RAE’S READS

  • The idea is to copy the first line of a book to see if it grabs another reader. This meme is hosted by Hoarding Books and Wandering Words. Place YOUR first line along with the title and author of the book it comes from and play along.

    Here is the first line of Anna Quindlen’s Alternate Side:

    ” ‘Just look at that,” Charlie Nolan said, his arm extended like that of a maitre d‘ indicating a particularly good table.”

    Whatever it is, it pleases Charlie and also his wife Nora. It is something they have wanted since moving in to the dead-end block, their “tranquil village amid the urban craziness,” as described by the book’s cover. This was a book set in New York that I had intended to read after seeing for myself what New Yorkers were like during my girlfriends’ weekend in The Big Apple this past March 19th-23rd. Obviously, that trip was cancelled, but I can still read about NYC as I begin this novel by one of my favorite NY Times bestselling authors.

  • img_1384-0 WHAT books have you just finished? WHAT are you reading currently? WHAT will you read next?, and I will add, WHAT have you watched? These are the questions Miz B at Daily Rhythms initiated and Sam at Taking on a World of Words now asks as she hosts this fun meme.

    It has been so long since I’ve played this “game” but here are my answers for Wednesday, May 27th, 2020.

    shopping 9781773212579518hlxqF+ML._SY346_shopping-1

    978052565333251xiwfeZsnL._SL300_ It was a good week to read, and I finished all these: three novels, a memoir, a collection of short story/fantasy urban legends, and two non-fiction books. One, Funny, You Don’t Look Autistic, I started from scratch; the others I had already begun. Kristin Higgins was a new author to me.

    9780451489395 WHAT are you continuing to read? Two novels, 51cJvgfnQ6L._SY346_ WSleepless_(novel) WHAT I will read next is the book for “M” of my 2020 Alphabet Soup Challenge, then I’ll continue going through a box full of samples for various writing manuals My Better Half found in a discard pile, “stealing” ideas, and enjoying the essays in the “Reader” sections.

    WHAT I have watched in addition to a movie here and there on Netflix is PBS’s World On Fire, a fantastic series about WWII set in Germany, Russia, Poland and Britain, as well as resistance pockets throughout Europe. It is a fine series.

  • Friday Firstliners is a take off on First Line Fridays hosted simultaneously by Hoarding Books and Wandering Words. The first line I’m featuring today should sound familiar to many southerners who have read coming of age stories like To Kill a Mockingbird. Kate DiCamillo’s Because  of Winn Dixie is a delightful coming of age story that opens…

    “My name is India Opal Buloni, and last summer my daddy, the preacher, sent me to the store for a box of macaroni-and-cheese, some white rice, and two tomatoes, and I came back with a dog.”

    This was a favorite of my 6th through 8th graders, boys and girls alike, and presented some of the most memorable characters in tween and teen books. Themes of “friendship, community and fellowship”are presented as only a book set in a small town in the Deep South can do.

    I highly recommend this book.

  • 418-JybCiwL    Carolyn Macklin has written about a problem many tweens face in Not if I Can Help It,  remarriage. However, there is a twist–Willa’s father wants to marry Ruby’s (Willa’s best friend’s) mother. Both girls are heading to middle school as sixth graders, and all their friends, teachers, and even the principal think the situation is “cool.” Willa does not agree. How to handle the girls’ mutual friends and Ruby’s excited anticipation of becoming “sisters” is a bitter pill to swallow!9781250166784

    All the Ways Home by Elsie Chapman presents a boy’s story. Kaeda, a Japanese Canadian is in 8th grade, facing the strong possibility that he will have to repeat 8th grade in the fall, when his mother is unexpectedly killed in a car crash. Facing the unpleasant fact that he may have to live with his surly grandfather, Kaeda travels to Japan to plead with his much-older musician brother, Shoma. Kaeda has a summer to get his life on track in a challenge few boys his age must face.

    UnknownMaggie “saves” little things, anchors to keep her Altzheimer’s-afflicted grandmother grounded. She refuses to let her mom or anyone throw her “treasures” away. This is a story of “loss” and “leavings”; it is a story of anxiety and hoarding in children, a real and challenging problem.

     

     

  • shopping-1ALPHABET-SOUP-2020-AUTHOR-EDITION-BE-820 I did it!! All 500+ (800+ for large print) pages!! And what a delight it was. There were many “faces” I’d met in documentaries and historical books about WWII, and the stamina of the English citizens made me proud for my grandmother’s people.

    Larson never ceases to amaze me; his non-fiction facts are strung together in a way that makes his books read like a novel, tracing threads of family drama, political intrigue and biographical characterization.  I have read and enjoyed several of Larson’s books, but this one was as fascinating as it was informative. I never lost interest or was bored. I loved following the career and love-life of Churchill’s daughter,Mary and was entertained by the excesses his wife, Clementine put up with from The Prime Minister.

    Any WWII fan will enjoy this book, but so will readers who enjoy a “darned good read.”

  • Tuesday Teaser, hosted by The Purple Booker invites readers to post a few random lines from your current read in hopes of “teasing” others to add it to their TBR list.

    My Tuesday Teaser for Tuesday, May 19th is from Susan Vreeland’s Lisette’s List:

    “One morning Pascal thudded down his coffee bowl and pushed himself upright. ‘I’m going to the ochre quarries. The colors glow at this hour’

    ‘No Papa. The cliffs are too dangerous.’

    ‘Don’t tell me what to do. And don’t follow me.’

    I burst out crying.”

    This novel is one of seven novels Susan Vreeland wrote in her lifetime, each focused around some aspect of art. I plan to read aloe them.  This is the fourth I’ve read.

    If you would like to leave a “tease” for this blog’s readers, please enter it in the Reply section. Be sure to mention title of book and author. No spoilers, please.

  • 41094522._SY475_  This was one of my favorite Cybils contenders in 2019 when I acted as a first round reader for the award. Wendy S. Swore has written a sensitive, special book about Sophie, who has a port wine birthmark that she considers “hideous,” and convinces this fairy-tale fan that she is some kind of a marked monster, that some evil fairy or evil stepmother has cast a curse on her and all those she cares for. This obsession becomes a psychological problem that dictates Sophie’s every thought and move. It is a moving, unforgettable book.

    35277358  Emma Otheguy brings another 2019 publication, Silver Meadows Summer to tweens, especially artistically “gifted” young girls. Gabriella wants to be like her girlfriends, but her cousin, Carolina, who is a “country bumpkin” is staying the summer. Loyalties to friends and family are at stake.

  • 51BOIIIsmIL

    The Humiliations of Pippi McGee by Beth Vrabel deals with every humiliation eighth grade has to offer. Several common themes appear in humorous ways: bullying, revenge, forgiveness, taking the “high road,” approaching high school, and finding one’s niche. Pippi is an unforgettable character who makes us cringe, makes us laugh, and makes us sigh, sometimes all in the same chapter.

    On a more serious note,41473877  Gail Villanueva’s My Fate According to the Butterfly introduces the reader to Sab who sees a black butterfly and is convinced it is the harbinger of her imminent death. She awaits only her birthday to meet her fate. Set in the Philippines, this story is beautifully, hauntingly written.

  • Oh for this company of a cat

    Jen Payne's avatar

    She assumes the thin space
    between me and the keyboard,
    in front of anything I had to do right now,
    her tail swooped against my hand resting
    on the mouse that does all of the work.

    I think to push her away but
    her fur is soft and comforting
    something to hold and touch,
    her breath is purry and hypnotic,
    and she is patient in her morning
    meditation or prayer, insistence

    here, this next day in the series of days
    we keep together in this space
    she in her routine and I in mine
    like yesterday and its day before
    or tomorrow and its day after
    we assume, god and virus willing,
    oh, for the company of this cat

    So I just let go of my things to do,
    wrap both arms around and
    lean into her small warm body
    as it expands and contracts
    gently against my chest,
    snuggle…

    View original post 69 more words

  • 35431592._SY475_      An unusual book with a tough but important topic is Lisa Bunker’s Zenobia July. It deals with a transgender protagonist, “Zen,” short for Zenobia (Who wouldn’t go by a nickname if she/he had the name Zenobia?) who  teaches others around her (and this reader) to use the pronouns “va” and “vien” rather than “she” and “them.” Zen lives in Maine with her lesbian aunts who are her legal guardians, and va meets many unusual people at her aunts free-thinking home. Va is a computer genius and a very gifted individual. As Zen seeks to find her identity, the reader is led to question the basic question of “Who am I?”  Sharing Zen’s journey is a thought-provoking, often humorous experience most middle graders will enjoy.

    9780316521833    For girls whose lives are spelled B-A-S-K-E-T-B-A-L-L, Barbara Carroll Roberts’ Nikki on the Line is a must-read. A humorous look at family and the frequently assigned project of developing/drawing a family tree is the vehicle that carries 13-year-old Nikki to search for her identity, only to learn that the best advice is to “Be yourself.”

    Both these books are excellent for reluctant readers as well as bookworms who adore a “darned good read.”