Early Book Review: Odd, Weird & Little by Patrick Jennings

Odd, Weird & Little by Patrick Jennings is a children's novel that is currently scheduled for release on January 28 2014. Toulouse is the new kid, and he is a little odd. He is very short, always wears a hat, and does not talk much. Woodrow is not exactly popular, but he decides that giving the new kid a chance is more important than becoming more of a target to the schoolyard bullies.  The two make a good pair, they enjoy fishing and make a great volleyball team. The story is simple and sweet, with fun moments.

Odd, Weird & Little is a charming children's chapter book about being yourself, bullying, and acceptance. Toulouse is an odd kid, and Woodrow is not the most accepted kid in his grade either. However, their teasing by others and some shared interests connect the pair quickly. I loved that Woodrow has his reservations about befriending someone that was libel to make him a bigger target to bullies, but saw something in Toulouse that made him extend his friendship and defy the fear of the bullies. I liked that message about bullying was subtle and flowed well with the mystery of just why Toulouse was as different as he appears. While moments of the story seemed a little simple, it all come together in a way that really worked for me. The story itself was just like the title, something a bit odd, weird, and little.

I would recommend Odd, Weird & Little for elementary school and middle grade readers. The book is one that even the most popular kids might get something out of. The story is charming, sometimes funny, but also heartfelt. It is a short read, and well worth the time.

Book Review: 1 Cookie, 2 Chairs, 3 Pears; Numbers Everywhere by Jane Brocket

1 Cookie, 2 Chairs, 3 Pears; Numbers Everywhere is the latest book in the Clever Concepts series by Jane Brocket. Like all of the books in this series, this book uses bright photographs of ever day objects to explain a concept. The pictures are detailed and colorful, using common objects in unique ways to help children with the concept of counting as well as different ways numbers can be used.

I am a big fan of Jane Brocket's series, and I recommend them to teachers and parents looking to expand on or explain a concept with their children. 1 Cookie, 2 Chairs, 3 Pears; Numbers Everywhere is a book that deals with numbers and counting. It shows how numbers can be found everywhere around us, and how we can count objects in a number of different ways. Simple and common ideas are used first, like counting fingers and toes, but by the end of the book readers have counted things that are the same, things that are different, stripes, sets of different items, and much more. While still simple, the book will encourage further counting and exploring in the world around them when the book is finished.

I recommend 1 Cookie, 2 Chairs, 3 Pears; Numbers Everywhere (and the entire series) for classroom, library, and private collections. Young readers will enjoy and learn while they explore the photographs and ideas presented. While Ruby, Violet, Lime will always be my favorite from the series, I also loved this addition to the collection.

Early Book Review: Ophelia and the Marvelous Boy by Karen Foxlee

Ophelia and the Marvelous Boy by Karen Foxlee is a middle grade novel which is currently schedule for release on January 28 2014. This is a modern take of the classic Snow Queen story. Ophelia Jane Worthington-Whittard is smart, and believes in science and the things she can study. She and her sister Alice are still grieving for their dead mother when their father takes a job in a strange museum in a city where it always snows. On her very first day in the museum Ophelia discovers a boy locked away in a long forgotten room. He is a prisoner of Her Majesty the Snow Queen, and he has been waiting for Ophelia's help. Ophelia accepts that she must rescue the boy, and as she searches for keys and battles things she does not believe in, everything that she believes will be tested. Slowly the boy shares his own story with Ophelia, and the stories come together in a fairy tale about courage, friendship, love, and perseverance.

Ophelia and the Marvelous Boy is a great modern take on The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Anderson. I loved that the setting was a museum, and one that I might like to wander around in myself. The nature of a museum with hidden treasures and forgotten storerooms and objects really added to the story. Ophelia and her sister have the complicated relationship most siblings have, which teeters between devotion and annoyance at a speed even they cannot keep up with. The loss of their mother makes this balance even harder to maintain and makes Ophelia lonely enough to make the story possible. This, and the father's way of throwing himself into work to avoid his grief, are all so realistic that the moments of fantasy- like the Marvelous Boy's existence, the Snow Queen, the misery birds, and the rest seem that much more likely to exist. Although I will admit that the museum guards and the furious knitting, among other oddities, scared me much more than some of the creatures that were technically more frightening. I really loved Ophelia's journey, both through the museum and through coming to terms with herself, her family, and her grief.

I would highly recommend Ophelia and the Marvelous Boy to middle grade readers and older. The setting and story are entertaining and while fantastical also something readers can see a bit of themselves in. It is a story for fairy tale lovers, coming of age tales, adventure fiction, magical realism, and just plain old good stories.

Blog Tour Including a Guest Post by Eva A. Blaskovic, Author of Beyond the Precipice


About Beyond The Precipice by Eva A. Blaskovic:

A young man with a dark secret must choose between his family and the girl he loves.

For six years Bret Killeen is trapped by the wishes of his dead father, blackmailed by his brother, and rejected by his uncle. Meanwhile, he watches his mother descend into the depths of poverty.

As Bret wrestles with guilt over the death of his father, he is helped by Nicole, a young cello player with big dreams. She stirs the embers of his longing both for music and for her - and ignites a fire he can't extinguish.

But can he brave his past in order to seize his future?
The award-worthy debut novel by Eva A. Blaskovic is a riveting blend of suspense, dark humor, and compelling inter-personal drama. Once you engage this roller coaster read you won't be able to stop.

Purchase The Book:
Amazon Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Precipice-Eva-Blaskovic-ebook/dp/B00C3NZAU2/
Paperback: http://www.amazon.com/Beyond-The-Precipice-Eva-Blaskovic/dp/0988163810/
Ashby-BP Publishing:  https://ashby-bp.com/product/beyond-the-precipice/
KOBO: http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/beyond-the-precipice

Guest Blog: In the Eye of the Beholder
by Eva Blaskovic

I grew up believing that you present your attributes to the world, get evaluated objectively, and, based on that evaluation, get assigned the lifestyle you have earned (a.k.a. deserve).

Instead, this wisdom should be applied: Do not present yourself to the world to be evaluated. Assign yourself a value and then present yourself to the world.

When you allow the world to evaluate you, you are empowering other mortals to assess you, with the assumption that they will be objective and have your best interests in mind. In reality, your judges are subjective people with a sphere of life experiences that may be vastly different from your own, are emotional, and have their own interests, problems, prejudices, values, and beliefs through which their perception of you is filtered.

Evaluation is what happens in school, for example. If the subject is math, which isn't subjective and can’t be contested, you’ll likely get an objective assessment in the form of a grade. Tests are capable of evaluating some knowledge, but it is well known today that they do not asses a person’s multiple intelligences accurately. In high school English and social studies, you have to utilize talents and attributes—if you’re lucky to already have them—to the tune of insight, maturity, worldly knowledge, inference, persuasion, written language ability, and the ability to read your teacher and understand the rubric, in addition to knowing essay structure and textbook facts, to get your good marks. It doesn't stop there. Students are evaluated, assessed, and have their futures determined in arts (including music and theatre), athletics, and sciences. People are also evaluated later in life through careers and activities.

But here’s the thing. How do you explain all those who, at some point in their lives (usually early on) had been written off, and yet today they are well-known names—people respected for their abilities, insights, inventions, or other contributions to society?

Thomas Edison: assessed by an elementary schoolteacher as “addled,” when he was, in fact, partially deaf. Thankfully, his mother knew better, homeschooled him, and gave him the chance to reach his potential, which was to become the greatest inventor of the twentieth century, opening a series of companies, some of which are still in existence today.
Lucille Ball: “Too shy.”
The Beatles: “Their guitar music is on the way out.”
Michael Jordan: Cut from the school’s basketball team.
Walt Disney: “No original ideas.”

In this motivational video, who is the real problem? The person? Or the judge(s)?
Thus, the whole rationale many of us live by is backwards.

Why does the reverse work? One thing I've noticed to be ubiquitous—whether in the playground or throughout incidences in history—is that people always respond to confidence. Confidence translates as knowledge and ability, which translates as desirable leadership and good decision-making.
History and the schoolyard have, however, shown us that this is not always true. Confident people do not always have the best answers and frequently muddle things up worse than the non-confident, too shy to speak up but more knowledgeable people. Yet confident people who are good leaders continue to draw willing followers because they are convincing. Since people insist on responding in this way, we can work with it.
If you track successful people, whether they became successful at a young age or have taken a lifetime to figure it out, they all have something in common that they've applied and that works. They evaluate themselves first (or a significant adult believes in them), which makes them confident, gives them purpose, and makes them feel that they have something to offer the world (which they do). Because they have made their own evaluation first, they do not indiscriminately accept everyone else’s judgment along the way, are not as easily discouraged or sidetracked, and thus are not shaken from their cause—or their course—which is to make a living on their own terms. This living is simply an exchange of goods and/or services: they offer something to others that is considered valuable, and others reward them in a way that gives them a satisfying lifestyle.
The more they believe in themselves and persevere, the more others believe in them. When others believe in them, they find their income niche, creating that satisfying lifestyle—on their terms—doing things they want to do, which simultaneously allow them to make a living and thrive. They have convinced others of their value, and hence others have valued (and paid) them.
Thus, the more you believe you can—the more you know you can—the more others believe you can, until it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. And that is why you have to assign yourself a value first and then present yourself to the world.


AUTHOR BIO
Eva Blaskovic was born in the Czech Republic, grew up in Ontario, Canada, and moved to Alberta in 1988, where she raised four children. Eva has worked in science labs and has taught literacy, writing, math, and science. She is both an accomplished writer and editor of non-fiction articles on business, education, how-to, parenting, and travel. She is also an author of short fiction. Beyond the Precipice is Eva Blaskovic's first full length novel, but it has already received rave reviews from literary professionals and aficionados the world over. When Eva hasn't buried herself in writing or editing, she may be found taking her teenagers to Taekwondo, exploring the Farmers' Market, listening to Celtic music, or sipping a latte.

Visit her:
Website: http://www.siriusword.com/ebblog/beyond-the-precipice




Book Review: A Bag of Marbles by Joseph Joffo and Vincent Baily

A Bag of Marbles by Joseph Joffo and Vincent Baily is a historical graphic novel for tweens and teens. In 1941 in occupied Paris, brothers Maurice and Joseph play a last game of marbles before running home to their father's barbershop. With the German occupation threatening their family's safety, the boys' parents decide Maurice and Joseph must disguise themselves and flee to their older brothers in the free zone. Surviving the long journey will take every scrap of ingenuity and courage they can muster. If they hope to elude the Nazis, they must never, under any circumstances, admit to being Jewish. During their travels, the boys face threats from strangers and receive unexpected help. Based on an autobiographical novel by Joseph Joffo and adapted with the author's input, this true story offers a harrowing but inspiring glimpse of a childhood cut short.

In A Bag of Marbles, Joseph Joffo tells the story of his childhood, a story that touches the heart. I am not a person that enjoys reading about the horrors and persecution people have inflicted on each other. However, for some reason I picked this up. It took me a couple tries to read it, mainly because I had to be in the right mindset to deal with the WWII era. However, as soon as I really got started I was impressed with Vincent Baily's watercolor style artwork and the way the story was told through those illustrations as well as Jaffo's words. I think this is a great resource for bringing home the facts of the Holocaust to middle grade and older readers. The story of these boys is something that they can connect with and make the history that we think we know much more poignant. This is not the typical narrative, not what you generally get when you pick up a book about children in WWII, and I think that makes it that much more touching and interesting. I am interested in reading the memoir from Jaffo, which this graphic novel was adapted from, to see how the two compare.

I would highly recommend A Bag of Marbles to readers that are interested in the WWII era and the realities of what some of the luckier Holocaust survivors went through. I think this would be a great classroom resource when discussing the time and war, in order to make the dates and words in the history books mean a little more to students.

Book Review: The Magic Between Us (Faerie #3) by Tammy Falkner

The Magic Between Us is the third book in the Faerie romance series by Tammy Falkner. I have not read the two previous books, and aside from some secondary plot moments I do not feel that the lack affected my read. Marcus Thorne was groomed to be one of the Trusted Few in the land of the fae, but must step into his father's title in the British ton. In doing so he leaves behind his first love. Cecelia Hewitt, is more than a little upset with Marcus for leaving her behind. The situation is made worse that in the six months Marcus has been gone her mother has passed away and her father has become increasingly troubled. When situations bring them together again Marcus realizes that he has made a mistake and needs to reconcile with Cecelia. But will she be able to trust him again, and will they find a compromise that works for both of them, and their families?

I am not quite sure where to start with The Magic Between Us. Part of the problem lies in the fact that the book is nothing like the description on Goodreads, but does match the description on Amazon. I thought that both Cecelia and Marcus could have been fleshed out a little more, although I am sure readers of the entire series have a slightly fuller understanding of Marcus than newcomers. On the plus side, Cecelia and Marcus really did seem to be made for each other, and his interfering family was fun. I liked that Cecelia made him work for reconciliation, for the most part, and had her own plans rather than completely relying on others. Their interactions were fun and flirtatious. I did think that the resolution with her father was a bit lacking- that a person with as much strength and integrity as Cecilia would have gotten help before this book even began.

I thought that The Magic Between Us was a quick read that could keep readers entertained on a snowy winters night. I would recommend it to those that have read the previous two books in the series so that they could see the end to the larger story arch. If you see the book on the bargain shelf or at the library, it could make for a fun night's reading. However, it is not a book that I would recommend seeking out.