Faith, Hope and Ivy June

Ivy June Mosely cannot believe it. Her teacher pulled her name from the coffee can, so she is going to be her school's ambassador to a private school all the way in Lexington! She'll go live with a family in Lexington for two weeks, and attend the school with a girl her own age, name... Continue Reading →

Clyde Robert Bulla

If you or your child is studying early American history, you will want to become familiar with Clyde Robert Bulla's works. Bulla has authored a whole, huge long list of books - including two books I've already reviewed, Donald's Duck and The Sword in the Tree. I really appreciate Bulla's sensitivity to children and their... Continue Reading →

Word After Word After Word

Do you know an elementary school student interested in writing?  Encourage them to pick up Word After Word After Word by Patricia MacLachlan.  She's the author of the Sarah, Plain & Tall series, and a number of other books my children and I love. Word After Word After Word is the book that came out... Continue Reading →

The Penderwicks

Our family's new favorite books are about the Penderwick family, written by Jeanne Birdsall.  We love each of the four girls, who don't have a mother, but do have a doting and somewhat distracted father. The first book The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits and a Very Interesting Boy introduces readers... Continue Reading →

The Velvet Room

One book I picked up over and over again over the course of my childhood was The Velvet Room by Zilpha Keatley Snyder.  It's not as well-known as Anne of Green Gables, but I loved it nearly as much. The Velvet Room tells the story of Robin, the middle child of five.  She and her... Continue Reading →

Calico Bush

I imagine Calico Bush by Rachel Field is not at the top of many people's reading lists.  But it should be! This is the second time I've read through Calico Bush, but it will certainly not be my last.  I had forgotten how much I enjoyed this story. Marguerite is an orphaned French girl who... Continue Reading →

Anne of Green Gables

An orphan delighted to find a new home on Prince Edward Island - then crushed to discover that her new guardians had wanted a boy.  Her bright spirit and delightful chatter wins Matthew over, and he decided they must keep her.  Thus began Anne's life with Marilla and Matthew on their farm, Green Gables. Anne... Continue Reading →

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 →

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 →

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 →

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