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My Name is Truth: the life of Sojourner Truth by Ann Turner

10 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books, History, Non-Fiction, Picture Books

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abolitionist movement, Children's books, History, Picture Book, slavery, women

my name is truth

Finding non-fiction for young readers is sometimes challenging.  Finding good biographies about women is also a challenge. This book meets those challenges in an exceptional way. Sojourner Truth’s belief in God shines through clearly without being “preachy.” Her strength of character is obvious, but she is also shown as having fears and sometimes doubts about herself.  She is a very real woman.

Ann Turner tells the story of Sojourner Truth to younger readers using Truth’s own words.  James Ransome has done a fantastic job with the illustrations. Sojourner Truth was born Isabella Baumfree. She was one of at least 10 children born to her parents.  Her mother instilled in her a love for God and a good knowledge of right and wrong.

Her last owner was very cruel and worked Isabella like a draft horse because she was tall and strong. New York was set to abolish slavery in 1827 and her owner had told her that she would go free a year before that happened, but she was injured and her owner refused to let her go, so she escaped with her baby Sophia.

She had to leave her three other children with her former owner because she could not take all four of them on her flight to freedom.  When she found out that Mr. Dumont, her former owner has sold her son, Peter, she went to court and won his release. (This was the first case of its kind in the U.S.).

She took the name Sojourner Truth many years later and became a strong voice in the abolitionist movement and with William Lloyd Garrison to free all slaves.  I think the book will appeal to children of all ages; however, is specifically designed for grades 1-3. I would highly recommend its purchase for any elementary library.

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Dragon of the Stars by Alex J. Cavanaugh

06 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Science Fiction, Young Adult

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aliens, Sci-Fi, teen readers

dragon of the Stars Set in the far distant future, this science fiction tale is about a civilization on a planet similar to ours. It is part of an alliance of other planets that have agreed not to colonize or to enslave senescent being of other planets. Aden Pendar is a young lieutenant whose job it is to undertake a top secret mission to find a star ship called Dragon of the Stars. This ship was developed by scientists on his planet, but on its maiden voyage, the man who had developed it took off with it.  It supposedly has the ability to destroy any other starship, and other members of the Alliance are determined to keep it from being found. Aden eventually finds the ship after several close calls with Alliance ships.  But what he finds out about the ship and its inventor will leave the reader stunned. When I first began reading this book, I had trouble getting into it because of all the military and space jargon, I even began to wonder if it were worth my time to read it all.  Then, all of a sudden – there it was – a turning point that I had not expected and from that point on I couldn’t put it down.  Readers of science fiction will definitely enjoy.  I would recommend it for readers in 7th grade and up.

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Bears Don’t Read by Emma Chichester Clark

22 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books, Picture Books

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bears, Children's books, Picture Book, reading

5bears don't read

George, a large grizzly bear, is different from other bears.  He likes to think about life and about his existence as a bear.  He wants MORE, but he doesn’t know just what that is. One day he finds a book in the forest that has pictures of bears just like him in it, and he decides to learn what the words in the book have to say about bears.  He goes to town to find someone who can teach him to read, and, of course, scares people to death.  Eventually, a little girl teaches him to read and all turns out well even though it took a while for George to learn to read.

Learning to read can be a challenge for some children. This read-aloud book lets those children know that George had to work hard to learn to read, but he eventually succeeded.  It teaches children that persistence is necessary to achieve one’s goals.  This is a good book for Pre-K and first graders.  I definitely recommend it.

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Bayou Magic by Jewel Parker Rhodes

18 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books

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abusive relationships, Children's books, gulf oil spill

bayou magic This is a delightful story about a little girl who visits her grandmother in a bayou in Louisiana. Her three older sisters have all had a turn staying all summer with their grandmother, and they tell her they don’t want to go back. Maddy has always felt she was different from her sisters, but during this trip, she learns just how different she really is.

Maddy feels she is truly at home in the bayou. She learns to listen to nature.  She learns that she comes from an African woman who could speak to the water spirit, Mami Wata. She learns how to make friends. She learns she has magical powers and can communicate with Mami Wata. Bear, the boy she meets in the bayou, teaches her how to enjoy life even though his life is far from enjoyable.  It appears that he is enhancing her life, but in the end she saves him.

The setting is the summer of the oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico,with an obvious lesson about the environmental impact of deep sea drilling. Also present in the book is familial abuse and its causes. It might be a little disturbing for some younger readers.  However, I think the story is well written, and I recommend this book for readers age nine through twelve.

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The Lost Track of Time by Paige Britt

16 Monday Mar 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books, Fantasy

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Children's books, Fantasy, Paige Britt

lost track of time

Cute little fantasy!

Penelope’s parents keep her on a very strict schedule that occupies nearly every minute of every day.  During the little time she has to herself, she like to visit an older woman near her home to have tea.  One day she finds that her mother had neglected to fill out the daily schedule that she must follow, and Penelope suddenly finds that she has a gigantic hole in her schedule.  She visits her friend and mysteriously falls into the hole of her schedule.  She finds that she is in a world that is obsessed by time with absolutely no time for “moodling.” She must confront the evil Chronos as he tries to control everything in his world.

The story is reminiscent of Alice in Wonderland and of Momo. It is a delightful little tale of a time-pressured, overextended little girl who desperately wants some time just to think and imagine how the world would be if she only had time.  I recommend its purchase for readers grades three through eight.  This is a first novel for the author, and, while I would expect others to follow, it is nice to read a stand-alone story and not have to wait for another book to come for me to feel satisfied with the ending.

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If You’re Reading This by Trent Reedy

26 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Young Adult

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Afghanistan, parental conflict, teen readers, Trent Reedy, United States, War

 

if you are reading this

The war in Afghanistan has had many casualties, many soldiers and many more family members.  Each deal with his or her losses in different ways, yet all are similar. Something has been taken that an never be replaced. Questions are raised that can never be answered, and lives are broken in ways that can never be fixed.

Mike, a young man whose father was killed in Afghanistan, begins to receive letters from his dead father on his sixteenth birthday.  Obviously, he wants to learn who has held those letters for the past eight years, but more than that, he wants to learn about his father and the dreams he had for his little boy.

Mike has always wanted to play football, but he knows he should be working to help his mother pay the bills since she alone is financially responsible for the family, and it is difficult for her to raise him and his little sister. His mother is also dead set against his playing football because she fears he will be hurt.  The letters encourage him to pursue his dreams and become the best he can, so he forges his mother’s signature on the release form for football and begins to live a life of lies and deceit.

How he resolves his dilemma and uncovers the sender of the letters makes this a moving story for any young person – especially a young man- who may be in conflict with his parents.  I recommend its purchase for any library with teen readers.

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The Only Thing to Fear

20 Friday Feb 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Political fiction, Young Adult

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Caroline Tung Richmond, future, Hitler, political fiction, teen readers, United States

the only thing to fear

Did you ever wonder how life might have been different if the Allies had not won World War II?  Caroline Tung Richmond is a freelance writer who has now given us this premise in her first novel. She pictures for us the type of society that we might have had to endure under a regime that gave us not only Hitler as the dictator, but also his family as the continuation of his legacy.

In this story, Hitler’s medical experiments have resulted in the creation of some people with super powers. Zara is one of those anomalies. She lives in what used to be known as The United States of America, but is now called Eastern American Territories. Zara has spent her whole life trying to escape the attention of her Nazi overlords, but now she has to come face-to-face with them and with her powers, if she is to be able in any way to carry on the legacy of her family as defenders of freedom.

This fast-paced story will have the reader sitting on the edge of his/her seat and wondering what will happen as more freedom fighters with powers come out of hiding.  There is a love interest that develops, but it is not a sexualized book. I think it is appropriate for middle and high school readers.

 

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Playing a Part by Daria Wilke

12 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Young Adult

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Bullying, Homosexuality, Performing Arts, Social Issues, teen readers, Theater

playing a part

Bullying and homosexuality are both handled quite well in this story from Russia.  A young boy, Grisha, has been a part of a theater of puppeteers as long as he can remember.  His goal is to continue that life but boys at his school are bullying him because of his small frame, and even his grandfather thinks he is not “macho” enough.

When his best friend, Sam, leaves Russia after refusing to deal any longer with the homophobia he faced and when Grisha’s best friend, Sashok, (who happens to be a girl) has to deal with a potentially fatal heart condition, Grisha’a world comes tumbling down around him.  He begins to question whether or not he is gay, and begins to wonder if his life would be like Sam’s if he were gay.

The protagonist in the story is very young, yet he seems to have insights that reach far beyond his years. This is a very moving, extremely well-written tale, but I think it might be emotionally too advanced for elementary readers, and the age of the main character might turn off the older readers. I am just not sure who the audience will be.  I liked the ending that leaves the reader wondering if perhaps Grisha is not gay and will not have to continue living with the bullying.

I am recommending it as an optional purchase for middle school and high school libraries, although I think it would make an excellent book for English teachers to use as a novel study in a World Literature class.

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Jefferson’s Sons by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley

26 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Historical Fiction, Young Adult

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historical fiction, movie material, Sally Hemmings, teen readers, Thomas Jefferson, United States

jefferson

Although this book has been out for several years, I had not read it.  It caught my eye the other day, and I thought I would try it because the students in one of the classes in my town are doing research into African Americans.  This is one that should be added to that list – if not required.

It is, of course, the story of the children of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemmings. However, it is more than that. It is an unusual look into the dichotomy of a man who would pronounce that “all men are created equal” in The Declaration of Independence, post a copy of that document in the lobby of his home, and yet deny his own flesh and blood the parental support that they so desperately wanted.

It is a sobering, eye-opening look into the institution that was slavery in the U.S.  The scenes are horrifying in many instances, but they are necessary to present the true picture of life in Virginia during the time of slavery.

The characters are well developed.  The author did extensive research into the Jefferson family and slavery, and she did a masterful job in presenting this piece of historical fiction to us. She does not use any dialectal language in the story.  The characters come alive and seem very real to any reader precisely because they are not different in speech or behavior. They speak, love, suffer, and die the same as any other person.  To do less with them, would be to reduce their humanity.

I did not know that Sally Hemmings was, in fact, a half-sister to Thomas Jefferson’s wife, thus the aunt of his daughter, Martha.  Martha tried to pretend that no connection to her family existed between her family and Sally’s. Yet, it was one of her daughters who taught Sally’s children to read and write.

While I knew that a mixed-race child born to a white woman was considered free, although they may still be considered black, and that a mixed-race child born to a slave was considered a slave, I did not know that a person of 7/8 white blood was considered white, but they could also be considered a slave because of the skin tone of their mother. Very confusing to me.

This book is well worth anyone’s time. I highly recommend it.  I do not know why it has not been made into a movie.

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Burn Out by Kristi Helvig

12 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Science Fiction, Young Adult

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political fiction, Sci-Fi, teen readers

burn out

 

I have always liked science fiction, but lately I have not been able to get that type of book to review.  Science fiction has often given rise to actual scientific inventions.  Someone reads a book or watches a movie and begins to think, “Why couldn’t that really happen?” The biometric machines that are common-place in our hospitals had their inception in Star Trek. A machine that could travel to the moon and another that could go deep under the sea was born in the mind of Jules Verne. These are only a few examples of how science fiction has influenced reality.

The concepts that Helvig proposes in Burn Out are somewhat terrifying, yet intriguing.  Could it be possible to develop suits that would be totally heat resistant and self-repairing? Is it possible to travel deep into space through a type of worm-hole? This particular story was a pleasure for me to read, not only because it is well-written and thought-provoking, but also because it promises more to come.

It is 300 years in the future, and seventeen year old Tora lives all alone in an underground shelter. The earth is quickly dying because the sun has become a red giant and is burning up everything as it dies.  Her mother and sister were killed when they ventured outside and were burned alive by the sun. Her father, an engineer for the government, was killed by that government, so Tora can trust no one.  She knows that her only hope is to escape from Earth to someplace else in the Universe, but she has no idea where to go and no spaceship – only the deadly weapons that her father had created that only she can fire because he set them to her biometrics.  She doesn’t know if anyone else is even alive on Earth, but she sends out a broadcast every day, just in case. A family friend, Marcus, appears one day; and her world actually becomes worse.

Any high school Sci-Fi reader will love this book. It is also a type of political commentary because the government that is supposed to be trying to save the world is actually out to save themselves. I recommend it for high school readers and up because it is rather violent and there are sexual references.

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