Blog
About
My Writing Journey
Ezra Jack Keats & Me
Out & About Me
Resources
Publication
My Writing Process
Favorite Websites & Other Resources
Contact

Virginia McGee Butler

Blog
About
My Writing Journey
Ezra Jack Keats & Me
Out & About Me
Resources
Publication
My Writing Process
Favorite Websites & Other Resources
Contact
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Readin’, Ritin’, but Not Much ‘Rithmetic

Virginia McGee Butler
June 14, 2021

Strong Like the Sea

Virginia McGee Butler
June 14, 2021

Wendy S. Swore in her recently released middle grade novel Strong Like the Sea, makes her setting almost like another character. Alex was born in Hawaii to an atypical family.

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Virginia McGee Butler
June 11, 2021

Eyes on Your Own Paper

Virginia McGee Butler
June 11, 2021

I asked this seven-year-old grandson to pose for my picture to illustrate this blog and questioned if his teacher ever told him to keep his eyes on his own paper. “Well, she used to,” he said, stretching his arms into a semicircle, “before we got these things around our desks.”

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Virginia McGee Butler
June 7, 2021

The Immortals

Virginia McGee Butler
June 7, 2021

I was drawn to The Immortals by Steven T. Colis when I saw the blurb on Net Galley about this book, published this month, focusing on a group of medical chaplains and a young Black petty officer who were heroes in the sinking of the Dorchester on February 3, 1943.

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Virginia McGee Butler
June 4, 2021

Knees and Toes

Virginia McGee Butler
June 4, 2021

A favorite activity when I taught kindergarten, for the children and for me, was the old “Head and Shoulders, Knees and Toes” motion song. I’ve had to give up the “knees and toes” segment over the last few months since my right knee has cried, “Enough!”

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 31, 2021

Murder in a Scottish Garden

Virginia McGee Butler
May 31, 2021

Should you be in the mood for a cozy mystery, let me recommend Murder in a Scottish Garden by Traci Hall, just out on May 25. Be prepared for the Scottish dialect throughout that takes you right into that Scottish garden and surrounding seaside community of Nairn.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 28, 2021

Carle's Contribution

Virginia McGee Butler
May 28, 2021

What a legacy! Eric Carle departed this world at 91 years of age leaving behind more than 70 books translated into a number of languages with his most famous, A Very Hungry Caterpillar, selling more than 50 million copies.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 24, 2021

All the Little Hopes

Virginia McGee Butler
May 24, 2021

In 1943, Allie Bert Tucker, but please skip the “Allie,” knows that it is her fault when her mother and baby sister die in a difficult childbirth in the mountains of North Carolina.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 21, 2021

The J's of Teaching

Virginia McGee Butler
May 21, 2021

Juliana Urtubey of Nevada, national teacher of the year from Nevada, in an exuberant appearance on morning television declared that teaching for her was Joy and Justice. This year, as never before, those two words have been needed by educators and their students.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 17, 2021

High Country Justice

Virginia McGee Butler
May 17, 2021

Having decided I was in the mood for an old-fashioned Western, I requested an advance reading copy of High Country Justice by Nik James (to be published on May 25) on the Net Galley site. The first chapter, with four dead bad guys and a pretty girl arriving on the scene, let me know that the book would fit the genre.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 14, 2021

More Than I Bargained For

Virginia McGee Butler
May 14, 2021

I used to get a laugh from my junior high students when they came in lauding their latest boyfriend/girlfriend as being “so cute.” My warning was, “You have to be careful with looks. I married a cute guy with wavy black hair.”

3 Comments
Virginia McGee Butler
May 10, 2021

War and Millie McGonigle

Virginia McGee Butler
May 10, 2021

As she has done so well before, Karen Cushman returns to history to set her novel, War and Millie McGonigle, in the place where her husband grew up. A young girl in San Diego during World War II turns out to deal with issues that will be remarkably timely.

1 Comment
Virginia McGee Butler
May 7, 2021

Many Kinds of Mothers

Virginia McGee Butler
May 7, 2021

As we get ready to celebrate Mother’s Day this weekend, I have been thinking about how different these two mothers were and reflecting that there are many ways one can mother, never error-free, but well.

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Virginia McGee Butler
May 3, 2021

Roll with It

Virginia McGee Butler
May 3, 2021

The tone for Jamie Sumner’s book Roll with It is set in the first line, “It’s kind of hard to watch The Great British Bake Off over plates of Stouffer’s lasagna.”

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 30, 2021

Spine Poem

Virginia McGee Butler
April 30, 2021

I do my last tribute to this year’s Poetry Month with three spine poems, an enjoyable exercise I stumbled upon a couple of years ago. Simply stack some books so that the order of their names on the spine make a poem.

1 Comment
Virginia McGee Butler
April 26, 2021

The Push

Virginia McGee Butler
April 26, 2021

Last month, another member of the de Grummond Book Group continued a conversation with me via email after the meeting, recommending that I read The Push by Asley Audrain. She forewarned me that it was not a light read but brought real-life issues into a compelling story line.

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 23, 2021

Poem in Your Pocket 2021

Virginia McGee Butler
April 23, 2021

In this quarantining time, we have a celebration that can be observed from a safe distance! Poem in Your Pocket Day falls yearly on a selected day during Poetry Month.

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 19, 2021

View from Pagoda Hill

Virginia McGee Butler
April 19, 2021

So start with a talented writer of historical fiction, give her a great-great-grandmother born in 1870s Shanghai, and turn her loose to do extensive research – and there is a good chance that a fine novel will result.

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 16, 2021

Playing with Poetry on the Place

Virginia McGee Butler
April 16, 2021

I’ve had a common experience with other writers from what I can read and hear in that Covid has brought a brain freeze for our normal writing practices, followed by experimenting with forms of writing outside our comfort zones.

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 12, 2021

Ivy and Bean Get to Work

Virginia McGee Butler
April 12, 2021

It is very appropriate in this Drop Everything and Read Day set in honor of Beverly Cleary’s birthday, that I review a book whose characters would have been good friends with Ramona, the star of many of Beverly’s books.

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Virginia McGee Butler
April 9, 2021

Growing

Virginia McGee Butler
April 9, 2021

April has long been designated as poetry month. My fondness for this genre goes back to my earliest memories with Mama reading poetry aloud to us – some we understood and some we did not. I loved the sounds even when the words took flight right over my head.

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