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Showing posts with label #bookaday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #bookaday. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

48 Hour Book Challenge Starts this Weekend!!

After being out of the loop for the past two weeks due to knee replacement surgery and great pain medications :), what better way to get back into the groove than Mother Reader's 48 Hour Book Challenge this weekend!!

It couldn't happen at a better time for me - I have 2 adult book club books I need to read (Little Bee and The Elegance of the Hedgehog), a large TBR pile of children's books that are calling my name, and some great professional books that were suggested at last Sunday's #titletalk on twitter. In addition, I will be joining the Central Ohio kidlit bloggers for breakfast and shopping at our favorite indie children's bookstore here in Columbus, Cover to Cover, on Saturday morning. I'm guaranteed to come home with another great pile of books!! I will be surrounded by books and loving every minute!

In addition to MotherReader's 48 Hour Challenge, Donalyn Miller (The Book Whisperer) has invited all interested to join her in the summer #bookaday challenge. Pretty simple stuff - try to complete any type of book each day of your summer. Then, if you'd like, post what you're reading on twitter so that all of us can gather more great titles.

The 48 Hour Challenge and the summer #bookaday challenge are reasons I love my kidlit PLN - we are always encouraging each other to expand our own reading in so many ways! So, even if you can't commit to 48 hours this weekend or a book a day for the entire summer, tackle what you can, and join in the fun!! Can't wait to hear about what you're reading!!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Better Late Than Never: My Holiday #Bookaday Roundup

Bill and I have been busy these past few weeks looking at books that might win the Newbery with our Looking for Newbery posts.

However, during that same time frame, I had a lot of fun joining @donalynmiller and @paulwhankins and many others on twitter for holiday #bookaday fun! The goal was to read a book a day and then tweet what you had read. The compiled list has been fun to follow - I've been fascinated to learn what type of books others enjoy. I have picked up quite a few titles to put on my TBR pile as well.

But since we were doing the Looking for Newbery thing, I hadn't had an opportunity to reflect on my reading for my holiday #bookaday challenge. Today, I'm going to take a deep breath, and look back at what I've read over the holiday break (a short one for my school district; yes, that is a whine you hear :) ).

1st #bookaday - The Fantastic Secret of Owen Jester by Barbara O'Connor. I'm such a fan of Barbara's. Readers who were fans of The Small Adventure of Popeye and Elvis will definitely enjoy this one as well. One event can change the humdrum life of a child in huge ways! What fun! Since Popeye and Elvis was our first read aloud of the year, and my students loved it, I can almost guarantee that Owen Jester will have a line of people waiting their turn to read it.



#bookaday #2 - Jimi Sounds Like a Rainbow by Gary Golio. This was a book nominated for the Cybils nonfiction picture book category, and I fell in love with it! The words are beautiful, it tells of Jimi's life before the bad times, and the illustrations are amazing. A wonderful mentor text in so many ways - a great literary nonfiction, similes, amazing word choice, and layout of story. So excited it won an award on Monday - loved it!



#bookaday #3 - True (sort of...) by Katherine Hannigan. This is an ARC I was given at NCTE and I just got around to reading. Unfortunately, it doesn't come out until May. I liked it better than Ida B. and that's saying a lot. For more info on this book, check back; I plan to review it later this week.



#bookaday #4 - Never Smile at a Monkey by Steve Jenkins. How prolific is this guy?! He had 3 different books nominated for the Cybils nonfiction picture books this year - wow! I plan to use this book with a few of his others to start a nonfiction study this month.



#bookaday #5 - A Tale Dark and Grimm by Adam Gidwitz. The narrator's voice alone in this story makes it worth the read. Add to that, how well Gidwitz ties together all the story pieces and you have a very clever book. I actually reviewed this as one of the books for Looking for Newbery.



#bookaday #6 - A Pig Parade is a Terrible Idea by Michael Ian Black and illustrated by Kevin Hawkes. This was recommended to me by my friend, Bill, as a wonderful mentor text for teaching the art of persuasive writing. Once I got past my giggles, I couldn't agree with him more!



#bookaday #7 - A Conspiracy of Kings by Megan Whalen Turner. This title caught my eye when I was reading what Nina and Jonathan's mock Newbery group had to say over at Heavy Medal. As many people already know, Turner already has written one Newbery Honor Book (The Thief) that is a companion book to two others (The Queen of Attolia and The King of Attolia) as well as this one. I would probably have been better served if I had the background knowledge these books would have provided. That being said, this book was an intricate tale, full of twists and turns. Definitely not a book to be read without the utmost concentration. As someone who is a very quick reader, I had to force myself to slow down and really concentrate.



#bookaday #8 - Dark Emperor and Other Poems of the Night by Joyce Sidman. Another title that caught my eye after all the love it received at the Heavy Medal Mock Newbery. I'm not sure what I expected, but it definitely wasn't the actuality. The layout of this book is amazing. A gorgeous poem on every left side of the page about a "creature of the night". Beautiful language; literally took my breath away in places. But, add to those poems, some great nonfiction writing on the right hand side. The possibilities for this as a mentor text are amazing. Can't wait to share Dark Emperor with my students!!



#bookaday #9 - Penny Dreadful by Laurel Snyder. This was actually a recommendation from a friend, but I also starting hearing marvelous things about it via Twitter. It is a delightful story about a girl (very similar to me when I was growing up) who thinks life occurs in the same way a book plot does. It was delightful to see what happens when Penny opens herself up to the notion that sometimes life is not as orderly as the sequence of a book, and every moment in life is not always happily ever after.



#bookaday #10 - Justin Fisher Declares War by James Preller. Bill and I got to meet and spend some quality time with James Preller a couple of years ago when he came to our school. We enjoyed him very much and were delighted that, at the time, he shared with us the concept of his upcoming book, Bystander. We had some deep conversations over drinks about what bullies (the topic of Bystander) look like.
Well, Justin Fisher is nothing like Bystander, but it is thoroughly enjoyable. Teachers will be nodding their heads as Justin's character is developed and we realize what a class clown he is. Most of us have had a Justin in our rooms. I also liked that Preller brought back Trey and Spider from Along Came Spider as supporting characters.



#bookaday #11 - The Strange Case of Origami Yoda by Tom Angleberger. Middle school angst combined with advice from a Yoda finger puppet = lots of chuckles. I already had some boys reading this before our holiday break, but I'm sure when I add my copy to our classroom library, there will be many more takers. :)



#bookaday #12 - Smile by Raina Telgemeier. I think this is a book that will have more girl appeal than boy appeal. Another book full of middle school to high school angst, complete with losing two front permanent teeth, braces, beginning to like boys, trying to find the group of friends that best suits you, even if that means leaving the group with whom you've always been friends. The decision to do this as a graphic novel is perfect - seeing the pictures adds to the angst.

Twelve books over break and that doesn't count the newest David Baldacci book I read, either. I thoroughly loved holiday #bookaday!!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

#BookaDay - Holiday Version


This past summer, Donalyn Miller (@donalynmiller on twitter) challenged people to try to read a book a day. Recently, Donalyn decided to bring back the #bookaday challenge, and proposed that she wanted to try to read a book a day over her holiday break and invited others to join in on the fun. I immediately decided it was an event in which I wanted to be a part!

Break and books - what is not to enjoy!! So, my task the past 2 weeks was to start gathering a TBR pile of books for over break. I am in school through this Wednesday, so I will be trying to read a book a day starting Thursday, Dec. 23 - Monday, Jan. 3. Eleven amazing days (not counting Christmas Day) to read to my heart's content.

My TBR pile is divided into 4 parts:
  • Books that were recent Book Fair gifts from some of my students -- Smile, The Strange Case of Origami Yoda, Human Footprint, Of Thee I Sing, Interrupting Chicken

  • Books recommended by friends: The House on Mango Street, Titanic (the first in a new series by Gordan Korman out May 2011), Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword

  • Books that I received at NCTE -- The Fantastic Secret of Owen Jester (1st to read), the 2nd book in The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place series (out March 2011), True (... sort of) by Katherine Hannigan (out May 2011), One Day and One Amazing Morning on Orange Street (out April 2011), Junonia by Kevin Henkes (out June 2011)

  • Books that are the "hot buzz" when it comes to potential Newbery winners on January 10 -- The Kneebone Boy (this will be a reread), Dark Emperor, They Called Themselves the KKK, A Conspiracy of Kings

I'm so looking forward to my first book on Thursday. I'm starting with The Fantastic Secret of Owen Jester. What a great start with many wonderful books to follow! As you can see from my list, there's no way I'll get everything read, but I'll sure have fun trying!! And I'm actually going to try to throw in some fun adult books as well. :)

If you'd like to follow what everyone is reading over holiday break in the Book a Day challenge, go to twitter and type in the hash tag #bookaday. People will be listing their books as they read them. I imagine there will be some great titles I will want to add to my already too-large TBR pile.