Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy by Gary D. Schmidt



My father is with God, just as the minister here says. But God didn’t call him there because God had work for him to do. My father died because he was doing God’s work here. 
He wanted the people of Malaga Island to live in a place that was their own.”

I started reading this book four days ago, but I kept having to put it down because there are so many utterly terrible scenes. On the one hand I wanted to keep reading but I also felt the need to protect myself from the vicious scenes. 

This book is utterly harrowing and upsetting but I really do appreciate the journey Gary D Schmidt has taken me on. About halfway through this story I began to worry there might not be a happy ending so I decided to skim through a few reviews. Some said the ending was tragic, but I also read that the ending was hopeful. This means that when the most dreadful and devastating things happened to Turner, I simply did not believe them. 

I should have read the Kirkus Star review more carefully:

There can be no happy ending to this story, but the telling is both beautiful and emotionally honest, both funny and piercingly sad.

Bookseller blurb: Set in 1912 and centered on a historical event, the moving and compelling coming-of-age story of Turner, a white minister's son who discovers joy through his friendship with a black girl, Lizzie, and finds his own strength and voice after painful losses transform his life. In this powerful and moving novel, Turner Buckminster, a preacher's son newly arrived in in Phippsburg, Maine, meets Lizzie Bright Griffin, a strong, spirited black girl from Malaga Island, a nearby island community founded by former slaves. All of Phippsburg, especially Turner's repressive father, disapproves of their friendship, but Turner ignores them; Lizzie is the wisest, most knowledgeable person he ever met. On top of knowing everything, she can row a boat and pitch a baseball like a champ. The town's move to turn the island into a tourist attraction destroys the powerless community, a historical event that occurred in 1912. It is the catalyst for a wave of personal losses that shakes Turner's world but leaves him whole.

Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy is a Young Adult title and I would say this book is best for ages 14+. The treatment of and prejudice towards African American citizens as explained in this story set in 1912 in Maine is certain to shock teenage readers here in modern Australia.  It is also important to read the back notes which explain the actual historical events that inspired this novel.

If you are book talking Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy I would use the four covers I have shared above as a way to interest your library or class group. In the light of my earlier comments it is interesting to think about the age intention of these cover designs. I wouldn't use this with a high school group but I do wish I could find a soundtrack of all the hymns Turner plays to Mrs Cobb. 

Take a look at this review. Here are some text quotes from this book:

Opening sentence: Turner Buckminster had lived in Phippsburg, Maine, for fifteen minutes shy of six hours. He had dipped his hand in its waves and licked the salt from his fingers. He had smelled the sharp resin of the pines. He had heard the low rhythm of the bells on the buoys that balanced on the ridges of the sea. He had seen the fine clapboard parsonage beside the church where he was to live, ...

He didn’t know how much longer he could stand it. Maybe somewhere out West there really were Territories that he could light out to, where being a minister’s son wouldn’t matter worth a . . . well, worth a darn. He hoped so, because here, being a minister’s son mattered a whole lot, and pretending that it didn’t matter to him was starting to peck at his soul.

Readers let's meet Lizzie Bright: She looked out at the thrusting tide, clenched her toes into the loose sand, and smelled the salty, piney air. At thirteen, she was, as her grandfather liked to remind her, one year older than the century, and so a good deal wiser. Too wise to stay on Malaga Island, he said, but she planned to stay there forever. Where else, after all, did the tide set a pale crab on your toe?

“More to the point,” said the tallest of the group—the one with the most expensive frock coat, the most expensive top hat, and the most expensive shiny shoes—“one less colored on Malaga Island.” Laughter from the group, louder than the gulls. “Though the issue is much larger than one colored.” His eye searched the pine shadows across the water for the girl, as if he sensed her watching him. His hands moved to the lapels of his coat. “The issue is how to relieve Malaga Island of the girl, her family, her neighbors, what she would call her house, what they would call their town.”

“Reverend Buckminster, behold the cross we bear in Phippsburg: a ragtag collection of hovels and shacks, filled with thieves and lazy sots, eking out a life by eating clams from the ocean mud, heedless of offers of help from either state or church, a blight on the town’s aspirations, a hopeless barrier to its future.”

The afternoon had become as hot as meanness, and since the shirt he was wearing had enough starch in it to mummify two, maybe three, pharaohs, he began to feel he could hardly breathe. The only thing that saved him from absolute suffocation was the sea breeze somersaulting and fooling, first ahead, then behind, running and panting like a dog ready to play.

In the clearing, sixty graves lay quiet and still, restful. Wood crosses with printed names too faded to read stood at their heads. Some had piles of pink-grained stones gathered from around the island placed carefully at the foot of each cross. Some had sprigs of violets, some fresh evergreen boughs.

She took a deep breath, and she wasn’t just breathing in the air. She breathed in the waves, the sea grass, the pines, the pale lichens on the granite, the sweet shimmering of the pebbles dragged back and forth in the surf, the fish hawk diving to the waves, the dolphin jumping out of them. She would not ebb.

And suddenly, Turner had a thought that had never occurred to him before: he wondered if his father really believed a single thing he was saying. And suddenly, Turner had a second thought that had never occurred to him before: he wondered if he believed a single thing his father was saying.

Turner felt the cold of the place come into him. He could not move. It was as though the bricks surrounded him and him alone. He felt that he would never escape them, never see anyone he loved again, never see the ocean waves again. That he would always be cold, and the cold would be in him more than around him.

Companion book:

You may have read my previous post about the Newbery Award where I set myself a challenge to read more of the honor book titles. Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy (2004) was one title on my list - partly because the title sounded intriguing and partly because I recognised the author's name.

I previously read these books by Gary D Schmidt:






Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Lion of the Sky by Ritu Hemani



"How can anyone draw a line
between neighbors?
between brothers?
between friends?"

"Even if all the Hindus
in the world stop liking
all the Muslims in the world,
I never will."

Raj is twelve. He is a Hindu boy who loves flying kites with his grandfather and his best friend. He dreams of winning the big kite competition. Iqbal is his best friend but he is Muslim and India is about to be divided by partition. Their precious friendship will be cut in half just as their country is divided and their homes now become places of danger and violence.  This is so confusing - it is all because some one from far away has drawn a line on a map.  

People smile with tight lips,
and it's no coincidence
that everyone is dressed in white
the colour we wear 
when someone dies.

Raj and his family become refugees and they have to move from Hyderabad in Sindh to Bombay. The train journey is dreadful and all their possessions are taken by thieves and then the most unimaginable thing happens - in the chaos and confusion Raj's sister Maja aged nine disappears.

This book is sure to make you curious about the partition of India and also about traditional Indian foods. 

We sit down
to a breakfast of dal pakwan,
the creamy-flavoured lentils,
spicy mint coriander chutney
and deep-fried crispy sweetbread
mingling in my mouth
before I swallow with relish.

... with our baskets filled with
diamond-shaped Kaju mithai.
I inhale the scent
of cashew nuts and cardamom
and hope there will be some left over ...

The blended scent
of saffron and cardamom
fills the air
as Amma prepares to slice
her freshly rolled varo.
With careful force
she cuts across the center,
and I lick my lips,
imagining the sweet crunch
of pistachios, almonds, 
cashew nuts, and poppy seeds
with hardened caramel.

The British have left India and Raj is also caught up in the politics of the times. His brother explains:

You would not be sad
if you knew what they have stolen
how they have treated us,
burning out fingers to serve 
them phulko, while they burn
our money and drink out chai. ...
They charge unfair taxes on salt,
take the cotton, spices, 
and crops from our land,
use the modern railways you boast of
to steal what is ours,
and sell it back at inflated prices ...
They keep every last rupee,
while our country starves,
they look at us like we're
uncivilized dogs ...

This is a complex story about a time in history that will be unfamiliar to most young readers aged 10+ here in Australia but it is well worth the reading journey. I am quoting in full the book description by the author:

An evocative historical novel in verse about a boy and his family who are forced to flee their home and become refugees after the British Partition of India. Twelve-year-old Raj is happiest flying kites with his best friend, Iqbal. As their kites soar, Raj feels free, like his beloved India soon will be, and he can’t wait to celebrate their independence. But when a British lawyer draws a line across a map, splitting India in two, Raj is thrust into a fractured world. With Partition declared, Hindu, Sikh, and Muslim families are torn apart—and Raj’s Hindu and Iqbal’s Muslim families are among them. Forced to flee and become refugees, Raj’s family is left to start over in a new country. After suffering devastating losses, Raj must summon the courage to survive the brutal upheaval of both his country and his heart. Inspired by the author’s true family history, Lion of the Sky is a deeply moving coming-of-age tale about identity, belonging, and the power of hope.

Listen to an audio sample here. I read Lion of the Sky as an ebook. The hardcover novel with 416 pages is way too expensive for your library here in Australia. It was published in 2024 so I imagine there will eventually be a paperback edition. 

There are some powerful words of wisdom in this book:

"Holding on to your anger is like drinking poison and expecting your enemy to die."

"Because we don't need your kind and my kind ... only kindness."

Ultimately this is a tale about being lion-hearted, soaring after falling many times, and still reaching for the sky. It’s also about lines that divide, that cut across hearts and countries, and that are seared into memories. An exquisite, memorable story about new beginnings and the quest to belong. Kirkus Star review

Here is an interview with the author. Lion of the Sky is her debut book. 

Companion book:





Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Simon Sort of Says by Erin Bow




"Who wouldn't want to live in a place with no internet and no cell phones and no TV or radio? Who wouldn't want to live surrounded by emu farms in a town that's half astrophysicists and half people who are afraid of their microwaves. I mean isn't that the American Dream? Hint: no."

I am only going to give brief details about the plot of this book because I do not want to spoil your reading experience. Erin Bow drops tiny hints (Betsy Bird calls them breadcrumbs) which gradually give you the details of what has happened to Simon back at his old school. Here are a few of them:

My father got fired - the hilarious reasons are outlined in chapter one. Simon's mother is an undertaker. Undertakers can work anywhere. "And that's why we came here. Anyway, that's what I tell people."

"I would have moved to Mars if it got me away from what happened in Omaha."

"I don't like the stiff and clearly brand-new backpack, but I never got the old one back ... "

"I was home-schooled all last year, and I asked my parents not to include the records from before that."

"The bell is loud - it's a real bell, being hit by a real hammer, sounding like a real emergency - and my body slams backwards into the chalkboard, the eraser tray jamming into my hip. But none of the other kids notice."

There are some terrific plot devices in this story - no internet means no one can Google Simon to find out about his past. The name of the town Grin and Bear It allows the author to create a small town in America with so many quirky shops and other businesses including the funeral home which is called Slaughter and Sons. I love the other fun towns Erin Bow "invents" (perhaps they are real) Truth or Consequences, New Mexico; Come by Chance, Newfoundland; and Intercourse, Pennsylvania. There are emus in this story which is funny to me because I am here in Australia - we never do find out why Agate's neighbour has an emu farm. I also adore the minor adult characters in this story - Simon's mum and dad just seem so real and Erin Bow describes them so well; Agate has a wonderful eclectic family and even though we don't meet her dad until the final chapters I just wanted to hug him and Mrs Van der Zwaan. Mum has a deep coffee addiction - so funny to me especially as a non-coffee person. Read this:

"I need a proper mocha ... seventy two percent dark Madagascar chocolate, microfoamed almond milk and two shots of espresso, Yirgicheff bean, lightly washed."

If you want to read more the Kirkus review contains the main plot spoiler.

Adroit, sensitive, horrifying, yet hilarious. Kirkus Star review

Betsy Bird sums up this idea too, of not spoiling the story:

I almost fear telling you too much about it, in case you don’t come to it with the same clean slate that I had. The fact of the matter is that Erin Bow has created a masterpiece of tone with this book. Combining a legitimately horrifying situation with humor, heart, and the occasional Jesus squirrel, this is both the funniest book you’ll read this year, and the best-written. Would that I were joking about that. In three words: I am not.

BUT Betsy does go on to say do not read her review if you want to avoid possible spoilers!

The book itself has this summary:

"Two years after a tragedy saddles him with viral fame, twelve-year-old Simon O'Keefe and his family move to Grin And Bear It, Nebraska, where the internet and cell phones are banned so (that) astrophysicists can scan the sky for signs of alien life, and where, with the help of two new friends, a puppy and a giant radio telescope, Simon plans to restart the narrative of his life."

I love the final words of Betsy Bird's review:

This is for the kid who likes their humor to be complicated, their writing to be scintillating, and to never, ever, know what an author is going to do next. One and all, please be so good as to meet the most memorable book of the year.

Here are some detailed discussion questions.

Some time ago I joined an online book discussion group. I don't read every book but this one intrigued me. I am about to do some traveling so I have bought a small Kindle and I added this book to my Kindle library. Over the last few days while I had a small mountain mini break I decided to test out reading on the Kindle and I picked this book as a perfect one to try. Simon sort of Says is such an engrossing story with a plot structure I really appreciate where the author gradually reveals past events and also where other kids, not by design or on purpose, gently help the main character recover from a trauma. I do like to highlight sections as I read and in the past with Kindle titles I previously easily did this on my ipad but it took me a few tries to master this on a different device. The highlighted notes give me access to text quotes and also jog my memory about plot details and also a way to join the online discussion questions posted earlier this year. 

Companion books:





Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Christmas is coming to Australia read Sarah's Two Nativities



I discovered this book in 2019 and I was certain it would appear on lots of award lists - but oddly it didn't.  Read my post here. If you are reading this post in 2021 then I am happy to say this book is available, in hardcover, and for a really good price. It won't arrive in time for Christmas but I highly recommend this book as one to add to your own Christmas shelf - it is a book you will want to revisit each year. 

You can see this book at the Storybox Library. 




A perfect story for families everywhere to read at anytime, but especially at Christmas.  Kids' Book Review

Saturday, December 18, 2021

The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare

 


"Kit hesitated. She didn't want to admit how disappointing she found this first glimpse of America. The bleak line of shore surrounding the gray harbor was a disheartening contrast to the shimmering green and white that fringed the turquoise bay of Barbados which was her home."

The year is 1687.  Katherine Tyler, known as Kit, has travelled to Connecticut because her grandfather has died. The only family she has now is an aunt who she has never met who lives in Westersfield. Aunt Rachel fell in love with Puritan and ran away to America. Kit is a lively and impetuous girl but these are complex times. It is the time of the witch trials. People in these tiny settlements are suspicious of strangers. Their Puritan ways are severe. Added to this Kit has not told her aunt or uncle that she is coming. 

Publisher blurb: Kit Tyler is marked by suspicion and disapproval from the moment she arrives on the unfamiliar shores of colonial Connecticut in 1687. Alone and desperate, she has been forced to leave her beloved home on the island of Barbados and join a family she has never met. Kit's unconventional background and high-spirited ways immediately clash with the Puritanical lifestyle of her uncle's household, and despite her best efforts to adjust, it seems Kit will never win the favour of those around her. Torn between her quest for belonging and her desire to be true to herself, Kit struggles to survive in a hostile place, and just when it seems she must give up, she finds a kindred spirit. But Kit's friendship with old Hannah Tupper, who is believed by the colonists to be a witch, proves more taboo than she could have imagined, and ultimately Kit is forced to choose between her heart and her duty.

At a recent charity book sale I spied a copy of The Witch of Blackbird Pond.  I have wanted to read this book for a long time partly because I thought I had read it as a child (this turns out to be wrong) and partly because I am trying to find a book I did read in late Primary school about a young girl who goes to live with a mysterious old woman in a swamp and I thought that might be this book (it wasn't).

Did enjoy The Witch of Blackbird pond although I did not understand most of the political and historical references. I did enjoy the love story, the kindness of Kit, her sweet close observations of the people in the town and that all important happy ending. 

The Witch of Blackbird Pond (1958) won the John Newbery Medal in 1959. I have put a selection of covers at the start of this post. You can see more here at the School Library Journal where Elizabeth Bird talks about this book. Listen to the first chapter.

Here are some companion reads:








The Thickety (for mature readers)

And if the topic of strict religious practices is one you want to explore try to find this very old Australian book:


One more thing to add here.  The book I am looking for that I read around age eleven contained a similar story of a girl going to live in a strange environment. The woman she lives with is, I think, shunned by the people of the town. The young girl finds the old woman strange and difficult to talk to and yet each day the woman packs up the most delicious lunch for the girl to eat at school. The lunch is packed into the most perfect little containers. Do you recognise this book?  Please add a title in the comments.  

Thursday, March 18, 2021

The Easter Story


Image Source: Collins Dictionary

The Christmas story from the Bible is a fairly easy one to share through a picture book for young children but Easter is more complex.

The author needs to include:

  • Passover
  • The Last Supper with the disciples
  • The betrayal by Judas
  • The Crucifixion
  • The resurrection
  • The Ascension to heaven 

Here are three books you could share with a child. Each contains bright illustrations - Brian Wildsmith; Christina Balit; and Sophie Allsopp

Here are a set of teaching ideas to use with The Easter Story by Brian Wildsmith.

Taking a closer look at these three books. I have included text quotes to give you an idea of the level and style of the writing:




Opening lines: "Once, a long time ago, a little donkey was brought to Jesus. The little donkey had never been ridden before, bu Jesus spoke gently to him, and soon he stopped being afraid."

Closing lines: "But Jesus knew it was time for him to leave this earth. As the sun rose one morning, he went up to his father in Heaven. The next day Jesus' friends took the little donkey back to his home. And the little donkey stayed there for the rest of his life, remembering the kind and good man he had carried on his back to Jerusalem."


Recommended for ages 8+  You can view the whole book here


Opening lines: "One springtime, long ago, everyone was talking about Jesus of Nazareth. 'He is a wonderful storyteller,' said the children. 'He welcomes everybody,' said the outcasts. 'We believe he can work miracles,' added those who were sick. 'But how can the son of a carpenter be a teacher?' asked the religious leaders. 'Who is this Jesus? Who can he be?"

Closing lines: "We are the followers of Jesus - the one who was crucified and who I declare has been raised from the dead. He is the Messiah, the one sent by God to save us. ... In this way Peter began the work of spreading the message of Jesus: the message to bring people into God's everlasting kingdom."

Recommended for ages 10+


Opening lines: "Long ago there lived a man named Jesus. He was a storyteller and a miracle worker and a preacher. 'And he tells us the good news,' said the children, 'that God loves us."

Closing lines: "One day when Jesus's followers were together, they heard a noise like blowing wind. They saw flames of bright fire blazing above them. They felt brave and strong as never before. That very day they began to spread the good news about Jesus. The news about God's love: the love that will last for ever."

Recommended for ages 5+

Friday, February 12, 2021

People might hear you by Robin Klein


Friday Old Favourite

Publisher blurb: "When her aunt marries the forbidding Mr Tyrell, Frances is introduced to the mysterious temple, with its strange, fanatical beliefs. At first she trustingly accepts her aunt's new life, and tries to be a 'worthy' member of the temple. But as she uncovers its sinister secrets she realises she has no escape . . ."

Frances is told her aunt is getting married, this is a huge surprise. Then she is told she will be leaving her school. After the "marriage" Frances and Aunt Loris move in to the house of the strange Finley Tyrell and his almost silent daughters. No one is allowed to know they live in the house. Very late at night the girls are allowed out to run around the block for exercise but this is closely supervised and quite terrifying. Meals are silent and lessons are from old books and are mostly about preparations for the end of the world or religious indoctrination. Frances has no idea what is going on but Robin Klein gives her reader hints through her word choices. I have highlighted these for emphasis:

"The temple was a building made of grey concrete slabs, unattractive and intimidating. Heavy metal screen meshed the windows facing the street. ... the only garden was a fringe of thick, fleshy grass blades which crept up all around the foundations."

"Her own shoes made a clatter, disturbing the quietness of the house."

"He didn't sound grouchy with her, but his personality was so strong that she didn't care to argue. He didn't even look at her to make sure she was doing as she was told, but seemed to take it for granted that he would be obeyed."

"Frances realised suddenly that Claire's speech was remarkably free from slang. She spoke as no other child Frances had ever heard, almost like a very precise adult. There was no light and shade in her voice, and no liveliness."

"If we ever had to fight for what we believe in, we'd be able to lock ourselves in and survive for a long time. And in the war, when everything else is in ruins, this house will be spared, because it belongs to the temple and has divine protection."

"There was a heavy screen door that also had to be unlocked from the inside, and then cold, dark air slashed in at them, causing Frances to plunge her hands deep into her coat pockets. There was a porch; a small yard rippling with wind-tossed, spiky bushes... "

People might hear you was originally published in 1983. I loved this book when I first read it back in 1984 and since that time I have often recommended it to students in my school library. Re-reading it over the last few days, while the story did engross me, it didn't have quite the same emotional impact. The naivety of Frances and her constant references to her friend Kerry annoyed me a little. I would still recommend this book for mature readers aged 10+ but I no longer feel desperate to see it back in print. The ending, however, is brilliant - filled with hope but also tantalisingly unresolved.

My copy also had a very condensed and small font which made reading more difficult than it should have been. Here is a review with more plot details.

I would pair this book with Grace by Morris Gleitzman.


Sunday, July 26, 2020

Running on the Roof of the World by Jess Butterworth



Rule One: Don't run in front of a solider
Rule Two: Never look at a soldier
Rule Three: Say as little as possible

Tash and her friend Sam live in Tibet where is is dangerous to mention anything cultural and everything connected with their beloved Dalai Lama (including the two words Dalai Lama) is banned. When Tash's father is arrested, Tash decides she must make the long and dangerous journey from Tibet to India to seek help from the Dalai Lama.

"I remember the photograph of the Dalai Lama. I slip my fingers into my pocket and feel it filling me with strength. I pull it out and stare at his happy face. I have to do something to help. ... The Dalai Lama stares back at me. If there's one person who could know what to do, it's him. He's my glimmer of hope."

Sam is Tash's friend. He won't let her travel alone. So they quickly gather supplies and load them onto the back of two yaks. Winter is coming. Time is short. The soldiers are following. And making things even more dangerous, Tash is carrying a letter (in code) and some newspapers written by her father who is working for the resistance. If these things are found Tash (and her parents) are sure to be put in jail.

The fifty-five chapters are framed with mandala's which you almost want to colour in.  I also liked the chapter headings which gave the story a sense of urgency:  Rules, Crowd, Flames, Stories, Run, Vulture, Pursuit, Glaciers.

Listen to an audio sample here. Small plot warning - near the beginning of the story Tash watches as a man sets himself on fire in an act of self-immolation. This may distress some younger readers.

I really wanted to adore this book but oddly, while it did hold my interest, I cannot give this book five stars. I think the cover (by Bob Biddulph) is excellent and the inside graphics are decorative but I was not quite so convinced about the story I think because the final meeting with the Dalai Lama did not match my hopes (I felt so let down). I do not want to discourage you from reading Running on the Roof of the World because I know everyone reads books in different ways and there is plenty to enjoy and learn from this book.

In the March, 2009 issue of Magpies Magazine Rayma Turton explores this idea. She gives the book Darius Bell and the Glitter Pool to two (unnamed) reviewers. Both reviewers enjoyed this book but both approach their reviews in quite different ways.

Reviewer One "This is vintage Hirsch, with its quirky, well-rounded characters and subtle humour.... Darius and Cyrus's fraternal sparring is accurate as well as funny ... "
Reviewer Two "The strength of Hirsch's writing lies in his control of narrative. A world is created, characters are introduced and well-detailed events progress methodically. ... What saves this book from being completely bloodless is the relationship between Darius and his brother Cyrus."

Now let's look at some contrasting review comments about Running on the roof of the world. Each of these reviews will also give you more plot details.







Here is the US Cover:


I would pair this book with The Lost stone of Skycity:


When you loan this book to a reader in a library it would be good to give them one or two of these:




Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Welcome to Planet Omar Book One - Accidental Trouble Magnet by Zanib Mian

The real pleasure of this book is Omar - his imagination, the pleasure he finds in ordinary things, his infectious zest for life make this irresistible reading. The book also offers insight into the life of an ordinary Muslim family, something we don't often get ... LoveReading4Kids


My local bookseller Beachside Bookshop has kindly given me a big bag of books to read this month. Yesterday I picked up Welcome to Planet Omar. This is new book - I had an advanced reader copy. This book will be available this month. I read it all in one sitting and yes it it that good. I thought I might post some quotes from the author:

People like me simply weren’t in story books, when I was young.

Muslims may just be the most misunderstood group of people on the planet. I had to set it straight somewhat, which is why I chose to write a funny middle grade book about an ordinary Muslim family.

When I heard of the surge in faith-based bullying in schools, I knew I had to contribute something positive to the world that would challenge these stereotypes.

For those readers that don’t have Muslim friends, I thought it would be great to use humour as a tool to open a window into the lives of a Muslim family, to shed some light on things that they might have always wondered about, but were too polite to ask – for instance, why we fast or why we wear hijab.

In this book I learnt about Ramadan, the two Eid festivals and iftar in an easy to read and very funny story which at times was also surprisingly poignant. I totally agree with the endorsement on the back cover - this book is perfect for fans of Tom Gates and Diary of a Wimpy Kid but it is also so much more.

Here is an excellent review with more plot details. This book was originally published under the title The Muslims.  Take a look at the trailer to see the format of the text which uses different fonts and text features and lots of white space making this book very easy to read. I don't like to use the words "an important book" but I would like to put this book into the hands of some young readers and hear their thoughts especially children in schools where they have perhaps had no contact with children from other faiths.






Monday, February 25, 2019

The Book of Boy by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

"The face of a an angel and the body of a fiend - 
I suppose that defines a boy right enough."
'Not a boy. Boy. That's my name.'  
I did not care the words he tossed about. 
I did not care for people calling me anything other than Boy"





Let's start with the cover of this Newbery Honor Book. I love the top one. My copy was the second one. The first is the US cover and the second comes from Chicken House in the UK. Which do you like?

Boy is an outcast. He is a hunchback and he is regularly taunted by other boys in the town. Adults who meet him give him a wide berth or hastily make a sign of protection. Luckily Boy finds friends in animals. The goats he tends in the fields talk to him. If he lies down to sleep animals arrive to keep him warm. Old Father Petrus has told Boy never to reveal himself, never to reveal his secrets.  What are these secrets? One is his ability to understand animals and another is that he has no need of food.

Boy is living in France. The year is 1350. He works for an old knight called Sir Jacques. Sadly Sir Jacques has been badly hurt during a joust and he can no longer speak. One day a pilgrim appears. "He is tall, goats, and wears a brown pilgrim robe and cloak and wide hat, with a staff as tall as he, and he carries a pack on a long pole. Perhaps he journeys to the Holy Land, or to Rome to see the key to heaven."

The pilgrim orders Boy to take him to his master. The name of the pilgrim is Secundus and he tells Cook (who is now married to Sir Jacques) that he will take Boy for the next part of his journey. He needs someone who is good at climbing. Secundus is collecting seven relics. His methods are not always legal but he desperately needs the relics to ensure his place in heaven. Such is his own guilt he cannot touch the relics but Boy can do this without fear and so his task is also to carry the pack - in fact it is tied to his body with a stout rope. Secundus wants to collect the relics of Saint Peter:

Rib Tooth Thumb Shin Dust Skull Tomb

This journey will take much longer than the promised 6 days and the gathering of the relics will lead Boy on a journey beyond his imagining but Boy has a purpose too. If he can reach Rome he hopes he can make his own request. Boy is desperate to be an ordinary boy.

Reading this book will make you curious to discover more about The Black Death, about the uses of religious relics, and about the ruined city of Rome in 1350.

"The thousand years (more or less) we know as the “Middle Ages” were a time of violence, superstition, and squalor, as well as a time of fervent faith and shimmering splendor.  The supernatural haunts this cavalcade of pilgrims, villagers, priests, monks, renegade knights, and robbers.  Hell seems to have broken through to earth at times—but so does heaven." Redeemed Reader

You can read a text extract here - this is a good way to discover the flavour of this very special writing. Catherine Gilbert Murdock skillfully creates the sights, nasty smells and sounds of the Medieval world.  Here are a couple of text quotes:

"This church, too, looked like the heart of a jewel. Colour filled the windows even in the grey dusk. The ceiling blazed with candles, and cloths hung on the walls. At the far end stood the altar, glittering with gold and candlelight."

"What a city it was. What a cesspit. Tall buildings made narrow streets even tighter ... the streets were clogged with beggars, and finely dresses women, and servants, clothed from the wealth of their masters."

In this video Catherine talks about her book. Here is a review with more plot details. Horn Book asked Catherine five questions.

I was pleased to discover I had read and thoroughly another book by Catherine Gilbert Murdock - Princess Ben.



Praise for The Book of Boy:
A Newbery Honor Book * Booklist Editors’ Choice *BookPage Best Books * Chicago Public Library Best Fiction *Horn Book Fanfare * Kirkus Reviews Best Books * Publishers Weekly Best Books * Wall Street Journal Best of the Year * An ALA Notable Book

I can only speak for myself, but the real lure of this book might not be the characters, the mysteries, the setting, or even the mysterious relics. The book has something a little more difficult to pin down, and even harder to attain. It’s a sheer pleasure to read. I mean it. The chapters whiz on by, daring you to put the book down for even one iota of a second. Somehow Murdock has managed to write something simultaneously archaic in form and incredibly enticing to the modern eye. Elizabeth Bird SLJ

Blend epic adventure with gothic good and evil, and add a dash of sly wit for a tale that keeps readers turning the page, shaking their heads, and feeling the power of choice. Kirkus Star review

I would follow The Book of Boy with The Book without Words by Avi and the Pagan series (5 titles) by Catherine Jinks.  Here is the first book:



You could also take a look at Catherine Called Birdy and Matilda Bone by Karen Cushman and Crispin : The Cross of Lead by Avi.