Tag: fiction

“I Can’t Believe I Haven’t Read That Yet” #6 (Help me choose!)

“I Can’t Believe I Haven’t Read That Yet” #6 (Help me choose!)

December’s Result – Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel My first adult read of the year! Reading Station Eleven made me realize how long it has been since I read a solid work of fiction like this. Station Eleven felt to me like a […]

25 KidLit Annotations: Early Readers [Review]

18 January 2019 / review / 0 Comments
25 KidLit Annotations: Early Readers [Review]

One of the assignments for my children’s literature course last term was to write 25 annotations (snapshot reviews between 50 and 150 words) on all sorts of kidlit. It was a great opportunity to delve out of my comfort zone […]

Anna-Marie McLemore’s Dazzling Debut [Review + Discussion Questions]

15 January 2019 / review / 0 Comments
Anna-Marie McLemore’s Dazzling Debut [Review + Discussion Questions]

The Weight of Feathers, Anna-Marie McLemore’s debut novel, tells the story of two families of entertainers caught up in a bitter feud. The French Romani Corbeaus walk in trees and the Latinx Palomas swim as mermaids, travelling to small towns in California for performances. The Weight of Feathers explores themes of family, loyalty, and love with a touch of magical realism. The book is #ownvoices for Latinx representation.

Brother and Sister Face a Wicked Wood in this Forthcoming Middle Grade Novel [Review]

8 January 2019 / review / 2 Comments
Brother and Sister Face a Wicked Wood in this Forthcoming Middle Grade Novel [Review]

Deep within the enchanted woods in the town of Watch Hollow stands the once-grand Blackford House, whose halls hold a magical secret: a giant cuckoo clock that does much more than tell time. But when the clock’s gears cease to turn, an evil presence lurking among the trees begins to come out of the shadows.

Reading Middle Grade in 2019

6 January 2019 / to be read / 9 Comments
Reading Middle Grade in 2019

One goal I have this year is to increase the number of middle grade novels I read. I’m aiming for one title per week. In order to achieve this goal, I’m taking advantage of ‘suspended holds’. You can place a book on hold at the library but ‘suspend’ it until a certain date. This means you keep your place in line, but the book doesn’t become available until after that date. By using this strategy, I hope to avoid…