Friday, July 18, 2025

Picture Book Round Up

     A librarian friend of mine mentioned that it's been awhile since I've reviewed a picture book. Oops! I raided the Orono Public Library juvenile new books and came up with enough to do a nice little round up.

     Adventure loving kids will find the real life story To Walk The Sky: How Iroquois Steelworkers Helped Build Towering Cities (by Patricia Morris Buckley) fascinating. Can you imagine working hundreds of feet in the air balanced on a narrow steel where one slip could be fatal? I think you'll agree that's not for the faint of heart. 
     Buckley shares the history of the skywalkers from over a century ago when those were the few jobs through which a Mohawk man could support a family to the present when native men and women practice this profession in cities in America and Canada. It's a very personal narrative for her. Her great grandfather died in a bridge collapse that took the lives 78 of the 86 men who were working on it. Her family was involved in commemorating the tragedy a hundred years later.
     Dynamic illustrations by the great E. B. Lewis combine with text to celebrate the bravery of these skilled workers. 

     Do your children enjoy helping out in the kitchen and take pride in seeing other people enjoy their creations? By all means add Jose Feeds The World to their reading 📚 menu. 
     Jose was born in Spain. At a very early age he began to help his parents prepare food for family and friends. Not surprisingly, given his passion, he went to culinary school and became a chef. Moving to America, became a restaurant owner famous for his innovations.
     He was also volunteering at a soup kitchen. When Haiti was devastated by an earthquake in 2010 he went over to help and embarked on a highly innovative second career. 

     Moth is a perfect book for science loving kids. It introduces the complex concepts of evolution, natural selection, and adaptation through the story of the peppered moth which comes in two varieties: light and dark. It shows how events like the industrial revolution affect each variety's ability to camouflage and live long enough to reproduce and pass on genes.
     Daniel Egneus's are vibrant and dynamic. The ones of lots of moths are absolutely breathtaking. 
     This book was suggested to me by a mother who had just enjoyed it with her own kids.

     Kelly Crull's The Black Mambas is most definitely a book for older kids who read 📚 independently. The story of the world's first all-woman anti-poaching units, it's a good fit for budding feminists and kids who care about endangered species. 
     Crull was an advocate for animals since before he started school. With his mother's help he painted a mural of animals in danger of extinction. You can tell how excited he must have been to meet some of these animals in real life (he did the photos as well as the narrative) and interview their protectors. The book radiates enthusiasm, determination, and hope.
     Readers get a real sense of the Black Mambas' day to day patrolling the West Nature Reserve and protecting and sometimes healing its inhabitants. They also learn the history of this unit and the stereotypes the women had to overcome. 
     "Our families weren't as excited as we were. "They wondered if women could do a job that has always been done by men. They wondered what other people would think. They wondered if we would be safe."
     Crull hopes that The Black Mambas will motivate children to commit to the protection of endangered in their own neighborhoods as well as in more exotic locations. He gives some really great advice: 
     "The first and most important step to protect wildlife is to get to know our wild neighbors. Look for them. Learn their names. Find out where they live, what they eat, when their bedtime is, how they have fun, and who their friends and family are. The more you know about your neighbors, the more you will care about them. Ask grown-ups what you can do to help your neighbors grow and stay safe. Keep asking until someone answers your questions."
     And remember towns and cities play host to a rich variety of urban wildlife. 

     How Sweet The Sound is another one for the older kids. And it's one of those books it would be a sin to read only silently in your head. I read it out loud to my wing cat precious Tobago. 
"Listen to the fireside chorus
of the motherland
to the talking drums
dancing beneath the golden sun 
that beat a bold tapestry of yesterday's sorrows 
and tomorrow's dreams."
     The incomparable Kwame Alexander's narrative in verse and the vivid, vibrant illustrations of talented newcomer Charly Palmer combine to tell the rich story of Black music in this country from the days when rich whites were building their wealth on the unpaid labor of kidnapped slaves (while paying lip service to the notion of all men being created equal) to today. 
"Listen to the Quiet Storm
to the fast-paced rhythm of the Street Life
to the corner cries and croons 
of freedom and love 
of Happy Feelin's 
that keep lifting you higher 
because Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing"
     In the Musical Notes at the back of the book readers get background on each stage in this history. The names of many musicians are included, making it possible to make the eras come more vividly to life by listening to the music. 
     Sounds to me like a good family project. 

     Colleen Paeff's Firefly Song (illustrated beautifully by Ji-Hyuk Kim) is another parent recommended book. It's a beautiful testimony to the idea that experts don't always know all there is to know and that sometimes persistent questions are right. 
     As a child Lynn spent her summers in the Great Smoky Mountains. She spent idyllic days swimming, hunting for treasures, and, after dusk, watching fireflies. After she grew up, married, and had children of her own her family spent summer weeks every year in the family cabin...
     ...where firefly watching continued to be one of the main attractions. Lynn began to notice a different kind of firefly that flashed and went dark in sync. When she tried to find information on them the authorities she relied on--the library, the park rangers, and the University of Tennessee entomologists--were no help...
     ...but Lynn knows what she sees. And she doesn't give up.
     Firefly Song is not just a read and put down book. It gives young firefly fans instructions on how to spot, catch, and release fireflies and how to create a firefly friendly habitat. 

     Picture books often do an excellent job of addressing social justice issues. Lita Judge's Old Blue Is My Home is ideal for teaching young readers and listeners about the housing insecurity that is affecting way too many children and families in the richest nation in the world. 
     The narrator, her sister, her parents, and their cat and dog all live in a blue van. They all sleep in the back which also doubles as a living room in inclement weather. Cooking is done outside. 
     Sometimes, especially when school is in session, she feels that she's "from everywhere and belong nowhere." Someday she hopes that she and her family will have a forever home.
     Judge based the book on her childhood experiences. Her family led a nomadic lifestyle in remote parts of states like Alaska. Although there were temporary houses, the only dependable home she knew was an old blue van. 
     This is an excellent book for a family to read together. An excellent follow-up activity would be to brainstorm which of your daily activities would be difficult or impossible if you had to live in a motor vehicle.

     Where The Deer Slip Through is a perfect bedtime story to help young children make the transition from busy day to restful slumber. Katie Howes has set the stage as a farm set among rolling hills. One by one she introduces nocturnal visitors: the deer who slip through from the woods, the rabbits who squeeze through, the lizards who creep through...I'm really glad bats are included because too many people are needlessly afraid of them.
     Beth Krommes' intricate illillustrations provide the perfect ambiance for the narrative. And especially attentive kids will be able to find creatures not mentioned.
 
    I hope that parents of younger children enjoyed this roundup. I'll do my best to not neglect the picture book set in the future.

On a purrrsonal note, I normally post on odd numbered day. But since I'll be in deep woods at camp tomorrow I'm posting early tonight.
A great big shout out goes out to all the authors and illustrators who are creating gorgeous and memorable picture books for today's children and the loving parents who read to their beloved sons and daughters.
Jules Hathaway 



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Thursday, July 17, 2025

Detained (adult nonfiction)

    I think these days if the Statue of Liberty was capable of doing so she'd step off her pedestal and swim back to France because of how badly America has betrayed her promise. We were hope for people needing to escape war, gangs, cartels, environmental destruction, grinding poverty, and other evils.  Now with the MAGA crowd chanting " build a wall. Build a wall" and ICE minions tearing families apart we're anything but. 
     D. Esperanza's Detained: A Boy's Journal of Survival and Resilience is a diary he kept during the ten months when he struggled to get from his native Honduras to the United States and then languished in a series of detention centers we wouldn't put cats and dogs in. Readers will learn about how his dangerous passage included walking long distances without food,  riding on the roof of trains, and dodging cartels with guns. They'll learn how in this country he was shuttled between prisons, some of which didn't even provide the necessities of life.
     "And I don't even think they're trying to hurt us exactly. They do it because that's just how this system is built. They do it because that's how it's done here. They've created this prison camp where all of us are constantly told: you're a criminal, you're a pain in the ass, you don't matter. They don't say it out loud, but stay locked up long enough, and you get the message loud and clear."
     D. was not a rapist, a drug dealer, a gang member or a criminal as Trump would have us believe. He was a child. He and his younger cousin had lived with their grandmother and uncle. His parents had migrated to the United States because they could not earn enough money to support a family in Honduras. They hadn't taken him with them, considering the journey too hazardous for an infant. 
     The family managed to get by until the uncle dies in an accident. Then the grandmother succombs to cancer. The only way the boys can survive is to join D.'s parents in America. 
     I want you to read this book. I want you to be angry. It's going to take a lot of us to defeat the MAGA crowd and become a nation actually fulfilling the promise of the Statue of Liberty 🗽, becoming a beacon of hope to a hurting world.
On a purrrsonal note, have you ever unexpectedly reconnected with someone who gave you a precious beyond measure gift? That was my experience Tuesday night at the children's garden. Someone called my name. She looked so familiar but my injured brain couldn't place her until she said she was Dr. Tardiff. OMG, LAURA!!! When my beloved Joey cat was 11 he was knocking on heaven's door. Laura did a 4 1/2 miracle surgery and saved his life. Not only did he not die but he bounced back so healthy and happy the practice gave him a jingle mouse they were giving kittens--he had that much energy. Laura gave us FIVE MORE YEARS of love and joy and togetherness. She's looking forward to meeting Tobago.
A great big shout out goes out to Dr. Laura Tardiff, vetinerian and human being extraordinaire.
Jules Hathaway 

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Wednesday, July 16, 2025

I thought that you'd like to see this critter I found standing in front of a bike shop in Orono. Every summer ☀️ a menagerie of colorful creatures arrive and can be found all over downtown Orono. It's one of the really special summer traditions. 



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Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Gem & Dixie

     "An abandoned mother here. A missing uncle there. A disappearing father two generations back. A friendship broken by fear or mistrust or addiction. Genes that make you vulnerable to certain problems. Two children who weren't loved right meeting up when they're not really adults yet and having two more children who aren't loved right. 
     It adds up. It all adds up."
    Gem, narrator of Sara Zarr's Gem & Dixie, has studied her family's history. She and little sister, Dixie, are the "two more children who aren't loved right". Even though her family hasn't been reported to children's protective services her home life is most definitely dysfunctional and dangerous. Both parents are substance abusers. Her father has taken off. Her mother is incapable of taking care of herself, let alone two young daughters. Gem has cared for and protected Dixie.
     Unexpectedly--totally out of the blue--their father decides to re-enter their lives, painting himself as a devoted parent and a responsible adult. Dixie, who has been shielded from the worst of the family dynamics, takes him at his word. When he goes on a $400 grocery shopping spree she believes happy days have arrived. Gem can't buy in.
     "Our dad buying us food shouldn't have been a special treat, it shouldn't have felt like Christmas or a trip to Disneyland; we should have had it all along. There should have been child support, there should have been someone making sure we had what we needed for school. There should have been regular bedtimes and no one working nights, leaving us home all alone."
     When the girls' mother gets home she threatens to call the cops if he doesn't leave right away, preventing him from retrieving the mystery backpack he stashed under Gem's bed...
     ...a backpack that contains about $27,000 (probably gained illicitly), a sum that would allow the sisters to escape their dysfunctional household and start a new life. There's only one problem...
     ...Dixie, believing that their family good times have finally begun, does not want to escape. 
On a purrrsonal note, I had a bit of a scare yesterday. A neighbor told me that the (annual trailer coop) barbecue will be August 9. I thought OMG!!! I have only three weeks to get the backpacks ready. Since 2020 I've been running a backpack 🎒 project that provides backpacks full of school supplies for the kids in my trailer coop. I called Amber and my church for help. Then I looked over my supplies in my shed and the money people have given to buy more. Looks like the sixth year is going to be epic. 
A great big shout out goes out to everyone who is helping me and the fine folx who are coordinating the barbecue. 
Jules Hathaway 



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Sunday, July 13, 2025

Enemies To Friends and beyond (YA romance)

     Fam, if you're in the market for perfect beach or pool side reads I've got a couple of winners. They're in my favorite YA romance genre. Just PLEASE before you settle down and get comfy exercise due diligence with the sunscreen. Future you will be grateful. 
   
   "'And you know how Wharton is. They don't just want some typical straight-A .student. Academics is just one part. They want leaders, not lazy soon-to-be seniors who can't even get a job at the bakery.'"
     Rochelle, protagonist of Zakiya N. Jamal's If We Were A Movie, is obsessed with getting accepted at her mother's alma mater. She's done her academic due diligence, being on track to be valedictorian. But something is missing. She's applying to an ejlite business school and she's, never held a job the summer before her senior year. 
     Fortunately she gets a job at Horizon Cinemas, a beloved Black founded and owned multi plex. There are only two problems. Her immediate boss is Amira, her academic rival and all round nemesis. And someone seems to be trying to sabotage the theater to force it to close.

     "Some people don't think asexual or aromantic people count as queer, or just not queer enough without another letter tacked on, and--well, it's a shitty feeling, being told that you don't belong by people who are supposed to know what it's like to be treated like there's something wrong with you."
     What I love the most about Amanda Dewitt's Wren Martin Ruins It All is that her narrator, Wren, is unapologetically ace. In my experience people who are ace encounter the most entrenched prejudice. IDK. Maybe it's because of the idea that developing sexual attraction is an integral part of growing up. The narrative so often is that they just haven't found the one or are somehow deficient. 
     At the beginning of his senior year in high school Wren has been bumped up to student council president. And does he ever have plans for change. "'I want to abolish the Valentines Day Dance,' I say with all the confidence of someone dropping an atomic bomb. 'And redirect the funding into the school's infrastructure to actually improve this place for everybody who goes here after us.'"
     In Wren's opinion it's just plain wrong to devote such a huge amount of the school's very finite resources to a one night event that won't benefit many of the students when the badly in need of repair facilities endanger them all. The year before a student performing in a play fell through the stage. 
     Wren has a problem even bigger than the love of the student body for the dance. His newly bumped up vice president, Leo, just happens to be his personal nemesis. And Leo believes that they can get the dance sponsored by a social media ap called Buddy.
     Needless to say, Wren is not a happy camper. 
     It doesn't look like Wren and Leo are going to work together well...
     ...unless...

On a purrrsonal note, today I'm enjoying a perfect day 📚  and writing outside near my beautiful flowers. Today when I walked to train for the mountain climb I wore my new used boots. They are very comfortable and seem perfectly suited to the mission. I am SO EXCITED about achieving my goal and raising money for a good cause. Also it is getting less hard to give up the foods I enjoy. It's been weeks since I've had candy, 🍰, ice cream 🍦...you know the yummy sugary stuff. Of course I can't give myself a treat to celebrate because human treats have too much sugar. So I have to enjoy watching Tobago enjoy a treat. She's going to get an unexpected tin of her beloved Fancy Feast.
A great big shout out goes out to my kids and friends for being there for me during this traumatic transition. And a great big shout out and tons of wishes go out to my good friend, Bailey, who is marrying the love ❤️ 😍 💖 ❣️ 💕 💘 of her life today. They are such a cute couple!!!
Jules Hathaway 


     

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Saturday, July 12, 2025

Fam, I found this wonderful painting in an alley between two buildings in Lincoln, Maine. It really resonated with me. Because I usually can see the 🌞 shine I do my best to be it. (Except when it comes to politics in America. I am a realist.)



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Friday, July 11, 2025

If You're Not The One (YA romance)

     The order I review books in is purely random. It's based on the order in which they arrive by ILL 🚚. I haven't requested them by any unifying theme since my third internship when I had to learn all that I could about restorative justice in general and in higher education. I basically send for books that have interesting reviews in journals and newsletters, are recommended by friends, are other volumes by a newly discovered favorite author or look interesting but unaffordable in bookstores. Even then I sometimes find an intriguing unifying element in two consecutive reads. Although Farah Naz Rishi's If You're Not The One and Not So Pure And Simple may seem worlds apart (Islam/fundamentalist Christianity) in both the influence of religious communities on relationships is major. 
     Ani (Anisa) is the perfect desi daughter. She follows all the rules and customs that will protect her family's reputation in the their religious community. She's chosen an acceptable vocation: lawyer. In high school she had virtually no social life, being too busy with AP classes, work, volunteering, and being editor of the school paper and student body VP. Now in her first year of college she's got a similar lifestyle going on to prepare for law school. 
     Although Ani isn't officially engaged, there is an understanding between her family and Isaac's that they will marry. 
     "I should feel lucky she's (future mother-in-law) deemed me good enough for her only son, which means that I've managed to meet her three basic requirements: 1) Good looks (self-explanatory), 2) Good education (solidified by my acceptance to Marion and eventually law school) and 3) Good family (that my family has solid standing, which is just a fancy way of saying no one has dug up any dirt on us)."
     Ani is fine with that. She considers Isaac perfect and gets security from the arrangement. In her mind they are on a guaranteed path to a perfect marriage, home, children...
     ...in other words a perfect life...
     ...She'd been looking forward to college when they'll have more time together away from parental eyes. But it's not working out that way. He rarely has time for her. If they make a date he usually cancels. He gets ugly when she tries to make plans...
     ...he may even be seeing someone else on the side and keeping her in the dark...
     Ani has disliked Marlow on first sight. (He was wearing crocs). She's irate when a professor pairs them up for a project that will count for a big percentage of their grades.
    But when he offers to be her love coach and help fix her relationship with Isaac...
     ...she's too desperate to say no. 
     If you like your romances with some depth and nuance to them If You're Not The One will make a perfect addition to your summer reading list. The ending makes it Hallmark movie worthy. 
On a purrrsonal note, I have a major announcement to make. Early in the summer ☀️ I'd set an intention of climbing a small mountain by the end of summer. I later changed it to autumn because I do better in cooler weather. I just was having trouble working out a way to train. I can't drive to official trails. And I can't yet keep up with my adult friends. But when I got Eugene to buy me my perfect hiking boots my brain kicked into gear to come up with a plan. The first phase involves swapping out hiking for stationary biking twice a week. I know the layout of Veazie from my years of door to door campaigning for myself in school committee elections. I planned out a morning route and evening route. In phase two I'll do some hiking/climbing with families with kids. Phase three will be the real thing. Today after breakfast I slipped on my sneakers 👟 and grabbed my keys 🔑 and took off. It was almost an hour going steady and I did much better than I'd expected. About halfway I had an inspiration. Instead of doing a small mountain climb with a few friends I can turn it into an EVENT to raise money for Black Bear Mutual Aid Fund which helps UMaine students with stuff like textbooks and unexpected medical expenses. Wouldn't this be AWESOME?
A great big shout out goes out to me for coming up with this creative idea and totally committing to it. 
Jules Hathaway 



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