
After taking one month off from blogging to finish writing a novel, I figure I'd better get back to doing some recommending!
I just finished reading The Lacemaker and the Princess by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley, a sumptious tale of a young girl who witnesses the French Revolution firsthand.
Isabelle is a poor lacemaker who, through an extraordinary turn of events, becomes the playmate of Therese, daughter of the King and Queen of France (better known as Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette).
Bradley does a wonderful job of painting a picture of the French Revolution both from the side of the disgruntled, starving citizens of France and the blissful ignorance and extravagance of the royalty. Isabelle is put in the interesting position of understanding both sides of the battle -- Therese is her friend who lavishes riches on her, but outside of the walls of Versailles, Isabelle's family lives in squalor.
I'm a great fan of literature set during this period, but this book presented such a unique vantage point that is rare in a novel for kids. We sympathize with all the characters in the book -- through the eyes of an innocent young girl who tries to see good in everyone. We are also left with a vivid picture of France at the time -- from the poorest sections of Paris to the opulence of Versailles with its blood-red marble walls.
What a wonderful book for any middle schooler through high schooler. I love it when an author can make history come alive -- and author Bradley has done just that in The Lacemaker and the Princess.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Historical Fiction Pick: The Lacemaker and the Princess
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Labels: books for teens, gift book, historical fiction, independent readers, middle grade novel, middle school reading, mother and daughter, princesses
Monday, October 15, 2007
Anyone Up for Some Adorable Picture Books?

Mondays stink. Even my girls think so. They are OK with school, and they love their teachers and friends, but still, Monday mornings at my house are filled with moans and groans (mine included).
Everyone needs some cheering up on Mondays -- so here are a few picture books for girls (all right, for boys too) that will make you smile on a Monday or any day....
First, give Plaidypus Lost, by Janet Stevens and Susan Stevens Crummel a try. Susan came and did an author's visit at my kid's school last spring, and I was lucky enough to be in the audience. Once you've read a few of her books (which she collaborates on with her illustrator sister Janet), you can imagine how funny she was in person.
Plaidypus Lost (that's right P-L-A-I-D) is a tribute to best loved toys everywhere -- most especially those stuffed friends that go everywhere -- the ones that parents live in fear of losing (see my posts about Knuffle Bunny). This stuffed creature is made out of, yep, you guessed it -- a plaid flannel shirt -- and is constantly in danger of being lost forever. Of course, he is always found by his owner who swears she will "never, ever, ever" lose him again.
With clever, sing-songy prose that is as fun to read as it is funny -- this is one of those books that girls of all ages will love to read -- whether by themselves or with a grown-up.
Another great picture book for girls is Cha-Cha Chimps by Julia Durango. This counting book is filled with hilarious illustrations by Eleanor Taylor and clever rhyming verses. Girls will love this literary dance lesson and mom readers will especially will love the end, when Mama Chimp escapes for a little cha-cha-ing of her own.
I love books that leave us laughing and reading together. These are a few that are sure to leave you and your girls doing the same.
Remember, EVEN Mondays can be fun when you sit down and read a book with your girls!
Enjoy!
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Labels: animals, bedtime books, emergent reader, family, gift book, grandparent, independent readers, picture books, read aloud books, rhyming picture books
Friday, September 14, 2007
Quiet Books Before a Not-So-Quiet Weekend

As I sit at my laptop and count down the minutes until the girls get out of school for the weekend, I am soaking up the quiet.
After a summer of non-stop noise, I relish the hush that falls over the house when I get back from morning drop off. I am able to work on writing assignments, balance the checkbook, do some laundry, go for a walk, eat lunch, and write for fun (to me -- that's fiction).
I know very well that in just a few hours there will be screaming, conspiring giggles, pounding footsteps up the stairs and questions. "Mom, can I ... have a popsicle, can I watch TV, can I keep this snake I just found?"
We all need our quiet time -- am I right? Even children need something non-narcotic to lull them into a relaxed state. I advocate using books for this purpose.
One of my favorite "quiet" sleepy-time books that I read to my girls for years is the classic The Big Red Barn by Margaret Wise Brown. This is a perfect book for all girls who still appreciate read aloud books. The rhyme is rolling and charming, the illustrations, by Felicia Bond, are so adorable -- your girls will love to scan the pages for little suprises.
Now that my girls are older (and have read The Big Red Barn about a million times) they prefer picture story books like Fancy That by Esther Hershenhorn. This book, about a limner (painter of portraits) named Pip enthralls my girls every time we open it up.
The story tells a vivid tale of life in the mid-1800s (through gorgeous illustrations by Megan Lloyd) -- but it also weaves a story of determination, finding one's calling and family love.
Sounds like a lot for a picture book, but Hershenhorn and Lloyd have done such a fantastic job of layering this story and its illustrations -- and my girls delight in discovering all the patterns that occur throughout the pictures and text.
Pip and his sisters are left at the end realizing that siblings are a true gift (sometimes I like to reiterate that once or twice when I finish reading), and when I put my girls to bed, they are smiling and hopefully, maybe thinking that they've got it pretty good.
I hope you have some quiet time this weekend -- I know I probably won't -- but that's OK. As my own mother keeps reminding me -- someday they'll go off to college and there won't be noise after school.
That's the kind of quiet time that I'm more than willing to wait for....
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Labels: art, bedtime books, board books, emergent reader, family, gift book, historical fiction, independent readers, picture books, quiet books, read aloud books
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Books, Books, Everywhere! Part I: The Board Book Years

Today my living room looks like the children's section of the library has exploded inside of it.
We are having our upstairs carpets cleaned on Wednesday and are taking this opportunity to purge all Happy Meal toys, broken toys and toys that haven't been touched since Christmas 2002.
And we're weeding through books. Emptying out five bookcases, we see what a collection we've amassed over the years since our first daughter was born. So now all of these books are piled high downstairs while my husband moves the bookshelves out of the girls' rooms -- hopefully enabling the carpet guys to nail any lurking dust mites.
AND while hubby's doing the heavy lifting, I've got the task of deciding which books need to go bye-bye. This has proved harder than I thought.
It's an inherited problem -- I grew up in a house where, even during lean years -- there were always books. These books were proudly displayed in over-stuffed bookcases -- reading material that ranged from the Warren Commission Report on the assassination of JFK to my great-grandmother's time-worn cookbooks. As a result, I think it's in my blood to feel funny about actually getting rid of books.
But still -- there are quite a few that my girls no longer read -- and many which they were never crazy about to begin with. I start with those -- make a pile to donate -- and then I stumble on some baby board books.
I find Do You Know New?, by Jean Marzollo, a book that I read over and over again to both of my girls, even as infants. The cute rhyme scheme and the mirrored page at the end were irresistible to both of them.
I can still feel their wiggling little selves in my lap. I'd read: "Do you know blue?" Then I'd ask them the color of the sky and they'd point to the page with chubby toddler fingers and say "Boo!"
Another great book series that my girls enjoyed was the "My First" series by DK Publishing. These are a type of first dictionary -- introducing the concept that every object has a word to go along with it -- an early reading lesson. Plus the pictures are stimulating and colorful and my girls loved pointing to them as I'd call out the corresponding word.
And they liked to chew on them too. Answer me this -- how's a mom supposed to get rid of a book that has her baby's teeth marks etched in the corners? -- even if that baby is now 9 years old?
Nope, sorry, can't do it -- maybe next time we have the carpets cleaned. But not today.
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Labels: baby books, board books, early readers, gift book, picture books, read aloud books
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Classic Picture Book: Brave Irene

Every two weeks my girls and I go to the library and check out an enormous pile of books (though I do encourage the girls to store them in one place it can get awfully difficult to keep track of them all!). I am often surprised by the amount of picture books that they bring home and dismiss relatively quickly -- I keep a close eye on these things and take note of the books that they want to read again and again.
One of the books that they can't get enough of is the picture book classic Brave Irene, by William Steig. Perhaps best known today as the author of the original Shrek!, Steig hits the nail on the head with this sweet picture book -- and in my capacity as a "girl book" reviewer, I see tremendous value in this story. Why do my girls like this picture book so much? I think they can see themselves in the main character, Irene.
Irene is a good daughter, who must deliver a dress that her sick mother has made for the duchess. On the way to the duchess' house, Irene encounters a fierce snowstorm. The storm becomes a character in the story that battles against Irene's equally fierce determination. But just when the storm seems ready to declare victory, Irene's ingenuity shines through and she finds her way past the trouble.
Steig's illustrations bring Irene to life, and I love the writing especially as Irene shouts at her nemesis, the wind. But my favorite part is the end, when we see so clearly the love between Irene and her mother.
This book makes a great gift from one generation to the next -- my own mother sent my oldest daughter a copy several Christmases ago. It's a wonderful story of adventure, hope and determination -- a wonderful message to send to any girl.
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Labels: adventure book, early readers, easy readers, family, gift book, grandparent, independent readers, mother and daughter, picture books, read aloud books, winter