RAE’S READS

  • Tru and Nelle and Tru and Nelle: A Christmas Tale, both written by G. Neri and illustrated by Sarah Watts, are about the childhood and teenage friendships of Truman Capote (In Cold Blood) and Nelle Harper Lee (To Kill a Mockingbird). When interviewed as to why he wrote the refreshing novels, Neri said he “used their (Capote and Lee’s) childhood friendship in Monroeville, Alabama as fodder for (his) fiction.” The author continued, “I was intrigued that no one had ever written about that friendship, especially for young people.” (Neri, interviewed in “Taking with G. Neri” / Books and Writers (magazine)

    Neri recommends the first novel, Tru and Nelle for second through sixth graders and T and N: A Christmas Story for middle school students.  At the end of the first book, Tru leaves Monroeville where he had spent the summer with his aunt for New York City to live with his mother and stepfather. The second novel begins with Tru running away from a military school his mother had placed him in as an attempt to “man him up,” and he heads to Monroeville.  There he is awaited by Nelle and Big Boy, the notorious detective story enthusiasts and “agents” from childhood who are now growing into their pre-teen and teenage years. The setting is 1930’s Monroeville, home of the Jim Crow laws, the Klu Klux Klan and Southern Injustice. All characters, events, and places are “drawn from real life,” characters and events. Beginning with Tru’s Aunt’s house burning to the ground, leaving the family homeless at Christmas, an event Nelle’s father feels he is responsible for, the tale is described as “speculative fiction in search of poetic truth.” Both books are funny, sad, touching and well-researched.

    The first book is deliberately reminiscent of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and the second deals with teenage angst, search for sexual identity, and zaniness of the teen years. Both are excellent books.

  • Because Santa brought us a stomach virus as an early Christmas present, and because I had been sleeping days as well as nights to catch up from being up at night, I awoke early Christmas Eve-Day and decided it was the perfect time to rip into a box of donations for my Little Free Library, and dig in. As I went through the books, I wanted to add many to my TBR shelves, but there simply was not room. Discovering that several of the donated books were already on my TBR list, some from years ago (It had been a long time since I had cleaned out my TBR manilla folder full of scraps of paper and newspaper reviews.) I decided to hold my own Christmas Eve-Day marathon.

    I spent from 5:30 a.m. CST until 10:45 p.m. CST alternating between reading books, reading blogs I was so far behind on, and snacking on whatever would stay down (mostly water and saltines).

    Books I began and finished:

    Your Flying Car Awaits by Paul Milo–This one was a clip of a review in The Houston Chronicle from 2009. It was a fun read which described predictions of “robot butlers, lunar vacations, and other dead-wrong predictions of the twentieth century.” (cover blurb)

    Books I had already started and continue to read:

    The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin–The second novel in “The Broken Earth” series, a sci fi adventure/thriller/mystery/poetically written novel started as our read-to-each-other for My Better Half and I, but when I needed an “O” for my Alphabet Challenge, I asked permission to go ahead and finish this on my own.  Things just became too busy as the Holidays approached. I now have about 250 pages to finish.  Just “getting back to it” was an accomplishment.

    Books I started Christmas Eve-Day and am continuing at the present:

    Modern Lovers by Emma Straub was a book I checked out of our local library and began reading Christmas Eve Day while recuperating.  I have only read 106 pages. This refreshing novel was also from a review in The Houston Chronicle’s “Zest” section where books are reviewed on Sundays.

    What Great Teachers Do Differently by Todd Whitaker was a donation to my LFL from a friend who is eventually moving and who is “fixing up” her home ahead of schedule, planning construction and remodeling work over the Holidays. I began this one Christmas Eve Day and have read only sixteen pages.

    Books I’ve Barely Begun:

    Magic Words @Work by Kaminsky and Penney, part of the “Magic Words Series” was a donation by the same friend. I started it Christmas Eve Day, but I only read to page 47 before I had to wait until My Better Half woke up so I could retrieve my Quotes Notebook from the main bedroom to copy many of these “pearls of wisdom” down.

    I have failed miserably at catching up with blogging friends’ posts, especially those done just for Christmas.  Honestly, I just wasn’t in the mood to read them, and listened to Christmas music with the lights dimmed and tried to stop my stomach from roiling.

    This morning,  I’m “over it all.”  PTL!  I went outside about six a.m. and brought in the paper, then put a nice beef roast in the slow cooker for a late dinner or even maybe supper, depending on how tender the roast is.  The fact that I can write this description of food without becoming nauseous testifies  to how much better I feel. God is good, and happily, today I celebrate His birth!

     

     

  • The kids who would respond well to the novel(s) I am reviewing today would more likely be sleeping in, scrunched up under the covers, on Saturday mornings than watching cartoons.  Alice Hoffman has written some wonderful YA novels along with her outstanding adult novels, which turn something ordinary into something extraordinary, using a “touch”of the supernatural. The double novel, Green Heart contains two novellas, Green Angel and Green Witch.

    As with Faithful (reviewed earlier on this blog), the protagonist is a fifteen year old girl. Like Faithful, Hoffman’s sophisticated novellas could be labeled “coming-of-age stories.”  This double novel is  a “two-fold story of loss and love.” The fifteen-year-old Green Angel maintains a wonderful garden which bears plants, vegetables, and flowers that her family takes with them when they go to town to market. One October weekend, her whole family goes off to market and are lost in a terrible fire that consumes the market and the town. Ashes from this disaster even cover the countryside farm where she had stayed behind. Also, the young man she loved is missing. Has he betrayed her, or has he been betrayed? Her only consolation is working in the ruined garden where nothing will grow. Slowly, over years, she resurrects the garden, with Hoffman’s signature touch of the supernatural, touch of magic.

    Over time, she begins to heal. She learns the truth about love, hope, and magic. One day, the Green Angel, “branded [by her neighbors] for her mysterious powers,” and called a witch by little children, begins a quest to discover what became of the boy she had once loved.

    The exciting end of the quest and the “battle” that ensues demonstrates the Angel/Witch’s craftiness and dedication to love. The ending is quite satisfactory.

    Interestingly enough the metaphor of tattoos prevails throughout the novel(s). The first,vines, inked in green and self-inflicted by the devastated young fifteen-year-old, foreshadow many more tattoos of growing things and becomes a major theme of resurrection, life and change.

    To me, this was a magical, beautifully written book, one of Alice Hoffman’s best. I give it five stars out of five.

  • This was a post made previously on PWR. Because it is Christmas and the time for giving–BOOKS–to children and grandchildren, this book emphasizes the importance and significance Of E.B. White’s life and contribution to children’s literature and word-smithing, in general.  ‘There are more recent biographies of E.B White, even a children’s version, but this one is the most complete. It includes the detailed story of how the children’s classic, Charlotte’s Web came to be written and published.  All the information came from huge research into the primary sources of White’s letters, trips and  to his childhood home, and interviews with many other researchers into the life and works of this wonderful man.

    The details of White’s boyhood are fascinating and foreshadow many of the things that appear in Charlotte’s Web, but for me, when I hit the middle of the book, things got very interesting.  As a long time subscriber to the New Yorker magazine an  aficionado of all things journalistic, I could hardly put down the book’s description of White’s earliest publishing jobs, his romance and marriage to a famous New Yorker editor and the publication of his earliest columns.

    The author knows his subject and it became apparent to me that only E.B. White and his experiences in life could have written Charlotte’s Web. The book was a wonderful read, a complete and encompassing exploration of all things E.B. White.”

  • Take a look at my newest blog site, literacylessons.wordpress.com  It should be easier to find, and it has a new look. If you have not checked out this particular blog before (I have posted some things on both sites, but some are original to LL.) you will find postings by students of Advanced Writing classes, statistics and thoughts on reading and writing, and comments on how schools and the teaching of literacy have changed in 50 years. In 2019, I will post books written by preK-2nd graders at the school where I volunteer on Tuesdays and stories of a new challenge at the Family Community Center where I volunteer on Thursdays. Even though I have officially retired from university teaching, I will continue to teach, but will not be paid for it. Come join me on my new adventure.

     

  • Carla's avatarCarla Loves To Read

    These two books are both wonderful additions to a family, school or classroom library. They are all about creativity, crafting and homemade gifts. I thought they were both especially timely with Christmas coming. I love homemade gifts from my family and these books have several suggestions.

    Nature Craft5 Stars

    Published August 14th 2018 by QEB Publishing

    View original post 511 more words

  • Rae Longest's avatarblogging807

    I am indebted to my blogging friend, Rachel Poli, for the refreshingly quick format to place “out there” a book I’ve read recently and enjoyed that I don’t have time to properly review.

    The Lightkeeper’s Daughters by John E. Pendziwol, published in 2017

    How I got it or came to read it: The book was reviewed by a blogging friend, and it sounded interesting enough for me to order from my local library.

    Synopsis: Elizabeth, a blind resident of a nursing home meets Emily, a delinquent teenager in foster care when Emily is assigned community service painting out the graffiti she sprayed on the home’s fence. When Emily begins working for Elizabeth as a personal aide, together they undertake the restoring and reading of Elizabeth’s father’s journals which tell of his years of service as a light keeper on Porphyry Island on Lake Superior.

    First Thoughts: The novel appealed to…

    View original post 137 more words

  • I went to two parties today. One was a Christmas party at a friend’s place of business where she brought her whole family to “help out”. I have ties with this family and couldn’t believe how the “boys” had all grown. Also a student at the local community college whom I try to help out was there dressed as an elf.  She also brought her dog, Lady, who was decorated and dressed to the hilt! She was the biggest ham when it came to taking pictures with Santa.  For the price of one can of food to donate to the local food pantry (not required, just encouraged) people could have their pictures made with Santa.  He was a good Santa, too, with a natural beard and a lovely red velvet suit.   The other party was an 85th BD party for my Sunday School teacher, thrown by her daughters and granddaughters in a nearby town. Everything about it was outstanding: the food, the decorations, the cats (which appealed to me) and the gorgeous house.  I kept taking pictures hoping to steal her decorating ideas. Because of my “social obligations,” I am late posting my books for kids that I will put out in my Little Free Library as soon as the sun comes up tomorrow.

    The Curious Little Kitten’s First Christmas, a Little Golden Book, deals with a kitten’s first Christmas and all the curious things that appear around Christmastime at the house. Although it was published in 1986, and I purchased it for 50 cents, it is in mint condition and was originally the garage sale lady’s son’s who is now a grownup.

    Jack Prelutsky’s It’s Christmas, published in 1981, was another purchase at that particular garage sale, and one I used in my Basic ESL class where I volunteer. It is a funny book and appeals to beginning readers whether they be second graders or adults. It includes what Christmas means to children, grownups and Santa himself.  The best part is, it is a “chapter book,” but each chapter may be only two pages. It deals with the abundance of Santas appearing around this time of year, as well as a child being ill at Christmas and mad about it. The illustrations by Marylin Hafner are inclusive of ethnic groups and teach life lessons about receiving a blessing from blessing/giving to others–without “preaching.” This is a dream come true for primary teachers and can be purchased at Half Price Books sometimes (as well as garage sales) or from Mulberry Books/An Imprint of William-Morrow and Company/ 1150   Avenue of the Americas/New York, N.Y./ 10019.

    Happy Shopping!