Children's Literature

  • K-12 Reviews: 30th Anniversary Salute to Banned Books Week

    Sep 26, 2012

    Salute to Banned BooksOne of the most fiercely guarded—and most fiercely debated—freedoms that citizens of our nation have is the right to read. As long as books are published, there will be titles that offend someone. From talking animals in some fairy tales and folktales to books in which characters explore their sexual identity to titles in which questions about religious beliefs are raised or certain expletives are used, no book can ever be considered safe from offending someone. In honor of the thirtieth anniversary of Banned Books Week—celebrated September 30 to October 6—this week members of the International Reading Association Children’s Literature and Reading Special Interest Group look back at books that have raised the ire of some readers, particularly during the last year. Teachers may be interested in using some of the excellent lessons for different grade levels on examining challenged books at ReadWriteThink.org. The American Library Association also has several useful resources for teachers and librarians and a list entitled Books Challenged or Banned in 2010-2011 compiled by Robert P. Doyle. The ALA websites offer suggestions for how to become involved during Banned Book Week, including writing letters to the editor on behalf of books and reading or rereading a book that has been banned or challenged. Additionally, ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom has provided a list of 326 challenges to books during the past year. Among the top ten most challenged books are the ones that appear below.


    GRADES K-3


    Butler, Dori Hillestad. (2005). My mom’s having a baby: A month-to-month guide to pregnancy. Illus. by Carol Thompson. Morton Grove, IL: Albert Whitman.

    My Mom's Having a BabyFive-year-old Elizabeth is excited about the arrival of her unborn sibling and is full of questions. Using a nonfiction format, the author has created a month-by-month look at the development of a baby within the mother’s uterus as told by its narrator, Elizabeth, from her childlike perspective. Since older siblings are always curious about a new baby, the book provides accurate and straightforward explanations as to how a baby is conceived and how it grows as a fetus until the baby is ready to be born. The illustrations complement the text in their variety and form from cartoon-like panels to speech balloons or full page spreads. Mother explains how her body is changing to allow for the baby to grow. The love and excitement as well as the anticipation of a new baby brother or sister permeate the book while factual details are woven throughout the months. This book was named a Top Ten Sci-Tech Books for Youth 2005. Teachers can find guides for parents and siblings from the author at her website. Interested readers can listen to the author discuss her book with an adult and a Fox news commentator.

    One of the top ten most challenged books reported to the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, the book’s frank and open discussion of how a baby is created disturbed some critics. Many adult readers liked the month-by-month description on the development of the baby and how it grows, but felt uncomfortable with the detailed explanation about conception to a five year old. Arguments swirled around the right age for children or teenagers to learn about the basic facts of “where babies come from.” Many librarians maintained that the book belongs in the nonfiction section of libraries and parents/adults/caregivers have the responsibility of making the choice as to when and if the books will be useful within their family units. On the blog, She Scribes, a lively pro and con discussion of this book reflects the nation-wide controversy can be found. Projects such as The Uprise Book Project state that their goal is to end the cycle of poverty with banned books and proclaim: “We think that parents have a right and an obligation to monitor their own child’s access to literature they feel might be inappropriate, but they can’t control another child’s access. By banning and challenging books in schools and libraries, though, they’re doing exactly that."

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    GRADES 5-8


    Harris, Robie H. (2009, 3rd Edition). It’s perfectly normal: A book about changing bodies, growing up, sex and sexual health. Illus. by Michael Emberley. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press.

    It's Perfectly NormalThe year 2009 celebrated the 15th anniversary edition of It’s Perfectly Normal. Intended for intermediate and middle school-aged tweens and teens, the book offers answers to the myriad kinds of questions that young people ponder as their bodies change during puberty. The author offers frank and factual information in a straightforward fashion. The introduction, “Lots of Questions,” sets the open tone for the book. Part One launches this format with “What is Sex?” The cartoon-like yet anatomically accurate illustrations serve to lighten the tone and create pictures that can be observed and invite discussion. Throughout the book, his cartoons of the bird and bee discussing the featured topics add a touch of levity to subjects that are often difficult to discuss openly. Other chapters that continue the discussion are: Our Bodies; Puberty; Families and Babies; Decisions; and Staying Healthy. Some of the topics included within these chapters deal with sexual reproduction, sexual desire, sexual intercourse, heterosexuality, homosexuality, sex organs, changing feelings, puberty, birth control, taking care of babies, the cells, sex abuse, STDs, HIV and AIDS, staying healthy, and responsible choices. The most recent edition includes chapters on the Internet and safe use of the Internet and evaluating websites. The publisher has provided an in-depth information sheet on the website that includes notes from the author, talking points for teachers and caregivers using the books with tweens and teens, and comments from doctors and experts in the field of sex education. The author discusses her books on her website. Companion titles from Robie Harris include It’s So Amazing: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies and Families (2008); It’s NOT the Stork! A Book about Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends (2004), and her newest title Who’s in My Family? All about Our Families (2012). The controversy surrounding the book deals with the opinion of some that the book is pornographic. Some critics consider the illustrations too graphic. Other challenges refer to the discussions on intercourse, masturbation, and homosexuality. A school district in the state of Washington removed the book from the school library stating, “The book is an act of encouragement for children to begin desiring sexual gratification…and is a clear example of child pornography.” Challenges have come from schools and public libraries around the country, making this title the American Library Association’s most challenged book in 2005 even though it was supported by such groups as Planned Parenthood. Another type of question surrounding the use of this book is the concern that it is written for children rather than older teens or adults. The ageless argument among parents and adults is the question dealing with age appropriateness as to when the explanation of sex and sexuality should be introduced. (Reference: The American Library Association.)

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    GRADES 9-12


    Alexie, Sherman. (2007). The absolutely true diary of a part-time Indian. Illus. by Ellen Forney. New York: Little, Brown.

    The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time IndianFilled with humor and pathos, this title describes the decision made by Arnold Junior (or Arnold, his white name) to leave the Spokane Indian Reservation for a better education in the nearby town of Reardon. The author’s description of the poverty, alcoholism, and depression that fill the lives of those around Junior make it easy to understand why he chooses to attend school in a place where he is the only Native American. In some cases, just getting to school is a challenge by itself, and once Arnold settles in, of course, he must navigate the confusing high school social order while fending off accusations of betrayal by the friends he left behind. The author describes the beauty of the area of Washington State where Junior lives and dreams of a brighter future. The pages resonate with cultural awareness and respect for the past and for family amid the certainty that Junior must leave what is familiar if he hopes for more than the bleak lives he often sees around him. Few who have read the title can remain untouched by its clear depiction of the inequities in this nation. Despite its popularity and National Book Award, the title has been challenged due by parents due to what they consider to be offensive language, racism, its religious viewpoint, and its sexually explicit nature.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Collins, Suzanne. (2008-2010). The Hunger games trilogy. New York: Scholastic.

    The Hunger GamesThe three books that recently sparked something of a reading craze rivaling that of the Twilight series among teens have come under fire as being anti-family, anti-ethnic, insensitive, violent, and containing offensive language and dealing with the occult or satanic themes. The trilogy centers around Katniss Everdeen, a sixteen-year-old who volunteers to take her younger sister’s place in the annual Hunger Games. Each district selects a male and a female tribute to represent them in a televised fight to the death with only one survivor. Katniss is sure that she stands little chance of surviving, but as it turns out, she has more survival skills than she realized. Sexual tension is provided by her growing attraction to Peeta, the male tribute from her district. The first book is filled with surprises about the post-apocalyptic world in which the story is set, and all three books feature difficult, almost impossible choices about life, death, and survival faced by the book’s characters. At many points, it’s virtually impossible to know who to trust or who to believe. The author weaves a skillful, riveting page-turner that still has many readers thinking about how the series ends.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Huxley, Aldous. (1946). Brave new world. New York: Harper & Row.

    Brave New WorldDespite the creation of a perfect society in the world of the future described in this literary classic often read in senior English classes, not everyone is content. One man in particular, Bernard Marx, is bored by the promiscuous, pleasure-seeking aspect of the world in which he lives, and longs to be left alone. Citizens are kept in line through the use of drugs that numb their minds and keep any questions or critical thoughts at bay, and Bernard has grown increasingly uncomfortable with the society he sees around him. For many readers, this early dystopian novel foretold the focus on consumerism that exists today and seems to insist that we buy more, more, more when we really need less, less, less. The book, a perennial title on the list of books that are challenged or banned, earns its place on the list because of insensitivity, nudity, racism, religious viewpoints, and for its sexual explicitness.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Hwa, Kim Dong. (2009). The color of Earth series. New York: First Second.

    The Color of EarthThis graphic novel series set in Korea focuses on love, a first love for young Ehwa and a second chance at love for her mother. In the first title, The Color of Earth, Ehwa, the daughter, on the cusp of puberty, is torn between growing affection for a monk-in-training and a wealthy landowner's son while her mother experiences sexual ecstasy with a traveling artist who leaves a brush behind each time he visits. The characters are refreshingly honest about their feelings, and the storyline is engaging and filled with descriptive language that accompanies the softly drawn and painted illustrations whose subtle tints and tones mirror the blush on a young girl’s cheek as she explores the mysteries of her own body. In classic romantic fashion, both females long deeply for love or sexual fulfillment, their feelings a counterpoint against the often vulgar remarks of some of the men in the village and the curiosity of the village children, who are learning about their own bodies in a playful fashion. The relationship between mother and daughter is deep and honest, and no question is too intimate to be asked. The book has been considered too sexually provocative by some and inappropriate for its intended audience.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Lee, Harper. (1960). To kill a mockingbird. New York: J. P. Lippincott.

    To Kill a MockingbirdAnother ubiquitous title found in the middle and high school literary canon, this book has been challenged frequently for its offensive language and racism. Set in small-town Maycomb, Alabama, in the 1930s, the story centers around the Finch family: Scout, her brother Jem, and their father, Atticus. The storyline involves a mystery or two, a fight for justice, and the unfair laws that existed at the time. Scout must come to her lawyer father’s defense when he defends a black man accused of raping a white girl. She and Jem find it difficult to understand the attitudes of the adults around them when it comes to race and class. In the end, a society heavily mired in decades of prejudice and a double-tiered system of justice is shaken by the words, deeds, and quiet dignity of the heroic Atticus Finch. For many readers, this book represents their coming of age about the topic of social justice and civil rights and has prompted much reflection on the assumptions we make about those around us.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Myracle, Lauren. (2004-2007). Internet girls series. New York: Abrams/Amulet Books.

    TTYLThis young adult trilogy is written completely in the style of instant messaging with teen vocabulary. The first title, Ttyl, is internet slang for “talk to you later” and introduces readers to the winsome threesome—Madigan, Zoe, and Angela—who help each other through the ups and downs of high school and young romance. Next in the series are Ttfn “Ta-ta for now” and finally L8r, g8r “Later, gator,” two titles which continue the girls’ friendship as they explore alcohol and drugs and begin sexual relationships. These titles have topped the ALA list of challenged books for offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, and unsuited to age group. Myracle is available on Twitter and Facebook to talk to fans about the books, their topics, and her characters.

    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver


    Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds. (1985-2013). Alice series. New York: Simon & Schuster.

    AliceYoung girls and women across the world have read one, a couple or all of the books in the Alice series. There are 27 titles that follow the main character, Alice McKinley, from third grade all the way to college. Besides featuring a character to whom readers can easily relate, the books discuss topics such as family, friendship, moving, bullies, prejudice, and body image. When Alice is in high school the books explore themes about identity, first jobs, relationships, dating, and sex. The series has made the ALA most challenged book list for several years for the books’ sexual content. The movie Alice Upside Down is based on the series. In May 2013 the final Alice title, Always Alice, will be published, chronicling Alice’s life from age 18 to 60. Naylor keeps a blog where she answers readers’ questions.

    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver


    Sones, Sonya. (2004). One of those hideous books where the mother dies. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers.

    One of those Hideous Books Where the Mother DiesChallenged but then retained at the Theisen Middle School in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, in 2010 despite a parent’s concern that the book’s “sexual content was too mature for eleven- to fourteen-year-olds,” this title has won several awards, including being named a 2005 Best Book for Young Adults by the American Library Association. A superficial reading of the book might validate the parent’s concern. Explicit references to sex and the desire to have a sexual experience is a chief preoccupation for 16-year-old Ruby Milliken. But that is only a part of who she is and her life experience. As the book opens, Ruby’s mother has just died in Boston, and she is on a plane to start her life with her father she doesn’t know, the famous movie star Whip Logan. Ruby believes that her father doesn’t love her because of what her mother told her about him. Instead, she finds Whip to be a caring and concerned human being and seemingly delighted to have his daughter with him. While Ruby worries about her boyfriend Ray staying faithful to her, she is also drawn to local boy Wyatt. Relying on freestyle prose-poetry, the author paints a vivid picture of pain, teenagers, feminine awareness, and challenges of life in an honest fashion. As the story progresses, Ruby transitions from ignoring her father to accepting him, and even admitting that she is proud to be his daughter. Discovering that he was in a monogamous relationship with another man does not matter to her. She survives both natural and romantic disasters and ultimately realizes that her supposedly uncaring father has kept tabs on her all along.

    - Rani Iyer, Washington State University Pullman






  • Reviews of K-12 Books with Mathematical Perspectives

    Sep 19, 2012

    This week members of the International Reading Association's Children's Literature and Reading Special Interest Group (CL/R SIG) share recent books all around the theme of math. Each title takes a different mathematical perspective from counting, adding, subtraction, graphing to multiplication. Building math skills through literature can create confidence and make learning fun. Literature could be used as a way to introduce new math concepts, review math theories and/or have students independently explore math ideas.


    GRADES K-3


    Armstrong-Ellis, Carey F. (2012). Ten creepy monsters. New York: Abrams Books for Young Readers.

    Ten Creepy MonstersThis fiendishly clever counting book features characters not typically found in books introducing math concepts—monsters. The endpapers are covered in spider webs with spiders dangling from the threads, and the book opens with an oceanside graveyard scene in which monsters are rising from their burial mounds. One of them clutches a bag filled with something. After all, it is Halloween night. Ten different  monsters—a ghost, a witch, a zombie, a werewolf, and a vampire among them—gather together on the first pages of this book written in rhyming text, before setting out on their journey. But before they can wreak any havoc, one by one, bad things happen to them. By the end of the night, only one monster remains, and his identity will surprise some young readers. The acrylic illustrations showing the expressions on the monsters' faces as they lurch toward town add another layer of hilarity to the story. The illustration of a zombie clutching the foot he lost along the way and the artistic depiction of a swamp brew-splashed toad wearing a witch's hat and glasses are hilarious. A perfect Halloween read-aloud but a great way to relieve malaise on any day, this picture book also helps young readers learn to count as the monsters fall by the wayside in gruesome fashion. 

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Brown, Margaret Wise. (2012). Count to 10 with a mouse. Illus. by Kirsten Richards. Bath, UK: Parragon.

    Count to 10 with a MouseFrom the author of Good Night Moon (2005) and Runway Bunny (2005) comes another engaging book that is filled with adventure, rhyme, and fun. Children may even forget that they are learning to count while reading this title.  The book opens with the rhyme, “There was a little mouse no bigger than a mole, who lived in a round place that he called a hole” (unpaged). This particular small grey mouse is very friendly and familiar, inviting readers to turn the page to see what happens. The mouse does everything with style. He finds a book with one hole, and then runs inside the hole in order to see the different creatures on the pages. His adventures become exciting when he discovers fish, monkeys, butterflies and other creatures, but they take a dangerous turn when he meets six pussycats. Thankfully, they are busy untangling themselves, and the mouse escapes. Phew! After the mouse encounters a clock, the author reminds readers of the nursery rhyme, “Hickory, Dickory, Dock,” before nimbly moving the story back to its original focus. Readers will enjoy finding out what happens when the mouse reaches the number ten. Perfect for reading aloud, this title provides a place to begin conversations about numbers. The book would also be useful as a mentor text to teach writing to older students.

    - Rani Iyer, Washington State University, Pullman


    Formento, Alison. (2012). These bees count! Illus. by Sarah Snow. New York: Albert Whitman.

    These Bees Count!This is a counting book and so much more. Mr. Tate takes his class on a field trip to visit Busy Bee Farm. Farmer Ellen is ready to give his class a tour of the farm and gives each student beekeeping gear so they are safely protected to take a close look at the bees and all the activity surrounding the hives. As the children approach the bees and hives the counting begins. The author has included a detailed note at the end providing even more information about the lives of bees and the work they do. Detailed teacher’s guide, book trailer and resources at the publisher’s website.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Gershator, Phillis and Mim Green. (2012). Time for a hug. Illus. by David Walker. New York: Sterling Children’s Books.

    Time for a HugAny time is time for a hug. Watching the clock throughout the day, two little bunnies go through a typical day for any young child. Starting at 8:00 in the morning the bunnies wash their faces, get dressed, brush their teeth, play with puppets, read books, ride bikes, climb trees until it is time for bed. With clocks on every page indicating the passing hours, each hour has time for a hug. Be ready for National Hug Day on January 21. Also visit the author’s website or use the “Draw a Math Story” lesson from ReadWriteThink.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Holub, Joan. (2012). Pumpkin countdown. Illus. by Jan Smith. New York: Albert Whitman.

    Pumpkin CountdownFarmer Mixenmatch is giving a tour of his farm and especially the pumpkin patch to Ms. Blue’s first grade class. He shows the children his petting zoo, gives them a ride on the tractor, shows them the corn make and also the education center at the farm. Holub has used rhyming verse to travel around the farm and have readers count things on each page that they discover on the farm. Answers are upside down at the bottom of the page. Her countdown actually starts and 20 and works the numbers down as children explore the farm and readers explore for answers. The endpapers of the book have many more facts about pumpkins. This will be a fun book to use before any fall field trips. Teachers will find a math related lesson plan idea entitled “Exploring Sets through Math-Related Book Pairs” at ReadWriteThink.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Holub, Joan. (2012). Zero the hero: A book about nothing. Illus. by Tom Lichtenheld. New York: Henry Holt and Company.

    Zero the HeroAlthough this is a book literally about nothing, it’s a book dealing with a very important mathematical concept. The book’s focus is Zero, the place holder in our numbering system. But despite the other numbers’ disparaging remarks about his value, Zero is much more than a place holder, and this book tells why. Although Zero is sure he has value, the other numbers taunt him because he is useless when it comes to counting. Knowing that he has heroic characteristics, Zero develops a self-identity crisis since he only acquires value when placed next to another number, say a “1,” to make a “10.” He’s also frequently mistaken for other round objects such as the “6” or even a doughnut or the letter “O” and is useless when it comes to addition, subtraction, and division. Once the other numbers recognize that multiplying themselves by Zero makes them equal to nothing, they flee from him, and in shame, Zero rolls away and hides. After some challenging story problems and a round-off game make them miss their friend, the numbers become distracted and are captured by Roman numerals. Zero saves them with his ability to reduce anything to nothing through multiplication. As in last year’s E-Mergency!, the book brims with delightful word play and ink, pastel, and colored pencil illustrations that provide distinct personalities for each numeral. Math never has been so much fun.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University, Pullman


    Long, Ethan. (2012). The wing wing brothers math spectacular! New York: Holiday House.

    The Wing Wing BrothersThe Wing Wing Brothers, five hilarious duck brothers, present a circus-like show that has fun with math concepts. In three acts, the brothers try to outdo each other with their laugh-inducing tricks like spinning plates, juggling and throwing pies. Each acts presents a different math concept including greater than and less than, addition and subtraction while creating math problems within the reading circus acts. The final act includes a disappearance the readers will have to ponder and figure out the solution. This book offers such a fun approach to not only these math concepts the story problems to be solved. Teachers will appreciate the page at the end that relates Common Core State Standards to this book.  “Writing and Math with Shopping Lists” can be found at ReadWriteThink. The author’s blog/website is filled with fun for young readers.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Marzollo, Jean. (2012). Help me learn subtraction. Photographs by Chad Phillips. New York: Holiday House.

    Help Me Learn SubtractionMarzollo’s popular “I Spy” books are favorites among children. She has turned that same style of book making to the math arena and this is the third book in the Help Me Learn Math series. Chad Phillips’ photographs add the actively visual appeal of this book and each math problem as a wide variety of real objects displayed to create the math problem written in rhymed text. For each subtraction problem the author has created the vertical and horizontal setup of the math problem and in some cases a basic little word problem presented as dramatic play. Explore some “Math Center Activities” at ReadWriteThink. The author discusses why she wrote this book on her website.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Menotti, Andrea. (2012). How many jelly beans? A giant book of giant numbers. Illus. by Yancey Labat. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books.

    How Many Jelly Beans?Learning about big numbers should be portrayed in a big book and the oversize format of How Many Jelly Beans does just that. Aidan and Emma are offered some jellybean and so Emma says she will take 10. Aidan quickly comes back with his response that he wants 20 … and the jellybean battle begins. Each child asks for more and more jumping their requests by hundreds and thousands until they are realizing really big numbers! Emma challenges Aiden with the questions, “You can’t eat five hundred jelly beans.” This prompts the concept of dividing into so many per day and how many over a year’s span. The exaggerated fun spins off ending the book with a huge fold out page depicting a million jellybeans. This will be a great companion book to use with “Lucky Beans” by Becky Birtha to give this introduction to counting jellybeans a context. Teacher resources for this book are available at the publisher’s website. ReadWriteThink offers the lesson plan, “Giant Story Problems: Reading Comprehension through Math Problems.”

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Weill, Cynthia. (2012). Count me in: A parade of Mexican folk art numbers in English and Spanish. Figures by Guillermina, Josefina, Concepción and Irene Aguilar. El Paso, TX: Cinco Puntos Press.

    Count Me InTold in English and Spanish, this beautiful counting book celebrates the Mexican July festival, Guelaguetza. The Aguilar sisters have used their craft to illustrated this book in the traditional folk arts of Oaxaca, Mexico. Balloons, firecrackers, musicians, and giants are all part of the festivities depicted in the figurines crafted to bring this festival of sharing to the printed page for both English and Spanish readers. Learn more about the world famous women artists, The Aguilar sisters. For a little deeper look into Mexican folk art, visit the Deep Space Sparkle website or another lesson idea comes from the Brooklyn Children’s Museum.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Zullo, Germano. (2012). Sky high. Illus. by Albertine. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books.

    Sky HighKeeping up with the Joneses is taken to extreme heights in this clever book about greed and proportion. With very little text, this title tells the story of two competitive neighbors who embellish their already attractive abodes in an attempt to outdo each other. The respective two-story houses of Agenor-Agobar Poirier des Chapelles and Willigis Kittycly Junior are impressive enough on the book’s opening pages. But what they have is not enough, and page by page, they add embellishments to their dwelling places. One adds a solid gold door, and the other counters with a Carrara marble column inlaid with diamonds. After that, the competition is on, and each one hires highly-priced architects who create mosaics fashioned from emeralds, rubies, and sapphires, design billiard rooms and rooms that can accommodate 8,000 guests, even attaching an antiques gallery, a wave pool, and a tennis court. Glimpses of what’s being brought into the inside of the houses—a stuffed Bengal tiger and a library of rare books, for instance—reveals even more of their excess to readers. Eventually, enough is enough, and once both buildings tower into the air at 4,025 feet—a line on the side of the right-hand page indicates this height—one structure topples since it can’t support all the rooms at its top. Although the other building still towers into the sky, its owner isn’t necessarily the victor since even the simple act of having a pizza delivered ends up being impossibly complicated. Readers will shake their heads at the two men’s greed and consider this an adult game of Jenga, the tumbling block game. The very black and white illustrations are exquisitely detailed and fascinating to examine.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    GRADES 3-6


    Adler, David A. (2012). Perimeter, area, and volume: A monster book of dimensions. Illus. by Edward Miller. New York: Holiday House.

    A cast of monsters set out of their 3-D movie to invite the little monsters in the audience on an explanation of the movie set and several math concepts along the way. The monster characters measure each other demonstrating their height and weight. They measure the movie screen and talk about perimeter. They even measure the volume in the popcorn box. A detailed teaching guide/lesson plan is available at the publisher’s website. Read more about this prolific author on his website.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Beaumont, Holly. (2012). Multiplication made fun. New York: DK Publishing.

    Multiplication Made FunWhen children need to learn their times tables this beginner’s guide with a wise owl calculator will help make multiplication fun. The book begins with a basic review of what numbers are and discusses the importance of counting. Then it moves into the difference between addition and multiplication, showing how we can count larger amounts by multiplying. Next, the book explains each number two through twelve on individual pages sharing the different multiplication problems. If children get stuck with a multiplication problem they can spin the wheels till the numbers appear in the owl’s eyes and the answer shows in the beak. Throughout the book are tips for grown-ups with suggestions about helping children. This would make a great addition for teachers and families.

    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver


    Kelly, Jamie/ Jim Benton. (2012). School, hasn’t this gone on long enough? New York: Scholastic.  

    School, Hasn't This Gone On Long Enough?Jamie hates math and writes all about this hatred in her diary. Her best friend, Isabella, is good at math and is willing to help her and in exchange Jamie can help Isabella with language arts. Summer school is threatening on the horizon if Jamie does not bring up those math grades and Isabella’s house is getting a pool! Check out the author’s website for more on The Dumb Diary series including the book trailer for this new Year 2 series

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Mahaney, Ian F. (2012). The math of baseball. New York: Powerkids Press/Rosen Publishing.

    The Math of BaseballThis is part of the series Sports Math from Powerkids Press. Read aloud or individually various aspects of the sport of baseball are explained through the use of mathematics. From the dimensions of a baseball field, to batting averages, hitting distances, strikeouts, scores and statistics the entire sport is covered with figures that deal with addition, subtraction, measurement, percentages and more. Photographs, charts and diagrams add to the appeal of the book and bring a real-life use of math to young readers. Find more math and baseball ideas at The Teachers’ Corner.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Morrisette, Sharon. (2012). Toads and tessellations: A math adventure. Illus. by Philomena O’Neill. San Franscisco, CA: Charlesbridge Publishing.

    Toads and TessellationsSet in Renaissance Italy, young Enzo is a hoping to become a magician like his father. The cruel castle housekeeper approaches Tessel, the local shoemaker that she needs 12 pairs of dancing shoes for the princesses in the castle and demands the shoes must be made from a single piece of leather. Tessel turns to Enzo for help. His father is away so Enzo must step up to help his friend but his magic goes awry when he turns Tessel into a toad. With Tessel’s daughter Aida for help, they discover a mathematical way to geometrically cut the 12 pair of shoes from one piece of leather. Notes at the end of the book provide some history of mathematics and tessalations. Over twenty tessellations are sprinkled throughout the book for young readers to discover. 

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Slade, Suzanne. (2011). Multiply on the fly. Illus. by Erin E. Hunter. Mt. Pleasant, SC: Sylvan Dell Publishing.

    Multiply on the FlyEven in nature numbers are an important part of our world. This picture book combines insects and multiplication together to make learning much more exciting. Each double page spread shares a rhyming multiplication story with a new insect. For example, “Five lonely grasshoppers / sound their mating song. / Each strums two shiny wings. / How many play along?” Then the mathematical equation is shared with a question mark inviting students to figure out the answer. Other insects highlighted include fireflies, luna moths, dragonflies, soldier ants, honey bees, ladybugs, pirate bugs, walking sticks, monarch butterflies and spittlebugs. The back matter includes information about insect body parts, the life cycle of insects, information about comparing and contrasting insects, and a multiplication table.

    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver


    GRADES 9-12


    McKellar, Danica. (2012). Girls get curves: Geometry takes shape. New York: Hudson Street Press/Penguin.

    Girls Get CurvesDanica McKellar, actress and mathematician, has written her fourth book for girls. Her earlier books, Math doesn’t suck, Kiss my math, and Hot X: Algebra exposed worked at removing the math “nerd” stereotype for smart girls. Her latest book deals with geometry. NPR interviews author Danica McKellar in addition to the website devoted to this book.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant








  • Young Adult Book Review: The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict

    Sep 18, 2012

    by Judith Hayn

    Stewart, Trenton.  (2012).  The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict.  New York, NY: Little, Brown, and Co.

    The Extraordinary Education of Nicolas BenedictThe Mysterious Benedict Society series, launched in 2007, introduced young readers to a intriguing set of adolescent fighters of injustice. Their mentor Nicholas Benedict is the brilliant mastermind who organizes and directs the group, but who is he really? This prequel provides the answer. Nicholas is indeed an orphan, and this tale begins with his incarceration in a new orphanage at age 9. He is an odd lad with disconcerting narcolepsy that will dog him all his life; he falls asleep when emotionally bombarded.

    At Rothschild’s End, a wealthy magnate bequeathed that an orphanage be maintained in honor of his saintly wife. The Manor has fallen on hard times, and Mr. Collum, the new director, is determined to rectify financial chaos. Nicholas arrives to become the brunt of teasing and torment by a fiendish group of bullies called the Spiders, but he also finds friendship with John Cole, another orphan. Nick manages to survive by his wit and cunning while the tension surrounding each encounter with the Spiders is spellbinding.

    Stewart includes essentials of the enthralling adventure story—a dark, foreboding Manor that is literally crumbling around the orphans; a locked room for imprisoning Nicholas to contain the impact of his sleeping disorder; a secret treasure that could save everyone; and a spooky, undiscovered observatory. All combine to provide Nicholas with plenty of impediments as he races to find that treasure ahead of Mr. Collum. Along the way, he discovers the value of true friendships and the inner strength that he will need as the future patriarch of the Mysterious Benedict Society. As the others in the series, this book displays Stewart’s witty and charming style as the suspense mesmerizes readers.

    Read an excerpt from the book at the Little, Brown and Company website.

    Dr. Judith A. Hayn is an Associate Professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

    This article is part of a series from the Special Interest Group Network on Adolescent Literature (SIGNAL).





  • Book Reviews: Professional Reading

    Sep 13, 2012

    Summer’s days are fleeting with fall just around the corner, and teachers have returned to their classrooms rejuvenated after vacation days spent recovering from a hard nine months of teaching and then relaxing and recharging their batteries. Sometimes time away from the classroom affords extra time to read books for pleasure and catch up on the latest book award winners. But it also provides teachers with the luxury of uninterrupted time to catch up on some professional reading that might prompt new approaches to literacy instruction or encourage radical changes in how we define literacy. Professional reading might also be the kick-start we need to make simple changes in our daily routines; for instance, spending five minutes on a poem every day or once a week or considering the effects of the CCSS on daily instruction. The International Reading Association (IRA) and other publishers released many insightful texts this year. This week the members of the IRA Children’s Literature and Reading Special Interest Group (CL/R SIG) share our thoughts about some professional texts that caught our attention and nudged us to reflect on our own pedagogy. 

    Appleman, Deborah, & Graves, Michael F. (2012). Reading better, reading smarter. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    Although the authors themselves may come from two different disciplines, their recognition that English teachers are also literacy teachers responsible for teaching literature but also responsible for teaching reading led to this book. They propose that teachers use what they call “scaffolded reading experiences” so that students are able to “read successfully, enjoyably, and purposefully” (p. xv). Subsequently, they provide 22 specific activities that support student readers before they read the texts assigned for class, while they read the texts, and after they have completed them. In the book’s six chapters, the authors provide tips for teaching students to use different lenses as they read as well as advice for text selection and how to evaluate student performance. After teachers digest the sample activities provided here, they will be able to create their own similar activities to accompany the texts their students read. Naturally, the authors address issues of motivation, relevance, and building background knowledge throughout the book. Most notable, though, is that the texts for which reading activities have been created are books or short stories with which teachers are already familiar, offering ways to refresh their approaches, as well as some, lesser known texts that promise to provoke rich classroom discussions. Since the books the authors discuss in the text are listed in the back matter, teachers can slowly start to transform their classrooms so that their students learn to become smarter readers.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Bromley, Karen. (2012). The next step in vocabulary instruction: Practical strategies and engaging activities that help all learners build vocabulary and deepen comprehension. New York: Scholastic.

    Former IRA board member Karen Bromley has written a very practical book filled with ideas that teachers can use to help their students approach new words independently. In a teacher-friendly manner she masterfully weaves cutting-edge research into her text to build a strong rationale for each strategy and activity while addressing the following questions:

    • How can I become a word-conscious and wise vocabulary teacher?
    • How can I teach in ways that help students become independent word learners?
    • How can I develop and deepen the vocabulary of struggling students and English language learners?
    • How can I promote electronic and online word learning via the Internet?
    • How can I build my students’ enjoyment of language through wordplay?
    • How can I use children’s literature to build word knowledge and language appreciation?

    Each chapter provides ideas for direct instruction, guided practice, and independent learning. Teachers will find this an excellent resource for enriching students’ vocabularies across the curriculum.

    - Terrell A. Young, Brigham Young University Provo


    Calkins, Lucy, Ehrenworth, Mary, & Lehman, Christopher. (2012). Pathways to the Common Core: Accelerating achievement. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    In this useful book that could serve as a primer for the latest education reform movement, the authors explain exactly what the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) are and how they are impacting what is taught in schools today as well as how what is taught is being assessed. After addressing the criticisms of naysayers as well as the laudatory remarks of supporters of the CCSS, they provide some suggestions as to how to implement the Standards within the existing structure of classrooms. The book contains eleven chapters intended to demystify the Standards themselves and possible pedagogical applications. After providing an overview of the CCSS for Reading, the authors examine Standards 1 and 10 Literal Understanding and Text Complexity. Chapter 4 and 5 look at Standards 2-9 with their emphasis on Reading Literature and Reading Informational Texts. Chapter 6 provides an overview of the Writing Standards with more specificity offered in the next chapters. Chapter 7 hones in on Composing Narrative Texts, Chapter 8 discusses composing Argument Texts, and Chapter 9 looks at Composing Informational Texts. Chapter 10 focuses on Speaking and Listening and Language Standards, and the final chapter ties up loose ends, reminding teachers of the link between assessment and instruction. While the book may not make readers into proponents of the CCSS, it certainly does clarify many points while also acknowledging that the route to this particular change is not clear. The book is not intended as a blueprint or a roadmap that must be followed assiduously, but it does provide a place for teachers to begin examining their instruction and a way to begin conversations about curriculum. This is essential reading for today’s teachers and would be a perfect book for a teacher book club.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Fletcher, Ralph. (2011). Mentor author, mentor texts. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    Savvy teachers realize that there is a strong link between reading and writing. If student writers hear and read examples of good writing--texts that can serve as mentors for their own writing--they are likely to become better writers. In this book, the author provides 24 pieces of his own for teachers to use as mentor texts in writing instruction. There are stories, poems, essays, picture books, novel excerpts, and memoirs among the selections, some short, some longer. The author includes his own writer’s notes about each text so that student writers can peek inside his thinking process and follow along in understanding his own writing decisions. For some pieces, he points out specific things he wants young writers to notice while essentially opening the text and the creative process for them. There are also places in which the author explains his revision process and shows some of the revisions he made on these published pieces, something that will reassure beginning writers since they may expect their own writing to need no revision. Not only does the author provide materials to teach writing, allowing his own writing to serve as an example, but he explains how this book can be used in the classroom, complete with testimonies from teachers who offer their suggestions about where it might fit within a mini-lesson on as the focus of one aspect of writing, in a writer’s workshop or unit on writing. Best of all, readers will have the chance to marvel at Fletcher’s own writing while also learning ways to bring it and his craft into their own classrooms.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Laminack, Lester L. and Wadsworth, Reba M. (2012). Bullying Hurts: Teaching kindness through read alouds and guided conversations. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    The authors introduce this important book by describing several incidences of bullying that might surprise readers and then offer a rationale for a book that seeks to address bullying through literature and discussion. They write, "We believe focused read aloud experiences with carefully selected children's literature followed by guided conversations is one way you can create a climate in your classroom, school, or district where bullying is not an accepted or rewarded behavior. A climate where an individual's humanity and human dignity trump any difference(s) and kindness is the order of the day" (p. xii). Using the Common Core State Standards as connections to the read aloud selections chosen for this book, the authors explain how the use of read aloud experiences starting from the first day of kindergarten and continuing through the elementary years will develop a framework to help children understand bullying. Looking at character analysis, comprehension strategies, reflection techniques and critical thinking and problem solving strategies, teachers can guide critical thinking discussions about bullying with young and emerging readers. The book’s seven chapters discuss commonalities and differences and offer ways to change bullying behavior. Back matter also includes activities to build community and resources for teachers. Teachers will want to learn more about one of the authors through his website. See CL/R SIG reviews K-12 books about bullying here

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Newkirk, Thomas. (2012). The art of slow reading. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    In today’s highly-distracting world and amid today’s rush to insure that all students are proficient readers, able to handle increasingly complex texts and types of text, this book touts the merits of reading more slowly. The author suggests that there is something to be said about savoring text rather than rushing to the book’s end. By slow reading, the author has in mind “the relationship we have with what we read, with the quality of the attention that we bring to our reading, with the investment we are willing to make” (p. 2).  In an age where there are so many distractions and calls on our time, the author is concerned that everything moves too fast for much appreciation of the writer’s craft or for ideas to be digested. To his way of thinking, readers who slow down are able to hear the voice of authors and appreciate the way sentences flow while those who read too quickly may miss the writer’s craft. Consequently, he provides six ways to slow reading down: performing, memorizing, centering, problem finding, reading like a writer, and elaborating. The book’s eight chapters are filled with ways in which students—and their teachers—can adjust their reading pace and sip, rather than gulp, the nourishment found in the books they read. Reading should not be something that is timed for speed but an experience that allows the words being encountered to have some effect on those who are reading them. Consider reading this way to be akin to water gently bubbling from a fountain contrasted with a tsunami of words. What a brave and inspiring counterpoint to the current rush toward skimming and finishing everything quickly!

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Owocki, Gretchen. (2012). The Common Core lesson book, K-5: Working with increasingly complex literature, informational text, and foundational reading skills. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

    This very practical and teacher-friendly book is a “must have” resource for teaching the Common Core State Standards in K-5 classrooms. For each standard, Owocki begins by placing the standards in the context of meaningful, research-based best practices. She provides teachers with a clear description of each standard and helps them see what each standard expects from students. Moreover, teachers are able to make note of grade expectations so that they know the expectations for students in the grades before and after their own. For each anchor standard, Owocki provides teachers with guidelines and strategies to teach the standard through the gradual release of responsibility model that includes teacher demonstration, collaborative engagement, and independent application. She even provides prompts at various grade levels for teachers to use. Moreover, the instructional decision trees included in the text effectively connect assessment to planning and provide teachers with additional techniques for intensifying instruction for readers needing additional support. Classroom teachers especially will appreciate the many graphic organizers for student use. This book is the ideal tool for helping teachers in enhancing and extending adopted curricula to meet the CCSS goals.

    - Terrell A. Young, Brigham Young University Provo


    Silvers, Penny and Shorey, Mary C. (2012). Many texts, many voices: Teaching literacy and social justice to young learners in the digital age.  Portland, ME: Stenhouse.

    The book’s authors collaborated in a college classroom and an elementary school classroom in order to explore critical literacy and critical thinking. The book enables them to share ideas and activities with other teachers interested in implementing critical literacy concepts developed around the ideas of social justice to children. They comment, "Critical literacy requires that the reader/consumer examine multiple perspectives and ask, 'Whose interests are being served?' and 'Whose voice is heard—or silenced?' (p. 12). Rather than an addition to a lesson or curriculum, critical literacy is a way of thinking, communicating, analyzing, and living a literate life. Critical literacy also implies the possibility of taking some kind of social action in order to support a belief, make a difference, or simply help during a time of need." This professional book offers teachers specific books to use, lesson guides for implementation, assessment tools, text set lists, student checklists, graphic organizers, diagrams, technology tools, a detailed index and more. In addition to the plethora of reading ideas, the authors go a step further in the call for action to guide students to become involved in the support and/or aid of people and causes not only within their local communities but also in a global perspective. Using literature as a starting point, they guide students into the stages of critical thinking and evaluating possibilities for action and then to develop the plan of action to conclusion. Their suggestions and lesson ideas for embedding the concepts of social justice into each of these lessons in an authentic format is accurately expressed in the Foreword by Dr. Linda K. Crafton, “By using the twenty-first century multimodal tools of learning, they show explicitly how teachers can bring curriculum to life by grounding the daily experiences of their students in authentic questions that thrill kids the most."

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Vardell, Sylvia M. (2012). The poetry teacher’s book of lists. Seattle: CreateSpace.

    If you are looking for one book to help improve your teaching of poetry, then this is the one for you! This book is a treasure trove containing over 155 different lists and featuring over 1,500 books of poetry for children and teens. Interested in award-winning poetry or books of poetry considered notable?  This book contains 27 of those lists. Vardell has also includes 19 holiday and seasonal poetry booklists, 7 multicultural and international poetry booklists, 6 thematic or topical poetry booklists, 21 poetry booklists across the curriculum, 20 booklists highlight the form of poetry, 19 booklists for creating a poetry-friendly environment, 12 lists for sharing and responding to poetry out loud, 15 lists of teaching poetry writing resources, and 9 general poetry teaching resources. She also includes a poetry glossary, prompts to guide meaningful discussions about poetry, a poetry history timeline, blogs for children, blogs for teachers, and so much more. It would be hard to imagine a better resource for teachers and librarians. Anyone anxious about including poetry in the classroom will have all fears alleviated by this thorough book.

    - Terrell A. Young, Brigham Young University Provo


    Vardell, Sylvia, & Wong, Janet. (Compilers). (2012). The Poetry Friday anthology: Poems for the school year with connections to the Common Core, K-5 Edition. Princeton: Pomelo Books.

    If there is one thing most teachers seem to be afraid to teach, it has to be poetry. Well, they need fear no more, thanks to this wonderful new poetry anthology put together by two former members of the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children Committee. This visually-appealing collection features 218 original poems written by 75 poets specifically for the anthology. Arranged by grade level, from kindergarten to fifth grade, the book features one poem on each page as well as poetic connections to the Common Core State Standards. Each poem has a "Take 5!" section with many suggestions about how to perform each poem, including simple props, and ideas about how to introduce poetry to children. The compilers have even provided references to poems or other poetry books with similar themes so that if students love one type of poem or one subject for a poem, they can easily find another similar one in this book or in another volume of poetry. Back matter includes a mini-glossary of poetry terms and a list of 25 websites and blogs devoted to children's poetry. There are memorable poems from some of the stalwarts of this type of writing: Arnold Adoff, Nikki Grimes, Julie Larios, J. Patrick Lewis, Jack Prelutsky, Laura Purdie Salas, Eileen Spinelli, Janet Wong, and Jane Yolen. While many of the poems feature familiar names, verses by others, such as Guadalupe Garcia McCall and Amy Ludwig VanDerwater, show that the future of poetry is in good hands.  Be careful when reading this highly-addictive anthology.  You may find yourself nodding vigorously in agreement at a poet’s sentiments about a topic or chortling in glee. Find a place for this book on your desk since you’ll be turning to it time and time again. You may even want two copies, one for your students and one for your own use.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Also, IRA's new and forthcoming book list includes:






  • Reviews of Books with Historical Perspective

    Sep 05, 2012

    Although many students today claim to hate history, it often isn’t history they dislike so much as how history is taught or what they know about historical events. If social studies and history courses consist merely of memorizing dry facts or dates or marching inexorably year after year from the “discovery” of America by the white man to the Civil War or WWI and WWII without discussing the individuals behind those important events, dates, and movements, then there is no wonder that today’s generation avoids history like the proverbial plague. But there are plenty of fantastic books being published today that offer different perspectives on history. In this week’s reviews, the members of the International Reading Association Children’s Literature and Reading Special Interest Group provide some recent titles that may awaken the curiosity in young readers or rekindle an interest in history.


    GRADES K-3


    Kay, Verla. (2012). Civil War drummer boy. Illus. by Larry Day. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons.

    Civil War Drummer BoyIt is April 21, 1861, and the Civil War has begun. The battles don’t involve only teens and adults but even some children. Through the eyes of an enlisted young drummer boy, the author tackles a complex topic and uses short verse to portray the battle scenes and emotions of the War Between the States. The pen-and-ink watercolors shift from bright colors in the opening scenes and those when Johnny is training with the soldiers and all seems cheerful and confident. As the battles grow in intensity, smoke-filled pictures and often blood-smeared scenes bring the war to life and darken the scenes portrayed. An older, taller, and war-weary Johnny returns to the family farm at the end of the book. Teachers may find this book useful as a read aloud or an example of rhymed verse to tell an emotionally charged story. The title could serve as a read aloud introduction to the Civil War or as a picture book companion to Jim Murphy’s The Boys’ War: Confederate and Union Soldiers Talk about the Civil War (Clarion, 1990). Teachers might find it helpful to view a short, artfully done book trailer at Vimeo.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    GRADES 4-5


    Freedman, Russell. (2012). The Boston Tea Party. Illus. by Peter Malone. New York: Holiday House.

    The Boston Tea PartyA large crowd stood on Griffin’s Wharf on the night of November 28, 1773. They watched as local colonials, dressed as Mohawk Indians, raided the British merchant ship, the Dartmouth, and dumped its cargo consisting of thousands of pounds of tea into Boston Harbor. The tea was being heavily taxed against the new American colonies, and the angry colonials vehemently decided to protest. Smearing their faces with lampblack, soot, and grease, community members consisting of printers, shipwrights, carpenters, blacksmiths, and even apprentices joined the angry mob. This action became known as the Boston Tea Party, marking the beginnings of active protests that would eventually lead to the American Revolutionary War. Through his usual well-researched and documented narrative, Freedman brings this exciting moment in American history alive for young readers. The watercolor illustrations authentically portray the period in great detail, including the facial expressions of participants and onlookers. The use of actual quotes from many of the “Mohawks” make the night’s activities all that more real. Back matter includes an afterword, a bibliography, and a timeline to add further background information about this era. Used as a read aloud, this book vividly replicates the exciting heat of the moment surrounding an act of defiance from oppressed colonials, on their way to becoming Americans. Teachers might like to show students the exhibit and videos found at the Boston Museum website on the Boston Tea Party.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Ochiltree, Dianne. (2012). Molly, by golly! The legend of Molly Williams, America’s first female firefighter.  Illus. by Kathleen Kemly. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills Press/ Calkins Creek.

    Molly, by Golly!The Oceanus Engine Company No. 11, part of New York City’s Fire Department in the early 1800’s, was stricken by an influenza outbreak among the firemen. When a fire started on a cold and blizzard-like day, most of the firemen were too sick to battle the blaze. Molly Williams, the African-American cook for Mr. Aymar, one of the volunteer firemen, realized how desperate the situation was and took matters into her own competent hands. She sent young boys known as alert runners into the neighborhoods to warn people about the fire. She also put on a helmet and work gloves and stood beside the available men to pump water from the river. The vivid illustrations portray the heat from the fire juxtaposed against the snowy blizzard as well as the period detail in clothes and buildings and fire equipment. This little-known story shows Molly’s great courage as well as a providing a piece of American history portraying a real hero. Teachers may want to read more of about Molly at the author’s website

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Ray, Deborah Kogan. (2012). Paiute princess: The story of Sarah Winnemucca. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux/ Frances Foster Books.

    Paiute PrincessBorn in 1844 in Nevada Territory, Paiute Sarah Winnemucca started her life on the edge of two cultures. Chief Truckee recognized his granddaughter’s intelligence and aptitude for learning languages and made sure that she learned English and was educated about the white man’s ways. Her early life in the tribe exposed her to the injustices that were befalling her native peoples due to the influx of settlers, ranchers, miners, the railroad, and other imposing aspects of the white culture. As Sarah grew up and witnessed atrocities by the whites, the chalk and mixed-media illustrations subtly portray these acts of violence. Years later, Sarah chose to be a spokesperson and activist for her tribe, making the world aware of the plight of Native Americans at the hands of the often-unjust and deceitful Bureau of Indian Affairs. She spent her life traveling and speaking to raise awareness, prompting white journalists to tag her with the title of “Princess Sarah.” In 1885 she founded the Peabody School for young Indian children in Lovelock, Nevada before her death in 1891. The author uses actual quotations from Sarah’s autobiography, which was the first book written by a Native American woman in the English language. Ray discusses her book in an interview at Kid Lit Celebrates.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Rubin, Susan Goldman. (2012). Jean Laffite: The pirate who saved America. Illus. by Jeff Himmelman. New York: Abrams.

    Jean LaffiteThis biography will appeal to all adventure-seekers. Jean Laffite, along with his brothers, was a pirate who seized and robbed Spanish ships. His family was kicked out of Spain because they were Jewish. Consequently, they detested Spain and captured every ship in the Gulf of Mexico owned by Spain. During these watery conflicts, they won duels, took sailors as prisoners and gained cargo such as gold, coffee and cinnamon. Even though Jean was a pirate he was known to be polite, calm and wise in manner. He even helped other pirates settle quarrels and later became known as the “boss.” During the War of 1812, when the British wanted to reclaim America, the British Royal Navy tried to persuade Jean to help them beat the Americans. But Jean, along with the Baratarians (other pirates in Louisiana), defended their country by killing 2,500 British soldiers within 30 minutes, refusing to allow the British to invade New Orleans. President James Madison praised the pirates’ courage and loyal service by granting them citizenship. More information about Laffite is shared in an author’s note, bibliography, and places to visit.

    - Deanna Day, Washington State University Vancouver


    Stout, Glenn. (2012). Good Sports: Able to Play. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

    Good Sports Able to PlaySports history showcases athletes who overcame physical disabilities. This slim volume features four baseball players who played the game despite their physical challenges. After losing three fingers in a farming accident, Mordecai (Three Finger) Brown went on to become a professional baseball pitcher. When he was 24 he learned to pitch a curve ball with three stumps and two crooked fingers to hold the ball. After playing for the St. Louis Cardinals, the Chicago Cubs, and the Cincinnati Reds, he was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1949. In 1958, 18-year old Ron Santo graduated as the top athlete in the history of Washington State. He chose to play for the Chicago Cubs, even if they couldn’t offer him as much money as other teams. A routine blood test revealed that Ron had type I diabetes. At that time, the life expectancy for someone diagnosed with diabetes was only 25 years. Ron learned how to play baseball while dealing with the disease. Twelve years later, his fans and teammates came together to collect funds for diabetes research by hosting “Ron Santo Day.” Jim Abbott was born without a right hand. His right hand was a stump just below his elbow with only one small, misshapen finger. Although his parents encouraged him to try a prosthetic arm, Jim was happy to do everything with one hand. Jim loved the Detroit Tigers. Despite being called cruel names such as “crab” by the youngsters in his native Florida, Jim ignored their taunts and eventually became proficient enough to play professional baseball for 10 years before retiring. Curtis Pride was born deaf. He excelled in sports, including track, basketball, and soccer. The New York Mets drafted Curtis for their baseball team while he was still in high school. Because he also had a basketball scholarship, he played baseball in the summer and studied finance and played basketball the rest of the year. After his graduation, he was drafted by the Montreal Expos to play professional baseball where he played for several teams. The inspiring stories of these four men make this a great volume for reluctant readers and baseball lovers everywhere.

    - Rani Iyer, Washington State University Pullman


    GRADES 6-8


    Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker. (2011). Jefferson’s sons. New York: Dial.

    Jefferson's SonsWell-researched historical fiction often has large kid-appeal, and the fact that this story revolves around one of the nation's founding fathers makes it even more compelling. Readers will be troubled by the distance, dissonance, and dishonesty between Thomas Jefferson's written words about freedom and mankind’s inalienable rights in the Declaration of Independence, and his own actions in owning slaves on his Monticello plantation, hiding his relationship with Sally Hemings, and never acknowledging publicly their four children. The children, Beverly, Harriet, Maddie, and Eston, stayed in the slave quarters, their existence an open secret not shared with the outside world or even the rest of Jefferson's family. The story is told from the perspectives of Beverly and Maddie, and then from Peter, a friend of the Hemings family. While their mother, who was one-eighth black, made sure that the children would be freed when they turned 21, their ability to pass for white in the world outside the plantation depended on the lightness or darkness of their skins. Thus, not all of the children would be able to have the same freedoms once they were grown. Complicated and troubling on many levels, the book covers the last 20 years of Jefferson's life. While there is certainly affection between Thomas and Sallie, he didn’t free her while he was alive, and they never lived openly as a couple. Clearly, Jefferson was a product of his times, and acted accordingly, but readers will wonder at his inattention to these four children and his cavalier treatment of the human beings who kept his plantation running. Curious readers will ponder the difficulty of the lives of Jefferson's grown up children, unable to stay in touch with the family members they left behind on the plantation, carrying the secret of their ancestry to the grave. This book is highly recommended, engrossing reading.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    McArthur, Debra. (2012). A voice for Kanzas. La Jolla, CA: Kane/Miller.

    A Voice for KansasThe months leading to the Civil War were filled with turmoil as debate swirled around whether new territories would allow or forbid slavery. This historical fiction title makes that argument even more personal through the eyes of a young girl. To her dismay, thirteen-year-old Lucy Thomkins and her parents head to the Kansas Territory in 1855 in order to support the abolitionist movement and to start a business. A budding poet, Lucy doubts that she will find inspiration for her writing in her new home. As she fends off bullies at school who tease her because of her clothing and attitude, she accidentally learns that some of her neighbors are involved in the abolitionist movement, and she becomes friends with Levi, a Native American boy. Through her experiences, Lucy realizes that writing need not focus only on the world's beauty but may be used to encourage societal change. As Lucy pens anonymous letters to the newspaper editor and crafts poetry dealing with freedom and slavery, she finds her writing voice and an unexpected source for inspiration. Readers will enjoy watching Lucy’s growth amid her new surroundings as she copes with some of the settlers’ less than courteous actions. The author makes clear just how deeply divided about the issue of slavery was the area that would become the state of Kansas.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    McKissack, Patricia C., & McKissack, Jr., Frederick L. (2012). Best shot in the West: The adventures of Nat Love. Illus. by Randy DuBurke. San Francisco: Chronicle Books.

    Best Shot in the WestThe story of Nat Love, also known as Deadwood Dick, whose facility with a gun was almost legendary, bears some resemblance to an American tall tale due the many coincidences and feats recorded during Love’s life. Readers are sure to relish the story of a most unlikely hero, a man born as a slave in 1854, his subsequent losses and hardships, and then his incredible adventures as a cowboy. Surely, his is a story worth telling just for the gasp-worthy passages that describe how he determinedly broke the most reluctant horses and his near-death during a cattle stampede or an ambush during a cattle drive. Partly biography and partly fiction, this title is certainly engaging and lends itself well to its graphic novel format since Love’s life seems to have been so episodic with great tragedy leavened by moments of triumph. The book begins with Nat having left behind his adventurous life on the range to travel the rails as a porter. Since his current job necessitated having to snap to the orders of those who considered themselves better than him, readers will realize how hard that sort of behavior must have been on the proud Love. How embarrassed those rude passengers might have been if they had realized with whom they were speaking! The acrylic and pen illustrations provide a haunting backdrop to Love’s story, making it almost impossible to distinguish the features of the characters or even the setting while readers are traveling through the misty fog of time and adventures long in the past.

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Rappaport, Doreen. (2012). Beyond courage: The untold story of Jewish resistance during the Holocaust. Somerville, MA: Candlewick.

    Beyond CourageThe author shares the inspiring stories she collected during six years of research from those who resisted the Nazis during the Holocaust. In this new collection of stories revealing the courage of those Jews who fought against Hitler and the Nazi regime, the author begins with the events of Kristallnacht and describes the heroism of two teens who remove Torah scrolls from a synagogue. She then moves chronologically to other acts of heroism. She tells about the transport of children to other lands and how children were smuggled out of cities right under the noses of the Nazis. She also details the courage and determination of resistance fighters in the Polish ghettos and in the camps. While some of the stories are brief, hinting at the clear-eyed acts of heroism sure to result in death, others are longer and more detailed. All of the stories, though, are fascinating, inspiring, and humbling, vivid reminders. From the young and from the old, from males and from females, inside the cities and in rural areas, there was organized resistance to Hitler's campaign to eradicate the Jews. Heroism came from the most unlikely of sources; for instance, one sidebar notes how art teacher Friedl Dicker-Brandeis brought art supplies with her when she was transported to Theresienstadt, and then hid the children's drawings when she was moved to Auschwitz. In another section, the author describes how some individuals kept records of what was happening so the world would know the truth, and then placed their accounts in milk cans that were buried later. The book is also filled with photographs so readers may see these very ordinary individuals who behaved so heroically. Lightly shaded photos behind the text hint at the courage and determination behind the Nazis’ atrocities. Readers who want to read more stories of  heroism may want to visit the author’s website

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Swain, Gwenyth. (2012). Hope and tears: Ellis Island voices. Honesdale, PA: Boyds Mills Press/Calkins Creek.

    Hope and TearsThe author has paired period photographs taken at Ellis Island with poems, scripts, and essays that portray the immigrant experience. Although these short texts are fictional, the author has captured the spirit of each photograph in words that will make this an excellent choice for a read aloud or reader’s theater or a compilation of short passages in segments. The book is divided into six chapters: Ellis Islands, Arrivals, Inspections, Island of Hope, Island of Tears, Living and Working, and Closed Doors Reopened. The chapters are arranged chronologically as more and more immigrants arrive in America and are detained at Ellis Island – some for physicals, some to wait for sponsoring relatives or prospective employers. The possibility of being sent back looms over each new entrant. The final chapter takes a contemporary look at immigration today. Readers may want to visit the author’s website for more background on her research on Ellis Island she conducted before writing this book. Teachers can direct students to the Ellis Island Museum website or make use of the curriculum resources at the National Parks Service website.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    GRADES 9-12


    Aronson, Marc. (2012). Master of deceit: J. Edgar Hoover and America in the age of lies. Somerville, MA: Candlewick.

    Master of DeceitThe name of J. Edgar Hoover, the long-time director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was long associated with power and fear. This book about his life and times provides insight into a man who became so powerful that he and his agency could get away with keeping secret files, browbeating others, even collecting information on those he feared, disliked, or suspected of harboring Communist sympathies. It begs the question of who polices the agency responsible for protecting the nation and its citizens. The book begins with a letter attempting to blackmail civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. and then briefly covers Hoover's childhood and rise to power. As part of the book’s eighteen chapters, Aronson takes readers through some of the nation’s more unsavory history and periods of paranoia and secrecy that colored the way some Americans regarded others. Among other critical incidents, he revisits Senator Joseph McCarthy's attempts to ferret out Communists in the motion picture industry, the Rosenbergs' trial and execution, and even the torture used to gain information after the fall of the Twin Towers. Clearly, Hoover was a master manipulator and skilled at self-promotion, and the author hypothesizes possible motivations for his actions and his secrets, even addressing rumors about Hoover's sexuality. While sifting through the nation’s past, Aronson also ponders the trade-off between blissful unawareness of potential dangers and the price of secrecy and security. Readers are sure to ponder the fine line between protection and intrusive as well as how information obtained secretly might be used against others. This thoroughly engaging and impeccably researched book brings many figures from history to life again, describing their personalities and character traits. Hoover, for instance, is not painted solely in a negative light but with an attempt to understand the man and his context. Readers will enjoy sifting through the photographs that fill the book's pages and relishing Aronson's description of his own research and writing process. This title is highly recommended, and might even prompt some passionate discussions among parents and their teens. 

    - Barbara A. Ward, Washington State University Pullman


    Coats, J. Anderson. (2012). The wicked and the just.  New York: Harcourt.

    The Wicked and the JustSet in medieval England and Wales in the 1290’s, this story describes how young Cecily’s father has taken the post of burgess in the newly conquered town of Caernarvon in Wales. She is furious at having to leave her comfortable life in England. As she settles into her new surroundings she assumes the position of the woman of the house in charge of the servants. Gwenhwyfar or Gwinny is one of the young Welsh maids serving Cecily in the castle. During her life in Wales, Gwinny has been horribly exploited, and her resentment toward the English, represented by Cecily, is seething. When the castle town is attacked and an unwanted marital match is made for Cecily, it is Gwinny, surprisingly, who is able to help Cecily. At another point in the story, Cecily, unbeknownst to Gwinny, is able to offer aid to Gwinny’s failing mother. The ravages of war and cruelty shown to others are harshly brought to bear in this story as the reader shifts between the voices of Cecily and Gwinny. The author has provided historical notes at the end. Author J. Anderson Coats is part of the Skype an Author Network

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Sheinkin, Steve. (2012). Bomb – the race to build-and steal-the world’s most dangerous weapon. New York: Macmillan/ FlashPoint.

    BombScientists, political leaders, and spies – everyone wanted the atomic bomb. It was 1938 when the radioactive uranium atom was split. And so began the race to develop the world’s most destructive bomb – a war-ending bomb. Sheinkin’s well-researched background into the history of the atomic bomb deals not only with the scientific aspect but also goes on to reveal the attempts by the Soviets to steal the secret behind the creation of the first atomic bomb for themselves. This book travels the world as the history of the era unfolds from the moment the original German scientist made the atomic discovery and then on to bringing many of those scientists to the United States to work at the University of Chicago, and then continuing to the atomic testing grounds in New Mexico. The book is divided into several parts: the Prologue, Part 1 – Three-Way Race; Part 2 – Chain Reaction; Part 3 – How to Build an Atomic Bomb; Part 4 – Final Assembly; and concludes with an Epilogue, Race to Trinity, and extensive source notes and credits. Photographs are interspersed throughout each chapter to help readers see the many individuals who played a part in this real life drama. Read more about this bomb at the author’s website.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Weaver, Lila Quintero. (2012). Darkroom: a memoir in black and white. Birmingham: University of Alabama Press.

    DarkroomLila Weaver was five-years-old when she and her family moved to Alabama from Argentina in 1961. She and her family found themselves outsiders, in this era of Jim Crow and distinct separation of black and white. Lila and her family were neither. Using the graphic novel format, she relates this family memoir through black and gray sketches that reflect the photography of her father. Her mother was a visual artist as well, and not surprisingly, the perspective in this book is artistic as well as political. The author describes life in Alabama during a time when civil rights were the main focus in American politics. The fact that her family was actually experiencing a similar yet unique kind of discrimination provides a fresh perspective into this 1960’s scenario. Teachers may want to listen to an NPR discussion of the book.

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant


    Wein, Elizabeth. (2012). Code name Verity. New York: Hyperion Books.

    Code Name VerityTwo young women’s lives become intertwined through the auspices of World War II. As Maggie, the pilot, and Julia, the spy (known as Verity), become friends, readers learn about the girls’ very different backgrounds set against the backdrop of WWII. In a mission flying over France, their plane crashes, and Julia is captured. The Nazis begin their torture to get information from their captive about the British War Effort. Trying to delay her impending death and succumbing to the torture, she begins her tale of the crash and her dear friend Maggie. This harsh, riveting story portrays not only the depth of two girls’ friendship but the courage displayed in both these young women facing the consequences of war. The second part of the book provides the story from Maggie’s point of view. This compelling story about war and friendship will keep readers gasping as they read with tear-filled eyes. Teachers can watch the book trailer and learn more of the back story at the author’s website

    - Karen Hildebrand, Ohio Library and Reading Consultant






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