Bea and Belle, for a very good reason, my last two books are "middle grade" books. I stumbled upon them, happily for me, while I was volunteering with the Friends of the Library here in Burlington. My section to shelve is YA fiction, and there I found Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick and The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune. I love fantasy, and both of these are great! (Our book sale starts Sept. 9.)
yikes! i pressed “like” and here’s the comment box! i love the picture of Bea standing on her head and reading! i want to read everything ypu have recommended! you guys are amazing and i love FTT ( i might have figured out how to check in
I loved this post. Another reason for kids to reread -- they definitely pick up more vocabulary, sense of structure, etc., especially if the book was a bit of a stretch for them.
I wonder if Bea would like The Odyssey (read to her)? No Japan, but such amazing mythology and a great story. And maybe some Celtic mythology -- such strong women.
Bea and Belle, for a very good reason, my last two books are "middle grade" books. I stumbled upon them, happily for me, while I was volunteering with the Friends of the Library here in Burlington. My section to shelve is YA fiction, and there I found Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick and The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune. I love fantasy, and both of these are great! (Our book sale starts Sept. 9.)
yikes! i pressed “like” and here’s the comment box! i love the picture of Bea standing on her head and reading! i want to read everything ypu have recommended! you guys are amazing and i love FTT ( i might have figured out how to check in
I loved this post. Another reason for kids to reread -- they definitely pick up more vocabulary, sense of structure, etc., especially if the book was a bit of a stretch for them.
I wonder if Bea would like The Odyssey (read to her)? No Japan, but such amazing mythology and a great story. And maybe some Celtic mythology -- such strong women.