No sobbing required: A different kind of animal story

2014-03-20T15:39:43-04:00

Finally: a story about animals that won't leave you in a puddle, heart-broken, swearing off all other animal stories for life. (I won't name them here, because including them in this context is truly spoilerific, but you know the stories I'm referring to. We probably cried in all the same

No sobbing required: A different kind of animal story2014-03-20T15:39:43-04:00

Ian Hamilton’s The Red Pole of Macau (2012)

2014-03-20T15:40:44-04:00

The previous volumes in the Ava Lee series sketched her character as slightly as the silhouette in the striking cover designs* but The Red Pole of Macau takes Ava into new emotional territory; it is a worthy addition to the series and has reignited my interest in this character's adventures.

Ian Hamilton’s The Red Pole of Macau (2012)2014-03-20T15:40:44-04:00

Yellow, Black and Braille: Two books for young(ish) readers

2012-11-30T19:09:28-05:00

Pamela Porter's backlist landed all-of-a-piece on my TBR with I'll Be Watching. Yellow Moon, Apple Moon is aimed at the earliest readers. It provides a lovely transition-from-board-books option. [Next on my Pamela Porter list, if you're curious, arranged in order of readers' ages: Sky (prose, 8-12) and The Crazy Man (free verse,

Yellow, Black and Braille: Two books for young(ish) readers2012-11-30T19:09:28-05:00

The relationship of your nose to your book: adjust ratio, as required

2012-11-29T15:13:07-05:00

On occasion, I have to wonder if perhaps  my grandmother and great-aunts didn't have a point. How many times did they instruct me that I should not, so often, have my nose in a book. Because sometimes I really wonder how I missed something huge. Like, for instance, Robert Lepage's

The relationship of your nose to your book: adjust ratio, as required2012-11-29T15:13:07-05:00

Ahmad Akbarpour’s That Night’s Train (2012)

2013-03-19T18:45:26-04:00

When life and story intersect: that's where this story takes place. (And isn't that the best place ever to set a story?) Groundwood - House of Anansi, 2012 But, okay, in the beginning, when readers step aboard That Night's Train, they are actually in a railway carriage. "The train

Ahmad Akbarpour’s That Night’s Train (2012)2013-03-19T18:45:26-04:00
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