Thank You, President Bush

I know that Thanksgiving is holiday devoted to giving thanks primarily to God for His blessings and His care for us. However, I thought today I’d thank one of His servants, who deserves a little recognition and thanks in my humble opinion.

Count me in the whatever-small-percentage of Americans today who heartily approve of the job President George W. Bush has done in leading our country for the past eight years. No, he hasn’t been the perfect president. Yes, I’ve disagreed with him on some issues. But right now I want to say thank you , President Bush for:

Standing against terrorism without demonizing all Muslims or all people of faith.

Keeping terrorists in jail who want to kill and terrorize Americans and others.

Freeing women especially in Afghanistan from the prison that the Taliban had made of that country.

Ending Saddam Hussein’s nuclear program and standing against Iran’s push to obtain nuclear weapons.

Leading us to victory in Iraq —for us and for the Iraqi people.

Appointing conservative justices Samuel Alito and John Roberts to the Supreme Court.

Championing a bill that tripled funding for combating AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis, mostly in Africa but also around the world.

Fighting against sex trafficking and forced prostitution.

Banning embryonic stem cell research and supporting the humane, and more promising, approach of adult stem cell research.

Advocating for abstinence-based sex education.

Keeping our country safe after 9-11.

Passing a tax bill that cut taxes for every American and defending those tax cuts throughout your years in office.

Staying out of the Kyoto treaty and instead pushing for alternative and cleaner-burning fuels.

Not responding to your detractors in anger or hatred, no matter how ugly and vicious the provocation.

Jim Towey: Why I’ll Miss President Bush

I’m going to miss him, too.

Children’s Fiction of 2008: The Diamond of Drury Lane by Julia Golding

At the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane,
Covent Garden, this present day, being 1st January, 1790,

Will be presented

The Diamond of Drury Lane
(written by Miss Cat Royal)

Principal Characters
Miss Cat Royal–orphan and ward of the theater
Mr. Johnny Smith–prompter with a secret
Mr. Syd Fletcher–leader of the Butcher’s Boys and champion boxer
Mr. Billy “Boil” Shepherd–evil leader of rival gang

And a HIDDEN diamond!

With a new musical interlude by
Mr. Pedro Hawkins, late of Africa.

To which will be added a farce, in which
A HOT AIR BALLOON will land onstage!



I copied the blurb from the back cover of the book because the teaser was just as much fun as the writing in the story inside the book. Catherine Royal is an foundling of unknown parentage who lives backstage in Mr. Sheridan’s theater. She becomes involved in a plot to guard a hidden diamond as she overhears gossip that she’s not supposed to hear.

The book gives a great picture of the 1790’s for children, including cameo appearances by important personages, a look at the political issues of the time, and a vivid depiction of the cultural milieu of both the back alleys and the drawing rooms of late eighteenth century London. But history and cultural improvement were not the point of the story—the play’s the thing, as another author immersed in the theater would say. Cat would be a new and winsome addition to Jen’s Cool Girls of Children’s Literature list, and her friends and enemies in Drury Lane are a delight to get to know.

Cat warns her readers in the beginning of the book that “a different deportment is required on the streets of London than is usually taught to young ladies and gentlemen. . . . I hope you are not unduly shocked, for there is much more of the like to come.” I don’t think young readers will be unduly shocked by the violence and grit of 1790’s London as shown in The Diamond of Drury Lane, but they will be entertained and educated, both at the same time.

This book was published in 2006 in England where it won the Smarties Book Prize, a prize (similar to the Texas Bluebonnet Award) that was voted on by schoolchildren in Great Britain. It’s just now come out this year in the U.S., published by Roaring Brook Press. According to Ms. Golding’s website, there are already four more books in the Cat Royal series. The second one, Cat among the Pigeons, is available here in the U.S., and the third one is supposed to be “coming soon.”

More from other book bloggers:

Casey at Read a Great Teen Book: “Throughout all of her many adventures Cat stays true to her beliefs and her sense of right and wrong. Though Cat may be too trusting at times, she is crafty and intelligent and willing to risk everything to help a friend. The setting is richly portrayed and is accented by photographs of actual maps of London from 1790, the time when the story takes place.”

Sarah Rettger at Archimedes Forgets: “Makes me want to reread: Master Rosalind, by Patricia Beatty, another story of a girl in the theater with touches of political intrigue.”

I must add in response to Ms. Rettger that The Diamond of Drury Lane made me think of Sally Watson’s undervalued and almost forgotten classic about a girl in Shakespearean England, Mistress Malapert and the sort-of-sequel set during Cromwell’s reign, Lark. I love Patricia Beatty, so I’ll have to add Master Rosalind to my TBR list along with the others in the Cat Royal series.

Sunday Salon: Links and Thinks

MotherReader: Book Is the New Cool! I’m going to start using this slang, and my kids are either going to think I’m book —or nuts.

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Online Christmas Party 2008 Hosted by Lilliput Station. I think I’m planning to join in just as soon as I can catch my breath. But don’t wait for me. Check it out.

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Epi Kardia blog has a book give-away and a series of so-far excellent articles on giving books for Christmas.

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Joseph Bottum on chidren’s classics. I can’t say I completely agree with him. Little Women is “stale” and “a little creepy”? Winnie the Pooh, that philosophical genius, “consigned to the waste bin”?
Never. Still, Mr. Bottum does recommend some authors, old and new, that you may never have read or considered. And such recommendation are always welcome here at Semicolon.

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I’ve been thinking a lot about giving books as gifts and about helping people to find the right book at the right time and about working in a library or a bookstore. I don’t work in either one right now, and I may never do so again. (I was a librarian in a former life.) However, part of what I want to do with this blog is to help people find that book, the one they were looking for and didn’t know it. I do think that connecting reader to book is really, well, really book, and I’d like to do it well and more often. It’s a good feeling to see someone enjoying a book that I recommended.

HHBJD???

YOU ARE INVITED TO…. THE “HOUSTON HOMESCHOOL BLOGGY JOE-DOWN!”
(get it? Cup of Joe? Hoe down?)

We’ll be meeting for a cuppa something (I don’t drink coffee) on Tuesday morning, November 25th, at 10am somewhere in Houston.

Would you like to come? If so, email me for the exact secret location at sherry DOT early AT gmail DOT com.

So far, the following bloggers are planning to be there:

Marsha of Our Homeschool and Other Such Happenings.

Kelly of Wisdom Begun.

Rachel of Keep the Way.

Heather of Sprittibee.

Rhonda of Imagine.

Amanda of MandyMom.

If you’re in the area, we’d love to see you on Tuesday, too.

Children’s Fiction of 2008: Surviving Seventh Grade

Fouling Out by Gregory Walters.

Carlos Is Gonna Get It by Kevin Emerson.

Bringing the Boy Home by N.A. Nelson.

Growing up is hard to do. That’s the message of all three of these middle grade fiction nominees, and the message comes through loud and clear. Craig in Fouling Out, Trina and her friends in Carlos Is Gonna Get It, and Tirio in Bringing the Boy Home all have to pass through their own rite of passage and come to some understanding that “coming of age” involves more than just celebrating a birthday. There’s some disillusionment and some hard facts of life to face at the end of each novel, but there’s also hope for the main character/narrator in each book and for the friend/helper whose problems impel each one to maturity.

Fouling Out, a Canadian title, begins with Craig Trilosky getting more than a little tired of his friend Tom. The boys have been friends since second grade, but Tom is becoming more and more wild and trouble-prone while Craig’s thinking he might make a lot fewer trips to the principal’s office and be more popular with the rest of the seventh grade class if he stopped hanging out with Tom so much. Changing your life and making new friends and loyalty to old friendships are a few of the themes of the book, and although Craig is low-class seventh grade —jaded, blase, and insecure underneath all the sarcasm and bravado—the thematic elements carried the story in spite of my antipathy for the narrator thoughout much of the book. I wanted Craig to lose the derisive and defiant voice, but I realized as I read that part of the message of the book was that change doesn’t come overnight, that growing up is a process, and that even underachieving and somewhat obnoxious seventh grade boys may have redeeming qualities.

I remembered that lesson as I read Carlos Is Gonna Get It by Kevin Emerson. I didn’t like the narrator of this one very much either at first. In fact, all through the book I just wanted to tell Trina to quit being so self-absorbed and get a life. She and her friends Thea, Sara, Donte, and Frankie, are, at the beginning of the story, absorbed in righting petty injustices with equally petty acts of retribution: call someone a hateful name, and Thea or one of the others will trip you at recess. Carlos (not a friend), however, is so weird and so disruptive and so annoying that his actions call for a plan that will stop his trouble-making once and for all. Trina thinks of herself as a “good girl” who just has to to get into trouble every once in a while. Her friends have equally well-drawn personalities, and the way the author used the events in the story to reveal his characters’ depths was one of my favorite aspects of the book. My most un-favorite aspect was the language: lots of OMG, God’s name used in vain as punctuation. The way the characters talked was also revealing, but I didn’t enjoy it at all. In fact I almost put the book down and quit, but the final scene got me. As Trina foresees/recounts the eighth grade futures of all the main characters in the book, the story becomes a poignantly bittersweet reflection on growing up and missed opportunities.

My favorite of these three seventh grade coming-of-age novels was N.A. Nelson’s Bringing the Boy Home. Tirio was cast out of the Takunami tribe at the age of six —by his own mother who placed him in a “corpse canoe” and sent him out into the current of the Amazon River. Tirio’s maimed foot made him a liability to the tribe, and he would never be able to pass the test of manhood. Rescued by an American anthropologist, Sara, Tirio goes to the United States, receives medical help for his foot, and grows up as normal soccer-playing American boy. But he doesn’t forget about his soche seche tente, his thirteen year old test of manhood, and now seven years after he left the Amazon, he’s being called back by the spirits, the good Gods, and by his father, the one who said he was too crippled to ever become a real man.

This story, although fictional, reminded me of so many things: first, the true story of Jim Elliot and Nate Saint who died in an attempt to bring the gospel to the isolated Auca/Waorani tribe in Amazonian Ecuador. Tirio’s Takunami tribe and its customs are made-up, but the author traveled in the Amazon jungle and incorporated what he learned there into his book. I was also struck by the parallels between Tirio’s fictional experience of clashing cultures, and the experience of a boy who is the adopted son of a close friend of mine. “Noah”, my friend, was born in Sierra Leone, and his arm was deliberately mangled in the fighting that has been going on there for some time. Christian missionaries brought “Noah” to the U.S. where he was able to receive medical care and a new family. (“Noah’s” parent’s died in Sierra Leone.) Like Tirio, “Noah” has been and continues to be challenged as he tries to integrate his cultural heritage and and his new family and American upbringing.

There’s no religious teaching of any kind, certainly not Christianity, in Tirio’s American experience. Tirio continues to believe in and depend upon “the good Gods” of his Takunami tribe with no conflicting messages from a Christian perspective. I think that’s a shame and a missed opportunity because it would be an interesting conflict to explore, but that’s not the book Mr. Nelson chose to write. And the book he did write is good enough, full of descriptive passages that made my mental picture of the Brazilian rain forest vivid and with plenty of action to satisfy the most adventurous of readers.

Bringing the Boy Home is highly recommended, and the other two books are worth reading and discussing if you can get past the narrator’s attitude in both and the casual profanity in Carlos.

A list of the Cybils Middle Grade Fiction nominees with links to panelists’ reviews of each book.

Semicolon reviews of Children’s and YA fiction of 2008, mostly Cybils nominees.

Poetry Friday: Despair and Faith

“I can truthfully affirm that I never learned anything which would now be considered worth learning until I had done with them all (governesses) and started foraging for myself. I did have a few months of boarding-school at the end, and a very good school for its day it was, but it left no lasting impression on my mind.”
~Ada Cambridge Cross

Ada Cambridge Cross was a British Australian writer born on this date in 1844. She was married to the Rev. George Frederick Cross, and she began writing to make money to help support their five children. (I suppose the pastorate in Australia didn’t pay too well.)

She wrote novels as well as poetry, and the following poems are two of her sonnets:

Despair
Alone! Alone! No beacon, far or near!
No chart, no compass, and no anchor stay!
Like melting fog the mirage melts away
In all-surrounding darkness, void and clear.
Drifting, I spread vain hands, and vainly peer
And vainly call for pilot, — weep and pray;
Beyond these limits not the faintest ray
Shows distant coast whereto the lost may steer.
O what is life, if we must hold it thus
As wind-blown sparks hold momentary fire?
What are these gifts without the larger boon?
O what is art, or wealth, or fame to us
Who scarce have time to know what we desire?
O what is love, if we must part so soon?

Faith
And is the great cause lost beyond recall?
Have all the hopes of ages come to naught?
Is life no more with noble meaning fraught?
Is life but death, and love its funeral pall?
Maybe. And still on bended knees I fall,
Filled with a faith no preacher ever taught.
O God — MY God — by no false prophet wrought —
I believe still, in despite of it all!
Let go the myths and creeds of groping men.
This clay knows naught — the Potter understands.
I own that Power divine beyond my ken,
And still can leave me in His shaping hands.
But, O my God, that madest me to feel,
Forgive the anguish of the turning wheel!

Children’s Fiction of 2008: Cybils Nominees Briefly Mentioned

10 Lucky Things That Have Happened to Me Since I Nearly Got Hit by Lightning by Mary Hershey. In this sequel to My Big Sister Is So Bossy She Says You Can’t Read This Book, ten year old Effie’s happy with her two best friends, Nit and Aurora, and her mom, the coach, and her bossy sister even though Effie’s dad is in prison for embezzlement. But when Aurora leaves their private school to go to public school, and when Mom’s friend, Father Frank moves in to get himself sorted out, and when bossy Maxey starts acting like a saint to impress the priest, Effie feels she must figure out how to straighten them all out and make everything return to way it used to be.

Longhorns and Outlaws by Linda Aksomitis. Twelve year old Lucas Vogel’s parents died in the Galveston Hurricane of 1900, and now his older brother Gil wants him to go with him to Montana and become a cowboy. But Lucas wants to go to school and eventually become a Pinkerton agent who chases down outlaws like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. I’d recommend this one as a supplement to state history studies of Montana or of the turn of the century time period. Ms. Aksomitis has a website with free resources for teachers and links to free Old West movies. There’s a sequel in the works called Kidnapped by Outlaws.

A Thousand Never Evers by Shana Burg. In Kuckachoo, Mississippi, 1963, twelve year old Addie Ann Pickett sees injustice and the courage of those who fight against it as the Civil Rights movement begins to change life even in a small town in the Deep South.
Complete review at The Well Read Child.

Autumn Winifred Oliver Does Things Different by Kristin O’Donnell Tubb. Set on the edge of the Great Smoky Mountains during the Great Depression, this book is narrated by the eponymous Autumn who prides herself on doing things “different.” However, when she and her sister and her mama move in to Gramps cabin to take care of him instead of going to live with Pop in Knoxville, Autumn must deal with a great deal of “different” that she didn’t plan on at all.

Itch by Michele Kwasney. After the death of her beloved grandfather, Delores aka Itch moves with her grandmother from Florida to Ohio, under protest. She makes a new friend, Gwendolyn, but finds that the talented baton twirler has serious family problems (child abuse). Delores/Itch must learn to speak up and tell the truth even when it’s hard.
Full review from Bill at Literate Lives.

The Buddha’s Diamonds by Carolyn Marsden. A coming-of-age story set in present day Vietnam, this short book tells about Tinh and how he comes to understand his relationship to his father and his spiritual heritage of Buddhism.
Good review by cloudscome at a wrung sponge.

The Curse of Addy McMahon by Katie Davis. We’ve come full circle with a book in which a girl loses her best friend due to a misunderstanding, worries because her mother’s (boy)friend is moving in, and decides that she’s the victim of the McMahon family curse. Pair this one with 10 Lucky Things.
Cynsations interview with Katie Davis.

These are briefly mentioned because I’m reading furiously to complete as many of the 139 books on the Middle Grade fiction nominees list as I can before our panel must decide on the finalists. Stay tuned for more reviews and news about Cybils nominees.

A list of the Cybils Middle Grade Fiction nominees with links to panelists’ reviews of each book.

Semicolon reviews of Children’s and YA fiction of 2008, mostly Cybils nominees.

Children’s Fiction of 2008: Julia Gillian and the Art of Knowing by Alison McGhee

Julia Gillian has an unusual name, a loyal, healthy St. Bernard named Bigfoot, and a list of accomplishments that extends to the front and back of a piece of lined notebook paper. She’s the only child of two teacher parents, and I can only speculate that tendency toward prissiness and precocity stems from her family situation. I found it difficult to enjoy Julia Gillian at first, but by the end of the book I was used to her precise and somewhat prim voice. I was rooting for her to overcome her fears and get used to the things she cannot change about her essentially happy and secure life.

Julia Gillian is certainly not a madcap romp or a mysterious adventure, but it might suit the more sedate among the early elementary set. The story takes place over the course of a summer, and Julia Gillian matures and learns to venture into unknown territory and adds to her list of accomplishments. What more can one ask of a hot Minneapolis summer?

Book bloggers and Julia Gillian and author Alison McGhee:

Mary Lee at A Year of Reading: “Julia Gillian is a spunky as Clementine, with as unique a world view, but she’s a little older and a little more serious. I’ll be waiting just as anxiously for the next book in the series.”

Little Willow interviews Alison McGhee.

Alison McGhee’s website.

Children’s Fiction of 2008: The Island of Mad Scientists by Howard Whitehouse

Being an Excursion to the Wilds of Scotland, Involving Many Marvels of Experimental Invention, Pirates, a Heroic Cat, a Mechanical Man and a Monkey in the series The Mad Misadventures of Emmaline and Rubberbone.

The subtitle just about says it all. This book made me laugh out loud and reminded me of M.T. Anderson’s series of Thrilling Tales (See my review of The Clue of the Linoleum Lederhosen) and of a Little Orphan Annie cartoon story and of the movie version of Jules Verne’s Around the World the World in Eighty Days, among other things. (It’s a book full of allusions and reminders.) The setting is Victorian England, or rather Scotland. The pace is frenetic. The characters are:

Emmaline Cayley, a thirteen year old pioneer of aviation,
Rubberbones aka Rab aka Errand Boy aka Robert Burns, a bouncing boy with “indestruckable” physique,
Aunt Lucy Butterworth, the Best Sort of (very large) Aunt,
Lal Singh, a mysterious and heroic butler,
Professor Ozymandias Bellbuckle, a mad scientist from Georgia, USA,
Princess Purnah, a royal personage, also thirteen years old, daughter of the late Mir of Chiligrit (somewhere in Central Asia),
The Collector, insane, obsessive yet organized kidnapper of eminent scientists,
Samuel Soap, a master of disguise,
Hrecules and Titch, little thug and Big Thug,
Angus, a Scottish automaton,
and several other assorted minor characters and cameo appearances including Sherlock Holmes, Queen Victoria, Harry the Hobo, Maisie the cat, and several mad scientists in various stages of madness.

With such a cast, the author could afford to throw them all into peril and have them chase each other all over the British isle and run into each other at such inopportune moments as fortune and a loose plot would allow. It all makes for a lot of fun, especially since Princess Purnah never learned to speak English properly and says things like, “Here is weapony for smitings, Auntilucy. I go now. Slay thee many policishes with mighty blows of umbrelly!” Meanwhile, Emmaline tries to keep Professor Bellbuckle from the inordinate use of explosives, while Rubberbones and Lal Singh settle in on the island of Urgghh, a haven for mad scientists off the northern coast of Scotland.

I gather that The Island of Mad Scientists is a sequel to The Strictest School in the World: Being the Tale of a Clever Girl, a Rubber Boy and a Collection of Flying Machines, Mostly Broken, the first misadventure of Emmaline and Rubberbones in which Emmaline and Princess Purnah escape from a school run by the infamous Mrs. Malvolia Wackett. The second in the series is called The Faceless Fiend: Being the Tale of a Criminal Mastermind, His Masked Minions and a Princess with a Butter Knife. And there is more than a hint toward the end of the book that this third tale might not be end of the mad misadventures of Emmaline and Rubberbones. Still this book stands on its own quite well and might just induce me to find a copy of books one and two in the series.

Recommended for fun and frivolity.

Other blogger reviews:

Melissa at Book Nut: ” . . . this book is a grand romp. Hilarious, milk-snorting-through-nose funny, I can’t remember when I’ve had so much fun reading. It’s full of grand asides, amusing language, silly situations… everything a comic novel should have.”

Educating Alice: “In the witty alternate history tradition of Joan Aiken, but with a distinct feel all of their own, these books are a delight to read.”

Mr. Whitehouse’s blog.

Adolescence Obsolescent?

Newt Gingrich: Let’s End Adolescence.

More from Anne at PalmPundit.

Matthew Lee Anderson on the Controversial Case Against Adolescence.

Joseph Rendini at The Culture Project blog: Demographics vs. Culture, Slicing Horizontally, not Vertically.

Should Kids Be Able to Graduate After 10th Grade? Our local school district is already doing this in practice if not in name with many students taking a full load of dual credit classes at the local junior college. I think they’re following the lead of homeschooled students who began doing dual credit as a supplement to or substitute for the last two years of high school about six to ten years ago around here. Now it’s the norm among homeschoolers, and becoming the expected thing for academically advanced public schoolers, in my Major Suburban neck of the woods.

This topic of the artificiality and superfluity of the concept of adolescence fascinates me. I read The Case Against Adolescence, and although I had issues with the author’s emphasis on competency testing as gateway to legal rights and responsibilities, I agreed with his basic premise that young people should be able to take on adult rights and responsibilities as soon as they are able to do so rather than being artificially restricted by number of years they’ve been alive. In other words, why can’t fifteen and sixteen year olds get married? They did so for centuries before we invented adolescence and the teenager. Why shouldn’t thirteen, fourteen and fifteen year olds own property, earn wages for honest labor, and drive if they are able to do these things safely and are not being coerced to do them?

Homeschooled twins Alex and Brett Harris wrote a book, published last year, called Do Hard Things. It was a call to other young people to grow up and follow the Biblical mandate found in I TImothy 4:12:

Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity.

Let’s treat our young people as if they were functioning, intelligent adults insofar as legally possible and see what happens. I think we might be pleasantly surprised.