Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Underneath


The Underneath by Kathi Appelt (J APP)

This Newberry Honor and National Book Award Finalist book was hailed by many critics as “lyrical.” I read this book with high expectations, only to finish wondering how it had garnered such high praise. The story is woven together with seemingly unrelated plotlines that leave the reader wondering what is going on until the threads finally converge in one climatic moment.

One plotline involves a bloodhound named Ranger who is forever chained to his master’s porch and a calico cat and her kittens Sabine and Puck who all live under the cruel Gar Face’s decrepit house in the East Texas swamps. Gar Face abuses the animals and one day takes Puck and his mother to the swamp to feed them to the giant alligator he is obsessed with killing. Puck escapes and must find a way back to save Ranger and Sabine from Gar Face’s cruelty.

In another plotline, a character named Grandmother Moccasin is trapped in a pot buried near a tree as punishment for her crimes, which are detailed in an ancient Indian story plot thread.

The novel’s “lyrical” language is annoying, but perhaps it is best suited for reading aloud. The language and style of the book seemed designed in such a way as to be literary and artistic at the expense of spinning a good yarn.

Reviewed by Margaret Ballard

The Tale of Two Mice


The Tale of Two Mice by Ruth Brown (E BRO)

Billy is a mouse who lives in a baseboard inside a big house with his older brother Bo. One night they run out of food and are forced to leave the safety of their baseboard in search of nourishment. Bo sees the cat every step of the way, but when Billy turns to look, he sees object arranged in such a way that they give the illusion of being a scary beast, and believes his little brother is just paranoid.
Beautifully illustrated lift-the-flap pages and a special pop-up are essential to this humorous story.

Reviewed by Margaret Ballard

Tillie Lays An Egg


Tillie Lays an Egg by Terry Blonder Golson (E GOL)

Tillie likes to lay her eggs in unusual places such as the porch, the laundry basket, and inside a pickup truck, rather wait for her turn with the traditional nesting boxes her fellow chickens share.

Vivid color photographs of the author’s chickens, on which the story is based, accompany the simple, fun text. On each page, a chicken asks where Tillie laid her egg. Read it to see of you can find all the places Tillie laid her egg.
The author has a Hen Cam where you can watch her chickens.

Reviewed by Margaret Ballard

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go



Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go (Circle of Heck #1) by Dale E. Basye

When siblings Milton and Marlo Fauster die in a giant marshmallow sculpture explosion, their souls descend into Heck, the netherworld where the souls of bad kids go for rehabilitation and punishment. Marlo is an experienced shoplifter, but Milton is a Boy Scout and straight-A student and believes he was sent there by mistake.

In Heck, children go to a school run by Bea “Elsa” Bubb, Principal of Darkness, and take classes such as home economics taught by Lizzie Borden and P.E. with Blackbeard the Pirate. The cafeteria in Heck serves atrocious food and houses a sappy singing purple dinosaur who hugs children against their will. Events take a turn for the worse for Milton when Damian, the bully responsible for the fatal marshmallow explosion, dies and goes to Heck. Milton and Marlo, along with their new friend Virgil determine to escape from Heck and return to the world of the living.

The premise of the book is creative and leads one to believe that the story will be interesting and worth the time. Unfortunately, the book fails to be either. Filled with too many puns, the story drags on leaving the reader to wonder if perhaps they are experiencing Heck in a way the author did not intend.

Reviewed by Margaret Ballard

Monday, January 4, 2010

What's your New Year's Resolution?



Is it to learn how to do something new?

Maybe it's to get better grades?

Improve a skill?

Whatever your goal the library can help!

For example this week at the Central Library you can
  • hear stories at Storytime (did you know we have 5 each week?)
  • learn at a Little Bit of Science (Thursday at noon, for preschoolers)
  • improve your drawing at Get Graphic (Friday at 4:15, ages 8 to 14)
  • learn how to create paper art in Origami (Saturday at 2, 8+)
  • or get some help with your homework (Saturday at 10, grades 1 to 8)
So, as you are making your plans for conquering this brand new year, think about this:

The library...what can we do to help?

A Crooked Kind of Perfect by Linda Urban


Zoe Elias is a ten year old girl with big dreams. HUGE, really.

The problem is, life doesn't always give you want you want.

You can tell that right away in the book because the first chapter is titled: How it was Supposed to Be. The second chapter: How it is.

Zoe faces a lot of the same issues most young girls do, like:
  • School (ugh)

  • Best friends (or rather friends who used to be your best friend, but have decided that they like hanging out with someone else now just because they live in the same big house neighborhood and love wearing the same sparkling t-shirts)

  • Strange friends (like the one that follows you home from school each day...doesn't he have a home of his own?)

  • Parents (A mom who is always at work, and a dad who doesn't like to leave the house)

Author, Linda Urban, gives Zoe a great voice. She is funny but not mean and let's not forget...she can play a mean organ.

Oh? Did I forget that part?

What Zoe really wants....is to learn how to play the piano.

What Zoe has...is an organ. A Perfectone D-60. (It's in the book!)

Turns out she is pretty good at it too!

This is a fun book about realizing that life doesn't have to be perfect to be ok.

(reviewed by Marianne Follis)

Washington at Valley Forge by Russell Freedman



I love reading about the Revolutionary War for many reasons:
  1. 1) My family fought in the American Revolution and for a long time after the war, our Philadelphia based family named children "George."

  2. 2) I grew up in Philadelphia, so we whenever we drove around the city, there were constant reminders of the role it played in the history of our country.
That being said, to me Valley Forge was just a really big park that was right outside of town. Yes, I knew that George Washington and his army spent a winter there, and I read about their hardships in history, but this book really solidified what these soldiers endured and just how far away 20 miles can be!

This book covers the six months that General Washington and his troops were camped at Valley Forge.

Russell Freedman is one of my favorite nonfiction writers. He is one of those rare authors who can make learning new things painless. His narrative voice draws you in as no history text book can...."Private Joseph Plumb Martin leaned into the icy wind, pushing one sore and aching foot ahead of the other and kept on marching." One of 11,000 soldier marching on foot through the brutal winter of Pennsylvania, these half starved and tattered men walked even when their shoes fell apart..."on bare and bleeding feet." (p.1)

While the language and words transports you to another time and place, copies of original sketches and artwork, like a page from a American Manual of Arms, depicting the drill exercises of Continental soldiers. (p. 55)

A clear and concise timeline heads up the back matter of the book, along with excellent source notes, a bibliography, picture credits and an index.

An informative and touching look at the founding of our nation and the men who suffered and died for this cause.

(reviewed by Marianne Follis)