2013

Prepping for #Readathon

Every time a #readathon ends, I say “I’m going to take the day before #readathon off of work, so I can prepare (or at least a HALF DAY.)” and I never seem to be able to do it. Something always comes up and I just can’t take the day (or a half day) off.

This year it’s even worse because TW has to drive to Wisconsin tomorrow to pick Prince J up from school which means our normal after work shopping for #readathon snacks was a bit of a bust. We went to Whole Foods tonight and spent a ton of money on nothing that really looks all that fun, to me. I’m sure it will be fine but I’m just not excited about most of it. Tomorrow we’ll run into TJ’s before we grab our Starbucks and maybe I’ll find something more interesting?

Ho hum. I think we’ll go to Fresh Market before the spring #readathon — I think they have better #readathon snack food….

And, someone has to run to the library tomorrow to pick up a whole bunch of holds — otherwise my plans for #readathon books will be shot and I’ll have to re-think the whole day (and TW’s mom probably won’t have enough books to make it through the day, either.)

So yea, totally unprepared and I sure wish I’d been able to take the day (or half of the day) off. I’m still looking forward to it, though. I do love #readathon.

Prepping for #Readathon Read More »

The Goddess Chronicle

I ran to the library one morning, by myself, to pick up some holds and pluck some books off of the shelf for TW because she was OUT of BOOKS. The Goddess Chronicle was one of those books. I really thought she’d probably already read it. But she hadn’t — thank goodness.

It was a good pick because not only is it a great feminist creation story, we discovered it’s part of a series so now we have another handful of books to look forward to reading.

The Goddess Chronicle Read More »

Five Children’s Non-Fiction Books

I’m finally getting to the stack of Cybils non-fiction books that have been sitting on my library cart since JMP was here. I’m fairly indifferent about most of them but I was pleasantly surprised by one…

When I have a stack of these, I usually read them in a very specific order — the ones I suspect I’ll like least, I read first. The one I have the most hope for, I will save for last. This is usually a good strategy because I’m not comparing books I’m inclined to not like with books I was pretty sure I would like. But, sometimes none of the books turns out to be what I’d expected. This was one of those times.

I started with Dolphin Baby because I don’t usually like sea creature books, particularly about dolphins. Too cute. They’re cute enough without any forced prose to try and make them cuter. This one — pretty much perfect. Nice illustrations. Information about dolphins was presented well. Not a lot of cute mommy baby, look how adorable they are stuff. This ended up being my favorite of the batch.

Next, Nic Bishop’s Snakes. I like Nic Biship but his books are all pretty much the same — great photos, basic info, same ole, same ole. That’s not a bad thing, but I do not like snakes at all. I made it through without looking too closely at the photos, a hard thing to do with a Nic Bishop book, and I don’t think I’ll have snake-like nightmares. If you need a book with great snake photos, this is your book. I don’t need that. Hope never to see it again, but I heartily recommend it to you if your kids are snake-crazy.

Then I read Island: A Story of Galapagos because I expected to find it ok but nothing to get excited about and that’s pretty much what happened. It does a nice job of explaining how species’ adapt to their surroundings. Finches with small beaks didn’t live long enough to pass that trait along, finches with larger beaks survived so they passed that trait along. Insect eating iguanas evolved to eat algae. Cormorants don’t need to fly so their wings are underdeveloped. Nicely done. I’d have liked it more with stronger illustrations, I think.

Then there’s Looking at Lincoln. How can you not like a book about Lincoln? That’s why I saved it for the end. But this one — gah. Throwing in things like Did Mr & Mrs Lincoln call each other cutesy names? Really? Was that necessary? Also, do children understand why people say “I could have stared at his picture all day.” I do not understand why so many children’s books about Lincoln include that tidbit. (Someone remind me to ask some kids about this the next time I’m in a room of 5-8 year olds.)

Last but not least, sigh. Mrs Harkness and the Panda. I had high hopes because I find Ruth Harkness to be fascinating. Unfortunately, all of the things I find interesting about her were missing from this book.

Ho hum.

Five Children’s Non-Fiction Books Read More »

Stuck in the Middle with You

I like Jennifer Boylen and I liked Stuck in the Middle with You but… I also didn’t like it.

Jennifer was a dad, when she was Jim.
And then a mom when she transitioned to Jennifer.
But she was always a parent.

A parent who did change (in some ways) as a parent once she transitioned to being a woman.

The it just muddied the waters about what fatherhood, motherhood, parenthood is (or isn’t) — and why. No clear conclusions except that we’re all different, as people and as parents (and we are often different people or parents as time passes.)

Duh and also murky at the same time. Which is pretty much what life is like (for all of us.)

Stuck in the Middle with You Read More »

Reading in September

This list is a little (OK a lot) wonky. Some of the kids books were really read in August but since I fell behind, I didn’t blog them in August so they’re being counted here. Which is good since I didn’t get much reading done in September, either.

Blah. I read 19 books….

4 Fiction
2 Non-fiction (one was a book of short stories)
0 YA (has this ever happened to me? I don’t think so!)
12 Children’s fiction (4 of these were Cybils)
1 Audiobooks

Reading in September Read More »

The Potty Mouth at the Table

So, The Potty Mouth at the Table… I laughed out loud, early in the book, much louder and longer than TW did when she was laughing her way through Let’s Not Pretend (The Bloggess). Then I hit a few stories that didn’t really make me laugh. A couple of more that bugged me. And, I never quite fell back into the stories — I think I was always waiting for one to bug me. Which might be my problem with reading a book of short stories cover to cover.

Very funny in spots. Not so much in others (though I suspect the stories that bugged me wouldn’t bother others since one person’s joke is another person’s angst…)

It was well worth reading, if only for the hobos and the problem with puffs.

The Potty Mouth at the Table Read More »

The Raven Girl

The Raven Girl is a fairy tale about a postman who falls in love with a raven — they have a raven girl baby (chick?) who has to find her way in the world when she never feels quite right. She looks like a human but she feels like a raven.

Cute story. Good mix of fantasy and scifi. Nice illustrations.

I’m actually more interested in it now that I know it was written to be a ballet. Now that’s interesting. I’m betting it’s a great ballet. Not that it wasn’t a good book. It was. I liked it, though the end felt a little rushed.

The Raven Girl Read More »

The Mermaid of Brooklyn

There were a half dozen books on the library cart that needed to go back soon, so I asked TW which of them I should read (as I often do) and she said I should read The Mermaid of Brooklyn. So I did.

I see why she thought I’d like to read it — it had potential. Park Slope mom with a degree in Russian folklore or some such thing and a crummy husband, jumps (I mean falls) off of the Brooklyn Bridge and is saved by a rusalka.

But, I didn’t really like Jenny — not before the rusalka or after or even after that. Not liking her made it very hard to enjoy the story. VERY hard. So I didn’t. Not really.

The Mermaid of Brooklyn Read More »