Saturday, February 18, 2023

Out of This World: Star-Studded Haiku

Written by: Sally M. Walker and Matthew Trueman

Why you should read this book: Exactly what it says it is: a short collection of short poems and splashy paintings that describe our knowledge of the celestial world. Stars, planets, the Big Bang, the robots on Mars, and other cosmic concepts get the 5-7-5 treatment. Includes 6 additional pages of historical, factual, and scientific details about the subject matter, along with a glossary, reading list, and links to relevant websites.

Why you shouldn't read this book: I think, to enjoy this book, you have to be really into space and really into haiku.

The World of Emily Windsnap 1: Emily's Big Discovery

Written by: Liz Kessler and Joanie Stone

Why you should read this book: This is an easy reader retelling of the first part of the first novel in the popular Emily Windsnap series, in which a little girl who is not allowed to swim, despite living on a boat and regularly being made to hang out on the beach, discovers that she is a mermaid. The first time she tries to swim, she's frightened by the strange sensations in her body, but intrigued enough to try again. Once she enters the ocean, grows a tail, and realizes she can breathe underwater, Emily meets another young mermaid, learns some mermaid slang, and makes a friend for life.

Why you shouldn't read this book: I'm sorry, but are we supposed to believe that Emily Windsnap went 11 years without taking a bath?

Find out about Animal Babies

Written by: Martin Jenkins and Jane McGuinness

Why you should read this book: This short, sweet nonfiction picture book explains that all animals have babies, but that their babies are all different. Using thirteen different kinds of animals as examples, the text highlights some basic dichotomies, such as animals whose babies look just like them, like lizards, and animals whose babies don't, like butterflies. A satisfying look at animal babies for young readers.

Why you shouldn't read this book: You're some kind of monster who does not wish to find out about animal babies. 

Thursday, February 2, 2023

Love in the Library

Written by: Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Yas Imamura

Why you should read this book: Tama, like most of the Japanese-Americans interned in the Minidoka Incarceration Camp during World War II, is not happy with the circumstances of her life surrounded by desert dust, barbed wire, and guard towers. Every day she goes to work in the camp library, even though she knows nothing about being a librarian, and every day, George, a Japanese-American man her age comes to the library to read, check out books, and smile. Tama has nothing to smile about until George comforts her in a low moment and she realizes that the thing he has been smiling about the entire time is her, Tama; the story ends with them getting married and giving birth to the author’s uncle while still in the camp.

Why you shouldn't read this book: This book mentions truths about American history that some people would rather not deal with.