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Monday, February 24, 2025
Rethinking Heaven: A Review of "The Magician's Nephew" by CS Lewis
The Grass is Greener on the Other Side: A Review of "Freckle Juice" by Judy Blume
I picked up "Freckle Juice" by Judy Blume up at Bora Public Library recently. It's funny. As I read this short book (less than 100 pages) I found myself envisioning my second or third grade when I attended Shawsheen Elementary School in Greeley, Colorado, and then when I was googling the Freckle Juice movie, I saw that this is about the second grade. So I thought that was something.
So what's the story about? Spoiler alert! It's about a boy named Andrew who wants to have freckles (What is it about wanting to have what we can't and not wanting what we have?). He envies a boy in his class who has freckles, apparently because then nobody would know whether or not he has washed his face and neck. So a girl in his class gives him a "magic potion" that will give him freckles. But all it does is make him sick. His mom thought that his appendix had ruptured. He stayed home the next day and the day after that, he gave himself freckles with a magic marker.
Then his teacher, Miss Kelly, came to the rescue and gave him a "magic" freckle-remover kit. He went into the bathroom and removed his so-called "freckles."
The moral of the story: Accept yourself for who you are. If you don't have freckles, be glad you don't. If you have freckles, be glad you do because that's who you are.
If you're looking to check off reading a book, this is an easy one. I would guess an adult could read this whole book in an hour or less in one sitting, though I read it over several days. And now I can check it off the list and am now one book closer to catching up to my son.
By the way, if you're looking for a good library with quality children's books in English, I highly recommend Bora Public Library. By the way, I'm not getting any kickbacks in telling you that.
Friday, January 24, 2025
Robbed
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Monday, January 20, 2025
"Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus" A Book Review
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Last time I went to the library, I did a couple of searches on recommendations of chapter books for fourth-graders, since my son is in the fourth grade. Unfortunately, many books on the list from Read Aloud America are not available in the city I live in here in South Korea. But I found "Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus" at one library here in Yongin-City, Kyeonggi Province, South Korea, at Bora Public Library. This library is distinct among libraries in Yongin and this is one way in which it is unique. Even in Korean, only Bora Public Library has this book. I may utilize it to study Korean as well.
What can I say about this book without giving the whole story away? Well, it is a moving book about a girl named "Aven" who has no arms. She was born that way. She was adopted by two of the coolest parents who love her and think of her not as their adopted daughter but as their real daughter.
Her life is comfortable in Kansas but as a result of her dad getting a job as a theme park manager in Arizona, the whole family "gets to" move to Arizona. But when they get there, there are a whole lot of surprises. I won't spoil it by telling you what those surprises are.
While Aven has no arms, she is a truly remarkable person. You who have known people with disabilities who lived exemplary lives know what I'm talking about. And she becomes friends with two others, one of which also has a disability of sorts and the other is self-conscious about being overweight. But these three become three in a pod.
As I told you, I borrowed this book for my son but I am 46 years and I absolutely loved it. In fact, I wish I had read a book like this when I was in the fourth grade and had a hard time making friends. This book is a must read for anyone, big or small.
I'll warn you now, once you pick it up you won't want to put it down and don't be surprised if you shed a tear at some point, especially at the end when Aven does the remarkable on stage.
If you're wondering what age this book is appropriate, according to Common Sense Media, this book is appropriate for children age 9 and above.
Don't want to go to the library but just want to read it from home. Just click here and you can buy it directly from Amazon.