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BOOKS! BOOKS! BOOKS!

EXPLORE THE AMAZING COLLECTION OF THE BRITISH LIBRARY

Beautiful and reverent but perhaps not particularly relevant.

As the subtitle indicates, young bookworms are invited to “Explore the Amazing Collection of the British Library.”

“Explore” is the key word here, as the table of contents lists 21 potential discoveries among the library’s holdings. In its tour, the text capitalizes on the human-interest aspects of the collection, such as the facts that Shakespeare’s First Folio is kept in a bombproof, underground room and that the oldest surviving book produced in Europe, St. Cuthbert’s Gospel, was found in a coffin. Other monuments to the (mostly) English masterworks surveyed include Darwin’s On the Origin of the Species, Handel’s handwritten sheet music, and the original manuscript of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Questions to readers provide segues from one entry to the next; “Are you hungry after all that drama?” leads them from Shakespeare to the section on cookbooks. The watercolor-and-digital illustrations lend a fanciful, hodgepodge effect to the collection of literary tidbits. Varying typefaces play to the topics, as with the use of a Gothic type for The Canterbury Tales and a delicate scriptlike type for Jane Austen. The book effectively demonstrates the role of the British Library as custodian to a broad swath of British literary history. The question here is, who is the audience on this side of the Atlantic, particularly at a time when concerted efforts are being made to create a more diverse and inclusive canon? The Inside-Outside Book of Libraries, by Julie Cummins and illustrated by Roxie Munro (1996), is a little old but still provides a better introduction to the concept of libraries.

Beautiful and reverent but perhaps not particularly relevant. (thumbnail bios, glossary) (Nonfiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 5, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-7636-9757-0

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2017

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TRUE BUCKETFILLING STORIES

LEGACIES OF LOVE

Similar to the vignettes found in the Chicken Soup for the Soul series, this book’s sentimental collection can’t help but...

Intended for ages 9-12, this collection of 10 true vignettes elucidate the bucket-filling philosophy of being a helpful and caring person.

There is a simple philosophy behind bucket filling. As Lundgren writes in her introduction, “We each have an invisible bucket. When it is full, we feel good—happy, peaceful, grateful, or loving. When it is empty, we feel bad—sad, lonely, angry, and frightened.” Ultimately, we must decide whether to be selfless “bucketfillers” or selfish “bucketdippers,” and through a series of short and sweet anecdotes, the book pushes the idea that it is far better to fill than to dip. The stories focus on regular folks who choose to be a positive force for others in small ways. There is the mom who picks up a gallon of gas for the new family at church and relates her story to the police officer who stops her for speeding. Hearing her story, the officer lets the woman go with only a warning—filling the woman’s bucket rather than dipping into it by issuing a ticket on Christmas Eve. Another vignette tells of a ballet dancer reminiscing about the high school teacher who not only allowed her to find solace in dance during the darkest days of her parents’ divorce, but was there with an extra hug when needed. While the stories are often overtly sentimental (seemingly cut from the same cloth as a Hallmark card commercial), each effectively demonstrates that it is just as easy to do good in this world as it is to do ill or nothing. All of the tales culminate with a set of discussion questions that allow the reader to bring her own insight into what she has just read; perfect for a classroom setting. This trains the reader to get into the proper mind-set to use the bucket-filling philosophy in her own life. Despite the book’s slight feel (10 stories in just over 100 pages), the reader will be left hard pressed not to fill more buckets in her life.

Similar to the vignettes found in the Chicken Soup for the Soul series, this book’s sentimental collection can’t help but warm your heart.

Pub Date: April 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-0984336609

Page Count: 110

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: Aug. 30, 2010

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50 BURNING QUESTIONS

A SIZZLING HISTORY OF FIRE

This lighthearted, informative look at a fascinating subject poses such playfully provocative questions as "Who's for dinner?" and "Would you like some gunpowder in your stew?" and should spark interest in reluctant readers. Lloyd Kyi answers these questions in engagingly written vignettes that reveal how important fire has been and continues to be in nearly every aspect of human life. Since it was harnessed by our human ancestors, fire has been used in hunting, cooking, lighting, manufacturing, communication, religious rituals, energy production, weaponry, transportation, torture and execution, conservation and a multitude of other applications. Interspersed throughout the text are simple fire-related activities readers can perform utilizing a few common household items (only about half involve open flames; those that do advise adult help). Kinnaird's colorful cartoon illustrations complement the text's humorous tone, taking advantage of the opportunities offered by the comedy inherent in scorch marks. Accessibly written and appealingly designed, the book is formatted in a way that it can be either browsed or read cover to cover. (further reading, bibliography, index) (Nonfiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-1-55451-221-8

Page Count: 104

Publisher: Annick Press

Review Posted Online: July 29, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2010

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