Cybil Challenge

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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Cybils Short List – One Poetry, One Graphic Novel

I was really looking forward to Borrowed Names – a book about mothers/daughters, a book about Laurie Ingalls Wilder, Madam C.J. Walker, and Marie Curie (and their daughters). And I did like it but more than half the book was the store of Laura Ingalls Wilder and Rose Wilder. The Walkers and Curies felt shorted – which is too bad because I particularly liked the Walker and Curie sections of this book.

Twin Spica – a little girl wants to be in the first class of the Tokyo Space School. There are problems, of course, it’s a graphic novel after all. The girl’s mom was injured and killed when she was a baby – when the first Japanese rocket crashed into earth after lift-off. Elly read this one before I did and she liked it. I read it and… I liked it too, once I settled into the traditional backwards method of reading (it always takes me about three pages to get used to reading right to left, lol) – but I didn’t get the end. I don’t know if it’s because it was almost midnight when I finished or if I missed a heading that explained what the heck was going on but… I think I need to re-read the last three pages. Maybe that’s the intro to volume two? I don’t know. (FYI to those looking for middle grade graphic novels – there’s some family violence in this book. The father slaps the daughter a couple of times. And there are cases where the kids fight with each other, but in the context, the fighting makes sense (three kids locked in a small room together and told to place dominos – millions of dominos – in line within 7 days …. Or they flunk the test. It’s one of those controlled environment tests for space programs. Totally stressful, read Packing for Mars if you’re confused by this. Heh)

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Cybils Shortlist Challenge – 2011

Yippee! It’s that time of year again and one of my most favorite things about January 1st – the Cybils Shortlist is up and I’m ready to start reading! (I’ve learned my lesson and will reserve those sometimes hard to get children’s non-fiction books FIRST.)

Easy Readers & Early Chapter Books

Cowgirl Kate and Cocoa: Spring Babies – 2.5.11

Fly Guy Meets Fly Girl – 2.5.11

National Geographic Readers: Ants – 2.5.11

The Babysitters: Cork and Fuzz – 7.1.11

We Are In a Book (An Elephant and Piggie Book) – 2.5.11

Anna Hibiscus – 3.13.11

Frankie Pickle and the Pine Run 3000 – 4.9.11

Home on the Range (Down Girl and Sit) – 7.1.11

Princess Posey and the First Grade Parade (Book 1) – 3.13.11

Zapato Power: Freddie Ramos Takes Off – 5.12.11

Fantasy and Science Fiction (Middle Grades)

The Call (The Magnificent 12) – 2.8.11

The Dead Boys – 7.3.11

Dragonbreath: Attack of the Ninja Frogs – 4.9.11

Fever Crumb – 9.29.11

Ninth Ward – 9.15.11

Reckless – 12.13.11

The Shadows (The Books of Elsewhere Volume 1) – 3.27.11

Fantasy and Science Fiction (Young Adult)

Brain Jack – 2.15.11

Guardian of the Dead – 10.30.11

Plain Kate – 9.23.11

Pod – 11.25.11

Rot & Ruin – 3.27.11

Ship Breaker – 11.29.11

The Wager – 12.2.11

Fiction Picture Books

A Beach Tail – 9/11/11

Chalk – 9/11/11

The Cow Loves Cookies – 9/11/11

Flora’s Very Windy Day – 9/11/11

Interrupting Chicken – 9/11/11

Shark vs Train – 11.4.11

A Sick Day for Amos McGee – 10.23.11

Graphic Novels (Middle Grade)

Athena: Grey Eyed Goddess – 7.1.11

Guinea Pig, Pet Shop Private Eye:  Hamster and Cheese – 7.2.11

Meanwhile: Pick Any Path. 3,856 Story Possibilities – 5.12.11

Smile – 5.12.11

The Unsinkable Walker Bean – 3.13.11

Graphic Novels (Young Adult)

Ghostopolis – 3.4.11

Mercury – 7.2.11

The Night Owls (Vol. 1) – 12.29.11

Twin Spica (Vol. 1) – 2.5.11

Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty – 6.9.11

Middle Grade Fiction

Because of Mr Terupt – 4.10.11

Belly Up – 10.14.11

Betti on the High Wire – 3.1.11

Crunch – 10.16.11

Milo: Sticky Notes and Brain Freeze – 11.20.11

The Kneebone Boy – 11.14.11

The Strange Case of Origami Yoda – 3.28.11

Nonfiction (Middle Grade and YA)

The Dark Game: True Spy Stories – 3.7.11

The Hive Detectives: Chronicle of a Honey Bee Catastrophe – 11.26.11

Kakapo Rescue: Saving the World’s Strangest Parrot – 11.25.11

Secret of the Yellow Death: A True Story of Medical Sleuthing – 10.22.11

Spilling Ink: A Young Writer’s Handbook – 11.19.11

Under a Red Sky: Memoir of a Childhood in Communist Romania – 11.18.11

An Unspeakable Crime: Persecution and Prosecution of Leo Frank – 11.27.11

Nonfiction (Picture Books)

Bones – 11.4.11

Dinosaur Mountain: Digging into the Jurassic Age – 11.5.11

Henry Aaron’s Dream – 10.22.11

Pop! The Invention of Bubble Gum – 10.22.11

Sit-In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down – 11.5.11

Skit-Scat Raggedy Cat: Ella Fitzgerald – 10.23.11

The Extraordinary Mark Twain (According to Susy) – 10.22.11

Poetry

Borrowed Names: Poems About Laura Ingalls Wilder, Madam C.J. Walker, Marie Curie and Their Daughters – 2.5.11

Dark Emperor and Other Poems of the Night – 11.3.11

Mirror Mirror: a Book of Reversible Verse – 10.23.11

Scarum Fair – 10.9.11

Sharing the Seasons: A Book of Poems

Switching on the Moon: A Very First Book of Bedtime Poems

Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature’s Survivors – 10.9.11

Young Adult Fiction

Dirt Road Home – 3.23.11

Harmonic Feedback – 9.17.11

I Now Pronounce You Someone Else – 10.11.11

Scrawl – 11.09.11

Some Girls Are – 9.14.11

Split – 10.09.11

Stolen – 2.7.11

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Bad to the Bone (Down Girl and Sit)

I finally got the RIGHT Bad to the Bone from the library – I reserved two other books with this title neither of which are on the Cybil’s short list. Who knew there were so many Bad to the Bones published for kids in 2009-2010? This one wasn’t great. In fact, it’s one of those kinds of books that I just don’t like. Dogs who think their masters need training and who think they’re “good”…. I just don’t get the humor. I guess if you like that kind of thing… it’s not bad. It’s just not for me.

 

One more book to go in the Cybil’s shortlist challenge… I’m going to have to buy it, aren’t I?

 

 

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Cracked Up to Be

I cannot believe how long it took for Cracked Up to Be to appear on my holds list. I reserved it ages ago – some darn teen checked it out and kept it for a very long time, didn’t she? Hmph. Teens should be more responsible than that… but not obsessively so. Which is kind of what this little book is about. The perfect girl who is so perfect that she’s having panic attacks… and then “something” happens and she gives up being perfect, gives up her friends, tries to push everyone away (and punish herself) because that horrible “something” that happened was her fault…

Excellent book. Depressing in that perfect girls, bad stuff happens to good kids sort of way. I wonder what RJ would think of this? She’s probably think Parker was nuts… sigh.

(Two more books to go in my Cybils Shortlist Challenge… I’m getting worried because as long as it took for me to get this one, it’s taking even longer to get these other two… people. Bring your books back to the darn library! People are waiting to read them!)

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Chains

We listened to Chains on audio and it took a good bit longer to finish than I expected. For some reason I had it in my head that it was a short book, it wasn’t. It was pretty darn good, though. At first, I was skeptical. I like Laurie Halse Anderson’s contemporary YA fiction and I wasn’t sure she could pull off something about slaves just prior to and in the early days of the Revolutionary War but she did it. And she did it well.

I’ve got a little love/hate with the ending. I guess it did end as it should have (and goodness knows, she’d have needed another 400 pages to get us to another ending…) but I would really have liked to find out what happens next. Hah… good thing there’s a sequel… though reading the synopsis on Amazon leads me to wonder if I’m going to be happy with what happens next. I’m reserving it on audio now.

And with this book, I’ve finished the Middle Grade Fiction books from the Cybils Shortlist – they were all excellent choices, every darn one of them.

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Into the Wild Nerd Yonder

I had a hard time getting started with Into the Wild Nerd Yonder. I read the first five words about fifty times before I got anywhere and then I was pretty amused with the whole thing. There’s an awful lot of teen sex talk in this little YA novel. Girls giving blow jobs. Girls contracting STDs from said boys. Lots of trying to fit in with this crowd or that crowd. In the end, it all works out for the best – which often doesn’t happen in high school. And, this story almost made me wish I played D&D… and sewed. Almost.

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Three More Cybils

All three of these were pleasant surprises. Very pleasant surprises.

Dinosaur Hunt is a short chapter/easy reader that’s way too easy to be in the short chapter book category – kind of like the Mo Willems books. It can’t compete with Mo, unfortunately, but I liked it an awful lot. A cute little dog heads out to hunt dinosaurs in the yard – and he ends up building a dinosaur out of every day stuff you find in the yard. I liked it. Fun. Cute. I like Max Spaniel.

And then there was Anything But Typical – I was not expecting such an awesome book in that particular package. It’s one of those softcover paperbacks that you see in school book order forms – Scholastic type. I hope a lot of kids read this, expecting it to be lighter and easier than it was. I loved the Storyboard storyline and the Storyboard convention. I liked the online girlfriend twist. I like that all of the characters felt very real to me. I think that’s tough sometimes when you’re writing about autism.

The biggest surprise of all was Heart of a Shepherd. I didn’t remember this being on the Cybils list. When it came out of the library bag, at first I thought it was a Christian fiction large print that we had grabbed for TW’s mom. But no, it wasn’t large print. It also didn’t seem like something TW would have just plucked from the shelf. I shrugged, but it on the cart and forgot about it… until I needed another book, checked my Cybils post and discovered that book was MINE. Huh.

It started on a ranch and felt like some sort of old fashioned “western” story. I thought that’s what it was for a few pages until the boy’s dad was being sent to Iraq.  Then I wasn’t so confused. And I was pretty much hooked. I have no idea why the author had the boys’ mother living in Italy but whatever, it’s a small piece of an otherwise excellent story. And in the end, it could have been a very nice large print Christian fiction for TW’s mom. If it had been in large print. I’m guessing there will be a lot of kids who turn their noses up at this one. Too bad because I liked it.

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Carter Finally Gets It

I didn’t expect to love Carter Finally Gets It… a book about a dumb male freshman? Please. Boys. Are. ANNOYING. In. HIGH SCHOOL. And Carter was annoying, as were his dumb friends. But Carter was also endearingly annoying in that he has no idea what he’s doing sort of way. It was cute. And funny. Also, it was a nice change from the books about dumb female freshman. Because Girls. ARE. Annoying. In. HIGH SCHOOL.

Loved the book. I wish I could convince all three of the younger kids to read it. Maybe I should get it on audio and force them to listen to it in the car…

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