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Thursday, February 26, 2015

Luna's Red Hat Review

Title: Luna's Red Hat: An Illustrated Storybook to Help Children Cope with Loss and Suicide

Author: Emmi Smid

Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers

Publication Date in US: April 21, 2015

Date Started: February 26, 2015

Date Finished: February 26, 2015

Format: E-Book

Medium: Kindle Keyboard

Review:

Luna's Red Hat is one of the only picture books that I have read that tackles a tough subject with such grace and dignity that I feel it should also be a book placed in an adult section of a library.  Not only does Smid address the means of how a child feels about suicide and the loss that comes with it, but she also addresses how a parent should speak with a child about difficult life situations.

The illustrations are beautiful.  I enjoy how almost minimalistic and almost childlike the illustrations seem.  They aren't a distraction from the message of the story but a companion that walk arm in arm with one another.  The story is not dark so the pictures are not dark.  The illustrations actually convey a sense of beauty using daffodils to remind the main character, Luna, that while her mother may be gone the memories they shared will always be around; all she has to do is look at her mother's favorite flowers.

One of my favorites part of Luna's Red Hat is towards the end there is a commentary from Dr. Riet Fiddelaers-Jaspers explaining to parents, grandparents, or any guardian of a child on how to handle speaking to a child on this very difficult subject.  He also explains how a child sees and feels when something of this magnitude affects their life in a negative way.  I enjoyed the research that went into this storybook as well.  A reader will be able to tell Smid took the time to actually research the subject to properly give this subject the proper feeling it needs.

While I would not use this book during a storytime because of the nature of the subject, I would definitely have this in my library as a reference.


Rating: 4/5

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

The Beginning of My Demise

Okay, I admit, I may be in this for the free books...and that may not be such a great thing.

I love books.  That is one of the main reasons why I took up a liking to library work and also the general atmosphere of a library/bookstore (the others being a slow-paced work environment aaaaand the occasional lazy day that happens to all twenty-somethings who work where their passions lie).

Another reason is it gave me an outlet for all of these books I hoard.  No, seriously, it has become a situation in this household.  Let me clarify.  There are two, I repeat, TWO book obsessed/ book genre polar opposites/ and talk-about-work-when-we-aren't-at-work librarians living under a very tiny roof. It has become "what I call" a nightmare (thank you Miranda Hart, I love you).

We like 2nd and Charles, book ARCs, and I will name her....., (since people on blogs enjoy making incognito names for their children and significant other, I feel this is only proper) Socks, just go with it, juuuuuuuuuuust signed up to be a committee member on the Georgia Peach Awards (almost 100 free books a year YAY!) board and I have a gut wrenching feeling she will be picked so we shall be receiving/buying/begging for books ALL OF THE TIME. (UPDATE:  She didn't get picked. BOO! But I signed up with Blogging for books and get free books at least twice a month. Yay!)

                    ________________________________________________________

I have been wanting to do one of these blogs for a while and finally have the time to do them.  This one will be mainly for doing book reviews and they may be short and they may be run-on-ey but that's how my brain works so *raspberry*.

When I said Socks and I are polar opposites, I was being completely true.  She enjoys zombie dystopian (Jonathan Maberry, Charlie Higson, and the Walking Dead compendiums) and I, on the other hand, enj...well, I'm actually kind of all over the place with my interests.  I like Margaret Peterson Haddix, D.J. MacHale, Scott Westerfield, Rainbow Rowell, Loren Long and lots lots more when it comes to the youth categories but oh, man gee man do I like adult fiction too.

Andy Weir, Ernest Cline, Daniel H. Wilson...pretty much anything Sci-Fi or Fantasy I will drink up.  (Help me with Game of Thrones, though, too much high fantasy all at once).

So, that's my ramble.

Welcome to my rambly blog.

-Book Brain