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Showing posts with the label realistic fiction

Breakout by Kate Messner

A special book lingers long after you close the cover. I can't help thinking about Kate Messner's Breakout, and I finished it days ago . The main plot of the story involves two inmates who escape from a maximum-security prison. Everyone's life is impacted by the two week manhunt. The underlying theme, however, is racism and racial profiling. When Elidee's brother is incarcerated, she and her mother move to the small upper NY state community near the prison. They pride themselves on being a friendly town--yet we see many evidences that they are not as welcoming to a black family. Elidee's classmate, Nora, is a middle school journalist who uncovers more than a story in Messner's novel. In fact, at the conclusion, she may have more questions than answers. Told in letters, poems, text messages, news stories, and comic—a series of documents Nora collects for the Wolf Creek Community Time Capsule Project— Breakout is a thrilling story that will leave readers th...

Secret Sisters of the Salty Sea

Since I'm not doing webcasts every month, I've developed a new way to track what I'm reading and what I think about it. I started an old fashioned notebook. A lovely handwritten collection of my thoughts as I read books for my What's New in Children's Books workshop. I try to record where the book takes place, where the author lives, debut?, related books or books it reminds me of. I jot down quotes that speak to me. I scribble questions I think about while I'm reading. I note potentially sensitive areas for cautious communities. I think about how it might be used in a classroom or library setting. Sometimes my entries are quite long, filling pages of words from the author. (I'm using mostly library books, so writing in the books is a no-no.) Then I get to Secret Sisters of the Salty Sea. It has three starred reviews, plus it is Lynne Rae Perkins. It's a must-read for me already. And I have a sister that I love and am close to. She lives by the Salt...

The Shoe that Didn't Drop

I suppose I've read too many YA novels. Teen angst. Murder. Betrayal. Lies. Or maybe I've been watching too much TV. Yesterday I finished Secret Sisters of the Salty Sea by Lynne Rae Perkins. Not that Perkins is known for stories with tragic events, but in her latest, there's the ocean and a warning to not go out too far. (The girls are safely recovered.) There's an opportunity for two sisters to become enemies, each one jealous of the other. Yet by the end of the book, they are closer than ever. The parents are present--and smart, and funny, and love each other. So why then, was I so worried? THE COVER IS BLUE!  For those of you who've been following me for a while, you know my theory: books with blue covers make you cry. Often they make you sob. I remember when I first connected the dots in 2016 that by the time I got to When Friendship Followed Me Home by Paul Griffin, I was terrified to read it. The cover is blue, the title is blue and there is a DOG on...