Sunday, December 30, 2012

Audiobook review: The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels by Ree Drummond

Before she was known as The Pioneer Woman, Ree Drummond was a city girl through and through.  When Ree decided to uproot her life in L.A. due to a dead-end relationship, her plan was to spend some time back home in Oklahoma before uprooting her life again and moving to Chicago. Chicago was the perfect place to start a new life: it had all the draws and conveniences of big-city but was just one plane ride away from her family back home.

But then one night while out with some friends at a bar in her hometown, she met a cowboy whom we only know as Marlboro Man. Ree found herself falling head over heels in love with Marlboro Man and her plans for a new life in the hustle and bustle of Chicago were soon replaced with preparations for life on a cattle ranch in the middle of nowhere. This was not the life she had planned for herself, but as Ree displays with great insistence throughout the course of the book: the heart wants what it wants.

If ever there was a feel-good love story, Ree Drummond has it. I love watching her show on Food Network every weekend and I equally love watching her family interact. Ree proves in this heartwarming memoir about the man who swept her off her feet that she's no slouch as a writer. As someone who tends to shy away from cheesy romance novels, Ree manages show me that cheesy romance memoirs are worth my time, most likely because she doesn't take herself too seriously. Her sassy, self-deprecating humor is a perfect antidote to all that is cliche in the world of romance writing.   

After listening to Ree narrate her own story in this audiobook, I have to say that my admiration for her continues to grow. As someone who was used to the conveniences of a suburban existence, Ree displayed virtually no resentment toward her new husband when she moved to his ranch in the middle of nowhere. She made the best of her situation and realized her happiness was with her husband, not in her surroundings. I wish I had been able to be so adaptable in my own love story.

I hope despite Ree's busy schedule with her new show that she doesn't stop pursing other book ideas. Listening to this memoir made me hope for more than just cookbooks to be authored by her in the future.


The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels by Ree Drummond
Published: February 1, 2011
Publisher: William Morrow/Harper Audio
Pages: 341
Audiobook length: 11 hours, 3 minutes
Genre: Memoir
Audience: Adults

Saturday, December 29, 2012

My Top Ten Favorite Books of 2012

As does everyone with a book blog this time of year, it's time to reflect on my top faves of the year. I'm not going to categorize them and say, "These were my top YA picks" and "These were my top picture book picks". No I will spare the long, drawn out posts and just say, out of ALL the books I read, YA, middle grade, picture book, non-fiction, etc, etc, these were my absolute favorites. Links for each book take you to my reviews.



1. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
I have never in my life declared a book my favorite. There are too many good books out there to call one book the very best. That is until I read The Fault in Our Stars. I don't even know where to begin to explain how perfect this book is. People who walk around lamenting over the fact that young adult literature is bereft of any sort of literary sophistication need to get their heads out of the sand and start reading some because if they read TFiOS, they'd stop declaring that YA lit isn't "literary" enough for them. Clearly these people have not read John Green. If this book doesn't win a Printz award come January, there is no justice in the world.



2. Wonder by RJ Palacio
Auggie Pullman is one of the most memorable, lovable characters in all of children's literature. Wonder is destined to become a classic. Period. It won the hearts of so many readers within just a few short weeks of being it published and continues to win the hearts of many more as we get closer and closer to award season. Like with TFiOS, if this book doesn't win some sort of heavy medal in January, I call foul.



3. The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate
It has the heartbreak of Charlotte's Web coupled with the joy of Because of Winn-Dixie. Yet another book that is soon to become a classic.



4. The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom by Chrstopher Healy
Want to know what happens after "happily ever after" in fairy tales like Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and Rapunzel? In The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom, we discover that the Princes Charming who saved the aforementioned princesses were, let's just say, less than the handsome dreamboats we imagined them to be. This is one of the most memorable audiobooks I've listened to in recent history and that is all thanks to the sheer comic genius of actor Bronson Pinchot, who not only narrates this audiobook, he performs his heart out in it. All of Pinchot's voices are brilliant, but my personal favorite is that of Prince Duncan, who sounds more like a surfer dude who's fallen off his board one too many times than that of the dignified prince one imagines to have married Snow White. I can't wait for the second installment.


 
5. Brothers at Bat: The True Story of an Amazing All-Brother Baseball Team by Audrey Vernick, illustrated by Steven Salerno
I have a confession to make: I don't like baseball. But in between the pages of any Audrey Vernick baseball book, I become a baseball fan. She works really hard to craft a narrative full of voice: whether it's silly humor in her Buffalo books, or quiet respect and reverence as with her nonfiction picture books like She Loved Baseball and now Brothers at Bat. And to write such a brief narrative full of voice is no simple task, but Audrey is a master at it.Thus the reason that this is one of my favorite books of 2012.



6. Yes, Chef by Marcus Samuelsson
Born in Ethiopia and adopted to a Swedish family, Marcus Samuelsson has one of the most fascinating upbringings and genuine human interest stories of anyone in the food world. This frank memoir is one of my favorite food memoirs I've read in recent history.



7. Book Love by Penny Kittle
In this book, Penny Kittle addresses the contention most high school teachers seem to have that reading and writing workshop is just a "middle school thing." Not only does Penny show that workshop absolutely belongs in the high school classroom, but she allows us to see that it's a necessary part of the high school English and literature experience if we are to prepare our students for college and careers beyond the classroom. I hold this book on the same pedestal as I do The Book Whisperer. It's that good.



8. Because It Is My Blood by Gabrielle Zevin
In this second installment of the Birthright series, Anya Balanchine continues her story in late 21st century New York. After some enlightening discussion with Gabrielle Zevin at NCTE/ALAN, I discovered that she felt the same way I did that this series is not a dystopia as it has been labeled by many and she told me that she wrote it more as a character story/family saga. Based on that conversation over our mutual disagreement over genres not to mention my love for that fact that despite Anya's stoicism, she still has a fierceness about her, this book had to be included in my top 10 favorites for the year.



9. Z is for Moose by Kelly Bingham and Paul O. Zelinsky
You know how there's a whole genre of books out there called "fractured fairy tales?" Where  an author turns the fairy tale archetype on its head somehow? Well, I've decided to coin a new genre of picture books called "fractured ABC books" and Z is for Moose is one of them. This ABC book gets hijacked by a Moose who is distressed over the fact that he was not selected for the letter M. What happens as a result is one of the silliest, most entertaining picture books of the year.



10. What Teachers Make by Taylor Mali
If you haven't already seen the poem inspired by this book, please do yourself a favor and go watch it right now. In this memoir/series of essays, Mali gives further explanations for the moments that inspired different lines from the poem. Not only that, but the purpose of this book, as Mali states in the introduction is, "Someone needs to remind teachers that they are dearly loved. I'm that guy."


What were your favorite books of 2012?

The best gifts are unexpected: Moorenko's Ice Cream

When my husband and I met Barry and Pam Soorenko a few years ago while vacationing in Asheville, North Carolina, one of the things Barry and I talked about when the four of us went out to dinner together was our love for unusual ice cream flavors. I mentioned that my love for strange ice cream flavors began in NYC at Mario Batali's Otto where I ordered olive oil gelato out of morbid curiosity, not expecting to like it in the least. But at the moment of first taste, I discovered olive oil was now my new favorite ice cream flavor and that was the beginning of my experimenting with my own strange (surprisingly delightful) ice cream flavors. After I spent time gushing about olive oil gelato, Barry mentioned to me that his sister Susan owned a burgeoning ice cream empire in Maryland known as Moorenko's and that he would have to recommend she give olive oil ice cream a try sometime.

I have been Facebook friends with Barry and Pam ever since we returned home from Asheville and every so often Barry would post something ice cream-related on my wall after perhaps reading of some unusual homemade ice cream I had concocted, but on the whole, I haven't really heard from either of them since our dinner together in Asheville. That changed about two weeks ago when I received a message from Barry asking for my address because he wanted to send me some Moorenko's ice cream. It was at this moment that I realized why Christmas gifts stress me out so much: because they're something everyone expects. The best gifts, the true gifts. come out of nowhere, when you're not even expecting them. Barry knew how much I loved ice cream, he knew I take great pleasure in making my own ice cream and decided to share the love with some of his sister's own ultra-premium, fancy-flavored ice cream.

About a week later, I returned home from work one day with a box full of this packed in dry ice on my front porch:
Flavors in the box included:
honey lavender
burnt caramel bourbon brickle
salted caramel with pralines
fresh ginger
black raspberry chocolate chip
cinnamon cappuccino

Lavender flowers in the honey lavender ice cream
I was in ice cream heaven. I have since sampled from each container and have deemed the honey lavender the most heavenly for the simple fact that, as is the norm with me, it is the most unexpected and unusual flavor of the lot. You don't expect your ice cream to be floral, but the sweet and the creamy pairs beautifully with the floral notes of the lavender. If I close my eyes while eating this ice cream, I might swear I was strolling through the lavender fields of Provence in late spring/early summer.

Even though honey lavender was my favorite, all six flavors were delicious and each container had the perfect creamy, luscious texture one would expect out of a high-end, ultra-premium ice cream. The only thing that a connoisseur might contest is Moorenko's appears to be a bit stingy with the mix-ins. Whether it's chocolate chips or pralines, the mix-in landscape is not very fertile. However, I actually found this to be an advantage rather than a setback. I'm someone who prefers my ice cream to be smooth instead of "rocky" and I like to savor it slowly.
burnt caramel bourbon brickle ice cream
If I'm spending more time chewing, that takes away from experiencing the actual ice cream base. Large chunks of mix-ins are a distraction from the master's craft. They prevent you from tasting and experiencing the pure, artisanal ice cream.

After getting the opportunity to experience Jeni's Ice Cream this past summer, I'd have to say that Moorenko's is definitely in the same league as Jeni's. The texture is perfect and the flavors are sublime. I feel like I received an ice cream windfall in 2012. I wonder what delicious surprises await in 2013.

Just this evening, before I finished this post, I polished off the entire carton of salted caramel with pralines almost completely by myself. My husband contributed by maybe having 4 or 5 bites.
If this is cheaper than therapy, I just got my money's worth!




Thursday, December 27, 2012

And the Babymouse thief was...

So yeah. This just happened.

The past few months I've been lamenting over the fact that my signed copy of Babymouse has gone missing. I've lectured my students about being more responsible with my books. I've guilt tripped them by saying that these books are for the whole class and it's not fair if someone takes them and/or loses track of them in the black hole that is their locker. I've even resorted to the ever effective, "I won't be mad at whoever has it. Just return it to its rightful place on the bookshelf and all is forgiven." All to no avail.

But Christmas break brings out the organizer in my husband and me, so this evening he decided to clean off the bookshelf in the office that was covered in his tools and put them back in the garage. Upon closer inspection of our newly cleaned bookshelf, what do you suppose is the first thing I noticed?

No words are necessary here...
but I'll use them anyway. Yes, that would be my signed, personalized copy of Babymouse.

I do believe a great big apology to my students and some groveling is in order on the first day back to school in January. But hey, yay kids! Babymouse is back!

A moment like this, I think Babymouse should get the last word, don't you?



Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Speed Reviewing (1)

I've read a bunch of short books lately and rather than writing one long review for each book, I've decided to do some speed reviewing:

Homer by Elisha  Cooper

Anyone who's ever loved a dog will totally "get" this book. Homer is a dog's dog who's just content lying around, knowing that his people are nearby. The ending will tug on your heartstrings.






B is for Brooklyn by Selina Alko

This lively, colorful ABC book brings Brooklyn to life and will make any reader want to spend part of their time in NYC exploring its neighborhoods. Each page has a bunch of different words to represent each letter and some representations will be well-known to those of us not from Brooklyn (Brooklyn Bridge, Coney Island, Prospect Park) and some will only be known to locals (DUMBO - Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass, Kings County Kick Ball, Mermaid Parade) which makes this book all the more appealing to everyone, visitors and locals alike. I know I personally want to plan a trip to NYC right now just so I can explore Brooklyn more than I did on my last trip.  


I Have a Dream by Martin Luther King, Jr., illustrated by Kadir Nelson 

Kadir Nelson took the most famous section of MLK's "I Have a Dream" speech and charged it with even more emotion with his moving illustrations. I have heard the "I Have a Dream" speech many times and it still makes me cry to this day. Kadir Nelson brought that emotion right back to me and will hopefully bring this important milestone in our nation's history to light for a new generation of kids. I could hear King's voice as I read his historic words.


Little White Duck: A Childhood in China by Andres Vera Martinez and Na Liu

I am always fascinated by memoirs and fictional/autobiographical accounts of people's lives in China during the Cultural Revolution. Little White Duck is unique in the sense that it begins right as Chairman Mao has died and China is going through more changes. This graphic memoir would be a good book to read before or after Revolution is Not a Dinner Party by Ying Chang Compestine and Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang




Bink & Gollie by Kate DiCamillo and Allison McGhee, illustrated by Tony Fucile

Bink and Gollie are the perfect examples of why characters matter to me more than plot. Bink is wild and vivacious and lives on her whims, Gollie is reserved and sophisticated and thinks things through before she acts. Together they are a dynamic duo of endearing entertainment. I will definitely be reading more Bink & Gollie books in the future.  

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Merry Christmas to all and to all a good book!

What was my favorite Christmas present this year? It wasn't a present at all but a moment, one I hope is followed by many more moments like it:
My non-reader husband lying in bed, reading a book

Thank you Carrie Harris for being my husband's gateway back into the world of reading. When you read a passage of Bad Hair Day at your book launch party the humor and expression of that passage piqued his curiosity and made him want to read your books. What it usually takes me a few months with most students has taken me over five years with my husband. I am determined to find him more books just like Bad Taste in Boys and Bad Hair Day - funny, campy, and science-y. That is apparently just what he needs.

He has been telling me for years that he's a slow reader and that's why he doesn't like to read, yet when he picked this book up, it took him less than a week to finish. After recently reading Penny Kittle's Book Love, I used the argument that he's only a slow reader because he's never tried to read to build stamina. Hopefully this picture I took today is a sign that the conversations I have with my students about reading are finally starting to work on my husband. ;)

Merry Christmas everybody! I hope you all found some good books under your tree and that the non-readers in your life found some books they love too!

Monday, December 24, 2012

It's Monday! What are You Reading? 12-24-12

 
Originally hosted by Sheila at Book Journey, Jen and Kellee  over at Teach Mentor Texts also host a kidlit version of It's Monday! What are You Reading?

Merry Christmas Eve! I hope Santa brings you all lots of books under your tree tonight. :)

Some of the picture books I read and enjoyed last week were:
 
Time to Sleep Sheep the Sheep! and Let's Say Hi to Friends Who Fly! by Mo Willems
My new favorite thing is to spot The Pigeon in Mo Willems books that aren't part of The Pigeon series.


The Monsters' Monster by Patrick McDonnell
An adorable, feel-good story about a trio of monsters who create a monsters' MONSTER to be the biggest, baddest monster of all time, but what they get instead is a gentle giant who is just happy to be alive. 

 
Seed by Seed: The Legend and Legacy of John "Appleseed" Chapman by Esme Raji Codell, illustrated by Lynne Rae Perkins
Beautiful, educational portrayal of the man known as Johnny Appleseed, John Chapman. It's one of those books you just feel better knowing it's in the world, being read by kids and adults alike. 


Currently (still) reading:
 
You Tell Your Dog First by Alison Pace
Just One Day by Gayle Forman


Currently (still) listening:

The Diviners by Libba Bray
Liar & Spy by Rebecca Stead


Don't forget to enter my current giveaway:
Win a 2013 Maurice Sendak calendar (ends 12-27)