Showing posts with label Joan Bauer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joan Bauer. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

CLOSE TO FAMOUS by Joan Bauer

Love 'Em Cupcakes.


Close to Famous by Joan Bauer
Foster and her mom, Rayka, just moved from Memphis to Culpepper. It was more like a shoot-for-the-moon move since they are actually running away from someone. It was the kindness that got them settled in that place…and some very good cupcakes.

Foster can bake cupcakes like they were made from heaven. Everyone who nipped a bite never stops biting. Soon, Foster is making good cash and good friends. But Foster is keeping a secret from people because she doesn’t want to be called stupid or anything like that. She wants to have her own baking show, she wants to be famous. What she didn’t understand is that revealing her secret is the key to her success. She can run, but she cannot hide.
I'll tell you something about tough times.
They just about kill you, but if you decide to keep working at them,
you'll find your way through.

After reading Hope Was Here, I knew I’d be reading another book(s) by Joan Bauer. I love the issues she brings, and the possibilities they show. It’s no shame crying and laughing with her characters. It always gets at me when kids are given the chance to stand up for themselves when kids were able to cross their limits through help and compassion from others, and allow them to be extraordinary in spite of all the terrible circumstances.
There's nothing wrong with having a different way of learning.
What's wrong is when people blame you for it.

And, btw, you might want to try Foster's cupcake recipes.



Book details:
Title: Close to Famous
Author: Joan Bauer
Publication: Puffin (February 3, 2011)
Genre: Fiction / YA
Rating: ★★★★



Thursday, July 4, 2013

SOUP REVIEWS | 1

Children's Books


The Wolves in the Wall by Neil Gaiman

The artwork spent on this book will surely get the reader’s attention.  I spent more time inspecting each picture than reading the whole story.  There’s a certain oddness to them that most people would think them disturbing; but if parents would want to wean their kids into good art, this is something to start them with.  Dave McKean did a great job with this one.

This was a Finalist in the 2003 Bram Stoker Award, Work for Young Readers.  The story deals with how kids can sometimes be carried away by their imagination, and how those imaginations led them to fear.  The lesson lies in how kids should learn how to be the hero in conquering their own fear.  Sometimes accomplishing that just needs further imagination, motivation, and a lungful of bravery.

Book Details:
Title: The Wolves in the Wall
Author: Neil Gaiman
Publisher: HarperCollins
Rating: ★★★



From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E.L. Konigsburg

This is one of those stories I wished the movies got exactly right.  The book received the Newbery Medal in 1968; and the William Allen White Children's Book Award in 1970.  So, it seems a waste of film not to give it justice.

Claudia dragged her brother Jaime into running away from their home because she believed that her family does not appreciate her.  And then, she decided to be the hero to prove that the statue of the Angel was an authentic Michelangelo.  In short, she no longer wants to be that same reliable Claudia who does the laundry, the dishes, and takes out the trash when she comes back home. She wants to be the important Claudia, appreciated by everyone.  Besides, she thought, running away is the greatest adventure there is.

The first lesson, I believe, goes to the parents.  We parents are not given kids as an extension of ourselves, to be an additional adult to take care of things in the house, while we are busy making a life for ourselves.  It is never wrong to teach our kids chores, but we have to remember that our kids are entrusted to us, so we should take care of them, not the other way around.

The second lesson is best described by this passage:
“I think you should learn, of course, and some days you must learn a great deal.  But you should also have days when you allow what is already in you to swell up inside of you until it touches everything.  And you can feel it inside you.  If you never take time out to let that happen, then you just accumulate facts, and they begin to rattle around inside of you.  You can make noise with them, but never really feel anything with them.  It’s hollow.”
Book Details:
Title: From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
Author: E.L. Konigsburg
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Rating: ★★★★★



Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer

The story begins with a teenage girl, named Tulip, but she had the good sense to dub herself Hope and made it legal eventually.  The thing is, you have to live-up with that sort of big name, and Hope sure did.

There is so much juice in this book. The story of love, hope and strength all neatly tied up within 186 pages.  Joan Bauer did a nifty job developing the characters and the events throughout the book.  I felt them between each setting and dialogue.

The sense of never-giving-up-no-matter-what is written all over.  Every character had their own issue to take care of, and unwavering hope was their key to each and everything.  The story also speaks of accepting the end –everything ends.  It was not about mourning what we lost, but appreciating what we had, and drawing strength from memories made.

This is a very inspiring read, no wonder it was made into a Newbery Honor Book in 2001.

Book Details:
Title:  Hope Was Here
Author: Joan Bauer
Publisher: Puffin
Rating: ★★★★★