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Varsha Seshan

The Talking T-Rex

posted on September 5, 2024

We've read two books from the A to Z Mysteries by Ron Roy; we're all set to read another!Before picking up The Talking T-Rex, I wondered whether it would be a scary book--that's what the cover leads us to believe. But it's not! We know from the very beginning that the T-rex is a machine; in fact, we first see it before it is assembled. The mystery revolves around the T-rex, yes, but it's about who stole money from the T-rex's belly. It isn't about a T-rex going rogue! And the simplicity of the story makes it a perfect book club read. Inventions A talking t-rex is an exciting invention! If you could invent anything at all, what would you create and why? How would it work? Alliteration 'Alliteration' is a word that I introduce to my book club over and over again because it's such fun to play with! The Talking T-Rex. The Canary Caper. … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: A to Z Mysteries, book club, bookish activities, books for ages seven and eight, online reading programme, online workshops for children, reading, Ron Roy, The Talking T-Rex

Just Harriet

posted on September 4, 2024

Harriet isn't your typical protagonist. She lies, she's selfish, and she's often sulky and bad-tempered. Even as I read Just Harriet, I mulled over whether to introduce it to my book club. We've read and loved two books by Elana K. Arnold - A Boy Called Bat and Bat and the End of Everything - but this one's quite different. The protagonist is younger; she's just finished third grade. More, she behaves a lot younger; she's not the sophisticated child we often see around us. But doesn't that make her more real?The answer, to my mind, was yes. And that's why we're reading Just Harriet at my book club for ages nine at ten next month. Names Harriet is named after the protagonist of Harriet the Spy, but whenever grown-ups make the link, she's quick to say that she's "just Harriet". Names are important to all of us! What does your name mean? Who … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: book club, bookish activities, books for ages nine and ten, books for ages seven and eight, Elana K Arnold, Just Harriet, online reading programme, online workshops for children, reading

Spellbound

posted on September 3, 2024

We're rereading Spellbound by Nalini Sorensen at my book club next month!There are some books that simply must be read at a book club. They're full of possibility, bursting with ideas and imagination. When author Nalini Sorensen visited my online creative writing programme a few months ago, Spellbound was hot off the press, and the reviews I read promised that it would be be one of those books, a delight to work with. And I wasn't wrong. It is everything I expected it to be - a book that wants to be read and discussed.In Nalini Sorensen's story, all poor Prince Freddy was doing was chasing a beautiful butterfly. That's it. It was sheer bad luck that he ran into the witch Weyona, who took great delight in turning him into a frog. Yes, that's a little bit of The Frog Prince right there; it is a fairytale remix after all. But what will saving Prince Freddy involve? Is he going to get a good … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Workshops Tagged With: books for ages seven and eight, Chapter Book, Nalini Sorensen, online reading programme, reading, review, Spellbound

Petu Pumpkin: Freedom Fighter

posted on September 2, 2024

We need more books this length! Petu Pumpkin: Freedom Fighter is perfect for my book club for so many reasons! For one, it's a book about agency and creating change, while also being a humorous read featuring familiar characters. For another, since it's just about a hundred pages long, we have enough time to read as well as do activities based on the book.  Interviews Petu Pumpkin and his friends gather quite a crowd as they protest outside their school gates. This is a good prompt for us to explore how interviews worked. What questions would we ask an interviewee? Just like when we read Sita's Chitwan, I look forward to interesting interviews of my book clubbers! Campaign What would you campaign for? What makes you angry, and what do you feel is unjust?With Petu Pumpkin, we'll look at a few elements of a campaign from discussing … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: Arundhati Venkatesh, book club, bookish activities, books for ages nine and ten, online reading programme, Petu Pumpkin: Freedom Fighter, reading

Susie Will Not Speak

posted on September 1, 2024

Susie Will Not Speak by Shruthi Rao was one of the first hOle books I read, and it remains one of my favourites. Jahan and Susie leap out of the pages - sparkling characters that make the story what it is.Susie has a lisp. How can she say even her own name without proclaiming her lisp to the world? There's just one solution. Susie will not speak. Ever. What can her best friend Jahan do? NOT Speaking What if you refuse to speak? How else can you communicate? We can use the chat box, charades, artwork, and even make up a sign language of our own. During our very first class, that's exactly what we'll do! Poems Bullies make up mean rhymes about Susie, but those rhymes don't even make sense. Surely, we can do better! We'll try to make up rhymes about ourselves - and they'll make sense too! Tongue Twisters A noise annoys an … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books, Children, Workshops Tagged With: book club, bookish activities, books for ages seven and eight, hOle books, online book club, online reading programme, reading, review, Shruthi Rao, Susie Will Not Speak

Other Words for Home

posted on August 23, 2024

Search for 'verse novels for middle-grade readers', and Other Words for Home is bound to come up. It's a Newbery Honor Book and a New York Times bestseller. However, just like I said when I reviewed Red, White and Whole, I wasn't sure if I wanted to read yet another immigration story.And perhaps that was why it fell short for me. I've read too many of these - Inside Out and Back Again, In the Beautiful Country and Red, White and Whole come to mind immediately. While Other Words for Home is a sweet story, I was not drawn into it the way I was into the last two.When unrest begins to mount in Syria, Jude's family makes a decision. Jude and her mother will move to America, where her uncle lives. But her father and brother stay back. And so begins the story of a family divided by the ocean, struggling to figure out what home is. Jude sometimes feels like her mother doesn't want her … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books for tweens, Jasmine Warga, Middle Grade, novel in verse, Other Words for Home, reading, review

Mirror to Mirror

posted on August 20, 2024

Stories about sisters are incredibly special. And sisters who would do anything to win each other's heart? You have me with the premise itself.I read Mirror to Mirror only because I attended an author talk that Rajani LaRocca gave for the Neev Literature Festival Reading Challenge. Listening to her read from the book and then talk about her book, I knew that this was a book I was likely to enjoy.I didn't just enjoy it; I loved it.Maya and Chaya are identical twins. But when Maya tries to hide her anxiety from Chaya and even refuses to let Chaya talk to their parents about it, Chaya knows she must act. She must reinvent herself so that she isn't a shadow, an image pulling her twin down. They must be different, so different that Maya can shine with her own light.Maya, on the other hand, must be perfect. If she isn't perfect, the world will crumble. Even as she creates … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Middle Grade, Mirror to Mirror, novel in verse, Rajani LaRocca, reading, review

Mascot

posted on August 19, 2024

Mascot by Charles Waters and Traci Sorell is the third and last book I read because it's on the required reading list for an online workshop on revising your verse novel that I will be attending later this year thanks to my Highlights Foundation scholarship. A nuanced story in verse exploring multiple perspectives, Mascot reminds us that activism must be intersectional for it to be meaningful.Ms Williams, an eighth grade teacher, invites her class to debate whether the mascot of the school should stay. Callie is convinced that there's no room for debate. It's absurd that people think it's okay to appropriate to use a copper-toned, muscled, tomahawk-wielding caricature as a mascot. Others, however, believe that the mascot honours Native American tradition and it is absurd to replace it with something else. Six eighth-graders from a variety of backgrounds and beliefs begin to talk … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books for tweens, Charles Waters, Mascot, Middle Grade, novel in verse, reading, review, Traci Sorell

A Melody in Mysore

posted on August 13, 2024

With Independence Day just around the corner, it's the perfect time to read A Melody in Mysore by Shruthi Rao, a new addition to the Songs of Freedom series. I've thoroughly enjoyed most of the books in the series, some more than others. Set in different parts of the country in the first half of the twentieth century, each book is a snapshot of what it might have been like to be a child during the independence struggle.Growing up in Mysore, Leela is relatively cocooned from the British rule. Under the Maharaja, many feel safe. The British struggle isn't relevant to their lives. But as the freedom struggle sweeps across the nation, questions emerge. How long will they be sheltered? And if Leela wants to join the movement, how can she?The answer is in the title itself: through music. Music isn't for everyone, but Leela discovers just how powerful it can be. Leela's bond with … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: A Melody in Mysore, books for tweens, historical fiction, Middle Grade, reading, review, Shruthi Rao, Songs of Freedom

Spin

posted on August 12, 2024

What if the gods didn't bless Arachne after all? What if, like all mortals, she had to toil, ignored by the gods until she, through her own hard work, achieved a kind of immortality, the only kind that is granted to us?Spin by Rebecca Caprara is the second book I read because it’s on the required reading list for an online workshop on revising your verse novel that I will be attending later this year. I would never have enrolled for this workshop if I had not received the Highlights Foundation scholarship, and I might then never have read this stunning book!Modern and feminist without ever being anachronistic, Spin shows us how power is wielded by those who tell stories. When Persephone is snatched into the Underworld, her own father Zeus is complicit. Helios, the sun, pretends he saw nothing. It is Hecate, goddess of the night, who is relentless in her search for … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: novel in verse, reading, Rebecca Caprara, review, Spin, Young Adult

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