Wednesday, July 12, 2023

A perfect choice for young active listeners

Brielle’s Birthday Ball by Once Upon a Dance is a whimsical story written with toddlers and early-readers in mind. This magical picture book illustrated by Stella Mongodi captures the essence of childhood birthday excitement as Brielle receives a magical gift that takes her to an out-of-this-world birthday celebration. The authors add another layer of fun with interactive dance movements that prime the child’s imagination to act out the story. It’s a perfect choice for young active listeners. It engages them to get up and move as the story unfolds. For young pre-readers, realistic illustrations add visual interest and make it an easy “pretend to read” book for kids who know the story. This book has the potential to be a childhood favorite, and the original storyline will invite re-readings for both story listeners and early readers.

Brielles Birthday Ball

 

Book Review: Brielle's Birthday Ball

I recommend this book to children interested in dance, and to those who enjoy fantastical stories ages 3-7. I’m happy to give this book 5 stars and recommend it along with other Dance-It-Out! Creative Movement Stories for Young Movers books like: Princess Naomi Helps a Unicorn and Joey Finds His Jump!

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As BookHookup, I am a long-time book reviewer and received a free review copy of this book in collaboration with Blackberry Book Tours. I have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

About the Author: Once Upon a Dance 

Once Upon a Dance offers movement, breath, joy, connection and imagination through stories.

Their catalog (25 books across four series) offers positive role models, whimsical stories, and diverse characters. Alongside movement and dance, the books feature themes of empathy, friendship, the value of practice, self-acceptance, sibling relationships, anger management, and working toward goals.

Ballerina Konora is living her dreams as a full-fledged ballet Company Artist. Teacher Terrel arrived in Seattle after a Peace Corps stint teaching English and dance. Complementing decades of teaching dance, she worked in early childhood education and for non-profits supporting kids. Terrel was recognized by her local City Council for "embodying the spirit of partnership and commitment to children in our community" for her work with young dancers. She serves on Pacific Northwest Ballet's Board of Directors and on a National Dance Education Organization committee.

Stories are lovingly crafted, and royalties are donated to charity partners. A few highlighted honors:

• 40+ Book Awards

• Family Choice Award

• Mom’s Choice Gold Award Recipient

• PenCraft Award: First Place

• Firebird Book Award: First Place

• Royal Dragonfly Book Award: First Place

• Pinnacle Book Achievement Award - Best Book Juvenile Fiction

• Outstanding Creator Awards: Best Children's Book, Top 10 Author of 2022

• Kirkus Reviews Starred Review

Visit DanceStories.com to learn about the mother-daughter team, browse books, or discover learning resources.

Follow Once Upon a Dance on social media for sneak peaks, dance photos, and the latest on their goofy cats.

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Grips the reader with page-turning fervor but disappoints in the end

Who Was Sylvia by Judy Gardiner is a haunting WWII tale involving two British sisters growing up in prewar England (1939) in a home with an overbearing father and an emotionally dismissive mother. Kit Coyrn idolizes her older sister Sylvia. She’s not only beautiful but full of life and love. Then one day it all changes. Kit arrives home to find her sister gone without a trace and without explanation from her parents. She’s just vanished. Kit never forgets Sylvia and when she is conscripted to serve during the war and off to London, her mother gives her a picture of Sylvia and tells her that she heard Sylvia was in London. 

Who Was Sylvia

About the book: Who was Sylvia?

Most of the story is told in first-person retrospect and does a great job of pulling the reader along the undercurrents of Kit’s life. She learns the rigors of serving in the military, makes friends, finds love, but every time a possible clue about Sylvia surfaces, she after it like a dog on a hunt. The story unravels bits of Sylvia’s life, but remains a mystery raising new questions with each discovery. Finding Sylvia becomes an obsession that involves the reader.

Book Review: Who was Sylvia?

The setting of wartime London adds new depth to Kit’s character. Her captivating story grips the reader with page-turning fervor. When Kit finally prepares to meet her sister after all the years that have passed, the tension is high. The anticipation of learning why she left, and what has happened since propels the story forward along a sketchy trail wrought with details that don’t match Kit’s idyllic memories.

This story of love and loss is well written with one exception. The end. It brings you right to the edge with all kinds of twists and turns, but then falls off the cliff without resolution of who Sylvia really is. It left me disappointed, but I would still recommend it to readers who enjoy WWII fiction like Soraya M. Lane’s The London Girls. Just know the end feels incomplete and there is no second book to tidy up unresolved questions.

 

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Emotionally charged heart-wrenching story

Montpelier Tomorrow is an emotionally charged, heart-wrenching story that grabs you like a riptide and drags you along through the everyday life of Colleen Gallagher, a mom in her mid-50s who was widowed in her 20s as she was expecting her third child. As the story opens, she is working toward retirement. But life takes a turn when she visits her adult daughter, Sandy when her second baby is due. That’s when Colleen learns that her son-in-law, Tony, has been diagnosed with ALS. None of them really understands the impact of what this will mean to their future, but it doesn’t take long for the fatal disease to start to steal Tony’s abilities to function. 

Montpelier Tomorrow

About the Book Montpelier Tomorrow

Author Marylee MacDonald does an excellent job not only capturing the details of juggling Colleen’s role as a mom, grandma, and Mrs. fix-it around the house, as well as donning the hat as the cook, but also follows her into her new role as the caregiver of her son-in-law who is not easy to get along with. She captures the raw emotions that rock their everyday world where all the usual chores, repairs, diaper changing, childcare, etc. still clamber for attention, but Tony’s care takes on first place. Feeding him a single meal takes hours, showering him requires a feat of strength, just getting him out of the house to transport him is a challenge. Colleen meets each challenge while her daughter continues to work to keep their medical insurance. Amid it all, MacDonald captures the raw emotional roller coaster of negative emotions like hopelessness, depression, feelings of alienation, and the loss of control as she steps away from her job as a kindergarten teacher for a semester. Problems sleeping exacerbate the situation as the family faces the heartbreaking truth that ALS will take Tony’s life. 

Caregiver Burnout

Book Review: Montpelier Tomorrow

While this is not a happily-ever-after read, it is an emotionally engaging read, filled with flawed characters, and it reminds you that even a mother’s love can’t fix everything. The inclusion of small sensory details places the reader right there, seeing everything that’s happening, hearing the sounds, and smelling the aromas, scents, and odors of her environment. I loved MacDonald’s writing style and I recommend this book to people who enjoy Women's Literary Fiction that touches the heart, those who have been affected by ALS, and for caregivers currently caring for someone suffering from a devastating disease. I’m happy to give this book 5 stars. 

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As BookHookup, I am a longtime book reviewer, and I received The Hired Hand as a free review copy from BookTasters and have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

Marylee MacDonald

About Author Marylee MacDonald

Marylee MacDonald grew up in Redwood City, California, married her high school sweetheart, and worked as a carpenter in California and Illinois. When she's not writing, she's hiking in the red rocks of Sedona, walking on a California beach, or plucking snails from her tomatoes.

Her short stories have won the Jeanne Leiby Chapbook Award, the Barry Hannah Prize, the Ron Rash Award, the Matt Clark Prize, and the American Literary Review Fiction Award. Her short story collection, BONDS OF LOVE AND BLOOD, was a Foreword Reviews' INDIEFAB Finalist, and her novel, MONTPELIER TOMORROW, was a Gold Medal winnerhttps://maryleemacdonald.com in the Readers' Favorites annual book awards. Her most recent short story collection, BODY LANGUAGE, contains stories about the resilience of the human spirit. To help writers who haven't been able to find an agent, she wrote THE BIG BOOK OF SMALL PRESSES AND INDEPENDENT PUBLISHERS.

She currently splits her time between Tempe, Arizona, where her husband is a professor, and Santa Rosa, California, where she tries to stay out of the way of fires.

Find out more at: https://maryleemacdonald.com