Showing posts with label Spring Reading Thing '09. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring Reading Thing '09. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2009

good thing there's no penalties

Yep, I've blown more challenges during the past few weeks.

First of all, there was Book Awards II that ended at the start of the month. Didn't finish. The good news, however, is that I did do better than last year. ;) Out of the required ten, I managed seven. And even better, I enjoyed every one.



*Fax From Sarajevo by Joe Kubert (Eisner Award: Best Graphic Album 1997)
*The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents by Terry Pratchett (Carnegie Medal 2001)
*The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon (Costa/Whitbread 2003 and Alex Award 2004)
*The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo (Christopher Award 2007)
*American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang (Printz Award 2007)
*Looking for Alaska by John Green (Printz Award 2006)
*The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara (Pulitzer Prize 1975)

And yesterday marked the end of Spring Reading Thing '09. Again, failure. At least in the absolute sense. But again, I did better than last year. Eight out of eleven...could have been worse.





My list:
*Fax From Sarajevo by Joe Kubert
*The Dead and the Gone by Susan Beth Pfeffer
*Shakespeare Wrote for Money by Nick Hornby
*Nation by Terry Pratchett
*The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
*The Garden of Eve by K.L. Going
*...I never saw another butterfly...: Children's Drawings and Poems from Terezin Concentration Camp, 1942-1944
*Step on a Crack by James Patterson

Books to read to boys:
*Looking for Bobowicz by Daniel Pinkwater
*The Hoboken Chicken Emergency by Daniel Pinkwater
*Samuel Blink and the Forbidden Forest by Matt Haig

Also ending yesterday was Once Upon a Time III. And hooray...this one I actually finished!!! But I gotta say, I'm really sad to see this one coming to an end already. It really seems like it just started.








Mythology:
*The Sandman: Season of Mists by Neil Gaiman
Folklore:
*Legend of Chun Hyang by CLAMP
Fairy Tale:
*The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents by Terry Pratchett
*The Castle Corona by Sharon Creech
*Fables: Animal Farm by Bill Willingham
*Fables: Storybook Love by Bill Willingham
*Fables: March of the Wooden Soldiers by Bill Willingham
Fantasy:
*Samuel Blink and the Forbidden Forest by Matt Haig

*****

Samuel Blink and the Forbidden Forest by Matt Haig.

(Not that it matters in the slightest, but I couldn't find a picture of the cover we have.)

I think I've mentioned before how I've really fallen in love with fantasy books aimed at the 9-12 year old set. And while I didn't find this one of the very best of those, I couldn't have enjoyed it more...and that's because the boys couldn't have enjoyed it more. They positively loved this book!!! There wasn't a single night that they weren't begging for more, even on nights when I read an hour or more.

And there really was a lot to love...

"All the creatures!"--Gray

"It was funny and fantastical!"--Max

"It was exciting!"--Gray

"I love scary stories!"--Max

"If it wasn't fiction, it would have been really scary!"--Gray

"The witches could turn into cats!"--Max

And I have to agree that all those things did make this a magical story. And for the most part, I too, loved this book. The creatures were wonderful, from the huldres to the trolls and the Tomtegubbs to the Slemps. And my very favorite of all, the Truth Pixie. For the most part, I was impressed that the author seemed to give kids a lot of credit by not simplifying things or toning down the "scariness." But there were a few lapses. For example, I felt that the story of how the "bad guy" came to be a "bad guy" was a bit too simple. Not that I wanted some in-depth psychological analysis or anything, but it just came off a bit too goofy to fit along with the rest of the book. And can I just be totally petty for a moment? The accent Haig gave Aunt Eda drove me freakin' nuts...not that she wouldn't have that Norwegian accent--"effer" for "ever" and the like--but it seemed to be used very unevenly. Or maybe that was just my imagination. Anyway, I have to admit that after a few chapters with Aunt Eda, I just stopped "reading the accent" aloud altogether.

Sheesh...I didn't really say a darn thing in regards to what the book is actually about, did I? Okay, super short intro here:

The Blink family is on an outing to celebrate Martha's birthday. But tragedy strikes in the form of a careless logging truck driver who losses his load...with one log landing soundly on the Blink parents. So orphans Samuel and Martha are shipped off to reside with their only living relative, Aunt Eda, who lives in Norway. An aunt they don't even know. With the death of the Blink parents, also came the death of Martha's voice, which leaves Samuel feeling even more lonely. Samuel isn't feeling particularly cordial towards his aunt, and he is less than thrilled with this new life that is laid out before him. As if things weren't bad enough, Aunt Eda has no close neighbors. Heck, she doesn't even have a TV. The only thing of interest at all is the forest...and without explanation, Aunt Eda has definitively declared it off-limits. But no silly rule is going to stop Samuel. Luckily, however, something else (I don't want to say what) does. But then when Martha feels herself mysteriously pulled into the forest, Samuel has no choice but to disobey Aunt Eda despite the dangers he now at least somewhat understands...

Okay, my babbling leaves a lot be desired here...even for me. :) Bottom line, I really did like the story, but I absolutely loved the experience of reading this to the boys. Because they gobbled it right up! And yes, we will definitely be on the lookout for the next book in the series.