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Bibliography: Flack, Sophie. (2011). Bunheads. New York: Little Brown Books for Young Readers.  ISBN: 978-0316126533

Plot Summary:  All 19 year old Hannah has ever wanted to do with her life is dance.  And she is so close to living her dream.  Dancing with the prestigious Manhattan Ballet, she and her friends, all fellow dancers, eat, drink, and sleep ballet.  When they aren’t dancing, they are getting ready for a show, attending dinners and galas to fund raise for the company, gossiping about other dancers, taking yoga and Pilates classes, and hoping to make soloist.  But when Hannah meets musician and non-dancer Jacob, everything starts to change.  What has she given up in order to be a ballerina?

Critical Analysis:  I feel in love with ballet when I saw The Nutcracker on television.  Up till that point, I had been studying clogging (which was lots of fun in its own way.)  I begged my mother to let me switch to ballet classes.  There was something so graceful, so beautiful, so perfect about the dancers I had seen.  Bunheads shows all sides of the ballet world.  The beautiful glitzy innocent perfect side of performance is exemplified through Matilda, the young daughter of a stage hand who is enthralled with ballet and adores Hannah.  The intense competitive sometimes dark side is shown through Hannah and her friends, who comfort and confide in one another but always compete and never fully trust.  There is rejoicing in compliments, getting cast in certain parts while at the same time jealousy and despair.  How did that dancer get chosen over me?  There are even horrible scenes where Hannah is told to lose weight in her breasts and a star dancer collapses.

Even when Hannah starts to question her world and her devotion to dance, there are still moments where the reader can see that she loves ballet–a dancing a combination in a quiet moment, going up into the flies to have the best view of the performance.  Flack does an excellent job of communicating Hannah’s emotions to the reader.  We see her eyes opening and her world expanding.  We feel her being pulled in many directions, her struggle to return to her dream once she realizes that there might just be more out there for her.

I loved this book for it’s realistic portrayal of the world of professional ballet, all the glitz and the glam and the dirt.  Rather like Hannah’s description of her costume for dancing Rubies in Balachine’s Jewels: “The costume is a cherry-red cropped Lyrca dress that hits just below the hip.  The bodice is adorned with glittering ruby crystals all the way down to my belly button….The costume is old and not easy to clean and has a distinctly human smell….If I look closely, I can see where the fabric has been bleached by the sweat of other dancers and places where missing jewels have been replaced with ones that don’t exactly match” (p. 273).

With the popularity of movies such as The Black Swan and television shows such as So You Think You Can Dance?, even girls who aren’t dancers will enjoy this book.

Readalikes: For more books featuring dance:  So You Think You Can (Read About) Dance

Review Excerpts: ”A multi-layered and absorbing good read by a promising debut novelist.”–Kirkus Reviews

“Exhilaration and drudgery, passion and exhaustion, exist side by side for dancers in the exalted Manhattan Ballet, a world unto itself, which Flack (a former New York City Ballet dancer) brings vividly to life in this strong debut.”–Publisher’s Weekly

“…[A]n entertaining read, shedding light on a world most readers know nothing about. After the success of the Oscar-winning Black Swan, this title will appeal to dancers and those with two left feet.”–School Library Journal

Reviewed from publisher provided advanced copy.  Amazon Affiliate: If you click from here to Amazon and buy something, I receive a percentage of the purchase price.

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Bibliography: Offill, Jenny and Nancy Carpenter. (2006).  17 Things I’m Not Allowed to Do Any More. New York: Schwartz and Wade.  ISBN: 9780375835964 (hc) 9780375866012 (pbk)

Plot Summary:  A mischievous little girl has a lot of seemingly good ideas but they all seem to get her in trouble.

Critical Analysis:  Books like this one make me miss being a children’s librarian and seeing new picture books and reading them at story time.  This one is so much fun, and such a marriage between the text and the artwork to tell the story, communicate the emotion to the reader.  The pictures, a combination of pen and ink drawings and digitally manipulated images on crumpled paper not only fill in some of the details, but also are the kind that children will want to examine even after the story is finished.  In addition, the text leaves room for the reader or listener to come up with their own ideas about what happens.  Or in my case, to think about other great ideas that might not turn out so well.  ”I had an idea…”

Review Excerpts:  ”Ingenious artwork–a flawless marriage of digital imagery and pen-and-ink–is indisputably the focus of this winning title….striking and subtle–real wood grain, blades of grass, the chrome-plated details on classroom furniture–all are seamlessly integrated around a winsome cast of well-drawn characters….just about picture-perfect”–School Library Journal

“The title is terrifically cheeky, and Carpenter…outdoes herself in these mixed-media illustrations….Kids will be intrigued by the pictures’ playful sense of composition as well as the heroine’s brazenness….”–Publisher’s Weekly

“Our mischievous but delightful heroine is the kind of kid who makes parents and teachers old before their time, but still makes us laugh….Carpenter combines a lively pen and ink black line with naturalistic colors and digital media….The mottled look of the paper is achieved by crumpling it and filing with an emery board; Adobe Photoshop is used to rescan and manipulate the type; bits of photo collage are added for a fresh visual look. The glue she is smilingly squeezing from the bottle on the jacket has an attractive three-dimensional quality.”–Children’s Literature

Reviewed from public library copy.  Amazon Affiliate: If you click from here to Amazon and buy something, I receive a percentage of the purchase price.

 

Edited to add: The winner of the giveaway is Andrea C.  Andrea, please e-mail susan at readspace dot net so I can send you your prize!

Bibliography: Nayeri, Daniel.  (2011). Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow.  Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press. ISBN: 9780763655266

Plot Summary:  Four novellas representing four different genres.  Toy Farm is a western unlike any other–a farm that grows living toys and a ranch the grows empty people.  Our Lady of Villains is science fiction, looking at how the near future morphs into the faraway future with the help of technology.  Wish Police is a police procedural about a team that locks up wishes that can’t or shouldn’t or won’t come true.  Doom with a View is a romance, if Death were in charge of the world.  So everyone dies in the end but love conquers all.

Critical Analysis:  Nayeri has written two previous books with his sister Dina, Another Faust and Another Pan.  Both were sort of retellings, or more re imaginings of classic tales and full of action, suspense and dread.  With these novellas. Nayeri wanted to do something a little different.  He decided to write stories that would appeal to boys and girls.  That would introduce readers to different kinds of stories that they didn’t realize they would enjoy.  According to his author’s note, he wrote all of them on his iPhone.

The sampler I have included the story Doom with a View.  I have to admit, it did take me a minute to get into the right frame of mind.  (The mention of The Princess Bride in the note should have been a clue.)  Nayeri has taken several age old tropes and turned them sideways.  Two families feuding but over the interior decorating world?  Two children destined to be together but they don’t even speak the same language?  One beautiful girl who Death takes by mistake is stuck in limbo, not waiting for the kiss of a prince, but for the paperwork and bureaucracy to clear up and return her to her life.  So so so funny!  I would have to say that this is unlike anything else being published for teens these days, and I only hope it is a sign that Nayeri has more in store, whether solo or with his sister.  I for one can’t wait.

There are some great commercials for the novels that I hope you will enjoy.

Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow – Our Lady of Villains Commercial from Candlewick Press on Vimeo.

Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow – Wish Police Commercial from Candlewick Press on Vimeo.

Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow – Doom With a View Commercial from Candlewick Press on Vimeo.

Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow – Toy Farm Commercial from Candlewick Press on Vimeo.

Also, you can download Toy Farm (Straw House) for free from Amazon for your own sample of these novellas.  And last, but certainly not least, the good folks at Candlewick are providing a copy for me to giveaway.  Just leave a comment below and you’ll be entered to win!  Contest closes Saturday, October 29.

Review Excerpts: “[The] novellas riff on influences as varied as The Wizard of Oz, Mad Max, and the sardonic Death of Pratchett’s Discworld…Strong and assured, these stories seamlessly merge different styles, teasing out and playing with readers’ assumptions about how westerns, fantasy and fairy tales work…provocative and deeply satisfying.”–Kirkus Reviews

Reviewed from publisher provided advanced copy.  Amazon Affiliate: If you click from here to Amazon and buy something, I receive a percentage of the purchase price.

October 22, 2011

End-Oh I had such good intentions to sleep for a just a few hours and then get up and read some more.  So didn’t happen.  So I didn’t make my goal, but I did have fun.

  1. Which hour was most daunting for you? The last one :)
  2. Could you list a few high-interest books that you think could keep a Reader engaged for next year? I really felt like Bunheads by Sophie Flack held my attention, but that is possibly because I love the subject (ballet) so much.
  3. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year?  Ummm, not really.  I just wish I could find the magic way to stay up longer!
  4. What do you think worked really well in this year’s Read-a-thon?  My favorite part is interacting with everyone else.
  5. How many books did you read?  I read a lot of pieces of books, but not one complete book.
  6. What were the names of the books you read?  Doom with a View by Daniel Nayeri (novella), Bunheads by Sophie Flack, The Moving Toyshop by Edmund Crispin, “Some Fortunate Future Day” by Cassandra Clare (short story), Wicked Autumn by G.M. Malliet, 17 Things I’m not allowed to do any more by Jenny Offill and Nancy Carpenter, To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn, Vixen by Jillian Larkin.
  7. Which book did you enjoy most?  Bunheads I think.
  8. Which did you enjoy least?  The Moving Toyshop, but I think that is because I was feeling sleepy so I wasn’t “getting” it very well.
  9. If you were a Cheerleader, do you have any advice for next year’s Cheerleaders?  I wasn’t a cheerleader but I liked having them stop by!
  10. How likely are you to participate in the Read-a-thon again? What role would you be likely to take next time?  I am sure I will participate again, probably as a reader.

11:44 p.m.-Read Cassandra Clare’s story from Steampunk. Have made it through several chapters of Wicked Autumn by G.M. Malliet.  Drunk 2 large glasses of Diet Mountain Dew.  And with all of that, all I feel is more and more sleepy.  Every time I do a read-a-thon I say this will be time I stay up and read.  And every time (at least so far) I don’t do it.  I think if I can just push through I’ll get a second wind but so far I have never found out.  And tonight won’t be that time either.  Good night.  7 hours read.

10:18 p.m.-Got back from the party and started reading again just before 9.  (I made way too much food, but we’ll just enjoy crostini for a few days.)  I finished Bunheads, which I loved.  Every time I read a book with ballet in it, it makes me wish for more books about ballet.  I do have this post about dance titles but it could perhaps stand to be updated.  I drank a couple of cups of coffee, one with chocolate syrup added (YUM!).  Thinking about hitting the diet Mountain Dew.  Started The Moving Toyshop, but it might not be the best choice when I am starting to feel a little sleepy.  I only have about a billion other things I could read…now just to choose one.  5 hours, 55 minutes read.

5:45 p.m.-Taking an extended break for dinner and then off to a party.  Finally got to sink my teeth into Bunheads.  I am loving it so far.  I did buy a 2 liter of Diet Mountain Dew when I was at the store earlier, so perhaps I’ll do something wild and crazy like stay up all night.  Or at least until 12:00…4 hours and 35 minutes read.

4:02 p.m.-Cooking done!  Chili is simmering for dinner in a few hours.  Eggplant and sun-dried tomato tapenade in the fridge for party later.  (Not sure why I don’t like olives but I do like tapenade.)  Dear husband was a little surprised I bought pre-made toasts at the store, but I wanted a few minutes to read!  I listened to more of Vixen while cooking.  Up next, Bunheads3 hours, 15 minutes read.

2:48 p.m.-Back from errands.  Picked up Death Angels by Ake Edwardson and The Moving Topyshop by Edmund Crispin at the library.  Both are for discussion on 4 Mystery Addicts, a listserv I joined this week.  I also picked 17 things I’m not allowed to do any more by Jenny Offill and Nancy Carpenter.  It was recommended on another listserv, and I just had to get it.  I don’t read many picture books since I stopped being a children’s librarian, so this is a real treat.  I managed to listen to 30 minutes of To Fetch a Thief by Spencer Quinn and another 30 minutes of Vixen by Jillian Larkin.  Then I stopped by a few blogs.  Now I am back to the audio while I prepare eggplant and sun-dried tomato tapenade crostini for a party tonight and chili for dinner.  2 hours, 30 minutes read.

12:30 p.m.-Back home.  Made a grocery list, frozen pizza for lunch.  Stopped by a few blogs to see what others are reading and how the read-a-thon is going for them.  Stopped by read-a-thon page to realize I had won a prize!  Cool.  I never win anything, especially if they are going for time reading on these events.  Now, off to the library and perhaps craft store before hitting the grocery store.  I will get in some audio book time and contemplate caffeine for later.  I bet I am the only person in Publix with earbuds NOT listening to tunes.

9:30 a.m.-Just finished reading “Doom with a View,” one of the novellas in Daniel Nayeri’s new book, Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow.  Nothing like a little Death, first thing in the morning.  Getting ready to go to a memorial service, so perhaps that is appropriate in an odd kind of way. 1 hour, 30 minutes read.

8:00 a.m.–So excited for another read-a-thon, although this one will be a bit of a challenge because of the various activities I have going on today.  Find out more about this read-a-thon by visiting Dewey’s Read-a-thon.  There will be posts throughout the day including  mini-challenges.  And of course, prizes! It isn’t too late to sign up.  You can also follow along on twitter, look for the #readathon tag.

Here is my introduction:

1)Where are you reading from today?  Naples, Florida

2)Three random facts about me…

a) I love television shows that are targeted to teens but today will be all about the books.

b)  I am a librarian at a university.

c) I love ballet (see 3 below).

3) My TBR pile is always huge and I always think I will read more for these read-a-thons then I do.  I would like to finish Bunheads by Sophie Flack.  (ballet=win!)

4) Even though I have a packed day, I want to read more than then 11 hours I read last time I participated.

5) My favorite part about read-a-thons, besides the luxury of reading, is connecting with other readers.  Visit blogs, post on twitter, share what you are reading.

Feeling a little sleepy this morning.  Going to start my reading off with a sampler from Straw House, Wood House, Brick House, Blow by Daniel Nayeri…and coffee.

Bibliography: Cain, Chelsea. (2011).  The Night Season. New York: Minotaur Books.  ISBN: 978-0312619763

Plot Summary:  Heavy rains have caused the Williamette River to swell, threatening the city of Portland.  Several people have been caught in the swiftly rising waters and appear to have drowned.  The medical examiner discovers that the latest victim was poisoned before she ever went into the water.  Other drownings are soon shown to be poisonings as well, and Archie Sheridan has a new serial killer on his radar.  Susan Ward is sure that the killings have something to do with the Vanport Flood of 1948.  Archie and Susan are racing against the rising waters, trying to track a killer without becoming his next victim.

Critical Analysis:  It hardly seems fair to the author or the reader to advertise this as book 4 in the Archie Sheridan/Gretchen Lowell series.  Gretchen barely makes an appearance, and when she does, it is secondary to the action and the story.  Don’t worry, there is still plenty of action, thrills, suspense and murder to go around.  But even more than that, the looming presence of the river, the rain and the rising waters add to the atmosphere, sense of place, a sense of urgency.  The story feels leaner and tighter than the previous entries in the series, perhaps because the focus really is on the core group of Archie and Susan with Henry and Clare, and the events are clustered within a short time frame.  It seems reviews are quite mixed, but count me as one who is pleased to see that Cain can write quite a story without an assist from the Beauty Killer.

Review Excerpts: “Perfect for readers who want to mix true crime history with their contemporary serial killers….The pace is as relentless as the floodwaters engulfing Portland.”–Library Journal

“[T[he story is deftly handled, the suspense is plentiful and Cain’s evocation of the gloomy atmosphere and Portland setting is superb.”–Kirkus Reviews

“Cain easily weaves the history of the real-life Vanport flood with her trademark heart-stopping moments, and fans will be pleased to see the series flourishing without Gretchen on every page.”–Publisher’s Weekly

“The enveloping floodwaters are every bit as terrifying as the octopus-toting killer (many of the key action scenes take place in or under the black water), and the river itself takes on a kind of evil persona, a superhuman antagonist of unfathomable power.”–Booklist

Reviewed from public library audio book.  Amazon Affiliate: If you click from here to Amazon and buy something, I receive a percentage of the purchase price.

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