Glenn’s Christmas Sweater For Kids

October 30, 2009 by Kim  
Filed under Books



christmasbookcoverBy Dan Samaria
Publisher/YC
October 30, 2009

If you loved Glenn’s Christmas Sweater, you will love this one just for kids.  As he described on his radio show that he read it to his kids, when he first wrote it without the pictures. His two kids kept on requesting it over and over.

I decided to test his words, not that I didn’t believe him. I took it to a group of children in my neighborhood. I couldn’t leave; I had to read it over and over again. I was there for three hours. It brought tears to my eyes that there was a book that kids wanted to hear. And they didn’t even know that it was teaching them a lesson. Some of the kids even ask me to help them learn how to read it themselves.

If you have not got it, I am telling you that it is a must book to read to your children. This is one that kids will want to hear every night over and over again. You don’t have to read it just for Christmas. It can be read anytime.

I am going to let Glenn describe what the book is about in his own words:

We would like to know how your children reacted  and learned from it. You can contact us at dan@goldcoastchronicle.com . And we will publish them.

by Glenn Beck

On Christmas Eve, Eddie shook his snow globe one last time and placed it on the dresser beside his bed. He watched the snowstorm swirl and thought about the one gift he wanted most for Christmas—a new bicycle.

Adapted from the #1 New York Times bestselling novel by Glenn Beck, The Christmas Sweater shares a young boy’s story of hope and redemption as he searches for the true meaning of Christmas. With the whimsical Grandpa by his side, Eddie takes a magical journey reminiscent of A Christmas Carol and The Polar Express that leads him to appreciate the simple things in life: family and love.

The picture book edition of The Christmas Sweater is a beautiful holiday treat from Glenn Beck that you’ll share with your family again and again.

Source: Glenn Beck

Book Review: Twilight

October 18, 2009 by Kim  
Filed under Books

twilight_coverBy Amy Orringer
October 18, 2009

Our Review

Though fantasy stories and fairy tales continue to enjoy their hold on the younger set, thanks to a certain wizard-based series, the world of young adult and tween fantasy is experiencing its own coming-of-age. The stories are less about plunging readers completely into another world, and more about that other world being tossed into readers’ lives, the already complex mess of adolescence.

 

Twilight, The Twilight Saga, Book 1 (Little, Brown Young Readers, 2006) by Stephenie Meyer

This is one of the few young adult novels we can recommend for both grandmothers and granddaughters. Twilight, the Twilight Saga, Book 1 is the first in yet another brilliant series that’s well-written enough to suck in (excuse the pun) even the most cynical adult reader. Readers can immediately identify with the main character, 17 year-old Bella; she’s a completely regular, kind-of-clumsy, independent girl — the kind we root for because secretly (or for some tweens, maybe not so secretly), we’re a little like that too.

So the plot gets even more enthralling when we discover that Bella just happens to be cosmically connected to a handsome, dangerous, incredibly kind vampire. Sure, there are lots of books about love against all odds, but this one manages to conjure up that belief in true, immortal that love we develop as young girls and never really let go of, no matter how long ago we traded it for practicality.

Young readers find themselves wanting to believe that even amid midterms and homecoming and the whole vampires-eat-humans problem, they’ll somehow make it through; older readers will simply feel like young readers again. The entire series has been flying off the shelves for months, and the first book will be released as a movie, starring Kristin Stewart and Robert Pattinson, later this fall.

Price: $6
For ages: 14 and older
Available at: Amazon.com

Source Grandparents

Book Review: Wintergirls

August 23, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

By Ariel Hasellwintergirls
August 23, 2009

Being a teenager is more than just showing up at shopping malls and homecoming games. We review new fiction that explores the hard parts of life.

Wintergirls (Viking Children’s Books), by Laurie Halse Anderson, gives readers an insightful and heartbreaking look at Lia, a high school senior, battling anorexia. Lia — in and out of treatment centers herself — learns of the death of Cassie, her bulimic best friend.

She obsesses over the circumstances surrounding Cassie’s death, and consumed with guilt, suffers a relapse of her own disease. Lia’s desire to be an accomplished student, a good daughter, and reliable sister is directly at odds with her desire to become smaller and smaller. There are pages that repeat the words: “Must. Not. Eat.” Obviously, this is not going to be an easy battle for Lia.

Anderson is a celebrated young-adult author who captures the complexity of the modern, American teenage mind without reinforcing old strereotypes or relying on caricatures. In Wintergirls, Anderson maintains the tenor of her other works; her portrayal of anorexia is honest, enlightening, and doesn’t glamorize the disease, as other stories sometimes inadvertently do.

Age: 12+
Retail Price: $9
Available at: multiple sellers

Source: Grandparents

Editor’s Note: We would like to know what book you read this summer? dan@youngchronicle.com

Awesome Business Book for Kids

August 1, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

businessbookby Phoebe Assenza
August 1, 2009

 

A complete resource for the youngest entrepreneurs

Arthur Bochner was just 13 when he wrote the first edition of The Totally Awesome Business Book for Kids, a thorough and extensive guide to which the youngest entrepreneurs could easily relate. In The New Totally Awesome Business Book for Kids (Newmarket Press, 2007), Bochner and his sister, now in their twenties and teens, respectively, have updated the classic with 20 business ideas for kids, including the age-old mowing the neighbors’ lawns or becoming the family’s waste-management consultant, a.k.a. sorting recyclables. Other business skills like keeping records, communicating, negotiating, and marketing effectively are all covered, giving your grandchildren the inside track on mastering their own professional destiny.

Age: 8+ Retail Price: $10
Available at: amazon.com

 

Source: Grand Parents
Editor’s Note: We would like to know what you think? dan@youngchronicle.com

Michelle Obama: Meet the First Lady

July 23, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

firstladyby Phoebe Assenza
July 23, 2009

Readers of nearly all ages who are curious about our President-elect’s other half will be inspired by Michelle Obama’s biography.

The concise, easy-to-read for teens, Michelle Obama: Meet the First Lady tells the story of a young woman from the South Side of Chicago, and the hard work and determination that took her to Princeton, Harvard, and the White House, becoming what some would call a living example of the American Dream.

 

Age: 9-12 Retail Price: $11.55
Available at: amazon.com

Source: Grandparents

Editor’s Note: We would like to know what you think if you read this book? dan@youngchronicle.com

Book Review of the Week – Moon Rabbit

July 18, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

moon rabbitBy Amy Scheibe
Grandparents
July 18, 2009

Editor’s Note: This book is wriiten by Natalie Russell (Viking Juvenile, 2009)
Ages 3 to 6

We would like to know your favor book? And we would also like if you would write a review on it and we will Publish it. dan@youngchronicle.com

I am completely smitten with Little Rabbit  and her moonlit adventure to discover whether there is someone out there “just like her.” When she hears some lovely music playing in the park, she stumbles upon Brown Rabbit, who is nothing like her, making him the perfect friend. Russell is a papermaker, and has illustrated her adorable book with sumptuous prints.

Or try: Goodnight Moon (1947). No kidding. If you don’t have a copy in your house, get one. All ages.

 Source: Grand Parents

My Sister, Alicia May

July 11, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

my-sisterby Beverly Beckham
July 11, 2009

Share with your grandkids the inspiring story of a child’s special love for her sister who has Down syndrome.

When Nancy Tupper Ling’s childhood friend gave birth to a daughter with Down syndrome, Ling wrote a poem called Our Fragile Emissary. The heartfelt verse quickly landed in e-mail inboxes and on message boards around the world. (You can Google it.) Six years later, Ling wrote a book about the same child, titled My Sister, Alicia May, and what happened next is a tale of fate, serendipity, and maybe something more.

Ling sent her manuscript to Pleasant St. Press, a small publishing house in Raynham, Mass. Co-owner Jean Cochran, who is also a children’s book author, instantly loved it, and bought the rights to publish the book. Then she went looking for an illustrator. “I first saw Shennen [Bersani]’s work on a British website for illustrators,” Cochran said. She assumed two things: that Bersani lived in the United Kingdom and that she would never be able to afford her.

Cochran contacted the illustrator anyway and learned in a telephone conversation that Bersani lived not an ocean away, but just ten miles down the road from her office. An even more remarkable coincidence is that My Sister, Alicia May was in many ways Bersani’s personal story, too.

“Shennen informed me that just as with the sisters in the book, she too had a sister – her only sibling – who has Down syndrome,” said Cochran. “I had no way of knowing this. We were both in shock at the coincidence.”

It took Bersani a month to decide whether she should illustrate the book. “I thought if I take this on, it will bring up all the emotional stuff,” Bersani said. But she chose to do it because, she said, “No one will be able to do it the way I can.”

When Bersani’s sister, Holly, was born 40 years ago, it was a different world. There were few programs for any kids with disabilities. A lot of the day-to-day caretaking for Holly fell on Bersani. She went to art school during the day and watched her sister nights and weekends. Although Bersani is a successful artist now, illustrating books for children that sell more than a million copies around the world, she had never used her professional work to explore her feelings about her sister or disabilities in general.

“I can tell you honestly, I sobbed and wept over a few of the pages as I tried to work on them – I ‘became’ Rachel [Alicia May's older sister]. I felt every emotion vividly because they were my own.”

The book is filled with these emotions.

Cochran, whose publishing company is only three years old, said, “It is extremely important to us that our books are as good, if not better – in content, art, and production – as the larger, more established houses with whom we must compete.”

My granddaughter Lucy has Down syndrome and I have spent the last five years in search of a mainstream, beautifully written and illustrated book like this. Until My Sister, Alicia May, I’d found nothing.

Cochran said there is a huge void in the market for children’s books, especially picture books. “In publishing, there’s a saying that everything under the sun has been done. This has not been done. Not like this.”

My Sister, Alicia May, which was published May 1, is the story of two real girls, Alicia May and her sister Rachel, and every child who has a sister or a brother or a friend. It is the story of what it’s like to love someone. Sometimes the people you love irritate you the most. Sometimes you want to pretend you don’t know them. Sometimes you don’t want them tagging along. Sometimes you’re so proud of them you want to tell the world.

“Classrooms, libraries, doctors’ offices, and ordinary households need this book,” Cochran said. “I feel that it’s important as a person and as a publisher to bring awareness, to tell this story.”

This is also the kind of tale that belongs on every grandparent’s bookshelf. It is a story first, and only subtly, like all good stories, a lesson.

“She looks like me,” an 8-year-old at my local library said after studying the book’s cover. Alicia May has long, dark blond hair with bangs, pink cheeks, and a beautiful smile. And what this 8-year-old saw was not a child with Down syndrome, but another little girl with blond hair, just like her.

Source: Grandparents

Editor’s Note: We would like to know what you think? And what good books are you reading this summer? dan@youngchronicle.com

Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls: Moving Day

July 1, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

bookBy Meg Cabot
July 1, 2009

 

If you like books that are fun and have many silly jokes, then Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls: Moving Day is the book for you.  A book filled with lots of drama from Allie and her friends, many laughs and of course, rules.

Allie has one friend named Marry Kay. Allie’s not that crazy about her; she really wants a new best friend.  But when Allie wanted a change, her parents gave her one. The secret was that they were moving.

Allie wasn’t surprised. Her mom had wanted to test out her home improvement skills on an old house that she could restore. Their current house was already redone. Allie didn’t mind moving at first, but soon she did.

Moving means new friends, new school, new house, new everything. When Allie moves, she will also have to deal with the challenge of being the new girl. Allie wanted a change, but not one as big as moving. Even though Allie wants a change (a new best friend) she likes her house and doesn’t want a new one.

The characters in the book have a good mix of personalities. Many of the characters are very different from each other, especially Allie and Mary Kay. Allie and her rules are fun. Some are silly, and some are ones that really make sense. For example, a silly one that Allie uses is “Never eat anything red.” A good rule that’s not very silly is “Treat your friends the way you’d want them to treat you.” There are many more rules in the book. Allie was very believable throughout the book. If she said something about moving, Mary Kay or school, you could definitely believe her. As I read the book, she almost felt like a best friend to me.

I enjoyed the book as every chapter added to a great story. The chapters weren’t short but they weren’t long and the story moved quickly without long descriptions. This is the first in a series, and it left me wanting to read the next book. I became so lost in the book that whenever I wasn’t reading it, I was talking about it.

I would recommend Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls to all girls who love a good fun book with silly moments.

Source: Scholastic News Online

Editor’s Note: We would like to hear what you think? And if you read a book and you would like to do a review. You can contact us at dan@youngchronicle.com

Book Review: Nick of Time

June 27, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

nickBy Demaria Williams
June 23, 2009

The main kid characters in Nick of Time by Ted Bell are ordinary kids on an extraordinary adventure through time. Nicholas McIver and his little sister, Kate, are helping their father spy on Nazi U-boats from the lighthouse where they live. Nick finds a mysterious sea chest that contains Leonardo da Vinci’s time machine.

The dreaded pirate Billy Blood will do anything to get his hands on that machine. With the help of some friends, Nick embarks on an adventure that takes place more than 100 years in the past. He travels in time to save his dog, Jip, and others kidnapped by the wretched Billy Blood. He also runs into a relative along the way!

The plot moves quickly. I was definitely able to lose myself in the story. I felt as if I had jumped into the book and joined in all the action. My own world didn’t even exist anymore after I got caught up in the story! I definitely think you should set aside the time to read Nick of Time.

Editor’s Note: We would like to know what you think? And we would like to know what your favorite book is? dan@youngchronicle.com

Source: Scholastic News Online

 

May No Soldier Go Unloved

May 23, 2009 by Dan  
Filed under Books

book-review1By Thomas Anthony Longo
World Voice News
May 23, 2009

Sometimes, a book comes along that shatters all your expectations and breaks every mold and routine that you use to approach the act of reviewing.

Most of the time when one reviews books, there is a requirement of a certain pedigree; being well read and educated to a certain level, or an ability to discern art in the midst of routine and rhetoric. Often, the reviewing of books is a tedious matter with little reward for the effort. Most of the time it is the practice of reviewers to keep the purely personal out of their reviews. It is in fact the hallmark of an objective review. Sometimes, a book comes along that shatters all your expectations and breaks every mold and routine that you use to approach the act of reviewing.
Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved” is such a book.

When I first picked up this book I had no idea what was in store for me. I knew generally that it was about a volunteer organization that helped out soldiers in the field. As a political writer, who was disgusted at the attempt of the Democrat party to pull funding from the troops, I looked forward to it. I had no idea how quickly it would strip away all hint of ideology and preconception.

By the time I was ten pages into this book I had forgotten all about political squabbles. By the time I was thirteen pages into this book, I was crying like a baby. Without a doubt, this book makes one thing crystal clear. Whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, whether you oppose the war or support it, the soldiers who fight in foreign lands on our behalf do believe in their mission. If we do not support them and if we do not go the extra mile to help them to complete their mission, then we are not Americans at all.

It’s true that most of the soldiers in Iraq believe in the cause that they fight for, but that’s not the mission I speak of. I speak of each and every soldier’s drive to do their part and return home safely. I speak of the mission of each member of the military to keep their family back home safe and provided for. In this, I speak of the personal mission of each soldier. This is something that Patti Patton Bader has hit upon, and it’s not surprising that her epiphany and everything that followed became a national movement.

As one reads Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved,” the deep emotion caused by the speed of a single idea, that spreads into a power to move mountains, is overwhelming.   It is difficult to believe that such just happen. Certainly, the snowball effect as one mother’s courage and commitment spread to those around her and mushroom into a national campaign to help soldiers in the field, must be the result of divine intervention.

In many ways, Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved” is more than just the story of one woman’s fight to help her son in a foreign land. It’s more than a chronicle of how sending a few boxes of cookies metamorphed into airlifts of goods on the grand scale. It is a demonstration, once again, that the actions of one person can have a dramatic effect in the world we live in.

Many of the pages of Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved” are devoted to letters back home from the soldiers who are receiving the largess of their adopted “angels.” Of course, the heartfelt thanks is moving, but no less so than the desire to tell the anonymous donors about the things that they are doing and explain how their selfless gifts helped to make life in an unbearable place, more bearable.

There are letters of commendation from officers in all branches of the service, but none of the letters reproduced in Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved” are as moving and as heartfelt as the letters of those relatives of soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.

A book of this kind defies a traditional review, and cries out for something more. In the process of requesting a review copy of Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved,” I received a copy of an email from Patti to Jeff Bader by accident. She had seen my request and wrote a quick not to Jeff to tell him that she thought my request was “important.”

How unimportant I am cannot be more evident. I can write this review, and I can do everything I know how to do to publicize Soldiers’ Angels, and get the word out about the good work that they are doing, but it can never be anything but laughably insignificant when compared to the mountains moved by one woman with faith and a will.

I’m not important, Patti. This review is not important. What you are doing and what Soldiers’ Angels is doing.

These things are the very definition of important.

Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved” is something else too, it’s a paean of love and admiration from a husband to his wife-a validation of an effort well undertaken and a life well lived. I cannot recommend enough that you buy and read Soldiers’ Angels-”May No Soldier Go Unloved,”  nor can I encourage you to become involved with the organization with more enthusiasm.

Please, visit the Soldiers’ Angels organization at their web site.

Adopt a soldier. Spend your money. Spend your time. Do anything that you can to help. If ever there was an organization worthy of American generosity, this is that organization.

Source: Soldiers Angel