Caterpillar Summer
by Gillian McDunn
Bloomsbury
2019
304 pages
ISBN: 9781681197432
Available: April 2, 2019
Caterpillar Summer captures a poignant and honest portrayal of a sibling relationship in which the older sibling must take on the parent role. Cat has never had time to be a kid. She's always taken care of special needs Chicken and talked him out of his "meltdowns." In fact, Cat is the only one who can control him. Chicken needs constant supervision as he is prone to wander off and get lost.
When the siblings have to spend three weeks with their grandparents for the first time in EVER, Cat finally has a summer where she can explore on her own. As she discovers more about the rift between her mother and her grandparents, Cat wonders why the adults can't just fix their differences. She may have to become the CATalyst to heal her own family.
A treasure for middle grade readers who love a story of family ties and sweet sibling relationships. This book is suitable for all school, One School, One Book reads and classroom reads. It would be a great choice for a summer reading book as well.
Recommended grade 4 (good readers), grade 5 and up.
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Saturday, March 23, 2019
Friday, April 28, 2017
Beach Pick or How To Move On With Your Life Pick: Ramona Blue
Ramona Blue
by Julie Murphy
Balzer + Bray
2017
400 pages (page count taken from arc)
ISBN: 9780062418357
Ramona Blue is author Julie Murphy's most memorable character yet. A strong female on the brink of discovery, Ramona is learning about life and love and how both can change and that change is okay.
Ramona Blue longs to escape her seedy beach town of Eulogy, Mississippi--Eulogy--even sounds desolate right? Ramona's world is made up of her pregnant sister Hattie, her inept father, her idiot mother and no where to go or to be except at one of her jobs. Ramona is the only one who seems to "get" that the family is struggling for their existence. Since Hurricane Katrina destroyed their home, they have been living in a FEMA trailer that is little better than sleeping outside.
Ramona is a larger than life figure--standing at over 6' tall, she has to duck and navigate her "home" and showering in the tiny shower is laughable. Ramona, far from a shrinking violet, sports electric blue hair...always. After saying good bye to her summer romance Grace, Ramona realizes that for her, it was more than just a summer fling. She is worried that Grace will go back to her "real" life and forget all about their summer together.
When old friend Freddie arrives back in town, Ramona is happy to spend time with him. It is easy being around Freddie and their friendship seems just right.
Ramona is on the edge of something great--her life is before her, her past behind her. This coming of age story will strike a chord in readers. It is real life. Fiction just says it better! Thank you, Julie Murphy, for making terrible things beautiful.
This book is for anyone who is at the crossroads whatever they may be. Ramona Blue will choose and it will be alright.
Heartfelt and deep, Ramona Blue will pull readers in, and Julie Murphy has another winner on her hands!
Highly recommended grade 9-up. Mature subject matter.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received the ARC from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Julie Murphy
Balzer + Bray
2017
400 pages (page count taken from arc)
ISBN: 9780062418357
Ramona Blue is author Julie Murphy's most memorable character yet. A strong female on the brink of discovery, Ramona is learning about life and love and how both can change and that change is okay.
Ramona Blue longs to escape her seedy beach town of Eulogy, Mississippi--Eulogy--even sounds desolate right? Ramona's world is made up of her pregnant sister Hattie, her inept father, her idiot mother and no where to go or to be except at one of her jobs. Ramona is the only one who seems to "get" that the family is struggling for their existence. Since Hurricane Katrina destroyed their home, they have been living in a FEMA trailer that is little better than sleeping outside.
Ramona is a larger than life figure--standing at over 6' tall, she has to duck and navigate her "home" and showering in the tiny shower is laughable. Ramona, far from a shrinking violet, sports electric blue hair...always. After saying good bye to her summer romance Grace, Ramona realizes that for her, it was more than just a summer fling. She is worried that Grace will go back to her "real" life and forget all about their summer together.
When old friend Freddie arrives back in town, Ramona is happy to spend time with him. It is easy being around Freddie and their friendship seems just right.
Ramona is on the edge of something great--her life is before her, her past behind her. This coming of age story will strike a chord in readers. It is real life. Fiction just says it better! Thank you, Julie Murphy, for making terrible things beautiful.
This book is for anyone who is at the crossroads whatever they may be. Ramona Blue will choose and it will be alright.
Heartfelt and deep, Ramona Blue will pull readers in, and Julie Murphy has another winner on her hands!
Highly recommended grade 9-up. Mature subject matter.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received the ARC from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Book Peek and Author Interview: Jennifer Salvato Doktorski
The Summer After You and Me
Jennifer Salvato Doktorski
Sourcebooks Fire
May 2015 ● ISBN: 9781492619031
Tradepaper/$9.99 ● Ages 14+
Will it be a summer of fresh starts or second chances?
For Lucy, the Jersey Shore isn’t just the perfect summer escape, it’s home. As a local girl, she knows not to get attached to the tourists. They breeze in during Memorial Day weekend, crowding her costal town and stealing moonlit kisses, only to pack up their beach umbrellas and empty promises on Labor Day. Still, she can’t help but crush on charming Connor Malloy. His family spends every summer next door, and she longs for their friendship to turn into something deeper.
Then Superstorm Sandy sweeps up the coast, bringing Lucy and Connor together for a few intense hours. Except nothing is the same in the wake of the storm, and Lucy is left to pick up the pieces of her broken heart and her broken home. Time may heal all wounds, but with Memorial Day approaching and Connor returning, Lucy’s summer is sure to be filled with fireworks.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jennifer Salvato Doktorski is the author of two YA novels and is a freelance nonfiction writer. Her first paid writing gig was at The North Jersey Herald & News, where she wrote obituaries and began her lifelong love of news and coffee. She lives in New Jersey with her family.
MY INTERVIEW WITH JENNIFER SALVATO DOKTORSKI:
I was able to ask Jennifer a few questions about her passions, love, life and the pursuit of writing. Jennifer, an avid Hogwarts fan and ex-obituary writer, answers my questions here:
(Me) I read that you are a Hogwarts fan, so this is about your love:
1.
If you arrived at Hogwarts, what house would the hat choose for
you and why?
Okay, so for this
question I took three online quizzes and three times, the answer was
Hufflepuff. The reasons given were that I’m loyal, dependable, and hardworking.
Coincidentally, I once had my handwriting analyzed and that same set of
characteristics came up. So, Hufflepuff it is. Better that than Slytherin! My
friends call me “safety pup” so I knew I wasn’t cut out for Gryffindor.
2. Since you have been an obituary writer, write a brief obituary
for Dumbledore:
Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore died today
at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. He was between 115 and 150 years
old. Longtime Hogwarts headmaster and founder of the Order of the Phoenix,
Dumbledore never married or had children. He is preceded in death by his sister
Ariana, survived by a brother, Aberforth, and devoted phoenix, Fawkes, and will
live forever in the hearts and minds of the Hogwarts students and wizards who
knew and loved him. Funeral to be held on the Hogwarts grounds beside Black
Lake, where he will also be interred.
( Me again) these are not about Hogwarts:
2.
What 3 books are your favorite books of all time and why?
To Kill a
Mockingbird.
I re-read this book every few years and never get tired of it. Scout may be one
of the most endearing characters in all of literature. From the opening line
until the end, Scout speaks to me; telling an important story that is every bit
as relevant today as it was when it was first published in 1960. Yes, I’ve
already preordered Go Set a Watchman.
Are You There
God? It’s Me, Margaret, I recently read a list of important “must reads” in
YA literature that’s been kicking around social media lately and was shocked to
find that this title was not on it. What? I consider Judy Blume’s books to be
the cornerstone of YA fiction. Judy Blume was one of my earliest and most
important influences. Her books were groundbreaking and anyone writing YA today
owes her a debt of gratitude.
The Catcher in
the Rye.
I picked up this book for the first time in seventh grade. I’d finished a test
early and my teacher told me to select a book off the classroom shelf and read quietly. No problem there. Not when I
found this book to be absolutely mind blowing!! It was also un-put-down-able. I
remember forgoing all homework that night until I finished it.
4. Is it more exciting to finish writing the last sentence of your
book (s) or is it more exciting to see the first copy in print?
Even as I’m writing that
last sentence, I know I headed back to the beginning to start a series of
revisions. In fact, if it weren’t for print deadlines, I would never stop
rewriting. So for me, it’s more exciting to see the first copy in print because
it means the hard part is done.
5. What advice would you give to your 15-year-old self if you
could?
Hang in there, it all
gets better. Oh, and the “popular” kids? You won’t even remember their names in
20 years.
6. Hurricane Sandy influences your latest book Summer After You
and Me, how did it change you personally?
It underscored what I
already knew—nature is powerful and life is precious and we shouldn’t take one
second for granted. It also renewed my faith in the inherent goodness in
people. It was nice to see people coming together and showing their willingness
to help people they didn’t even know in the aftermath of a devastating storm.
7. Describe your writing style:
This may be more my process than my style, but I’m
definitely more of a pantser than a plotter (Google pantser).
Maybe it’s because I began my writing career as a
journalist and thrive on deadline pressure, or maybe it’s because I never could
figure out how to do a proper outline with Roman numerals, capital letters, and
numbers, or maybe I’m just stubborn. At any rate, when I begin a novel, I have
a vague idea of where I’d like the plot to go, but for the most part, I just
see where my characters take me. I wish I could be a plotter. I want to be a plotter. I’m told by
authors who have converted from being pantsers to plotters that plotting IS
easier. But I don’t know, there’s something about sheer panic that helps the
words spill out faster and gets that first draft (ugly as it may be) down on
paper.
8. Finish the sentence: If I could write just one more book,
I'd write.....
…something that would leave readers laughing.
(ME, Pamela) Thank you, Jennifer, we can hardly wait to read your new book! Congratulations!
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
The Sound
by Sarah Alderson
Simon Pulse
2014
308 pages
ISBN: 9781442499331
British teen Ren Kingston is visiting America as a nanny. Just getting over a break-up with her first boyfriend, Ren decides it's the perfect time for escape. She lands a job as a live in nanny for two small children, baby Braiden and precocious Brodie. Between their day care and summer camp hours, Ren has a lot of "off" time to explore the town and walk the beach of Nantucket. She even learns to drive on the right side of the road (the American side--the British drive on the left side of the road--a custom steeped in history that left your sword arm--your right arm--free to defend yourself against enemies. I don't hear about any incidences of sword fighting motorists run amok, so driving on the left seems nonsensical).
Summers in Nantucket cater to a wealthy crowd of old money and year round town kids. The battle lines are clearly drawn in the sand and Ren tries to walk the fine line between the two warring groups. The trust fund babies stick together and party hard; they have no rules and are seemingly above the law while the town kids are expected to worship them. When Ren meets handsome, mysterious Jeremy, she is intrigued. Then she meets local bad boy Jesse and is warned to stay away from him--he's trouble.
As she is drawn further into the feud between the two boys, a nanny is found murdered. Megan--a friend of Ren's from back home-is worried about Ren's safety. This is the second summer that a young nanny has been murdered, and a serial killer may be on the loose targeting foreign nannies.
Readers will like the gossip-y pace and beach setting. This is the perfect book for a summer beach read with enough mystery and murder to keep things interesting. Ren's voice comes through loud and clear and it is brilliantly British! Her comments about American pop culture, Gossip Girl references, our weird obsession of throwing the word "LIKE" into sentences at least every other word; example: Ren like thinks it's like weird that Americans like the word like so much, ring too true.
Recommended for readers who like a breezy summer read and anyone who loves a British accent that comes alive on the pages.
Grade 9-up. Partying, mature content.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Sarah Alderson
Simon Pulse
2014
308 pages
ISBN: 9781442499331
British teen Ren Kingston is visiting America as a nanny. Just getting over a break-up with her first boyfriend, Ren decides it's the perfect time for escape. She lands a job as a live in nanny for two small children, baby Braiden and precocious Brodie. Between their day care and summer camp hours, Ren has a lot of "off" time to explore the town and walk the beach of Nantucket. She even learns to drive on the right side of the road (the American side--the British drive on the left side of the road--a custom steeped in history that left your sword arm--your right arm--free to defend yourself against enemies. I don't hear about any incidences of sword fighting motorists run amok, so driving on the left seems nonsensical).
Summers in Nantucket cater to a wealthy crowd of old money and year round town kids. The battle lines are clearly drawn in the sand and Ren tries to walk the fine line between the two warring groups. The trust fund babies stick together and party hard; they have no rules and are seemingly above the law while the town kids are expected to worship them. When Ren meets handsome, mysterious Jeremy, she is intrigued. Then she meets local bad boy Jesse and is warned to stay away from him--he's trouble.
As she is drawn further into the feud between the two boys, a nanny is found murdered. Megan--a friend of Ren's from back home-is worried about Ren's safety. This is the second summer that a young nanny has been murdered, and a serial killer may be on the loose targeting foreign nannies.
Readers will like the gossip-y pace and beach setting. This is the perfect book for a summer beach read with enough mystery and murder to keep things interesting. Ren's voice comes through loud and clear and it is brilliantly British! Her comments about American pop culture, Gossip Girl references, our weird obsession of throwing the word "LIKE" into sentences at least every other word; example: Ren like thinks it's like weird that Americans like the word like so much, ring too true.
Recommended for readers who like a breezy summer read and anyone who loves a British accent that comes alive on the pages.
Grade 9-up. Partying, mature content.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
This review has been posted in compliance with the FTC
requirements set forth in the Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and
Testimonials in Advertising (available at ftc.gov/os/2009/10/091005revisedendorsementguides.pdf)
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Book Giveaway: Welcome to Dog Beach
Welcome to Dog Beach (Seagate Summers series)
by Lisa Greenwald
Amulet
2014
272 pages
Lisa Greenwald's earlier books include Sweet Treats and Secret Crushes, the Pink and Green series and Reel Life Starring Us.
by Lisa Greenwald
Amulet
2014
272 pages
Lisa Greenwald's earlier books include Sweet Treats and Secret Crushes, the Pink and Green series and Reel Life Starring Us.
About the book
Eleven-year-old Remy loves Seagate, the island where her grandmother had a house and where her family spends every summer vacation. But this year’s different. Remy misses her dog, Danish, who recently passed away. The usual Seagate traditions don’t feel the same—and neither does her relationship with her two best friends, Micayla and Bennett. Micayla’s family is moving to Seagate year-round, and she’s spending more time with the year-round kids. Bennett’s doing “boy stuff” with new kid Calvin and his snobby sister Claire. Remy takes comfort in the company of Dog Beach—which is where she hatches her plan to bring her friends closer and recapture the Seagate magic. This start of a new series is filled with summer treats, activities, and the spirit of friendship and invention that are Greenwald’s trademarks.
Praise for Welcome to Dog Beach
"Remy’s quiet tale of change and growth marks a promising start to a new series."
Praise for Welcome to Dog Beach
"Remy’s quiet tale of change and growth marks a promising start to a new series."
I have 5 FREE copies of the ARC up for grabs! For your chance to win and read the book first, simply post a comment to the blog and be sure and include your first name, city, state and email contact. Deadline for posts is Thursday, February 27 at noon MST. Winners are chosen randomly by Randomizer. Winners will receive an email from me shortly after 12:00 noon MST on February 27. Please be sure and check your email on that date. Winners have 24 hours to respond to my email. Books will ship from New York. Good luck and start posting! Pamela
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Tween Pick: Lauren's Beach Crush (Crush #1)
Lauren's Beach Crush
by Angela Darling
Simon Spotlight
2013
176 pages
Tweens will gravitate to this promising series. Good, clean fun and sweet romance will draw them in and keep them reading.
Twelve year old Lauren Silver has been crushing on gorgeous Charlie for two years! She's been planning how to make Charlie notice her and fall in love with her. This year at her family's beach house, she will set her plan in motion. She has watched Charlie...no studied Charlie...okay, almost stalked Charlie, but it's all for her research. Like her dad, Lauren is overly organized. She's "very precise" referring to her plan as "Operation Cell Phone."
Lauren is excited for her summer at the beach until her mother informs her that Chrissy Porter, her mother's friend's daughter, is joining them for the summer. Lauren isn't sure she wants Chrissy around or involved in her plan, but she tries to make the best of things.
Sometimes the best of plans go awry, but sometimes things have a way of working out.
Girls will empathize with Lauren and her dramatic feelings. They will cheer for her and feel her sadness.
Recommended for tweens grade 5-up.
FTC Required disclaimer: I received the arc from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Angela Darling
Simon Spotlight
2013
176 pages
Tweens will gravitate to this promising series. Good, clean fun and sweet romance will draw them in and keep them reading.
Twelve year old Lauren Silver has been crushing on gorgeous Charlie for two years! She's been planning how to make Charlie notice her and fall in love with her. This year at her family's beach house, she will set her plan in motion. She has watched Charlie...no studied Charlie...okay, almost stalked Charlie, but it's all for her research. Like her dad, Lauren is overly organized. She's "very precise" referring to her plan as "Operation Cell Phone."
Lauren is excited for her summer at the beach until her mother informs her that Chrissy Porter, her mother's friend's daughter, is joining them for the summer. Lauren isn't sure she wants Chrissy around or involved in her plan, but she tries to make the best of things.
Sometimes the best of plans go awry, but sometimes things have a way of working out.
Girls will empathize with Lauren and her dramatic feelings. They will cheer for her and feel her sadness.
Recommended for tweens grade 5-up.
FTC Required disclaimer: I received the arc from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
This review has been posted in compliance with the FTC requirements set forth in the Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising (available at ftc.gov/os/2009/10/091005revisedendorsementguides.pdf)
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Monday, July 11, 2011
Chick Pick: Moonglass
Moonglass
by Jessi Kirby
Simon & Schuster
2011
232 pages
Poignant, touching, and fresh, Moonglass is a triumph of a first novel. Anna is only seven when her mother walks out into the surf and drowns. Now at age sixteen, her father is uprooting Anna to go live in the small beach town of Crystal Cove, California. Anna is not looking forward to the move--she doesn't want to make new friends or live in a new place.
Things start to look up when she sees the beachfront cottage they get to live in. The next day she meets a motormouth girl named Ashley who assures her that they will be BFF's and she meets Tyler, a hot lifeguard. Maybe this won't be such a bad place after all.
Sadly, Anna keeps remembering the night her mother walked into the ocean--maybe it's because they are now living in the little town where her parents met and fell in love. What was it that her mother was looking for in the surf? Why are some of the cottages abandoned? Who is the strange man who crawls the beach every day? Why is Joy so interested in telling Anna about her mother?
Part romance, part mystery, but all mesmerizing, Moonglass is a sure winner.
Highly recommended ages 12-up. Some skinny-dipping but no graphic details, no sex.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Jessi Kirby
Simon & Schuster
2011
232 pages
Poignant, touching, and fresh, Moonglass is a triumph of a first novel. Anna is only seven when her mother walks out into the surf and drowns. Now at age sixteen, her father is uprooting Anna to go live in the small beach town of Crystal Cove, California. Anna is not looking forward to the move--she doesn't want to make new friends or live in a new place.
Things start to look up when she sees the beachfront cottage they get to live in. The next day she meets a motormouth girl named Ashley who assures her that they will be BFF's and she meets Tyler, a hot lifeguard. Maybe this won't be such a bad place after all.
Sadly, Anna keeps remembering the night her mother walked into the ocean--maybe it's because they are now living in the little town where her parents met and fell in love. What was it that her mother was looking for in the surf? Why are some of the cottages abandoned? Who is the strange man who crawls the beach every day? Why is Joy so interested in telling Anna about her mother?
Part romance, part mystery, but all mesmerizing, Moonglass is a sure winner.
Highly recommended ages 12-up. Some skinny-dipping but no graphic details, no sex.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
Monday, January 3, 2011
Chick Pick: The Cupcake Queen
The Cupcake Queen
by Heather Hepler
Dutton Children's Books (Penguin Young Readers Group, 2009
242 pages
The best cute ya novel for girls this year!
Quirky, clumsy Penny Lane (her parents loved the Beatles) finds herself eons away from her New York City upbringing when her mother decides to "find herself" and moves them to Nowheresville, USA known as Hog's Hollow. It's bad enough to live in a small, picturesque town known for its pork products, it's worse to have to work in a cupcake shop decorating minature cakes for the town's wealthy and snobbish gentry. When Penny crosses paths with local mean girl Charity (who is soooo totally misnamed!) sparks fly and other kids laugh.
Penny finds friends with blue haired outcast Tally and a cute boy named Marcus and his even cuter dog Sam-- who runs into her--literally--on the beach. Penny is hopelessly lost in her new surroundings and she hates it! Only when her father and mother decide to really call it quits and DIVORCE, does Penny realize that the place she's at might not be the place she hates.
The Cupcake Queen is charming, quirky, light, and cute and girls who liked The Teashop Girls and Coffeehouse Angel are sure to love this novel.
Recommended grade 7-up.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I purchased this book for the middle school library. I did not receive any monetary compensation for this review.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Realistic Fiction
Angela 1
by David A. Bedford
Eloquent Books, 2009.
188 pages.
Angela moves to a new town with her mother and sister after her parents' divorce. Although school is exciting and Angela has no trouble making friends, things aren't as pleasant as they sound. Her history teacher is making waves with some citizens who don't like his teaching methods--they prefer that teachers not have an opinion.
Angela and her friends uncover some suspicious activities being covered up by her principal, too. What happens when teen-agers fight the good fight? Will adults and authorities believe them?
This first novel in a series of three introduces Angela and her friends as activists and moral teens, trying to do the right thing. There is quite a lot going on in this novel; I suspect the follow-up novels will help clarify a few things.
The cover art and style of the book seem quite off-putting to the teen market and the price ($25.50) is steep for many teen buyers and certainly libraries.
Ages 13-up due to "adult" crimes like corruption, mis-use of funds, slander--terms that younger students are not usually familiar with.
FTC Required Disclosure: The author sent me a copy of his book to review. I received no monetary compensation for this review. I would recommend this book more whole-heartedly if it were packaged for the mass-market with a new cover and a better, more affordable, price. In its current format the book looks like a high school reader produced by a textbook company.
by David A. Bedford
Eloquent Books, 2009.
188 pages.
Angela moves to a new town with her mother and sister after her parents' divorce. Although school is exciting and Angela has no trouble making friends, things aren't as pleasant as they sound. Her history teacher is making waves with some citizens who don't like his teaching methods--they prefer that teachers not have an opinion.
Angela and her friends uncover some suspicious activities being covered up by her principal, too. What happens when teen-agers fight the good fight? Will adults and authorities believe them?
This first novel in a series of three introduces Angela and her friends as activists and moral teens, trying to do the right thing. There is quite a lot going on in this novel; I suspect the follow-up novels will help clarify a few things.
The cover art and style of the book seem quite off-putting to the teen market and the price ($25.50) is steep for many teen buyers and certainly libraries.
Ages 13-up due to "adult" crimes like corruption, mis-use of funds, slander--terms that younger students are not usually familiar with.
FTC Required Disclosure: The author sent me a copy of his book to review. I received no monetary compensation for this review. I would recommend this book more whole-heartedly if it were packaged for the mass-market with a new cover and a better, more affordable, price. In its current format the book looks like a high school reader produced by a textbook company.
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