Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Tales from Outer Suburbia

(New York: Arthur A. Levine Books, 2009)
Hardcover, 96 Pages, Children’s Short Fiction Anthology
ISBN: 9780545055871, US$19.99

ABCD Rating: BACKLIST

From the Cover: You thought you knew suburbia… Then you meet an exchange student from another world, discover a secret room that lets you escape to a place of perfect beauty, find a neighborhood where brightly painted missiles decorate every yard, and wait for a blind reindeer who demands a very special offering. … These are the odd, magical details of everyday suburban life the might forever go unnoticed, were they not finally brought to life by Shaun Tan, author and illustrator of award-winning New York Times bestseller The Arrival. Outer Suburbia. It’s closer than you think.

This collection contains the following stories: “The Water Buffalo,” “Eric,” “Broken Toys,” “Distant Rain,” “Undertow,” “Grandpa’s Story,” “No Other Country,” “Stick Figures,” “The Nameless Holiday,” “The Amnesia Machine,” “Alert But Not Alarmed,” “Wake,” “Why Not Make Your Own Pet: Here’s How,” “Our Expedition,” and “Night of the Turtle Rescue.”

My Review: It seems that a lot of books follow the same pattern for me: I am on my way out of the library and a book leaps off the shelf and into my bag. Tales from Outer Suburbia is one of those books. We were in the children’s section of our local library and I was at the self-check out and after running the books under the scanner, turned to go and I was confronted by the blank staring face of a diver’s helmet boring in to me from an endcap display. Compelled, I had to pick it up.

It sat, forgotten, amongst our library books for about a week before I finally saw it again (which seems strangely appropriate given the “found” nature of the stories in the book). I picked it up and started flipping through it and was instantly arrested by not only the artwork (which is absolutely incredible) but the stories are so … odd … that I cannot even begin to describe them. (Not good for a book review, I know, but it’s the honest truth.) I started reading them at bedtime and everybody fell in love with them. My wife and I loved the stories and my son and daughter loved the artwork.

So, as for the stories … they are so absolutely surreal that you need to experience them to fully appreciate them: a water buffalo that will point you in the right direction, what happens to all the poetry people write but don’t publish, a strange vigil of dogs, and … in my favorite … the eerie watchfulness of the “Stick Figures.” What Tan has created in Tales from Outer Suburbia is nothing short of astounding. He has taken the ennui and utter blandness of suburban life and turned it on its head; found the magical in the mundane, so to speak. This suburban landscape is still populated with cookie-cutter tract houses, and chain stores and fast food strip malls, but the vacant lot houses a water buffalo. Childhood adventures with a street map are elevated to the stature of expedition, and “keeping up with the Joneses” meets Arms Race in a very strange and also very satisfying story.

This is a truly marvelous book and would be the perfect gift for that precocious reader in your life.

Teaser Tuesdays: Something's Wrong ... Very ... Wrong ...

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:




  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (Make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
My review of The Men Who Stare at Goats is still coming (I hope to write it in a little) but in the meantime, here is a teaser from my current read, Gary Krist’s historical account of the 1910 Wellington Avalanche which is considered the worst avalanche in American history. It’s a fascinating and harrowing account, and I always love reading about local history … especially those events that are largely forgotten, and in the case of the Wellington Avalanche that in and of itself is a tragedy.

The White Cascade: The Great Northern Railway Disaster and America’s Deadliest Avalanche
(New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2007)
Hardcover, 315 Pages, Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780805077056, US$26.00


MY TEASER: “When Lewis Jesseph awoke on Wednesday morning, it was immediately apparent to him that something was wrong. The train he was on, which should have been rocking along the flat coastal plain toward Puget Sound, was instead standing at a dead halt” (45).

Monday, January 25, 2010

Musing Mondays: Where Do Your Visiting Books Stay?

Today’s Musing Mondays is hosted by Rebecca at just one more page… and is as follows: Where do you keep any books borrowed from friends or the library? Do they live with your own collection, or do you keep them separate? Do you monitor them in any way?


Books, right now, are kind of all over the house. Even my books don’t have a permanent place to live. They’re just stacked wherever right now, so the library books just kind of also live … wherever. We try to keep them in a logical place, but with a spirited four-year-old and a willful two-year-old, keeping books in one place is a sketchy proposal at best. The best I can hope for is to keep track of them, and I try to do that with a list of our books in Excel that I try to keep updated via the library’s online catalog and our accounts, but that, again, is a dream that has yet to come to full and complete fruition. My only consolation is that any and all late fees we pay because of the flaws in my system and the fact that we have young’uns in the house go to a good cause.

Booking Through Thursday (From 1/21/2010): Author Unknown

Well, another Thursday is upon us, and that means it is time for yet another Booking Through Thursday prompt. What will it be this week, you ask? Here you go…


Prompt: Who’s your favorite author that other people are NOT reading? The one you want to evangelize for, the one you would run popularity campaigns for? The author that, so far as you’re concerned, everyone should be reading—but that nobody seems to have heard of. You know, not J.K. Rowling, not Jane Austen, not Hemingway—everybody’s heard of them. The author that you think should be that famous and can’t understand why they’re not…

This is a very compelling question because, at least for me, I have a lot of favorite authors who have seemed to have fallen off the public’s radar but who are excellent authors. These would be your Ramsey Campbells, your Robert Blochs, your Jack Ketchums, your Brian Keenes, your Richard Laymons. Granted, these are all authors in the horror genre, but they are all authors that are doing excellent work … they just are not on the public radar like, say, Stephen King or Dean Koontz.

Then there is Caleb Carr, author of The Alienist (which is the book that started all of this way back in August of 2000). Carr blew me away with The Alienist and made me want to share my reviews and thoughts on books with others, and yet, as far as I know, Carr is off of everyone’s radar. Though, it probably hasn’t helped that he hasn’t published anything in the last eight or ten years, but anyone who wrote The Alienist doesn’t deserve to disappear like that.

Finally, and this is the author I would really stump for, is Kit Berry. Berry came to my attention after a July 2007 post about books labeled “The Next Harry Potter.” I expressed some dismay about pitting books in comparison to (and competition with) Rowling’s books, and a number of the author’s on the list also expressed their displeasure at the label. One of those was Ms. Berry, who also sent me a copy of her book for review and I promptly fell in love with her series and have been promoting her books whenever I can.

Technical Difficulties

As was indicated in my most recent post, I have been in a bit of a funk in January, and have not been as diligent as I should have been in posting on this blog. I have a backlog of posts that I am going to try and work through to bring me “up to speed” and, hopefully, jumpstart my drive for this site. Anyway, stay tuned … more posts to follow shortly.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Next Up from Quirk Classics

I am a little behind in posting this (it was announced on January 12, 2010) and I chalk that up to having been in a bit of a “funk” the last week or so. Quirk Classics has announced the next title in their acclaimed mash-up series:

Android Karenina
by Leo Tolstoy and Ben H. Winters
(Philadelphia: Quirk Classics, 2010)
Trade Paperback, 320 Pages, Fiction
ISBN: 9781594744600, US$12.95

From the Publisher: Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters co-author Ben H. Winters is back with an all-new collaborator, legendary Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, and the result is Android Karenina—an enhanced edition of the classic love story set in a dystopian world of robots, cyborgs, and interstellar space travel. As in the original novel, our story follows two relationships: The tragic adulterous love affair of Anna Karenina and Count Alexei Vronsky, and the more hopeful marriage of Nikolai Levin and Princess Kitty Shcherbatskaya. These characters live in a steampunk-inspired world of robotic butlers, clumsy automatons, and rudimentary mechanical devices. But when these copper-plated machines begin to revolt against their human masters, our characters must fight back using state-of-the-art 19th-Century technology—and a sleek new model of ultra-human cyborgs like nothing the world has ever seen. Filled with the same blend of romance, drama, and fantasy that made the first two Quirk Classics New York Times best sellers, Android Karenina brings this celebrated series into the exciting world of science fiction.


Me again: Quirk has not yet released the cover art for the book hence the Abraham Lincoln steampunk picture. I have one big reservation about this book—in spite of all the coolness with which a Russian classic combined with steampunk robots is inherently imbued—and that is that Quirk’s version of Anna Karenina is only 320 pages long. My own experience with AK is that it is a much heftier novel than that, and poking around online has revealed other paperback editions to be somewhere in the range of 750-900 pages long. Winters has obviously employed some serious edits to Tolstoy’s novel and I, for one, find that to be more than a little disappointing. As near as I can tell, the Jane Austen mash-ups were in no way “abridged” and so to do so with Tolstoy seems a bit of a betrayal of the spirit in which these books began. But, that’s just my two cents. I’ll still read it of course.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Teaser Tuesdays: ¡Ay Caramba! Now That's a Demoralizing Thought!

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:




  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (Make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Well, after working on it for nearly a month, and barely getting 150 pages into the 770+ page novel, I had to give up on Drood … not because it was bad or boring or any such thing, I just couldn’t get into it mentally, so I had to give it up, shelve it for another time. Maybe on audio… So, I turned to the next book in my TBR pile: Jon Ronson’s The Men Who Stared at Goats (on which the George Clooney-Ewan McGregor-Jeff Bridges-Kevin Spacey film is based). I got so into this book that I probably will be posting a review of this book tomorrow (I blew through it in about three days). The book is scary, hilarious, odd, and absolutely fascinating and so, without any further ado, here is the Teaser from Jon Ronson’s The Men Who Stare at Goats:

The Men Who Stare at Goats
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009)
Trade Paperback, 259 Pages, Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781439181775, US$15.00


MY TEASER: “The Americans have always been better than the Iraqis at the leaflets. Early on in the first Gulf War, Iraqi PsyOps dropped a batch of their own leaflets on U.S. troops, designed to be psychologically devastating. They read, ‘Your wives are back at home having sex with Bart Simpson and Burt Reynolds” (130).

Friday, January 01, 2010

The Friday 56: The Moon Man, The Driver, and the Royal Woman

The Friday 56 is hosted by Storytime with Tonya and Friends

RULES

  1. Grab the book nearest you. Right now.
  2. Turn to page 56.
  3. Find the fifth sentence.
  4. Post that sentence (plus one or two others if you like).
  5. Post a link with your post to Storytime (and here on Bryan’s Book Blog, I’d like to know what book you’ve got at hand).
For some reason, Robert R. McCammon’s Boy’s Life is the closest book to hand … and I don’t know what it’s doing out of the office and next to my computer. I certainly didn’t bring it out (I’m still working through Drood so it’s not as if Boy’s Life is the “On Deck Book” because Drood is still in the batter’s box swinging away), it must have been one of my kids, which is even more random, because they’re four and two. Anyway, here’s the fifth sentence on page 56:

As the Moon Man helped her from the car, the driver opened an umbrella and held it over her royal, ancient head” (56).

Friday Finds: January 1, 2010

Friday Finds (hosted by Should Be Reading)

What great books did you hear about/discover this past week?
Share with us your FRIDAY FINDS!

Happy New Year everyone! Here’s hoping your 2010 is better than your 2009. Gonna keep it short for the holiday, so here you go … this week’s finds:

The Gates by John Connolly
There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Trout! by Teri Sloat illustrated by Reynold Ruffins
Jane Bites Back by Michael Thomas Ford
Hell by Robert Olen Butler

2010 Audiobook Challenge

A lot of book bloggers out there join in “Challenges” that are hosted by other book bloggers in an effort to … I don’t know what. Anyway, since I have joined in to the wider book blogger community these past five or six months, I have shied away from joining in on any of the challenges (1) because it was the middle of the year and it seemed pointless, and (2) because I didn’t really like the idea of having my reading “directed” (I got enough of that from my literature classes as it was). However, about two weeks ago, Alyce over at At Home with Books posted that she was joining the Audiobook Challenge, and that one seemed like one that I could do, and wouldn’t screw with my perceived reading autonomy, as it were. And, since I blow through audiobooks fairly quickly, it seemed like a natural Challenge for me to join up with. It’s being hosted over at The Royal Reviews this year, and this is what they have to say about it:

With most of us having iPods or MP3 players these days listening to audiobooks has become an easy activity. Personally doing housework, driving the kids to school or sitting waiting for soccer training to finish has never been more enjoyable.

Challenge Guidelines:
1. Anyone can join. You don’t need a blog to participate.
2. There are four levels:
—Curious: Listen to 3 Audiobooks
—Fascinated: Listen to 6 Audiobooks
—Addicted: Listen to 12 Audiobooks
—Obsessed: Listen to 20 Audiobooks
3. Audiobooks only.
4. You can list your books in advance or just put them in a wrap up post. If you list them, feel free to change them as the mood takes you.
5. Challenge begins January 1 thru December 2010.

I listened to 17 audiobooks in 2009, so I think that I can easily hit the Obsessed level. So, the goal for audiobooks for 2010 is at least twenty. So, with that in mind, allons-y!

The Best (and Worst) of 2009

Well, now that 2009 has come to a close, it is time to take stock. First and foremost, I fell well short of my stated goal of books to read in 2009. Out of my goal of 105 books I only read 75 this year. *sigh* I’ll have to consider what I want to set as a goal for 2010. That’ll be posted later today at some point. Now, as for The Best and The Worst of 2009, it was easy to make those decisions as this year I implemented a Ratings systems so the Bests are those that were rated as ACQUIRE in 2009 and the Worsts are those that, conversely, were rated as DITCH this past year. I noticed that after about August there were less Ditches and a lot more Acquires, and I think that comes from the fact that as we got ready to move and as I started my first quarter of my Masters program, I became a lot more picky about the books I read as my leisure reading time became a lot more precious to me, and I started picking books more discriminatingly than I did before that time (also, from January to April, I had books I was required to read for classes for my undergrad classes, and so those may not have been ones that I necessarily chosen on my own, so there was a much wider margin of books and quality during that time). So, without any further ado, here are my best books of 2009:


THE BEST
January
Ghost Story

The Poetry of Robert Frost: The Collected Poems, Complete and Unabridged
by Robert Frost
edited by Edward Connery Lathem

February
Selected Poems
by William Carlos Williams

The Blackwater Lightship

100 Selected Poems
by e.e. cummings

The Grapes of Wrath: Steinbeck Centennial Edition
by John Steinbeck

March
A Bit on the Side
by William Trevor

East of Eden
by John Steinbeck

April
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance—Now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem!
by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith

Brick Lane
by Monica Ali

May
The Silence of the Lambs (Audio): Redux
read by Frank Muller

June
The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon (Audio)
read by Mark Deakins

Good Book: The Bizarre, Hilarious, Disturbing, Marvelous, and Inspiring Things I Learned When I Read Every Single Word of the Bible (Audio)
by David Plotz
read by The Author

Posted
06/23/2009 – 05:00:00 AM

The Composer is Dead
by
Lemony Snicket
illustrated by
Carson Ellis
read by The Author
with music composed by Nathaniel Stookey

Posted
06/27/2009 – 11:30:00 AM

Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned: Stories
by Wells Tower

Posted
06/30/2009 – 11:10:00 PM

July
The Book of Totally Irresponsible Science: 64 Daring Experiments for Young Scientists
by Sean Connolly

Posted
07/10/2009 – 12:00:00 AM

The Road
by
Cormac McCarthy
Posted
07/10/2009 – 01:50:00 AM

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs
by Judi Barrett
illustrated by Ron Barrett

Posted
07/10/2009 – 02:40:00 PM

August
The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
by
Michael Pollan
Posted
08/20/2009 – 04:50:00 PM

‘salem’s Lot (Audio): Redux
by
Stephen King
read by Ron McLarty

Posted
08/28/2009 – 02:50:00 PM

September
Doctor Who: The Nightmare of Black Island (Audio)
by Mike Tucker
read by Anthony Head

Posted
09/29/2009 – 11:45:00 AM

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters
by Jane Austen and Ben H. Winters

Posted
09/30/2009 – 09:45:00 PM

Dragons of the Hourglass Mage
by
Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
Posted
09/30/2009 – 11:10:00 PM

Doctor Who: Pest Control, An Exclusive Audio Adventure (Audio)
by Peter Anghelides
read by David Tennant

Posted
09/30/2009 – 11:30:00 PM

October
The Spellman Files
by
Lisa Lutz
Posted
10/14/2009 – 01:35:00 AM

All the King’s Men (Audio)
by Robert Penn Warren
read by Michael Emerson

Posted
10/15/2009 – 01:40:00 AM

Doctor Who: Forever Autumn (Audio)
by Mark Morris
read by Will Thorp

Posted
10/18/2009 – 01:50:00 AM

The Peshawar Lancers
by
S.M. Stirling
Posted
10/19/2009 – 12:30:00 PM

Doctor Who: The Nemonite Invasion, An Exclusive Audio Adventure (Audio)
by David Roden
read by
Catherine Tate
Posted
10/20/2009 – 09:35:00 PM

Star Wars: Death Troopers
by
Joe Schreiber
Posted
10/28/2009 – 10:15:00 PM

November
The Last Town on Earth (Audio)
by
Thomas Mullen
read by Henry Strozier

Posted
11/04/2009 – 01:25:00 AM

Doctor Who: The Feast of the Drowned (Audio)
by Stephen Cole
read by David Tennant

Posted
11/10/2009 – 01:35:00 AM

December
The Terror (Audio)
by
Dan Simmons
read by John Lee

Posted
12/18/2009 – 02:15:00 AM

Simone Goes to the Market: A Children’s Book of Colors Connecting Face and Food
by
David Westerlund
Posted
12/31/2009 – 12:05:00 AM

There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Trout
by
Teri Sloat
illustrated by Reynold Ruffins

Posted
12/31/2009 – 03:50:00 PM

Wheedle on the Needle
by
Stephen Cosgrove
illustrated by Robin James


If I was pressed to pick the Best-of-the-Best that I read in 2009, for print books it would end up being a tie between East of Eden by John Steinbeck, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith (with Wells Tower’s Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned coming in at a close second); as for audiobooks it would probably be another tie between All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren and read by Michael Emerson and The Terror by Dan Simmons and read by John Lee (though Good Book by David Plotz and The Lost City of Z by David Grann come in tied at a very close second place).

Now, for the dregs…


THE WORST
January
Twilight (Audio)
by
Stephenie Meyer
read by Ilyana Kadushin

Posted
01/25/2009 – 03:15:00 PM

February
New Moon (Audio)
by
Stephenie Meyer
read by Ilyana Kadushin

Posted
02/19/2009 – 12:20:00 AM

The Pearl
by John Steinbeck

Posted
02/19/2009 – 01:10:00 PM

March
Eclipse (Audio)
by
Stephenie Meyer
read by Ilyana Kadushin

Posted
03/31/2009 – 07:45:00 PM

April
Breaking Dawn (Audio)
by
Stephenie Meyer
read by Ilyana Kadushin and Matt Walters

Posted
04/30/2009 – 07:30:00 PM

July
How to Draw Washington’s Sights and Symbols
by Aileen Weintraub

Posted
07/10/2009 – 03:45:00 PM

August
Dead Until Dark
by
Charlaine Harris
Posted
08/23/2009 – 09:50:00 PM

September
The Science of Stephen King: From Carrie to Cell, the Terrifying Truth Behind the Horror Master’s Fiction
by Lois H. Gresh and Robert Weinberg

Posted
09/17/2009 – 08:00:00 AM

December
The Flock
by
James Robert Smith


Well … I guess there was a trend to the Worsts in the first four months of the year. Did you see it? What was that? You want Worst-of-the-Worst? Well, at the risk of offending, it would easily be The Science of Stephen King by Lois H. Gresh and Robert Weinberg.

Well, that’s 2009 in a nutshell, though of course there were plenty of good books in between these. Lots of decent BACKLIST and CHECK OUT books. As I said in the previous post, Happy New Year’s to you and yours from Bryan’s Book Blog, and here’s hoping that your 2010 is full of love, happiness and lots and lots of books!

Out with the Old and Ringing in the New


Happy New Year’s to you and yours from Bryan’s Book Blog.
May your 2010 be filled with love, happiness and lots and lots of books!

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Wheedle on the Needle

illustrated by Robin James
-A Serendipity Book-
(Los Angeles: Price Stern Sloan, 1974)
Library Binding, 32 Pages, Children’s
ISBN: 9780843105643, US$2.95

ABCD Rating: ACQUIRE

Dedicated to Seattle, Washington, a wonderfully warm place for a Wheedle to stay.

From the Cover: Wheedle is a very grumpy Sasquatch, and with Seattle’s growth, finding a quiet place to sleep is close to impossible. When he heads for the top of the Space Needle and unleashes a never-ending rainfall, everyone stays indoors, and the city is quiet once again. Now, it's the Seattleites who are grumpy—who wants to stay inside all the time? Is there a solution that makes everyone happy?

My Review: I was born and raised in California. A year after my wife and I were married we moved to Seattle, Washington. After four years in Seattle, we moved to Utah to help family and so I could return to school. Now, in 2009 after finally completing my Bachelors degree, we have returned to the Pacific Northwest so that I could go to grad school in the English Masters program at Western Washington University. All of this is to say that even growing up in California I have always been in love with Seattle and Washington and everything that the city and state embodied. Even though both my wife and I are native Californians, we consider ourselves honorary Washingtonians and associate more with the Pacific Northwest as a home than we do with either California or Utah.

This is the long way around the barn to explain why, at the age of 33 and in 2009 I am just now hearing about Wheedle on the Needle. 2009 represents the 35th anniversary of this book and—more importantly—a return to the original message and Seattle-centric plot of the book. Apparently, back in 2002, when Wheedle was rereleased that eliminated the environmental message and made the Wheedle not native to the Puget Sound region. I can’t imagine how this might have looked, since it seems to me that the Seattle-ness is absolutely essential to the story. After all, the Wheedle became a Seattle icon and institution and was even the mascot for the Seattle Sonics basketball team from 1978-1985.

Anyway, after a 15 year long legal battle with the publishers, author Stephen Cosgrove has finally regained the rights to the book and it has been restored to its original Puget Sound local and there was a big to-do on Evening Magazine about a month ago celebrating the 35th anniversary of the book and its restoration, and believe it or not I have been in the hold line for this book at my local library for all that time.

As with There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Trout, Wheedle on the Needle has become a bedtime staple for my children. My son (age 4) especially loves the book, and now anytime he sees the Space Needle he says “Hey! Daddy! That’s where the Wheedle lives!” He’s very excited that we live close to Seattle and keeps asking me if we can go to Seattle to go to the Needle to see the Wheedle.

I cannot recommend this book enough for those of you with small children. It is especially good for those of you with kids that are beginning to learn to read as the words are nice and simple, and easy for children to pick up on. While I’m not a literal native Washingtonian and only a transplanted Pacific Northwesterner, my heart belongs to The Evergreen State and Wheedle on the Needle is now a big part of my love of this region.

There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Trout

illustrated by Reynold Ruffins
(New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1998)
Hardcover, 32 Pages, Children’s
ISBN: 9780805069006, US$15.95

ABCD Rating: ACQUIRE

There was an old lady who swallowed a trout
That splished and splashed and thrashed about.

From the Cover: Everyone has head about the old lady who swallowed a fly, but there is something particularly fishy about this old lady. … Beautiful illustrations in this story capture the scenery and wildlife of the Pacific Northwest. The buoyant text jumps along as the old lady swallows a salmon, an otter, a seal, a walrus, and more, until eventually she swallows the entire sea and the trout swims free! With a unique and fascinating setting, this pure flight of fancy gives a fresh look to a familiar poem.

My Review: This is one of those gems of a book that I found at the last minute in the library. I was in the process of checking out at the self-check out station and this book was being displayed at the folklore section (which is next to the check out) and the title so tickled my fancy that I scooped it up. Little did I know that it would soon become my childrens’ favorite book of 2009? No joke.

My kids have absolutely fallen in love with book, so much so that we have bumped it to the top of Book to Buy list for them. They love reading it, and it has become a must read for bedtime … each and every night. The big plus, though, is the fact that even though I have more or less read it every night at bedtime for the last month not only have they not grown tired of it, but I have not grown tired of it! And that is a major plus.

There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Trout is a simply marvelous book. I absolutely love the different spin on the old poem and (at the risk of spoiling) the fact that the Old Lady doesn’t die at the end of this particular incarnation of the poem is a very good thing. The other aspect of this book that I absolutely love is the artwork. Ruffins’ Pacific Northwest-esque art is delightful and adds to this book the air of legend, like it was an Inuit or First Nations legend (which is probably why it was in the folklore section of the Children’s wing of the library).

This is a very fun book, and one that I highly recommend for the child in your life; if they are anything like my son and daughter they will fall in love with this book.

Simone Goes to the Market: A Children's Book of Colors Connecting Face and Food

(Bellingham: Applied Digital Imaging, 2008)
Paperback, 25 Pages, Children’s
ISBN: N/A, US$15.00

ABCD Rating: ACQUIRE

From the Cover: Newborns instinctively connect food and face. But as we grow up this connection erodes or even disappears. This book is my contribution to the strengthening of this connection for our little ones. My hope is that you and your little ones will rediscover the texture, joy, and meaning found in eating food from your neighbors. The story takes the reader with Simone to the local farmer’s market as she meets the farmers and buys fresh, colorful produce from them. My book is relevant for all ages—for infants learning to focus on faces, small children learning colors, kindergarteners learning to read, and all of us relearning the joy of eating locally.

My Review: We were in a local toy store the other day, doing some Christmas shopping for the kids and as I was purchasing everything, they had this book next to the register. We were already over budget for the kids’ presents that I wasn’t able to pick up a copy, but the next time we were at the library, lo and behold, there was a copy.

In the last four years or so (more or less since the birth of our son) we have tried to live a more sustainable lifestyle. We recycle, buy organic and natural, avoid companies like NestlĂ©, have tried to cut our carbon-footprint, and eating more locally. This was hard to do in Utah (it is not the most green-friendly state in the Union) but here in Bellingham we’ve found it much easy to try and live more sustainably and in an eco-friendly manner. Part of that has been frequenting the Bellingham Farmers Market whenever we could and getting our produce from a more local source. (We’re not perfect, yet but we have made great strides in changing the way we live.)

Now, bringing it back to Simone Goes to the Market, Westerlund’s book is simply marvelous. Our kids always loved being at the market, looking at all the produce, running up and down the walkways between the stalls, listening to the buskers, picking out treats for themselves and so now that the BFM is closed until April 2010, Simone Goes to the Market is a fun way to remind our kids about the fact that food should and does have a face more than just the checker’s at the local supermarket.

The photography (all of which was taken by Westerlund) is absolutely gorgeous and the colors are simply beautiful. My daughter loves looking at the brightly colored foods and my son, who has always been interested in growing food in the garden (and has been a great help to my wife as she manages our garden plot) has asked if we can plant purple pole beans or yellow patty pan squash in “our garden.” Thus, Simone Goes to the Market definitely passes the “Kid Test.” They have loved this book, and as for me, I too have fallen in love with this book.

As a fun little surprise, I was leafing through the book, and all of a sudden there was a picture of a friend of ours from the playgroup Alisa and the kids belong to who sells coffee at the Market.

I cannot recommend this book enough. If you want a copy, and don’t live in the Bellingham area where you can go to the Market or one of the other local stores that carry Simone, then for a $3 shipping fee you can order a copy at the following email: david@faceandfood.com, and if it helps to seal the deal, 60% of the proceeds from the sale of Simone goes to: Food to Bank On, Growing Washington, Community to Community and Tierra Nueva’s Family Support Center.