Young Adult Fiction of 2007: If a Tree Falls at Lunch Period by Gennifer Choldenko

Brown Bear’s Review:
This book has two main characters.

First, there’s Kirsten McKenna, a slightly plump girl with a genius younger sister named Kippy, two parents who fight all the time, and a giggle that Kirsten insists, to use it, you have to be “…size three and named Barbie.” She also has a best friend named Rory. But suddenly, Rory doesn’t seem like the best friend she had been. She’s been hanging around with Brianna, the queen bee of Mountain School, whom Kirsten hates. Her mom keeps giving her unwanted advice, and Kirsten dislikes the way her father calls her a genius when everyone knows that’s Kippy, not her.

Then, there’s Walker Jones, who’s being sent to a private school and is trying his best to stay out of trouble, somewhat aided and abetted by his cousin, Jamal, with whom he went to school before switching. Even though Walk has better friends now, like Matteo, his mother, Sylvia, is still afraid he’ll wind up in juvie hall. Walk says, “Don’t have to worry, Momma. Before I go bad I’ll let you know, send a Hallmark card ready-made for the occasion…’On the Eve Your Son Messes Up’,” but Sylvia doesn’t think it’s funny.

Kirsten and Walker are similar to each other. They go to the the same school, they are in the same grade, and they are friends. But there is one, seemingly important, difference: One is white and the other is black.

I enjoyed this book. It was a very good story and it was funny. I love a book that can make me laugh out loud.

There were, however a couple of things that bothered me. For one thing, the two main characters, who were supposed to be in seventh grade, seemed to act much older than that. Maybe it was just me…?

Also, the book starts out involving, mostly, Kirsten and Walk’s problems at school and how they deal with them there and at home, and for about two thirds of the book, this is most of what the story is about. However, the key part of the story, which takes place in about the last third of the book, doesn’t really involve the school at all. There is very, very little foreshadowing of what happens at this point.

But despite this, it was a good book, funny and interesting.

Sherry’s thoughts:

The two main characters alternate chapters; one chapter is told from Kirsten’s point of view, in first person, and then the next is told from Walk’s point of view, but in third person. I found this switch in persons, especially, somewhat confusing, and I couldn’t really discern the author’s purpose in organizing the book this way. Also, Brown Bear’s right: the kids in the story do act more like ninth or tenth graders. The mom in the story is disturbing. Her emphasis on popularity at any cost is not doing her daughter any good at all, and mom’s problems seem to overwhelm her parenting abilities and make her into Monster Mom.

This book may be more appropriate for older kids, young adult rather than middle grade. I certainly wouldn’t recommend it for children who are still in elementary school. There are plot developments, the ones Brown Bear refers to at the end of her review, that would confuse many younger children.

If a Tree Falls at Lunch Period has been nominated for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction.

More reviews:

Becky’s Book Reviews: “Anyway, the book is well written. And it’s a fast, enjoyable read. While not all the characters are likable, all are well-developed.”

In the Pages: “I absolutley HAD to read this one as I loved her book, Al Capone Does My Shirts. I will preface by saying it didn’t hit me AS HARD as Al Capone, but I did like it, and I think teens will enjoy it as well.”

Books4Ever: “This is a great story with a major surprise that really looks at what it means to be a family. The book switched off perspectives between Walk and Kirsten which gives you many sides to what life is like for these two middle schoolers.”

Children’s Fiction of 2007: The Talented Clementine by Sara Pennypacker

Betsy-Bee’s review (Betsy-Bee is also eight years old, just like Clementine):

Clementine is a eight year old girl in third grade. When her teacher announces that they will have a talent show, Clementine thinks that she does not have a talent. But she must not know what talent it is. Her friend, Margaret, who has lots and lots of talents tries to help her, but it was no use (she did them all wrong!). Sometimes I think I do not have a talent, but I really do. (I just do not think hard enough!)

The day before the talent show she tells her mom and dad that she has a big surprise on the talent show, but she could not do what she was going to do. When she gets to the talent show she tells the directors of the show, that she does not have a talent for the show. So when one of the directors has to go, the other one says to Clementine, “Will you help me with the show?”

Clementine refused, but the director insisted. So she did. At the end of the show they clapped for the people in the talent show, then the director came on stage and told everybody who was there that if Clementine was not here there would be no show. And it was Clementine. They gave her a round of applause! When she got home her mom and dad decided to take her with them to a restaurant. You should really read The Talented Clementine today.

The End!

Children’s Fiction of 2007: Not Yet Nominated

cybilsI’m on the nominating panel for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction. The Cybil Awards are blogger-nominated and blogger-chosen awards for children’s and young adult literature. This year is the second year for the Cybil Awards (2006 winners), and we’ve had a lot of books nominated in seven categories: Picture Books; Non-fiction Picture Books; Middle Grade fiction; Poetry; Young Adult fiction; Non-fiction (YA/MG); and Graphic Novels.

Anyone with an e-mail address may nominate one book per category. Then groups of bloggers get to work. First, a nominating committee reads ALL the titles in a given category. After nearly two arduous months, this committee winnows the nominees to five finalists. A second committee of bloggers considers the shortlist and, after much debate, chooses the best of the best for 2007. The nominations close on November 21. So if your favorite middle grade fiction book, published in 2007, is on this list go over to the Cybils blog and nominate it. Or if you have a another favorite 2007 book, check to see if it’s been nominated.

Here’s my list of books that are nominated so far for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction. And the books in the list below are eligible and have not been nominated, as far as I can tell:

The Story of Jonas by Maurine Dahlberg. Semicolon review here.

Do Not Pass Go by Kirkpatrick Hill. Semicolon review here.

The Lacemaker and the Princess by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley. Semicolon review here.

Spelldown by Karen Luddy. Semicolon review here.

The Theft and the Miracle by Rebecca Wade. Semicolon review here.

Ellie McDoodle: Have Pen, Will Travel by Ruth McNally Barshaw. NOMINATED.

Hunted by Christopher Russell. I read this book, published in the U.S. in 2007, and so eligible for the Cybil Award, a couple of months ago. I forgot to review it here, and now I don’t remember enough details to do so. I thought it was good historical (medieval) fiction, and I enjoyed reading it.

The Dog Who Thought He Was Santa by Bill Wallace. I haven’t read this one, but I saw it at the library and thought it looked like fun.

LawnBoy by Gary Paulsen.

Brendan Buckley’s Universe and Everything In It by Sundee Frazier

Summer Ball by Mike Lupica.

Toby Wheeler, Eighth Grade Benchwarmer by Thatcher Heldring.

Edward’s Eyes by Patricia Maclachlan.

First Light by Rebecca Stead.

The Mother-Daughter Book Club by Heather Vogel Frederick.

Leap of Faith by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born November 12th

'Richard Baxter' photo (c) 2011, Skara kommun - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/Richard Baxter, b. 1615. Puritan preacher, he wrote over 140 books of sermons, devotions, and instruction. Baxter is the author of this famous dictum on Christian unity:

In necessary things, unity; in doubtful things, liberty; in all things, charity.

Let’s thank God today for Richard Baxter and all his fellow Puritans. They may have sometimes lapsed into legalism, but at their best they were passionate followers of Jesus Christ, dedicated to Christian unity, Christian liberty, and Christian charity.

More Support for Huckabee, and Some Questions

It’s your Monday morning, Veteran’s Day, Mike Huckabee for President post. As usual, your mileage may vary.

Author Randy Alcorn supports Huckabee for President: “In my opinion, Huckabee doesn’t just know the words; he knows the music. You can see the authenticity in him. I heard him say, ‘I do not spell G-O-D G.O.P.’ That means he’s a follower of Christ before he’s a follower of the Republican party. He’s not overbearing in his spiritual beliefs, but he never apologizes for them. He’s humble and self-effacing. He’s not in your face, yet he’s firm in conviction. I actually think this guy says what he believes and believes what he says. And I have to say, I don’t think that about most politicians.”

Southern Baptist leader and pastor Rick Scarborough supports Huckabee: “Some criticize his alleged “big” government approach to problem solving. I’d rather debate that issue with a candidate than abortion, same-sex marriage and marital infidelity.”

So, why in the world, would televangelist Pat Robertson endorse Rudy Guiliani, of all people? Does he think Guiliani is inevitable and want to have influence with the winning Republican nominee? I cannnot understand how any pro-life voter could support Mr. Guiliani’s candidacy, since his nomination as the Republican candidate would only lead us into an election in which there is NO pro-life candidate for whom to vote. I am almost sure that this eventuality would cause many, many pro-life Republican voters to either stay home or vote for a Democrat. Why not? If you are indifferent to economic issues and if you hate the war in Iraq, positions which many Republicans “values voters” hold, why not vote for the Democrat since abortion will continue on its merry way with either Guiliani or Clinton or Obama or Edwards as president?

I also fail to understand Senator Brownback’s endorsement of fellow senator John McCain. Is it a case of throwing a bone to an old friend? Well, I have a lot of respect for Senator Brownback, especially his fight against modern-day slavery, but John McCain has never been my friend, nor has he ever been a true friend to Christian pro-life voters. I just don’t believe in his more recent buddy-buddy behavior in regard to evangelical Christians; I have a longer memory than that.

So, my question to people of faith who believe that abortion is categorically wrong and is destroying the soul of this nation: if not Huckabee, then who?

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born November 11th

I posted this quiz a couple of years ago on this date, but I think it’ll fly again. Leave your guesses in the comments.

He was born on this date in 1821.

While he was at school, his father was murdered by his own servants at the family’s small country estate.

He graduated from engineering school but chose a literary career.

He was arrested and charged with subversion because of his meetings with a group of intellectuals to discuss politics and literature. He and several of his associates were imprisoned and sentenced to death. As they were facing the firing squad, an imperial messenger arrived with the announcement that the death sentences had been commuted to four years in prison and four years of military service..

While in prison, his intense study of the New Testament, the only book the prisoners were allowed to read, contributed to his rejection of his earlier liberal political views and led him to the conviction that redemption is possible only through suffering and faith.

In 1867, he fled to Europe with his second wife to escape creditors.

He returned home and finished what many consider to be his greatest novel two months before his death in 1881.

Quotes by Mr. X:

“Man only likes to count his troubles, but he does not count his joys.”

“It’s life that matters, nothing but life–the process of discovering, the everlasting and perpetual process, not the discovery itself at all.”
“So long as man remains free he strives for nothing so incessantly and so painfully as to find some one to worship.”

“If there is no God, then I am God.”

“Taking a new step, uttering a new word is what people fear most.”

Quotes about Mr. X:

“…the only psychologist from whom I have anything to learn.” – Nietzsche

“. . . gives me more than any scientist, more than Gauss.” – Albert Einstein

“an author whose Christian sympathy is ordinarily devoted to human misery, sin, vice, the depths of lust and crime, rather than to nobility of body and soul” -Thomas Mann

“..the nastiest Christian I’ve ever met”.-Turgenev

“He was in the rank in which we set Dante, Shakespeare and Goethe.” – Edwin Muir

“My husband was to me such an interesting and wholly enigmatic being, that it seemed to me as though I should find it easier to understand him if I noted down his every thought and expression.” -Mr X’s second wife
(My response to Mrs. X’s observation is: aren’t they all? But who would have time or energy to write it all down–and then try to figure it out?)

Finally, I never have been able to decide how to spell his name. So who is it? And what about you? Have you read his novels? What did you think? Do you find him gloomy and sad or interesting and enigmatic–or all of the preceeding? And how do you spell his name?

Nominated for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction (so far)

cybilsI’m on the nominating panel for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction. The Cybil Awards are blogger-nominated and blogger-chosen awards for children’s and young adult literature. This year is the second year for the Cybil Awards (2006 winners), and we’ve had a lot of books nominated in seven categories: Picture Books; Non-fiction Picture Books; Middle Grade fiction; Poetry; Young Adult fiction; Non-fiction (YA/MG); and Graphic Novels.

Anyone with an e-mail address may nominate one book per category. Then groups of bloggers get to work. First, a nominating committee reads ALL the titles in a given category. After nearly two arduous months, this committee winnows the nominees to five finalists. A second committee of bloggers considers the shortlist and, after much debate, chooses the best of the best for 2007. The nominations close on November 21. So if your favorite middle grade fiction book, published in 2007, is NOT on this list go over to the Cybils blog and nominate it. Or if you have a favorite 2007 book in another category, check to see if it’s been nominated.

As if I don’t have enough to read . . .

Annie’s War by Jacqueline Levering Sullivan.

Annie: The Mysterious Morgan Horse by Ellen F Feld.

Aurora County All Stars by Deborah Wiles. Semicolon review of The Aurora County All-Stars.

Bearwalker by Joseph Bruchac

Bird Springs by Carolyn Marsden.

The Broken Bike Boy & The Queen of 33rd Street by Sharon Flake. Semicolon review of The Broken Bike Boy and the Queen of 33rd Street.

Camel Rider by Prue Mason. Semicolon review of Camel Rider.

Cassie Was Here by Caroline Hickey.

Cat on the Mat is Flat by Andy Griffiths, illustrated by Terry Denton.

Celeste’s Harlem Renaissance by Eleanora E Tate. Semicolon review here.

Chess Rumble by G Neri.

Clarice Bean, Don’t Look Now by Lauren Child.

Class Favorite by Taylor Morris.

Cork & Fuzz: Good Sports by Dori J. Chaconas, illustrated by Lisa McCue. Betsy-Bee and Semicolon joint review of Cork and Fuzz.

Cracker by Cynthia Kadohata.

A Crooked Kind of Perfect by Linda Urban.

Dear Jo by Christina Kilbourne.

Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney. Karate Kid reviews Diary of a Wimpy Kid.

Edward’s Eyes by Patricia Maclachlan.

Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis.

Ellie McDoodle by Ruth Barshaw.

Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis. Brown Bear and Semicolon joint review of Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree.

Freak by Marcella Pixley.

Friskative Dog by Susan Straight.

Greetings From Planet Earth by Barbara Kerley.

Home of the Brave by Katherine Applegate. Semicolon review of Home of the Brave.

Honestly, Mallory! by Laurie Friedman

How To Steal A Dog by Barbara O’Connor. Karate Kid’s review of How To Steal a Dog.

If a Tree Falls At Lunch Period by Gennifer Choldenko. Brown Bear and Semicolon review If a Tree Falls at Lunch Period.

The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick.

The Isle of the Swords by Wayne Thomas Batson

Kiki Strke: The Empress’s Tomb by Kirsten Miller. Brown Bear’s review of Kiki Strike, the first book in this series.

Kimchi & Calamari by Rose Kent.

Leap of Faith by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley.

Leepike Ridge by Nathan D. Wilson. Karate Kid’s review of Leepike Ridge. Semicolon review of Leepike Ridge.

Lemonade War by Jacqueline Davies. Karate Kid’s review of The Lemonade War. Semicolon review of The Lemonade War.

Letters from Rapunzel by Sarah Lewis Holmes.

Louisiana’s Song by Kerry Madden. Semicolon review of Louisiana’s Song.

Lucy Rose: Working Myself to Bits and Pieces by Katy Kelly.

Me and the Pumpkin Queen by Marlane Kennedy.

The Middle of Somewhere by JB Cheany Semicolon review of The Middle of Somewhere.

Middle School is Worse Than Meat Loaf by Jennifer Holm. Semicolon review of Middle Is Worse Than Meatloaf.

Miss Spitfire by Sarah Miller. Semicolon review of Miss Spitfire.

Moxy Maxwell Does Not Like Stuart Little by Peggy Gifford. Besty-Bee and Semicolon joint review of Moxy Maxwell Does Not Love Stuart Little.

My Last Best Friend by Julie Bowe.

Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Stewart. Semicolon review of The Mysterious Benedict Society.

No Castles Here by ACE Bauer

No Talking by Andrew Clements. Karate Kid and Semicolon joint review of No Talking.

Paint the Wind by Pam Munoz Ryan.

Penina Levine is a Hard Boiled Egg by Rebecca O’Connell.

Perch, Mrs Sackets, and Crows Nest by Karen Pavlicin.

The Puzzling World of Winston Breen by Eric Berlin.

Qwikpick Adventure Society by Sam Riddleburger

Reaching For Sun by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer. Semicolon review here.

Regarding the Bees by Kate & Sara Klise

Rickshaw Girl by Mitali Perkins. Semicolon review of Rickshaw Girl.

Rising Star of Rusty Nail by Lesley MM Blume. Semicolon review of The Rising Star of Rusty Nail.

Runaround by Helen Hemphill.

The Secret Identity of Devon Delaney by Lauren Barnholdt.

Seeing Sky Blue Pink by Candice Ransom.

So Totally Emily Ebers by Lisa Yee.

Social Experiments of Dorie Dilts: Duped by Popular Demand by PG Kain.

Someone Named Eva by Joan Wolf. Semicolon review of Someone Named Eva.

The Talented Clementine by Sara Pennypacker.

Tales of a Texas Boy by Marva Dasef.

Tall Tales by Karen Day. Semicolon review here.

The Thing About Georgie by Lisa Graff. Semicolon review of The Thing About Georgie.

Twelve by Lauren Myracle

Way Down Deep by Ruth White. Semicolon review of Way Down Deep.

Webb’s Wondrous Tales Book 2 by Mack Webb & Celia Webb (illus).

Wednesday Wars by Gary D. Schmidt.

What the Dickens by Gregory Maguire

When Heaven Fell by Carolyn Marsden

Wild Girls by Pat Murphy.

Children’s Fiction of 2007:The Middle of Somewhere by J.B. Cheaney

Finally, a book I loved. I was on a bad streak earlier this week, but The Middle of Somewhere is a book to end the losing streak. As Kent Clark says, “Don’t let life’s little surprises get you down. Expect the unexpected! Remember, there’s always a Plan B.” Who is Kent Clark? He’s the author of Seize the Way: Ten Weeks to SuperSize Your Life!. (Don’t bother to go looking at Amazon; I think it’s a made up book.) The quotations from Mr. Clark’s opus that introduce the first several chapters are priceless, as our protagonist and narrator, Veronica Sparks aka Ronnie, uses Mr. Clark’s positive thinking philosophy to guide her through the joys and difficulties of a summer road trip through Kansas.

I’m a bit ahead of myself, however. Twelve year old Ronnie has a younger brother, Gee, who’s six years old and seriously ADHD. Now, I must admit to being something of a skeptic when it comes to attention deficit and hyperactivity. I saw too many zombies overdosed on Ritalin when I was a school librarian in another life. However, even though I believe the condition is over-diagnosed and over-medicated, I do believe it’s real. Some kids just can’t pay attention and have a great deal of trouble learning to look before they leap. Gee, short for Gerald, is one of those real cases. I liked the way sister Ronnie accepts her brother the way he is, hyperactivity and all. She gets frustrated with him, defends him, rescues him and wants to get away from him for a break, sometimes all in the same day, sometimes all in the same hour.

When the two children get the chance to accompany their unsuspecting grandfather on a business trip through Kansas in his brand new RV, chaos ensues. Gee hardly ever slows down, and Ronnie has her hands full taking care of Gee and placating her crochety old grandfather so that he won’t turn around and take them back to Missouri. Then, in a plot development reminiscent of Betsy Byars’s Newbery Award book, The Summer of the Swans, Gee disappears, and Ronnie, Pop, the state police, and Ronnie’s new friend, Howard, a Kansas farm boy, all combine forces to find Gee and his hero Canonball Paul, who’s probably the magnet that drew Gee to run away in the first place. If that’s as clear as mud, rest assured that Ms. Cheaney is a much better writer than I am, and if you read the book, all shall be revealed. Plus you’ll develop an appreciation for ADHD kids and their families, and you might even look to see what else Ms. Cheaney has written. I did.

I liked the fact that the characters in this book are Real. Ronnie is a great big sister, but she gets tired and even calls Gee “a dummy” at one point in the story. Pop, the grandfather, is a not-so-great grandfather who’s neglected his progeny in the past, and who has no idea what he has committed to when he takes Gee on a road trip. I liked Pop in spite of his shortcomings; he reminded me of my own grandfather who was a salesman with an itchy foot, too. Ronnie’s and Gee’s mom is a wonderful mother who misses her children, but who can’t help being relieved about being left to recover from her broken leg in peace and quiet.

Then, too, Ms. Cheaney’s writing is great. Try these sentences on for size:

“But as good as Sunday ended, Monday opened up rainbows, sunbeams, and white-water rapids of potential goodness.”

“Mama and I hunkered down expectantly, knowing we were about to hear the story that was almost popping out of Pop.”

“The sight of that maroon-and-white house-on-wheels in our driveway was like the test that got postponed.”

“Now that he was up close and personal with this humongous thing, he seemed subdued —as if its sheer size had packed him into a ball of subduedness.”

The story also features a dog named Leo, a poker game with high stakes, a man who travels around Kansas shooting himself out of a cannon, and a genuine wind prospector selling “power from the sky.” What more could you ask?

The Middle of Somewhere is one of the books nominated for the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Fiction.

J.B. Cheaney’s website, where you can read biographical information, get teacher helps, and read some of Ms. Cheaney’s reviews of children’s fiction by other authors.

Susan Olasky interviews J.B. Cheaney and N.D. Wilson for WORLD magazine.

An Interview with J.B. Cheaney, Author of The Middle of Somewhere

cheaneyI’ve never really interviewed anyone before, not even via email, but Ms. Cheaney (the J stands for Janie) kindly agreed to be my guinea pig. Here’s a little bit of biographical information from her website:

“Some time after my daughter was born, I thought it might be fun to try writing a novel. I guess it was so much fun I went on over the years to write three more, but couldn’t find a publisher for any of them (that’s why they’re still packed away in boxes). But I did write three creative writing workbooks, called the Wordsmith series, which are still being sold, mostly to homeschoolers. Some time after my son graduated from high school in 1996. I started writing my first book intended for young-adult readers, based on an idea I had been thinking about for at least eight years. It became The Playmaker, published in the fall of 2000. The True Prince followed in 2002.

When not writing, or thinking about it, I like to travel, read, sing, sew, do needlework and sleep–though not necessarily in that order.”

Sherry: Eldest Daughter says every good interview begins with the question: what did you have for breakfast? (I think she’s crazy, but I like to humor her.)

Janie: Well, why not? I’m not a big breakfast eater, which is why I make myself whip up a smoothie every morning. Yogurt, frozen fruit, protein powder, juice and a banana–yum!

Sherry: This next question is probably only of interest to me, but since I graduated from Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas, and I saw at your website that you also went to school in Abilene, I have to ask: where?

Janie: ACU. Back then it was Abilene Christian College, rather than University. I didn’t actually attend school for long: I transferred there from a Junior college in Dallas, then dropped out after I got married during the semester break. (It was what you’d call a whirlwind courtship.) I audited some classes after that, but never finished a degree.

Sherry: I think I first read your writing in essays you’ve written for WORLD magazine. How did you come to write for WORLD?

Janie: WORLD was actually my first publisher. Back in 1990, I wrote an essay for their “Soul Food” column, which at that time was open to anybody who wished to submit. For the next few years I wrote some book reviews for them, then lapsed for a year or two while the editorial staff reorganized and the Olaskys came on board. I Submitted a Soul Food column about Dr. Laura Schlesinger to Susan Olasky in 1996, and have been a contributor ever since.

Sherry: One of my favorite authors, Madeleine L’Engle, once said something to the effect that she wrote for children because they were more open to understanding what she had to say than were adults. Why did you decide to write books for children rather than adults?

Janie: That was probably a result of homeschooling for twelve years and reading lots of children’s literature. I used to read aloud to my kids every morning, even after they were well able to read for themselves, and I was always scouting for good material at the library. In the process I discovered (or rediscovered) that children’s books are definitely better than adult fiction for story value, because kids aren’t impressed with literary flourishes or authorial showing-off. The only way to impress them is to tell a rousing tale, and an essay by C. S. Lewis (“On Stories”) helped me re-think just how important the story is. So it made sense to go to the audience that appreciated stories most.

Sherry: I think I liked The Middle of Somewhere partly because the setting in Kansas reminded me of West Texas where I grew up, and partly because the grandfather in the story reminded me of my own grandfather, who used to sell insurance and horses and who-knows-what-else. Did you know someone like Pop in the story?

Janie: The novel is dedicated to my husband, “who hates loud noises, sudden moves, and surprises.” He served as the model for Pop, having some of those same eccentricities (though he’s never been on a motorcycle and would never stand 3 1/2 days in a hard body contest).

Sherry: Another great character in the story is, of course, Gee, Ronnie’s ADHD little brother. Was it difficult to make him a sympathetic character and at the same time really annoying and worrisome? Again, do you have personal knowledge of a kid with ADHD, or did you just do a lot of research?

Janie: More than one reader has told me that my characterization of Gee is spot-on–which is gratifying, because I don’t know any kid like Gee. To capture his character, I relied somewhat on research (I didn’t do that much about ADHD specifically), plus a childhood memory of a distant cousin (slightly younger than I) whom I met only one time and who impressed me with his climbing ability. He would attempt to climb anything, including a sheer brick wall at a shopping mall we went to.

Sherry: Who are your favorite authors? What’s the best book you’ve read recently?

Janie: Best adult novel I’ve read recently (and I don’t read too many): Atonement, by Ian McEwan.
Best nonfiction book: Welcome to Lizard Motel, by Barbara Feinstein (it’s a memoir with some profound things to say about children’s literature)
Best children’s novel (argh, this is a tough choice): I’m going to take a chance and say Skin Hunger, by Kathleen Duey. It was nominated for this year’s National Book Award, which is why I checked it out. I’m taking a chance because I’m only halfway through and can’t make a final judgment. But it’s very promising.
Favorite children’s authors: Kenneth Oppel, Rick Riordan, Katherine Paterson, Leon Garfield, Daniel Pinkwater, Donna Jo Napoli, David Harrison, Joan Bauer . . . and others.

Sherry: I read your review of last year’s Newbery Award winner The Higher Power of Lucky, and I thought your criticisms were on target. However, I’m curious about how you maintain objectivity when reviewing an award winning book. I tend to think, when a book that I didn’t like very much receives a lot of praise, that I must have missed something. Does being a published author yourself give you confidence, or have you always been self-assured in your opinions on books?

Janie: I don’t think it has so much to do with self-confidence as it does with being passionate about literature. Which doesn’t mean I can’t be wrong about certain judgment calls, and much of what appeals to me is purely a matter of taste. A book can still be a good book, even though it doesn’t appeal to me personally. But a story must be true to itself–to its own internal logic–and The Higher Power of Lucky lacked that kind of integrity in some respects.

Sherry: I also noticed in one of your reviews that you criticized someone’s similes (don’t remember whose). As a writer of sometimes cliched and sometimes cringe-inducing metaphors and similes myself, how do I improve that aspect of my writing? How does a writer come up with fresh and expressive ways to use language?

Janie: Exercise your imagination by dreaming up lots of figures of speech. Some will work, and some won’t, but as you practice you’ll develop more of a sense of the effective simile or metaphor. The best figures of speech appear effortless (though of course they aren’t).

Sherry: I also read The Playmaker, and I’m planning to read the sequel to that book. Both books are set in Shakepeare’s England. Where and when were you introduced to Shakespeare, and what’s your favorite play?

Janie: I was introduced to Shakespeare in my backyard, age 10. The best way to meet him is NOT by reading him, which can be deadly–the plays were meant to be performed. My sister and I used to put on a play for our birthday party every year (we’re four years apart, but born in the same month), and that year she decided we’d do a version of Julius Caesar. We wrote our own, relying heavily on Richard Armour’s Twisted Tales From Shakespeare (Armor was a humorist popular at the time), but also using a lot of lines directly from the play. The experience gave me a certain chumminess with Shakespeare I wouldn’t have had otherwise.
My favorite play–actually plays–is Henry IV, parts one and two. The True Prince draws heavily on the Henry cycle.

Sherry: I liked your Shakespeare Goes to the Movies page, too. What’s your favorite movie adaptation of one of Shakespeare’s plays? (I love Branagh’s Henry V and Much Ado About Nothing.)

Janie: I like those too, but the one I keep going back to is Twelfth Night, directed by Trevor Nunn. It’s lovely.

Sherry: I have to ask: are you writing another book?

Janie: Not at the moment. I took 2007 “off,” in a sense, in order to promote The Middle of Somewhere. I do have a manuscript with my editor right now, but I think it’s going to need some work before they make me an offer on it.

Sherry: Thanks for taking the time to do this interview.

Janie: Thanks for the opportunity!

See above or click for my Semicolon review of The Middle of Somewhere, and try this WORLD magazine interview by Susan Olasky for more information about Ms. Cheaney and her writing.

Quaker Elitism: An Oxymoron

I started reading the book IQ: A Smart History of a Failed Idea by Stephen Murdoch, and he mentions Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C. in a discussion in the opening chapter of the book of schools requiring IQ testing for preschoolers. I looked at the Sidwell Friends School website and found there this statement:

We seek students who demonstrate the potential to meet high academic and personal standards and contribute to the vitality of the School. As a Quaker school affiliated with the Religious Society of Friends, we are committed to promoting the basic testimonies of Friends (Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality, and Stewardship) and providing all of our students with opportunities to “let their lives speak” of excellence and caring.

Doesn’t it seem deliciously ironic that a Quaker school, committed to “equality” and “simplicity” would be among the most elite private schools in the nation and would require that preschoolers take an IQ test, not to mention that if they are admitted, their parents pay over $25,000 in tuition per year?

From Wikipedia:

“Friends believe that all people are created equal in the eyes of God. Since all people embody the same divine spark all people deserve equal treatment. Friends were some of the first to value women as important ministers and to campaign for women’s rights; they became leaders in the anti-slavery movement, and were among the first to pioneer humane treatment for the mentally ill and for prisoners.”

It all just sounds a bit contradictory to me. But then I’ve never been a fan of elite private schools, nor have I ever understood all the fuss in the East, particularly Washington D.C., about getting your preschooler into the best private preschools that money and connections and IQ scores can buy.

To each his own, as my mom would say.