Rachel Flood is an alcoholic. She's been faithfully attending her AA meetings and working through the steps. She's on the right path. But Rachel knows she's left a path behind her with a lot of emotional casualties and she can't let it go. She needs to right her wrongs in her hometown of Quinn, Montana. Rachel knows that no one, including her own mother, will be happy to see her back in Quinn but she needs to give it a try.
Quinn's most spunky women all come together each summer to form the town's baseball team. The hilarious characters of Flood Girls will have you checking NetFlix to re-watch '90's movie A League of Their Own. Will Rachel receive the forgiveness she seeks? Will she be driven to drink again? Beneath all the rough and tough exteriors are the residents of Quinn hiding a big heart after all?
You'll laugh. You'll cry. You'll want to keep reading Flood Girls.
Simon & Schuster Canada are kicking off 2016 with a series of novels with kick-ass women characters. Flood Girls has a few kick-ass women in it. What other novels have you read with kick-ass women characters?
Love Letters to the Dead is about a girl named Laurel. She is starting grade 9 at a new high school out of her district so that she won't know anyone and won't have to talk about her sister, May's, recent death. Her mom couldn't cope with May's death so she skipped town and went to California. Laurel divides her time between living with her Dad and her Aunt Amy. Life isn't easy for Laurel. She has a lot to deal with. When her English teacher gives an assignment to write a letter to a dead person the novel Love Letters to the Dead is formed.
Laurel writes letters to all kinds of dead people such as Kurt Cobain, Amelia Earhart and Janis Joplin. The letters tell Laurel's story and become therapeutic for her. The novel is beautifully written but it is very sad and parts of it were hard to read. Definitely not a book I will be getting for my school but would be appropriate for high school.
I love a story that gives you an understanding of how others might feel. Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng does a fantastic job of invoking empathy for each of the characters in the story. The Lee family is a complicated family. Each family member lives with their own struggles and burdens.
As a young child Lydia vowed to do anything to please her mother. Lydia's mother life hasn't gone as planned and she's determined for Lydia to live her dream. Lydia's dad also has expectations for Lydia that she can't live up to. After years of pretending and over-achieving Lydia cracks and a tragedy occurs. Lydia's older brother has just been accepted to Harvard and is successful but invisible to his parents. Lydia's younger sister Hannah is a shadow moving around the house.
How did the Lee family get to this point and how do they now move forward without their beloved Lydia?
I love tracking my reading on Goodreads. This website is a great way to keep track of what I have read and what's on my to read wish list. I can mark a rating on the books I've read by a simple star rating system or provide a more detailed review. Goodreads also lets you connect with friends or other like minded readers. You can see what your friends are reading and their reviews. Another feature I love is that you can set a reading goal for how many books you hope to read in a year. My goal for 2015 was to read 50 and so far I'm at 55. Today they offered a cool little summary of your year in review. Check mine out here: Goodreads Year in Review
Want to be friends on Goodreads? I'd love to connect.
On the eve of her daughter's wedding June suddenly loses all her family. She is left completely numb and a shell of her former self. Without any thought she heads out of town on a road trip to an unknown destination. On her travels she contemplates her relationships with all those she has lost. Although, June has lost the most, there are others that have lost as well and are grieving. Everyone in town is talking and spreading rumors. What caused the tragedy? Who caused the tragedy? Other than the town gossips no one seems to have the emotional strength to question how it happened.
Did You Ever Have a Family by Bill Clegg is a beautiful story of love, loss, grief and healing. It's also about the decisions you make in life and then living with the consequences.
Cameron and his mom have been on the run. Moving houses, cities, new schools, unlisted phone numbers. Just as things settle, Cameron's mom has a feeling that his dad has found them and they are on the move again. It's been so long since Cameron has seen his dad he can't remember if his memories are real or just stories his mom has told him.
Cameron moves into an old farm house and starts hearing stories about the place. Soon he's talking to ghosts and digging up old murder stories. Is Cameron losing his mind or is he on to something? Most importantly, is Cameron just like his dad?
The Dogs by Allan Stratton is a Red Maple nominee in the 2016 Forest of Reading.
Every year I like to read one or two Red Maple books to my grade 7 and 8 classes. This year I've really struggled to pick one of the ten that I could read out loud to a class. The nominees this year seem to be a bit more mature than other years. I thought I would pre-read The Truth Commission to see if it might be a good read aloud. Definitely not!
The Truth Commission is about three friends that attend a special art high school. Normandy Pale is writing a story for a school assignment and The Truth Commission is that story. Norm has two best friends Neil and Dusk. The trio decide to seek out the truth among their fellow students. Eventually the truths begin to unravel within the group. Norm has some major family issues that no one talks about, including her parents. When Norm's sister moves back home from college though it may just be too much to handle.
I found The Truth Commission to be very mature for a grade 7 and 8 level. I thought some of the truths were way too mature. One guideline that I try to use when picking books for that level is making sure that the characters are at the most 14 years old. Norm and friends are 17 years old. Because this book is a Red Maple book I will purchase it for my school library but I will probably let borrowers know that it's pretty mature before they start reading.