Ores

 

 

 

 

This book explains the various types of ores and how the ores are used to make copper, aluminum, steel, etc.

There is a glossary, and a list of ore types, but only a few of the types listed appear in the actual text.

This book is scant on information, although the photos are interesting.

If the other books in this series are as sparse as Ores is, they would not even begin to compared to the Rock-Ology series.

 

Frankie Liked To Sing

 

 

 

This is a very nicely illustrated picture book on the life of Frank Sinatra, starting with his youth in Hoboken, New Jersey. The story chronicles Frankie’s love of singing: at school, at work, everywhere. The story continues with Frankie’s move to New York City to study voice, his first appearance in concert, and his records being played on the radio. Moving on into his film career, singing and dancing on the big screen, and moving on to his international tours, Las Vegas tours, and awards, the reader gets a rosy view of Frank Sinatra, focusing on his talent and hard work, and omitting any mention of organized crime, womanizing, drinking, smoking, or any other vices.

 

The book includes an Author’s Note and Bibliography.

Talkin’ Guitar: A Story of Young Doc Watson

 

 

 

 

Talkin’ Guitar: A Story of Young Doc Watson by Robbin Gourley is a delightful story of the young Arthel Watson who came one of the most beloved and celebrated figures of folk, bluegrass and old-time music: Doc Watson. Set in his boyhood home in the Appalachian mountains, the story tells of Arthel’s attention to sound (train whistles, farm animals, the river rushing, his mother singing, his pappy playing banjo). His loved sound and music and couldn’t keep it inside, and taught himself to play harmonica, banjo, and guitar. This is a nicely illustrated story of a boy’s determination.

The book contains biographical information, and print and web resources.

When Butterflies Cross the Sky: The Monarch Butterfly Migration

In the form of a third person narrative, this book tells the story of monarch migration from the continental United States to central Mexico.  Engaging text leads the reader through the forces that send the butterfly south, the perils of the journey, arrival at her Mexican destination and culminates with the return to the north to lay the next generation of Monarchs.  The book ends with a quick summary of the Monarch’s life cycle.  Illustrations are full of rich color, perspective, and motion and add to the migration story.

Book includes fun facts, CCSS connections, glossary, additional resources, and index.

Carrots Like Peas and Other Fun Facts

Part of the “Did You Know?” series, this is truly a fun book of facts about food.  Most pages begin with question providing an engaging and entertaining communication of food facts.  The book has a stream of consciousness feel as the seemingly random facts about food connect from one page to the next following the whim of the author: invention of the dishwasher to invention of the toaster to sandwich to chips then potatoes.  Colorful images of cartoon animals growing, making or consuming food support the text.  Readers will not walk away with any great increase in knowledge, but the book will entertain and intrigue budding scientists.

The Flinkwater Factor

Flinkwater is a city similar to Silicon Valley in which most of the people are employed by a computer company. Those people are super smart and nerdy, as are their children. However in an attempted takeover, people are reduced to a catatonic state by watching the screen saver for the local school’s mascot. The founder and CEO of the town’s tech industry was actually the culprit. Hautman does a terrific job with the main character, Ginger, a 13-year-old girl. The dialog and self speak is snappy and funny, and goes off on tangents pretty much just like a 13-year-old girl. Kids will enjoy the humor and fast pace of the story.

Hotel Ruby

Welcome to the Hotel Ruby, a suspenseful story laden with foreshadowing and figurative symbolism that mystery fans will enjoy.  Audrey and Daniel Cassella have recently lost their mother.  Their father was never really into parenting them and made plans for them to live at their maternal grandmother’s for the summer after Audrey had a party at her house.  On the drive from Phoenix to Elko in northern Nevada, they stop into the Hotel Ruby, which is a splurge.  Visually stunning, Audrey’s room is separated from her brother and fathers– hers being on the 13th floor which is under renovations.  Immediately, each person in the family is swept up, and away from each other, by the hotel’s oddities.  But when Audrey begins visually seeing people with blood on them when they are perfectly fine, she knows there isn’t quite right. Drama and tension build to a point where Audrey even tries to leave the hotel, but “the door only leads into the Ruby.”  Each character is questionable in their motivations, leading the reader, like Audrey, unable to know who to trust.  And while one might think they know how the story will wrap up, they too should not trust the oddities of the Hotel Ruby.  This page turner from Suzanne Young is recommended for high school audiences.

The Last Kids on Earth

Middle school boys see if you could keep up with Jack Sullivan if your world turned upside down with roaming monsters and zombies!

Jack has not had the easiest of lives being an orphan and shifting from one bad foster home to the next, but then the monsters and zombies take over. “But one thing I’ve learned about life after the Monster Apocalypse: nothing’s quick and nothing’s easy.” (p. 4) Now, Jack lives in a tree house which he has fortified.  On one of his trips to the CVS to get replacement parts for is walkie talkie, Jack runs into BLARG, a monster who will make several appearances for revenge on Jack. Jack spends his days calling out on the walkie talkie trying to make contact with his one friend Quint. [Foster kids don’t make or keep real friends easily.] Jack new life philosophy “Ever since the Robinsons peaced out– that’s forty-two days ago, now–I’ve been forced to survive alone in a world of monsters. That’s pretty much the plot of a video game, right?! So I said, y’know what, I’ll treat life like a video game.” (p. 23)

In video game fashion, Jack finds his best friend Quint. Jack helps move Quint and all of his science stuff in Quint’s mother’s suped up pickup truck, they call BIG MAMA, back to the tree house. They have a fine life eating Brown Sugar Cinnamon Pop-Tarts, drinking Mountain Dew, along with other junk foods. All the while, Jack is looking for June Del Toro, a girl from his former middle school, whom he wants to save as a damsel in distress. This is one of Jack’s Feats of Apocalyptic Success! video game style. While looking for gas to keep Big Mama running, Jack meets up with a humungous  pet monster (perhaps a dog- soon to be called Rover). On another trip out looking for June, Jack runs into the former middle school’s bully – Dirk. Dirk is not having any trouble fending off the monsters, but Jack talks him into coming and living with him in the tree house. BLARG makes an appearance, but between Dirk and Jack they are able to escape in Big Mama.

Quint makes a saddle for Jack to use to ride Rover. While riding Rover, the monster pet, Jack spies June’s sweat shirt stuck in the grating of a middle school window. Jack, Dirk, and Quint go to rescue June. As it turns out, June ends up rescuing them inside the abandoned middle school when BLARG makes yet another appearance. June does not want to be rescued. She’s trying to make contact with her parents. She saw them evacuating the city when the Monster Apocalypse began, but she was not able to reach them at that time.  Once again, Jack is able to talk another person into joining Quint and him back at the tree house fortress. Quint, Dirk, Jack, and now June deck themselves out in the school’s protective sports gear before going out to face the zombies and BLARG so they can return to the tree house. They are almost to Big Mama when Jack starts running away to lead BLARG away from the group. The rest of the group make it back to the ree house, but Jack is cornered by BLARG. Rover bounds in, in the nick of time. Back at the tree house,  Jack and friend use all of the fortress’s defenses to defend the tree house. Jack Slays BLARG. “I completed the ULTIMATE Feat of Apocalyptic Success! and now? Well, now, I think it’s time we all relaxed. At least for a little while…[until] the next giant monster comes around the corner….   THE END! (for now…)  (page 255)

Douglas Holgate’s graphic novel style illustrations are generously spread throughout the book making this a middle school boy favorite.