Who’s That Knocking on Christmas Eve

Who’s That Knocking on Christmas Eve? by Jan Brett

Sometime in the last five years I stumbled across this in the school library.  I was suckered in by polar bear on the cover and I took it out.  Imagine my shock! delight! amazement! That this is, in fact, a retelling of the same Norse folktale as The Cat on the Dovrefell.  I had to own it.

This time it is a young boy who is traveling with his ice bear.  And instead of taking possession of a deserted cottage, he shelters with a young girl whose father has headed to the mountains to attempt to cut off the trolls.  Of course, if the father were to be successful, there would be no real story, so naturally the defense of the cottage falls to the children.  They check all the entrances, but trolls are quite determined and after a good bit of knocking make their way inside.  Again they mistake the bear for a cat and tempt it with food, clearly an error in judgement.  As in The Cat on the Dovrefell the bear rises up and chases the trolls outside, saving Christmas forevermore.

Jan Brett’s version is certainly more beautiful and mysterious than DePaola’s.  The illustrations are in her typical highly detailed style with the insets on the sides adding even more to the story.  There’s enough here to keep focused lookers and listeners busy for awhile.   It doesn’t have the same humor as DePaola’s version however, and because of that (and perhaps the use of children as the main characters) it is much scarier when the trolls descend upon the house.

Great for: It’s a lot of fun to share both versions of this unusual holiday story and have your audience decide which they prefer.  Older children will be able to effectively compare and contrast the stories and make a judgment about which is better.  For classroom teachers this can serve as a nice filler activity towards the holidays when you don’t want to start a whole new unit but do want to continue teaching curriculum.  The setting of the books at Christmas will almost convince your students they’re having a special holiday treat.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – The boy encourages the bear to attack the trolls.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – Some children find the trolls in this book scarier than in the other book.  They are also coming into a house with children (in Cat on the Dovrefell there’s only an adult and a bear) which is a little more frightening.  The trolls also do a lot of knocking before they invade so there are some suspenseful elements.

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The Cat on the Dovrefell

Cat on the Dovrefell by George Desant
illustrated by Tomie de Paola

In recent years this has slowly crept into the coveted position of my favorite Christmas book.  This is in part due to the cadence of translation from the Norse and in part due to Tomie De Paola’s gloriously hideous trolls and puffy white polar bear who is adorable even with fangs bared.  Set on Christmas Eve, a man and his polar bear are en route to the King of Denmark and need a place to spend the night.  Under duress, Halvor offers the man his cottage with a stern warning that the trolls will descend upon him.  The man (clearly not feint of heart if he’s traveling with a polar bear) accepts.  The highlight of the book of course is the trolls feasting with abandon until they find the man’s “cat” (erm, polar bear) and poke it in the nose with a sausage.

I could not love it more.  Sadly, it is out of print and hard to find (my own copy is held together by nearly a full roll of book tape).  But if you can locate one, it might be an interesting change from the typical Santa, reindeer, elves, trains to the North Pole, evil green creature robbing Whos that you’re used to.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Well.  None.  But as an adult you may get a kick out of the troll screaming “Pussy, will you have some sausage?” at the polar bear.  Oh, troll.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – The polar bear shows its teeth and runs at the trolls. Halvor uses an axe to chop wood.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – The trolls might look too scary for the littlest readers, but many will find them funny.

 

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Snowed In

Snowed In by Rachel Hawthorne

Ashleigh Sneaux’s parents are getting divorced and her mother has whisked her away to a quaint frozen island in the great lakes.  In the tiny community it doesn’t take long to acquire a new self-proclaimed best friend, Nathalie.  It also doesn’t take long to fall for a handsome lumberjack type.  Of course, it is a bit awkward that he turns out to be Nathalie’s boyfriend, but this is a teen romance and if the tension isn’t between the boy and the girl, it’s got to come from somwhere!  While I didn’t get a sense of any real depth to the characters, the story was charming and pleasant and especially nice to read if you happen to be in a wintery wonderland (or wish you were!)

This is really a pretty PG rated romance novel.  There’s certainly dating and kissing, but the raciest the kissing gets is sitting on someone’s lap.  No worries about hot bodies pressed together or tongues probing in this one.  Definitely an option for girls who want all the grown-up feeling of reading a romance but aren’t ready for the hot and heavy stuff.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Dad and Mom are getting divorced.  There is some kissing and hand holding.  The term “hooking up” is used, but given the context seems to me “getting together” or “making out” and not the more carnal application it’s often used in these days.  There is some enthusiastic making out.  People cheat in relationships.
Profanity – “hell”, “bitch,”
Death, Violence and Gore – The main character is really into horror movies and is often scared of serial killers or bad things happening, but there’s nothing actually violent or scary.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – One girl compares dating to being at a wine tasting, but she does say she’s never been to a wine tasting.
Frightening or Intense Things – Some bats fly at Ashleigh and there’s a power outage, other than that, nothing scary.

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Let It Snow!

Let It Snow: Three Holiday Romances

When YA heavyweight authors like John Green and Maureen Johnson get together to write Christmas themed short stories, everybody wins.  The three tales in this book are intertwined with characters crossing between the stories that take place in a snowbound small town.

Aimed at smart teens, this book is another young adult selection that I can recommend for adult readers as well.

The Jubilee Express by Maureen Johnson

Up first is Maureen Johnson’s Jubilee Express.  It sets the tone for the whole volume and I was delighted with it!  I hadn’t been as enamored with Johnson’s 13 Little Blue Envelopes and was a little worried that this would be a let-down as well, but it wasn’t at all.  I feel that ending a short story at the right place is a tricky thing to get down, but this one wrapped up at just the right time.

Jubilee is the first of the characters to be affected by a huge blizzard that has blown into Gracetown stopping the progress of a passing train.  Completely alone and stranded for Christmas, she makes the decision to leave the train when a whole team of cheerleaders and their perkiness finally push her to the breaking point.  Her trek leads her to a Waffle House and ultimately to some completely unexpected changes in her life.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Jubilee says her name is a stripper name and that she has to deal with jokes related to stripping.  A girl cheats on her boyfriend in a bathroom.  There is kissing (including reference to tongues).  Jubilee’s mother worries she might be staying with molesters (she’s not).
Profanity – “ass,” “dick,” “pimp,”  “asshole,”
Death, Violence and Gore – Some bumps and bruises related to an abrupt train stop.  A small riot including batting people with catalogs and pouring lukewarm cocoa on others.  A slap fight.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – A woman at the Waffle House has been smoking.  There is at least one reference to crack, but no actual use of drugs.
Frightening or Intense Things – A slight chance of frostbite and hypothermia related to blizzard conditions and an instance of going to jail.

A Cheertastic Christmas Miracle by John Green

Green’s writing is immediately identifiable, even without the smattering of “asshat” throughout.  Luckily this story doesn’t rely on Green’s tried and true (and tiresome if you read too many of his books in a row) formula boy loves girl, girl is too cool.  It’s also blissfully upbeat.

In another part of Gracetown, three friends are cozily snowbound when they receive an urgent call from the local Waffle House.  An entire cheerleading team has become stranded in the restaurant.  Only a few additional boys will be admitted in order to maintain the optimal cheerleader-to-guy ratio.  Thus begins an extremely hazardous race to the Waffle House.  As with any good journey the ultimate destination ends up quite different from what the characters initially desire.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – A reference to Lindsay Lohan’s legs being always open.  There’s a discussion about if Daniel Craig (who plays James Bond) is hot and if it is gay to find him hot.  Daniel Craig is in his underwear.  There’s a discussion of one character having “tiny balls”.  The hotness of cheerleaders is covered at length as well as the possibility of having sex with them.  There is making out and kissing.
Profanity – “asshat,” “sucks”, “shitty,” “pissed”, “crap,” “slut,” “stupid,” “Jesus Christ”, “God,” “damn,” “jackass,” “hell,” “screwed,” “frakkin'” and “retarded” used as an insult as well as someone flipping someone off.
Death, Violence and Gore – A joke about cancer.  During a James Bond movie, James Bond kills people. There is some actual fighting, including some reckless behavior with cars and use of a tripline.  Someone makes a snow angel that’s meant to be shaped like a body at a homicide investigation.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Two of the contenders in the race to the Waffle House are in possession of a keg of beer.  A character is a worrier as evidenced by his childhood fear that if he didn’t do his homework he’d end up strung out on heroin by fifth grade.
Frightening or Intense Things – There’s some very questionable driving in the snow.

The Patron Saint of Pigs by Lauren Myracle

I can’t decide if it’s better or worse for Myracle that her story came last.  This story is the weakest in the set, but it may simply suffer from the comparison to Green.  On the other hand, at this point, I’d built up such a sense of goodwill towards Gracetown and its blizzard trapped residents that I didn’t care so much.

Addie is a self-absorbed, shallow, largely unlikable character. On the upside, she’s surrounded by people who are fed up with her, so the whole story is largely about how she’s going to fix the fact that her life is kind of a mess because she’s inconsiderate and needy.  Also, there’s a teeny tiny pig involved, which helps when you’re getting as sick of Addie as her friends are.  Cameos by all previous characters help to wrap up the whole book  in one enjoyable wintry package.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – Guys are “hot”.  There is definite kissing.  One guy is shirtless.
Profanity – “bitches,” ” suck/suckage”, “asshat,” “shit,” “damn,” “durn,”
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – The stoners at school are not nice.  Addie gets drunk (beer shots are involved).  There’s a reference to Cheerwine.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

 

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Is It Hanukkah Yet?

Is it Hanukkah, Yet? by Nancy Krulik

My expectations for this were at rock bottom, because honestly, easy readers/Step in Reading books are usually just awful.  I can tell you that kids love being able to read things all by themselves but from an actual literary standpoint, yuck.  However I was pleasantly surprised.  While this wasn’t anything I’d want to read aloud, especially when compared will many of the other Hanukkah books I’ve reviewed on this blog, it’s something I think a beginning reader would treasure.  Despite the short length and easy vocabulary, Is it Hanukkah Yet? manages to incorporate the religious story and a celebration.  Definitely a solid entry for its type.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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Penina Levine is a Potato Pancake

Penina Levine Is a Potato Pancake by Rebecca O’Connell

Plenty of girls will find it easy to relate to Penina Levine, whether or not they are Jewish.  She’s a procrasinator and has left her Hanukkah gift-making until the very last minute.  She’s absolutely sick to death of her adorable younger sister Mimi who seems to get all the attention and she’s devastated that her best friend is headed to Aruba over winter break leaving her with no one to spend time with.   Penina is in sixth grade and fully exhibits the melodrama and self-absorption of that age but mostly in a charming way.

Sometimes Penina seems a bit young for her age, and considering the content, this book could certainly be enjoyed by grades 3 and up and certainly as a read aloud to younger children.

Vocabulary:
tsimmes: mess
tsuris: trouble
tzedakah: in the context used here, they are referring to a tzedakah box which is where they place money that is being given to charity (in this case an animal shelter).

Sex, Nudity, Dating – A sixth-grader is buying a bikini.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – The story of Hanukkah is told.  The fighting is referred to as guerilla warfare and it mentions sneak attacks, hand to hand fighting and that “anyone caught being Jewish was killed.”  Zozo’s dad died when she was a baby.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Penina and Zozo pretend they are blowing smoke rings and Zozo says that her mother has promised to teacher her how to blow them for real once she is 21.  Zozo’s mother is a former smoker.
Frightening or Intense Things – A teacher has to leave to go take care of her sister who is ill.

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Snow

Snow (Sunburst Books) by Uri Shulevitz

No one wishes for snow quite like a child.  As soon as the first snowflake begins to fall, the boy and his dog are ready for snow.  But all the adults he encounters, whether in person, or on the television, or radio, gravely predict there is no snow.  They are all proven wrong as the white snow blankets the village.

The colors are lovely.  The snow is lovely.  The Caldecott Honor seal on the front attests to that.  The only complaint I have is that some of the adults were drawn in a way that I personally find creepy. It’s simply a style that I don’t like.  So between the lady with the umbrella and the moon-faced Mother Goose, I probably would have had nightmares if I were still a child. I’m suspecting that most people would not be in the least bothered by this.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – None.
Death, Violence and Gore – None.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – None.

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I’m Dreaming of a White…

You know I cannot resist seasonal books.  It’s practically a sickness with me.  If there is a holiday approaching, there are essentially three critical things that must be done.

1. I must watch movies about that holiday.
2. I must eat foods traditional to the holiday.
3. I must read books set during the holiday.

This December, I have my typical mix of Christmas, Hanukkah and just plain old wintery goodness.  So get some cookies, make some cocoa, snuggle up to any furry animals you can convince to sit still and enjoy some holiday reading.

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A La Carte

A la Carte by Tanita S. Davis

Elaine loves to help out at her mother’s restaurant. It’s one of the only places that she feels like she belongs.  At school she’s somewhat of an outsider ( Although it’s really unclear why she doesn’t have normal dorky friends like most non-popular high school kids). But what hurts the most is that she feels left in the dust by her former best friend Sim.  He’s popular and just a little bad and Lainey wishes he were still in her life.  And maybe as more than just a friend.  So when he all-of-a-sudden shows up and starts asking for favors, Elaine is more than happy to do what she can to keep him in her life.  Even if it means making some terrible decisions.

I found this book to be pretty sad.  As I mentioned before, it’s really strange to me that Lainey doesn’t really have friends.  Her puppy-dog devotion to Sim is absolutely bad news, and everyone other than her can tell this from a mile away.  While her relationship with him is depressing, it is a power dynamic that is seen far too often for high school girls.  As the book progresses, Elaine has some growing up to do, and while you’re not exactly left with a happily ever after, you at least get the sense that things are heading in the right direction for her.

Also, I wasn’t thrilled with the constant concern about weight.  Elaine has put quite a bit of effort into losing 2 sizes, but it takes some of the fun out of the cooking.  There are a few body positive messages, but not nearly enough to compensate for the negative ones.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – There’s kissing and talking about kissing.  A boy is shirtless in a girl’s bed, although they are just friends.  A boy puts his arm around a girl’s shoulders. A boy tells a girl he’s “too wasted to jump” her.
Profanity – “jerk,” “hell in a handbasket,” “heck,” “screw” although not in reference to sex, “Jeez,” “suck,” “stupid,” “crap,” “jackass,” “hell,” “darned,”
Death, Violence and Gore – A boy is bullied by his brother. Elaine’s father died when she was young. Laine wishes she could slap someone.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – Stoners are listed as a high school social group. A teen has quit smoking.  There is a keg and marijuana at a high school party.  A boy smokes (and it seems like possibly he smokes more than just cigarettes).  At a party a boy hands off his drugs and another kid gets in trouble for it.
Frightening or Intense Things – A character runs away from home, triggering an investigation.  A teen gets in trouble with the law jeopardizing future plans.

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Encyclopedia Brown Takes the Cake! A Cook and Case Book

Encyclopedia Brown Takes the Cake! by Donald Sobol

I never thought my first Encyclopedia Brown entry would be in the cooking category, but when I saw this in the library, I couldn’t resist.  I loved Encyclopedia Brown mysteries when I was growing up, even if I never was clever enough to figure out the solutions without help.

When I cracked the cover and started reading about Idaville’s finest detective and the first quarter was dropped into Encyclopedia’s gasoline can indicating the start of a case, I was hit with a powerful wave of nostalgia.  But reading this from an adult’s perspective was pretty revelatory.  In some cases, clues are left out of the stories, which feels sort of cheap.  It’s really hard to solve the mysteries on your own because they rely on things that happen outside of the pages of the books.  Additionally, because this is a “cook and case book” there are far fewer cases than you would normally expect to find in an Encyclopedia Brown book.  The chapters alternate between cases and recipes which seems a little weird and confusing when you first start to read.

So about those recipes…

Evidently, this was written in the dark ages when international foods were unfamiliar, but starting to be all the rage.  So you’ll find recipes for Mexican, Chinese and Italian food along with handy tips such as how to make your own plum sauce (which I suppose was not available in stores back then – although they do tell you to buy frozen egg rolls, so I’m wonder what food manufacturer fell down on the job there), that corn chips are sometimes called tortilla chips, and that if you have olive oil, you can use that instead of salad oil in your italian cooking.  It’s a blurry line between old-fashioned ignorance and possible cultural insensitivity.

Sex, Nudity, Dating – None.
Profanity – “unwashed ape,” “darn it,”
Death, Violence and Gore – Sally is able to punch out town bully Bugs Meany.  I’d forgotten how tough Sally was.  GO SALLY! (Um, except that I don’t condone violence). Encyclopedia is threatened by a bully. Terrible of me, but as a spoiler I shall have to reveal that a missing goose was in fact killed, and eaten.
Drugs, Alcohol and Smoking – None.
Frightening or Intense Things – Well, as there are mysteries to be solved, questionable things must happen, including scams and thefts.

 

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