Showing posts with label self-respect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-respect. Show all posts

The Little Engine That Could: Deluxe Edition Review

The Little Engine That Could: Deluxe Edition
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I read this book as a child. As a result, I grew up with the realization that if I tried hard enough and kept at it long enough, almost anything was possible! I also came away from this book realizing that it was good to help others. I believe that it is the SINGULAR most important book that a child 1-5 can have read to them!
Having said that, over the years I have given this story to many children and adults. You DO NOT WANT TO GIVE A PAPERBACK OF THIS STORY!!! Because it is the kind of tale that DESERVES being in a child's life for a long, long time. It is the kind of story that DESERVES to be passed down from generation to generation.
This book is WORTHY of that distinction. And believe it or not, I can recall that even last year I had a difficult time finding a hardback edition of The Little Engine... that was in print.
I can honestly say that this is the NICEST edition of The Little Engine That Could that I have seen. It is surrounded by red foil paper on the edges and on the back! And the pictures are reproduced from the ORIGINAL deluxe editions and are just GORGEOUS.
Does this cost a little more than the paperback? Yes. But it is a book that hopefully your child will even pick up when he is a teenager or a young adult....just to remind himself that yes...he really CAN accomplish a formidable task.

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Small Persons With Wings Review

Small Persons With Wings
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When a lawyer calls to tell Mr. Turpin that his father is dead, thirteen-year-old Mellie is only too happy to move away from her a school where she is teased and bullied to live in her Grand-Pere's inn. But when the Turpin family begins cleaning up the inn, Mellie discovers the family secret of an obligation to take care of the small persons with wings in exchange for a moonstone that has been in the family for hundreds of years. She is caught up (along with her parents and the boy next door) in a struggle by the small persons to regain their original magic at the cost of the Magica Artificia that has given them the illusion of beauty and comfort for the years since they gave up the moonstone. In the process Mellie allows herself to be friends with her neighbor and to cope with the bullying she has endured.
I love the opening chapters in this book that flash back to Mellie's childhood. As young Mellie, the unpredictable narrator, questions her reality, the reader is also unsure of what is real. Once the Mellie's motivation are in place the plot moves quickly with well-drawn characters, particularly Mellie as she convincingly navigates the ups and mostly downs of tweenage years. Descriptions of the fairies are vivid and delightful.
Caution: Mild language or inference of profanity and an ongoing reference to a "tampon incident".


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Five Flavors of Dumb Review

Five Flavors of Dumb
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Also appears on The Screaming Nitpicker.
After mouthing off to her high school's "it" band Dumb, Piper is stuck being their manager and has one month to get them a paying gig. She doesn't want to do it, but her parents raided her college fund to pay for an operation for her sister and Piper needs money. However, it's going to take a lot of work to turn Dumb into a commercial band. Between recruiting new members (one of whom lacks any talent), keeping the five flavors of Dumb from killing each other, pulling some cunning tricks to get Dumb places, fighting and making up with her family, and learning what music's all about, Piper has a lot on her plate. She can handle it. Well, she can if people will stop using her deafness as an excuse why she can't handle it.
I have heard nothing but praise for this book and was dying to get my paws on it and read it. That praise? Yeah, it is all deserved. This book is so good that it gave me the strong urge to cut my hair and dye it Atomic Pink.
It's not everyday you see characterization this strong in a young adult novel anymore. Get this: For once, the characters are deeper than puddles! Piper, as our heroine, is not perfect. She isn't always nice, she tricks people many times, and she provokes people more than once. She's also cunning, good at finding loopholes, and comes to see the band as more than a way to make money. Instead of her deafness characterizing her and being a disability, it's just another part of her. In fact, the abilities of lip-reading and signing that she gained because of her "disability" turn out to be valuable assets that help Dumb get ahead. She is deaf, but deaf is not her.
But the real star of this novel? That would be Kallie Sims, the "perfect girl" deconstructed. Initially, Piper dislikes her for being so perfect and as the novel goes on, the reader discovers that Kallie isn't perfect; she's a girl just like Piper. Kallie has a not-so-ideal home life, her fashionable clothes (that are bought with her mother's employee discount) get made fun of by her "friends" for being last season, and while she loves music with all her heart and connects with it in a way few people do, she can't play an instrument to save her life. This perfect girl is as imperfect as everyone else and even when she takes center stage late in the novel, she is still just a girl. I love Kallie. I'd love to see a sequel one day through her point of view.
Other characters, like angry green-haired guitarist Tash and Piper's music-loving brother/translator Finn, get their touches of depth too. Even Piper's parents get some depth! How often are the parents more than just background characters like this? The scenes where Piper fought with her dad or exhibited jealousy towards her baby sister Grace genuinely tugged at my heart strings. In fact, this had to be one of the most "real" novels I've ever read. Everything about it, from Piper's discovery of what music is about and who she is to the fight she has with her family to the fight the band has among themselves, felt so real to me.
Five Flavors of Dumb also gave me the worst case of novel whiplash I've ever had. On one page, I would be laughing so hard (my favorite quote came off page two and to preserve the magic, I will not speak of it) that I was given strange looks by other people if I was reading in public; in a few more pages, I would be ready to bawl like a baby because of any particular scene I found heart-wrenching. My poor Mom thought I was having mood swings! And keep in mind, of course, that I'm not an emotional reader. If I weren't so lazy, I would make a "made me cry" and "made me laugh" tag so people could see just how rare it gets.
Five Flavors of Dumb is now one of my favorite books of all time and I don't slap that label on books lightly. Only four other books have that title and this one right here is number five. I recommend this book to absolutely anyone. As long as you don't hate music (especially rock music), I think you'll enjoy Five Flavors of Dumb.

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Jersey Tomatoes are the Best Review

Jersey Tomatoes are the Best
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JERSEY TOMATOES ARE THE BEST is a deceptively light contemporary story that delves into the darker side of sports without getting preachy. Whether you're an athlete or not, girl or not, you'll find something to enjoy in this moving yet fun novel.
Henry and Eva are Jersey girls, best friends, and hardcore athletes. Henry is New Jersey's junior tennis champion, and Eva is on her way to becoming a world-renown ballet dancer. Their friendship has sustained them through disappointments and demanding parents, but when they separate to go off to different summer adventures--Henry to a nationally ranked tennis academy, Eva to the ultra-competitive New York School of Dance--can their friendship last through their different experiences and some shocking changes?
Padian's straightforward narration makes it very easy to relate to these Henry and Eva's situations. Few of us may be on Henry and Eva's level in terms of athletics, but it was still eye-opening to read about all the pressure they faced, the difficult choices they had to make. I thought that the girls' relationships with their parents was a pretty shockingly true portrayal of some overinvolved, living-out-their-dreams-through-their-children parents. The parents were realistically overwhelming: I didn't consider them exaggerations of the type, and instead could totally see this happening.
I am envious of Henry and Eva's friendship. These two, equal in pretty much everything, such as skill, looks, and wit, still displayed normal feelings of envy or inferiority at times. It was clear that the girls cared for each other very much, and yet their lives were clearly not wrapped up in the other's: they both have separate interests and dreams, after all.
Eva's heartbreaking eating disorder will resonate with anyone who has felt insecure in their bodies, often for all the wrong reasons. The voice in her head that yells at her felt a little extreme to me at times, but I am not one to judge for the voice's "accuracy;" I just recognize that this is something that definitely happens to people. Henry's romance at tennis camp also felt slightly contrived at times. Again, however, it may be that that was the point: their relationship was inseparable from their budding fame as star tennis players. And finally, as a Jersey girl myself, I thought it felt a little weird and unrealistic whenever Henry and Eva "acted Joisey": do people really do that? But hey, maybe they do.
These points didn't detract from my engagement with the story as a whole, however. JERSEY TOMATOES ARE THE BEST is a solid contemporary read, one that I would highly recommend to people looking for a good book involving female athletes.

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The Deer Dancer Review

The Deer Dancer
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I got this book at a bookstore the day it came in and I was so glad I did--it was a really inspiring story. The boy is dirt poor and he works his way up in life--dealing with many problems that seem real. I'd recommend it to anyone, of any age, who is interested in Indian life or in Mexico or the Zapatista uprisings, but would be especially right for very mature teenagers and twenty-somethings.

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Juan Araiza is a Yaqui Indian boy with no money, no shoes, no education, and no future. He leaves his village to search for his father a man he never knew in Mexico s second largest city. He doesn t find his father, but his native wit and grit take him all the way from the streets to a job in the federal government. He meets the charismatic Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos and soon finds himself feeling torn his head in the government job and his heart in the black-masked Zapatista fight for Indian rights.

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Slippery Willie's Stupid, Ugly Shoes Review

Slippery Willie's Stupid, Ugly Shoes
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Larry Peterson has accomplished many feats in this his first children's book: he has provided an entertaining and clever story that will definitely entertain youngsters, illustrated the book with absolutely first-class drawings, and has delivered a message much needed in the education of children (and parents alike!) - to learn to accept differences in others and in ourselves.
Willie Wiggins has an odd way of ambulating - he has slippery feet that cause him to slip and slide around, unable to climb tress or perform in other forms of play. He hates his slippery feet, and so does his mother and he is the laughing stock of his friends because he slips around instead of walking or running. His mother takes the matter in hand and has special shoes that will prevent Willie from sliding around. Problem? Willie hates the "stupidest, ugliest shoes in the whole world."
When Willie steps into his ugly stupid corrective shoes even his mother laughs at him as do all of his friends at school, making Willie miserable - until Willie wakes up from his dream and realizes he hasn't worn the new shoes yet! When he indeed puts on the shoes not only can he walk normally but he also becomes the envy of his friends for the fabulous new shoes he wears!
Peterson's story flows so well and is so well married to the illustrations that the book is at once engrossing and entertaining as well as being sophisticated. Caldecott and Newbery Awards alert! The only aspect of the book that in a way takes it from the intended reader is the added instructions at the end - well meant ways of listing things that are different in us and in other people and how to deal with these differences. It is one of those examples of overkill as the book is so beautifully done that adding the workbook or study guide at the end feels tacked on and extraneous and because the story and presentation itself makes such a finely honed point: it comes close to dumbing down the reader.
Final diagnosis? Excellent book by a fine new author/illustrator. Hopefully many more books will come from Larry Peterson and Tribute Books. Grady Harp, January 11

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Willie Wiggles hates his slippery feet. He just slips, slides and spins all over the place. But what he hates even more are the special shoes that have been made for him that will help him to walk just like all the other kids. Willie thinks that they are the "stupidest, ugliest shoes in the whole world."Discover how sometimes we worry about things about ourselves when actually there is nothing to worry about in the first place.

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Young Masters: Heart Of A Lion (Young Masters Little Wisdom Series) Review

Young Masters: Heart Of A Lion (Young Masters Little Wisdom Series)
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This Book, Heart of a Lion, was a gift I sent to my 8 year old grand nephew for Christmas.
Not only did he love it, he shared it with his 10 year old sister and she shared with some of her friends.I loved it and I'm not in the age range by many years. The words, music and art are amazing.These books are fun and also teach good thinking ideas for all who read them.I recommend this series to anyone wanting to express positive living in their families.
Keep up the good work, the world needs more books like this !

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Magic of Giving, The Review

Magic of Giving, The
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Reviewed by Sophia McElroy (age 8) for Reader Views (1/11)"The Magic of Giving" was a great story about a little boy named Marc who wanted to enter a talent show at his school to win one-hundred dollars. There was one problem: He didn't have a talent, so he went to the school library to find one. He found a book about how to do magic; he thought it was perfect! When Marc went back to his classroom he told his teacher.
He practiced every day and every night, but the other students didn't practice because they already practiced for a day or two. When the day of the talent show arrived, the other students did terrible. Marc did his magic and won the talent show! His last magic trick was the magic of giving. He knew how he was going to spend his money. You will be pleasantly surprised to find how he shares his winnings in "The Magic of Giving
Book received free of charge

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When Marc decides to enter the school talent contest, he is at first discouraged because, unlike all the other kids, he can't come up with a talent. But during a trip to the school library, he picks out a book about Harry Houdini and decides that his talent will be magic. He practices all week for the big contest, and when he wins the prize, he buys a Thanksgiving feast for his friend, whose father recently lost his job. This uplifting picture book for young readers encourages kids to develop their abilities and use their talents to help not only themselves but others.

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I, Emma Freke Review

I, Emma Freke
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I saved this book for my vacation in a family cottage where many family reunions have taken place. Everyone can relate to this book and how the character Emma felt. I thought of my nieces who are just this age and remembered back to that those "middle" years of school. It's funny, a perfectly delicious read no matter what your age!

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The Turkey Prince Review

The Turkey Prince
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According to the inner flap of this children's book, the story of "The Turkey Prince" is based on "an old Hasidic tale" but gives no other source info. However, the tale does have a known author: Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, known as the Breslover Rebbe, who first told it to his disciples in the early 1800s. It was later published in a collection edited by his chief disciple, Reb Noson of Nemirov, and can be found in English translation in "Rabbi Nachman's Stories" by Aryeh Kaplan (see pp. 479-480).
The tale itself is in the common domain, and appears in a number of other collections as "The Rooster Prince." (There is some debate as to exactly which barnyard bird "truthahn" originally referred to in Yiddish.) When I was a child I heard it told as "The Rooster Prince," and thought of the prince as being "chicken." The switch to "turkey" is more recent and might be because of modern English slang. In this book, the prince "knew he was a turkey" in the sense that he did not feel competent to one day become king and lead the people like his father did.
Like many classic fairy tales, the original version of the Turkey Prince was not intended to be a children's story. It was a parable that Rebbe Nachman told to his disciples about how to bring non-religious Jews back to Judaism, and/or how to become more Torah-observant onesself. A Jew who has left Judaism has forgotten who he truly is and, like the Prince, is sitting "naked" -- without the proper "garments" to clothe the soul. In recent years, Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum wrote an entire Hasidic self-help book based on this story, entitled "Under the Table and How to Get Up" (available here on Amazon.)
The original is quite short (only a page or so) and the prince is already crazy at the beginning of the tale. In this book, we go back and learn that this happened because he got stage fright at a royal banquet. This is followed by a detailed description (with cute illustrations) of how he took off his clothes. In the original, he sits stark naked under the table, but here he keeps his shorts on, which makes it appropriate for everyone in terms of modesty. After that, the book follows the original pretty closely, right down to the dialogue about how a turkey can wear clothes, eat good food, etc.
As in the original, various people come to the palace and try to cure the Turkey Prince. In the illustrations here, they are dressed in all sorts of costumes and silly hats, presumably to tempt him to wear clothes. But only the "unknown healer" knows the secret cure -- to pretend that he, too, is a turkey, make friends with the prince, and convince him that a turkey can do everything a normal person does. The original story ends here, but this book adds a follow-up about what happened to the prince when he grew up.
The School Library Journal review rather disparagingly called this a "psychological" story about "self-esteem", with a "psychiatric" cure that "may appeal more to adults who espouse its values than to children" (word in quotes are the Journal reviewer's). I disagree. This negative opinion is based more on the description from the inside flap (presumably aimed at parents who buy the book) than the story itself, which is no more "psychiatric" than any other parable. Hasidic children and adults were enjoying this story long before Sigmund Freud. Like many fairy tales, it is a teaching story with a moral, true. But it is also great fun, with just the right amount of silliness to get the point across without being preachy. And, like any good parable, it is a story that grows deeper with every telling. As a child I loved this story. As an adult Breslover Hasid, I thoroughly enjoyed this version. I recommend it to Hasidim and non-Hasidim alike.



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Based on a heart-stirring Hasidic tale, The Turkey Prince tells the story of a young prince who believes he is a turkey.One evening at a royal banquet, the flustered young prince is pushed forward to make a speech, but the pressure of it turns him into a turkey. People from miles around are called in to help . . . but nothing works until one day a mysterious healer comes to the palace. Stunning and unique illustrations capture the spirit of this unusual story, making The Turkey Prince a precious gift to anyone who has ever felt like a turkey inside.

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Truth with a Capital T Review

Truth with a Capital T
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If I had a daughter, I'd want her to read this. I love strong young female characters. Great story.

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Phileas's Fortune: A Story About Self-Expression Review

Phileas's Fortune: A Story About Self-Expression
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I can't recommend this book enough to parents who seek to teach their children that less is more and that it's not who you are, but what you do (and how you do it) that matters most. A lovely story. It was a little shorter than I expected, more of a picture book, but the illustrations are stunning. I read it to 3 of our boys ages 10, 5, and 2.5 - and they all enjoyed it on some level (my 5 year old liked it best). It's a deep yet simple message that kids can abosorb differently at different stages. Especially recommended for boys as the dark setting really works to grab their attention while the sweet, powerful message of expressing love is one parents will want their boys to understand.

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