Showing posts with label #WeNeedDiverseBooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #WeNeedDiverseBooks. Show all posts

#IMWAYR August 19, 2019

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. 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. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.



We are back in Vancouver. After two weeks away, the garden was a wee disaster. I've spent three half days and have at least another four to six hours before it's under control. On a positive note, we are eating fresh beets, carrots, tomatoes, cucumbers, zucchini and raspberries on a daily basis! Our plan is to make cucumber kimchi this week.

BLOG POSTS LAST WEEK


Poetry Friday August 16, 2019
Helping Mayor Patty by Fran Manushkin & Laura Zarrin (Illustrator)
Some Places More Than Others by Renée Watson

NOVELS


4 stars
Wool by Hugh Howey

I'm not a huge science fiction fan, but ended up absolutely mesmerized by Wool. It feels at times like a western novel set in a post apocalyptic society. The world building is spectacular. The book is chock full of fabulous characters. As much as I despised one of them, I appreciate how Howey portrayed him as a sympathetic, albeit twisted, individual trying to do the right thing. Unfortunately, we all know that this is how to pave the road to hell, and this is pretty much the reality here.


I'm left with this question. Can evil ever work on the side of good?



5 stars
How the Light Gets In by Louise Penny & Ralph Cosham (Narrator)

I was on the edge the whole time I listened to this book. At the same time as it references Quebec history, (this time with a fictionalized version of the Dionne quintuplets), it reads like le Carré spy novel with all the intrigue and back stabbing going on in the Sûreté.

I sure am happy that the next book in the was available because I am devouring this series.
Louise Penny is Canadian. 🍁


3 stars
The Mighty Heart of Sunny St. James by Ashley Herring Blake

I had a hard time with this book. Let me start by saying that someone I am close to had a double lung transplant recently, so as I read this I couldn't help but wonder how realistic the medical related situations would be. Rejection is a huge worry for at least a year. In addition there are other side effects to worry about including kidney failure and diabetes from all the the drugs. That first year, monitoring your vital signs on a daily basis is so critical, that it's hard for me to accept that a 13 year old girl wouldn't take it more seriously than Sunny does. I really liked Kate, Sunny's guardian, who is a responsible adult with Sunny's best interests at heart. I wasn't so enthusiastic about the mother who didn't seem to understand Sunny's medical situation and seemed to be more interested in befriending her than acting as an adult.


I empathize with Sunny's desire to start a new life after her surgery, but it didn't always work for me. Even though I think most of the difficulties are realistic, there was too much angst in her relationships with Quinn and Margot for me.

I expect the target audience won't be nearly as critical as I am and will love this.


5 stars
The Golden Tresses of the Dead (Flavia de Luce #10) by Alan Bradley & Jayne Entwistle (Narrator)

Flavia and Dogger have set up their own detective agency. When a severed finger is discovered in her sister Ophelia‘s wedding cake, their first assignment begins. It soon turns out that this is just the start of a case that involves con artists, missionaries and murder. I am loving that Flavia seems to be maturing and appreciate Dogger more and more. I sure hope this isn't the last book in the series. On a positive note, there is a rumour that a Flavia television series in the works for CBC.


Alan Bradley is a Canadian who now resides on the Isle of Man. 🍁


POETRY



4 stars
Finding Baba Yaga by Jane Yolen

This story is a mash up of the modern and the traditional. It’s both specific and universal. My acquaintance with Russian folk lore is minimal, but I am acquainted with the original Baba Yaga tales. Vasilisa the Beautiful is new to me.

There’s a dreamlike quality to this novel in verse. I am left thinking it’s a meditation of sorts about what it means to be a woman in any time.

CURRENTLY


I'm listening to The Way Home by Louise Penny. On my device I'm rereading Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga. I am one third into Carnival Catastrophe by Natalie Lloyd and still reading Now You're Logging! by Bus Griffiths, a graphic novel first published in 1978. I'm liking it, but it's dense with lots of logging vocabulary to figure out. After all the research I've done, I'm hyper aware of all the ways men can get hurt in the woods, so I'm full of fear as I read this!


UP NEXT


I had to send books back to the library unread. It's very distressing. I hope to find time to read the pile of picture books I have here as well as Finding Orion by John David Anderson, Friday Barnes, Under Suspicion by R. A. Spratt, and Just Call My Name by Holly Goldberg Sloan.


PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS


#MustReadIn2018 16/25


#MustReadNFIn2018 10/12


25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 18/25


25 books by Canadian Authors 42/25


Big Book Reading Challenge 9/4


Goodreads Reading Challenge 261/333

#IMWAYR June 24, 2019

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. 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. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.



Here in British Columbia in Canada, we have one more week of school. I am thankful that I only intend to work two days.
I'm still not sure I will survive.
I haven't felt like doing much more than vegging out in front of the TV. 

I'm sharing a couple of weeks worth of books. We celebrated my grandchildren's second birthday party last weekend and had a house full of company. Then Sunday was Father's day so we had more hullabaloo then.

At work I have been weeding picture books that haven't been checked out in two years. If the title looks in good shape, I give it a read through and make a decision. Sometimes I hope that since we are getting rid of so many books, this one will shine and get circulated. Many of the books here today are 'rescued' from the recycling centre.

Clicking on the titles below will take you to the Goodreads page for that book.

RECENT BLOG POSTS

Poetry Friday June 21, 2019

Poetry Friday June 14, 2019

BOOKS I'M READING WITH THE GRANDKIDS



We are on a tear these days with Olivier Dunrea's Gossie and Friends series.
We've been reading, rereading, and rereading Gossie, Gossie and Gertie, Ollie the Stomper, Ruby and Rufus, and Jasper and Joop. The more I read, the more I appreciate the patterns in these little books. I'm recommending them to all the school libraries for beginning readers. Another favourite these days is The Wonders of the Color Wheel by Charles Ghigna & Jatkowska Ag (Illustrations) Ada can't get over the "Big Mess!" the painters make. 

PICTURE BOOKS


5 stars
A Princess of Great Daring by Tobi Hill-Meyer & Elenore Toczynski (Illustrator)

This is a fabulous book with a trans character. I love that the book is mostly about friends playing together creating their own adventure. That Jamie is a now a girl is really an insignificant part of the story.


4 stars
Some Things Are Scary by Florence Parry Heide & Jules Feiffer (Illustrator)

I first thought this book might be good for Halloween, but after my second read I realized that it has lots of potential for social and emotional development. 


3 stars
Li Minoush (Thomas and His Cat) by Bonnie Murray, Rita Flamand & Sheldon Dawson (Illustrator)

After a discussion with his friends about pets, Thomas goes home and asks his mom for one. They decide to get a cat. After his mother suggests that they name their kitten Minoush, he learns that it means cat in Michif.
Michif, the language of the Metis, a combination of Cree and French, is in serious decline. The story is told in both English and Michif. Sheldon Dawson's realistic paintings create a sense of intimacy to the book.
The back matter includes a Michif pronunciation guide. I appreciated the information on the back cover about Rita Flamand, a fluent speaking Metis woman, who created a written form of the language to keep it alive. Unfortunately this book is now out of print. 
All of these contributors are Canadian. Bonnie Murray and Rita Flamand are Metis. 


4 stars
Allison by Allen Say

This is an important book to include in your collection of books about families. Allison, an Asian girl, was adopted into a white family. This picture book deals with some of her struggles as she realizes that she does not look like her parents.


4 stars
I Can’t Have Bannock But The Beaver Has A Dam by Bernelda Wheeler & Herman Bekkering

This cumulative story of why a young boy can't have bannock is pure fun to read. It's wonderful for readers who enjoy If You Give a Mouse a Cookie kind of tales.
Two things I enjoyed about this book include: everyone wins - the boy and the beaver, and there is a recipe for bannock at the back of the book.
I liked Herman Bekkering's black and white art, but wish the illustrations were in colour.
Both of the contributors are Canadian. Bernelda Wheeler is indigenous.


5 stars
The Grandma Book by Todd Parr

Everything here is absolutely true.


5 stars
Me With You by Kristy Dempsey & Christopher Denise (Illustrator)

I pretty much love everything about this book. I love the rhyming poetry. I love the illustrations. I adore the message.
I picked this up because I thought it might be an appropriate book to read for Father's Day. The students and I were not sure if the You in this book is a father or grandfather.

NONFICTION PICTURE BOOKS


5 stars
Little People, BIG DREAMS: Emmeline Pankhurst by Mª Isabel Sánchez Vegara, Ana Sanfelippo (Illustrator)

One of the students brought this book in to share with me.
I loved it. Emmeline Pankhurst is one of the suffragettes we have to thank for getting women the right to vote. I appreciate that the book shows us how her early years with supportive, activist parents, led to her becoming who she eventually became. Our roots matter.
I also appreciated the timeline and additional information about her at the end of the book.


5 stars
I Am Jane Goodall (Ordinary People Change the World) by Brad Meltzer & Christopher Eliopoulos (Illustrator)

This book is a wonderful introduction to Jane Goodall's life. It's also important in that it reminds us that we are part of a larger community and that we are responsible for it.

NOVELS


4 stars
Cold Skies by Thomas King (Big Book - 464 pages)

Give me a good mystery and I'm satisfied. Throw in some of Thomas King's way with words and ironic sense of humour, and I'm almost over the moon.
DreadfulWater is a retired cop who now lives in the small town of Chinook, Montana where he tries his hand at art photography. His past is weighted down by the murders of his partner and her 10 year old daughter, an unsolved case that haunts him.
When bodies start piling up, the sheriff, who's just about to head off on vacation, does his best to convince DreadfulWater to take on the role of acting sheriff.
What works for me here is all the little details, the grumpy cat, DreadfulWater's lusting after a six burner gas stove, and all the quirkiness in the characters and reality of living in a small town. I just picked up the first in the series up and can hardly wait to get to it. 


4 stars
To Night Owl from Dogfish by Holly Goldberg Sloan (Goodreads Author), Meg Wolitzer

This is the Patent Trap story with a twist. When two gay fathers want their daughters to meet and get to know each other in preparation for blending their families, it starts out rocky, and gets worse. In the end, no matter what happens with their parents, these two girls will always be sisters.
I loved it. I loved the characters, all of them, especially Gaga, the grandmother we all need in our lives.

NONFICTION


5 stars
The Inconvenient Indian: A Curious Account of Native People in North America by Thomas King

Listening to this read by Thomas King himself was as delightful as possible given the subject matter. As I read of the repeated land grabs and ongoing attempts to eliminate indigenous peoples, I’ve been struck by the fact that we are continuing to do this still today. I sure would like to hear what he has to say about members of the Canadian senate refusing to pass the UNDRIP bill.

CURRENTLY

I am listening to Archenemies (Renegades #2) by Marissa Meyer. I'm reading The Case of Windy Lake by Michael Hutchinson. I've been carrying around The Essential Gwendolyn Brooks by Gwendolyn Brooks for a while, but it's going to have to be returned to the library unfinished.

UP NEXT

I'm hoping to get to Artificial Condition by Martha Wells and The Benefits of Being An Octopus by Ann Braden, but we shall see how things go.

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

#MustReadIn2018 13/25

#MustReadNFIn2018 8/12 in progress

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 14/25

25 books by Canadian Authors 31/25

Big Book Reading Challenge 2/4

Goodreads Reading Challenge 204/333

#IMWAYR November 19, 2018

#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. 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. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.


I'm following the lead of Shaye at The Miller Memo, so if you clink on the title link for each book, it will take you to the GoodReads page for that book.




It was an intense reading week. It feels like I didn't finish much, but what I did read will stay with me for a very long time. Aside from that, I finished one pair of gloves for a daughter-in-law's Christmas gift and have started on another pair for the other one. (I swear that with all the pulling out and starting over I have knit at least 2 pairs already!) I have almost completed another baby quilt too!





PICTURE BOOKS

4 stars
The Remember Balloons by Jessie Oliveros & Dana Wulfekotte

This endearing picture books shows the impact of Alzheimer's Disease on a grandfather, his grandson and their family. The analogy of the balloons as keepers of memory is brilliantly done and will help other young people understand this debilitating illness.

4 stars
Hide and Sneak by Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak & Vladyana Krykorka (Illustrator)

Allashua is not very good at hiding. She loves to play hide and seek, but ends up getting distracted by butterflies, flowers, fish in ponds and all kinds of delights around her in her northern world.
Unfortunately, Ijiraqs are very good hiders. If they help a child hide, the child is never heard from again. Allashua can't believe the stories when she meets a cheerful Ijiraq and finds herself in serious trouble because of this. Luckily, Allashua is very smart and manages to save herself!

Allashua is also featured in A Promise is a Promise, a book this team worked on with Robert Munch. 

Vladyana Krykorka's illustrations in this and the other books she works on with Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak are stunningly gorgeous.

NONFICTION

5 stars
Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death, and Hard Truths in a Northern City by Tanya Talaga & Michaela Washburn (Narrator)

Starting this title after finishing up Killers of the Flower Moon was probably not a good idea. It was a jump from historical racism into its modern day counterpart here in Canada. This is intense and not easy to read. 

It's going to be the most important book I've read this year. 

Tanya Talaga painstakingly takes the reader through a detailed chronicle of how the Canadian government explicitly attempted to destroy indigenous peoples. It begins with with the horrors of the residential school system, the death of Chanie Wenjak in 1966 and on into today with a federal government that still refuses to fund indigenous education at the same rates as the rest of the population.

She leads us through the lives and deaths of seven students from 2000 to 2011: Jethro Anderson, Curran Strang, Paul Panacheese, Robyn Harper, Reggie Bushie, Kyle Morrisseau and Jordan Wabasse. All were forced to leave their homes and cultures and travel to Thunder Bay, Ontario, to get a secondary education. Aside from numerous hate crimes and assaults, there have been at least 6 more suspicious deaths since an inquest into those deaths was held in 2012.

According to Robert Jago, from an article in The Walrus titled, The Deadly Racism of Thunder Bay, "First Nations lives are being lost at an alarming and disproportionate rate in Thunder Bay. While the city accounts for barely 5 percent of the Indigenous population in Ontario, it accounts for roughly 37 percent of the province’s Indigenous murder victims. Thunder Bay has more than three times as many First Nations murder victims than the entire province of Quebec, which has more than twelve times as many Indigenous people. In raw numbers, more Native people are murdered in Thunder Bay than in any Canadian city, save Winnipeg."

There are those who think a serial killer is on the loose. It's not hard to believe after reading the book. It is a damning revelation that highlights the institutionalized racism of the police, all levels of the justice system, as well as the provincial and federal governments. Citizens of the city don't come across very positively either.

5 stars
We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices by Wade Hudson, Cheryl Willis Hudson (Editors) & others.

Just WOW! This book, with writing and artwork from many talented creators, written to bring hope and inspiration to their children, ends up bringing it to all readers.
This quote From Drumbeat for Change by Kelly Starling Lyons has stuck with me, "The drumbeat of hope will always drown out howls of hate."

CURRENTLY

I'm halfway through listening to Transcription by Kate Atkinson. I'm reading nothing with my eyes. I've started and stopped about three different novels this week though I did read more of A Thousand Beginnings and Endings than anything else. I needed light and hopeful to contrast with my nonfiction reading and I don't have anything like that in the house.

UP NEXT

I'm planning on starting Lost Soul, Be at Peace by Maggie Thrash. My next nonfiction title will be something completely different from what I have been reading: Shark Lady: The True Story of How Eugenie Clark Became the Ocean's Most Fearless Scientist.

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

Two of my goals have been reached!

#MustReadIn2018 23/25

#MustReadNFIn2018 12/12

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 24/25

Goodreads Reading Challenge 389/333

#IMWAYR November 12, 2018


#IMWAYR time again, when readers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to in the past week. 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. Whatever you are looking forward to in your next great read, these are fabulous places to start your search.

BTW, I've followed the lead of Shaye at The Miller Memo, so if you clink on the title link for each book, it will take you to the GoodReads page for that book. 


We are at our Oliver house this weekend. We just wanted to get away, and also to attend the Remembrance Day Ceremony at our home town. When the names on the roll call are familiar ones, the intimacy of it brings a heightened understanding of what war takes away from us. 

It's been relaxing and sort of productive. I've gotten a lot of reading in and accomplished a bit of knitting, but haven't touched the fabric I planned to cut up while here. Maybe I'll get to it Monday afternoon after reading all your blog posts?

PICTURE BOOKS

5 stars

This book is fun, factual, and fabulous!
The front end covers show us all the characters in this book. (I’m fond of Flappy Squirrel myself)
The book has one big story that’s loaded with Mo Willems classic puns and nonsense. It’s delightful. Then there are joke and information sections. The layout reminds me of Ben Clanton’s Narwhal and Jelly books.
Every primary classroom needs this. (And Clanton’s series as well)

5 stars

I am in awe of Michael Ian Black & Debbie Ridpath Ohi. Their characters, a little girl, a potato, and a flamingo, reveal to us, in 40 pages, important truths about what it means to be human. Sometimes we are sad. Each one of us gets over it in different ways. We don't love each other less because of this. Laughing together helps.

4 stars

As a reader and a knitter, it is inevitable that I would enjoy this book. My knitting, thankfully, has never gotten nearly this out of control. Greta the Goat ends up getting carried away with her knitting and her emotions. In the process, she creates a few monsters.  It's a close call before she figures out how to unravel them all.

4 stars

About a year or so ago I was called in to evaluate papers written by grade seven students. They had been given the first part of this rhyming poem and were asked to analyze it. I have been itching to read the rest of the poem ever since. So when I discovered this picture book on display, I had to have it.
It begins with a description of an elderly, gifted wizard, travelling around in search of welcome. This section is all the students saw.
The poem is so much more. There's a lonely sociable cat. Eventually the two characters meet and end up becoming best of friends. Gillian Johnson's magical illustrations bring their shenanigans to life. 

GRAPHIC

4 stars

While Maggie is away at an all girls’ summer camp, she becomes infatuated with one of the camp counsellors. It appears that her feelings might be reciprocated. It’s Maggie’s first awareness that she is queer, and it’s not an easy revelation. She finds solace in her unexpected giftedness at the rifle range, but that relief is disrupted by antagonism from the other young woman in competition with her.

I enjoyed this coming of age memoir. I appreciated the brutal honesty. While I don’t generally appreciate teen angst, it fits into this story because of its authenticity. My only quibble is that while I like the simplicity of the artwork, there are a lot of characters with complex personalities, and I had difficulty sorting them all out. I suspect that additional details would have helped with that.

CHAPTER BOOKS

5 stars

This might be my favourite title in the series so far. Princess Magnolia sets off to a science fair. While she is there a monster pops out of a volcano. She changes into the Princess in Black and together with the Princess in Blankets, they attempt to subdue the monster, who is only looking for a home and something to eat. Eventually the two heroes and three other Princesses band together to take it where it can live.
I like the science focus here, but I love that these princesses work together to find a solution that works for everyone, including the monster. The ending, that suggests that all princesses can be heroes, is the best! 

NOVELS

4 stars

I forget how much I love Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch’s writing until I finish another book by her. She writes historical fiction imbued with the truth of impeccable research. Not only that, she writes characters that you can’t help but connect with and care for.
Making Bombs for Hitler tells the story of Lida, a young Ukrainian girl, who was taken by the Germans during WW2 to be a slave labourer.
Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch reminds us that war has many victims. Yes we need to remember the 25 million fallen soldiers, but up to 80 million civilians died in the Second World War and its aftermath. I’m thankful to Skrypuch, and writers like her, who tell their stories.
I also highly recommend Dance of the Banished, another of Skrypuch's historical novels 

4 stars

Another Aurora County novel from Deborah Wiles is cause to celebrate! This is especially true given that I had thought the series was complete with the publication of The Aurora County All-Stars, (my favourite so far)

The Cake family, with five boys, one girl, and their parents, arrive in Aurora County in the middle of the night. This itinerant baking family travels around from place to place baking cakes and helping people out until it is time to move again. They are a delightful crew who work together as a team when it is time to bake, but those boys can be raucous when the work is done and it’s time to play.
Emma, the only daughter, has had enough of moving and leaving friends behind. She is determined to harden her emotions and not develop any close relationships this time. Luckily, she is no match for Ruby Lavender, the protagonist from the first book in the series. Together the two of them hatch a plan to force the Cake family to stay.

I’m pretty sure I gained weight reading about all the cakes, cookies and muffins the family prepares. I kept wondering and hoping if there would be recipes at the end. You will be happy to know that there is, but you will have to read the book to find out what kind!

NONFICTION

4 stars

I was worried that this book was going to be a thriller that would scare the bejeezus out of me. It’s terrifying all right, but not for those reasons. It's truth, not fiction.

In the early 1910’s, when oil was discovered on their land, the Osage Nation became wealthy. Each member received a share, known as their headright, of the proceeds.
Unfortunately Indians were not considered competent to look after their own money and so guardians were appointed to monitor their spending. What ensued among the whites in the area of was a culture of corruption and murder. Not only were the Osage taken advantage of through price gouging and embezzlement, David Grant ends up concluding that between 1910 and the 1930’s around a hundred Osage people were murdered by white people for their headrights. Few of these murderers were ever brought to justice. It ended only when the Osage were able to handle their own money, and laws were put in place so that individuals had to be at least 1/2 Osage to inherit these rights. 

This book focuses primarily on the role Bill Hale and his compatriots played in this reign of terror, and how their apprehension led to the consolidation of the FBI.

What terrified me and continues to distress me is the magnitude of prejudice and corruption in these circumstances. I can’t help but make connections to the many murdered and missing indigenous women in North America today and contemplate that much of this is connected to law enforcement officers and others in power being blinded by their own racism. It’s left me wondering, how much graft we would find if we scratched the surface of political influence today.

Many thanks to my cousin Rhoda Peters, Sue Jackson at Book By Book and and others who encouraged me to read this book.
If it isn't on your must read list, it should be.

CURRENTLY

I've started listening to Seven Fallen Feathers: Racism, Death, and Hard Truths in a Northern City by Tanya Talaga. I'm reading, with my eyes, We Rise, We Resist, We Raise Our Voices

UP NEXT

I'm planning on getting to When the Moon Was Ours by Anna-Marie McLemore. I'm also hoping to get to Willa of the Wood by Robert Beatty. Truthfully I've got a pile of riches from the library and I want to read all of them!

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

It seems that I am making headway here! I might even accomplish my goals this year, and early to boot!

#MustReadIn2018 23/25

#MustReadNFIn2018 11/12

25 Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 22/25 1 in progress

Goodreads Reading Challenge 385/333