
For our December meeting, we decided to keep simple and just read one book, Richard Peck's A Season of Gifts. You can find a free printable discussion guide here.





Then we also discuss the first book in the 39 Clues series: The Maze of Bones by Rick Riordan
and Skeleton Creek by Patrick Carman (we all thought the way this book is integrated with videoclips online was really interesting, but we were all mad about the abrupt ending!)
Then if you want to read more mysteries I added two bonus books: Masterpiece by Elise Broach
And Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta (This one has A LOT of bad language, but it will suck you in!)
Picture Book:
Chapter Book:
Poetry:Frankenstein Takes the Cake by Adam Rex
Young Adult Fiction
Informational
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin (I LOVED the audio version, but you might need to edit a bit if you have little kids around)
Interworld by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves





Oh Underneath, people have such nice things to say about you, and yet, I can't seem to finish you! On first attempt I only lasted a few pages, but months later, after all the buzz from Mock Newbery contests, I made a second attempt. I HAD to quit halfway through because you were so dark and depressing and you bored me to tears!
Taylor Markam was ditched at a gas station at the age of eleven. Hannah, the woman who found her was a volunteer at Jellicoe School and that's how Taylor found herself gearing up to lead the annual territory war with the military cadets and Townies during her senior year. She wasn't elected unanimously by her fellow students so she's determined to do her job well and keep her power until Hannah disappears without a word. Hannah was the only adult Taylor relied on and she can't get over her sense of abandonment enough to concentrate of the games. It doesn't help that the leader of the cadets, Jonah Griggs, is the very same boy who turned her in when they ran away together years ago. The other students fear him because he's rumored to have killed his own father, but Taylor hates him for his betrayal.The House in the Night illustrated by Beth Krommes, written by Susan Marie Swanson
Caldecott Honor Books:
A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever written and illustrated by Marla Frazee
How I Learned Geography written and illustrated by Uri Shulevitz
A River of Words: The Story of William Carlos Williams illustrated by Melissa Sweet, written by Jen Bryant
Newbery Winner:
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Newbery Honor Books:
The Underneath by Kathi Appelt, illustrated by David Small
The Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba’s Struggle for Freedom by Margarita Engle
Savvy by Ingrid Law
After Tupac & D Foster by Jacqueline Woodson
Printz Winner:
Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta
Printz Honor Books:
The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume II, The Kingdom on the Waves by M.T. Anderson
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart
Nation by Terry Pratchett
Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan
Many seem surprised by Jellicoe Road's win, but I read it after it was announced as a Cybils YA finalist and it's riveting (as long as lots of F-words don't disturb you and that's never seemed to bother the Printz committee). The only book I might have wanted to win more was poor Frankie Landau Banks, but at least it got the honor.
As for the Newbery, this was the first year that I couldn't think of a book published this year that I was dying to see win. I'm glad to see Savvy with an honor, and sadly I have to admit that I have yet to read The Graveyard Book so I better rush out and pick it up before it's impossible to find.
Last week I was flipping through my copy of BYU Magazine and saw an article featuring one of the Newbery judges, Michael Tunnell, a BYU Professor. When asked what he was looking for in a Newbery winner, Tunnell said, "You've got to have a good strong plot on which to hang character development, on which to hang your beautiful language. It's the tree on which you hang the other ornaments. And I think we're not getting that as consistently and we used to." He also said his favorites from 2008 include Masterpiece by Elise Broach, Climbing the Stairs by Padma Venkatraman, When the Sergeant Came Marching Home by Don Lemna, and The Willowbys by Lois Lowry.
I've never known a Newbery judge to name some of their favorites from the year before the official announcement is made, have you? In fact, I remember the year Betsy Bird served on the Newbery committee, she was asked to remove her reviews of eligible books from her blog so I thought it was kind of forbidden, but maybe I'm wrong.
So were you happy with the ALA award results? What were you rooting for?
Twilight has been deemed the Vampire book for people who don't like Vampire books, and Stephenie Meyer said that The Host was a science fiction book for people who don't like science fiction books, but it wasn't. No, the book I would hand that title to is The Hunger Games. I wasn't going to review it here because what could I say that hadn't already been said, but I've recently run into a few child lit lovers who haven't picked up, and I couldn't let that happen, could I?
Hi, I'm Stephanie Ford, I'm an adult, and I'm addicted to Sammy Keyes mysteries. There, I said it. There are so many middle grade fiction series unraveling out there, but this is the one I'm most addicted too. Sure, I'm always in a hurry to find out how things with Percy Jackson will wrap up, and I NEED to know what happens to Charlie Bone next, oh, and who isn't looking forward to checking on the Goose Girl's characters in Shannon Hale's upcoming Forest Born? But I must say I most look forward to the release of each Sammy Keyes book.
For those of you who don't know, the official title of my MA is a Master of Arts in Language, Literacy, and Culture with an emphasis in Children's literature; which basically comes down to the fact that along with all my classes on children's literature and Literacy, I took a lot of classes about culture and race in the classroom and multicultural literature. I am by no means an expert, but I have been trained to examine the ways different cultures are portrayed in literature and to question what the portrayal teaches children. I really had trouble with this novel. I wanted to love it, but I did not. 


Not enough reading for you? Or maybe you're curious about other movies in the works? Here's a list with links for more info that club member Scott Knopf helped me put togther:
It's not easy to tell a moving story without words, but that's exactly what Patrick McDonnell does in his wordless picture book South.
With a title like Walt Disney's Alice in Wonderland, you might be expecting a watered down version of the Disney movie accompanied by illustrations ripped straight from the screen, but that's not what you will find when you pick it this book up.
Big Bad Bunny by Franny Billingsley illustrated by Brian Karas
Chester's Back by Melanie Watt
How to Heal a Broken Wing by Bob Graham
Katie Loves The Kittens by John Himmelman
The Sea Serpent and Me by Dashka Slater illustrated by Catia Chien
A Visitor For Bear by Bonny Becker illustrated by Kady MacDonald Denton
Wabi Sabi by Mark Reibstein illustrated by Ed Young