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Saturday, August 24, 2019

The Truth About Martians by Melissa Savage


Wondering about the existence of Martians is always a really popular topic and this story really gives the reader even more fuel for believing. The setting is New Mexico in 1947 when a flying saucer crash lands nearby in Roswell. Mylo and his two best friends Dibs and Gracie set out to investigate. It gets more interesting when they begin to hear voices calling for help. 

The book reminded me of the movie E.T. and The LIttle Rascals Gang.  Savage has some historical notes about the Roswell incident in the back of the book that nudges the reader to believe that a Martian sighting might have actually happened.  Hopefully, adults can encourage kids to keep reading and seeking more information on this conspiracy theory.  

This is another fun book for kids to read. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it and I give it a 4 out of 4 rating. 

  • Age Range: 8 - 12 years
  • Grade Level: 3 - 7
  • Reading Level: 650Lexile
  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers (October 2, 2018)

Friday, August 23, 2019

Float by Laura Martin


I love books set during summer camp and this story was a charmer! The plot includes the hijinks, fun, friendship, and events of a wonderful summer adventure. However, this is also a special camp for kids who are at RISK. It stands for reoccurring incidents of the strange kind. It seems more and more kids are born with strange and uncontrollable abilities; like floating, turning into a dog at random times, time-traveling, or spontaneous combustion.  The government mandates that these children are always watched and Camp Outlier is one of their summer choices. Camp turns out to be an experience of great freedom as kids can forget for a time about how strange their life is from other kids back home. 

Despite the humor and fun, there is a serious message which is subtle but impactful. RISK kids being set apart is expensive and difficult for schools and families. The ethics of how much can be afforded is hinted at with a time travel plotline. Kids might not pick up on the serious message but teachers and parents can guide kids into seeing how this fantastic story applies in today's world. 

I enjoyed reading this story so much. I could just feel, hear and smell camp! This book would make a great read-aloud. I give it a 4 out of 4 rating.

  • Age Range: 8 - 12 years
  • Grade Level: 3 - 7
  • Reading Level: 5,5 (11 points)
  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins (May 29, 2018)

I enjoy 1 Minute Books YouTube Channel where youth services librarian gives quick 1-minute book talks. Here is her book talk about Float.




Tuesday, August 20, 2019

My Favorite Summer Reads - Adult Fiction


Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes
Hardcover: 304 pages
Publisher: Ballantine Books (June 25, 2019)

Evvie is a widow and Dean Tenney is a baseball pitcher who has unexpectedly lost his arm for pitching. He rents out an apartment from Evvie to escape media attention. They become friends and begin to climb out of their disappointments into a new and loving relationship.

I picked this book because it was Jenna Bush Hager's July Book Club choice.  https://www.today.com/read-with-jenna  Sometimes it is fun to read along with another book club. I also caught her interview on Instagram with the author which gave me some author insights. This is a romance with a baseball theme! It is an easy read and just perfect for a summer day read. From what I remember, it was mostly closed-door romance details and little blush factor. I give it a 4 out of 4 rating. 



The Lost Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Park Row; Original edition (January 29, 2019)

This is a historical fiction story about women spies during WW II.  The main character has lost her husband during WW II and is struggling. She finds a suitcase in New York's Grand Central Station with some photographs and begins to investigate. Meanwhile, the story goes back to the owner of the suitcase who is a British woman who helped to train women spies to go into France for resistance missions. The story also features one of the spies, named Marie who was recruited to be a part of this spy operation.  There is a lot of mystery, adventure, and danger in the story that unfolds. 

I picked this book up on the cruise ship library from the cruise I took in Europe this summer when my Kindle refused to turn on... (it begin working later on). In so many of the tours I was on, I was reminded of the problems of WW II. This book also reminded me of sacrifices that many men and women have given for justice and peace.  There is some blush factor in some of the romantic scenes but easy to skip over.  It is easy to read and hard to put down.  I give this book a 4 out of 4




The Lager Queen of Minnesota by J. Ryan Stradal
Hardcover: 368 pages
Publisher: Pamela Dorman Books (July 23, 2019)

An older woman is baking pies at a nursing home in the middle of Minnesota and a Minneapolis food critic declares her pies one of the best in Minnesota. The nursing home is overrun with visitors on the days Edith is baking to the point that people are pretending to have loved ones in the home!  I was hooked at this opening but was still wondering how beer was going to be a part of this story. Eventually, you read how Edith's younger, smarter, and more talented sister basically inherited the entire family farm in order to fulfill her dreams of making a beer empire. The sisters are estranged and the story goes back in forth to each of them as they struggle to make a mark in the world. 

I don't drink beer and looked up a lot of things as I was reading this book. I looked up lager, stout, ale, hops and other details and I am still not sure about the differences. It really doesn't matter but I was curious. Anne B Jones from the podcast From the Front Porch recommended this book. She said..."I am a teetotaler from the south but his book made me want to go to Minnesota and drink beer."  I would also add...I really want to taste the Strawberry Pie Beer!  Does it even exist? I really found this book to be similar to a Fannie Flagg or Lorna Landvik book. It is charming and funny and just a great story. I highly recommend this book and loved reading it.  I plan on going back and reading his book Kitchens of the Great Midwest.  I rate it a 5 out of 4!


As Bright As Heaven by Susan Meissner
  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Berkley (February 6, 2018)

This is a historical fiction book about the Spanish Flu epidemic in Philadelphia in 1918. The Bright family moves to Philadelphia so that the father can be a partner and heir with his uncle in the funeral home business. The story is told chapter by chapter by the mother Pauline, and her three daughters as they share the happenings in their home and neighborhood from this historical event that killed more people than WW I did.  

I couldn't put this book down and despite the fact it was set in a funeral home and was about an epidemic, I didn't find it too gruesome or depressing. Meissner is such a good storyteller and created characters that you can connect and root for.  I had the feeling of ...now what am I going to read?....this was so good.   I rate it a 5 out of 4!


The Bookshop on the Shore by Jenny Colgan
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: William Morrow (June 25, 2019)

A young single mother is struggling to make ends meet and  her boyfriend's sister connects her with her friend in Scotland who runs a bookshop on a bus and needs help due to her pregnancy. She also lines up  a nanny job for evenings and weekends which provides her with a place to stay. A lot of comedy results as Zoe learns how to drive a bus, deal with small towns, quirky characters, and the horrible children she is to nanny. She finds romance  with her employer as she ends up being a Mary Poppins or Maria to the family who desperately needs her. 

I really loved the previous book written about the beginning of the bookshop bus called The Bookshop on the Corner. This book tells the story of how Nina loses her library job and ends up buying a bus in Scotland to sell books out of. She ends up falling in love with a local sheep farmer. I think it would be OK to read The Bookshop on the Shore without reading the first Bookshop book....but I would recommend both books....so read the Corner one too!

Jenny Colgan's books have been like eating potato chips to me. I can't stop! She writes romantic comedies set in Scotland, England, or France. They are filled with quirky characters, funny situations, and the charm of living across the pond.  They are not as squeaky clean as a Hallmark movie....some swear words and quick hook-ups but they are closed door for the reader.  I have enjoyed the comedy, quirkiness, and settings. Jenny Colgan always describes her settings so well.  I rate them all a 4 out of 4 so far!


Nina Redmond is a librarian with a gift for finding the perfect book for her readers. But can she write her own happy-ever-after? 



Polly is a heartbroken young woman who turns a new page in her life . . . by becoming a baker in the town of Cornwall.


Anna Trent may be a supervisor in a chocolate factory...but that doesn't necessarily mean she knows how to make chocolate. So when a fateful accident gives her the opportunity to work at Paris's elite chocolatier Le Chapeau Chocolat, Anna expects to be outed as a fraud.



Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Amal Unbound by Aisha Saeed


Amal Unbound was the middle-grade global read aloud for the fall of 2018 and has been read in many classrooms around the world. https://theglobalreadaloud.com/  What a great choice! This is a must-read for students, teachers, and parents. I was worried that it would be for mature readers or extremely sad, however, it is an empowering story of a modern Pakistani girl who seeks justice after being forced to quit school and become an indentured servant. It would be a great choice for 4th grade and up. I give it a 4 out of 4 rating!

Amal is a teen who dreams of becoming a teacher but has a run-in with their landlord who then requires her to come to his house as a servant as a punishment. She learns that despite her father trying to pay her way home, her room and board bills make this impossible. She is stuck like many of the people who have been caught in a similar situation. Amal works hard at her job and makes friends with the other servants as well as the landlord's mother who she serves. Amal risks much and comes up with a plan to fight for justice for herself and others. 

This story was inspired by the true story of Malala Yousafzai. Watch the following video where Amal Unbound is compared with the Young Readers version of I am Malala.







  • Age Range: 10 and up 
  • Grade Level: 5 - 6
  • Reading Level: 4.2 (6 points)
  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Nancy Paulsen Books (May 8, 2018)

ALSC Notable Children's Books - 2019 
CCBC Choices 2019 Choice: Fiction for Children 
ILA Teachers' Choices - 2019 
ALA-CBC Building a Home Library Booklist - 2018 
CSMCL Best Books - 2018 
Publishers Weekly Best Books - 2018 
Kirkus Best Books, Middle-Grade - 2018 
NYPL Best Books for Kids - 2018 
NPR’s Book Concierge - 2018 
School Library Journal Best Books - 2018

Monday, August 12, 2019

Mustaches for Maddie by Chad Morris and Shelly Brown


A book based on a true story always gets my attention and this is a wonderful story about a little girl who has to face a scary brain tumor surgery. She does it bravely with humor and great trust alongside the support of her family, friends, and school. She also begins to see that others are also struggling and her eyes are open to kindness and compassion. 

What I loved about this story was how you follow Maddie through her doctor's appointments, MRI's, and surgery and are able to understand what she has to go through.  I think lots of kids are curious to see what that might be like especially if they haven't faced this themselves. Details like having to get up early to go to the hospital and not being able to eat or what it is like inside an MRI machine are some of the things that were included.  I haven't read a lot of books that explain to readers what happens when you have surgery. This would be a great recommendation for kids interested in medical issues or even having to go through surgery themselves.  I used to love reading Cherry Ames, Nurse books when I was a middle school reader and I still watch lots of medical drama shows on television and so this book was interesting for me. 

I highly recommend this book and give it a 4 out of 4 rating. 


Awards for Mustaches for Maddie
Alabama Camellia Children’s Choice Award 2019 nominee
Ohio Buckeye Children's Book Award winner 2018
Missouri Mark Twain Award nominee 2019-2020
Rhode Island Children's Book Award nominee 2019

  • Age Range: 8 - 11 years
  • Grade Level: 4 - 6
  • Reading Level: 4.0 (7.0)
  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Shadow Mountain; Reprint edition (August 7, 2018)


The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise by Dan Gemeinhart


This book tops my 2019 reads so far. When I finished reading it, I ordered another one because I know I will be recommending it over and over. It is heartbreaking, hopeful, humorous and heartwarming.  It would make a great read-aloud for 4th and 5th graders and a great book club book too. 

Coyote Sunrise and her father, Rodeo, have been traveling around the country in a retrofitted school bus for five years. They begin this journey after a car accident killed Coyote's two sisters and mother.  The only way Rodeo could cope was to escape the pain. But one day everything changes when Coyote calls her grandmother and finds a reason that she needs to get back home immediately and she knows she will have to "trick" her father into getting there. Since she needs help on the journey back home they begin taking on people to travel with them on their bus. The story is full of fun twists and turns and Coyote is a wise, funny, and loveable character. 

I want this book to be a movie! It would be so good.  So, make this book a priority read. I would choose it as the Newbery winner for 2020 if I could!  I give it a 5 out of 4 rating.  



A 2019 Parents' Choice Award Gold Medal Winner 

Katherine ApplegateQuote Two

  • Age Range: 9 - 12 years
  • Grade Level: 4 - 7
  • Reading Level: 4,7  (12 points)
  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR) (January 8, 2019)

Friday, August 9, 2019

Forget Me Not by Ellie Terry


A few of my students read this book last spring at school at told me it was their favorite. Another librarian told me last week how much she loved it.  So, this one moved up on my TBR pile.  They were not wrong...it is a book I will recommend as well.  It is an impressive novel from a debut author. 

Calliope (Calli) June Snow is a middle schooler who loves astronomy, collects rocks and has moved numerous times because her widowed mother is chasing her "getting a  husband" dream. Calli also has Tourette's Syndrome and was advised by a doctor to not tell people of her condition.  Of course as a continual new student, because of all of her moves, she is targetted as a weird kid and her unexplained tics do not help.

Callie's neighbor, Jinsong, also lives in the apartment building that she lives in, goes to her school and is the student body president.  He is intrigued by this new girl and crushes on her. However, the teasing and tormenting by the rest of the school are difficult for Jinsong to deal with. He has to figure out how to navigate the mean spirited group dynamics. 

Calli and Jinsong are both narrators in this free verse and narrated book and the reader is privileged to a dual point of view.  It is a love story and coming of age book, full of middle school anxiety and lessons of doing the right thing. 

This is another one of those great books that teachers need to read to students and students need to read.  It is beautifully written.  Sometimes I just had to reread the verses....they were so delightful. It is also a quick read since more than half of the book is written in verse. Calli has a tough life and she teaches the reader about dealing with disappointment, resiliency, dreams, and life.  I give it a 5 out of 4 rating! I recommend it highly! 

  • Age Range: 10 - 13 years
  • Grade Level: 5 - 8
  • Reading Level: 4.1
  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Feiwel & Friends; 1st Edition edition (March 14, 2017)