Sunday, February 23, 2014

ReRunday: RAJ THE BOOKSTORE TIGER (Picture Book)

Originally posted on January 26, 2012.

~

by Kathleen T. Pelley, illustrated by Paige Keiser
Charlesbridge, 2011

A Book Review by
Violet the Telekinetic Puppy

I’m Daffodil the Flower Shop Wolf except that I am just kidding and my name is really Violet and I am a beagle who loves to read. I am going to tell you about one of the books that I love to read and that book is called RAJ THE BOOKSTORE TIGER.

RAJ THE BOOKSTORE TIGER is about Raj and you probably think that Raj is a tiger because this book is called RAJ THE BOOKSTORE TIGER but Raj is not really a tiger. Raj is a cat who thinks he is a tiger and the reason he thinks he is a tiger is because his person calls him a tiger because he is orange and has stripes like a tiger. His person is named Felicity and she has a bookstore. Raj likes being a tiger and because he spends all day in a bookstore that is why this book is called RAJ THE BOOKSTORE TIGER.

Every day Felicity reads a story to the kids who come to the store and those kids love to see Raj and Raj loves when the kids pet him and call him a tiger. There is a man who works at the bookstore and he has a white cat named Snowball and the man starts bringing his cat Snowball to the bookstore. Snowball is cranky and not nice and Snowball says that Raj is not really a tiger and that makes Raj feel bad because Raj likes being a tiger. Raj is sad not being a tiger until Felicity reads him a poem about a tiger and that poem about a tiger makes Raj feel like a tiger again and then he is not sad any more. You might think that Raj would be mad at Snowball but you would be wrong. Raj is nice and wants Snowball to be happy and that is why he tells Snowball about white tigers. Snowball likes the idea of being a tiger and it makes him happy and then he isn’t mean and cranky and then the two tigers become friends. I am happy that Raj and Snowball are friends at the end of this story and that is why I love this book.

There is another reason that I love this book and that reason is because of the pictures. My favorite picture is the picture on the first page where Felicity is holding Raj and Raj is smiling with his eyes closed and you can tell that he is a happy tiger. My other favorite pictures are the pictures where you can see all the books that are on the shelves at the bookstore and I want to read the book that has a boy blowing a big bubble gum bubble on the cover and the book about an elephant named Bob. I like the soft colors in the pictures and when I read this book and look at the pictures I wish I could spend my days in the bookstore with Raj and Snowball.

Here is a list of who will like this book:

Readers who like cats.

Cats who like tigers.

Readers, cats, and tigers who like bubble gum.

Readers, cats, and tigers who don’t like broccoli.

Elephants.

Good-bye.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

ReRunday: Briar the Psychic Beagle, Interview


Originally posted on September 21, 2010.

~

Tuesdays with Morzant: 
Getting to Know a Reader


Hi, there. Briar here in Morzant’s lab. Morzant is supposed to interview me today, but he’s going to be late because his toaster is about to burst into flames. I’d hate for you to have to wait, so I’ll get things started by answering the questions I predict he’d ask if pumpernickel weren’t so combustible.

Here we go.

Yes. No. In the year 2027. One time when I chased a squirrel up a tree, but never since. Fifteen, maybe sixteen. Excess orange rinds. Huey, Louie, and Dewey, in that order. Walla Walla, Washington. Peanut butter cookies. Sometimes rolling on a dead fish can help. CLIFFORD THE BIG RED DOG. Working on my own graphic novel. I’m not sure. A large meteor.

Well. That didn’t take too long, did it? I sense Morzant has put out the fire. If you’d like, I could share my most recent vision with you to pass the time while we wait for Morzant to join us. In the vision, I saw a giant armadillo buttering a piece of burnt toast. He offered me a bite, then grabbed it away and started lecturing me on the importance of cleaning toast gunk out of the toaster. I was sure that could mean only one thing—oh, here he is. Morzant, I mean. Not the giant armadillo.

[Morzant enters.]

MORZANT: I’m sorry I’m late. My toaster caught on fire!

BRIAR: I hope it’s okay that I started the interview without you since I knew the questions you were going to ask.

MORZANT: Your ability to predict future events is astounding. The scientist in me wonders how your psychic ability works and why, when you knew in advance the questions I intended to ask you, you didn’t also know about the piece of pumpernickel that had wedged itself dangerously in my toaster’s heating element.

BRIAR: Actually, I did. I had a vision where a giant armadillo—

MORZANT: You knew?

BRIAR: Yes.

MORZANT: Forgive me, but why then didn’t you come warn me about my impending toaster crisis rather than come to my lab to conduct your own interview?

BRIAR: Oh. I didn’t think of that.

MORZANT: No harm done. Aside from the scorched ceiling tiles and melted countertop. And incinerated pumpernickel, of course. Let’s continue the interview, shall we? Where did you leave off?

BRIAR: I answered all your questions.

MORZANT: Even the one about what causes Bigfoot’s photography impediment?

BRIAR: Yes, I said— uh-oh. Morzant? I think you’d better get back to your ship.

MORZANT: Why?

BRIAR: You won’t believe what the giant armadillo just told me about your blender.

MORZANT: Good-bye for now, humans. This concludes another interview. Please come back next week when I hope I can offer you a delicious pumpernickel smoothie.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Briar’s Journal (February 11 to 27, 2014)


Dream Entry*
April 27, 2008

Norman and Bigfoot are fencing with icicles.

“Stop! Stop!” Morzant cries. “It’s almost time!”

Mortimer breathes fire on the ice swords until they melt. Then all my friends, a duck, three puppies, and I file into an enormous stadium. The stadium is full of cheering cryptids waving striped socks.

A walrus runs into the arena carrying a small pot of orange flowers. He runs up a staircase to a platform. He breaks the pot, then plants the flowers in a bathtub. The flowers immediately start to grow at an accelerated rate. They spill over the edge of the tub and of the platform. The walrus gets tangled in the growing stems and swept toward the bleachers. The cheering gets even louder.

Soon the flowers are covering everybody in the bleachers. The flowers are as big as books, and soon they turn into books. They smell like pickles. Everybody picks them and starts to read.


The pickle-scented flowers BIGFOOT reads:

BEYOND MAGENTA: TRANSGENDER TEENS SPEAK OUT
by Susan Kuklin
[YOUNG ADULT—NON-FICTION]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

GRASSHOPPER JUNGLE
by Andrew Smith
[YOUNG ADULT]
Dutton-Penguin
February 11, 2014

LORD AND LADY BUNNY—ALMOST ROYALTY!
by Polly Horvath, with illustrations by Sophie Blackall
[MIDDLE GRADE—SEQUEL TO MR. AND MRS. BUNNY—DETECTIVES EXTRAORDINAIRE!]
Schwartz & Wade-Random House
February 11, 2014

SPLIT SECOND
by Kasie West
[YOUNG ADULT—SEQUEL TO PIVOT POINT]
HarperTeen-HarperCollins
February 11, 2014

BRIGHT BEFORE SUNRISE
by Tiffany Schmidt
[YOUNG ADULT]
Walker
February 18, 2014

SCHOOL OF CHARMS
by Lisa Ann Scott
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Katherine Tegen-HarperCollins
February 18, 2014

BETTER OFF FRIENDS
by Elizabeth Eulberg
[YOUNG ADULT]
Point-Scholastic
February 25, 2014

THE DUMBEST IDEA EVER!
by Jimmy Gownley
[MIDDLE GRADE—GRAPHIC NOVEL]
Graphix-Scholastic
February 25, 2014

HALF A CHANCE
by Cynthia Lord
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

INVASION OF THE UFONUTS
by Laurie Keller
[CHAPTER BOOK—SECOND IN THE
ADVENTURES OF ARNIE THE DOUGHNUT SERIES]
Henry Holt
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers MORZANT reads:

LITTLE POEMS FOR TINY EARS
by Lin Oliver, illustrated by Tomie dePaola
[PICTURE BOOK—POETRY]
Nancy Paulsen-Penguin
February 11, 2014

THE NOISY PAINT BOX: THE COLORS AND
SOUNDS OF KANDINSKY’S ABSTRACT ART
by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by Mary GrandPré
[PICTURE BOOK—NON-FICTION]
Knopf-Random House
February 11, 2014

A TASTE OF FREEDOM:
GANDHI AND THE GREAT SALT MARCH
by Elizabeth Cody Kimmel, illustrated by Guiliano Ferri
[PICTURE BOOK—NON-FICTION]
Walker
February 11, 2014

DARE THE WIND: THE RECORD-BREAKING VOYAGE OF
ELEANOR PRENTISS AND THE FLYING CLOUD
by Tracey Fern, illustrated by Emily Arnold McCully
[PICTURE BOOK—NON-FICTION]
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
February 18, 2014

ALASKA’S DOG HEROES:
TRUE STORIES OF REMARKABLE CANINES
by Shelley Gill, illustrated by Robin James
[PICTURE BOOK—NON-FICTION]
Little Bigfoot-Sasquatch
February 25, 2014

FEATHERS: NOT JUST FOR FLYING
by Melissa Stewart, illustrated by Sarah S. Brannen
[PICTURE BOOK—NON-FICTION]
Charlesbridge
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers MORTIMER reads:

THE BROKEN PATH
by Erin Hunter
[MIDDLE GRADE—FOURTH IN THE
SURVIVORS SERIES]
HarperCollins
February 11, 2014

MY HUMONGOUS HAMSTER
by Lorna Freytag
[PICTURE BOOK]
Henry Holt
February 11, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers PENNY reads:

THREE
by Kristen Simmons
[YOUNG ADULT—THIRD IN THE
ARTICLE 5 SERIES]
Tor Teen-Tom Doherty Associates
February 11, 2014

WHITE SPACES
by Ilsa J. Bick
[YOUNG ADULT—FIRST IN THE
DARK PASSAGES SERIES]
Egmont USA
February 11, 2014

PERFECT LIES
by Kiersten White
[YOUNG ADULT—SEQUEL TO MIND GAMES]
HarperTeen-HarperCollins
February 18, 2014

FIRE & FLOOD
by Victoria Scott
[YOUNG ADULT]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

TIN STAR
by Cecil Castelluci
[YOUNG ADULT]
Roaring Brook
February 25, 2014

THE WELL’S END
by Seth Fishman
[YOUNG ADULT]
Putman-Penguin
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers THE DUCK reads:

FERAL CURSE
by Cynthia Leitich Smith
[YOUNG ADULT—SECOND IN THE FERAL SERIES]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

THE TINKER KING
by Tiffany Trent
[YOUNG ADULT—SEQUEL TO THE UNNATURALISTS]
Simon & Schuster
February 11, 2014

ALASKA’S SLEEPING BEAUTY
by Mindy Dwyer
[PICTURE BOOK]
Little Bigfoot-Sasquatch
February 25, 2014

THE SHADOW THRONE
by Jennifer A. Nielsen
[YOUNG ADULT—FINAL IN THE
ASCENDANCE TRILOGY]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers NORMAN reads:

CHAMPION OF BREAKFAST
by Adam Rex
[YOUNG ADULT—THIRD IN THE
COLD CEREAL SAGA]
Balzer & Bray-HarperCollins
February 11, 2014

TESLA’S ATTIC
by Neal Shusterman and Eric Elfman
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE
ACCELERATI TRILOGY]
Disney-Hyperion
February 11, 2014

OPERATION BUNNY
by Sally Gardner,
with illustrations by David Roberts
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE
WINGS & CO. SERIES]
Henry Holt
February 11, 2014

STINK AND THE SHARK SLEEPOVER
by Megan McDonald,
with illustrations by Peter H. Reynolds
[CHAPTER BOOK—NINTH IN THE STINK SERIES]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

MISSING MONKEY!
by Mary Amato,
with illustrations by Ward Jenkins
[CHAPTER BOOK—FIRST IN THE
GOOD CROOKS SERIES]
Egmont USA
February 25, 2014

TIMMY FAILURE: NOW LOOK WHAT YOU’VE DONE
by Stephan Pastis
[MIDDLE GRADE—SEQUEL TO
TIMMY FAILURE: MISTAKES WERE MADE SERIES]
Candlewick
February 25, 2014

THE SECRET BOX
by Whitaker Ringwald
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE
SECRET BOX SERIES]
Katherine Tegen-HarperCollins
February 25, 2014

A SNICKER OF MAGIC
by Natalie Lloyd
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

THREATENED
by Eliot Schrefer
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

BY THE GRACE OF TODD
by Louise Galveston
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Razorbill-Penguin
February 27, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers BEVERLY reads:

BEFORE MY EYES
by Caroline Bock
[YOUNG ADULT]
St. Martin’s Griffin
February 11, 2014

STORM
by Donna Jo Napoli
[YOUNG ADULT]
Paula Wiseman-Simon & Schuster
February 11, 2014

THE TYRANT’S DAUGHTER
by J.C. Carleson
[YOUNG ADULT]
Knopf-Random House
February 11, 2014

WILLOW
by Tonya Cherie Hegamin
[YOUNG ADULT]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

NIGHTINGALE’S NEST
by Nikki Loftin
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Razorbill-Penguin
February 20, 2014

WHAT THE MOON SAID
by Gayle Rosengren
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Putnam-Penguin
February 20, 2014

FAKING NORMAL
by Courtney C. Stevens
[YOUNG ADULT]
HarperTeen-HarperCollins
February 25, 2014

I SURVIVED THE NAZI INVASION, 1994
by Lauren Tarshis
[CHAPTER BOOK—NINTH IN THE
I SURVIVED SERIES]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

THE LION WHO STOLE MY ARM
by Nicola Davies,
with illustrations by Annabel Wright
[CHAPTER BOOK]
Candlewick
February 25, 2014

YEAR OF MISTAKEN DISCOVERIES
by Eileen Cook
[YOUNG ADULT]
Simon Pulse-Simon & Schuster
February 25, 2014

ZANE AND THE HURRICANE: A STORY OF KATRINA
by Rodman Philbrick
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Blue Sky Press-Scholastic
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers BRIAR reads:

FATES
by Lanie Bross
[YOUNG ADULT]
Delacorte-Random House
February 11, 2014

TSARINA
by J. Nelle Patrick
[YOUNG ADULT]
Razorbill-Penguin
February 27, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers OLIVER reads:

SAY HELLO LIKE THIS
by Mary Murphy
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

TAKING CARE OF MAMA RABBIT
by Anita Lobel
[PICTURE BOOK]
Knopf-Random House
February 11, 2014

TIME FOR BED, FRED!
by Yasmeen Ismail
[PICTURE BOOK]
Walker
February 11, 2014

GREEN IS A CHILE PEPPER:
A BOOK OF COLORS
by Roseanne Greenfield Thong,
illustrated by John Parra
[PICTURE BOOK]
Chronicle
February 18, 2014

BUSY BUNNY DAYS: IN THE TOWN,
ON THE FARM & AT THE PORT
by Britta Teckentrup
[PICTURE BOOK]
Chronicle
February 25, 2014

DREAM DOG
by Lou Berger,
illustrated by David J. Catrow
[PICTURE BOOK]
Schwartz & Wade-Random House
February 25, 2014

GO! GO! GO! STOP!
by Charise Mericle Harper
[PICTURE BOOK]
Knopf-Random House
February 25, 2014

HI, KOO!: A YEAR OF SEASONS
by Jon J Muth
[PICTURE BOOK]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

S IS FOR SALMON:
A PACIFIC NORTHWEST ALPHABET
by Hannah Viano
[PICTURE BOOK]
Little Bigfoot-Sasquatch
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers LENNY reads:

EXTRAORDINARY WARREN:
A SUPER CHICKEN
by Sarah Dillard
[EARLY READER]
Aladdin-Simon & Schuster
February 11, 2014

MEANWHILE, BACK AT THE RANCH
by Anne Isaacs, illustrated by Kevin Henkes
[EARLY READER]
Schwartz & Wade-Random House
February 11, 2014

MR. BALL MAKES A TO-DO LIST
by Michael Townsend
[EARLY READER—JUMP-INTO-CHAPTERS SERIES]
Blue Apple Books
February 11, 2014

OKAY, ANDY!
by Maxwell Eaton III
[EARLY READER—JUMP-INTO-CHAPTERS SERIES]
Blue Apple Books
February 11, 2014

PENGUIN IN PERIL
by Helen Hancocks
[PICTURE BOOK]
Templar-Candlewick
February 11, 2014

DUCK TO THE RESCUE
by John Himmelman
[PICTURE BOOK—FOURTH IN THE
BARNYARD RESCUE SERIES]
Henry Holt
February 18, 2014

WAKE UP, RUPERT!
by Mike Twohy
[PICTURE BOOK]
Paula Wiseman-Simon &Schuster
February 18, 2014

WHEN AN ALIEN MEETS A SWAMP MONSTER
by Cornelius Van Wright
[PICTURE BOOK]
Nancy Paulsen-Penguin
February 20, 2014

EIEIO: HOW OLD MACDONALD GOT HIS FARM
WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM A HEN
by Judy Sierra, illustrated by Matthew Myers
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
February 25, 2014

THE END (ALMOST)
by Jim Benton
[PICTURE BOOK]
Scholastic
February 25, 2014

MOTOR DOG
by Kurt Cyrus, illustrated by David George Gordon
[PICTURE BOOK]
Disney-Hyperion
February 25, 2014

ROSIE & REX: A NOSE FOR FUN!
by Bob Boyle
[PICTURE BOOK]
HarperCollins
February 25, 2014

WEASELS
by Elys Dolan
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
February 25, 2014


The pickle-scented flowers VIOLET reads:

29 MYTHS ON THE SWINSTER PHARMACY
by Lemony Snicket, illustrated by Lisa Brown
[PICTURE BOOK]
McSweeney’s McMullens
February 11, 2014

JESSICA FINCH IN PIG TROUBLE
by Megan McDonald,
with illustrations by Erwin Madrid
[EARLY CHAPTER BOOK—FIRST IN THE
JUDY MOODY AND FRIENDS SERIES]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

ORANGUTANGLED
by Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen,
with illustrations by Aaron Zenz
[PICTURE BOOK]
Two Lions-Amazon
February 11, 2014

PRICKLY ROSE
by Shelley Gill, illustrated by Judy Love
[PICTURE BOOK]
Charlesbridge
February 11, 2014

ROCKY ZANG IN THE AMAZING MR. MAGIC
by Megan McDonald,
with illustrations by Erwin Madrid
[EARLY CHAPTER BOOK—SECOND IN THE
JUDY MOODY AND FRIENDS SERIES]
Candlewick
February 11, 2014

MEANWHILE, BACK AT THE RANCH
by Anne Isaacs, illustrated by Kevin Henkes
[PICTURE BOOK]
Schwartz & Wade-Random House
February 11, 2014

PENGUIN IN PERIL
by Helen Hancocks
[PICTURE BOOK]
Templar-Candlewick
February 11, 2014

TIPPY AND THE NIGHT PARADE
by Lilli Carre
[EARLY READER—GRAPHIC NOVEL]
Toon Books-Candlewick
February 11, 2014

MAPLE
by Lori Nichols
[PICTURE BOOK]
Nancy Paulsen-Penguin
February 20, 2014

MAISY GOES TO THE MOVIES
by Lucy Cousins
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
February 25, 2014




* The dream entries from Briar’s journal contain premonitions of books that will be published in the future. Briar’s dream self foresees the books’ summaries and knows which will likely appeal to each of her friends. Briar always wakes up before she can see whether her friends will enjoy the books.