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30 Hanukkah Books for Children

28Nov | 2014

posted by Paula

30 Hanukkah Books for Children

30 Hanukkah Books for Children

30 Hannukah Books for Children

Check out this wonderful list of 30 Hanukkah books for children that I have compiled for you. These books are a great way to discover the importance of this miraculous Holiday. Scoop up some of these gems for great Hanukkah gifts, or keep some for a great addition to your family’s library.

What is your favorite Hanukkah book? Did it make our list? Happy Hanukkah!

  1. The Night Before Hanukkah
  2. The Story of Hanukkah
  3. Hanukkah Lights
  4. Maccabee! The Story of Hanukkah
  5. I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Dreidel
  6. Light the Lights! A Story About Celebrating Hanukkah
  7. Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins
  8. Bright Baby Touch and Feel Hanukkah
  9. Hanukkah!
  10. Celebrate
  11. Simon and the Bear: A Hanukkah Tale
  12. Hanukkah: A Mini Motion Book
  13. The Borrowed Hanukkah Latkes
  14. Ultimate Sticker Book: Hanukkah
  15. Hanukkah Bear
  16. Happy Hanukkah, Corduroy
  17. All About Hanukkah
  18. Hanukkah: A Counting Book
  19. Shine Little Candles
  20. The Dreidel that Wouldn’t Spin
  21. Biscuit’s Hanukkah
  22. The Kvetch Who Stole Hanukkah
  23. How Do Dinosaurs Say Happy Chanukah?
  24. Happy Hanukkah, Curious George
  25. Chanukah Lights Everywhere
  26. Latke, the Lucky Dog
  27. Sammy Spider’s First Hanukkah
  28. Moishe’s Miracle
  29. My First Menorah
  30. Chanukah Bugs: A Pop-up Celebration

 

Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading, Uncategorized Tagged With: books, children, Hannukah, holidays, literacy, religion

Faction – Kurt Kamm Author Interview

23Oct | 2014

posted by Paula

1 Tunnel Visions Cover

First responders and the hazards they face and deter are at the heart of the fact-based mystery novels of Malibu, California author, Kurt Kamm. The following is a question and answer author interview with Kurt Kamm.

A graduate of Brown University and Columbia Law School, Kurt had a successful career as a financial executive and CEO before immersing himself in the world of the first responders who feature so prominently in his books. After attending the El Camino Fire Academy and training in wildland firefighting, arson investigation, and hazardous materials response, Kurt also became a graduate of the ATF Citizen’s Academy and has ridden along with the Los Angeles County Fire Department’s famed Urban Search & Rescue Task Force. Along with this, Kurt has has used his contacts with CalFire, Los Angeles and Ventura County Fire Departments, and the ATF to enhance the research which vests his novels with a realism that puts his readers on the ground with his characters.

  1. When did you realize you wanted to be a writer, and when did you actually begin to write?

I have always enjoyed writing and won a short story prize in high school. When I was at Brown, I took a career guidance test and was advised to become a writer. Even in those young, naive days, I knew I couldn’t earn enough money as a writer and decided to go to law school and on to Wall Street. I look at writing as a final reward for working hard at other things for most of my life

  1. What in your background prepared you to be a writer?

Every lawyer has to learn how to write, if not in the most interesting way. Right brain-left brain. I was never very good at math, but I was a terrific reader and had a good imagination. My business partner couldn’t write two sentences but was brilliant at numbers. We made a great pair. 

  1. It is said that the key to becoming a writer is to sit in a chair and write. What made you finally sit down and write?

I retired, was recently divorced, and moved out to Malibu. One day I woke up and had NOTHING to do. A friend from the LA Times convinced me to start writing classes. We were encouraged to keep a journal, and write something, anything, every day. That’s how I got started. I really enjoyed it and thought, this is something I can do.

  1. You write faction – fiction based on fact. How much research goes into your novels?

A lot of research. I just read about an author who wrote an entire series of novels about India without ever having even been there. That’s inconceivable to me. I have to be out in the field, smelling, touching, checking out the colors and textures and, most important, listening to the people around me. I have spent hundreds of hours with the men from LA County Fire Department in training situations and at actual incidents. I’ve never had so much fun in my life and have opened a window into a part of life that was unknown to me when I worked in the financial world. I use those experiences as the backgrounds for my novels. I could never dream that stuff up.

  1. Do you do your research yourself, or do you have an assistant do it?

I do all the research myself. I’m not sharing the fun with anyone!

  1. With the attention you give to detail, you know a tremendous amount about your topics. Why faction? Why not non-fiction?

Non-fiction is boring. I want to create factual backgrounds and then insert unique characters: identical twins who are terrorists, albinos obsessed with tattoos and rare blood, and weather broadcasters fixated on fires.

  1. In Tunnel Visions you bring attention to the realities we are facing with water in California? What made this topic of interest to you?

The idea for Tunnel Visions came from an actual event, a disastrous gas explosion in a water tunnel which killed 17 men. Once I adopted that as the background for the novel, the whole issue of California’s water shortage became part of the story.

  1. Is this reversible? How?

It’s hard to reverse a water shortage unless you are God. Conservation will help. The rain/drought cycles may be decades long. The western United States had a 50 year wet cycle up to end of the 20th Century, so everyone adjusted their expectations and water usage upward. Now we’re in a drought cycle and it’s hard to know how long it will last.

  1. For you, what drives a novel – plot or character?

Character drives the novel. I love to imagine people who are slightly, or significantly, off center. Isn’t everyone a little weird? The personality issues create the plot.

  1. You capture the voice and pathos of a young protagonist easily. How easy or difficult is this for you?

I refuse to admit my age. Who wants to read something written by an old guy about an old character who’s been there and done that? I like to write about young characters who are intrepid and enthusiastic but don’t have enough life-experience to avoid making mistakes. Actually, it’s easy to create these young characters, and I love ‘em all! Now excuse me, I have to take my mid-morning nap. 

  1. Your female character in Tunnel Vision is particularly strong. Did you make her this way on purpose? Did you model her on anyone in particular?

I do know a woman who is a special agent for the ATF, and she gave me some insight into her life in law enforcement. She is attractive, feminine, and tough as nails. I almost fell off my chair when she told me that she worked undercover for two years in an outlaw motorcycle gang in Wichita. (“Winter on a bike sucks.”) I like including strong female characters – I guess it brings out my feminine side.

  1. What do you hope readers take away from your books?

First, I hope they simply enjoy the experience of reading my novels and find my characters interesting, lovable, or reprehensible. I would also hope they get some insight into the skill and dedication of the first responders who make everyone else’s life safer and easier.

  1. What is the best advice you ever received as a writer?

How about the worst advice? The worst advice was, “Write what you know.” If you do that, you might not ever write anything interesting. Get away from your computer. Get yourself into something you know nothing about, and learn something new. Then go back and write about that.

     10. What is your best advice for aspiring authors?

When I was a master’s bicycle racer, I spent hours, training by myself and trashing my body. Then, on race days, I got up at 4 AM, drove two hours to a 7 AM race start, busted my gut for 2 hours, and sometimes ended up on the podium. And guess what? Almost no one was around and almost no one cared. Sometimes I asked myself, “Why am I doing this?” The answer was, because I loved it. The same applies to writing. You may spend hours working hard to create something no one notices or cares about, so you had better enjoy the process, because that may be all the reward you get. There are no guarantees. That said, if you do love what you are doing, don’t ever give up.

Kurt Kamm is an award-winning novelist of fact-based fiction. His latest thriller, Tunnel Visions, is on shelves now. You can read more from Kurt on Huffington Post or Facebook. To read interviews conducted by Kurt with some of your favorite best-selling authors, visit www.KurtKamm.com.

 

 

This post contains an affiliate link.

Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading

Is Leaving Time One of The Best Jodi Picoult Books Yet?

9Oct | 2014

posted by Paula

Fall reads

Fall reads

Leaving Time is Jodi Picoult’s latest release, due out this coming week. It’s been buzz worthy for months on line, and it’s sure to take a key spot on any list of the best Jodi Picoult books ever. Leaving Time doesn’t disappoint. Diehard fans of Jodi Picoult books will want to race out, download or order this one now on Amazon. Jodi Picoult books are almost always instant blockbuster best-sellers. Leaving Time is likely to dominate the New York Times bestseller’s list for months. It will also be a huge hit with book lovers this holiday season. But is it one of the best Jodi Picoult books yet?

From the time my kids were babies I have been a huge Jodi Picoult fangirl. When my babies were tiny, I used to take them for a lot of stroller walks. It was a means of getting outdoors, exercising and keeping the girls occupied too. Occasionally it tired my girls out too. Many of those walks landed us at the local library branch near our house. It was one of those mornings, after Books for Babies, when I found on the hot books display stand a copy of Tenth Circle by an author I had never heard of called Jodi Picoult. I picked it up and was enthralled. I signed it out and read it, unable to put it down. The next week at Books For Babies I picked up Nineteen Minutes. Well that was it, from the opening sentence I was done, lost to Jodi world as my husband calls it. Over the last decade I have sought out each of the Jodi Picoult books and read them all. The saddest moment ever in my world is the last page of a Picoult novel. When I finish one of her beautiful page-turners, I know I will have a small reader’s hangover of sorts waiting for the next novel to appear. Now that I have read every single thing Picoult has ever written, I can no longer visit the library and get my fix. One year is a very long time for a diehard Picoult fangirl like me.

This summer Leaving Time showed up here in advanced view format and I was giddy. The theme of memory resonated with me as many of you also know I have recently lost my Mom to acute pneumonia that was also tied to her Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. It has been an extremely sad time after months of learning about the brain and how memory works and also how it fails to work. Memory is such an incredibly sad thing to see vanish. The predominant themes of memory, family, love, grief, motherhood and loss are all contained in Leaving Time as the title hints. Needless to say I connected with the plot and the characters immediately.

Leaving Time is the story of a young girl names Jenna Metcalf who is obsessed with her mother’s disappearance. She is a bit of a loner and she lives with her grandmother. Jenna constructs lies and often tells her grandmother she is babysitting or sleeping over at a friend’s house so she can investigate her mother’s disappearance. In Jenna’s memory her mother Alice exists as a beautiful passionate woman who helped run an elephant sanctuary and studied elephant grief. Jenna’s father is equally passionate but moody and eventually we learn he is also extremely mental ill. Jenna’s obsession is all consuming. Abandoned as a child, she is wounded and not able to believe that her mother could have simply left her behind, either by death, or otherwise, so she pours over old newspaper snippets, journals, and follows an on line trail, hoping to find closure. She is a slightly naive and entirely unique main character. You have to read the book in order to understand fully all the nuances of character.

Jenna constructs a ragtag team of helpers, with a disgraced celebrity psychic and a jaded private detective. Together they grow to become a small family searching for the truth about Alice. Serenity Jones, Virgil Stanhope and Jenna clash often and, at times, seem unlikely to be able to finish the job they have been thrown together to complete. But each carries with them a history of complex emotional baggage that weighs them down at times, and volleys them forward in some mission to prove they can once again have purpose. Despite their regular conflicts and squabbles Serenity and Virgil begin to feel some emotional responsibility for Jenna’s youth and mental health and so they will follow through with their investigations, even when that means they are chasing Jenna across the country on their own dime.

Many Jodi novels have a sort of formula that works. I am not knocking that at all. It is tried and true and it is often the framework for other things that are extremely creative, such as plot twists and plot devices, so even when the books rely on a formula it is completely overshadowed by other things. We know with Picoult that the subject matter will often be ripped from the headlines and built into a great fictional story. We know the characters will often be children. The emotional buy in is often fast and intense because of the child characters at centre of the plot. The story will almost always involve the use of multiple narrators, providing more than one viewpoint and driving the plot forward nicely. This is often so well done that it really keeps the novel moving forward fast for the reader. Multiple narrative viewpoints can be clunky when they aren’t done well, but here they work. We also always know that Jodi will twist something near the final stage of the novel and it will be a stunning revelation that shocks you. I am not in the business of sharing spoilers that ruin the reading experience so I won;t start now. But there is a gigantic plot twist here that is incredibly artful and well done. There are so many reasons I found Leaving Time to be Jodi Picoult’s best book yet. The strength of the writing, the plot and characters. The plot twist. Sometimes it’s just reading the right book at the right time that makes a topic resonate as well. Regardless of the whys, Leaving Time is my new favourite Jodi Picoult book. Go buy it and tell me what you think.

Jodi Picoult is the author of 22 novels. The Lone Wolf, My Sister’s Keeper and The Storyteller were each the # 1 New York Times bestsellers. My Sister’s Keeper was made into a movie. As I noted I have read each of her novels and thoroughly enjoyed all of them. The Lone Wolf was the only one that left me a tiny bit unsatisfied. But many disagreed with me about that one.

Leaving Time is by Jodi Picoult, Ballantine Books, out this coming week, 2014, $28.00 in hard cover format, 406 pages.

$$$$$ out of $$$$$. This might be one of the best books I have ever read. For sure it’s Picoult’s best novel yet. Brilliant.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Ballantine, bestsellers, book reviews, books, fiction, fiction novels, gifts, holidays books, Jodi Picoult, love, memory, topical books

Five Classic Mexico Books

6Aug | 2014

posted by Paula

Mexico-nonfiction

Five Classic Books about Mexico

(guest post by contributor Bonnie Way )

Many of the dreams I have about travel are inspired by the books I’ve read about other countries. While traveling lets us see a country, reading can take us into the heart and soul of a place in another way. Here are five books about Mexico, written by great authors of the past century, that are sure to delight and teach you about Mexico, whether you are an armchair traveler or fortunate enough to make it there in person.

 

mexico-fiction

Some fantastic fiction books about Mexico

 

Sea of Cortez, a Liesurely Journal of Travel and Research
by John Steinbeck is his account of a research trip to the Gulf of California with his friend, marine biologist Edward F. Ricketts. Steinbeck and Ricketts depict their journey from Cabo San Lucas north, sharing their discoveries, friendship, and insight into the world of the 1930s. This book offers a fascinating exploration that is both literary and scientific. Paperback. Penguin Books, 2009.

 

The Lawless Roads (Penguin Classics)
by Graham Greene is another travel narrative set in 1930s Mexico. Greene was commissioned to report on how the Mexican people had faced the brutal anti-clerical purges of President Calles. This trip inspired his novel, The Power and the Glory. Greene brings his rich, poetical language to descriptions of remote areas of Mexico. Paperback, Penguin Classics, 2006.

 

Mornings in Mexico
by D. H. Lawrence is a series of essays written about Mexico in the 1920s. Lawrence’s trademark poetic prose marks these essays, which describe Mexico in a sauntering, unhurried fashion perfect for a vacation reader. This is ranked as one of the best travel books about Mexico and one of Lawrence’s best books as well. Hardcover and paperback. Fredonia Books, 2003.

 

All the Pretty Horses (The Border Trilogy, Book 1)
by Cormac McCarthy has been made into a movie by the same name and is actually the first novel in a trilogy. This coming-of-age story follows 16-year-old John Grady Cole into Mexico with two companions on an adventure that ends in romance. Winner of the 1992 National Book Award, All the Pretty Horses is a mesmerizingly tragic story. Hardcover and paperback. Vintage, 1993.

 

Mexico
by James A. Michener is the epic story of a country as only Michener can tell it. An American journalist travels to Mexico to report on a matador duel and discover the dramatic story of his own Mexican ancestry. From the ancient peoples to the Spaniards to the modern country, Michener takes readers through Mexico’s past and present. Paperback. Fawcett, 1994.

 

Bonnie Way is a reader, writer, and mom who visited Mexico for a few days in 2012.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: book reviews, books, Mexico, reviews, travel, travel books

Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline

23Jul | 2014

posted by Paula

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Don’t Go

I have found a new author I love, which means I will never ever truly make it through that Book Lover’s To Do List. You know the one I mean. Fellow book lovers each have one of those endless lists of treasures they aspire to enjoy. Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline is directly responsible for my red eyes this morning. Last night I sat up reading well into the wee hours so I could finish this lovely story. Don’t Go is a murder story with a strong family theme of fatherhood, familial loyalty, love, trust, addiction and new beginnings, set against a backdrop at home in the United States and abroad in Afghanistan. Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline begins with a hook so dramatic that I was reeled in right from page one. Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline is difficult to put down.

The Plot: Chloe, is the wife of Mike, a trauma surgeon serving in Afghanistan. As the novel opens Chloe lays dying on her kitchen floor, confused about what has just happened and, in an apparent drunken episode. While drinking she has decided to empty the dishwasher and a knife slipped, slashing her arm. As Chloe lays slipping in and out of consciousness ( she can’t stand the sight of blood) she fights to crawl to the front door and also struggles to reach a phone. She knows her sister-in-law should be home any moment from Christmas shopping with the baby and she will find her there and help her, she thinks as she lay dying. But the sister-in-law is not fast enough and yet the door lock is open and someone finds Chloe laying there. Will they call 9-1-1? Who is at the door? Is Chloe’s death as straightforward as it seems? Many mysterious circumstances surround Chloe’s devastating and deadly wound.

Meanwhile Mike is performing surgery in Afghanistan. We learn he is a foot and ankle surgeon _ in high demand because war injuries are often foot related due to bombs and land mines. He is operating as usual with his picture of beautiful wife and baby girl, Emily tucked into his pocket as a good luck charm and suddenly he gets a call that he will need to take a leave of absence for a funeral. Mike is about to go home when another tragedy occurs. This one adds emotional dimension to the character of Mike. He is a character who seems like he might not ever be able to get his head above water after such devastating insults to body and spirit. His homecoming is tragic because he is also now a widower and he intends to reclaim his role as a father but also realizes his infant daughter essentially doesn’t even remember him. How will he help her to get accustomed to his presence in her life.

Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline is a gripping read with emotional layers and a strong suspense element. I loved that the character Mike seemed to have strong three dimensional appeal and was well researched. The topic of the emotional reality of war, war veterans and people who sustain traumatic war injuries seemed authentic. The actual resolution of who the antagonist is came late in the novel and was less predictable than I might have thought.

If I have any critique of Don’t Go by Lisa Scottoline, it would be this: her characters never seemed to grab me by the heart and shake. Some authors are extremely skilled at pulling on the heartstrings. Lisa Scottoline has moments and for sure I was applauding and getting upset at moments in the book, especially during the child custody trial. But I never really felt the author’s hand around my heart. The characters are good. Mike is a solid male character. Danielle and Bob both have moments where their dialogue is really smart and rings true. But nobody made me cry. It’s a minor thing, but books are like customer experiences – you might not always remember what you bought, but for sure you recall you it made you feel. Don’t Go made me feel angry and happy and sad and invested but it didn’t ever hit the deep reserve of emotion that some authors are extremely talented at tapping into.

Lisa Scottoline is a New York Times bestselling author. She and the author of over 21 novels. She is published in 30 countries and she is also a weekly columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Lisa Scottoline is an author I will definitely read again. She is readable and her characters are relatable and Don’t Go is a great little summer read by the pool or at the beach.

Don’t Go is by Lisa Scottoline, published in 2013 by St. Martin’s Press, New York, 400 pages, $18.50 in Canada and $15.99 US.

This one gets $$$$ 1/2 out of $$$$$

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: book reviews, books, child custody, fatherhood, fiction, reviews, war

My Book Blog Makeover

22Jul | 2014

posted by Paula

books_blog

My New Home for my Book Blog

From the time I was old enough to know what one was, I have loved books. All sorts of books make my heart skip a beat. E-books and hardcover books, non fiction and fiction, poetry and young adult fiction too. I penned my first booklet when I was in grade two, illustrated and cowritten with a cute little tow headed boy named Matt who was paired with me often for team work projects. Back then my Book Posts and Booklets were cardboard paper and pencil with some staples thrown in. Digital publishing has come a long way since the second grade. I wrote for a lot of years before I started blogging. I studied literature and collected bylines and adored reading and writing so much I made it my career. Five years ago I started my main blog Thrifty Momma’s Tips. The main blog is still live and going stronger than ever. In the interest of keeping my passion for reading and books alive I started a book review blog in November of 2009, roughly six months after I started the main blog. Thrifty Momma’s Brain Food was born. Hard to believe, I have had a book review blog living over on blogger for almost five years. But recently I decided I wanted to make the leap to WordPress. So I contacted my amazing friend Kristen Paskus and asked her what she thought. Kristen is a talented blogger living in Alberta. She is a Mom of three great kids and a cat lover. You can read her blog here at My Three Lil Kittens. She is also super talented at web design and web makeovers and she offered to help me move my blog and get familiar with WordPress. And so, for the month of July, we have been working on this little project. Today, it’s ready for the big reveal and I am ready to breathe a new life into this space. The move to WordPress from Blogger has been a long time coming. A few factors tipped the scale for me. The SEO options and the plug ins are the biggest reason for me to finally make the move to WordPress. I think Kristen did an awesome job and I am happy to be able to share this newer, improved version of my book review blog with all my readers.

I hope you will find something fun to read here, or an idea for your next great read. What do you think of the makeover?

 

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: blogs, books, books blog, reviews, wordpress

5 Camping Themed Books for Kids

1Jul | 2014

posted by Paula

You know summer is here when you start to see RVs, boats, and cars loaded down with camping supplies heading down the highway. Whether you’re camping close to home or planning a bigger trip further away, here are some books to help introduce your kids to camping before they actually get there. From cooking to activities to setting up the tent, these books are sure to cover everything your child needs to know.
Cooking On A Stick: Campfire Recipes for Kids by Linda White tells kids everything they need to know about cooking over a fire. From chili to popcorn, this book is filled with old favourites in recipes that even a novice can cook. White also introduces kids to the basics of building a fire and discusses campfire safety. Beautiful illustrations accompany the recipes. Paperback. Gibbs Smith, 2000.
Kids Camp!: Activities for the Backyard or Wilderness by Laurie Carlson is a great book full of ideas for things to do while camping. Young campers will learn more about their environment, including insects, animals, and plants, and have fun while doing so. There are even ideas for rainy days. And if you can’t make it camping this summer, many of these ideas could be done in your backyard. Paperback. Chicago Review Press, 1995.
Toasting Marshmallows: Camping Poems by Kristine O’Connell George is a beautiful book of poetry that captures the spirit of camping for children. George turns every little camping moment into something memorable with her spirited, evocative verse, accompanied by Kate Kiesler’s vivid paintings. This book will help get young campers excited about camping—or remember the little things they enjoyed about their camping trip. Hardcover. Clarion Books, 2001.
S is for S’mores: A Camping Alphabet by Helen Foster James takes readers on an alphabetical tour of everything camping-related. From national parks to famous conservationists, camping snacks to camping equipment, James has it all covered in this book. Informational sidebars accompany James’ poetry to give readers more information about each topic discussed. Hardcover. Cherry Lake Publishing, 2007.
When We Go Camping by Margriet Ruurs follows one family on their camping trip, teaching children about what happens while camping and offering information about wildlife that campers might encounter. Each story had a hidden animal and tracks curving onto the next page. Beautiful artwork accompanies the story. Paperback. Tundra Books, 2004.
Of course, children may also enjoy going camping with their favourite literary friends in books like:
·       Scaredy Squirrel Goes Camping by Melanie Watt
·       Curious George Goes Camping by H. A. Rey
·       Olivia Goes Camping by Alex Harvey
·       Fred and Ted Go Camping by Peter Eastman (aka Dr. Suess)
·       Just Me and My Dad by Mercer Meyer
·       Amelia Bedelia Goes Camping by Peggy Parish
Have you taken your children camping? What was their favourite camping memory?

This post contains affiliate links. If you want to buy any of the books mentioned above, click through to amazon.ca and you can buy directly. Any small profits from the affiliate link, then helps keep this blog going.

This is a guest post by contributor Bonnie Way. Bonnie Way went on her first overnight camping trip at age seven and has taken her daughters camping in a tent when they were each newborns. She’s looking forward to more camping trips this summer in a brand-new family-sized tent! When she’s not camping, she can be found blogging as The Koala Bear Writer.

Filed Under: Amazon, best camping books for kids, books, camping, children, family activity, kids, literacy, outdoors, preschool, reading, travel

Seven Books About Mom For Preschoolers – #Mother’sDay

10May | 2014

posted by Paula

By Thrifty Momma’s Tips Contributor Bonnie Way
7 Books about Moms for Preschoolers
Mother’s Day is the perfect time to sit down with some books and snuggle close with our little ones. Here are a few books about moms, perfect for toddlers and preschoolers, to celebrate everything that mom means on this special weekend. These books are guaranteed to delight your little reader—and to result in a few hugs and kisses!
best_mom_books_for_preschoolers
Mommy Hugs by Karen Katz is a delightful board book about counting and hugging. Toddlers will delight in Katz’s bright, sweet illustrations, which focus on mother and baby together throughout their day. Hardcover. Margaret K. McElderry, 2006).

Me and My Mom by Alison Ritchie celebrates the special relationship between a mother and a child through the story of Little Bear and his mom. Little Bear is so impressed by everything his mom can do… including the one thing she does best of all. Hardcover or paperback. Good Books, 2009.

My Mommy and Me by Tina McNaughton captures the love between Little Mouse and her mommy. With beautiful, soft illustrations and an easy-to-read story, this book is a perfect story to snuggle with on Mother’s Day. Hardcover. Good Books, 2008.
best_mom_books_for_preschoolers


Mommy Hugs by Anne Gutman is all about the different ways that animal mothers show their love for their babies. With adorable illustrations of elephants and polar bears and other animals, this book celebrates the affection between mothers and babies and is sure to result in lots of kisses and snuggles while reading. Hardcover. Chronicle Books, 2003.

best_mom_books_for_preschoolers
Love You Forever by Robert Munsch is the classic children’s tale of a patient, loving mother who sings the same lullaby every night to her son, even when he flushes her watch down the toilet and plays rock songs in her living room. Available in Hardcover, Paperback, or ebook. Firefly Books, 1995.

In Just Me and My Mom (A Little Critter Book) by Mercer Mayer, Little Critter spends a special day in the city with his mom. There’s the usual Little Critter trouble along the way as he loses tickets, touches things he shouldn’t and misbehave, but his mom is always patient with him. Available in hardcover or paperback. Random House Books for Young Readers, 2001.

The Mommy Book by Todd Parr celebrates the differences between moms and helps kids understand that some moms work and some stay at home, some moms are tall and others are short, but all moms love their kids. This easy-to-read book has plenty of fun, colourful pictures. Hardcover. Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2002.

Bonnie Way is a mom with three daughters (ages 6, 4 and1) who enjoy reading and snuggling. She might just have one or two of the books on this list memorized… When she’s not reading, she can be found blogging about motherhood at www.thekoalabearwriter.com.

Filed Under: books, children, literacy, Mercer Mayer, mother's day, preschoolers, reading, Todd Parr

Living Without The One You Cannot Live Without #Giveaway

29Apr | 2014

posted by Paula

Many of my regular readers over at thriftymommastips.com know this past year has been a hard one. Right before Mother’s Day one year ago my Mom passed away. The loss of a parent is much harder than I could have ever imagined. It is fraught with little emotional land mines you sometimes don’t see until you are crying or heartsick.

Recently a publishing contact sent me this book Living Without the One You Can’t Live With Out: Hope and Healing After Loss. I assumed the book would be self help, but it is a different creature entirely. Living Without the One You Can’t Live Without is a subtle, quiet, realistic book of poems by a lovely remarkable woman named Natasha Josefowitz. Josefowitz published this shortly after her husband of many years passed away. They were married 35 years. Josefowitz was born in Paris to Russian parents. She earned her Master’s degree at 40 and her PHD at 50. That alone is reason to support this author. What a brilliant career feat! She taught the first course in the US on women and management in 1976. She is remarkably accomplished, and much of that achievement came later in life. I liked her even before I picked the book up and began reading.

The poetry within Living Without the One You Can’t Live Without is sombre, and realistic and dripping with emotion. It takes you into the doctor’s offices and the recovery spaces at home, then it whisks you off to the funeral, the days and months after when survival is your operating mode. This is a lovely book, simple and true. The poems aren’t forced or rhyming. They are lyrical at times and not at others. They are mostly helpful for anyone who has experienced loss. The poems are sometimes hard to read in a psychological sense, but they speak clearly to the experience of grief. I really like this book and I am struggling to find the words to tell you why exactly, which is odd for me. But I want to say that there is comfort in common experience and this is the place where Living Without the One You Cannot Live Without excels and dwells. It will not take away grief or pain, and it will not preach how to grieve at you, instead Josefowitz’s words will help you feel less alone and there is much to be said for that.

I have a copy of this book to give to one of my readers. Follow the instructions below and PLEASE don’t forget to leave me an email address or something to help me track you down if you win. Good Luck! This is open to Canada and the US.

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Filed Under: books, giveaways, literature, loss, poems, reading, seniors

The Little Red Stocking: Help Make Us Three #adoption

12Mar | 2014

posted by Paula

This review is by my daughter Payton Schuck, age 12.
The Little Red Stocking by Tina Dine is a lovely addition to anyone’s adoption library. The Little Red Stocking is about adoption and infertility. It features a man, woman and cat and their journey waiting to adopt a child. Their journey, I think, is similar to my parent’s story. 
The couple in this story always wanted a baby but they couldn’t have one. The story is told in the third person. The parents in The Little Red Stocking love each other but feel like something, or someone is missing. Then one day while the wife is out shopping at a market she finds a little red velvet stocking. She thinks it is just what they needed. She shows it to her husband and together they write down little hopes and dreams for a baby. They put the slips of paper in the red stocking each day. 
They hang the stocking on the fireplace mantle and together they start to feel a sense of hope. The stocking itself is kind of like a Christmas stocking and the notes inside are a little like a wish list. The  husband writes: “Come to us little one and I will place your little hand in mine and I will never let you go.” The wife writes similar messages. After about one year of this, the husband finds it too painful and tells the wife to put the stocking away. One day the stocking gets lost. The man and woman are incredibly sad because the stocking now holds all the wishes of their family also. They want the stocking back. The phone rings and someone finally finds it. The couple meets the woman who found the stocking and she tells them she has read all the wishes inside. 
The woman who found the stocking is pregnant. She tells them she wants to make their wishes come true. 
I like the book because it is sweet and a bit of a tearjerker. This is a good book for any adoptee. It would be good to read on days when you are feeling like nobody wanted you because you’re birth parents gave you away. When you have the negative thoughts about not being wanted, Little Red Stocking can help because it shows how much adopted children are wanted. The couple in this book really hope with all their heart to make their family into three. Eventually their wish comes true.
The illustrations by Jaded Dragon Studios are cute. Little Red Stocking $14.95 in the US by Mascot Books, $16.95 in Canada. I give this book $$$$ out of $$$$$. 

Note from me – Paula: This book deals well with the emotions of infertility and the devastating sadness and grief that accompanies the diagnosis. I like that Payton thinks it is a good resource for adoptees when feeling like they are unwanted. That feeling is a normal part of the adoption experience. I found the illustrations to be simple and I wasn’t crazy about them. I find the story requires a huge amount of suspension of disbelief. Adoption is rarely quite this tidy in the end. But the level of detail and emotion here is very compelling. I have never seen the infertility experience featured in a children’s book and it’s refreshing to read here.
My daughter is enjoying The Little Red Stocking and I welcome all the tools available to help explain and interpret her adoption experience. I received a copy of this book in order to facilitate review. 
For me it’s $$$ out of $$$$$.

Filed Under: adoption, adoption books for children, books, children, infertility, picture books, reading

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About Paula


Keeper of the Sanity - Freelance journalist, social media consultant and community manager. I build buzz for you. #KelloggersNetwork. Twitter Party junkie. Published in magazines, newspapers, on TV, radio etc.

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