#IMWAYR August 21, 2023

Welcome! 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.

We have the worst air on the planet these days. It's nasty. Forest are burning all around us, but not close enough to us that we are worried for our own safety. Still, friends, family and so many other people are either on evacuation alert, or have been evacuated that our provincial government has stopped all nonessential traffic into our region. 

I think I complained about the smoke last time I posted. We had a fabulous family reunion on the August long weekend in spite of it. Then we had a bit of respite for about a week after the fire to the south of us was brought under control. This was good because two of our granddaughters stayed with us and besides reading books together, going outside to tire them is part of our keeping sane strategy. Then their parents came and collected them just before all hell broke loose. This link will take you to a time lapse video of the fire about 100 kilometres north of us.

We started out their visit with trip to the library where we stocked up on books. I've shared some of them here. 

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.

MOST RECENT BLOG POST

FREE VERSE FRIDAY #8 AUGUST - VACATION

CHILDREN'S PICTURE BOOKS


Danny and the Dinosaur
by Syd Hoff January 1, 1958

My three year old granddaughter chose this (as well as a whole lot of other dinosaur books) from the library. There can be unfortunate consequences when a dinosaur practices its manners. We all laughed at this one.


How Do Dinosaurs Say I Love You?
by Jane Yolen & Mark Teague (Illustrator) January 1, 2009

This is another one the dinosaur mad granddaughter picked from the library. We read it at least three times during the 7 days she and her older sister were with us.


How Do Dinosaurs Get Well Soon?
by Jane Yolen & Mark Teague (Illustrator) February 1, 2003

We read this at least once a day during the 7 days my granddaughters were with us. After the youngest had gone to sleep, her six year old sister chose it as one of the books to read with me.
This one is a winner.


Lola at the Library
by Anna McQuinn & Rosalind Beardshaw (Illustrator) January 1, 2006

This is one of the books my six year old granddaughter picked to bring home from the library. She read it on her own a number of times. It wasn't til they returned to their parents that I found time to read it myself. I can see why she loved it.
Rosalind Beardshaw's art is gorgeous. I love how multicultural the characters are.


Duck, Duck, Porcupine!
by Salina Yoon May 17, 2016

My granddaughters and I enjoyed this hilarious graphic novel for beginning readers. The six year old could read it by herself. We will definitely read more of this series!


Dragon's Halloween by Dav Pilkey January 1, 1993

My six year old granddaughter loved this beginning chapter book. I read it to her and her little sister first, then she picked it up and read it on her own.


Perfectly Imperfect Mira
by Faith Pray April 12, 2022

My six year old granddaughter picked this out from the library shelves. I'm so glad she did, as I might have overlooked it.
Mira wants to be perfect and frets when she can't do things perfectly the first time. Eventually she realizes that she needs to do something and so she begins to practice different gymnastic moves on her own. Even though she doesn't do them perfectly, she doesn't give up and continues to improve. In the end Mira realizes she is perfect at growing.
This is a brilliant book that shows all of us how perfection is the enemy of the good.
I love Faith Pray's soft illustrations and how rounded and healthy Mira looks.


Carson Crosses Canada
by Linda Bailey & Kass Reich (Illustrations) May 30, 2017 🍁

When Annie Magruder learns that her sister, who lives on the other side of Canada, is ill, she decides to go see her. She fills her VW Bug up with her tent, baloney sandwiches, her dog Carson, and his favourite toy, Squeaky Chicken. She promises Carson there will be a surprise for him when they get there. We enjoyed reading about their adventures in the different parts of the country. The best part is when Annie goes to get a souvenir at Niagra Falls, and Carson leaves his own souvenir there.
Eventually they make it to Annie's sister's place and Carson is delighted with his surprise.

CHILDREN'S NONFICTION PICTURE BOOKS


A Seed Grows
by Antoinette Portis June 21, 2022

I wish I had remembered that I had this book on my iPad when my grandchildren were visiting. We could have read the book and then, after reading about the different phases of a this plant, gone outside and admired the sunflowers growing in my garden.
Not only do I love the illustrations here, I love how the simple text can be embraced by beginning readers.
I appreciated the additional information at the back of the book that includes a visual lifecycle.
This is a brilliant nonfiction text for new readers.


Being Frog
 by April Pulley Sayre February 4, 2020

This was a reread for me, but I had to introduce my grandchildren to the wonders of frogs. I chose this and the following title. You can read my original review of this book here


The Frog Mother
(Mothers of Xsan, 4) by Hetxw'ms Gyetxw (Brett D. Huson), Natasha Donovan (Illustrations)  🍁

The Mothers of Xsan Series highlights the Gitxsan’s way of knowing the world by showing the integration of culture and nature. I've reviewed this one in full here.
Not only were the grandchildren engaged by this one, the six year old, just after we started reading, remarked that it seemed like an indigenous book.


What Will Hatch?
by Jennifer Ward & Susie Ghahremani (Illustrator) February 5, 2013

This is a delightful information board book. Each section is made up of two, two page spreads. The first includes a setting with a clutch of eggs and includes the question? What will hatch? The next page names and shows the hatched creatures. Each set of pages also includes a rhyming couplet. Readers will learn about turtles, tadpoles, penguins and crocodiles. Did you know that crocodiles are doting mothers?

MIDDLE GRADE FICTION



The Labors of Hercules Beal
by Gary D. Schmidt & Fred Berman (Narrator)

Gary Schmidt is one of a handful of authors who I read just because I am guaranteed to fall in love with their male characters. 
There is a lot going on here. Hercules Beal and his brother, Achilles, are left to run their family farm and nursery after their parents are killed in an automobile accident. 
Hercules starts out at a new school with a hard core, ex marine, home room teacher who assigns unique projects for each of his students. Hercules’ assignment is to find parallels between his life and the labours of his mythical namesake. 
The book is full of adventure punctuated by ethereal moments of calm as Hercules, his dog, and pirate cat greet each dawn on a sand dune by the ocean. It’s also loaded with screaming hilarity. 
It shows a community, even the most crotchety members, stepping up to support their own when they need it. It shows us a boy dealing with grief and coming into his own. It’s just bloody lovely. 


Winterkill
by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch &. Michael Gallagher 
 (Narrator) September 6, 2022

I become besotted with Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch's writing all over again after reading one of her novels. She writes about historically horrific and brutal times with such compassion and tenderness for her characters, without whitewashing any of the reality.
This book is very timely since it is set in the Ukraine. It deals with the Holodomor, a genocide by famine deliberately engineered by Stalin.

ADULT/YA NONFICTION
 

The Anthropocene Reviewed
 by John Green
May 18, 2021

I savoured this book. I mostly listened to one or two essays at a time. If it was at night and I fell asleep, I was happy to go back and start where I began the night before.
At one point I stopped reading and spent the rest of the afternoon listening to The Mountain Goats.
I give The Mountain goats 4 stars.
John Green narrated this himself. His voice added layers of nuance to the pieces. While some pieces might be more personal than other's I really appreciated Green's honesty & ability to make a personal connection to everything in the book.

I give "The Anthropocene Reviewed" five stars.

CURRENTLY

The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai

Global by Eoin Colfer, Andrew Donkin, Giovanni Rigano (Illustrator)

UP NEXT 

I have no idea.

READING GOALS 

#MustReadFiction 16/24 

#MustReadNonFiction 12/20

Canadian Authors 29/75 

Indigenous Authors 12/20 

Big Books Summer 2023 - 12 - one in progress

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 127/200 


 

FREE VERSE FRIDAY #8 AUGUST - VACATION

I'm joining Beverly A Baird, Linda Schueler and others in a "year long poetry practice – on the first Friday of each Month," when they, and anyone else who joins, will be writing a poem based on the theme of the month and a photo taken relating to that theme.

You can find out more about this here.

I'm in the middle of a family reunion, so I forgot to post on Friday. The good thing about being the earliest one up is that I can clean up the house a bit and it stays that way for a little while, and two, I get a bit of time just for myself, and catching up on things I missed, like this. 

For me, retirement is mostly a never ending vacation punctuated by volunteering and the occasional day of paid work. Getting away from home is the closest to a holiday/vacation that exists for me. I scribbled this one just after we returned from the Vancouver Island Music Festival

Tom Wilson of Blackie and the Rodeo Kings


hanging out
at a music festival
is liberation
from ordinary life

letting ourselves get
lost in a montage
of marvels

of reverberations 
of sensation

of raconteurs spinning stories
from words and melody

of applause and cheering,
punctuated by
intoxicating silence
as one voice
ushers us across 
time and place
into sacred space

of hot sun
hot rhythms
hot bodies

of dancing our hearts out
amid a throng of similar souls

of grooving to tunes
rendered on an acoustic guitar
by a fifteen year old blues prodigy,
who’s picking those strings
like he’s in a contest with the devil himself

Horizon over main stage at Vancouver Island MusicFest

Here's the website of the young blues prodigy referenced in the poem. 

The first time I participated, I didn't get the photograph first bit. I let the theme percolate throughout the month before posting and the poem more or less wrote itself. When I realized my mistake, I sent a half decent draft of it to my partner, Randy Rotheisler, and a friend, Ron Peace, both gifted photographers, asking for images to accompany it. We have continued this process.

In case you are interested, both these photographs can be purchased from the photographers. Let me know if you want their contact information.