Showing posts with label Magical Thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magical Thinking. Show all posts

A Green Velvet Secret by Vicki Grant



Thanks to NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this novel. It will be released March 07, 2023, by Tundra Books.

Yardley (Ya Ya) and her grandmother, Gidge, a retired teacher and costume designer, are as close as two best friends could ever be. Gidge is flamboyant, outgoing, and deals with problems straight on, so when she receives a terminal cancer diagnosis, she lets her family know with helium filled silver balloons and a champagne breakfast. 

As she begins to get her affairs in order, Grandmother and granddaughter continue to be inseparable. Gidge works on her Karma, by sitting in the garden writing letters to people in her past who she has wronged while Yardley weeds. The two of them go through a life time of Gidge's clothing to take to a consignment shop to sell. The best place is owned by Conrad Kim (Connie) one of Gidge's former students. After a joyful reunion Gidge and Yardley spend a lot of time at the store. Connie's nephew, Harris, is always there working on his puzzle books. Gidge and Connie encourage a friendship between the two twelve year olds, but Harris wants nothing to do with her. 

As Yardley and Gidge spend more time together readers become aware of Gidge's failing health. Eventually she decides to stop chemotherapy and makes arrangements for a medically assisted death at home. Ya Ya is not ready for this, but the date arrives and her family is there with her as Gidge breathes her last breath. I'm not going to lie, I pretty much bawled my eyes out along with Yardley, her father and mother. 

Yardley continues to spend time at the shop, organizing clothes and helping set up displays. Harris remains aloof. Then one day she receives a letter from Gidge. Yardley gets it in her head that Gidge has been reincarnated. One day an older women comes into the shop claiming she is there to pick up a parcel she won. When she opens it up in the shop, it's Gidge's green velvet dress. Yardley becomes certain the woman is Gidge. As she sinks into magical thinking, Harris begins to take note of what's going on and tries to help her out. His actions are somewhat misguided at times, but it all turns out well by the end of the book.  

I loved so much about this book. The characters are brilliant. Yardley's quirkiness and unique fashion flair reminded me of one of my students. I liked that while the parents, both actors in a small theatre company, are also a bit odd, they have their daughters best interests at heart. 

I adored the glorious descriptions of vintage clothing!

It’s interesting to be reading this book at the ripe old age of almost 70. I can connect with Yardley, a young girl losing her grandmother, because I had two dearest grandmas I loved to spend time with. One of them lived with us at the end of her life. Now I have grandchildren of my own, so I am able to connect with Gidge, a grandmother having to say that final goodbye to her beloved granddaughter. I'm pretty sure that people will connect to both these fabulous characters even without this kind of background knowledge. 

In spite of the fact that this book is about grief and the magical thinking that accompanies the death of someone important, it’s chock full of laughter too. Be prepared for joy, laugh out loud humour, and tears. 

#IMWAYR September 6, 2021

 Hello everyone. It's #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.


Happy Labour Day Everyone!

I'm sharing a couple of weeks worth of reading because life has been exceptionally busy with camping, canning, company, gardening and sewing. Whew!
Here's a little outfit I made for my youngest Granddaughter's first birthday. It needs to be ironed. (I bought the jeans.)

I feel like I am entering a reading slump, and yet I see lots of stuff on my list today. Maybe it's just that there is so much going on that when I sit down to read I am easily distracted and plagued with guilt over other things I think I should be doing. Maybe I'm just overwhelmed by the books piling up around the house. Maybe I'm just overwhelmed. I'm really glad to be retired and not having to think about teaching. I am especially thankful for audiobooks, since it seems to be the main way I read these days.  

I still have to get around to reading people's #MustReadUpdates, but hope to do that this coming week. That will be after the juicing of 300 pounds of tomatoes. I grew up drinking home made tomato juice. Store bought just can't compare. These days my partner and I get together with my aunt and uncle and make it. That 300 pounds will end up in about 100 jars of juice. I drink a quart a week all by myself. 

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.

RECENT BLOG POSTS


BOOKS READ WITH GRANDKIDS

My son and his family spent five days with us. My four year old granddaughter and I read a couple more Princess in Black titles as well as many favourite picture books. 
Her 16 month old little sister is a huge fan of books! She carried around Where Do Diggers Sleep at Night, and climbed up on whatever lap was available and made the owner of the lap read it to her. 

5 stars

The Princess in Black and the Mysterious Playdate
 by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale & LeUyen Pham (Illustrations)

Princess Magnolia and Princess Sneezewort plan a playdate, but end up battling a monster who has followed Magnolia into the city. There are so many wonderful messages in these books about being a strong girl. 

5 stars

The Princess in Black Takes a Vacation
 by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale & LeUyen Pham (Illustrations)
An exhausted Princess Magnolia leaves the Goat Avenger in charge of the goats and heads off to the beach for a well desired rest. Her down time is disturbed by a a sea monster. Luckily she brought her Princess in Black disguise with her. 


What I think of this book is irrelevant.
It is obviously a hit for the target audience and it's actually fun to read out loud - even if it is over and over and over and over again.

PICTURE BOOKS

4 stars

Nimoshom and His Bus
by Penny M. Thomas & Karen Hibbard (Illustrator) 🍁

This is a sweet story about a Cree school bus driver and his interactions with the students on his bus. Cree vocabulary is integrated into the text.

5 stars

Cat Dog Dog: The Story of a Blended Family
by Nelly Buchet & Andrea Zuill (Illustrator)

This book is perfect for beginning readers. The words, cat dog dog are just about the only text in the book. The story, in all its hilarious, heartwarming brilliance, is revealed in Andrea Zuill’s illustrations!


Dear Librarian
by Lydia M. Sigwarth, Romina Galotta (Illustrations) & Ira Glass (Foreword)

“Libraries are the last safe, free, truly public space where people from all walks of life may encounter each other.” Philipp Schmidt
Based on a true story, a girl, whose family are homeless, finds a home and friendship in the local library. I love the photographs at the end that show the reunion between the girl and the librarian who made a difference in her life.
In my time as a teacher librarian, the library was regularly a refuge for all the misfits - children who, for whatever reason, didn’t fit an expectation of normal.

SHORT STORY 


Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory
by Martha Wells

I enjoyed this ‘behind the scenes’ look at the process of establishing Murderbot on Preservation Station. I also liked that it’s from Mensah’s point of view.

NOVELS


I could have sworn I wrote a review of this book on Goodreads, but when I went to retrieve it, it's not there. Grrr.

In a North America parallel to our own, this story integrates Indigenous reality with paranormal creatures. It's full of magic, monsters and Indigenous ways of knowing the world. Our hero, Elatsoe, can talk to the ghosts of dead creatures. She needs it, and the help of her friends as they try to find out how her cousin was murdered and who did it.


This book is beautifully written.
Truly Bateman is a character who took hold of me from the get go and won’t let go. This eleven year old is so authentic I’m wondering how she turned out.
She lives in an Indigenous owned trailer park with Clarice, her disgrace of a mother. Luckily, the owner, Andy El, takes her under her wing and looks after her.
In the summer of 1978, a year after Elvis Presley’s death, Andy El has Truly set up a lemonade stand. Truly doesn’t expect much to come of her summer venture, but on the first day, an Elvis impersonator shows up to rent one of the trailers. Truly is sure he is the real deal.
Her lemonade business turns out to be a success. The rest of the community steps up to buy her lemonade and contribute other things to sell. She makes friends with Andy El’s two grandchildren. Clarice is away most of the time with her new boyfriend. It’s the best summer of her life.
Truly tells everyone that she is saving up for a dog, but secretly plans to take the ferry to Vancouver, find her father, and bring him home to meet Elvis.
Before she gets a chance, something terrible happens.
I cried.
This book highlights the importance it taking a community to raise a child. It’s a book about stepping up and doing what is needed. It’s about love and finding the family you need.
It’s wonderful.


Mister Impossible
by Maggie Stiefvater & Will Paton (Narrator) 

I'm so far into Maggie Stiefvater's Dreamer Trilogy that the only way out is to continue reading. I listened to this twice, and I'm still not sure what is going on. It is one heck of a ride/read.
If I am completely honest, I must admit that I am addicted to Will Patton's narration. For me, his voice is The Raven Cycle and now this spin off series.
Ronan, Hennessy, and Bryde attempt to destroy the places that interfere with ley lines. This reminded me a lot of the characters in The Understory who ended up resorting to violence to save old growth trees and forests. 

4 stars

The Bear and the Nightingale
 by Katherine Arden & Kathleen Gati (Narrator)

This retelling of a Russian folktale is intense! It examines what constitutes evil from a number of perspectives. It contrasts the reality of the Christian church with a people who live close to the land. After a new priest extorts people to abandon their belief in the old ways, the community begins to suffer.
Vasilisa Petrovna, whose mother died at her birth, can see and communicate with the old spirits and tries her best to honour and support them, but her offerings are not enough. A great evil, working through Orthodox Christianity, is stalking her village.

NON FICTION


Freedom Is a Constant Struggle
by Angela Y. Davis, Cornel West (Foreword) & Frank Barat (Introduction)

I appreciated reading this collection of essays. Davis always stretches my thinking about the inequities in the world.
“[Prison] relieves us of the responsibility of seriously engaging with the problems of our society, especially those produced by racism and, increasingly, global capitalism.”

CURRENTLY

The (Other) F Word: A Celebration of the Fat and Fierce by Angie Manfredi 
Bear Wants to Sing by Cary Fagan
The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All by Josh Ritter
We Two Alone by Jack Wang

UP NEXT

Flight of the Puffin by Ann Braden
Truly Tyler by Terri Libenson
Under Shifting Stars by Alexandra Latos
Rez Dogs by Joseph Bruchac

BLOG POSTS PLANNED FOR NEXT WEEK (Hopefully)

Bear Wants to Sing by Cary Fagan
The Great Bear by David A. Robertson
The Great Glorious Goddamn of It All by Josh Ritter

PROGRESS ON MY READING GOALS

#MustReadIn2021 25/25
 

#MustReadNFIn2021 9/12

#MustReadPBIn2021 51/100 

Big Book Summer Challenge 9 

Books by Canadian Indigenous Authors 30/25

Books by Canadian Authors: 83/100

Canada Reads 2021 4/5 

Discworld Series 41/41

Goodreads Reading Challenge: 321 /333