Man! You guys have been
ACTIVE!! I'm gone one day and, when I come back, my email box is FULL of book reviews! You all are
GREAT!! Since I've received so many reviews, I'm not going to comment after each set, but hold any comments until the end. In fact, I'll list the reader guy's name, put his reviews after that, thank everybody at once, and give the standings.
But before I do that, let me direct your attention to a comment from
Jana, a librarian, a mom of boys, and one of the faithful followers of our blog:
OK, guys, go over there and vote! I've already done it. Jana runs a good blog and recommends some good stuff. Take a look.
Now for the Slam Dunks. First up is magnificent Michael:
The Elijah Project, book 1On the Run
by Bill Myers
People have started noticing 7-year-old Elijah's supernatural God-given powers... even the people who want them for their own purposes. When the villains make an advance, Elijah and his siblings: 13-year-old Piper and 15-year-old Zach, find that their parents have dissapeared, and now they must run away on their own. With the help of their friends Cory and William, the group must believe in God to help them defeat their enemy the Shadow Man, and the ultimate villain the Supreme Master, who in reality is Satan. Bill Myers makes another home run with this amazing book!
Jellaby, book 1
by Kean Soo
Meet Portia. She has no friends, her parents are divorced, and now she's got a monster for a friend! But that won't stop her and her friend, Jason, from finding Jellaby's home. Fast-paced, funny, and creative, this comic book is perfect for everyone!
Then we have the dynamic
Dakota T:
The next book that I read was High Rulian By Brain Jaques. this book was about a young ottermaid who's skills in the sling exceed any others. When a Giant bird and a barnicle goose , both injured by a Tyrant who rules over Green Isle, come to Redwall to find refuge. They both tell them of where they come from and how the otter tribes are getting tormented by a raging cat who will stop at nothing to remain Tytrant of the Isle. It's up to the ottermaid to rescue the tribes enslaved. This book has more than it's fair share of action, adventure, and care for others. This was one of my favorite book in the entire Redwall series. The flaw in this series is that most of the books get off on a slow start.
I read a book entitled Holes by Luis Sachar and it's about a poor boy who is taken to Camp Green Lake where you get to dig a hole five feet wide and five feet deep. If you find anything you are to report it to the warden who turns out to be a girl. But why? This book is creative, yet realistic, and is one of my all time favorites. While telling the story of Stanely, It also tells a story about a teacher and an onion farmer. It was amazing how everything just fit together and made sense. Hope you read this and enjoy it!
We read Kean Soo's Jellaby: Monster in the City the other night and really loved it. But it was just a little scary.
Here's our favourite page:
Check out more from the new Jellaby here.
Hey, we just got the new Jellaby - it's shiny, it's gorgeous and it has a title we were not expecting... Jellaby: Monster in the City. Given that the first volume of Jellaby ended on a cliffhanger, and given that we've been waiting months to get ourselves off that cliff we've been dangling off, this is very good news indeed.
More later! Must go read.
Meantimely ... there's an interview by Kean Soo and Naseem Hrab (of Canadian Children's Book Centre) with Shaun Tan posted over at Drawn. And check out Kean Soo on livejournal here.
And thanks so much to Lisa Mior.
Oh, we need this one!
Thanks, as ever, to Betsy for the heads-up.
We were huge fans of the first Jellaby and have been waiting for this one to hit stands.
I’ve been meaning to talk about Jellaby here for awhile. Jellaby is a fantastic new graphic novel for young readers by Toronto artist/writer Kean Soo. It’s about a little girl named Portia who finds a purple monster named Jellaby and is a real classic of the girl meets monster genre.
My youngest son was so taken with Jellaby that he drew this picture in homage to the book. I posted it here without realising he had copied it from page 87 of the book leading to a few online charges of plagiarism. It was my fault for not correctly making the connection and the reason this happened is that said son had become proprietary about a book for the first time in his life and had squirreled my copy away in his room before I could read it.
I’ve asked my little Jellaby fan to give me a bit of background on the book. Here’s what he said:
Portia is the main character of the book. She’s a girl who never thinks she can handle can handle anything, and she mostly doesn’t. Her plan is always to do something that would be a bit useful and she thinks that by then she will come up with another plan. Mostly she does.
Jason is kind of my favourite character because sometimes he’s quite a trickster. An example is when he’s on the phone to Portia’s mom and blocked his nose so he sounded like a grown-up and the mom fell for it.
The first thing I should say about Jason is that he’s addicted to just about everything: Godzilla, ramen, Dr. Seuss, ninjas and Mario games. He watches too many TV shows and plays too many video games. He looks at screens a bit too much.
The book Jellaby is very funny, especially the part where Jason puts his yellow hoodie on, pretending he’s a ninja. Really it’s supposed to be black and it looks really stupid.
Jason is kind of my favourite character because sometimes he’s quite a trickster. An example is when he’s on the phone to Portia’s mom and blocked his nose so he sounded like a grown-up and the mom fell for it.
I wouldn’t be scared to meet Jellaby because I watch a lot of Godzilla movies and I’m used to seeing giant purple monsters. Well, not really purple ones. Jellaby is not as big as Godzilla, doesn’t destroy buildings and he watches TV. He can actually fit in a building.
Jellaby is a purple monster that people think doesn’t have any thoughts but he really does have feelings and stuff. He’s kind of like a grown-up who didn’t go to school.
So let me just repeat: homage. The drawing was an homage. And I hope Kean Soo can forgive us. We're now looking forward to volume two of Jellaby. Meantime, you can visit The Secret Friend Society if you want to see more.
Living in my little hole on the prairie, I completely missed the brewing brouhaha over sneaky/deceptive kiddie food books.
But I still hold to the "chicken nugget theory" of kids' food (not to mention children's books, or any other kind of twaddle), which Jennifer Steinhauer wrote about last year in her Sunday NY Times article "Generation Pad Thai". Ms. Steinhauer lists some chefs' rules at
I don't know what happened but the link you posted got way messed up! Try this one:
russell-library.blogspot.com. Thanks so much! You guys ROCK!!