A Few Gems Celebrating Back-to-School

Whether your child is beginning school for the first time or a seasoned veteran, nothing says back-to-school better than books. We hope you’ll check out the titles we’ve selected to mark this event! 

RUFUS GOES TO SCHOOL By Kim T. Griswell, illustrated by Valeri Gorbachev.

Griswell has created the perfect character and companion for young children and a story that balances heart and humor on every page. Rufus Leroy Williams III wants to attend school. Unfortunately, he’s met with resistance from Principal Lipid and his steadfast rule, “no pigs in school.” Armed with a trough-full of charm, Rufus is bound and determined to show the principal he’s in the right place. After all, he’s equipped with all the right tools: a backpack, a lunchbox, and a blanket for nap time. None of these items persuade Principal Lipid until Rufus reveals his dream to learn how to read his favorite book. Gorbachev’s watercolor illustrations add the right amount of light and emotion to enhance the story. For young children about to embark on their own educational journey.

Ten Rules You Absolutely Must Not Break by John Grandits

TEN RULES YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST NOT BREAK IF YOU WANT TO SURVIVE THE SCHOOL BUS by John Grandits, illustrated by Michael Allen Austin

Poor Kyle is dreading riding the school bus for the first time. According to his big brother, riding the bus could see him laughed at or yelled at or pushed or pounded. Kyle wants to avoid any confrontations on the bus – especially running into a bully who’s the size of a grizzly bear. So Kyle tries to act like his big brother and follow his set of rules: never sit in the last row, never, ever make yourself stand out in any way, and never make eye contact. But when it comes to rule number ten, Kyle throws caution out the window and steps off the school bus in a better place.

Being that I’m the oldest sibling in my family, I can relate to the sibling advice but what I loved most about this story was seeing Kyle emerge from his shell and forge his own path. Grandits’ humor is contagious and Austin’s acrylics intensify the conflict. For ages 5 -8.

Justin Case by Rachel Vail

JUSTIN CASE: SCHOOL, DROOL AND OTHER DAILY DISASTERS  by Rachel Vail, illustrated by Matthew Cordell 

Justin Case is the most worrisome kid you’ll ever meet. If his stuffed animals could talk, they’d agree. He’s a nervous wreck about starting third grade. His new teacher gives out “Superstar” stickers for good behavior except that no one knows what the rules for good behavior are except Ms. Termini. If Justin were brave he’d ask her to clarify these “unfair” rules, but he’s afraid of everything: his new teacher, sports, math, pajama day, the bullies, gymnastics – even his own dog, Qwerty. Each situation he encounters has him imagining the worst possible outcome. But by the end of the school year, he’s facing his fears and meeting his adversaries head on. It just so happens, Justin is more heroic than he thought. Vail cleverly chronicles a “year in the life” of third grade. Outrageously bizarre and funny. Cordell’s illustrations accentuate Justin’s neurosis and tug at your heart.

Justin Case- Shells by Rachel Vail

JUSTIN CASE: SHELLS, SMELLS, AND THE HORRIBLE FLIP-FLOPS OF DOOM by Rachel Vail, illustrated by Matthew Cordell

Also be sure to see how Justin survives the summer before fourth grade! Both novels are for ages 7 – 10 whether you sleep with a stuffed animal or not.

Last Gasp Kids’ Summer Favorites!

For the few who are still on summer break, here are our last-gasp, fun summer reading recommendations.

For the youngest readers:

Rotten Ralph by Jack Gantos and illustrated by Nicole Rubel. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.

Even after more than 30 years, Rotten Ralph remains fresh and sassy and readers will thrill to his antics, which are a little naughty. In the end, Ralph changes his ways—or does he? It doesn’t matter because Sara loves him anyway and readers will enjoy his further adventures in subsequent books.

For transitional readers:

BuddyFiles LibraryMonster

The Buddy Files: The Case of the Library Monster by Dori Hillestad Butler. Albert Whitman, 2012.

Nothing says summer like being able to immerse your brain in a series of mysteries. In Book 5 in this series, Buddy, the dog detective, is spending time at the library as part of their reading therapy program. While listening to a child read, Buddy senses something is amiss. Searching the shelves he comes face to face with a mysterious creature lurking in the stacks. Short chapters are filled with humor, action, and dog stuff.

For older readers:

Ghost Horses

Ghost Horses (Mysteries in Our National Parks) by Alane Ferguson and Gloria Skurzynski. National Geographic, 2007.

For many families summer travels have to be vicarious but if you are visiting a national park, the mysteries in this series offer great adventures mixed with information about the area. Jack, 12, and his sister Ashley, 11, travel throughout the country with their parents. Mom is a wildlife biologist and dad is a photographer, allowing the kids to observe natural and manmade events around them. During a trip to Zion National Park in Utah they investigate the mysterious deaths of white mustangs, meet two Shoshone kids, and end up in the raging waters flowing through a narrow canyon.

Lara’s Gift, by Annemarie O’Brien

Lara’s Gift (Knopf, 2013), written by Annemarie O’Brien, is the type of book that will find a lasting place in the hearts of contemporary children and those who care for them. This timeless tale, loaded with family tradition and pride, takes place in snow-bound Russia during the early 1900’s. There we find a young girl named Lara whose passion is to follow in her father’s footsteps by caring for the Tsar’s majestic borzoi, in incredible breed of dogs unlike any other in the world.  Though tender and seemingly meek, this protagonist’s tenacity is strong enough to confront self-doubt, danger, and even her father’s stern will…all for the love of the borzoi.

As a complimentary reading supplement, Annemarie is offering a Discussion and Activity Guide, in which the lessons have been aligned with the Common Core State Standards. She invites you to use the guide to identify with Lara’s experience by completing activities such as journaling, craft creating, poetry writing, as well as enjoying videos that help in connecting with the unforgettable story’s time and place.

…for every borzoi birth was a gift from God (1).

LARA’S GIFT Author Annemarie O’Brien and Her Real-Life Dogs!

LARA’S GIFT by Annemarie O’Brien (released August 6 by Knopf) is about a girl named Lara living in Imperialist Russia in the early 1900’s who wants to become the Count’s next kennel master–even though it is forbidden. This is part 2 of ReaderkidZ’s interview with Annemarie.

 Annemarie AUTHOR PHOTO2 high rez with collar ring copy

What was your life like when you were LARA’S  age (versus that of LARA)?

I was a very happy kid. My parents were selfless in raising me (and my siblings) and modeled the kind of parenting that I hope to pass down to my own daughters. My parents made marriage look easy and I see now how challenging it is to raise well-balanced kids in today’s world. I owe a great deal to my parents.

I was no different than Lara in many ways. My first love in life was a yellow Lab named Emma. Like Lara and Zar, Emma and I were inseparable. Emma used to patiently wait for me at the end of our driveway for the school bus to drop me off. We had many adventures together!

Emma also saved my life once when a creepy man tried to lure me into his clutches. Lucky for me nothing happened. Emma came out of nowhere and positioned herself, barking and snarling, between me and him. When he took a step toward me, she leaped up and knocked him down. He scrambled to his feet so fast and ran!

I loved all animals and dreamed of owning a home with lots of land where I could raise anything and everything from cashmere goats to tigers and dolphins.

What were your favorite things to do as a kid?

I really enjoyed sports and animals. I was also a very active kid with boundless energy. I was a lot like the kids in the book, A BRIDGE TO TERABITHIA in that I spent a lot of time in the woods building forts with my dog, siblings, and the neighborhood kids. We created many imaginary worlds.

I played a good deal of kicker and dodge ball as a kid. I wish I could say that I had my nose in a book like most of my writer friends can say. While I went to the library each week with my family to get books, I reserved reading books before bed and chose to play outside during the day.

Did you have pets?

I had all kinds of pets as a kid: a lamb, chickens, ducks, rabbits, a turtle, fish, and dogs.

Where do you write your books? How long does it take?

I write wherever I can carve out some time. I have no problem writing in airports, planes, my car, at the beach or Starbucks, in bed, or at my desk. I prefer to write in my studio, but that is a luxury at the moment because of all the distractions. LARA’S GIFT took me two years to write and about four months to revise with my editor, Erin Clarke.

Tell us something about you that might surprise us.

I have eaten sheep eyeballs in Kyrgyzstan and snails in France. I met and shook hands with the former Soviet Premier, Mikhail Gorbachev in the Kremlin. I was an extra in the movie, Philadelphia and chanted, “Hey, hey, ho, ho … homophobia’s gotta go.” In college, I ate thirteen steaks in one sitting.

Leave a comment and share this post on some social media platform to win a copy of LARA’S GIFT. For every share or comment, your name will be entered into the pot. The winner will be drawn and announced August 30.

Congratulations to Teresa Burks – winner of the LARA’S GIFT book draw!

Link here to learn about Annemarie O’Brien, here for a teacher’s guide, and here for the book trailer.

 

Interview with the Author of LARA’S GIFT: Annemarie O’Brien

LARA’S GIFT, released on August 6 by Knopf, is about a young girl in Russia in the early 20th century, and her love of dogs–Russian Borzoi to be exact.

The men in Lara’s family have been the kennel masters for Russian Count Voronstov for many generations, breeding and keeping the Borzoi hunting dogs. Lara has helped her father since she was very young, and has a gift for working with the dogs. She wants more than anything to become the next kennel master. But this is an honor only passed from father to son. Lara has another gift. She sees encouraging or terrifying visions of the future. These frighten her father and he makes Lara promise never to use her sight. Then Lara’s mother gives birth to a son. Her father wants Lara to learn something useful like sewing so that she can be married off.  A special friendship (might it become more?) with the charming Count’s son who shares Lara’s love for the Borzoi may help her achieve her goal. The story is both old-fashioned and thoroughly modern, with action, romance, and really scary wolves. A fabulous read for ages 9 and up

Annemarie, why did you choose this time period in which to set LARA’S GIFT? Did you do research in Russia?

While I don’t have first-hand experience living in Russia during the Imperial era, I did spend about ten years of my early adult years living and working in Russia during the Gorbachev years. So the setting is something I have experienced and studied extensively. I’ve also read tons of Russian literature and books on Russian history, as well as immersed myself in the culture and language.

I actually wanted to set this story up in the Gorbachev era, but realized after reading TAMAR by the brilliant Mal Peet, that I needed to start my story much earlier to give readers a deeper perspective on the significance of borzoi in Russian history.

Why did you choose these dogs to write about? As a breed, how do they differ from others?

In 1989 while I was working in Moscow, Russia, I was gifted a borzoi puppy. Her name was Dara, but I called her Dasha. Through her, and the challenge I had bringing her back to the United States, I oddly learned the history of the breed and was amazed at how much it mirrored the history of Russia. I knew then that there was a story I wanted to write. I just wasn’t sure where to start the story.

Borzoi are very different from any other dog I have ever had (a spaniel, retriever, dane, and a tervuren). Borzoi are often aloof and really don’t need the kind of affection my retrievers had needed from every single person that walked by. Borzoi have a keen sense of character. I used Dasha as my barometer whenever I met someone new. If Dasha took to them, then I generally would, too. Dasha was gentle and never jumped up on anyone unless invited. Borzoi hunt by sight and Dasha was no exception. She was crazy about running after anything that moved, even a little speck in the horizon miles away. Borzoi are also great running partners!

Do you think humans need dogs? Why or why not?

I think everyone could use a best friend and unconditional love.

Learn more about Annemarie O’Brien and her real life dogs on Monday!

Leave a comment and share this post on some social media platform to win a copy of LARA’S GIFT. For every share or comment, your name will be entered into the pot. The winner will be drawn and announced August 30.

Congratulations to Teresa Burks – winner of the LARA’S GIFT book draw!

For more information about LARA’S GIFT, check out Annemarie O’Brien.

Link here for a Teacher’s Guide and here to view the Book Trailer

Summer Went By in a Blink

We’re back! We hope you and yours have had a good summer and are gearing up for the school year ahead. The ReaderKidZ are ready for  2013-14.  We’ll post more book reviews, more author and illustrator interviews, and more tools in the Tool Box than ever before.

We want your ideas and suggestions. Let us know if you’ve found any books others should know about.

We also want to encourage more involvement from KIDS. We’ll post the comments we get from them.

This month we’re interviewing debut author Annemarie O’Brien and her book just out from Knopf, LARA’S GIFT. Set in early 20th century Russia, it’s a story about a girl and the Borzoi dogs she loves.

Interviews coming in September and October are with Farhana Zia about The Garden of My Imaam, and with Maryann McDonald’s about Odette’s Secrets.

Finally, here are our themes for the coming months. Let us know what you’d like to see, both in the way of themes and books.

August: Everybody’s Back!

September: Diversity-Our Small World

October: Historical Fiction: Bringing the Past to Life

November: Nonfiction: Math and Science- Number the Stars!

December: Holiday Give Away and Our Favorites

(2 week hiatus)

January: Humor-We Love to Laugh

February: Mystery and Adventure

March: The Friends We Make

April: National Poetry Month

May: Summer Reading lists

(2 month hiatus)

Thanks for stopping by. Happy back-to-school from all of us at ReaderKidZ!

Splash! Signing Off For Summer

Dear Readers,

School’s out!! Or almost. We’ve had a wonderful time this year sharing children’s books we admire about accepting differences, families in change, intriguing people, historical fiction, sports, humor, poetry, and of course, favorites—ours and those of our young reader friends.

For now the ReaderKidZ team goes on hiatus until August.

We’ll use this time to scour new and old releases, diligently search high and low for the best fiction and nonfiction for young readers K-5, and plan for an exciting 2013-14.

We’ll also go to the beach.

We wish you a summer filled with family and friends, some water, picnics, sunshine, and lots of books in any of their many forms. See you in August!

Yours,

Ann, Deb, Dianne, Nancy, Stephanie, Kristen, and Jeanette

The ReaderKidZ