Will Sparrow’s Road

Will Sparrow's Road - Historical Fiction Children's Book

Published: 2012 Theme: Coming of Age Best for: 11 and up "Will Sparrow was a liar and a thief, and hungry, so when he saw the chance to steal a cold rabbit pie from the inn's kitchen and blame it on the dog, he took it - both the chance and the pie..." First and foremost, this is a beautifully written piece of children's historical fiction literature. The fact that the story and characters are interesting as well is icing on the cake..

Will in Scarlet

Children's Book: Will in Scarlett

Published: 2013 Theme: Robin Hood Best for: 10 and up "Killing wolves is supposed to teach me to be a great lord of men? Aren't there any books on the subject?" This children's book is full of action. While it's not written as a historical fiction, it gives a good view of the class disparity, and why one would rob the rich and give to the poor.

Truckers – Bromeliad Trilogy 1

Bromeliad Trilogy Book 1

Published: 1998 Theme: Science Fiction Best for: 11 and up "Be quiet! You know the words of Arnold Bros. (est. 1905)! Everything Under One Roof. Everything! Therefore, there can be no Outside. Therefore you're from some other part of the Store. Corsetry. Or Young Fashions..." The first children's book in The Bromeliad Trilogy is filled with humor, puns, social commentary, and a clever plot. I admit to laughing out loud ...

Wintersmith

Children's Book - Wintersmith

Published: 2005 Theme: Coming of Age Best for: 12 and up 'Tiffany had never been able to find out much about the librarians. They were a bit like the wandering priests and teachers who went even into the smallest, loneliest villages...It was said they could tell what book you needed just by looking at you..." The mastery of this children's book is the way everything is woven artfully into one exquisite whole, even while each part, each character, stands out clearly...

The Second Mrs. Giaconda

Historical Fiction Children's Book: The Second Mrs. Giaconda

Published: 1975 Theme: Historical Fiction Best for: 12 to 14 "Why, people ask, why did Leonardo da Vinci choose to paint the portrait of the second wife of an unimportant Florentine merchant when dukes and duchesses all over Italy and the King of France as well, were all begging for a portrait by his hand? Why, they ask, why?" This is quite a lovely way to introduce older children to the world of Leonardo da Vinci, and his painting of the Mona Lisa, and history of the Renaissance.

Esperanza Rising

Children's Book - Esperanza Rising

Published: 2000 Theme: Social Justice Best for: 9 and up "Abuelita smiled, reached over, and pulled the yarn, unraveling all of Esperanza's rows. "Do not be afraid to start over," she said." What better way for children to become true citizens of the world than by reading honestly written books about serious issues, in this case the treatment of Mexican immigrant farmworkers during the depression...

Echo

Children's Book: Echo

Published: 2015 Theme: Power of Music Best for: ages 10 and up "Have you ever considered that one person might play the mouth harp and pass along her strength and vision and knowledge? So that the next musician who plays it might feel the same? It is true..." The thread that weaves the three main characters together is the power of music to redeem even the darkest of situations...

The Dreamer

Children's Book - The Dreamer

Published: 2010 Theme: Live your dream Best for: 8 and up "He peeked out... and saw that the wind had also possessed his mittens. They looked like ghostly hands waving good-bye in the Chilean sky. Where were they headed? Whose hands would they cover next? ..'Where is the storehouse of lost and found?'" As I put this exquisite children's book down, I wiped my eyes, and marveled at the quick journey I had just taken into the heart and mind of Pablo Neruda...

Chu Ju’s House

Children's Book - Chu Ju's House

Published: 2005 Theme: Genuine Sacrifice Best for: 10 and up "In so loud a voice I was sure her words carried over the hills, Nai Nai said, "Send us a boy to care for us in our old age and not another worthless girl." I, Chu Ju, was that worthless girl. Nai Nia's harsh words made my eyes sting with tears." In another beautifully written children's book of historical fiction, Whelan brings alive a foreign culture and foreign era, making us live and breathe with it.

The Lost Track of Time

Children's Book - The Lost Track of Time

Published: 2015 Theme: Imagination Best for: 9 and up "In those days, possibilities fell to the ground like rain. Each one was a brilliant bit of light, etched with a message. 'It's a possibility,' people would say whenever they found one and, if they liked what it said, they'd pop it into their mouths and chew on it." In this allegorical children's book, similar to The Phantom Tollbooth, we journey to an imaginative land, The Land of Possibilities, which is now in a sorry state.