#IMWAYR August 15, 2022

Welcome readers! It's #IMWAYR time again, when bloggers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Jen at Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. These are fabulous places to start your search for what to read next.

This post I'm sharing a couple of weeks reading. I had no internet or technology when I was camping this last while, so I ended up writing out my thoughts in pencil on paper. It was a strangely liberating experience. Ideas seem to write themselves. Although I did have to edit these perceptions, I noticed that I ended up producing more. So this got me wondering, is it too much? What do people prefer to read - in depth reflections or just a one sentence blurb? I definitely prefer to read something about the books you have been reading - the more the better. 

This article, The Problem with Female Protagonists, came up in my Facebook memories a couple of weeks ago.  I reread it and wondered about my own reading life. Do I read mostly about women? men? 

I went and looked at the data for this year so far. I wish I had included a category for queer characters and gender of author, but will leave that for another time. Here are my results. Let me know if you want to copy the form for your own use.


Titles with a 🍁 indicate this is a Canadian or Indigenous Canadian Author and or Illustrator.

Clicking on the title will take you to the Goodreads page of the book.

PICTURE BOOKS

5 stars

Abdul's Story
by Jamilah Thompkins-Bigelow & Tiffany Rose (Illustrator)

Abdul finds that telling stories is easy, but writing them down is hard. He has trouble forming letters and spelling words correctly. He is about to give up writing when an author who looks much like him visits their classroom. He tells a story about a community very much like Abdul's. Mr Muhammad encourages the children to write their own stories. When he sees how disheartened Abdul is about his messy paper, he shows him his own messy notebook. This gives Abdul the courage to continue on with his own writing.
This is a wonderful book. I love the multicultural classroom and community portrayed in the pages. I love that it provides an overview of what the writing process looks like. I especially appreciate that it shows how attempting to get everything perfect the first time round interferes with eventually creating a brilliant story. That's an important message for all of us.

Slightly slapstick, this book is loaded with rhyming ridiculousness.
Mr. Watson and his partner, Mr. Nelson, start out with three chickens. Their life becomes pure chaos as those three chickens reproduce to become 456 birds. They had:
Chickens in the sink,
chickens on the bed,
chickens in the bread box,
chickens on their heads!
It isn't until Mr. Nelson threatens to move out into the coop out back - alone, that Mr. Watson finally comes up with a plan for what to do with all those chickens.
I appreciate much about this one: in particular, the gay couple just being a couple; the humour; and the illustrations so loaded with detail, readers can spend hours poring over them. Thanks to Linda Bai for the introduction to this.

4 stars

Rosa's Song
by Helena Ku Rhee & Pascal Campion (Illustrations) June 14, 2022

Jae and his family have moved into an apartment building in a new city in a new country. He mopes about their suite missing home. After his mother sends him off to make new friends, he knocks on a door and meets Rosa and her parrot, Pollito. They become fast friends. Rosa and Pollito teach Jae the song, When I fly Away, My Heart Stays Here.
One day, without warning, Rosa is gone. She left Pollito behind for Jae who is heartbroken. Eventually two new children knock on his door.
In her author's note, Helena Ku Rhee talks about growing up in an apartment much like this one. Like Jae, friendships were often "disrupted just as they are forming."
I like the multicultural community portrayed in Pascal Campion's illustrations.


Africa decides to join a Double Dutch Competition. She has never double dutched before, but her grandmother was a champion, so Africa is certain she has it in her too. She has one week to be ready for it. At first she tries to learn on her own. Then she gets her friends to help her. They might not do double dutch, but they teach her how to dance; step in rhythm; clap and sing; and double cartwheel, back flip, and summersault.
On the day of the competition, Africa uses the skills her friends taught her to double dutch even better than her grandmother used to.
The artwork in this book is glorious! Anna Cunha's illustration are vibrant and sing with action.

4 stars

The Queen of Kindergarten
by Derrick Barnes &Vanessa Brantley-Newton (Illustrator)

A young girl's mother sends her off to her first day of kindergarten with a tiara and rules for how to be a queen. The rules are: 1.Brighten any room you enter; 2. Be caring and kind; and 3. Be helpful to others. These are good rules for people of any age and gender.
If I was still working I would have ordered this book for the library in a heartbeat. I just wish this book and The King of Kindergarten had been titled with A as in A Queen of Kindergarten, rather than the.

MG NOVELS


I finished this, and then started it all over again.
It is the second in Pratchett's Bromeliad series.
The nomes (four inch tall people) now live in buildings in an abandoned quarry. Life is much harder than it was in their department store lives in Truckers. It is winter, already a hard time, when a notice goes up that the quarry is going to opened again.
A small crew head out on a scouting mission to the nearby airport while Grimma, (a budding feminist) and the rest of the leadership come up with a plan to make the humans go away. Believing that humans always obey signs, they create some badly spelled ones warning them to keep out. They lock the gate with a heavy chain and padlock. They spike the tires of a lorry that tries to enter. The humans keep coming.
Eventually they capture a night security guard.
Knowing that more humans will arrive with the dawn, the Nomes climb aboard JCB (Jecub) an abandoned digger they have refurbished with parts taken from the decommissioned lorry. 
Will they be captured and forced to make shoes, do housework, and paint flowers in exchange for bowls of milk? You will have to read the book and find out. 
The important thing about Pratchett's work is that while we are laughing, he provides a mirror for us to see ourselves with clarity and compassion. I can't help but wonder if Nomes really are smarter than humans.


I love this series about a group of teenage spies. With each story, the drama of their mission is counterbalanced by the social and emotional development of their characters.
To succeed in their new mission, Paris has to up his chess game so he can participate in chess prodigy tournaments in Moscow and Beijing.
Sydney, acting as a junior reporter, follows a billionaire's daughter around the world to uncover his role in soviet missiles.
Brooklyn is stuck in summer school where she connects with Charlotte, a previous member of the team. Together they manage to crack an important to code that enables the success of the operation.
The goal this time is to recruit a young North Korean chess prodigy, Dae-Jung, and his nuclear scientist father, Park Jin-Sun, before Umbra can kidnap them.
Luckily their adopted father, (code named Mother,) is there to support the team through their all their challenges.
Now I have to wait til next February for the next instalment.


If Ellis Earl (Earl) was a real person, he would be two years my junior. The same historic events would have reverberated across both our lives. That's where the similarities end. My family endured a short stint of abject poverty, but was a choice made by my parents in hopes of a better life to follow. Earl's poverty is a permanent fixture, a grind brought about because of the colour of his skin. Those events were significantly more profound for him and his family than I could have begun to imagine.
The conditions Earl and his family have to live in are horrific. He lives with his widowed mother and a large number of siblings. Then they end up looking after three of this brother's children while their mom is having another baby. In addition to the constant gnawing hunger, they live in an already crowded three room shack that leaks when it rains and floods the only way out.
Of course Earl loves school. School is his salvation and a potential way out of his misery. He has a fantastic teacher who cares for the educational, physical, emotional and social well being of students under his care. It's because of him that the circumstances of Earl and his family eventually improves. Mr. Foster gives Earl a copy of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory as a gift. Earl was a struggling reader until he became engaged in Charlie's story. He noted their similar circumstances and hopes to someday win his own kind of golden ticket. 
This is a book about making connections and looking forward. It's about the power of one important teacher in a child's life. It is still a hard read. 
I hope that all those real children Earl represents did manage to find their way into a better life.

4 stars

Me (Moth)
by Amber McBride (Author and Narrator) August 17, 2021

I listened to this book. I'm not sure it was the ideal medium for the story. While I appreciated the language, I think reading with my eyes would have had a more profound impact.
It's a book that deals with grief, isolation and abandonment. It's about first love.
Moth lost her entire family in a car accident. Sani sees ghosts. The two help each other find their way from their past into their futures.
I'm not going to spoil this book for you, but part of it was a huge surprise for me. It was a necessary revelation that enabled the two youth to move forward, but it still shocked me.

In 2017, women in Korea earned 63¢ for every dollar their male counterparts made. In 2021 it is still the lowest ratio in OPEC countries.
Kim Jiyoung, a symbolic character, epitomizes this story of gender inequality in Korea. She represents the experiences of Korean women, especially those with a career who are married with children.
The book is supposed to be a clinical assessment of a married woman with one child. Her husband sent her to see him after she began to behave peculiar.
"In a chilling, eerily truncated third-person voice, Jiyoung’s entire life is recounted to the psychiatrist—a narrative infused with disparate elements of frustration, perseverance, and submission. Born in 1982 and given the most common name for Korean baby girls, Jiyoung quickly becomes the unfavored sister to her princeling little brother. Always, her behavior is policed by the male figures around her—from the elementary school teachers who enforce strict uniforms for girls, to the coworkers who install a hidden camera in the women’s restroom and post their photos online. In her father’s eyes, it is Jiyoung’s fault that men harass her late at night; in her husband’s eyes, it is Jiyoung’s duty to forsake her career to take care of him and their child—to put them first."
At the end, the psychiatrist acknowledges that he would not be aware of women's reality without having met 
Kim Jiyoung, but he still doesn't make connections from her to the women in his own life.
Those of us from other parts of the world will find ourselves reflected in Kim Jiyoung's reality and in turn, see our own culture through new eyes.
This book leads us to ask all kinds of questions. What is it like for women in other parts of the world? Will/Did this book bring about change for women in Korea?
Here in Canada how many women stay home because child care is either not available or so expensive as to make continuing to work financially ridiculous? Even when women continue working following childbirth, they end up taking on a majority of the work at home. While they are at least spared the disdain of stay at home moms in Korea, we still don't acknowledge the value of their unpaid labour.
I am left contemplating my Korean daughter in law's experiences here in Canada. She has a master's degree in translation work. Before she was married, she lost or couldn't get jobs because of her gender. In Canada her options are limited because her qualifications are not recognized here. Like many married woman in Korea, she is a stay at home mom with two children and does contract work from home. I wondered how different her life is here compared to there. She tells me it is much better.

4.5 stars

A Psalm for the Wild-Built
 by Becky Chambers & Emmett Grosland (Narrator) July 13, 2021

This book is a kind of blessing - a promise of a better world to come.
Eons before the story begins, human beings built robots to do their work. One day robots awoke to consciousness and eventually an agreement was made between themselves and humans to live separate lives. It was a catalyst that changed human beings and their environments for the better.
This is the the story of Sibling Dex, a nongendered city monk who longs for more. They want to listen to the sound of crickets in the evening after working. They want a more meaningful purpose to their life.
After a few initial mishaps, Sibling Dex ends up with a successful tea cart, travelling through rural areas helping others get through the tribulations of their days. But there are no crickets. It still isn't enough. They decide to go in search of true wilderness.
On the way Sibling Dex meets up with Mosscap, a sentient robot. Mosscap is on a mission to find out what humans want. As they travel together, learning more about one another, a heartwarming friendship blossoms between the two of them.
I will definitely be reading more of Becky Chambers' words.

CURRENTLY

Yolk by Mary H.K. Choi March 2, 2021
The Fort by Gordon Korman June 28, 2022  πŸ
Wings by Terry Pratchett & Stephen Briggs (Narrator) January 1, 1990

UP NEXT

Barry Squires, Full Tilt by Heather Smith  πŸ
Cub by Cynthia L. Copeland, 

READING GOALS

#MustReadFiction 17/24

#MustReadNonFiction 13/18

Canadian Authors 49/100 

Canada Reads shortlist 5/5 

Indigenous Authors 12/25

2022 Big Book Summer Challenge 7

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 193/250

22 comments:

  1. The City Spies series is fun. Glad you enjoyed the latest.

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    1. It is such a great series with lots of action paired with wonderful character development.

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  2. I enjoyed seeing your graphs, fairly even most of the time. That last book, A Psalm for The Wild Built, sounds so intriguing. I loved The Lucky Ones and Me, Moth is one you might want to 'see', for the page look. It also sounds interesting about your handwritten notes versus on computer. If we only took the time, perhaps thoughts would slow down, too? Thanks, Cheriee. Have a great week!

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    1. I think you would like A Psalm for The Wild Built. Re Me, Moth, I think this poetry needs to have a visual component for it to really work.

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  3. I love City Spies and everything James Ponti. The Lucky Ones sounds really interesting. I enjoyed looking at your reading data. Have a great week!

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    1. I have only read James Ponti's City Spies series, but might have to go and see what I have missed while waiting for the next in this series.

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  4. Wide selection! Wow. My list is up http://www.lyndonperrywriter.com/2022/08/book-date-monday-amreading-aug-15.html

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  5. Abdul's Story is a classroom must-have. A great book to help ease anxieties about writing. City Spies sounds great!

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    1. I can see this about it. If I was still working it would be an automatic purchase.

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  6. I enjoyed the graphs as well and they are making me ask questions about what I read as well. I think it will be similar to yours with a more female characters and more female writers, but I might need to check that out. Lots of great books here as well. I have only read City Spies, which I also enjoy. I am going to check out a few of these PBs later in the week. Thanks for posting. Hope your trip went well, and by the way I enjoy the longer reviews. Have a great week!

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    1. I showed my kids this and we all figure we should try it using Goodreads or Shelves. I think I will have a higher male ratio than they do, although my 15 year old might be close. We will see.

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    2. I will look forward to seeing what your ratio looks like. I am certain my partner would have a much higher male character ratio, although he has turned me on to some stunning women authors.

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  7. I can already tell my comment will be absurdly long, so here goes! I understand what you mean about writing on paper being liberating—I've never tried it for reviews, but when I write poetry, I find myself so much less distracted by icons and windows and the general glow of the screen. Your question about how long reviews should be is a fascinating one—I personally prefer a longer post even if I do end up having to skim parts of it for time, because when I arrive at an intriguing book, I get the chance to see your full thoughts and learn about how compelling the story is. (I noticed that happening on this post several times—I made note of two different adult novels I would not have written down otherwise!) Also, as the author of countless ridiculously long reviews, I'd certainly be one to talk if I criticized other bloggers for writing too much—I think it can even just be personally rewarding to document all your thoughts, even if you know the audience may not read them all. And your comments on gender are fascinating—I quickly went through and counted protagonists in the books I've read this year (besides picture books), and I have 9 girls vs. 7 boys. I'm honestly surprised it's that even—I think I tend to relate more to girl protagonists because many of my traits (like having feelings) are considered stereotypically "girly," but it seems even my perception is skewed, because it's actually pretty close to even.

    Well, that is several comments' worth already, and I haven't even commented on the books! I made note of Abdul's Story, Rosa's Song, and Fly, all of which I have heard many wonderful things about. I also made note of Me (Moth), which I know was a National Book Award finalist recently—I will definitely make sure to try the written version, not the audiobook. Kim Jiyoung, Born 1982 and A Psalm for the Wild-Built are also both on my list—the latter in particular seems like the perfect combination of starkly original and short! And I hope you enjoy reading Yolk as well—that was easily one of the best reads of the year for me. Thanks so much for the wonderful and thought-provoking post, Cheriee!

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    1. I enjoy reading all your reviews Max. Like you, I might just skim over bits if I am pressed for time, but I want to know what people really think about books. I think that many authors are showing us male characters with great emotional depth and sensitivity. It's such a relief to read these books.
      I think you will enjoy A Psalm for the Wild-Built.

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  8. The City Spies series sounds good. It has been quite a while since I read a Middle Grade or YA book. I know I'm missing books I would enjoy. Come see my week here. Happy reading!

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    1. It is a great series Kathy. I read more adult novels now than I used to, but there are so many really brilliant authors writing MG and YA, that I continue to read that work.

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  9. So funny, Cheriee - I was just a few minutes ago asking myself the same question, as I visited different blogs today - do I write too much? What do people prefer, more description or just a cover photo and/or a few words? I know I tend to be wordy - I talk a lot in person, too! ha ha But I love connecting with people through the Monday posts.

    Wow, some great books for you, as usual (and some time offline camping - ahhh!). The Lucky Ones sounds amazing - I hadn't heard of it before. And Kim JiYoung sounds very powerful and thought-provoking. I've been wanting to read Psalms for the Wild Built, so thanks for reminding me of it!

    Hope you enjoy your books this week, Cheriee!

    Sue
    Book By Book

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    1. I think I talk a lot in person too.... I appreciate your in depth remarks. I love connecting through the Monday posts also, and that really only happens if people say something meaningful about the books they read.

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  10. I have always wondered about my reviews...because I do keep them pretty short. I feel like a summary can be found on Goodreads, so I just get to what I liked. But I wonder if people like that? I did enjoy reading your thoughts and what you've noticed about your reading. I too read a lot of female protagonists and female authors and find myself disappointed when I read a book with a male protagonist. I think I have tried to train myself to be on the lookout for female protagonists? But five years ago, I bet my data would be more similar to that article's! Thanks for sharing that.

    Also, Me Moth was a book that I devoured and did not see that twist coming. I loved it!!!

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    1. I probably write too much Alexis. I am happy just to read what people think of a book.
      I deliberately focus on female authors and protagonists, but as a mother of two sons, I also appreciate male ones, especially those who give me a perspective into how their brains work.

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  11. I'm a wordy reviewer. I figure people can skim and take away whatever they want from my review but I like getting all my thoughts down for myself. I think you should do whatever makes you happy!

    Mr. Watson's Chickens caught my eye a few months ago. It looks cute! And I keep stumbling over Becky Chambers's books. I finally gave in and bought The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet recently so that I'll hopefully finally get around to reading something she's written.

    Enjoy your week!

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