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Category Archives: Fiction

Grab bag of books

These last few weeks have far and away been the hardest of my school librarian career but one thing has remained steady and that’s the challenge I gave myself once COVID closed the doors to our school building and that was to read at least a book a day. Yes, I’m back in school, but we’re teaching our kids virtually which is a blog post for another day. And I’ve still been able to maintain a book a day so far. Here were some of the books I’ve read recently:

  • Witch Hat Atelier, Vol. 6
    • Pre-order and purchased in print because I will own every book in this series
  • The Bird Way audiobook
    • I’m a nut for nonfiction animal books
  • Hello, Neighbor!
    • I’ve been diving into the world of Fred Rogers and this picture book by Matthew Cordell was delightful
  • Every Body Looking
    • Verse novels are more commonplace formats but Iloh chose this format wisely for this heavily biographical story
  • Flyy Girls, books one and two
    • A series by Woodfolk that are neatly-packed and easily accessible titles with realistic characters who work through their problems with the help of friends
  • Poisoned Water: How the Citizens of Flint, Michigan Fought for their Lives and Warned a Nation
    • It’s as riveting as it is upsetting to read
 

Books with a side of food appreciation

The other day I was with a friend who has a deep love for good food as do I. She chose a perfect place to go and we shared plates and mmm-ed our way through the brunch. Not only do I love the act of eating good food, I love reading about food too– fiction, nonfiction, essays, you name it. Here is a roundup of some recently-read favorites in no specific order. 

This quick nonfiction book is just a little different in that it’s not really about celebrating food, but instead broadening the horizons of what can be used as food because of the changing climate. Specifically how insects are good protein sources and some weeds are actually great on a sandwich. Right before Thanksgiving I was treated to an insect quesadilla by our AP Environmental teacher who does “Bugsgiving” before the break for students to try alternative protein sources in food. I had recently recommended he read Messner’s Chirp and he sent me down that delightful treat. Food.

I’ve already blogged about this book and Danyal’s love of cooking even when it means his parents disapproval is heartwarming and fierce. Cooking and/or baking is many things to many people: let it be a career or let it be a hobby, but no one should tell you not to pursue a passion you have and this YA book sends that message. 

While not really centered on food, Mila moving to the farm in order to tutor and find respite does have more than one foray into the appreciation of farm-fresh food and flowers which helps her heal. The family sells flowers and food at the farmer’s market each week and the farmhouse table in which all of the adopted kids, “employees”, and adults sit for meals is cozy and heartfelt in how sharing both the ritual of making food and breaking bread is a healing balm. 

I never knew I needed a tea pet to keep me company while sipping tea until I read Teatime Around the World. It shares rituals and cultural ways to prepare tea around the world with brightly colored scenes and sparing narrative. I learned more about my lifeblood: tea and new ways to prepare and enjoy it.

What happens when there’s a friendly (not so friendly) food competition in school as a way to get back at your ex? That’s half of the story of The Secret Recipe for Moving On. Ellie has just had a hard breakup with her boyfriend who has moved on, but she needs a reason to do just that and putting her energy into the misfit group she’s assigned in Home Ec is just the recipe. 

Two girls come together in a shared mission to get their mothers together and create the best dish to enter into a competition even when their initial meeting was tepid at best. Sarah and Elizabeth are from two different cultures and if they place their trust in each other, the best kind of dish can emerge. It’s about friendship and food with the most romantic and delightful title. 

This is only a handful. I love how food seeps into many stories be it picture books or ones for adult audiences. Do you have a recent favorite that references food?

 

A readathon in pictures

I’m a shameless promoter for the Dewey’s 24-hour readathon because it’s a welcome break from other life activities in order to spend time doing something I love. 

Here is my readathon in pictures and narrative:

I always end the readathon by thanking my husband for tolerating being ignored for generally all of the event or hearing the echo of an audiobook wherever I’m moving in the house. He built the fire for ambience on a beautiful summer night when I enjoyed my amaretto cocktail at the 8pm end time in celebration. 

I also high-five my two boys who are now middle schoolers who participate– both for about 8 hours of the 24 hours. They packed it in around 12:28am for bed which I wasn’t expecting since they were at a sleepover the night before. 

There was the midnight-ish snack which has become a readathon tradition, having a hand-packed pint or pre-packed pint of ice cream from Stewart’s, which is totally an upstate New York thing. I picked a seasonal hand-packed pint called Mango Dragon Fruit Sherbet and it was stellar. It was a perfect pick for a blast of summer in a cup. 

Which if you can see the book pictured with the ice cream, it lent itself to the hour 7 Instagram challenge of matching your book cover- I think I nailed it. While I didn’t post the picture until later for the hour 13 challenge, when I’m munching and reading a print book, here is my favorite recent gift: a book weight. This has saved my reading life in so many ways. 

Another tradition is my bathtub reading. I’m of the same mind as Sylvia Plath who is quoted as saying

There must be quite a few things a hot bath won’t cure, but I don’t know many of them.

So a few book options came with me into the tub. I don’t have a fancy set up but I did throw in some bath salts. 

And even though the goal is 24 hours of reading, I also still have a household to keep running, so I spent a few of those hours still doing housework or cooking while listening to an audiobook. And I got my workout in too, which was a square on the BINGO card. I listened to The Feather Thief while hitting the elliptical. This audiobook is also another tradition for me for readathons, reading or listening to a book about animals, this one about a heist of bird feathers that is part of a larger ring of the illegal sales of banned bird species skins and feathers. While I did finish that one, I also rolled into the other audiobook about a girl growing up with her grandfather who was a beekeeper. 

I spent most of the day Saturday outdoors since the early morning thunder and lightning ushered in a cool but still warm weekend day where I also enjoyed some iced coffee. I don’t always drink coffee, but when I do, it’s iced

I take breaks throughout with my audiobook on, including eye breaks in general but also when I moderate a few hours of Goodreads discussions on the readathon page. In addition, I co-hosted hour 7’s post on their WordPress site. I love the connection to other readers and find it’s another way to do this and also show my appreciation for the organizers. 

Alas, I was getting close to the end and knew I had a blackout BINGO card which I shared along with my read stack when the clock struck 8pm. Needless to say, I slept well that night: a combination of sleep deprivation and a beautiful summertime fire.

Until October 24th, bookworms!

 

Outstanding book of the month for July 2020

What I have enjoyed about starting this post at the end of each month is that it forces me to review what I’ve read and refile my thoughts about them and also rank them– not picking the top seven or top three, but really picking one that stuck out.

Behold, July’s outstanding book…. Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron.

There are plenty of fans of retellings out there and if you are one of them, then make sure this one is on your TBR. The book is built on strong, memorable characters and challenging society (in this fantasy novel and in real life). It’s hard to separate Sophia and Constance, one readers meet Constance. Both have their motivations, Constance several generations removed from the stepsisters of Cinderella’s story, but Sophia wants to challenge the status quo of this kingdom, lorded over by the prince. She sees her friends readying themselves for the ball where they will be selected by a man who can then do whatever he pleases with her. Not only does Sophia not want to marry, she doesn’t want a husband. Erin has been her love for quite some time but is reluctant to run away from the kingdom with Sophia and is instead resigned to a life similar to everyone else’s.

And it’s Sophia and Erin’s first ball, that is one of several scenes in the book that are memorable. The ballroom itself appears in climactic scenes in the story to anchor the fantasy that most readers have of the Cinderella narrative. And Bayron turns it on its head, especially when the united pair of Sophia and Constance along with the fairy godmother raise Cinderella from the dead in another scene. How else can you alter your view of the sparkling, glass-slippered Cinderella than to raid her tomb and use a potion to reinvigorate her for a few minutes? Just as your version of a fairy godmother changes when the girls go into the White Wood and find her too.

Because not all that glitters… and one of the memorable quotes is what Sophia knew in her gut from the start but is slowly revealed as she goes on her quest to take down the prince.

I think sometimes we make the mistake of thinking monsters are abhorrent aberrations, lurking in the darkest recesses, when the truth is far more disturbing. The most monstrous men are those who sit in plain sight, daring you to challenge them.

Yes, the entire book is that powerful with a few crazy happenings in between. The feminist perspective with intersectional characters and a challenge of stories we hold dear not only feels so right for 2020, but also for our teens.

If Bayron now decides to do some more retellings, I’ll be waiting over here with my cup of tea.

 

Rewind: Recently-read graphic novel favorites

Today I’ll be co-presenting with Jack Phoenix, a public librarian who wrote a book called Maximizing the Impact of Comics in Your Library for School Library Connection (SLC) via webinar. We’re walking through five practices to transform your libraries as it relates to graphic novels, so it goes without saying that I’m going to share some recently-read favorites in no particular order.

  • Heavy Vinyl (Volumes 1 & 2) by Usdin
  • The Tea Dragon Festival (Tea Dragon #2) by O’Neill
  • Motor Crush #2 by Fletcher
  • Miles Morales: Spider-Man (Volumes 1 & 2) by Ahmed

Yes, all of these happen to be fiction and I’ve definitely read a handful of nonfiction titles too that you can check out on my Goodreads account. Suffice it to say, these were the ones that stuck out because of their story and their artwork.

I have a huge student fan of Motor Crush, so when I saw volume 2 was out via Hoopla, I pounced in reading it. And it was just how I remembered the world from volume 1, just like Tea Dragon.

As for Miles Morales, you can’t go wrong with the action and adventure in addition to the humor amidst the seriousness. It’s probably also while I was so caught up in Heavy Vinyl. A less sci-fi version of Paper Girls, these ladies who work at Vinyl Destination in the 90s moonlight as a fight club working to solve a mystery. The strength of their individuality is made stronger when they’re together.

There’s nothing better than feasting visually on well-made graphic novels when the story is as strong as the illustrations which I can say is why I’m advising everyone take a look at these.

 
 

Outstanding book of the month for June 2020

This solo book club choice is daunting each and every month! I’ve already shared a post about my adoration for the unpublished Punching the Air, so while I could make it my outstanding book of the month, there were a few others. I’m going to cheat here and give you a few of the other runners-up beside Zoboi and Salaam’s.

  • The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple by Jeff Guinn
  • Watch Over Me by Nina LaCour
  • Heavy Vinyl: Riot on the Radio (Volume 1) by Carly Usdin

So, then there’s only one other and it’s a yet-to-be-published title that you should be on the lookout for.

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More Than Just A Pretty Face by Syed M. Masood

This romantic comedy is layered. It’s certainly a romcom, but there’s also a depth that belies the title. Danyal has the good looks but he also wants to be a chef and that doesn’t go over well with his Southeast Asian parents who would be shamed if he didn’t try for a job that makes more money and to them has more prestige. While he might be in love with his best friend’s twin sister, another girl enters the picture: Bisma. She has brought shame to their family after a sex tape makes the rounds in their community. Her brutal father feels the only way to marry her now is to pay the man and for him to know the story upfront. Would they make the best match?

The generational conflict is heartbreakingly real and executed as well as another favorite of mine: American Panda by Gloria Chao. Each includes a push and pull between parent and teen with the intersectionality of culture. But it’s also their Islamic faith, which if you’re looking to add books to your library’s collection that explicitly include teen faith, that further deepens the character-rich story with Danyal the shining (and very funny) star.

Plus who doesn’t love an appreciation of geekdom for which Bisma has oodles of it. And, an outspoken younger sister to mix up a little trouble for her too.

The realization of each character feels refreshing and that cover is the kind that needs to be facing forward. Once you get past gushing over cover, you’ll also need your Post-it’s because there were plenty of quotables to reflect on. Make this one an August purchase when it comes out on the 4th.

 

Needing it, like, yesterday

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Certain books are felt so deeply that it usually takes another day or two to find the words to adequately express coherent thoughts about them. Punching the Air, a collaboration of Ibi Zoboi and Yusef Salaam is one of those books.

PunchingTheAirThanks for Edelweiss, I read a digital advanced copy and implore Balzer + Bray to fast track this book’s publication because I can’t possibly wait until September 1st to share Punching the Air with the teens (and staff) at our high school library. I think I have 12 copies on our order list and am debating whether to add more. Likewise, I’ve already mentioned it to a few art teachers about doing a collaboration using it.

With the combination of being told in verse and the powerhouse Zoboi penning it, the words are each tiny raindrops unleashing a torrential downpour of empathy. Amal is in lockup because the justice system is unfair. And the crudeness of his situation behind bars is exacerbated by his talent, thoughts, and loving relationship with his family that does not stop believing in him. That’s also where the book intersects with Salaam who, as one of the wrongfully convicted Central Park Five, uses the prejudice and injustices that transformed his life into a story that gives a mirror to so many black and brown boys.

I wrote down half a dozen lines that punched me in the gut (again from the advanced copy) to foster conversations about the school to prison pipeline.

“On the day of my conviction
I memorize
my inmate number
my crime
my time

On the day of my conviction
I forget
my school ID number
my top three colleges
my class schedule”

And it reminded me of the recent law that raised the age for teens convicted of crimes being punished through the adult legal system rather than a juvenile one in New York state, where I reside. Multiple passages were apropos of what I’m reading in the newspaper, seeing on the TV, scrolling through on social media.

My blog title says it all. I plead that Balzer + Bray push up the publication day because I can’t wait for September 1st. I need more people to read it so I can talk to them about it. I need it in the hands of my students. I can’t imagine that halfway through 2020, this book won’t get knocked off my top 10 for 2020.

 

Delightful Darius

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2019-01-28 08.48.38In January 2019, I was in Seattle, Washington attending the Youth Media Awards as a member of the William C. Morris Award Committee. The winner was Adib Khorram’s Darius the Great Is Not Okay. Fast forward to May 2020 and I had the distinct pleasure of reading an advanced copy of its sequel, Darius the Great Deserves Better. If it was still winter, it would be akin to sipping that morning hot cocoa while watching the fluffy snow fall but since it’s spring in our little area of upstate New York, reading Khorram’s follow up felt like the blooms of a magnolia tree. Brightness and beauty. 

DariustheGreatDeservesBetterDarius’s grandfather might not survive after their trip to Iran last year, the family’s financial situation sends Darius’s father to a project out of state, and the dream internship turned job that Darius has coveted might not be what he really wants. This is the backdrop where Darius’s romantic predicaments set the wheels in motion while he keeps up with school and soccer. The story is wholehearted. It’s big love. 

But if I stop to think about it, Khorram’s most valuable contribution is Darius’s constant questioning which provides a lens for teen readers to ask the tough questions of themselves and others. This internal dialogue mines the gold of Khorram’s personal storytelling. Authentic to the core.

And I can’t help but connect on a more personal level too in which the answer to anything in the Kellner family is tea. Their family is my family. And elementally, provides a mirror or window for how our cultures are who we are and we should embrace it: a celebration of our similarities and differences using literature.

It goes without saying that Darius the Great Deserves Better rises to the top much like Khorram’s debut because you can’t help but root for Darius. The writing is cerebral and emotional, using all of the senses which is the kind of experience that seeps into the cracks of our reading souls. I don’t ever want to leave Darius’s world– so whether Khorram decides to write a third or not, I’ll still feel satisfied that he’s bringing his A-game. Goooooooooooaaaaaaal. 

 

Dewey’s 24-hour readathon: Part II

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It’s so hard to say goodbye. Parting is such sweet sorrow. It’s not goodbye but see ya later. However you say it, the readathon is over for now. I’ll patiently await October and then if there’s a reverse readathon in the summer- I’m there. In the meantime, I’m celebrating my successes for the readathon and hope you’ll share yours if you participated too.

Here were my stats:

Time spent reading:

22 hours 38 minutes 02 seconds

Books read:

Junk Boy by Abbott (Digital)

Grown by Jackson (Digital)

Lunch Lady and the League of Librarians by Krosoczka (Digital)

The Season of Styx Malone by Magoon (Audiobook)

Ginger Kid by Hofstetter (Print)

Fifty Animals that Changed the Course of History by Chaline (Print)

Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates (Young Readers Edition) by Kilmeade & Yaeger (Print)

The Cool Bean by John (Digital)

My Neighbor Seki by Morishige (Print)

Chicken Every Sunday by Taylor (Print)

Part of Girls of Paper and Fire by Ngan (Print)

Almost all of American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century by Callahan (Audiobook)

Snacks and food consumed:

Saturday kickoff breakfast: overnight oats and tea,

Snacks: homemade chai tea biscotti, Sour Patch Kids, copious amounts of tea, Stewart’s Shops’ limited release peanut butter cookie ice cream,

Saturday dinner: Pulled pork and cabbage slaw tacos, Amaretto and cranberry

Sunday celebratory breakfast: chocolate milk, biscotti, and tea

Locations for reading:

Couch

Kitchen table

On the patio

On a bike trail

By the fire outside

Bathtub

 

Thank you to all who put it together time after time. There will be a change in lineup for next time as Heather and Andi will both step back while Gaby and Kate take the reins. Au revoir and welcome all in the same breath.

 

Ramadan & the case for the most epic book to accompany it

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How can I review a book that I just want to squeeze and hug? It’ll be tough to separate my feelings from a legitimate review– I’ll try– but you’re going to get the squealing schoolgirl with the professional librarian on this one.

OnceUponAnEidOnce Upon an Eid edited by S.K. Ali and Aisha Saeed with an additional thirteen contributors is a short story collection centered around the Eid celebration and going in to Ramadan, I can’t think of a better day to talk about it than today though the book doesn’t officially release until May 5th. I was able to get my hands on an early copy but look forward to purchasing my own copy (and dozens for my library) because there will be finalized artwork including G. Willow Wilson’s short story that is formatted as a comic.

I admit, I was also swept up in celebratory joy because I read it in between Christmas and New Year, so the excitement was doubled. From start to finish, the collection has an uplifting and fresh feel. It does grapple with socioeconomic disparities, illness, rigid traditions juxtaposed by newness while always providing positive vibes that ring forth on Eid. It embodies Rudine Sims Bishop’s much-quoted windows, mirrors, and sliding glass doors access that books provide.

Short story collections usually emit a glow from the get-go. There are many that even when one story may be weak, the entire collection carries to the finish line and doesn’t muddy the overall goal. There are some that are weak from start to finish. And then there are the gems where ever single story brings it’s own beautiful flower that put together becomes a most elegant bouquet: Once Upon an Eid is this kind of collection– an elegant bouquet. (How’s that for a gushy metaphor of admiration?)

The Muslim authors blend Muslim culture and religion. They share Eid fashion. Food. Relationships. The stories are told in comics, prose, and story. And this is its strength fortified by great storytelling and a rich knowledge to impart to others.

I can’t think of many books that I’ve actually re-read, but when I get the published copies I will re-read this one and place one on my personal bookshelf at home. I regret that when Aisha Saeed visited our high school this past November, that this hadn’t already come out to get a signed copy. So now, the new goal would be to see these two editors together, Ali and Saeed, to get them to sign the copy.

To close, Ramadan Mubarak!

And pre-order your copy of Once Upon an Eid, it’s the most epic book to accompany the Eid celebration to close the spiritual period of Ramadan.