Thursday, September 10, 2020

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

 

by J.K. Rowling

Still my favorite after all these years!

Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You

 

by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi

Wow. I feel weird saying I "enjoyed" a book like this, but that speaks to the enumerable talents of Jason Reynolds--that he can take this topic, and actually make it something that you really look forward to picking up and reading again every time you put it down. Horrified, heart-broken, educated, enlightened. Puzzled, ashamed, shocked, sadly not-shocked. Simultaneously energized and defeatedly depressed. Lots of emotions here. Many have said this before me, but what an important book to have in our hands right now. 


Thursday, August 6, 2020

by J. K. Rowling

This one was never my favorite of the series. I think it's paced a little slower than the rest, but my son and I still enjoyed it!

Monday, July 13, 2020

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

by J. K. Rowling

Forgot how much I like this one. Even better than the first! I'm really enjoying re-reading these with my son, and he's loving them, too!

Saturday, June 13, 2020

Three Times Lucky

by Sheila Turnage

Moses, better known as Mo, never knew her mother. Her adoptive father, whom she calls The Colonel, claims to have found her floating down the river in a hurricane. Her mother figure, Miss Lana, runs a cafe in their small, quaint, North Carolina town. Mo and her best friend Dale already consider themselves detectives of a sort--they pride themselves on knowing everyone's business and finding lost pets. But when a man in their neighborhood, a frequent customer of the cafe, gets murdered on the same night Dale "borrows" his boat, they find themselves in a heap of trouble. Really great writing and fun, colorful characters, although the mystery gets a bit convoluted towards the end.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

by J. K. Rowling

Just re-read this for the first time since around 1999. Just as awesome as I remembered!

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Orbiting Jupiter

by Gary D. Schmidt

It's been a long time since I've found myself wiping tears at the end of a book. Gary D. Schmidt is a genius, and this is a beautiful, sad, haunting story, that as a public educator, I find all too familiar. Sixth grader Jack lives with him mom and dad on a farm in Maine. His parents decide to foster an eighth grader named Joseph. All anyone seems to know about him is that he has a daughter, and that he tried to kill his teacher. Joseph won't speak to Jack. He flinches when anyone tries to touch him, and he cries out in his sleep. The beauty in this story is watching Jack and his family slowly break through Joseph's shell by loving him so much he basically has no choice. It's hard to tell any more of the plot without spoilers. Just read it. It will only take an hour or two, but if it doesn't melt your heart, you might not have one.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Sweet

by Emmy Laybourne

Laurel is nervously excited about getting to go on a celebrity cruise paid for by her wealthy friend's dad. Nervous because it's a cruise designed to promote a new weight-loss product, and because her childhood tv crush is hosting the footage of the trip, Ryan Seacrest-style. The product, Solu, is a sugar substitute touted to bring on rapid weight loss, and it works. Laurel, due to an extreme bout of sea-sickness, doesn't partake. Neither does Tom, her celebrity crush, because he's already in great shape and doesn't want to mess up his process. These two, and the few other cruisers who don't take the product, very quickly see that there's something a little off about Solu, and things take a dark and dramatic turn.

The characters in this book are a little shallow and one-dimensional, but the story is so fun you won't really care. And endings to books like this are hard to do right--this one is total greatness, down to the very last line. Lots of fun!

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Scary Stories for Young Foxes

by Christian McKay Heidicker

Just the kind of book I would have devoured as a kid! Is it really scary? Yes, because the life of an animal is dangerous and frightening, and this guy is really, really, good at somehow making the reader feel connected and engaged with a bunch of baby foxes. Glad it got some Newbery love, too. This is the kind of book that makes readers, and I can't wait to share it with students, and read it to my son when he's a little older.