Four years ago, we signed a check.
Four years ago, we received a deed.
The place was OURS,
or so we thought.
Readin’, Ritin’, but Not Much ‘Rithmetic
I wish a belated book birthday to Anna E. Jordan’s Shira and Esther’s Double Dream Debut that came out on October 10. The author takes her own background to weave a story that becomes an enjoyable mirror for Jewish middle graders and a delightful window for those who are not familiar with Jewish customs.
As I review Kin: Rooted in Hope, a verse novel by Carole Boston Weatherford that is beautifully illustrated by her son Jeffery Boston Weatherford, I am going to suggest starting with the author’s and illustrator’s notes in the back. These notes will give a glimpse of the heart and perspective behind the book and set the stage for the book’s story.
In my experience, most families with siblings raise children who claim that one or the other had a distinct advantage in the discipline department. Our two youngest children who are five and six years younger than their older brother vowed that he had a distinct advantage because he found a way to make me laugh when he got in trouble. It is possible that they have a point.
The questioner had no idea! We were anticipating together Mississippi’s biggest lawn party scheduled for this Saturday, August 19. I mentioned that I had attended all eight of them except last year when I had Covid, even the ones during the pandemic that became virtual. She asked, “When you went to the first one, did you have any idea that you would ever be a panelist?”
Star Crossed, by Heather Dune Macadam & Simon Worrall is a true and well-researched book, using personal letters and writings, documentary evidence, and long personal interviews with the subject’s sister Michelle. The book starts almost frivolously with a mixture of Romeo and Juliet, combined with a soap opera, mingled with a bohemian art group in Paris in 1941.
In a happy coincidence, since I was planning a blog about dragonflies, the biologist on Creature Comforts from the August 10 Mississippi Public Radio podcast discussed them. I listened as I walked as he shared fascination with these insects. I related to his comment that they were very hard to photograph.