Category: Book Reviews

Apr 07

Sprouts!

I’ve been wanting to plant a garden since I first moved to my new home. Nearly two years later and with help from some friends, I had a garden planted in less than 2 hours last Friday. My dear friends, who have quite a home garden of their own, brought Swiss chard, chives, cilantro, dill, several Roma tomato plants, and French marigolds to get us started.  We sowed zucchini, shallots, garlic, and corn for Ela (she loves elote).  On Saturday, my husband and I planted a blackberry plant. Yesterday, Ela & I sowed a few watermelon and cantaloupe seeds–we’ll see how they fair. We were so thrilled to see sprouts today! 

If you’re looking to start a garden I recommend: The Vegetable Gardener’s BIBLE by Edward C. Smith (Storey Books, $24.95)–a hefty book with proven methods for having a successful garden. He includes information for planning, starting, nurturing, protecting, and harvesting your vegetables. There are plenty of great photographs and illustrations to guide you, too. One of my favorite features of this book is the plant directory–plant specific information is outlined  including good and bad garden companions.

Once your garden is planted, get some inspiration for fun in your garden with your little one from Toad Cottages & Shooting Stars by Sharon Lovejoy (Workman Publishing, $14.95). Presented as “130-Wonder-Filled-Grandchild-Friendly Activities,” many of the activities can be adapted for parent and child, too. Activities aren’t limited to the garden, they include: creating faerie houses and hideouts, kid-friendly cooking, nature activities, crafts, and so much more.  Happy gardening!

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Jan 21

Time Tested Beauty Tips

Girls Book of GlamourOne of the books we gave our daughter for Christmas was The Girls’ Book of Glamour: A Guide to Being a Goddess (Scholastic, $9.99). Ela hasn’t put it down.

She’s been organizing her bedroom and even set up “a salon.” She must have gotten that idea from page 76, “How to Create Your Own Dressing Table.”  When I asked if she could paint my nails, she told me I needed to make an appointment. I only wonder how much she’s going to charge.

When I was picking at a pimple on my face the other day, she told me I shouldn’t do that, referring to page 25, “How to Deal with Zits.”

Two days ago, she came home from school with tights that she borrowed from a friend– she must have read page 22, “How to Persuade Your Best Friend to Lend You Her Clothes.”

At the moment she’s begging for some sunglasses–for she’s reading, “How to Convince People You’re a Celebrity.” It must also explain why she transferred the items in her book bag to this frilly one.Frilly Bag

There are more than ninety other “fabulous things you need to know” in this well priced hardcover. But buyer beware, you may discover your grooming essentials have gone missing and your preteen may suddenly begin pleading for beauty products she’s not old enough for.  Nevertheless, the tips in the book are lots of fun.  The Girls’ Book of Glamour has opened up a great dialogue between my daughter and I about caring for oneself and true beauty.

Here are some time tested beauty tips (author unknown):

  • For attractive lips, speak words of kindness
  • For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people
  • For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry
  • For beautiful hair, let a child run his fingers through it once a day
  • For poise, walk with the knowledge you’ll never walk alone

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Apr 06

Book Review – The Chosen One

The Chosen OneAs a bookseller, I receive quite a few advanced reader copies (arc’s). I must admit, it’s difficult to choose which ones to read, much less not fall behind on my selections/the ones I want to read & review.

Well, this past week I received an arc of The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams. After reading all the advanced praise printed all over the copy, I decided to set it atop my stack of “arc’s in progress” the day I received it (Tuesday, I think).

Fast-forward to ~2am Sunday morning. I had gone to bed earlier but woke up in the middle of the morning and couldn’t sleep. I reached over to my stack and picked up The Chosen One. I started reading and couldn’t stop. I didn’t stop. I read the entire book in the wee hours of the morning-it’s that good.

I realize, I’ve shared my experience of reading this book and not quite a review; but, that’s exactly what this story is–an experience–the experience of a 13- year-old girl named Kyra and her unimaginable life growing up in an isolated community where she has been chosen to marry her sixty-year-old uncle.

With that, if you choose to read this book (no pun intended), which I hope you do,  be sure to appropriate some time to read it–you won’t be able to put it down.

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