Showing posts with label Moon Over Manifest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moon Over Manifest. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading June 3 , 2013


It's Monday! What are you Reading? is a meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journeys as a way to share what you read and/or reviewed the previous week and what is in store for the upcoming week. It's also a great chance to see what others are reading. I first learned about it at Teach Mentor Texts.

This week, I began the arduous task of library inventory but with it comes small pleasures. Every now and then, I would come across a forgotten favorite book so I would take a few minutes to quickly read through it again. Sometimes, I would scan the book into the inventory and then set it aside promising to create a new lesson plan for a chosen few. The problem beginning to unfold was my chosen few stack begin to grow taller and taller. I am so grateful for such a rich and diverse collection of books that well reflects years of dedicated and thoughtful curation. How very lucky I am to be a elementary/middle school librarian.







During inventory, I came across one of my favorite biographies The Day-Glo Brothers by Chris Barton. I still remember when I was a kid becoming fascinated by these odd new colors. I spent my entire allowance on things like fluorescent glow in the dark paint and glue. I was really into science at an early age and still love it today thanks to cool inventions like day-glo paint. This is a terrific addition to any school library with themes such as: inventions, chemical reactions, family relationships-brothers, seeking solutions to a problem (multiple problems), and perseverance.




In School:This week, I read The Last Day of Kindergarten by Nancy Loewen to (of course) Kindergarten students and then we talked about what they were looking forward to when they became first graders. This was a wise little group-they pretty much offered answers that might help butter up their future first grade teacher.
It was a fun activity and they loved that the kids in the book were also graduating from Kinder while wearing mortar boards on their heads.



In Our Home:
4 year old, Mr. L, wanted to give his teacher books for her "Thank You Teacher gift" so he picked out some favorites-A Sick Day with Amos McGee, Big Animals, Worms, and a Toni Morrison's The Big Box which I added to the stack. 2 year old Mr. J wanted to hear A New Bear at School by Carrie Weston and Tom Warnes. This is one of the books I set aside for working into my fall lessons. Mr. J also selected Little Quack's Bedtime by Lauren Thompson because he likes math and this is a terrific way to introduce subtraction as each duck closes their eyes and goes to sleep leaving the others awake to hear the night sounds.

Professional Development Read:

 Notice and Note
Strategies for Close Reading
by Kylene Beers and Robert E. Probst

I borrowed a copy of Notice & Note from my friend and colleague, Mapuana Jones, a very talented literacy coach and the epitome of a book lover. This woman has possibly read every book ever written for children and middle grade students. I will be taking part in a Twitter PD and #NNNchat beginning June 6th at 8 p.m. CST. Join us!




I am still listening to Moon over Manifest by the talented Clare Vanderpool.  It is taking me a while to get through M.O.M. as I have a three mile commute to work, but listening to an audio book makes that short commute a joyful ride. I was not fond of the voice artist in the beginning and almost quit listening to it (for the second time) but I was a Bluebird when I was in elementary school (Campfire Girls) and our motto was "A Bluebird always finishes what she begins" although I am not sure this is always such good advice. I am glad I am sticking with the book. 

Abilene is a good sturdy main character and I like her tremendously. She appears strong and venerable at same time. She can take care of herself but still ponders over the reasons why her daddy left her in a stranger's care. She is hard working and honest. After accidently breaking Hungarian fortuneteller, Miss Sadie's clay pot, she returns to work off her debt and is rewarded with intriguing tales of 
 the days of Ned and Jinx, two previous residents of Manifest that are linked to the contents of a mysterious old cigar box that Abilene finds under a floorboard in Shady's home. 

Some of the characters are predictable like the mine boss and his spoiled son but there are also some very endearing like Lettie and Ruthanne, the two cousins who have befriended Abilene and set off to help her unravel clues to discovering who may have been a spy nicknamed The Rattler during the war. I am a big fan of historical fiction and found it interesting seeing Manifest's connection to World War I, immigration, orphan trains, Prohibition, the Spanish Influenza, coal mining and the use of a "company store" to keep employees in a never ending cycle of poverty.


What am I reading next? I am going to try to get my hands on a copy of The Dream Thieves by Maggie Stiefvater. Last year, I read The Raven Boys on Net Galley and am hoping to find The Dream Thieves available too. The woman knows how to write interesting books. For me, summer time is a chance to read YA fiction and listen to audio books at work as I work on much needed library maintenance-reaffix all those labels that come loose, create library displays, take part in online professional development and work on my Bluebonnet Book Club lessons.

Let me know what you are reading. I am always on the look out for something thrilling, mysterious, romantic, or shocking!




Monday, May 20, 2013

It's Monday, What are You Reading May 20, 2013


It's Monday! What are you reading? A weekly themed meme connecting many bloggers around the world and originally conceived by Sheila at Book Journeys. I first learned about it at Teach Mentor Texts hosted by Jen and Kellee. I was messing around with a button Scholastic had given me and stuck it in a calendar and snapped a photo. Cool right? Now I flash this pic to kids and ask them, "What are you reading?"

This week I polished off the very sweet tale of A Tangle of Knots by Lisa Graff. 


My favorite character in the story was Cady, a little girl with an uncanny talent for understanding and baking the perfect cake for a person. Cady is the five time winner of a famous baking contest always beating out professional bakers and famous chefs. A Tangle of Knots includes a lovable ensemble of characters, some of them are not very nice but most of them are gifted with a special unique talent such as spitting, knitting, or matching orphans to their perfect families. If you are looking for a light hearted read filled with tasty sounding recipes, then this is your book. I am anxious to try out some of Caddy's cake recipes. Reading this book was even more fun because I read it with two other Twitter buddies @strohreads and @readerroberts, the latter, who by the way, made the Miss Mallory's Peach Cake for her family last night. Here is the recipe in the Youtube video courtesy of author Lisa Graff.



I also really enjoyed one of Graff's previous books, Umbrella Summer and how she captured the healing of two souls throughout the story. Click here to see my Kids Book Club wiki for Umbrella Summer. This was my first online kids book club which we now call our Bluebonnet Book Club. Each year I update the website with a new list of twenty books nominated for the Texas Bluebonnet Award. I update the wiki each time I present a library lesson on one of the nominees.






IDuring library lessons, I finished up our Favorite Storybook Characters unit with Mo Willems books with a focus on Pigeon. We read Don't Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late and The Duckling Has a Cookie!?








Download the The Duckling Gets a Cookie Event Kit









We made the TP roll Pigeon and they turned out great. Students have been practicing oral story retelling so they can go home and share with their families.


Our bedtime storybooks:

Barrys Best Buddy by Renee French
Nighttime Ninja by Barbara De Costa
Tea with Rex by Molly Idle


Plaidypus Lost by Janet Stevens and Susan Stevens Crummel

I read any and all books by this sister team. You know the book will be wonderful.

Plaidypus lost.
Plaidypus found
This story goes around and around.




A young girl's grandmother stitches her a stuffed toy out of her grandpa's old plaid shirt-hence the name Plaidypus. The girls is so pleased with her new special toy that she promises Grandma that she will never lose him, but then she does exactly that. Not only does she lose him, she loses him repeatedly throughout the story. She forgets him at the park, she forgets him at the store, she forgets him at the lake, and then the poor creature blows out of her family's car window and ending up in tattered pieces. Plus he's kinda creepy looking to begin with. I can see this as a successful library read aloud because of the girl's carelessness with her precious toy. The kids will be horrified. I can hear them now saying "Oh no! not again!"Of course the natural question to end the story with will be "Do you think the girl will lose her Plaidypus again or try harder to keep up with him?" My money is on it getting lost again.







Moon Over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool

Listen to Clare Vanderpool explain why she wrote Moon Over Manifest and hear her read a portion of the story at Teaching Books.net. While this is a wonderful story, I just haven't warmed up to the voice actor's style of delivering the story through an audio presentation. I thought it was just me, but during a recent Twitter chat #MissRead on the comparison of print versus audio books, I discovered that other listeners had experienced the same resistance to the audiobook version of Moon Over Manifest. In fact, we agreed that in regards to audiobooks, the voice artist can make or break the story. I also love the works of Christopher Paul Curtis, especially some of his audiobooks, but I could not get into Mr. Chickee's Funny Money because of the voice actor.

Current Read

Penny Dreadful by Laurel Synder

On Saturday, I dashed to the MacDonald public library for a librarian hang out and to pick up my hold for Penny Dreadful. I am reading this as part of @MissionRead's #PageChallenge and already loving it even though I am just a few pages in. I can't wait to book talk with fellow readers.

When I arrived at the library, I noticed fellow librarian Lauren was holding a copy of Giants Beware and asked her if she was  planning to join in on this coming #SharpSchu book club on Twitter this Tuesday, May 21st.  I sent out a district wide email to all librarians encouraging them to join in. Lauren told me that she was not a fan of graphic novels but the red headed character on the cover of Giant's Beware had caught her eye and if she liked it, it would be her next Halloween costume. Cool, Claudette for Halloween. I like it! I, of course, launched into my praise of the book because it is one of my favorites and my students are ape over it. I haven't seen a copy in weeks except for the one that I begged the return of so I could brush up for the Twitter chat. 
GIANTS Beware!
Author: Jorge Aguirre
Illustrated by Rafael Rosado
First Second Books

Click here to see pages from the book.
I love this digital inking process and the cool accompanying music for Giants Beware.


Last but not least



Here is what Jennifer Green sent to me for Teach Mentor Text's Spring Book and Bookmark Swap. This was so much fun. My #Bookswap buddy was Maria Selke and I sent her The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson and I created three bookmarks for her to use because sometimes you just have to mark those very special passages you want to read again and again.

I have a big week ahead of me with library inventory beginning but since I always look on the sunny side of life that means more time to "read, before I weed" out a book. For those of you who do not approve of weeding libraries, don't worry-I make sure to get these books into the hands of children who usually do not have any books in their homes. I am also sadly out of book shelf space and already using every possible object that can hold books.