The Cay

My seven-year-old pulled the audiobook version of The Cay by Theodore Taylor off the library shelf and wanted to listen to it.  The picture on the cover made me hesitate - it's of a black man and boy clinging to a palm tree in the midst of a storm.  I wondered if it would be... Continue Reading →

A Long Way from Chicago

My youngest picked up the audio version of A Long Way from Chicago and wanted to listen to it in the van.  I had never heard of it before, never read anything by Richard Peck before, and I wasn't sure how appropriate it was for a seven-year-old. But I thought we would give it a... Continue Reading →

The Thieves of Ostia

My children are voracious readers. In search of something that would capture my oldest's attention, I discovered The Thieves of Ostia by Caroline Lawrence, the first in her The Roman Mysteries series at our local library. I made sure I read it before Nathaniel, because I was concerned about the character treatments, plot, and any... Continue Reading →

Otto of the Silver Hand

When I first started reading Otto of the Silver Hand, written and illustrated by Howard Pyle, I never thought I would include it as one of my favorites.  But now that I have finished it, I realized it more than makes the cut. Otto of the Silver Hand is set in Medieval Europe, a time... Continue Reading →

The Cat in the Hat

No American childhood would be complete without reading Dr. Seuss's famous book The Cat in the Hat.  Hollywood has taken to turning Dr. Seuss's simple children's books into movies - but as with most movies, the books are better. The Cat in the Hat tells the story of a boy and his sister, left alone... Continue Reading →

What’s the Big Idea, Ben Franklin?

Children studying the Revolutionary War will find What's the Big Idea, Ben Franklin? by Jean Fritz. Fritz starts with information every child is curious about - Franklin's childhood.  Instead of boring readers with facts and figures, Fritz tells stories from Franklin's life - of how he taught himself to swim different strokes, how he studied... Continue Reading →

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch

My nine-year-old just told me, "Carry On, Mr. Bowditch starts off boring, but then it gets really interesting."  She did complain about listening to it in the van, but when Nathaniel Bowditch fell in love with Elizabeth - and she begged to listen to Carry On, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Latham. She is a... Continue Reading →

McBroom’s Wonderful One-Acre Farm

Kids of all ages will enjoy the tall tales in McBroom's Wonderful One-Acre Farm by Sid Fleischman.  Fleischman has a breezy, easy-to-read writing style perfect for children. In  McBroom's, Josh McBroom is on his way west with his dear wife, Melissa, and their "eleven, redheaded, freckle-faced youngsters.  Their names were Willjillhesterchesterpeterpollytimtommarylarryandlittleclarinda." Try saying that ten... Continue Reading →

A Single Shard

An orphan boy and a crippled man live together under the bridge of a small Korean village in the twelfth-century.  Crane-man and Tree-ear scrounge for food in the village's rubbish heaps by day.  In the evenings, they discuss philosophies encountered throughout their day.  For as Crane-man says, Scholars read the great words of the world. ... Continue Reading →

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑