Saturday, March 1, 2025

Book Review: Avi's Crispin: The Cross of Lead

Crispin 2021 cover by Keith Robinson

 

Crispin: The Cross of Lead by Avi was first published in 2002 by Disney Hyperion, an imprint of Disney Book Group, and awarded the Newbery Medal in 2003 for distinguished contribution to children’s literature. The paperback version was published in 2021 by Little, Brown and Company, a division of Hachette Book Group. The book is over 20 years old, still relevant and new to today’s middle graders who were not born in 2003. Crispin a 13 year old orphaned serf lives in 1377 England. This is a tale of survival with themes of death, skills, adoption, and freedom. In spite of its rather grim circumstances this is a fun book to read. The descriptions of thirteenth century England are engrossing and Crispin’s character is captivating. I tend to reread this book during Arctic cold fronts and feel incredibly comfortable as serfs’ houses were cold, wet and drafty as they lacked doors, floors, chimneys and watertight roofs.

Warning: There is a graphic description of a decaying corpse on the gallows.

The back matter includes a Historical Note by Avi, an Interview with Avi and a Glossary. The paperback version is 310 pages long.

 

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Poetry

 

Blue sky and Snow photo by ET Charles  

 

  Honored to have my poems published on The Dirigible Balloon

 

Red Fox, The Dirigible Balloon, December 2024

Winter Day, The Dirigible Balloon, December 2024

December Lights, The Dirigible Balloon, December 2024

 

Osprey Chick, The Dirigible Balloon, June 2024

Ruby Throated Hummingbird, The Dirigible Balloon, June 2024

 

 

Sunday, February 2, 2025

Book Review: Avi's Ragweed & Poppy

 

Ragweed & Poppy illustrated by Brian Floca




I purchased Ragweed & Poppy by Newbery Award winning author, Avi a few years ago and have read and reread it. In an ideal forest adventurous mice, Ragweed and Poppy, form friendships, solve problems and exhibit leadership. This middle grade novel published in paperback in 2021 is 288 pages long. Caldecott winning artist Brian Floca rendered engaging depictions of mice and a tedious baby racoon in black and white throughout the book. While this is Book 2 in a series of 7, I read it first and as a stand-alone book; it is a fun book for all. Advanced readers will read above grade level and reluctant readers will enjoy the illustrations and mouse antics.

Visit Avi

Visit illustrator Brian Floca 

Visit Greg Pattridge host of Marvelous Middle Grade Monday

Visit your local bookshop Second Star to the Right 

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Review: Polly Holyoke's Skyriders

 

Skyriders cover illustrated by Brandon Dorman

             Polly Holyoke has written a fantasy adventure, Skyriders which is published by Viking an imprint of Penguin Random House, with skysteeds, winged horses, and a young central protagonist named Kie who battles with winged monsters called chimerae. Ms. Holyoke draws the reader in with her first sentence and continues to entertain throughout the book. Brandon Dorman has beautifully illustrated the cover depicting Kie riding her skysteed, N’Rah. Many strong adolescent female and male characters populate this book which has won multiple awards.

Skyriders was designed by Lucia Baez and published in 2023 with 291 pages of story and marketed for readers who are 8 – 12 years old and in grades 3 – 7. This is the first book in the Skyriders series and is a well written fantasy for middle graders with themes of flying and caring for skysteeds and family.

 

Visit: Polly Holyoke

Visit cover illustrator: Brandon Dorman

Visit book designer: Lucia Baez 

Visit Greg Pattridge host of: Marvelous Middle Grade Monday 

Visit Your Local Book Store Second Star to the Right

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Interview with Beth Anderson: Thomas Jefferson's Battle for Science

 

Thomas Jefferson's Battle for Science illustrated by Jeremy Holmes


 Beth Anderson’s eighth picture book Thomas Jefferson’s Battle for Science: Bias, Truth and a Mighty Moose! published by Calkins Creek, delights and has a hilarious ending. Award winning illustrator Jeremy Holmes illustrated this story with woodblock prints and digital pencil. The book includes beautifully illustrated end papers with paw prints of various North American mammals. As always Ms. Anderson include back matter which include a timeline, an essay and references.

 

 Two Question Interview with Beth Anderson

 Welcome Beth. Thanks so much for returning.

 ETC: How did you first learn of Thomas Jefferson’s “Mighty Moose” and its hilarious ending?

BA: My first attraction was to Jefferson’s obsession with mammoths. But when a book came out about that, I let my manuscript rest. Then I stumbled on an article about the moose incident. Soon another book was announced about his obsession with measuring, and that had the moose in it. But…my attraction to the incident was the idea of how to "measure truth." It strongly connected to our moment in time. It held so much relevance and had hugely important ideas about science, misinformation, and checking sources (so important to teachers!).  It took a lot of digging to understand the larger context, find the details, and decide how to handle the fact that Jefferson too was biased (with awful consequences).

 ETC: I would suggest that “Moose” in the title, the endpapers with paw prints and the line “Or So He Believed,” all constitute both hooks and heart. Is there a specific point in the book that you consider heart or an entry point for a child?

BA: Definitely! Moose in the title surprises and grabs interest. The footprints are a hook that illustrator Jeremy Holmes created in the end papers. And you nailed the beginning of the “heart” thread in the line “so he believed.” That’s really what it’s all about—what we believe, why, and being able to admit our errors. I think about hooks and heart from the very beginning. As I research, that’s what I’m after as I sift through the facts. If I can’t find any value for kids today and the event is an interesting anecdote rather than a story that matters, I let it go. I try to find my heart idea, what the story is about at a deeper level than the physical plot, before I start drafting because that heart becomes the frame and driving force for decisions about what goes in and how I shape the story. The heart of this manuscript shifted a few times as I revised and found that some pieces were too abstract or complicated. I experimented with the “path” through and different endings. There were just SO many possibilities and valuable ideas in this story that it was a real challenge to hone the through line to make it clear and focused.

ETC: Thank you for the detailed answers and a book about science with so much humor.

      Visit Beth Anderson

       Visit illustrator Jeremy Holmes

       Visit Greg Pattridge host of MMGM

            Visit book store Second Star to the Right

 

Previous interviews with Beth Anderson: 

Cloaked in Courage

Revolutionary Prudence Wright

Franz's Phantasmagorical Machine 

Tad Lincoln's Restless Wriggle 

Lizzie Demands a Seat 

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