Cybil Challenge

Ghetto Cowboy

This has been an awesome year for middle grade lit on audio. First, there was A Monster Calls, which I will never ever forget. Now, I’ve got Ghetto Cowboy and I’m almost glad Michelle has decided to move to Philadelphia because how cool is Philly with their Urban Cowboys and their horses? Because while this was fiction, Philly really does have urban cowboys and they really do  help keep poor black kids off of the streets by getting them involved with horses.   Learn a bit about Philadelphia’s urban riding program and then read/listen to Ghetto Cowboy. You won’t regret it – until the story ends and you want more.

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Two Cybils

My reserves are coming in oddly – I expected the children’s books to come in more quickly but I should have known better. Children’s books have a way of disappearing and being returned late. That means doubling up on reviews makes for a wee bit of oddness.

Me…Jane is a very pretty book. The paper feels nice. There’s some texture to it that gives the pictures that little something they need. I started out bored, a little girl and her stuffed animal. A little girl that we are obviously supposed to find fascinating and inspiring but it felt a little forced, to me. And when the little girl reads a book about a girl named Jane who lived with a monkey, I kind of rolled my eyes. Embarrassing since it turns out the book is about a young Jane Goodall. That made the book a whole lot better. Had I known that from the start, there would have been no eyerolling or forced feeling. It made sense once I got to the end. I read it again and smiled all the way through.

On the otherhand, Anya’s Ghost is not a children’s picture book. Anya smokes for goodness sakes! (lol) She’s also a very annoying teen girl who falls into a well and winds up with a ghost as a friend. A not very nice ghost. She’s also the daughter of a Russian immigrant who’s trying very hard to be American (and succeeding in all of the annoying ways.) Where is her father, I was fascinated by her mom telling her that she uses her child support to send her to this private school, (which isn’t a great private school but the best she could afford.) This is another book with great paper, (there’s nothing worse than bad paper), and a nice cover. The illustrations are all black and white and in a couple of cases, a little hard to read but not bad. The ending was a little forced, I think we needed another half dozen panels to wrap it up.

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2 Cybils Picture Books

The Princess and the Pig was kind of cute –I liked the “It happens that way in books” refrain throughout the story. Very cute, though the youngest of children may not get it if they haven’t been exposed to all of the traditional fairy tales.  I was pretty troubled by the queen dropping her baby out the window and not realizing it – I mean, I know queens are dumb but that was pretty bad. Sheesh.

I wasn’t sure I’d like Do You Know Which Ones Will Grow but the illustrations and the foldouts really worked.  I would add this one to Johnny Mac Pippins reading list. Definitely.

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A Monster Calls

Lord. This book, A Monster Calls, should teach me to reserve books without paying any attention to a) who wrote them b) what they are about.

Patrick Ness. That should have given me at least a clue as to what we were in for when we started listening to the book on audio. But, I didn’t know he wrote it. I didn’t pay attention. It was a Cybils Shortlist and that’s all I knew.

Gah.

It started off nicely. Really nicely, actually. With a tribute to a YA author who had died. The name of the author sounded familiar but I couldn’t place it – so I looked it up when I came home that first day of listening to it and discovered … Siobahn Dowd, the author of The London Eye Mystery (which I loved), had died. I didn’t know that. So sad – but a super wonderful tribute to her starts this book off nicely.

And then there’s a Yew tree monster, which makes perfect sense and TW was nodding her head along with the story and I was smiling.

There’s a lot about stories – the power of stories – how they’re wild things and hold a lot of power.

See, great start, right?

Sure, it was obvious that this was going to be a tough read, Connor’s mom has cancer and that never ends well. His dad moved to the US and is never around, either. He’s got some bully problems at school. Pretty typical of a YA novel – throw in a story telling Yew tree monster and you’ve got one hell of a book.

And then the pain starts. The emotional and physical pain of listening to the story play out – the horrible, horrible nightmare of a story. The pain starts slowly, and works its way into your head first. And then it grabs hold of your heart and twists and does not let go until you’re a bloody, sobbing, mess.

This book – horribly wonderful. Really. Ness is a master storyteller. He is. And when he tells you a heartbreaking story, you literally feel your heart break.

Be careful with this book. If you’ve lost someone recently. If your child has lost someone or is terrified of losing someone she loves – she may not be ready for this one. Hell, it’s possible that nobody, ever, is ready for this book.  But, it’s too good to NOT read.  I would also suggest careful thought to the age of the child reading. This is on the Cybils shortlist as Middle Grade fantasy/science fiction, which in my house tends to mean 8-12. But, I’m not sure that’s right – it feels older, deeper and a whole lot scarier than some 8 year olds are ready for. It’s not the story of sex between the prince and the farmgirl, that’s tame. But it is very, very violent. And heart-wrenching, I mentioned that painful, heartbreaking horror – right?

There are books that stay with you for your whole life – this is going to be one of those books.

*Note: We listened to it on audio so we didn’t see the illustrations others speak so highly of – there is a bonus DVD in the audio book but I’m not sure I want to SEE those images. Listening may have been enough for me… We’ll see.*

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Press Here

Funny. I was going to hold off blogging about Press Here because I didn’t have a lot to say – mostly because I couldn’t decide whether I loved it or thought it was stupid. I figured I’d toss it off to Elly (she’s 13) and see what she thought.

She loved it. She did it all. Every single thing. And she said “IT WAS AWESOME, BEST BOOK EVER.”

And still I wasn’t going to blog it yet because, well, I figured it was just a weird Elly thing and maybe the book is stupid.

But just now, RJ, (who is 16, remember), came down to wait for her papers to finish printing and she picked the book up. RJ does not generally give two glances to the children’s books I check out at the library but I sat here and watched her go all the way through it – doing every single thing the book said to do. And as she was doing this, TW walked in and said, “you’re doing it wrong, you have to press down all of the dots at once…”

I looked at her in surprise. TW belittles my reading of children’s picture books ALL. OF. THE. TIME. And yet she had picked that one up, without me mentioning it to her – and she too, went all the way through the book and just said, (sheepishly), it’s kind of cool.

So. I guess it’s not stupid?

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2 Children’s Picture Books from the Cybils Shortlist

Guess what – I liked them both. One took me by surprise because I started out bored, the second I enjoyed all the way through.

I Want My Hat Back, started slowly for me and I was bored. One of those books where an animal asks a different animal on each page for his hat (we’ve seen this format a zillion times) what we haven’t seen is how the animal whose hat was lost gets his hat back. I won’t spoil it for you but…. I LOVED IT. Some of y’all won’t love it because you won’t want to have to explain what happened to your small children. I, on the otherhand, found it to be refreshing and will be buying this one for Johnny Mac Pippin.

I Had a Favorite Dress was adorable. A little girl whose mom found a way to tweak the girl’s favorite dress each time she grew. Fabulous. Adorable. Great artwork.

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2 Graphic Novels from the Cybils Shortlist

So it begins, my quest to read all of the books on the shortlist and not surprisingly, I’ve got one I really liked and another that was ok but not my favorite.

The one I really liked was Hereville: How Marka Got Her Sword.  Great drawings. Good story. Knitting saves the day. How awesome is that?

The one I was disappointed and meh about was the one I thought I’d like the most: Nursery Rhyme Comics.  I think I expected the artists to take more liberties than they did – my fault since this is still a nursery rhyme book for kids. I did enjoy seeing Sarah Varon’s work and it was pretty much exactly right. There were some others that I liked but overall – it just fell flat for me. I suspect Elly felt the same way, though she didn’t say anything about it last weekend when she read it (which might also indicate that it fell flat for her, too.)

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The Cybils Shortlist Challenge – 2012

It’s that time again, time for the new Cybils shortlist – which means it’s time for me to get busy reading all of the books on the shortlist. I’ve already read two from the list of 80 – I thought I’d read this Anna Hibiscus because I griped about the cliff hanger in last  year’s book, but I either forgot to reserve it or I couldn’t get it from my library. (Or maybe I did read it and I forgot to blog it? Or something?)

*There’s a new category this year called “Book Apps” – I haven’t looked at it yet but am going to try to check out all of the shortlisted apps. We’ll see how that goes…*

Book Apps

Be Confident in Who You Are (iTunes link)

BoBo Explores Light (iTunes link)

Harold and the Purple Crayon (iTunes link)

Hildegard Sings (iTunes link)

Pat the Bunny (iTunes link)

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore (iTunes link)

The Monster at the End of This Book (iTunes link)

Easy Readers and Early Chapter Books

Aggie Gets Lost

Dodsworth in Rome

Frog and Friends

I Broke My Trunk

Clementine and the Family Meeting

Have Fun, Anna Hibiscus

Just Grace and the Double Surprise

Like Pickle Juice on a Cookie

The Trouble with Chickens

Fantasy & SciFi (Middle Grade)

A Monster Calls

Breadcrumbs

Dragon Castle

Icefall

The Cheshire Cat: A Dickens of a Tale

The Inquisitor’s Apprentice

Tuesdays at the Castle

Fantasy & SciFi (YA)

Angelfall

Anna Dressed in Blood

Blood Red Road

Misfit

Red Glove

The Girl of Fire and Thorns

The Shattering

Fiction Picture Books

Blackout

Do You Know Which Ones Will Grow?

I Had a Favorite Dress

I Want My Hat Back

Me… Jane

Press Here

The Princess and the Pig

Graphic Novels

Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword

Nursery Rhyme Comics

Sidekicks

Wonderstruck

Zita the Spacegirl

Anya’s Ghost

Bad Island

Feynman

Level Up

Page by Paige

Middle Grade Fiction

Darth Paper Strikes Back – 12.17.11

Ghetto Cowboy

Nerd Camp

The Friendship Doll

The Great Wall of Lucy Wu

Warp Speed

Words in the Dust

Nonfiction for Middle Grade and YA

Amelia Lost

How They Croaked

Into the Unknown

The Many Faces of George Washington

The Notorious Benedict Arnold

Unraveling Freedom

Nonfiction Picture Books

All the Water in the World

Bring on the Birds

Can We Save the Tiger?

I Feel Better with a Frog in My Throat

Planting the Wild Garden

The Case of the Vanishing Golden Frogs

Thunder Birds: Nature’s Flying Predators

Poetry

Cousins of Clouds

Dear Hot Dog

Emma Dilemma

Requiem: Poems of the Terezin Ghetto

Self-Portrait with Seven Fingers

We Are America

YA Fiction (gosh, I almost typed YA Saves, lol)

Anna and the French Kiss – 1/8/2011

Between Shades of Gray

Bunheads

Everybody Sees the Ants

Frost

Leverage

Stupid Fast

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Night Owls

And with Night Owls, I’ve finished the Cybils Shortlist for 2011. Yay me!

I had to buy Night Owls for Elly for Christmas in order to finish the challenge because my library didn’t have it. Which is a shame, for library patrons – it’s a great graphic novel. Well drawn. Well written. Well worth buying for Elly (and for me.)

The Timony twins are talented. Very talented.

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