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The Next Queen of Heaven

Who knew Gregory Maguire could write a book that isn’t a riff off of a fairy tale? Not me. Good thing, TW saw The Next Queen of Heaven on the shelf.  So it’s not a fairy tale but it has plenty of fairies – the gay kind that you sort of come to expect from anything Maguire writes.

So you’ve got the gay guys. AIDS. Old Nuns. Catholics and Pentecostals sharing a parking lot. Delinquent kids. A mom who’s pretty much out of it after The Virgin Mary bops her on the head.

Funny and sad, all at the same time.

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Double Dipping Challenges

The only thing I knew about Betti on the High Wire was that it was a middle grade fiction book from the Cybils Shortlist. Bonus! It’s also about adoption, which means it is the first book I’ve read in Jenna’s Adoption Reading Challenge. Extra Bonus! It was good.

I reserved this one on audio and Prince J listened to it first. He wasn’t overly impressed but then again, his taste runs more toward Dexter. Elly listened to it and she liked it – except she didn’t like Lucy. Elly has very little time or patience for first graders.

Betti was Babo when she lived in a burned out circus camp with “Auntie Moo” and a bunch of “leftover kids” in a war torn country that Railsback never names. She was found wandering around the burned out camp when she was a toddler. Nobody really knows how old she is or exactly what happened to her circus parents but… odds are high, they were casualties of the war that’s raged in her country for years.

Americans come to the camp to meet the orphan children – and they generally adopt babies. Or pretty children. Not broken children like Babo, who has a broken eye and missing toes. They also don’t adopt broken children like Babo’s friend George, who is missing an arm. This is fine with Babo because she does not want to be adopted. She wants to stay in her circus camp and wait for her mother, the tallest woman in the world with a tail, and her father, the green alligator man with bumpy skin, to come back for her.

But Babo is adopted – and so is George. And they travel to the same city in the US, together but without an adult. George adapts pretty happily. Babo, who becomes Betti, does not. She wants to go home. She tries to be “bad” so the Buckworth’s will realize they made a mistake. But of course, she isn’t bad at all – and the Buckworth’s are a good family who work very hard to help her make her way.

There are the normal rough moments when Betti, whose English is good, gets confused about things like “free food at the grocery store” – or when the kids at day camp make fun of Betti (and George) —  or when both Betti and George are terrified by the fireworks on Fourth of July. And the moment when Betti realizes that her parents are dead… that’s hard.

Excellent storytelling. Excellent character development. So many children without families – in war torn countries and our own.

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Some Sing, Some Cry

Another book that it took me a very long time to read, Some Sing, Some Cry. Chalk it up to a really rough work week, while I was sick – and it’s not the easiest book to read. It’s excellent but time moves swiftly in the book and I had a hard time letting go of one generation and giving myself up to the next. I also was a wee bit “homesick” when the storyline left Charleston – but that’s my own problem, I’m homesick all the time anyway.

I loved the characters. Loved the plot. Loved the music and the stories. Shange and Bayeza wrote it all beautifully.

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The Elegance of the Hedgehog

I’m so glad I reserved The Elegance of the Hedgehog on audio. In written form, I’d have skimmed through the long philosophical passages and I might even have given up on the book altogether. But on audio… on audio, it was wonderful. And not just because one of the characters was a quirky combination of all three of the small children. Get this one on audio and be prepared to think deep thoughts or just chuckle at the insanity of, well, everything.

By the way, I hated the end. I didn’t want a fairy tale ending but I didn’t want THAT either but the “dry cleaner truck” was brilliant.

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Brain Jack

Brain Jack is a creepy, cool book. Creepy because who wants a computer taking over your head or super hackers taking over your computer? Cool because computers can take over your head and hackers can do really amazing things.

The best part was when “Ursula” killed all of the spam in the world. I cheered out loud.  It would almost be worth it… almost.

Great book from the Cybils YA SciFi/Fantasy shortlist.

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The Orchid Affair

I loved Lauren Willig’s Christmas book, The Mischief of the Mistletoe, that I was a little bit afraid to read The Orchid Affair. It came so soon after the awesome Turnip book that I thought it might not hold up. Hah. I loved it. I love Laura Grey. I think she might be one of my favorite spies. Certainly one of my top three. And once again, Willig has me moaning because I have to wait another year for the next book.

Also… I cannot believe Serena did that. Colin can be such a whiny baby but I don’t blame him for feeling ticked off and betrayed by his sister for THAT. I’d have kicked her ass.

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Four Cybils from the Children’s Shelves + a Bonus Cybil from Last Year’s Shortlist

National Geographic Readers: Ants – pretty pictures but kind of boring. I imagined my brother, the ant fanatic, reading this when he was little. I think he’d have been bored though he probably would have been amused by the jokes at the top right corner of some of the pages. If you have a kid who hasn’t yet taken an interest in ants, this would be a good beginner ant book.  For those who’ve already dug into the ant pile, skip this one.

Fly Guy Meets Fly Girl – Ahhhhh, so much potential, such a let down. OK it’s not as bad as all that. I just wished for more. Just a little more personality from the flies. Or something. I’m not saying don’t read it, I’m just hoping the other books in the series go a little deeper, make me laugh a little more. So much potential.

Cowgirl Kate and Cocoa. Well. It is what it is. A little girl with a horse. The horse talks to her (and she to it) but the other animals do not seem to speak. This is what I’ve never really understood about some of these talking pet books. I’m also confused because Cocoa always starts out kind of grumpy and maybe not very smart but within a few sentences, turns around completely. It seems like if Cocoa is going to be a grump she should grumpily admit that the dog is nice, or the baby owls are cute – not to jump wholeheartedly into love when three seconds ago she was grouchy. I know, I’m an adult over-thinking a picture book. I can’t help it. I want perfection in my children’s lit. Heh.

Last, but never least, the man (and pig and elephant) who never disappear  — no matter how much I might wish they all would. I say it every year, I like Mo Willems (or I used to) but people. Please. Does he have to be on the Cybils short list every year? And is he really only writing Elephant and Piggie books? Because GAH! I’m so done with them. Or I was… until We Are In a Book. I can’t believe I’m saying this but…. Awesome. Brilliant. Willems, Piggie and Elephant (and the Cybils selection committee) have redeemed themselves this year. But please. That does not mean this series should be on the list next year.  Enough already. Except “Banana!” hahahahahaha.

One last book from the Cybils shortlist – except it is a book from last year’s shortlist. The book I reserved last July, the book that never came. The book the library website said was ON THE SHELF for six months. The book that was NOT on the shelf where it was supposed to be. (Parents in Glenview who take their kids to the library, a little clean up would be appreciated. Restack those books in the right place, please.)  I had given up hope for The Day-Glo Brothers. I also couldn’t quite bring myself to buy it. And then suddenly, there it was, on my pick up list. Yippeee! And thank goodness, it was interesting! I’ve never wondered how Day-Glo paint was invented. Have you? The guys behind the Day-Glo, great story.  It’s written for a pretty young set, and I wish it was written a little “older” – it’s missing just a little bit of depth that would have been nice.

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World and Town

On New Year’s Eve, TW, Michelle and I went to the big magazine in stand in Evanston to see if we could find some fun, quirky magazines to play with. We found some and we also found some old standbys – like Bookmarks. Inside Bookmarks were a lot of books I hadn’t heard of, including World and Town by Gish Jen. I thought this one sounded interesting so I reserved it at the library and… why have I not read Gish Jen before?

I love her writing. I love her characters. I love this story. As I approached the end of the book, I put it down in favor of some non-fiction because I just didn’t really want the book to end – even though I wanted to keep reading it. I kind of just wanted to keep reading it forever.

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Confessions of a Prairie Bitch

Last year I thought about reading the Little House actors’ memoirs and then put it off when our library closed. Thankfully, Zandria posted her yearly reading list and nudged me into reserving them.

The first one,Confessions of a Prairie Bitch, came to us last week – TW read it first and laughed loud and hard all the way through it. I mean she really really laughed. And she wanted to talk about what she was laughing and I had to shush her strongly so she would not give it away.

When  I read it, I chuckled in a lot of places but I did not roll around on the bed laughing the way TW did. TW is weird. I would, however, love to see Alison Arngrim’s stand up show. That would be awesome.

If you loved Nellie or hated Nellie, you should read this. Heck, if you enjoyed watching Little House on the Prairie, you should read this. I’m worried that Melissa Gilbert’s book won’t stand up to Alison’s… I’ll let ya know next month.

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Death of an Ambitious Woman

How could I resist, with a title like Death of an Ambitious Woman? Particularly when the sub-title points out this is a mystery with a female detective. I will admit that I thought this was just the most recent in a series I’d never heard of and was kind of surprised to realize it’s a debut novel. I hope there are more. I kind of like the people of New Derby – even the bad people.

I also liked that while I knew who did it, I didn’t know exactly how. And I also didn’t know EXACTLY what was going on with the other suspects who were all guilty of lots of stuff. Nothing super surprising occurred but there were enough twists that I read the book straight through last night and never once thought about putting it down.

If you like mysteries – give this one a try.

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