Lois Lowry is known for putting real life issues into a wonderful storyline. Her newest book, Tree. Table. Book., lives up to that reputation. In an interview about the upcoming book, she notes how often she writes about the relationship between the elderly and the young.
Unexpected Memory Trigger
If you don’t know that the Fay B. Kaigler Book Festival is a highlight of my year and that I use the pronoun “our” when I speak of what is in de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection, I can assume that you have not often read this blog. Sometimes, I get surprised myself about the connections I find there.
A Murder Most French
Colleen Cambridge in her historical fiction cozy mystery takes the reader back to the aftermath of World War II with her protagonist Tabitha Knight. Tabitha may be an aspiring cook (chef would be overstating her skill) for her grandfather and his partner with Julia Child as her best friend. An American in Paris, she speaks fluent French which will help with both her missions in the book.
Bibliophagist or Bibliophage
Bibliophagist or bibliophage. Call me either or both. The title has fit since my mother, concerned that she had an illiterate five-year-old on her hands, taught me to read before I went to school. Mama had instilled the love of words and story long before she embarked on teaching me to read. This new skill just meant I could read by myself.
The Backyard Chronicles
You may be like me and have Amy Tan nicely cubbyholed into a novelist that writes from her cultural heritage. I have certainly enjoyed her string of books – The Kitchen God’s Wife, The Joy Luck Club, and The Bonesetter’s Daughter – to name a few. Now she has done something entirely different and worth reading.
Short!
Coyote Lost and Found
Out today in book stores, Dan Gemeinhart follows up The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise with Coyote Lost and Found. Coyote, still sharing the grief from the loss of her mother and two sisters with her father Rodeo, has just begun settling in to her new school and a new normal for life when she finds a box containing her mother’s ashes. She and her father must come to terms with whether they are ready to scatter the ashes.
Watching and Waiting
In South Mississippi, we can hardly wait for our two or three weeks of winter to be over. I’ve been watching carefully for any signs of spring. Watching for a pot that will never boil, as the old saying goes, has nothing on watching for a bud to bloom. To distract myself, I decided to have some fun as I try my hand at a bit of flamenco.
Go As a River
Shelly Read sets her debut novel, Go As a River, in the mountain town of Iola, Colorado. The setting, which is based on a real happening when the town was destroyed by dam construction in the 1960s, joins the story like an extra character. Protagonist Victoria’s life is heavily influenced by her location beginning in 1948 when she is seventeen.
Tin Roof!
My bald-headed son Mark stopped by our house on his way to his home next door. With a twinkle in his eye, he put a grocery sack on the counter and said, “Now, I’ve paid my debt.” As I pulled a carton out of the sack, we were both transported to the days when he was a teenager with a head full of hair and a bottomless stomach.
Oh Boy Oh Boy
The Blueberry Books
The first blueberry book came to my attention when I was in my early teens and my mother took a “Kiddie Lit” class at Ole Miss one summer. To help make that possible as the oldest daughter in a family of six, my reward for sister-sitting, housekeeping, and cooking chores was the stack of books she brought home.
Symphony of Secrets
About Those Awards
Snow Surprise
Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers
Looking Back, Looking Forward
If you’ve read (and remember) what I’ve written in January before, you know I don’t make new year’s resolutions. I do like the idea behind the Roman god for whom the month is named as he looks back and then looks forward with a key in his hand to unlock the doors of the future. In this blog, I look back at 2023 and forward to 2024.
The Mona Lisa Vanishes
The Mona Lisa Vanishes by Nicholas Day is listed for 10 to 14-year-olds. The bottom number is not that bad, although I would have devoured it before I was ten. I think this generation has some nerds-to-be like me who will, too. The “to14” needs to be eliminated altogether and replaced with “and up.”