well with the rules he was subject to while sharing the reasons he wasn’t one of them.

Rapture Practice is a thoughtful story about Hartzler’s journey, and while I would have liked to know more about how his decisions affected his relationship with his family as he became an adult, I was thoroughly engrossed with story.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Book Review: Absent by Katie Williams

Absent cover imagePaige died when she accidentally fell from her high school roof. Now she’s stuck in place, able to move around the school grounds and in the building, but her spirit can’t pass the parking lot. At least she has friends: Brooke and Evan, two other teens who also died while at school.

But when Paige overhears a rumor that she committed suicide she can’t let it rest. She finds a way to inhabit her classmates and control what they say, hoping to stop the rumor. In the process she discovers surprising things about the people she thought she knew when she was alive.

Absent by Katie Williams explores the dynamics behind fitting in at high school and how easy it can be to pigeonhole people into stereotypes. When Paige starts talking through her classmates, she shakes things up, because she forces everyone to look at the person, not the image they portray.

There’s also a bit of mystery in the story, which Paige unravels as she puts pieces of the puzzle together from each of her former classmates and friends. Absent is a thoughtful tale that may even prompt you to question the assumptions you make about people you know.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Reading Tip: Help Kids Become Better Readers with Funny Poems

Funny poems are a great way to keep your kids turning pages and reading for fun. The main reason? When kids laugh, there’s an incentive to see what the next poem says, and then the next. Kenn Nesbitt, who has been writing poems for children for 19 years and frequently talks to students at elementary schools says while parents may dismiss funny poems as too light and fluffy to count as “real reading,” they help kids develop real reading skills and real vocabulary.

Summer break can be a great time to help your kids pick up a few books of funny poems from the library. Here are a few authors to look for:

Shel Silverstein

  • Where the Sidewalk Ends: Poems and Drawings
  • A Light in the Attic
  • Falling Up
  • Everything On It

Kenn Nesbitt

  • The Armpit of Doom: Funny Poems for Kids
  • The Tighty Whitey Spider and More Wacky Animal Poems I Totally Made Up
  • My Hippo Has the Hiccups and Other Poems I Totally Made Up
  • When the Teacher Isn’t Looking and Other Funny School Poems

Jack Prelutsky

  • The New Kid on the Block
  • It’s Raining Pigs and Noodles
  • A Pizza the Size of the Sun

 

Book Club Recipe: German Potato Salad

My husband’s great-grandparents came over to the U.S. from Germany and brought great recipes with them to hand down to the family. Here’s a recipe for potato salad that I use often for book club gatherings, neighborhood events or any other event where I have to contribute a dish.

German Potato Salad

Serves 4 to 6

  • 6 to 10 medium red potatoes
  • 1 cup olive oil
  • ½ cup red wine vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon fresh dill
  • 1 teaspoon fresh tarragon
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • ¼ cup fresh parsley
  • 2 teaspoons capers
  • sprinkle of green or red onions

Wash the potatoes, then cut them in quarters. Boil potatoes in plenty of water for about 10 minutes or until tender when pierced with a fork. Drain and put the potatoes in a large serving bowl.

Mix the olive oil, vinegar and all herbs together. Pour over the potatoes and mix with a spoon. Break up any larger potato pieces. Add salt and pepper to taste. The oil will soak in as the potatoes cool.

Book Review: When the Butterflies Came by Kimberley Griffiths Little

When the Butterflies Came cover imageWhen Tara Doucet’s Grammy Claire dies unexpectedly in a car accident Tara feels as though her whole family is falling apart. He mom disappears in depression and grief, her older sister retreats into her bedroom, and her dad has recently left the family to live in another state. Tara isn’t sure what to do to pull them back together when something magical starts to happen. Butterflies appear and soon after a letter from Grammy Claire shows up.

The letter contains a mystery, a key and a clue to another letter. Tara discovers that Grammy Claire was afraid that her research on a tropical island had attracted the attention of someone who wanted to take it, someone who may be willing to cause her harm to get it. She calls on Claire to solve the mystery through a series of clues that will lead her to a solution that may protect something precious.

When the Butterflies Came by Kimberley Griffiths Little focuses on the importance family members play in our lives while weaving a tale of mystery and fantasy. Tara feels the importance that Grammy Claire has entrusted something significant to her. As she learns things about herself along the way, she also becomes determined to forge a stronger relationship with her sister and help her mother emerge from depression.

Readers aged 9 to 12 will find a lot to like in Tara’s journey of self-discovery set along the bayous of Louisiana and the islands of Micronesia.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

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