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Safe Harbor – Rosemary McCracken Q and A plus #giveaway

24May | 2012

posted by Paula

First the review:
I am fortunate to receive some great authors here and have been, even more grateful and pleased, as a Canadian, to receive some really talented Canadian authors this year. Ami McKay’s The Virgin Cure was a treat and Peggy Blair’s The Beggar’s Opera rekindled my love of reading after a bit of a rough patch and numerous duty reads. Now I can add Rosemary McCracken to the mix. 
I was unsure of what to expect with this one, but the cover interested me and the suspenseful plot pulled me in. Main character Pat Tierney was a treat as a middle-aged established female, widowed and successful in her own field, as an investment expert. I am not the world’s biggest fan of suspense or mystery genre, but the plot, as I noted, is compelling. Pat is trudging along, for the most part, happily building a life after the death of her husband Michael, when the knock on her door comes from a woman named Jude. Jude, has a little boy with her who needs to be protected. She asks Pat to take Tommy. She reveals also that Tommy is Michael’s son. Pat doesn’t really disbelieve Jude as she sees Michael’s mannerisms and looks abundantly apparent in the child. She helps Jude out over New Year’s and anticipates it will be a short stint. But what appears to be a simple babysitting chore winds up being a full time state when Jude is murdered. In seemingly unrelated news, body parts are turning up throughout Toronto.
Pat is ambivalently thrust into the role of Nancy Drew seeking out the answers as to why Jude was murdered and who is involved. She knows enough to realize that the boy may also be in danger and may even have been a witness to some criminal acts. In the mix, there is also a safe house for refugees Safe Harbor. The plot them reveals human body parts, trafficking and illegal immigrants. 
There are some strong characters here that I quite enjoyed. This is not a perfect book, but it is a fun and enjoyable read. Pat Tierney is a strong female character, not a pushover, and not a twenty year old blonde bimbo. She has much potential for followup novels. Tommy is sweet and the cast of supporting characters are interesting, especially some of the relatives of the child on the mother’s side. The Seatons are a rich family with many quirks, but they are estranged from Jude because she has chosen a life of service and passion. 
Safe Harbor is an enjoyable read with great timing and a strong dose of suspense. The main character Pat Tierney is one I hope to see again. McCracken was one of five finalists for the first ever Arthur Ellis Award for  Best Unpublished First Crime Novel. She lives in Toronto with her husband and is a Canadian journalist who worked on newspapers across Canada.
Safe Harbor by Rosemary McCracken is available through Amazon and Barnes and Noble. 
It is in paperback and ebook format. By Imajin Books, 2012, 212 pages. I give this one a $$$$ out of $$$$$. Enjoyable and fun with an interesting main character. Great for the beach this summer. Perfect suspenseful cottage read for the summer of 2012.

A Question and Answer with Rosemary McCracken.

Rosemary McCracken is a freelance journalist and fiction writer who lives in Toronto, Canada. Her first mystery novel, Safe Harbor, was shortlisted for Britain’s Debut Dagger in 2010. It opens when a frightened woman barges into financial planner Pat Tierney’s office with a shocking request: “Look after my boy; he’s your late husband’s son.” The next day the woman is murdered and police say the seven-year-old may be the killer’s next target. Safe Habor was released by Imajin Books this spring, and is available as an ebook and a paperback on Amazon.com; also as a paperback on Amazon.ca and Barnes &Noble. Visit Rosemary on her website and her blog. http://www.rosemarymccracken.wordpress.com/


QUESTIONS FROM THRIFTYMOMMASBRAINFOOD:

Q1. Pat Tierney is a strong female character and a financial advisor. An unusual career for a main character. Can you tell me how you came up with Pat? 

A1. When I was turning over ideas for a central character for a mystery series, I first thought of creating a female journalist because that’s what I am and I know what the job entails. But I quickly moved on. Too close to home. I wanted to experience something new through my character. For several years, I’d been writing personal finance articles for newspapers and magazines: stories about acquiring a mortgage, saving for retirement, borrowing to invest — that kind of thing. I’d interviewed scores of people in the financial and investment industry and attended their conferences. I knew the issues they face in their work, and their concerns. They work in a challenging business. Investment markets have been murder in recent years. I couldn’t help but be impressed my most of them. They’re committed, caring people who help their clients realize many of their dreams. These people sparked the character of Pat Tierney. Pat has sleepless nights during down markets. She’s a champion of small investors and doesn’t want to see them get taken. She wants to see financial fraudsters and white-collar criminals driven off the face of the earth. But she knows that won’t happen.

Q 2. What is your writing day like? 
A2. Ideally, I’d like to devote three or four hours a day, five days a week, to fiction writing – first thing in the morning, when my brain is rested. But, unfortunately, it doesn’t work out that way most of the time and that’s because of my non-fiction writing. I often have a telephone interview for an article in the morning, and after that I’ll type up my notes. And when I’m in the middle of a newspaper article, I try to finish it to get it out of the way. And then another one lands on my plate. So my solution is to write fiction and non-fiction in different places. I write fiction at my cottage in the Haliburton Highlands north of Toronto; this home-away-from-home has become my creative space. And I write and research my newspaper and magazine articles in Toronto. At the cottage, I write in the morning, with a break at mid-day for kayaking or cross-country skiing. Then I return to my laptop in the late afternoon and early evening.

Q3. How was the publishing journey for you? 
A3.My first Pat Tierney novel was Last Date. In 2007, I entered it in Crime Writers of Canada’s inaugural Best Unpublished First Novel Competition. I was over the moon when it made the shortlist of five novels. Unfortunately, that honor did not lead to publication. With the recession of 2008, the market tightened, and Last Date never found a publisher. But being on that shortlist built my confidence. The judges liked my novel! I continued writing and completed the second Pat Tierney mystery, Safe Harbor, and I reworked it to stand as the first book in the series. In 2010, Safe Harbor was shortlisted for Britain’s Crime Writers’ Association’s Debut Dagger. Shortlisting in this competition has launched the careers of many writers, including Canada’s Louise Penny and Dorothy McIntosh. The CWA makes shortlisted entries available to British publishers and agents, and several asked to see my full manuscript. But Safe Harbor is not a British mystery, and none were willing to commit to it in today’s uncertain publishing world. Much as I love the works of British crime writers, the world I know and write about is North America. So I focused on the North American market. The market continued to be tight, and publishers and agents were hesitant. They couldn’t decide whether it was a mystery or women’s fiction – it has a murder mystery plot, and it also tells the story of Pat’s personal journey of coming to terms with her husband’s infidelity and getting on with her life. They felt that if they couldn’t fit it into one category, they wouldn’t be able to market it successfully. Then Imajin Books entered the picture. Publisher Cheryl Tardif thought Safe Harbor was a good read and would sell books. An hour after I sent her my query email, she asked to see the manuscript. A week later, she sent me a contract.

Q 4. What gets you out of bed in the morning? 
A4. Too often, it’s the alarm clock telling me to get ready for an interview for an article or an appointment. But on mornings when I don’t have interviews or appointments, I like to lie in bed for a few minutes upon awakening, and let my mind turn over my novel-in-progress. New characters sometimes emerge at this time, and plots and storylines can come together like parts of a jigsaw puzzle. The brain is rested and the subconscious seems to interact more effectively with the conscious mind. It was at this time that the premise for Safe Harbor came to me. I’d finished Last Date, and I was trying to come up with an idea for a sequel. What would be one of the worse things Pat could face? Michael, I thought. Michael, her late husband, wasn’t the perfect spouse she thought he was. He’d been unfaithful…and he had a child by another woman. And Safe Harbor took off from there! What is next for you? I’ve nearly completed the first draft of the sequel to Safe Harbor. It’s is set outside Toronto. Pat Tierney goes north to cottage country – the Haversham Highlands, a thinly disguised version of my own Haliburton Highlands – to oversee the opening of a branch of her investment firm. Just before she arrives, an elderly man is killed when he drives into his garage and it bursts into flames. And she meets up with some bikers who think she’s involved in the local grow-op. I’m now tinkering with the ending, and then I’ll spend the summer doing a rewrite and edit. I enjoy the self-editing process because potential treasures can be spotted: characters that can be expended, scenes that can be beefed up or pared down, suspense that can be heightened. And I still have to come up with a title.

Thanks so much Rosemary! This giveaway is open to Canada only.

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Filed Under: authors, bloggers, books

What I am Not, Guest Post by Tricia Goyer

13May | 2012

posted by Paula

Welcome to Pearl Girls™ Mother of Pearl Mother’s Day blog series – a week long celebration of moms and mothering. Each day will feature a new post by some of today’s best writer’s (Tricia Goyer, Sheila Walsh, Suzanne Woods Fisher, Bonnie St. John, and more). I hope you’ll join us each day for another unique perspective on Mother’s Day. AND … do enter the contest for a chance to win a beautiful hand crafted pearl necklace. To enter, just {CLICK THIS LINK} and fill out the short form. Contest runs 5/6-5/13 and the winner will on 5/14. Contest is only open to US and Canadian residents. Pearl Girls button
Get your button here If you are unfamiliar with Pearl Girls™, please visit www.pearlgirls.info and see what we’re all about. In short, we exist to support the work of charities that help women and children in the US and around the globe. Consider purchasing a copy of Pearl Girls: Encountering Grit, Experiencing Grace or one of the Pearl Girls™ products (all GREAT Mother’s Day gifts!) to help support Pearl Girls. And to all you MOMS out there, Happy Mother’s Day! What I Am Not by Tricia Goyer Becoming a mother is a complicated thing. Not only am I trying to negotiate a relationship with my child, I am trying to negotiate a relationship with myself as I attempt to determine how I mother, how I feel about mothering, how I want to mother and how I wish I was mothered. — Andrea J. Buchanan, in Mother Shock3 Sometimes the easiest way to discover who we are is to know who we are not. • We are not our children. We all know mothers who go overboard trying to make themselves look good by making their children look great. I saw one woman on the Oprah television show who had bought her preschool daughter more than twelve pairs of black shoes just so the girl could have different styles to go with her numerous outfits! Just as we -don’t get report cards for mothering, we also -don’t get graded on our child’s looks or accomplishments. While you want your children to do their best and succeed in life, your self-esteem -shouldn’t be wrapped up in your child. Life as I See It: My individuality will never end. There will be no one exactly like me, not even my child. She will be like me in some ways, but not at all in others. I -wouldn’t have it any other way. — Desiree, Texas • We are not our mothers. I remember the first time I heard my mother’s voice coming out of my mouth. The words “because I told you so .  .  .” escaped before I had a chance to squelch them. It’s not until we have kids that we truly understand our mothers — all their frets, their nagging, and their worries. It’s also then that we truly understand their love. Since you are now a mother, it’s good to think back on how you were raised. If there were traditions or habits that now seem wise and useful, incorporate them into your parenting. You also have permission to sift out things you now know -weren’t good. Just because you’re a product of your mother, that -doesn’t mean you have to turn out just like her. Repeat after me, “I am not my mother.” • We are not like any other mother out there. Sometimes you may feel like the world’s worst mother. After all, your friend never yells at her son — and sometimes you do. Then again, your friend may feel bad because you have a wonderful bedtime routine that includes stories and songs. In many cases, the moms you feel inferior to only look like they have it together. All moms feel they -don’t “measure up.” Instead of feeling unworthy, we should realize that everyone has strengths and weaknesses. The key is where we place our focus. The Bible says, “Let’s just go ahead and be what we were made to be, without .  .  . comparing ourselves with each other, or trying to be something we -aren’t” (Romans 12:5 – 6, MESSAGE). The problem with comparison is, we always measure our weaknesses against the strengths of others. Instead, we need to thank God for our strengths. We can also ask God to help us overcome our weaknesses — not because we want to compare ourselves, or look good in someone else’s eyes, but because we want to be the best mom out there.

Tricia Goyer is a CBA best-selling author and the winner of two American Christian Fiction Writers’ Book of the Year Awards (Night Song and Dawn of a Thousand Nights). She co-wrote 3:16 Teen Edition with Max Lucado and contributed to the Women of Faith Study Bible. Also a noted marriage and parenting writer, she lives with her husband and children in Arkansas. You can find her online at www.triciagoyer.com or at her weekly radio show, Living Inspired. Exciting News – the latest Pearl Girls book, Mother of Pearl: Luminous Legacies and Iridescent Faith will be released this month! Please visit the Pearl Girls Facebook Page (and LIKE us!) for more information! Thanks so much for your support! ###

Filed Under: authors, bloggers, books

Mama Love Giveaway Hop – Smashbox Cosmetic #giveaway

1May | 2012

posted by Paula

Welcome to the Mother’s Day MamaLOVE Giveaway Hop hosted by MamaNYC! Over 50 bloggers are participating and featuring giveaways with prizes valued over $25.00 each. Mother’s Day is just around the corner, so hopefully you will find some amazing gift ideas and hopefully win some prizes for mom! This event begins on May 1st and will end May 6th @ 11:59PM (EST). Don’t forget to scroll to the bottom of this post and hop down the list for many more chances to win great prizes!

My portion of this giveaway is graciously donated by Smashbox Cosmetics. It is an amazing O Glow, fabulous intuitive cheek colour. I have had one here for a couple of weeks testing it on myself. It is worth $32 and is the 15 ml size. To win follow the rafflecopter instructions. Good luck. This is open all week and you should also enter several of the great giveaways on my friend’s blogs. My prize is to make your cheeks rosy all year round. Smashbox O-Glow is packed with an exclusive Goji Berry -C complex. I love how pretty and fresh it is. It is a translucent gel that activates a glow on your cheeks. Gentle and lovely spring look.

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Filed Under: authors, bloggers, books

The Variations – Review

25Apr | 2012

posted by Paula

The Variations is a compelling first novel that tackles the complex topic of faith. It is a most worthy read, with a rather contemporary plot, a complicated main character, a priest who also writes a blog and begins to lose hios way after his mentor dies. I loved the savvy take on faith as something he has spun into a community of sorts on line as well. The main character is Father Dominic, an aging, conflicted soul. Quite an amazing anti-hero really. Likable despite his many faults, but not too likable. He is a gripping character study in some ways. Father Dom is surrounded by a colorful cast of secondary characters that help to fuel his disillusionment, like Dolores, a young spiritually challenged and emotionally volatile young girl who seeks comfort and presents as pregnant. Dom’s crisis of faith is in, a lot of ways escalated by her sudden pregnancy and the many questions regarding the paternity of the child. 
John Donatich is director of the Yale University Press and he lives in New Haven and New York City. So far, his first novel is creating quite a buzz and with reason. This is an author to watch, with a remarkable style all his own and a clear love for wordplay. A writer’s writer. Take for example this, as Dom cleans up the church grounds: “How he hated the clink of glass against glass in the garbage bag, hollow and carnal like a laugh track.” 
As the plot progresses, Dom’s blog attracts the interest of a young single editor, Andrea. Their relationship progresses until his apathy becomes to annoying for her. Their relationship compelling to watch as a reader and somewhat repulsive also, like being spectator to a train wreck. At the same time as Dom is struggling, James, a young African American pianist is working on his great piano masterwork and unable to finish. Will Dom leave the church for good, rediscover his faith or write a bestseller? You have to read it to find out.
The Variations is a lovely book and Donatich has a gorgeous style all his own. This one is a serious read, but should be on your list. It gets $$$$ out of $$$$$
The Variations is by John Donatich, a John Macrae book, Henry Holt and Company, New York, published March 2012, 288 pages $25.00

Filed Under: amish fiction, bloggers, book reviews, books, faith, God, Henry Holt and Company, pregnancy, suicide

Weekend Hop

1Apr | 2012

posted by Paula

Spreading Love Weekend Blog Hop

Another chance to make some new friends and followers. You know the drill. Link up, leave comments. Follow and be followed.

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Friendship Friday

31Mar | 2012

posted by Paula

Friendship Friday is a bloghop for books bloggers hosted by Create With Joy. Every which she asks one question and bloggers answer.

The question  for the week is: What do you enjoy about blogging?

Well, here at my books blog (thriftymommasbrainfood) I enjoy the great reads I get each week, sometimes each day, and I love that I get to interview authors occasionally and chat about writing too. I like being able to incorporate my family in the process and at times we review children’s books together. I love that this not only shows the children how much I love reading, but teaches them their opinions are valued too. I like that they enjoy getting new books and then vlogging with me from our treehouse. Sometimes the children’s insights are brilliant and honest. They are always real. My main blog – thriftymommastips – is a bit faster paced. I review brands and write about parenting and cooking and events and special needs and I am always on a deadline there. Here, in my little corner of the world, I curl up and enjoy a good read. Imagine myself on a beach, or in a window seat with a tea or latte relaxing. That’s what a good read is all about for me.

Now follow the button above and find some new friends.

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Lone Wolf Review: New York Times Best-selling Author Jodi Picoult

28Mar | 2012

posted by Paula

Any new novel by New York Times Best-selling author Jodi Picoult is a cause to celebrate. My loyal readers and subscribers to thriftymommastips and thriftymommasbrainfood know how much I love this author. I have read almost every book she has written, in fact I am pretty sure I have read the entire Jodi Picoult oeuvre. So when I finished her last book Sing You Home, I asked my friend Wanda @YMCBookalicious who has interviewed the author, what was next. I was both shocked and intrigued by the idea of this one and the setting. Wolves and end of life themes? The potential was intriguing. Now maybe I am spoiled by Picoult’s many magnificent books like House Rules, My Sister’s Keeper, Faith and Mercy and all those gorgeous novels. I am often spellbound by her plots and head over heels for the characters that spring from her imagination, which is maybe why I find it so hard to say that I sadly found Lone Wolf underwhelming. My love for Jodi Picoult’s novels is well established. I have reviewed many of her other books. I have loved many, and wished I had written many, and truly admired her skill and penchant for research. And yet Lone Wolf, her latest, was merely Meh for me.

Lone Wolf is the story of Luke Warren and his pack. When he is critically injured in a car accident at the start of the book, Warren’s family struggles to pull him back or let him go. This is an end of life saga that explores when life begins and ends and brain trauma and family relationships. Not surprisingly conflict comes in children at odds with each other. One refuses to let father die and the other fights vehemently to not extend the life support systems. I felt there was so much more potential for the sibling relationship here to be relevant and contemporary and perhaps even emotional and real. And yet it stays on the page. Flat. How I love the metaphor at work here. It is smart and well used. The family as a pack metaphor comes full circle towards the end and as a reader I enjoyed that. As a writer I appreciate this stylistically. Warren, the lone wolf, is a world renowned wildlife biologist who loses himself in his work and immerses himself into a wolf pack, accepted as one of their own. He eats when they eat, dines on raw calf, until he gets too sick from doing so, and sleeps outdoors with them. In the wild as part of a wolf pack he finds his senses heightened – this is a sub-theme carried over from House Rules, where our main character had Asperger’s syndrome and clear sensory processing disorder as well. Warren is larger than life, appearing on TV and magazine covers after he emerges from his experiment. We learn that he has written a book and his wife is remarried and at least one of his children is alienated from him. His young teenage daughter Cara is however fiercely devoted, having chosen to live with her father and not her remarried mother.

The research here, is as usual, amazing. I learned more about wolves than I ever could from reading a non fiction book about the same topic. So what  doesn’t work for me? Well the family dynamic is great and I love that the characters are all constantly changing in ways we cannot quite get a grip on until nearly the end of the story. I love the comparisons to the alpha male and female wolves. The problem with this one for me is that the emotional investment is weak. I expect to love at least one of Picoult’s characters and relate to one. I expect to have the carpet yanked out from under my feet near the end. It is a Picoult device. But not here. No compelling twist at end. No heartbreaking characters. Luke, in all of his mythical stature, is never really likable. I get that his character lingers between life and death and his viewpoint is established in a sort of series of flashbacks, interspersed between other character’s viewpoints. But because he is never really likable, he is merely a device to forward the story in some ways. I expected deeper character development of Luke. And I expect deeper characters from Picoult.

There were many moments in this book where I sighed as I felt I had read it before. Especially when Cara bolted from her hospital bed and went straight to a lawyer’s office. Too many similarities with My Sister’s Keeper and every other Picoult novel in which a trial is featured. Even when Picoult is not at the top of her game, she is still worth reading. But frankly as a fan of her body of work I would very much recommend starting with a different one of her novels.

Lone Wolf, by Jodi Picoult, Simon and Schuster Canada, $32, 421 pages

By now Jodi’s fans know of her penchant for ripping headline making sagas and plots and twisting them into best-sellers. They all know too of her reliance on courtroom drama. Perhaps its time to change the formula, because this one, although well researched, fell flat and predictable.

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

Disclosure: I received a copy of this book for free. My opinion is all my own.

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Tales From The Treehouse: Here Comes Hortense #Giveaway

18Mar | 2012

posted by Paula

Here Comes Hortense is a fabulous little read by Heather Hartt- Sussman, with outstanding pictures by illustrator Georgia Graham and a super creative contemporary plot. I thought it would be a great choice to resurrect our children’s series called Tales From The Treehouse. We did a lot of reviews from the backyard last year with my children and somehow put that concept on hold for a bit. Anyways here we are again chatting up some of our favourite reads.

Details:

Here Comes Hortense was just released by Tundra Books, author Heather Hartt-Sussman and illustrator Georgia Graham, 2012, picture books, Canada $19.99.

I give this one 5 out of 5 $$$$$. I loved it. Especially because it is so unique. Huge props to the author for tackling grandparent love.  I adore this illustrator. The characters are so detailed and expressive and the amusement park is magical.

I received a copy of Here Comes Hortense for the purpose of this review.My opinions are all my own.

#GIVEAWAY: Now, as promised. You can win a copy of Heather Hartt-Sussman’s book
Noni Says No, also reviewed on my blog. I will draw for this one on March 28th with random.org.

To WIN: Follow me on twitter @inkscrblr

And like my Facebook fan page

http://www.facebook.com/thriftymommedia

Leave me a way to contact you: email or a twitter handle.

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Noni Says No: Children’s Picture Book Review

13Mar | 2012

posted by Paula

Sometimes we get the cutest books here. I love that part of my job. Noni is a sweet little girl, who is also a bit of a doormat. She can do all kinds of cool things like reciting the alphabet backwards, but Noni cannot say No! She has a friend who totally takes advantage of her and can’t stop herself. When Noni wants to tell her No, please don’t sleep over at my house tonight; instead she says, Yes. If Noni wishes to play a different game, she can’t assert herself. Instead she plays the dog and is directed through the motions of playing a game she’d rather not. And Noni’s friend Susie just keeps pushing the limits of friendship. One day she even cuts all of Noni’s hair and Noni still can’t say No. So how long will Noni be untrue to herself? How will she react? What will she do? Will an adult have to step in or will she solve the problem herself? Read the picture book yourself to find out.

Noni Says No, is by Heather Hartt-Sussman, a Montrealer, who also was a reporter for Hollywood Reporter and host of E! Entertainment television’s The Gossip Show. She is author of Nana’s Getting Married and she lives in Toronto. The book is illustrated by Genevieve Cote. Cote  is illustrater of several books. Hartt-Sussman has also written Here Comes Hortense and Nana’s Getting Married. Those two are illustrated by Georgia Graham. Cote’s drawings here are simple and cute, with hints of quirky thrown in. Graham’s are magical.

Noni Says No is nominated for an Ontario Library Association Forest of Reading Blue Spruce Award.The awards bring recently published children’s picture books to Ontario children ages four to seven. The program promotes reading for enjoyment and beginning reader’s skills. Committees of public and school library practitioners select ten nominees each year. Students must read a minimum of five of those books to be able to vote. Voting is open for the month of April. The official voting day is Monday, April 23rd. to coincide with World Book and Copyright Day. Nonie Says No also was the recipient of an honourable mention in the OLA’s Best Bets List 2011.

Noni Says No, by Heather Hartt-Sussman, Tundra Books, $19.99, pub 2011, in Toronto, Ontario,

Her site is Http://www.heatherhartt.com/

This one gets a $$$$ out of $$$$$.

Use it to open conversation about feelings and to chat about how Noni might have handled things differently, or how she finds her voice. What a great tool for talking with your children. Perfect for age three and up to about 9.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Incredible Shrinking Bully – Giveaway

5Mar | 2012

posted by Paula


Frank the tank is a bully. Pure and simple. He is big and mean. He stuffs kids in lockers and runs amok throughout the school calling kids racially inflammatory names and taunting everyone he runs into. He grows in power and size every time he succeeds at this.
This is Frank. He is only stopped when the bullied group of kids get together and challenge him. Then he begins to shrink. Mona Shmitt is the author of the book The Incredible Shrinking Bully.
This is the first book from Smashwords that I have ever been sent for review. It is an interesting source of ebooks and because I am interested in ebooks increasingly, I agreed to take a look at this one. I actually enjoy having more options for kids books and ebooks available to us. The Incredible Shrinking Bully is $3.99 and is downloadable as a PDF, and you can download it for Kindle, Kobo, Nook etc.
This particular book is another interesting means of opening up a conversation on bullying with your kids. The metaphor is simple and the solutions are acceptable. What I do not like about this book is that the drawings are so crude. Especially the drawings of Frank. The words and the story are school aged level and appropriate. This children’s picture book is a good example of how to handle bullying; however, I worry a wee bit about the message that the bystander is the one who is supposed to tackle the problem. I guess realistically this is accurate in that the adults here are largely absent and ineffectual. That is upsetting, but largely true. Most often kids are left to solve their bully problems on their own. That should not be the case though and I would have liked to have seen more interaction from adults here to make it a well rounded solution to bullying. The story is a good way to start the bully chat with your child. It could be a good jump off point for discussion of how else it might have been handled.
I have five copies of The Incredible Shrinking Bully to give away.
What you get: An ecopy of the book ($3.99 value US)
visit https://www.smashwords.com/
To win: Follow this blog via GFC or follow me by twitter @inkscrblr
LEAVE Me A way to reach you.

I will draw five winners on March 14th.

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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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