This blog began with my librarian journey in 2008. It’s named for my disheveled barnyard in Radnor, PA -- but the majority of the content is dedicated to education, libraries, and YA literature.
“Most people don't realize how important librarians are. I ran across a book recently which suggested that the peace and prosperity of a culture was solely related to how many librarians it contained. Possibly a slight overstatement. But a culture that doesn't value its librarians doesn't value ideas and without ideas, well, where are we?” ― Neil Gaiman
Teaching With Passion, Patience, Creativity & Flare
When I am
talking to fellow teachers and parents they often fall into the “I love teens”
or “just get me through this stage” category.Hopefully those in the latter category are not high school
teachers, but I have met some just hanging on until retirement.I have been collecting resources that I
feel really help in working with creating a positive classroom with teens.If there is one thing I have learned,
it is that yelling does not work.You can create and adversarial relationship, but it will get you
nowhere.By creating a positive
relationship, you are more likely able to create the atmosphere of learning you
are seeking to create.My favorite
resource, the Love & Logic series, works for all grade levels. Some of the other resources I’ve listed
below have helped me gain an interesting perspective on schools, the classroom,
and creating a vibrant, passionate atmosphere for learning.Despite the constant litany of excuses and
laying of blame, I do believe it is possible to teach and teach well in today’s
schools – even with excessive testing, challenging students and administrators,
and regularly changing rules. Teaching,
like all professions, is not without its challenges, neither is it without its rewards.
Love and Logic for Teachers
By Jim Fay, Foster W. Cline, M.D. and
Charles Fay, Ph.D
My Favorite Time of Year... Honoring The Top YA Books of the Year with the Printz Awards!
I won't be at ALA in Anaheim for the Red Carpet Printz Award Ceremony this year, much as I love hearing the speeches, but I will be there in spirit. This year I met my goal -- I’ve now made my way through
the last of the four Printz Honor books as well as the Printz Award winner for
2012. It speaks volumes that five
books were close contenders for this year’s Printz Award. I have to say that, in my opinion, at
least four of the five books are indeed incredibly close contenders. The writing in all of the books is
phenomenal as is the individual storytelling, character development, and the
feeling left once each of the books are closed that it is a book worthy of an
award. If I had been on this
year’s Printz Committee, I would have struggled to choose a winner. And I’ve read a book or two that I
think ought to have been a contender!
Imagine if I had been tasked with reading the entire Printz Committee’s
pile of books!
Cullen
Witter is seventeen-years-old and has quite the weight of the world on his
shoulders. He has just identified
the dead body of his cousin Oslo for his Aunt and now had to deal with her
living with them. He spent his
days fending off bully Russell Quitman.
He also has a little brother Gabriel who he adores and thinks is one of
the most interesting people in the world, and yet not one of the most socially
skilled kids he has ever met.
Gabriel could care less what anyone else thinks of him. Fortunately his best friend Lucas Cader
is big, handsome, and well liked – and incredibly protective of Gabriel and
Lucas. One day a bird hunt begins
for the Lazarus Woodpecker, originally presumed extinct. And then suddenly Gabriel disappears…
This
first time novel by John Corey Whaley is both complex and beautiful. It is so much more than a simple love
story. The complex relationships
between the characters and wonderful interweaving of the various stories is
magic. This is a joy of a book to
read and will have wide appeal to both genders. I’m so sorry I won’t get a chance to meet John at ALA and
have him sign my copy of When Things Come Back!!!!
Every November the island of
Thisby holds a contest in which the strongest riders attempt to prove they are
the best by taking on the wild water horses of the island and racing one
another, sometimes to their death.
It is dangerous, exhilarating, beautiful, and exciting. The island champion, Sean Kendrick, is
an orphan indebted to his employer and hoping to one day earn his own
horse. This year the stakes are
high. Will Sean win his
horse? On the other side of the
island, another orphaned rider, Puck Connolly, has a similar plan. She also wants to win the race. But her stakes are higher. She hopes to save her family and their
home. So who will win the Scorpio
Races?
Maggie Stiefvater has
written an amazing story filled with tenderness and beauty. The dynamics between siblings, friends,
servants and masters is deftly handled and filled with real emotion. When the water horses are woven into
the story they come alive and feel so real that one expects to be able to
travel to remote islands in Ireland and actually find the mystical creatures
coming up out of the sea. The
Scorpio Races is Maggie’s finest book to date. It is a work of art.
I am so sorry I am not going to be at ALA to have my copy signed by
Maggie this year!!!!
Charlie Bucktin lives in a
small town in Australia in the 1970’s.
The Vietnam War is going on and his best friend Jeffrey and his family emigrated
from Vietnam. The town they live
in is filled with all of the local characters every small town is filled with
and Charlie’s parents are going through their own struggles. Charlie fills his days reading. One night as he is reading, an outcast
teen named Jasper Jones knocks on his window and begs for his help. As Charlie follows him into the night,
his whole world turns upside down.
The mystery that unfolds during the rest of the summer is a
heartbreaking adventure unveiling the true nature of prejudice, brutality of
domestic violence, and the beauty and healing power of love.
I absolutely loved this book
and in many feel torn between this one, The Scorpio Races, and Where Things
Come Back for the Printz Award itself.
If I could, I’d give it to all three. They are all three such beautiful books. Again, I wish I were going to be at ALA
to have Craig sign my copy of Jasper Jones!!!!!!!!!
I enjoyed this book by
Christine Hinwood, but agree with many of the other reviews that I read that it
will be quite a difficult read for many YA readers and had an inconclusive
ending. The language was quite
challenging and difficult to get into at first. I like fantasy as a genre in general. This book was a little
slow going at first for me, but once I got into it, I enjoyed it.
The book opens with a family
farming and introduces a few characters including Cam, the lone returning
soldier after the war has ended.
Cam has lost his arm in the war with the Uplanders, in addition, he has
taken on Uplander ways. Apparently
he also looks somewhat like an Uplander.
Much of the first half of the story is told from other characters
perspectives of the homecoming of the lone soldier. But Cam is lost in more ways than one. And when his engagement to Graceful
Fenister is broken, he too becomes broken. Eventually Cam decides he must leave his Downlander past in
search of something new.
There is likely to be a
sequel to this book. I liked it
enough to read the sequel, but I don’t think I’d recommend this to the average
YA reader. Most teens would get
too boggled down in the language and give up on it. Science fiction addicts, fantasy buffs, and high literature
readers would enjoy it. I probably
wouldn’t have given it a Printz Honor because of the inability for it to have
widespread YA appeal.
Art By Maira Kalman on the cover of The New Yorker
I have to say that this was
probably my least favorite of the books.
I’m not saying that it wasn’t a good book, just that in comparison to
the caliber of top level books, this was not there for me. I am guessing that it made the cut for
its originality in style. It is
cleverly written as a series of letters from Min, short for Minerva, to her ex
boyfriend Ed upon their break-up accompanied by interspersed full-colored
drawings of the mementos that she collected during their short one-month relationship. The art is lovely and Maira Kalman is well
known for her artwork and writing in other books as is Daniel Handler aka
Lemony Snicket. I included reviews
above with differing viewpoints from mine so that you might get other
perspectives on the book as well.
The letters are a monologue
of the relationship from the very beginning to the very end and you do have to
adore the hopelessly romantic Min. Min’s best friend is a boy named Al and she met Ed when he
crashed his 16th birthday party. Min and Al are two peas in a pod…and she and Ed are
definitely not. They come from two
different worlds. Ed is the
penultimate high school jock who lives to play basketball while Min is an artsy
old film buff who lives to be a film director. They have completely different sets of friends at school and
different interests after school.
Can they make a romantic relationship work?
Art from Why We Broke Up
Books that didn’t make it
that at least deserve an honorable mention…
I have read many books by
John Green and loved all of them.
This is now my absolute favorite.
I don’t know if it is because cancer has invaded my life so pervasively
in the past few years or not, but this book is just beautiful. I wish I were going to be at ALA this
year to have John sign my book, but I’m sure I’ll catch up with him another
year.
The story is about Hazel, a
teen who has miraculously had her life extended by new cancer medication that
has shrunk her tumor despite her terminal status as a young child. She is still living on borrowed time,
but has gained a few extra years of life.
Her mother insists on her attending a Cancer Kid Support Group so that
she will have a social outlet and meet kids like her, but Hazel is jaded and
sarcastic about attending…until the day she meets the gorgeous Augustus
Waters. Her whole world turns
upside down when she meets Augustus.
John has managed to write a
book about cancer that is honest, funny, tragic, true, and completely
heartfelt. It is the absolute
rollercoaster that one goes through when dealing with the disease. At the same time, he has written an
absolutely wonderful love story.
I’d have given this book at least a Printz Honor…and a box of
tissues.
I wrote about this book in a
previous post as one of my favorite books about girls and sports this
year. I really think it has wide
appeal to both genders and to not just athletes as the message goes well beyond
sports. While this book did make
some of the reading lists and did win an award for book with disabilities, I’d
have like to have seen it lauded for its greater messages.
Whether you are an athlete
or a mathlete, you can’t help but fall in love with this story about
sixteen-year-old Jessica, a high school track star with amazing potential who
wakes up on the first page of the book to find she has lost her leg in a
terrible accident. Jessica struggles through a whole realm of emotions
but continually dreams of running. She discovers that running on
prosthesis is a possibility, but an expensive one. Her entire team
rallies behind her to try and get her running again. At the same time,
Jessica meets Rosa who has CP and is in a wheelchair. Rosa tutors her in
math and she discovers something about disabilities – it’s easy to become
invisible.
I am a runner.
That's what I
do.
That's who I am.
Running is all I know,
or want, or care about...
Running aired out my
soul.
It made me feel alive.
And now?
I'm stuck in this bed,
knowing I'll never run again. (pg 6, The Running Dream)
A special note of thanks
to these incredible authors:
Congratulations to all
of you! You are wonderful authors
and are much appreciated for bringing terrific work to young adults and young
adults at heart! We love reading
your work, so please keep it up and we promise to keep reading what you write!