Today I’m taking part in a blog tour for The Trouble With Ants, Book 1 of the Nora Notebooks series by Claudia Mills. I loved Zero Tolerance (see my review), also by Mills, and I will be posting a review of her new book soon. Until then, I thought you’d want to know a little bit about this promising new series for readers aged 7 to 10.
Also, I have one copy of The Trouble With Ants to give away to a reader in the U.S. Just leave a comment here by midnight (PDT), October 19, about a favorite science experiment you have conducted or helped with and you’ll be entered to win.
If you’d like to take a look at the first 32 pages of the book, visit the Random House Kids website and click on “Look Inside” under the book’s cover image. If you’re interested in reading other reviews or checking out a curriculum guide, head over to Mills’s website. The Trouble With Ants looks like lots of fun. Here’s a little info about the author:
Claudia Mills is the author of over fifty books for young readers. She does not personally keep an ant farm, but she does have a cat, Snickers, with whom she curls up on her couch at home in Boulder, Colorado, drinking hot chocolate and writing. To learn more, and to download free curriculum guides for her books, visit her website at claudiamillsauthor.com.
Earlier this year I posted a book review of Home for Dinner, by Anne Fishel, cofounder of the Family Dinner Project. Fishel has written an article about how telling stories over the dinner table can help kids love to read. I am reprinting it here with permission from The Conversation.
Dinnertime storytelling makes kids voracious readers
As a young child, I loved to imagine myself as a pioneer girl in Little House in the Big Woods, eating fresh snow drizzled with maple syrup. I even pestered my mother to make this treat with the dirty snow that fell on our Manhattan sidewalk. Not a chance.
Years later, I honored my young sons’ request to try a coconut after reading the adventures of Babar. Who knew that even a hammer and chisel won’t crack these nuts? I resorted to clearing out the sidewalk below and then pitching the fruit out a third-floor window.
It worked, but thankfully there are many easier ways to bring food and reading together than hurling coconuts or eating dirty snow.
Here are some of the connections I researched while working on my book, Home for Dinner. And remember, none of these requires a gourmet meal or a trip to the bookstore. Library books and a takeout pizza are just as good.
Dinner conversation builds vocabulary
For starters, there is the linguistic pairing of reading and eating, shown in such common expressions as “devouring a good book” or being a “voracious” reader.
Rare words, those that go beyond the 3,000 most common ones, are 10 times more likely to show up in dinner conversation than in storybooks. When parents tell a story at the dinner table about their day or recount a funny family anecdote, they usually include many words that a young child hasn’t yet learned but can understand from the context of the story. Children who have rich vocabularies, packed with less common, more sophisticated words, learn to read more easily because they can make sense of the words they are deciphering.
The benefits to children don’t just come from listening to stories. Children who know how to tell stories are also better readers. In one large study, kindergartners who were able to tell stories grew up to be fourth- and even seventh-graders with higher reading comprehension than those kindergartners who lacked narrative skills.
Dinner is a prime time for children to tell stories and to be encouraged to tell better stories. Researchers have found that children can be taught to tell longer, more information-packed stories with a few simple instructions.
Reminisce with your children about past experiences you’ve shared with them. “Remember when we forgot to take the brownies out of the oven?”
Ask a lot of open-ended questions, including plenty of “how” and “why” questions rather than questions with yes-or-no answers.
Encourage longer stories by repeating what your child says or by elaborating on her story.
Instead of deciding what story to tell, follow your child’s lead on what she wants to talk about.
In this study, children who were given these instructions had bigger vocabularies and told more complex stories a year later.
There are other tasty connections between food and books. Consider the banquet of children’s books that feature food as a central force in the action. There are the magical noodles in Strega Nona, the pomegranate seeds that bind Persephone to Hades, the irresistible Turkish delight in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and the whimsical tribute to picky eaters, Green Eggs and Ham.
Just as dinner conversation can lead to more reading, reading can be the prompt for meals and for conversation. Parents and children might recreate a favorite literary meal for dinner, and then read that book, or a portion of it, aloud. Split pea soup from George and Martha or spaghetti and meatballs from Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs are two possibilities.
And, don’t forget the many nursery rhymes that involve porridge, rice pudding and blackbird pie (to name just a few). It could be fun to imagine what Harry Potter might eat for dinner at Hogwarts or to create a high tea that Mary Poppins might like.
Of course it’s not just children’s literature that gets our mouths watering. Melville devotes a chapter to clam chowder in Moby Dick, and in Nora Ephron’s Heartburn, the philandering husband gets his comeuppance with a Key lime pie in the face.
If cooking a literary meal doesn’t get you in a reading mood, here’s another idea for a dinner: ask family members to talk about one book that changed their life. That dinner conversation might just jumpstart some bedtime reading.
Today I’m taking part in the Heads Will Roll blog tour for a book by Dawn Ius, Anne & Henry. Ius has freshened up the historical tale for modern teens, and I have one copy of the book to give away to a reader in the U.S. Just be aware that the book is a sizzling romance with a trash-talking heroine, which makes it appeal to mature teens. Just leave a comment here before midnight (PDT), September 23 telling us what you like about historic events updated for modern audiences.Please note: The giveaway is closed. Congratulations to Mark on winning.
Now, here’s my review.
Anne & Henry by Dawn Ius
Anne Boleyn arrives in the town of Medina ready for a fresh start, a new beginning after surviving her parents’ divorce and a scandal she is said to be part of. Right away she challenges the dynasty at the top of her elite, private school. Henry and Catherine are the power couple, with Henry chosen even in high school to go for a life in politics with the expectation that he will be president one day. Anne is beautiful, dangerous, and unlike any girl he’s ever met. The two make sparks together, but can they maintain a relationship and still keep their heads?
Anne & Henry by Dawn Ius imagines what would happen if an anointed king of today fell for the dangerous beauty. Would he throw away everything he’s worked to achieve to win her love, or would she be too much for him? Centuries after the original Anne Boleyn and Henry Tudor conducted their famous affair, the story is still relevant and Ius creates a very believable scenario for the two of them in today’s world. Even if you believe you know how it all will end, Ius keeps you guessing about the details of how it will play out until the end.
I recommend Anne & Henry for readers aged 16 and over.
The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Fans of graphic novels and real life stories plucked from the history books should be drawn to read Captive of Friendly Cove: Based on the Secret Journals of John Jewitt. I have Chapter 8 to share so readers can see for themselves the detailed illustrations and some of the tribal life Jewitt wrote about. Here’s a description of the book from the publisher:
“From the creators of the award-winning Trickster and District Comics, comes another graphic novel about adventure and tribal life. After his ship is burned and his shipmates killed, British sailor John Jewitt lived for nearly three years as a captive of the Mowachaht people on the west coast of Vancouver Island. During his captivity, Jewitt kept journals of his experiences and of tribal life. Follow his adventures as he plies his skills as a blacksmisth, saves his only remaining crew member, and comes up with a strategy to free them both.”
Download the chapter now to read about how the tribe prepared for a whale hunt. Captive of Friendly Cove: Captive Of FriendlyCove Chapter 8.
Managing the conflicting priorities of work, marriage and motherhood often calls for a juggling act that can stress even the most calm women, who are often told that being successful at all three is just a matter of balance. Along comes Lela Davidson, a writer with a wicked sense of humor and a willingness to lay bare some of the challenges she has faced in the major areas of life since getting pregnant with her first child in the 1990s.
Davidson’s collection of essays, Faking Balance: Adventures in Work and Life, is honest, funny, and refreshing. Her stories start with an essay that tells how she set up a spreadsheet to plan to her first pregnancy, and then go on to describe the challenges of early motherhood, the jobs she held over the years, and the challenges she faced trying to make it all work. I saw similarities to my own family life in situations such as taking family portraits, hanging out with the kids at Chuck E. Cheese’s, struggling to get out of the house on time, wishing for rain to cancel soccer practice, and more.
Through it all I felt like I could have been having a cup of coffee with a friend, listening to her stories and laughing about the situations once the stress of the moment was in the past. Davidson’s stories capture the universality of experience for many women. Because of that, I believe it appeals to moms who work outside the home as well as those who don’t.
Ten years ago, Hurricane Katrina devastated the city of New Orleans. Some questioned whether it would ever be rebuilt. Yet, the efforts of many determined people—residents and volunteers from around the country and the world—have brought the city back from the brink and restored many of the areas that were affected.
Phil Bildner celebrates the recovery and the efforts of everyone who wouldn’t give up on New Orleans with a picture book called Marvelous Cornelius: Hurricane Katrina and the Spirit of New Orleans. The story is about Cornelius Washington, a sanitation worker in the French Quarter who captivated residents with singing, dancing, and performing tricks. Bildner shows how before the storm Cornelius’s pride in his work inspired those around him. After Katrina, that same can-do spirit and pride got people to pitch in on the clean up.
John Parra’s compelling illustrations capture the French Quarter scene, with the pigeons, iron-lace-work balconies, street cars, brick sidewalks, and lively residents. A note at the end talks about the life of the real Cornelius and the author’s experience in New Orleans. I recommend Marvelous Cornelius for readers aged 3 to 6 and their parents.
The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Today I’m taking part in a blog tour for a book that looks at how the relationship between Sherlock Holmes and James Moriarty would be different if they met as teenagers and if Moriarty was a girl. It’s interesting to see how the author plays with the well known crime-committing/crime solving duo. The book is called Lock & Mori by Heather W. Petty, and I have one copy to give away to a reader in the U.S. If you’d like a chance to win a copy, just leave a comment below about your favorite Sherlock story. Just be sure to comment by midnight (PDT), Monday, September 14.Please note: The giveaway is closed. Congratulations to Bridget on winning.
Here’s my review:
Imagine Sherlock Holmes in high school in modern day London meeting a girl named James “Mori” Moriarty. The two geniuses are bound together in an effort to solve a murder in a nearby park. They have only one rule: They must tell each other everything they discover along the way. But Mori finds the murder hits closer to home than she would have thought, and soon enough she is hiding clues from Sherlock in the hopes of solving the case on her own. But getting to the bottom of things may just ruin the romance developing between the two of them.
Lock & Mori by Heather W. Petty is an imaginative look at the relationship between Sherlock Holmes and his nemesis James Moriarty sure to delight teen readers. Creating Moriarty as a female character totally changes the way the two great minds approach each other. The book is told from Mori’s point of view, and while readers identify with her, they also see a glimpse of personality traits that hint at a future that could turn to crime.
While I was disappointed that the mystery was not very difficult to solve, the action remained compelling to read throughout until the end. I recommend Lock & Mori for readers aged 12 to 16.
The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Today I’m taking part in a blog tour for a book that helps kids navigate the world of friendships. I have one copy to give away of Friends and Frenemies: The Good, The Bad, and The Awkward to a reader in the U.S. Just leave a comment here about what you appreciate in a friend. Be sure to comment by midnight, September 13 for a chance to win.Please note: The giveaway is closed. Congratulations to Sandra on winning.
Here’s my review:
Having good friends and being a good friend are some of the biggest issues kids face as they go through school. Questions kids may ask themselves include: How do I make new friends? What happens when my best friend and I have a fight? Is gossiping ever a good idea? Friends and Frenemies: The Good, The Bad and The Awkward by Jennifer Castle and Deborah Reber aims to answer those questions and more. In short, easy to digest chapters, the authors cover the basics of friendships along with interactive features such as quizzes, suggested journal entries, poll results and other interesting tidbits. The chapters are colorful, and illustrations by Kaela Graham enhance readability.
Friends and Frenemies is a great book for readers aged 9 to 12. They can easily read the book all the way through to the end and then go back to do activities as specific issues come up that they need to deal with. That way it becomes a reference that can help with friendship issues through the years.
The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.