2010

The Live Oak Motel

I am… troubled… very troubled… by The Live Oak Motel. The author has spent most of her life in Gainesville, Florida. Her husband is an English Professor. This book… not funny. The racial stereotyping and the stereotyping of “southerners” wasn’t funny – and I’m a pretty un-PC kind of person. I didn’t find it amusing. I’m just very, very troubled.

I really need to be more selective about the books I put on my challenge list – and by the books I buy.

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Four More Cybils

The last from the Fiction Picture Books, The Listeners. I like Gloria Whelan and this book was nice enough but it didn’t really grab me the way most of her books do.

Then, I jumped to Easy Readers and Short Fiction…

When I saw Mo Willems on the list, again, I wasn’t thrilled. I’m getting a little tired of Elephant and Pig but I was very pleasantly surprised by Watch Me Throw the Ball. I laughed. Out loud. And it’s been awhile since Willems has really made me do that.

I like Mercy and I really liked Mercy Watson Something Wonky This Way Comes – not just for the use of the word wonky, either. Maybe I’m just a fan of buttered toast?

Last but not least, How Oliver Olson Changed the World. Oy. Parents who worry too much about their kids. Parents who do too much for their kids. And the kids who hate it. Brilliant book. Brilliant story. Brilliant use of Pluto the non-planet in this tough story. I like. A lot.

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Dexter is Delicious

And Dexter really was Delicious in this book. Thank goodness. I really didn’t love Dexter by Design so I was worried that Dexter is Delicious wouldn’t make me love Dexter (and friends) the way the first three books did. I was afraid I’d feel about it the way I feel about the Showtime series – which is cold, bored, and longing for the Dexter of the old days.  Thank goodness Lily Anne changed Lindsey’s writing as much as it changed Daddy Dexter.  It could be that I just don’t love Cody and Astor very much and I do love Brian. It could also be that I love Sgt Deborah and this book gave us another look at Debs. This book also brought back the funny Dexter which I think was really lacking in the last book. That’s probably the real problem – I need the sarcastic humor that IS Dexter.

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Two Must Reads from the Cybils Middle Grade Fiction Short List

First, Operation Yes – Goodness I loved that book. It’s probably the military family in me but who cares, it was awesome. Little green army men. Air Force (and one Army) “brats” at a small school in a small school in a small military town. What’s not to like? Particularly when there’s a great teacher involved. Heck, the book even made me like air shows and I really do not like air shows.

Next, The Small Adventure of Popeye and Elvis. Hah. We listened to this one on audio (and I do believe this is my preferred method of reading middle grade fiction) and at first, I was confused. How could a middle grade fiction book start in such a horrible, depressing way? It didn’t make sense. I’m not sure I’ve ever read a middle grade fiction book that started this way and I was pretty sure I was going to hate this book after listening to the first two chapters. But then… the Holiday Rambler appeared and the “vocabulary words from Velma” really got going and I just loved this story. TW loved it too and we were sorry to see it end – but very happy that it ended exactly the way it did end.

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Amulet: Cloud Searchers

Argh! How many books are there going to be in the Amulet series? They keep ending just when they’re getting interesting and I’m once again left wondering what happens next. Same darn thing happened last night when I read Cloud Searchers.  I was just settling in and getting excited about the story and … BAM. When is the next book coming out? Sheesh.

Have I mentioned I really like this graphic novel series (for younger kids)?

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5 More Cybils – Easy Readers and Picture Books

Finishing the Cybils Shortlist Challenge is going to be errr challenging. I’ve got a lot of books to read and some of them have been on my reserve list for a very long time. I’m beginning to think the cuts in library funding are going to prevent me from reading them all. But, I’m still trying. I finished five last night. I only really loved one of them and I couple were just plain bad.

The two that I really did not like were Shampoodle and The Book that Eats People. The Book that Eats People was really disappointing. I had high hopes but it was boring. A book that eats people should not be boring. Shampoodle was just one of those boring rhyming books where dogs have weird grooming things done to them – for nothing. I’m not a fan of those sorts of books.

The Curious Garden was nice. I liked the story. I liked the idea of helping nature grow in the middle of the city and seeing others join in. Very nice. Not great but good enough.  Good Dog, Aggie wasn’t bad either but it wasn’t super awesome. Just good enough  — though the boxy faces on the animals weren’t my favorite dog illustrations in the world.

The one I loved was Alice’s Shooting Star, though I didn’t love the title. I want a better title for this fun story. Rosie is an awesome kid and Alice is an even more awesome big sister for recognizing her sister’s personality for the great thing that it was. It can be difficult having a kid (or a sibling) like that but it’s who they are and there are lots of things to like about a quirky kid. I almost wish I had a kid in this age group so I could buy the whole series of Alice books.

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Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs

Doesn’t it seem like all of the books (by color) from my From the Stacks Challenge have been short stories? OK maybe not all of them but a lot? I think I should pay more attention to the books I’m choosing for this particular challenge because I’m just not a big short story fan. BUT… Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs was pretty darn good. Cheryl Peck needs to write more books – or more short stories. I don’t care which, I liked her. Hmmm does she have a blog? Because if she doesn’t, she needs one.

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The Remarkable & Very True Story of Lucy & Snowcap

The very first book I picked up off of the shelf of our brand new library was The Remarkable & Very True Story of Lucy & Snowcap. The cover pulled me in. TW saw it on the shelf at home and commented on the cover. Elly saw it yesterday on my bed and commented on the cover. It’s a very comment-worthy cover.

The story’s not half bad either.  TW thought it was a little creepy for a middle grade fiction but I didn’t think so. Some bad things happen – through magic. Some of the people aren’t as nice as you might like them to be, but that’s how life is. I think the start is a little jarring – taking a newborn baby to the Lifestone garden to leave him to die. But, to be clear there was no choice, the curse was killing him – not the leaving him in the garden.  I think there’s a big difference and most kids will understand that.  It was the curse, not abandonment.

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The Bedwetter

I don’t really love Sarah Silverman. I don’t hate her either, which I’m sure she’ll be glad to hear because she’s had a whole lot of people hating on her and she probably doesn’t want one more person piling on. I never would have read The Bedwetter but TW read the cover jacket and was forced to bring it home because it was funny – and crazy, much like Silverman herself.

If I liked fart jokes more. Or rape jokes more. Or [insert politically incorrect label for an ethnic minority] jokes more, I’d probably be a fan. But I don’t so I’m not. I was pretty fascinated with just how … weird her life has been, or how weirdly she talks about her life. I think I’d probably like her dad a good bit, he seems funnier.

I’m still not a fan but I don’t like her less than before I read the book. I call that a win.

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North of Beautiful

Another Cybils YA short lister and another that I kept pushing back on my list because… another beauty/body image book? Really? Do I have to? Because I’ve read an awful lot of them this year. North of Beautiful is better than I expected. It’s more than I expected. I yelled at Terra’s dirtbag father all the way through the book. I cheered at the end. It’s a lot more than a beauty/body image story. It really is. Read it, you’ll see.

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