Book Review: Delilah Dirk and the Turkish Lieutenant by Tony Cliff

Delilah Dirk cover imageSelim is a lieutenant in the sultan’s army in early 1800s Constantinople. He lives a quiet, simple life until the day Delilah Dirk shows up in the sultan’s dungeon. While questioning her he discovers she claims to be a fearsome fighter, with deeds to her credit around the world. When she escapes, the sultan believes Selim had something to do with it, and he orders them both to be killed. Delilah frees Selilm and takes him along on her adventures.

Delilah Dirk and the Turkish Lieutenant, a graphic novel by Tony Cliff, mixes humor and adventure as it follows the two main characters on their exploits around the sultan’s empire and beyond. Delilah is fearless while Selim is a bit bumbling and overly trusting. But Delilah thinks he makes the best tea in the world, and that is her excuse for bringing him along with her. As they get to know each other their friendship deepens even as Selim’s skills grow. When faced with the opportunity to return to his quiet life, he must decide what is more important to him.

Cliff’s illustrations portray Delilah as carefree, confident and capable. She and Selim are both likable in different ways, and the places they travel are exotic. It’s fun to follow along as they get into and out of trouble again and again

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

Author Katie Davis Talks About Toddlers and Pre-Reading

Recently I got an email newsletter from Katie Davis, one of my favorite kidlit authors and educators about how toddlers are great pre-readers. Katie is funny, energetic, and full of great ideas about kids and reading. She agreed to let me share her message with you; it’s a good reminder that almost anything can lead to an opportunity to share books with your kids while tapping into something that makes them really excited. Read on to hear what Katie has to say. And if you’d like to get more messages and tips like this from her, you may want to sign up for her newsletter yourself. She even gives a free gift when you subscribe.

You know, Kidlit Lover, an obsessed toddler is the perfect pre-reader.

Why?

Toddlers get obsessed.

  • Trucks? CHECK!
  • Firefighter hat? CHECK!
  • Pink tutu? CHECK!

Almost every parent has countless stories to tell about their child’s obsessions and the funny stories that came about because of them.

Pack a lunch: you might be stopping at every construction site you see to sit for a while and watch.

Get a nose plug: don’t EVEN try to take off that firefighter hat to wash hair!

Buy a comfy couch: you’ll be watching that new ballet movie 17 times straight. And 42 times later after that.

We’ve all been there, in one way or another. Whether it’s construction or trains or Princess Barbie, the drill is the same. Our kids live it and breathe it until we think we just can’t stand it.  I was lucky. Benny got obsessed with a teeny tiny guitar when he was two—to the point that he was sleeping with it as though it were a teddy bear! We picked up a VHS blues guitar video at a yard sale and he watched it until I almost (but not quite) stopped loving my favorite music!

So how is an obsessed toddler is the perfect pre-reader?

  • When little Jimmy wants nothing but more trains, trains, trains give him just that. Go to the library and lead him to all those delectable books about trains. If his name isn’t Jimmy, it’ll be harder. 😎
  • Get your child their own library card and let them begin to check out a few books at a time. Make sure to explain that you guys can go back and check out more books when they’ve been read (probably ad nauseum)! They’ll begin to understand the concept of libraries, the borrow system, and that the books are not theirs to keep…and that they can always get new ones!
  • Let your child not only pick books you read together, but also decide what and how long you read a specific book. It’s okay if they want to stop in the middle – prolonged attention spans haven’t kicked in yet!
  • They might want to just look at it all by themselves or better yet, let them “read” to you!

Catch your kid at being good!

  • Gift a new book about trucks/hats/tutus/whatever
  • Put it on their pillow as a surprise bedtime story surprise.
  • Earn star stickers for a new book.
  • Buy books at yard sales.

What do you do if your child expresses no interest in books at all?

 

  • Leave piles of books all over the house, within reach. (If it’s a paper book and they need supervision, you can leave it on a high shelf where it is still visible.)
  • Keep a bunch of books in the car. Don’t push your kid to read them – just have the books within reach.
  • When you do have that picnic as you watch the construction site, read the book about trucks right then and there.
  • Leave books just lying around and let them discover it or re-discover it on their own.

Forcing a child to sit down and listen to a book before they’re ready will send the wrong message. You don’t want them to start to see it as something to dread, not cherish. And if they get a cuddle with you, it’ll soon be something they’re begging for.

If all else fails, grab a truck, a firehat, and a tutu and get that kid obsessed!

Warmly,

Katie Davis photo with signature

KatieDavis.com

Book Review: Carnivores, written by Aaron Reynolds and illustrated by Dan Santat

Carnivores cover imageSome of the world’s best known carnivores—the lion, great white shark and wolf—are thought of to be fearsome and frightening. Yet when the trio get together in a new picture book, Carnivores, they can’t wait to share about how their feelings get hurt when they are labeled as meanies.

What’s a good meat-eater to do? These three decide to go on a vegetarian diet, but find they don’t have the stomach for it. Ultimately they go back to being their true selves, even if it does mean they eat cute animals.

Written by Aaron Reynold and illustrated by Dan Santat, Carnivores is a light-hearted look at what it means to be at the top of the food chain. The play starts on the cover, where the carnivores are covered in plastic as though they are packaged at a grocery store meat counter. The fun continues from there with the wild animals working to get in touch with their feelings and be more likeable.

The topic is a bit macabre, with the lion eating antelope, the shark dispatching dolphins and the wolf consuming bunnies, but it should help young children understand the role of carnivores in nature while entertaining them with humorous illustrations. It’s lots of fun in a dark sort of way.

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

Interview with Kathi Appelt: Author of The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp

Kathi Appelt’s book, The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp encourages you to curl up and get cozy with the characters and the story. (See my review in a previous blog post.) Appelt writes characters that are down-to-earth and comfortable to be around, so it should come as no surprise that she comes across the same way in an interview.

Today I’m taking part in Appelt’s blog tour by asking her a few questions about writing and her swamp characters. I’ll be giving away one copy to a reader in the U.S. who leaves a comment by midnight (PDT), Monday, September 16. Just tell us about your favorite swamp creature or swamp experience if you have one. Please note: the giveaway is closed. Congratulations to Krysty on winning!

Here’s a little more information about Appelt and a list of the next stops on her blog tour. Keep reading for the interview.

Bio: Kathi Appelt is the author of the Newbery Honor-winning, National Book Award finalist, PEN USA Literary Award-winning, and bestselling The Underneath as well as the highly acclaimed novel Keeper, The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, and many picture books. She is a member of the faculty at Vermont College’s Master of Fine Arts program. She has two grown children and lives in Texas with her husband. For more information, visit her website: kathiappelt.com.

The book trailer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wHUMloYN2A

Be sure to check out the next stops on her blog tour!

Interivew with Kathi Appelt

Kathi Appelt photo

Kathi Appelt. Photo by Ken Appelt.

How did you know you wanted to be a writer?

KA: I originally wanted to be a cowgirl. I was one of those girls who loved horses above all else. But one day, my first grade teacher, Mrs. Beall, stopped by my desk and told me that she believed that I would be a writer when I grew up. There’s something extremely powerful about a first grade teacher’s belief. When it became clear that I wasn’t really cut out for the cowgirl life (after a disastrous barrel-riding fiasco that involved a horse with one blind eye and a pair of pants that split down the middle), that belief held me in good stead. I still owe a debt of gratitude to Mrs. Beall—and all first grade teachers for that matter.

What do you enjoy most about writing?

KA: I love the discovery process. Often, when I’m writing, something will magically show up on the page, and it both startles and amazes me. It’s like digging for gold, I think, and actually finding it.

What do you find to be a challenge?

KA: Really working to discover who my characters are and what it is that they hold most dear, as well as what they most fear. Those are the twin, opposing questions that I have to keep asking of each of my characters. Love and fear are all balled up together, so it’s important to me to understand what that means for the cast and crew.

In The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp various characters love watching birds, eating pies, wrestling alligators and protecting the swamp. Do you share in any of those passions?

KA: I do appreciate bird-watching. I’m lucky in that my studio has a large window that looks right into a distinctly wonderful oak tree. So I have a lot of bird comings and goings. Nevertheless, I’m only a bird-gazer really. Not a true watcher. As for wrestling alligators, I’ll save that for braver folks. The thing I’m most concerned about is the swamp, and all of our wild spaces. I think it’s hard to love a swamp, but they play such an integral role in the well-being of our planet. So I am a cheerleader for swamps.

Swamps aren’t the first thing that come to mind when you think of Texas. What can you tell us about the area where the Sugar Man Swamp lies?

KA: It’s true that most people who think of Texas have an image of the dusty canyonlands of west Texas. That area seems quintessentially Texas. But there’s a large region along the eastern border with Louisiana that is part of what was once called the Great Pine Belt. It begins in east Texas and moves east across Louisiana, Mississippi, and on up into the Carolinas. Parts of it are extremely swampy. The area that is probably most like the Sugar Man Swamp is called The Big Thicket. It’s a natural home for alligators and thousands of bird species. Really, it’s worth a drive.

The facts you weave into the story—like those about the ivory-billed woodpecker, wild hogs, possum and raccoon habits—add to the fun of the narrative without breaking the pace for readers. Was it difficult for you to blend fact with fiction while keeping the story moving along?

KA: I love the facts of a story, actually. To me, having the facts gives the story authenticity. Not only that, but I really believe that young readers deserve as much solid information as I can give them. Of course, info-dumping is a real concern. So I work hard to make sure that those wonderful facts don’t overwhelm the story.

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp begs to be read aloud. Did you think about the sound of your words as you wrote them?

KA: In a former life, I really wanted to be a songwriter. And I might have been if I were at all musical. But my professional writing career actually started with picture books, which are meant to be read aloud. All those years of writing picture books has definitely played a role in my effort to make my stories part of an oral tradition. It’s important to me. So, yes, I do think of the sounds of the words, and the rhythm of the sentences. But I’d be lying if I said that they just fell onto the page straight from my head. It takes me tons of revision to get those sounds to work well. And I mean tons.

Without giving anything away, I’ll admit that I was surprised—in a pleasant way—by how all the plot lines came together at the end of the book. Did you know how it was going to end when you started, or did the story change as you created your characters?

KA: I always try to have at least an image of how a story is going to end. In this case, from the start, I knew that Chap would find what his grandfather lost (hope that’s not too much of a spoiler). I’ve found that if I don’t have a small idea about how a story will end, then I have a hard time ever finishing. I tend to roam around in the mucky middle, never to arrive. Having a vague notion of the ending helps me get there. Sort of like having a list at the grocery store. If I don’t have one, then I just walk up and down the aisles in wonder. And if I don’t know what I’m going to do with the items I buy, then that’s even worse. I wind up with a bag of popcorn and nothing for dinner.

What do you hope lingers in the minds of young readers when they finish The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp?

KA: Mostly, I hope they’ve had a good laugh or two. And if they end up with a yearning for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker to make her way home, that would be so satisfying.

Is there anything else you’d like to say to readers at Mother Daughter Book Club. com?

KA: My motto, for those of you who are interested in writing your own stories is:  write like your fingers are on fire!

Thank you so much for reading my book, and for asking such great questions.

 

 

Book Review: The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp by Kathi Appelt

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp cover imageToday I’m thrilled to review this great new book for young readers. I’m also excited to feature an interview with author Kathi Appelt tomorrow as part of her blog tour. Check back in then to see what she has to say about the delightful world she created in The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp.

Here’s my review:

J’miah and Bingo are raccoon brothers who live in the rusted frame of an old De Soto, deep within the Sugar Man Swamp of southeastern Texas. They know their job is important—they must listen to the Voice of Intelligence and wake up the Sugar Man if the swamp is in danger.

Chap is a 12-year-old boy who makes sugar pies with his mother in a café at the edge of the swamp. Their landlord has just told them to come up with a boatload of cash or he’ll evict them. The landlord also plans to pave over the swamp to make money with an alligator wrestling tourist attraction. These young heroes have the same thing in mind—save the swamp—but they each have their own thoughts about how they will do it.

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp by Kathi Appelt brings together creatures great and small in a serendipitous tale that will make you laugh, learn a little, and maybe even wipe a tear or two as you pull for the underdogs. A lot of elements come to play in the story—alligator wrestling, a lost De Soto with Polaroid photos, mischievous raccoons, canebrake rattlesnakes, pirates, an ancient oath, wild hogs and more. Appelt weaves these threads together to create a rich tapestry of a story that doesn’t trip up even once. With vivid writing style that tantalizes all the senses, she keeps the pace moving and the story spinning until the last satisfying page.

I highly recommend The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp for mother-daughter book clubs with girls aged 9 to 12. Even readers as young as six can enjoy the story with a parent reading it to them.

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

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Book Review: Coda by Emma Trevayne

Coda cover imageIn a future world, after a war that disrupted civilization as we know it, New York City recreated itself in a way to make sure it’s citizens would never rebel against the establishment. In this world music is a drug, and people can’t live without it. Listening habits are tightly monitored to make sure everyone stays dependent on the Corp who controls what they hear.

Anthem is one of the lowly members of this society. His mother has already died from her addiction and his father is not far behind. His driving need is to take care of his twin younger siblings, but his job, one of the many workers who supply blood used to power the city, is aging him prematurely. The only thing that keeps him going is his band. When tragedy strikes one of its members, Anthem feels he must do something to break the Corp’s hold on its citizens, or else everyone is in danger of losing what little freedom they have.

In Coda, Emma Trevayne creates a society where everything is watched and monitored, supposedly for the well being of its citizens but actually to make sure that the people in control stay in control. Anthem isn’t happy with the life that he and his friends lead, but he believes he’s powerless to change the system. His mother made him promise to take care of the twins before she died, and he plans to keep that promise.

But he also rebels against the thought of the twins, innocent and too young to get their first dose of addictive music, growing up in a world like his own. He thinks that taking care of them may be finding a way to change their future.

While it takes place in a fictional future world, Coda deals with issues relevant today: drug addiction, poverty, gender identity, government surveillance, and more. Plus it’s a good love story too. I recommend it for mother-daughter book clubs with girls aged 14 and up.

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

Book Review: Death, Dickinson and the Demented Life of Frenchie Garcia by Jenny Torres Sanchez

Death, Dickinson, and the Demented Life of Frenchi Garcia cover imageFrenchie lives down the street from the local cemetery, so she’s well aware of the impermanence of life. But lately it’s been getting her down more that usual and only Frenchie knows why. No one knows she was with Andy Cooper for one crazy night before he committed suicide. Frenchie is haunted by the thought that if only she had paid more attention to the clues, she could have done something to stop him. Finally, when she’s pushed everyone away except a new guy named Colin, she decides to relive the things she did with Andy that fateful night to see if there was something she missed.

Death, Dickinson and the Demented Life of Frenchie Garcia by Jenny Torres Sanchez is a look at the lasting legacy of suicide, even on people who were only acquaintances of the person who died. Frenchie had a crush on Andy Cooper, but she didn’t really know him, and she’s not sure why he chose her to be with him on his last night. She often goes to the cemetery to find a peaceful place to think, and she likes sitting by the grave of a woman named Emily Dickinson. Even though she knows it’s not the grave of the famous poet, Frenchie finds solace in thinking of Emily’s poetry and what it means to her while she sits there.

Frenchie is rough around the edges, and she’s at a turning point in her life. She wasn’t accepted to the art school she hoped to attend after high school, and she has no credible plan for what she’ll do instead. Andy’s death exacerbates the depression she feels more and more each day. In her quest to relive the hours she spent with him, Frenchie seems to be searching for a way to save herself.

I shed a few tears by the time I turned the last page on Frenchie’s story, and I recommend it for book clubs with girls aged 15 and up. Discussion can center on the effects of teen suicide and the difficulties teens face when graduating high school and determining what they want to do next.

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

Book Review: Colors and Opposites by Xavier Deneux

TouchThinkLearn Colors cover image

Chronicle Books has introduced two board books to TouchThinkLearn, it’s wonderful series for toddlers. Opposites helps little ones learn the concept of how things relate to one another. For instance, a kitten is shown at the top of a ladder to demonstrate high, and a mole is shown underneath the ground to illustrate low. Some of the other opposites portrayed include outside/inside, night/day, big/small, and heavy/light.

Colors shows bright vibrant colors while also showing familiar things that may portray them. For instance an apple is red, a teddy bear is brown and a leaf is green.

Several features make these books great for kids. First, the pages are sturdy and thick, so little fingers can turn the pages over and over without tearing them. Second, the illustrations are cut out, with one page showing the raised shape that looks cut from the other. In the apple example I talked about above, the left hand page has a raised apple shape with leaves and a stem drawn on, while the right hand page shows a cut-out space where the apple would be. You still see leaves and a stem above the shape, and the cut out shows apple seeds. In the Opposites book, a full black left-hand page has a raised white crescent moon shape to show night, while the right-hand page is white with a round yellow cut out to show day. TouchThinkLearn Opposites cover image

The illustrated shapes are compelling to look at and to touch. The books are recommended for ages 3 and up, but moms and dads can have lots of fun holding their babies and letting them touch the die-cuts while talking to them about what’s shown on the page. These books will definitely be at the top of my gift list for anyone who is having a baby.

You may want to look at this YouTube video that shows kids interacting with the books that will give you an idea of what they look like.

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

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