Friday, September 30, 2011

Jinx

Jinx Grave Cavendish

Huzzah for Lady Grace.

In this most excellent historical mystery, Grace and the other ladies are off to St. Bartholomew’s fair. While there, a tent burns down, killing a gypsy woman and severely burning Lady Sarah. Unfortunately, the apothecary that the Queen has brought in to treat Lady Sarah is a fraud. Grace knows this, but has to prove it.

An excellent look at health care, race relations, superstitions and omens at Court. Plus, a wonderful mystery story. I especially loved the humor of the Spanish delegation visiting court-- Grace’s complaints about the women and the Queen’s reactions to the men were great.

Love this series so much. I’m sad that the last few were never published in the States and even in England, it looks like publication stopped with Loot. :(

Book Provided by... my wallet

Technically, I'm a Book Depository affiliate, but I never took the time to figure out how to turn it on. Read my full disclosure statement.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

One of Our Thursdays is Missing

One of Our Thursdays Is Missing Jasper Fforde

The politics of fiction are never easy, nor are they clean-cut. War is brewing between Racy Novel and Comedy and it may all have to do with geological deposits of Raw Metaphor. There’s only one person who can stop this, but she’s gone missing. Jurisfiction wants the written Thursday (the one who prefers tea to guns) to pretend to be the real Thursday at the peace talks.

But... the Men in Plaid seem to want her dead, the series is suffering from very low read rates, and she’s been assigned a case that should be a no-brainer but is very dodgy indeed. Not to mention--- where exactly is the real Thursday?

More madcap zaniness from the king of intellectual prat-falls. I loved the closer look at fiction and how genres blend into each other. I thought the journey into Fan Fiction was rather hilarious and how can one not love a cameo from Richard Scarry’s Lowly Worm? I also really liked Sprocket, the robotic butler. But, at the same time, I really missed Swindon and the politics of of Goliath and cheese smuggling. There was just a little bit of it, but not enough to leave me satisfied.

I do continue to love this series and have started the torturous wait for more.

Book Provided by... my wallet

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Uncommon Criminals

Uncommon Criminals Ally Carter

Since the successful Henley Heist, Kat has been doing jobs by herself, tracking down paintings stolen by Nazis and stealing them back to return them to their rightful owners. Then a woman comes to Kat speaking about the Cleopatra Diamond. The Cleopatra Diamond is cursed. Stealing it is forbidden, but the woman tells Kat that Visiliy Romani sent her so Kat feels she has no choice.

But, in this con, Kat was the mark and as she tries to make it right, the diamond's curse seems to be wreaking its havoc on Kat’s team. Plus! Some Kat/Hale/Nick drama-rama.

I loved that the boy drama was there but wasn’t the focus of the plot. I loved that when the deals go down, the reader’s never entirely sure how much is planned and how much is luck and how much is good improv on the part of Kat and her team. I love her team-- Carter has such great supporting characters. I especially want more Gabrielle--that girl has depths that we’re just beginning to glimpse.

I just become a bigger Carter fangirl with every book of hers I read. New Gallagher Girls in March 2012!

Book Provided by... my local library

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Spook's Bestiary

The Last Apprentice: The Spook's Bestiary: The Guide to Creatures of the Dark Joseph Delaney

When the library at Chippenden burned, this was the only book left. A companion book to the Last Apprentice series, it explains all the creatures of the dark that the Spook and Tom have encountered, complete with annotations of further information learned by the Spook, Tom, and other apprentices. We also get some new background stories, such as what happened the first time Morgan tried to raise Golgoth.

What’s most interesting is there is a lot of information on Romanian old gods, witches, demons and elementals. We haven’t seen Delaney’s Romania yet, but my curiously is definitely piqued and I’m guessing (hoping) that this means the next book will take place in Romania. I wonder why and how??

I really like Delaney's in-between books in this series and how they really flesh out other characters and give background information--some of which is vital and some of which is just rather interesting.

ROMANIA!

Book Provided by... my local library

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Friday, September 23, 2011

Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee

Celebrated Cases of Judge Dee (Dee Goong An) (Detective Stories) trans. Robert Van Gulik

Judge Dee is a classic character in Chinese lit. Based on a real magistrate, the cases he solved and the legend surround him grew over the years. Think Sherlock Holmes, Perry Mason, and Law and Order all rolled into one guy.

In this book, Robert Van Gulik takes some Judge Dee stories that he thinks are the most accessible to Western audiences (so, no calling household objects as witnesses, which does happen in Chinese mysteries) and translates them. There's extensive introductory notes and footnotes, too. Van Gulik did this translation during WWII, when the war prevented him from doing his more academic research. I like that he found a way to

Van Gulik really wanted Judge Dee to find a Western audience. The original Chinese tales didn't take off as well as he hoped, so he wrote a bunch of new ones with Judge Dee as the main character. This, however, is an original Chinese one.

There are three murder mysteries in this book. I like how when he's working on one, another one pops up, so even though the mysteries aren't related, he's solving all of them at once.

In addition to the glimpses of Tang Dynasty life, and the traditional Chinese court system (detectives are judges, torturing a confession out is totally legit, etc) they're just intriguing mysteries with ingenious solutions.

Highly recommended to fans of Agatha Christie, Sherlock Holmes, and other older, classic mysteries.

I own most of the Judge Dee mysteries and can't wait to work my way through them.


Book Provided by... my bookshelf. Somewhere along the line I acquired used copies of most of Van Gulik's Judge Dee books.

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Thursday, September 22, 2011

Sisters Grimm: The Inside Story

The Sisters Grimm: Book Eight: The Inside Story (Sisters Grimm, The) Michael Buckley

The Grimm sisters are inside the Book of Everafter, running through various storylines as they try to track down the Master and save their baby brother. They have to rely on all their fairy tale knowledge, because the Editor is after them to make sure the stories stay as written.

I like how in this one, Daphne and Sabrina are inside the fairy tales, instead of the fairy tale characters being inside the real world. It gives us a different perspective. Lots of adventure as always and FINALLY Sabrina seems to be growing a bit as a person.

My only complaint is that this book has been out for over a year and we have to wait until Spring 2012 for the final installment.

Also, am I the only one who thinks that the new TV show, Once Upon a Time, looks like Sisters Grimm, but for grownups? I'm very excited for it. Too bad ABC's the only station our antennae won't properly tune. I'll be watching it online the next day, I guess.

Book Provided by... my wallet

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Cinderella (as if you didn't already know the story)

Cinderella (As If You Didn't Already Know the Story) Barbara Ensor

The cover also claims that this is "a quick read for smart girls." And it is. It's a pretty straight-forward telling of Cinderella, stretched into 112 pages and heavily illustrated with paper cut-outs.

I really liked Ensor's Thumbelina: Tiny Runaway Bride. But this one didn't resonate with me the same way. I wanted a little more from it. The voice and the use of paper cut-out illustrations reminds one of a less-whimsical Lauren Child. There's a slight snark there that I think, if it had been brought out more, could have made this book really hilarious and something very awesome.

Not that there's anything wrong with it as it is. It's perfectly lovely. I especially liked that there was a chapter AFTER the Prince finds her and a little bit about variations on the story from around the world. But, in the end, it's a very basic Cinderella without much added to it.

I do like the cut-outs though.


Book Provided by... my local library

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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Wolf Mark

Wolf Mark Joseph Bruchac

I am so excited that this book is FINALLY out so I can start shoving it into people's hands and making them read it.

Here's my short annotation:

When Luke’s ex-government agent father is taken, Luke devises a plan to break into the shady corporation at the edge of town to rescue him. Luckily, he’s just discovered he’s a werewolf. Unfortunately, his Russian mafia classmates might have also just discovered this as well.

Longer version:

Lucas's dad used to be black-ops with the Marines--special missions that didn't technically exist. But then Lucas's mom died, and so did Uncle Cal, Lucas's dad's best friend and intelligence partner. Now Lucas and his dad live in a trailer on the edge of town, where Lucas remembers all the training his father and Cal gave him and his dad just drinks and smokes his way into oblivion.

Then Lucas's dad is taken and the old codes-- the one that Lucas never thought they'd ever have to use are brought out and Lucas stumbles into something much more complex and dangerous than he ever imagined.

Basically, this book has the Russian Mafia, bad evil corporations, teen spies, and lots and lots of action. Oh, and werewolves. And vampires.

Think Alex Rider, but with paranormal abilities that mean he doesn't need as many awesome gadgets.

Seriously kick ass fun. Plus, a werewolf/vampire book that's totally boy friendly.

Plus, it's Bruchac and one of Lee and Low's new Tu books. Tu is an imprint specifically looking for fantasy/sci fi with characters of color. Bruchac is known for writing books with authentic Native American characters and themes. Lucas is Abeneki and the hott love interest is Pakistani. Plus, you know, Russian mobsters.

Lucas's werewolf abilities come from Abeneki werewolf stories (more shapshifters than turn-into-a-monter-at-full-moon types.) BUT! There is also some German blood in his heritage as well, and so he also has some of that European flavor of werewolf mixed in. I love how Bruchac mixed different cultural legends and myths about werewolves and molded them into one solid world while acknowledging what came from where. It's done very well.

It's just an awesome thrill ride with enough twists and turns to keep you guessing. A great book for readers who like action, spy thrillers and are a bit burned out on paranormal. YES paranormal! NO melancholy, love triangles, or wallowy ick.


Galley (pre-ARC) Provided by... the publisher, for use in my MLA presentation on diversity.

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Dewey's Read-a-Thon

It's once again time for Dewey's Read-a-Thon! Yay!

It starts at noon GMT on Saturday October 22 and goes for 24 hours. It'll be my first Read-a-Thon with my Kung Fu Princess. I forsee mad reading during naptimes and lots of reading out loud (she's already heard large portions of Middlemarch) at other times. And no staying up all night to read, but depending on how she sleeps that night, some random 3am updates.

I'm in! Are you?

Signups are here.

Nonfiction Monday: If I Had a Hammer

If I Had a Hammer: Building Homes and Hope with Habitat for Humanity David Rubel

Short version of this book:

1. Habitat for Humanity is the most awesome organization in the world.
2. Building houses for poor people is super-duper rewarding.
3. Building houses for poor people has lots of steps that change depending on location and size of the Habitat affiliate.
4. Habitat seriously rocks.
5. Religion drives you to do good stuff.
6. Habitat for Humanity is the most awesome organization in the world.
7. Building houses for poor people is super-duper rewarding.
8. Habitat for Humanity is the most awesome organization in the world.
9. Building houses for poor people is super-duper rewarding.
10. Habitat for Humanity is the most awesome organization in the world.

Ok, that was more snark than this book deserves, but...

The book really rubbed me the wrong way. It reads like a book-length promotional brochure for the organization (and I really like Habitat-- I've built houses for them!) and talks about how nice and rewarding it is to build houses for all those poor poor people who need someone to help lift them out of poverty. Occasionally, it felt a bit exploitative. Also, in focusing on Habitat's Christian roots, it really focused on how people's faith makes them volunteer. It was careful to point out that it's not just Christians feel this, but it did make it sound like you had to have religion in order to want to do good and help other people. Because atheists are just sacks of selfish pigs? I don't know.

I also feel that for a book focused on young readers, it doesn't offer any way for them to get involved to help Habitat, as the target audience for this book is too young to volunteer to build. There are ways for kids to get involved-- I know when I was a kid, my church was doing a Habitat build and the kids all made sandwiches and coffee and cookies and stuff to take over to the site to feed the volunteers. I'm sure there are other things that younger readers can do as well.

BUT! I did really like the look at the international, large scale projects. My experience with Habitat has been building a house in an existing neighborhood. A lot of the international projects involve building an entire village. I liked the discussion about how houses are designed and how local culture and customs are taken into account during the design process.

The book design was also clean and I liked the little side pictures of construction implements and what they're used for.

Today's Nonfiction Monday roundup is over at Tales from the Rushmore Kid.


Book Provided by... the publisher for 2009 Cybils consideration

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Poetry Friday: Where the Sidewalk Ends

Today I was eating lunch at the bookstore and leafing through my new purchase, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 when a father and son sat down at the table next to me to eat lunch and leaf through their new purchase, Where the Sidewalk Ends. It had obviously been a childhood favorite of the father's, and it was a nice treat to eavesdrop on their conversation as they read poems to each other, talked about poetry form, and how many books have someone write the book and someone else draw the pictures but in this case the same guy did both.

So, in honor of that moment and today being Poetry Friday and all, here's a poem from Where the Sidewalk Ends

Listen to the MUSTN'TS, child,
Listen to the DON'TS
Listen to the SHOULDN'TS
The IMPOSSIBLES, the WON'TS
Listen to the NEVER HAVES
Then listen close to me--
Anything can happen, child,
ANYTHING can be.

Today's round up is over at The Poem Farm.

Also, just a brief note to wax poetic (get it?) about that sandwich I had for lunch. Grilled cheese with 4 kinds of cheese, applewood smoked bacon, and apple chutney. OMG YUM.


Book Provided by... my parents for Christmas in 1987.

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Twilight of Avalon

Twilight of Avalon: A Novel of Trystan & Isolde (Twilight of Avalon Trilogy)Twilight of Avalon: A Novel of Trystan & Isolde Anna Elliot

Queen Isolde is burying her husband, King Constatine. He supposedly died in battle, but Isolde knows different. The court musician Myrddin is slain and Isolde has no allies as all around her men compete to take the title of King of Camlann. Her life is in danger, and the only thing she can control is a mercenary soldier being held prisoner.

Arthur! Tristan! Lots of court intrigue taking place in the ruins of Camelot. I loved the stripping back of the flowery Mallory legend. There wasn't a lot of Tristan/Isolde retelling in this one, but I assume that it will develop over the trilogy. Seriously loved all the politics and double crossing. I loved the portrait of a country caught between old ways and new. I also liked how Isolde used to have magic gifts that she's lost and isn't sure if she wants them back.

I enjoyed this book and it's suspense and character development. I'll be seeking out the other books in the trilogy. I also noticed that Elliot has some short one-offs about various characters that are available on Kindle. I love background information like this. That's why I enjoy the in-between books in such series as The Last Apprentice and Blue Bloods. I love how much they build up a world and flesh out minor points, which makes everything more awesome. I think the Kindle's a great format for authors to make this extra material available if their publishers don't want to do a separate volume.

Book Provided by... the author, for review consideration

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Rip Tide

Rip Tide Kat Falls

I loved Dark Life. In the second book of the trilogy, Ty's parents have set up a sale of their crops to a township named Drift. When they go to drop off the crops, they're kidnapped. Meanwhile, Ty's found another township that was anchored to the ocean floor, with the doors chained from the outside.

As Ty and Gemma rush to rescue his parents, they're sucked deeper into the complicated web of Commonwealth politics and the underworld or politics and economy.

I loved this look at another side of the 'Wealth. In addition to the Topsiders and Settlers, we have Surfs- surfeit population. They live on large floating townships, but can't fish near the coast or near the Benthic Territory. The government also cut most of their rations. They're starving and desperate, a situation that politicians with no oversight don't have a problem taking advantage of.

Just like in Dark Life Falls knows how to perfectly marry heart-stopping non-stop action with complicated politics and intrigue. My favorite part about dystopian fiction usually isn't the action, but exploring the politics of the new world. Catching Fire is my favorite Hunger Games book for this very reason. A lot of authors do action or politics, alternating between the two, but Falls does both at the same time and does both really well.

I'm really enjoying this series and the underwater life-- I'm surprised it doesn't have more readers.


Book Provided by... my local library

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Bake Sale

Bake Sale Sara Varon

Cupcake owns the Sweet Tooth bakery and is in a bit of a baking rut. He needs to try something new and shake it up a bit. Then he discovers that his best friend Eggplant knows Turkish Delight, who is only the GREATEST pastry chef in the world. Eggplant invites Cupcake to Istanbul with him, but Cupcake can't afford it. In order to earn extra money, Cupcake starts selling baked goods at several different events around town and working extra hours.

I love Sara Varon's work. Robot Dreams blew me away. It's even on our summer reading list for rising 5th graders, which is pretty impressive when you consider that Robot Dreams is wordless.

Bake Sale has words (and recipes!). I loved watching Cupcake go through the morning routine of baking and making coffee before opening. I liked how Cupcake and Eggplant hung out at the diner and I loved Cupcake's band. I really enjoyed the whole subplot with the band. (Cupcake has to quit the band in order to sell more backed goods.) And, in typical Varon style, instead of having a Brooklyn inhabited by Chickens or Dogs, this time Brookyn was filled with anthropomorphic food.

I also love how Varon's illustration style-- walking and talking animals and food, in a washed out pastel palate could easily be too twee and cutesy, but doesn't go there.

Another book to just cement my Varon love.


Book Provided by... my local library

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Three Cups of Tea

Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Journey to Change the World... One Child at a Time (The Young Reader's Edition) Greg Mortensen and David Oliver Relin, adapted by Sarah Thomson

Ok, so I read this before everything came out challenging the accuracy of Mortensen's story.

According to the book, after getting lost while coming off K2 after failing to reach the summit, Mortensen stumbled into a small Pakistani village. The villagers there took care of him as he regained his strength and health. When he saw that the kids had no school, but practiced writing in the mud every day even though a teacher only came three days a week, Greg promised to build the kids a school.

Raising the money and building the school was hard, but it got done and Greg built more schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. He believes that through education comes peace.

Of course, now we're unsure how much of this really happened. BUT! Schools got built. Schools are good and I think that education brings economic prosperity and peace. Education is the key.

I tried to read the adult version of this and just couldn't get through it. The Young Reader's edition is much tighter! But, both books idolize Greg Mortensen. I guess it kinda makes sense, because the adult version was his memoir and I'm sure he meant it to also work as a fundraising tool for the Central Asian Institute. But, at the same time, these books present him as God's gift to the Pakistani people. Even before the revelations came out, I was questioning the book, because Greg just seemed too good to be real, like Nancy Drew or an Ibbotson romance heroine.

And it's sad that the book did this and it's sad that so much of the story might not be true, because it dilutes the importance and impact of education and schools. It dilutes the ways that kids here can help other kids around the world and promote friendship and understanding.

Today's round up is over at Wrapped in Foil.

Book Provided by... the publisher for Cybils 2009 consideration

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Friday, September 09, 2011

Poetry Friday: May There Always be Sunshine

This is a song I sang when I was a child, in Russian and in English. It was a Young Pioneer song in the USSR, the Cold War was still happening and I grew up in the hometown of Josephy McCarthy, but we still sang it. We sang it for peace and friendship. And the Cold War ended and Russia is no longer the enemy.

 It's amazing what a difference 10 years can make. I was watching TV last week and there was a shot of the pre-9/11 Manhattan skyline and it looked weird. I remember how empty our current skyline looked for months. When did I get used to it? When did a 9/10 skyline become the weird one? And yet we're still at war.

 I was driving to work today, stuck in traffic near the Pentagon, listening to a news report about a new terror threat to DC or New York this weekend. This song popped back into my head. I hadn't thought about it in years, but it came back to me this morning.

 May there always be sunshine
May there always be blue skies
May there always be mama
May there always be me.

Today's Poetry Friday Round-up is over at Secrets and Soda.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Adult Romance with Sarah Maclean

I loved Sarah MacLean’s YA historical romance/ mystery The Season to bits and pieces. So much that was willing to make a leap into Adult Romance to read her other books. Now, I like romance. There’s a lot that I put down 50 pages in, but when I find one I like, I can’t put it down until it’s done. For me, it’s the ultimate escape reading. Her three adult romances are linked, so I'm reviewing them all at once. They're very juicy and funny. The heroines are all strong and even if the guys make them go weak at the knees, they're not swooning all over-- they know how useful it is to brace onself against a wall so said guy doesn't *know* you're going all weak at the knees.

These are regency romances and I liked how she dealt with the history-- just the right amount of detail. Also, wonderful dresses.

Now, these are adult romances, so... there's a lot more than just kissing.

Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake Sarah MacLean

Callie has mostly accepted that the rest of her life will be spent on the spinster seating at balls. But, she still wants to live a life of excitement and passion. Given that her age makes it so she won’t be married anyway, who the hell cares about her reputation? She’s made a list of things she wants to experience, most being things that well-bred women should never do. Like attend a duel and ride astride.

The first thing on her list is to kiss someone-- passionately. So, in the middle of the night she shows up on the doorstep of Gabriel St. John (Marquess of Ralston, notorious rake, and Callie’s first crush) to cross off item #1.

Gabriel has just discovered that the mother that walked out on him and his twin brother had another child, a daughter. Their mother walked out on her, too. Juliana’s father has passed away and she’s arrived at the St. John doorstep, all alone.

Gabriel gives Callie that kiss, but in return she must make Juliana accepted by the ton.

And, of course, Callie and Gabriel might just fall in love in the process.

I loved Callie. I like how even though life was not what she wanted it to be, she’s not whiny about it. She just changes what she wants from life. I love her family, especially her older brother. And of course I love the mischief that Callie gets herself into.

Ten Ways to Be Adored When Landing a Lord Sarah MacLean

Gabriel’s twin brother, Nicholas has long enjoyed being the younger brother. Unfettered by the demands of a title, he has a daring and secret past that the Duke of Leighton needs to take advantage of.

Isabel Townsend is the daughter of a wastral Earl. He has gambled her away in numerous poker games and let his estate fall to ruin. It keeps her out of the public eye, which suits her just fine-- it allows her to have a safe house for fallen women and those who have had to run. She’s run out of money and has decided to sell her mother’s marble statues. There’s only one person who can appraise them and he’s already on his way...

I loved finding out more about Nicholas and his past. I also loved the work that Isabel was doing. Leighton was a minor character in Nine Rules to Break and I liked seeing him taken down a peg or two.

Eleven Scandals to Start to Win a Duke's Heart Sarah MacLean

As readers of the series know, Simon Pearson, the Duke of Leighton, has always been overly obsessed with appearance and propriety. With his sister living up north with Nick and Isabel, he’s even more obsessed with keeping things looking perfect.

But, ever since he met her, he’s found himself drawn to Juliana. When he found out who, and what, she was, he’s stayed away, but fate keeps throwing them together.

Juliana is getting used to life in England. But the new life she’s worked so hard for and built up is thrown back into chaos when her mother walks back into London life.

A most delicious end to a most delicious series. I like the focusing on each of the St. John siblings in turn. I especially liked hearing from the female sibling! The addition of their mother was a nice touch. Not only did add more than a little drama to the story, but the reaction to her, and the mixed feelings added a lot of heart as well.

Love this series. Love love love

Books Provided by... my wallet

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Monday, September 05, 2011

Nonfiction Monday: On the Texas Trail of Cabeza de Vaca

On the Texas Trail of Cabeza De Vaca Peter Lourie

There's a subset of children's nonfiction where a large part of the book is less about the result of research and more about the process of the research. Scientists in the Field does this and it's part of what made Ain't Nothing but a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry so awesome.

On the Texas Trail is about Lourie's attempts to retrace the journey of Cabeza de Vaca, a conquistador who was shipwrecked near Galveston, walked across Mexico to the Pacific and then back inland before hitting Mexico City, where he was able to get a ride back home to Spain. Throughout his travels, de Vaca was dependent on the Native Americans he met along the way. He learned many of their langauges and grew to respect them as people equal to Europeans.

There are competing theories on the route de Vaca took. Lourie very briefly discusses this, and very briefly discusses which path he thinks is the right one, and why. And then he very briefly discusses how he visits some points on that path to try to match them up with de Vaca's writings of his journies.

Overall, it was just too short to adequetely cover de Vaca, the scholarly controversy of the path of his journey, and Lourie's travels. I wanted and neede dmore. However, I really appreciate Lourie's honesty in his failures. He spends a large amount of time searching for a canyon of pine trees-- this canyon being on the key pieces of evidence. And he comes and sees and leaves. Only he didn't actually see what he thought he saw:

I was like the conquistadors blinded by their desire to find gold. I had seen what I wanted to see. In my desire for historical discovery, I had made pine trees out of cedars.

Roundup is over at Playing by the Book.


Book Provided by... the publisher for 2009 Cybils consideration

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Friday, September 02, 2011

Poetry Friday: Denied, Deported, Detained

Statue of Liberty Dreams of Emma Lazarus, Awakens with Tears on her Cheeks

Naomi Shihab Nye

Give me your tired, your poor...
But not too tired, not too poor.
And we will give you the red tape,
the long line, white bread in its wrapper,
forms to fill out, and the looks, the stares
that say you are not where or what you should be,
not quirw, not yet, you will never live up to
us.

Your huddled masses yearning to be free...
Can keep huddling. Even here. Sorry to say this.
Neighborhoods with poor drainage
Potholes, stunning gunshots...
You'll teem here too.

You dreamed a kinder place, a tree
no one would cut, a cabinet to store your clothes.
Simple jobs brining payment on time.
Someone to stand up for you.
The way I used to do, for everyone. Holding my torch
to get you to your new home in this country stitched
of immigrants from the get-go...
But you would always be homesick. No one said that.

I was the doorkeeper, concierge, welcome chief,
But rules have changed and I'm bouncer at the big club.
Had no say in it, hear me? Any chnace I could be, again,
the one I used to be?

I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
It's still up high. At night I tuck it into my robe.
And worry. What will happen to you?
Every taunt, every turn-around,
hand it over. That's not what you came here for.
I'll fold it into my rubbing rad,
Bring back a shine.

Denied, Detained, Deported: Stories from the Dark Side of American Immigration Ann Bauseum

Well, the call has gone out for 2011 CYBILS judges (you should totally sign up!) So I decided it was about time I FINALLY finished going through my notes and writing up the last lingering books that were nominated in 2009. (I read them all in 2009, I just didn't get around to reviewing all of them.)

This book opens with the poem I posted above. There are 5 chapters-- Exlcuded tells to the story of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and anti-Chinese sentitment during the late 19th century. Deported looks at the case of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, Russian immigrants who became involved in the labor and anarchy movements at the beginning of the twentieth century and were deported for it after living in the US for decades. Goldman was already a citizen. Denied tells the of the ill-fated voyage of the St. Louis-- a ship of Jewish refugees who were denied port in Cuba and the US before returning to Hitler's Europe. Detained tells of Japanese internment during WWII. Exploited looks at the long history of Mexican immigration and the role of migrant workers in the US economy.

I wanted to like this one more than I did. It's beautifully done visually. The history is well explained and Bausum ties it in well with broader trends at the time as well as current events (and other events that happened between then and now.) The title chapters focus on just one family or person to give faces and names to some of the effected people. But... there is something about this book that I can't put my finger on that kept it from being truly awesome.

I ended up liking Bausum's Unraveling Freedom: The Battle for Democracy on the Home Front During World War I which I reviewed in March much better.

Today's Poetry Roundup is over at Miss Rumphius Effect.


Book Provided by... the publisher, for Cybils 2009 consideration

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Thursday, September 01, 2011

Haunted


Haunted Grace Cavendish

Long time readers may remember how much I adore the Lady Grace Mysteries. They are historical fiction done right-- lots of excellent detail that never gets in the way of a wicked good plot.

In this one, Elizabeth’s court is on progress for the summer. At one estate, the owner is building a new manor house, but a spooky figure keeps appearing, stopping work. Is it a murdered earl? Or is it another noble trying to shame a rival in front of the Queen?

I especially liked how this one takes place outside of London. We still don’t see the Elizabethan England that most of it’s citizens saw, but it’s nice to occasionally leave the walls of Whitehall and see the countryside, and not just because it’s summer, so London is full of plague.

Book Provided by... my wallet. It's not available in the US, but you can order from the link above for a good price with free international shipping.

Links to Amazon are an affiliate link. You can help support Biblio File by purchasing any item (not just the one linked to!) through these links. Read my full disclosure statement.

Booking Through Thursday

Today's Booking Through Thursday asks:

While my town dries out of record-setting, epic flooding from Hurricane Irene, let me ask you:
What’s your book with weather events? Hurricanes? Tornadoes? Blizzards? Real? Fiction? Doesn’t matter … weather comes up a lot in books, so there’s got to be a favorite somewhere, huh?


Everytime books about extreme weather come up, the first book my mind always jumps to is The Babysitter's Club Super Special, Snowbound.

I know there are ones I liked better out there. I know I've read much better ones, but when asked questions about weather books, Snowbound is the first to come to my mind and it beats up all the other books that try to remind me of their exsistence.

Dawn has a mean left hook.