Showing posts with label diversity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diversity. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

A review of The Sky Is Not Blue by Joy Jones and Sawyer Cloud

Recently, we've had gloomy skies and bitter cold where I live. This upcoming book is a good reminder to enjoy ALL the days!


Author: Joy Jones

Illustrator: Sawyer Cloud (perfect name for this book!)

Publisher: Free Spirit Publishing, 2024 (the Free Spirit imprint acquired by Teachers Created Materials)

Themes: Creativity, Self-confidence, Colors

Opening Line(s):

     "Ask Robert to name his favorite color. 'All of them!' he'd shout."

What I like about this book: The intriguing title pulls you into the story and the text uses lovely imagery to describe the sky as it changes with the seasons and the weather. It's a great text for classrooms studying alliteration. My favorite line is :Then a flash of silver slid like a straw through the milkshake-thick mist." The main character is a good role model for how to disagree, and be polite. Teachers teach children, but this story illustrates how children teach adults as well. The message to take time to look more closely at the wonders of the world resonated with me. The illustrations capture a diverse classroom, main character and teacher. 

Activities:

  • You don't have to look farther than the back matter! Fun facts AND activities.
  • Think of someone you disagreed with. How could this story help you interact with them?
This review is based on a review copy provided by the publisher. No payment was made. The honest review is my own.

For more Perfect Picture Book Friday suggestions - visit Susanna Leonard Hill's blog!


Thursday, February 26, 2015

Middle grade book recommendations - Echo and Katie Friedman Gives Up Texting



     If you choose books for a middle grade reader, or enjoy reading it yourself, I have two books to recommend.
     This is wild-waving two thumbs up stuff.
     At first glance, the two books are dissimilar . . .

     Pam Munoz Ryan’s Echo is a weighty tome. The ARC I read is 592 pages long. The story spans decades, weaving the individual stories of multiple protagonists together with themes of prejudice, justice (and injustice) and the healing property of music. A lush mash-up of fantasy, fairy-tale, and historical fiction, it reads like Gone With the Wind for middle grade with a brushstroke of magical realism. Stories that cross the globe with elements of family danger, racism and heroism are rendered at a personal level. It’s the kind of book you “experience” as much as you read it. Wondering how it was all going to tie together, the pages flew by (and sleep was lost!). You will want to run out and buy a harmonica, dust off that recorder from grade school, drum on the desk.

    

      The ARC of Tommy Greenwald’s Katie Friedman Gives Up Texting (and lives to tell about it) clocks in at 227 pages. Not counting the three page forward-looking epilogue, the storyline spans one week. The plot follows a single protagonist who makes the mistake of sending a text about misgivings about her boyfriend to the wrong person—her boyfriend. I began the book thinking the short chapters were the perfect interlude before I needed to go to the grocery store, and we ended up eating leftovers. It was a cover-to-cover single-sitting read. Part of the author's "Charlie Joe Jackson" series, this can be read as a stand alone title. The snappy contemporary first person narrative deals with the issues of honesty, social media, self-discovery and—the healing power of music. 

     Sometimes I wonder why I don’t have the radio on more now. When I was younger I studied to it, partied to it, sang to it every chance I could. While I didn’t personally identify with all of the songs that I heard, I identified with the singers’ angst and contemplation of the emotional journeys they had taken. And music has a way of freeing people up. A way of connecting people. Of making us stop, listen and feel. Going to go turn it on now.
     Other great elements I should highlight. Both books have diverse characters. Both deal with important social issues. Short chapters in both make them easy to dive into.

     I’m not sure about the boy appeal of these books. I’d love to hear from others to hear what you think!
     Echo is published by Scholastic Press and went on sale February 24, 2015
     Katie Friedman Gives Up Texting went on sale February 17th and is published by Roaring Brook Press.

DISCLOSURE:

I received a review copy from the publishers. No other compensation was received nor was a review required.  I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”