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Friday, December 29, 2017

Books I'm Looking Forward to Reading Before the End of 2017

Is your to-read list like mine: a mile (or two) long? Do you have books in stacks that ALL beg for your attention at the same time?

If so, the good side of this is that we will never run out of books to read! But how DO we decide which books to read first? I find it always so difficult to choose, and sometimes I can't! So,  I usually have two or three novels going at the same time, or a stack of picture books that I enjoy in one sitting.

However, with the end of winter break and the end of 2017 approaching,  I've had to prioritize! So:

These are the books I am putting on my READ NOW list--hopefully finishing these before NYE.  



I always look forward to reading the work of Duncan Tonatiuh because his art is always stunning.
When I was growing up, I was fortunate to see lots of this type of dancing and always admired the beautiful skirts and dancers' abilities (as well as their shoes)! 



My great-grandmother was a quilter (hoping that is the right term!), and I can still remember the large wooden frame in her living room that always held her current project. I know reading this book will bring back special memories of her. 

And, if you are like me at all, you probably have books you want to read that everyone else has already read! You meant to read them, but just got so busy! Right? (As I tell myself sometimes, better late than never!) 

Here are two that fall in the "should-have-already-read-but-unfortunately-I-haven't" category for me: 
  • Vincent and Theo Thank you, Macmillan Kids!  I had the chance to meet Deborah Heiligman at NCTE 2017 and enjoyed hearing her talk about this book!







These titles are at the top of my list. I plan to stay in, escape the cold, drink some hot lemon tea and enjoy the stories they bring. I will finish these books and then I can move on to the rest of my stacks! 
Fittingly for me, this is how I will close out 2017, and this is how I will ring in 2018! With books! Must complete my 2017 Goodreads Reading Challenge! 

Shoes I wore today because they are warm and comfortable:

Black Easy Spirit Suede Wedge booties with a fur trim! (Which I don't think they make any more!) 


Thursday, December 21, 2017

Winter is Here! (Sort of!)


Our holiday break is here, and today is the first official day of winter! But in my neck of the woods, it is not snowing or sleeting or "snowflaking" at all. Sadly, I haven't built a snowman out of actual snow this season (although I have made a few out of paper and books).  But I dream about snow (literally) and hope it will come soon! Maybe reading about it will bring it about? Books ARE magical you know! 

Even though I am not experiencing the traditional winter I read about in books this time of year, this will not stop me from sharing my go-to winter titles! And while there is so much I could tell you about each one of these books, I would never actually publish this post on the first day of winter if I started to do so! 

This is a mix of picture books and nonfiction, classics and recently published titles. It would be impossible to share them all, and I'm sure I've left some out, but that is what one must accept when one creates a list of this sort! 


THE BOOKS:
































I think I expect a lot from books about snow! I want them to be good books, yes, but I also want them to make me feel as if I AM in the snow -- when I am not. These books certainly do that for me, and it's one reason why I keep coming back to them. 

If you have any winter books you love that are not on this list, please let me know! 

Happy holidays, happy winter, and happy reading! 

One more thing-- In keeping with my blog name, I am going to try to share more of my shoe choices here, posting pics when possible. So------

THE SHOES: 

Even though it is not snowy here, I am still wearing my boots when I go out, though I really should have worn my Converse! 










Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Books Under the Christmas Tree

This year, I decorated my Christmas tree the day before Thanksgiving. I guess I felt the pressure to do it a little earlier this year, and I am not sure why. Perhaps it was the displays going up in the stores on Halloween. At any rate, I decided to put things up a little earlier so I could enjoy them more.

My tree takes a while to decorate because I only use glass ornaments, and care is required when placing them on the branches! I have dropped a few. These vintage-type ornaments are my favorites.




As a child, I can remember that our trees always had this type of glass ornaments. They seemed ordinary at the time, but now they seem magical. Christmases were never easy for me as a kid, but the tree was always right.  I am sure these ornaments were purchased at the local five-and-ten. How I wished I had saved them to enjoy now!

Once my tree was up and ready (it only took a whole day!), I looked underneath. My velvet tree skirt is certainly lovely, but indeed vary bare. I never quite know what to put under the tree, as gift-giving is done early in my house, most of it online or handed out way before the 25th. The solution came this past weekend, when I went to a friend's house for our book club gathering. Underneath her tree, she had smartly placed her favorite holiday books as a display. I am not sure why I hadn't thought of that.

So that's exactly what I decided to do.

My holiday books were not packed away like my ornaments and stocking hangers --wrapped in tissue, protected in sturdy plastic boxes . Instead, I place them on a their own shelf, knowing I probably won't read them from January to November.  I realized as I pulled them out that just as I take out ornaments from boxes and "ooohh" and "ahhhh" over beautiful ones I've forgotten, so too did I reacquaint myself with titles I hadn't thought about since last December. As I held the books, took in the cover art, and gently leafed through the pages, I remembered the stories again, appreciating once more how these books always make my holidays brighter. 

These are a few of the special holiday books underneath my tree:











And, of course, with new titles coming out every season, I added these 2017 books to my Christmas collection: 





(This is one I am looking to read next! Perhaps Santa will bring it to me!)



I should have known that books would add that unique touch of story and memory to my Christmas. They have become just as precious to me as the glass ornaments adorning my tree.



Monday, December 4, 2017

Waiting and Writing: An NCTE Memory


On the morning of my last day at NCTE 2017, I walked toward the Convention Center in St. Louis, a cold chill pouring through my inadequate fleece jacket. I desperately needed a hot cup of coffee.

This yearly trek I make early in the morning before 7 a.m. on the last day of NCTE is one I make alone (sleepily),  but I am determined to get to the Children's Literature Assembly Breakfast because I know the time will feed my love of books.

I arrive outside the room-- a line having formed. I am about twentieth -I estimate. As much as I think I was alone in this pursuit, I am not. I take a table close to the front, greeting people I know and sitting with a friend. It helps to sit with someone you know here. But if I can't do that, I know that at least the others sitting at my table will be friendly. After all, they are here because they love books, too.

We chat as the coffee pot is passed around and bond over the common need for it. Bits of conversation stream across the noise of over 200 people in a ballroom. I am able to separate a few nuggets: news of upcoming projects, where everyone is from, and what we've enjoyed at the conference.

I reflect on my own previous CLA Breakfast experiences as I take everything in. I try to remember how many of these I have attended. I remember by thinking of the featured speaker featured in previous years because each has had an impact on my work as a librarian. I either reread their books, or come back and share them again.
  • Sy Montgomery & Nic Bishop - 2013 
  • Jon Klassen - 2014
  • Kadir Nelson - 2015
  • Christopher Myers - 2016

This year, the author is Kevin Henkes. Of course I am very happy about this, and as he begins to speak, I gain a new appreciation for him, far beyond his books. His words are insightful -- giving us a glimpse of what it is like to create stories read by so many. The theme of his speech to us that morning is "Waiting"-- referring to his latest three books that share this common thread.





He very brilliantly walks us through each of these books, explaining the waiting in each, and sharing the thinking and the process for the art. The room hung on his every word, as did I, and sure enough, I began to think of all of the waiting I have done in my own life.

I have waited for so much and so many.

To recount:

I have waited for milestones, dates on the calendar, arrivals, my husband, classes, books, packages, lunch, friends, appointments, answers, phone calls, and e-mails.

I have waited for grades, orders, coffee, notifications, letters, and dreams to come true -- some of which already have.

And at this point, I realize this:

I am waiting for new dreams.  New goals.

Mr. Henkes talked about the character Rabbit in Waiting, and I have decided I am most like this character in the book (even though Rabbit wasn't waiting for any certain thing). Rabbit is okay in waiting. And so am I.

While I wait, I work. While I wait, I learn. While I wait, I realize what is around me, and what needs my attention. I am not anxious for the next step, only expectant --if that is possible.

When the breakfast concludes, I realize what a valuable experience it has been. It spurred some writing. It brought on reflection. I have realized something important about my work, while also learning more about children's literature from an author I admire so much. (And, thankfully, I finally got my cup of coffee.)

The Children's Literature Breakfast at NCTE remains a lovely memory. I only have to wait for it again next year.