Archive | September, 2014

Sharing Books with Distant Grandchildren

17 Sep

I’m writing this blog for my “peeps.”  You know who you are.  You’re the ones who wore a real Davy Crockett coonskin cap and owned an original Whammo Hula Hoop.  You remember the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show.  If you weren’t at Woodstock, you probably lie and say you were.  The sixties is now not just your favorite decade, but also the age on your driver’s license.  No, I don’t know how it happened, either.

Here’s what else happened while we were growing older: we raised independent kids, a lot of whom bring your grandchildren to the library.  We may live in North Jersey, but our kids went to college all over the country and followed their dreams to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boulder, or Austin.  Sometimes, they followed their dreams to a whole other country which means you don’t get to see your grandkids very often.

Now, it’s just as likely that, if you’re reading this column, you are not the grandparent but the wandering offspring.  Have you called your parents lately?  I just had to ask.  I promised your parents.  Anyway, it’s not like you can run next door so that your parents can read a bedtime story to their beloved grandchild.

And that’s where the Internet comes in.  Even grandparents know how to Skype, now.  We may not be crazy about how we look on camera, but that doesn’t mean we won’t go on-screen to share some time with a distant and beloved grandchild.  So, why not turn it into an occasion for book sharing?  I’m about to give you a way for intergenerational sharing, but mainly aimed at little kids.  However, consider that talking about books online doesn’t need to be restricted to children, ages 3 to 7.  Ever since Harry Potter and The Hunger Games arrived on the scene, it’s not at all unusual to find adults prowling around the Children’s Department looking for a book that their grandchild has recommended to them.  Instead of the awkward, “So, how old are you now,” telephone conversations that my parents used to have with my daughter, you can now discuss Katniss Everdeen and all the other dystopias your older grandchild is exploring.

Meanwhile, if you have younger grandchildren, there are some reading alternatives that you might not have heard about.  Readeo is a really cool book chat site.  You can buy a subscription for $9.99 a month (or $99 a year) and share books with your grandchildren from the site.  One subscription covers you and any and all of your grandkids.  You don’t need a separate subscription for each household.  Also, there’s an on-line chat function that allows you to discuss books with your young partner.  Readeo’s collection of online titles allows you to share current licensed book characters with your reading buddy.

A Story Before Bed is another service to explore for long distance reading.  You can go online and record a book for your favorite child using the webcam on your computer.  You won’t pay for the book until you’re satisfied with the product that you’ve created.  After that, the book is available for your grandchild to access on their home computer, tablet, or even an iPhone.  The choices of titles may be less familiar to you, but I recognized a number of them from our Hoboken Library collection.

Most of you have probably already discovered Skype as a way of sharing books.  This works best if both you and the child have a copy of the book, but with practice, you can probably hold the book up to the camera on your computer.  You can start the conversation with your regular weekly updates, and then extend your visit with a selection of books to share.  Time the call to evening in your grandchild’s time zone and you will have the joy of reading your child a bedtime story, perhaps even one you used to read to their parent.

You can use just about any book that you love to read to your grandchildren, but just to extend the theme, here are some books about grandparents and grandchildren that you might want to consider:

Tea with Grandpa, by Barney Saltzberg.

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The child in the book rushes home from school for her standing 3:30 date with her grandfather.  They talk, share tea, and read books.  The catch is that Grandpa is talking to the child by Skype.

Nana in the City, by Lauren Castillo.

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The little boy in this book is visiting his grandma in the big city where she lives.  He’s not at all sure that he likes the city, or that he thinks it is a safe place for his grandmother to live.  Nana, however, has a solution to his concerns. She provides him with a cape that confers superpowers and he is a braver visitor from there on.

Amelia Bedelia’s First Apple Pie, by Herman Parish.

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You may be familiar with Amelia Bedelia as the literal-minded maid who makes many mistakes because she doesn’t understand colloquialisms.  Now we have a much younger Amelia, still plagued with literalism, who is visiting her grandparents.  She wants to make an apple pie but, with her usual problems, her efforts are fraught with problems.  Don’t worry.  It all comes out well in the end, and the apple pie is delicious.

Heaven Is Having You, by Giles Andreae.

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Grandma Bear believes that heaven is all around her every day.  She also knows that the very best example of “heaven on earth” is having her small bear grandchild with her.

Let’s Dance, Grandma!, by Nigel McMullen.

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Lucy loves to dance, but she is happiest when she is dancing with her grandmother.

The Ultimate Guide to Grandmas and Grandpas!, by Sally Lloyd Jones.

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This is a book for kids about the care and feeding of grandparents.  It suggests ways to keep grandparents entertained by giving them special treats, singing to them, and dancing with them.

Everything is Different at Nonna’s House, by Caron Lee Cohen.

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A young boy lives in the city while his grandparents live on a farm.  Their living environments are very different.  The one unchangeable thing is how much the boy’s grandparents love him, whether in his city or their country.

Don’t sacrifice the experience of shared reading just because you live far from your grandchildren or your grandparents.  The library and other online resources make it possible to keep the lines of communications open, wherever you live.

-Written by Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian

A Little Bit of Magic: The Swan Gondola, The Thinking Woman’s Guide to Real Magic, and Midnight Crossroad

10 Sep

Sometimes you might wish you had a little more magic in your life, but as these novels show magic doesn’t always make your life easier, but the supernatural always make it a lot more interesting.

The Swan Gondola
by Timothy Schaffert

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The Swan Gondola is a tragic love story set at the fictional 1898 Omaha World’s Fair.  This fair is based on the actual historic Trans-Mississippi & International Exposition, but there are many dark fanciful elements that give the book a storybook quality.  Ferret, a magician and ventriloquist, has a dummy that can do everything from talk via a tiny record player in his head to light a cigarette. In his Author’s Note, Schaffert mentions that he was inspired by the Wizard of Oz, who in L. Frank Baum’s story was from Nebraska and was a ventriloquist’s apprentice.  Although not a retelling of The Wizard of Oz, The Swan Gondola takes a great deal of inspiration from the novel and fans of Baum’s series will enjoy finding the references to the Oz stories throughout. At times I found myself exasperated by Ferret’s, foolish lovesick behavior, but this may be partially that even when flawed the main characters are charismatic and leave the reader rooting for them and hoping for their success.  The novel ended very differently than I had expected, but still in a way that is satisfying. The last section includes elements of spiritualism which was historically influential in turn of the century America, but adds another element of the fantastic.  Overall The Swan Gondola charmed me and I will probably seek out some of Schaffert’s other works to read in the future.  If you are interested in reading the Oz series that inspired it checkout our previous blog post on Oz.

The Thinking Woman’s Guide to Real Magicby Emily Croy Barker

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The Thinking Woman’s Guide to Real Magic sounded like it would be a fun supernatural chicklit book, but it was much darker in tone and more complex than I expected.  Barker’s first novel revolves around Nora, a floundering grad student from NJ, who accidentally wanders into another realm and learns that not only is magic real, but she also has a talent for it.  My favorite part of The Thinking Woman’s Guide to Real Magic is the beginning where Nora has been enchanted by fairies and the ominous feeling and disorientation that the reader feels beneath the beautiful exterior of the fairy realm.  Fans of Deborah Harkness’s books should enjoy this book, however, it is much more swords and sorcery and less urban fantasy.  I enjoyed the way Barker uses things like poetry and algebra as forms of magic in the story.  As a poet I loved the way she worked in quotes from different famous poems such as William Carlos William’s “The Red Wheelbarrow”.  I would have liked to see more of Nora in our world to get a better feel for her as character in that environment; hopefully Barker’s next book will focus on that more.  Be warned the conclusion of the novel is definitely open ended and clearly is meant to lure you into reading the second in the planned trilogy, which has not yet been published.

Midnight Crossroadby Charlaine Harris

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In Charlaine Harris’s latest urban fantasy infused mystery, Midnight Crossroad residents include a talented witch with her very own cat familiar, a vampire, a psychic, and other mysterious characters.  This is the first in Harris’ new series which is set in the Midnight, Texas.  We are first introduced to the character of Manfred Bernardo who was a secondary character in her Harper Connelly series.  Although much of the novel focuses on him, several other characters including Fiji, the witch, and Bobo, the pawn shop owner are also a major focus (if I had one complaint about the series it was the ridiculous nicknames of all the characters).  The quirky dark town itself also truly feels like character.  Unlike with her Sookie Stackhouse series, where it felt like vampires and shape shifters are everywhere, in this series the small town of Midnight (with its single traffic light) seems particularly unique.  It reminded me a bit in this of my favorite podcast, the wonderful quirky Nightvale where the unexpected is the expected.  I found the novel to be a quick read with moments of humor interspersed with the darkness.  The story seems to also be making a statement about the monsters of myth such as vampires and witches versus the monsters of our real world like racists and sociopaths and where the evil truly lies.  I had begun to become disappointed in some of Harris’s later Sookie novels, but I’m looking forward to reading the next in the Midnight, Texas series.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference