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Can Magic be Used for Good?

The Thickety: A Path Begins is J. A. White’s first volume in the Thickety series, and my first book to write about in a blog. I’m new to Lemuria and completely new to blogging.

When I first started working at Lemuria I was really excited about all of the books that were now at my fingertips. I was especially drawn to the Young Adult and Middle Grade sections in OZ (our young readers room) when I noticed so many books that I had already read as well as books that I had been wanting to read. Based on my fondness of this area and on some of the previous series I have read, it was suggested to me to read The Thickety; and trust me, I’m glad I did. Think Harry Potter meets The Giver. Amazing.

thickety jacketIn Thickety, the villagers of De’Noran only have one thought: “There is no such thing as a good witch.” This is the thought that Kara Westfall grew up with, yet her mother was a witch. So, could it really be true that no witch is good? Or that nothing good could come from using magic? Kara has to go day to day being pushed aside because of her mother’s past with magic. She is treated worst of all by Grace, a girl in her class who belittles her and uses her to get things she wants. Kara soon learns of her own magical powers, and must figure out how to control them. She has to realize that she has enough honor and kindness to control her powers and use them for good. Others seem to only want magic and power to themselves. This leads to much devastation in the town of De’Noran, only making the villagers want magic gone for good.

Thickety lets you travel through a world filled with spells, magical creatures, and evil, while teaching you that doing good and being a better person will get you somewhere in life, and being a bully or trying to use people for your own advantage….well, won’t.

I’m definitely glad I followed up on that suggestion and basically spent my whole day off from work in the pages of this book. I really feel like kids in grades 4th through 7th will love this series. Even as an adult, I found this book very entertaining and it was difficult for me to put down. Now, I’m on to the second book!

 

Author J.A. White will be here this afternoon at 4:30 to sign the newest book in the Thickety series: Thickety: The Whispering Trees. Don’t miss it!

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National Poetry Month: More Than Just Romance

I’m a fan of this poem because it’s very easy to grasp, and I feel like many people can relate it it in different ways and situations. For instance, of course it can be a meaningful poem between a husband and wife, but it can also be just as meaningful between a parent and child. But most of all, I like this poem because it reminds me that even when you’ve lost someone in death, you can and will still carry that person in your heart.

 

[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]

By E. E. Cummings

i carry your heart with me(i carry it in

my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
                                                      i fear
no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you
here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart
i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)
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National Poetry Month: The Time is Right

shelI am going to confess something to y’all. I do not read poetry. I just don’t get it. When a customer comes in looking for poetry, I am crossing my fingers that they ask for a poet that I know about, especially if Adie is not working. I am always passing a poetry customer over to Adie (our resident poet) because she will be able to help them so much more than I could ever think about.

wherethesidewalkendsHannah sent an email out asking us to write a poetry blog to celebrate April being National Poetry Month. I immediately broke out in a sweat. I was discussing my dilemma with Jamie saying that really the only poetry I have ever loved was some I had read as a child. He urged me to write about it.

 

I loved Shel Silverstein when I was lightintheatticyoung. I had poems memorized and would recite them when I thought the time was right. So today I went in OZ and picked up a copies of Where the Sidewalk Ends and A Light in the Attic and found some poems to share with you.

 

 

hugpicHUG O’ WAR

I will not play at tug o’ war.
I’d rather play at hug o’ war,
Were everyone hugs
Instead of tugs,
Where everyone giggles
And rolls on the rug,
Where everyone kisses,
And everyone grins,
And everyone cuddles,
And everyone wins.

 

LISTEN TO THE MUSTN’TS

Listen to the MUSTN’TS, child,
Listen to the DON’TS
Listen to the SHOULDN’TS
The IMPOSSIBLES, the WON’TS
Listen to the NEVER HAVES
Then listen close to me —
Anything can happen, child,
ANYTHING can be.

 

NO DIFFERENCE

Small as a peanut,
Big as a giant,
We’re all the same size
When we turn off the light.

Rich as a sultan,
Poor as a mite,
We’re all worth the same
When we turn off the light.

Red, black or orange,
Yellow or white,
We all look the same
When we turn off the light.

So maybe the way
To make everything right
Is for God to just reach out
And turn off the light!

 

CHANNELS

Channel 1’s no fun.
Channel 2’s just news.
Channel 3’s hard to see.
Channel 4 is just a bore.
Channel 5 is all jive.
Channel 6 needs to be fixed.
Channel 7 and Channel 8–
Just old movies, not so great.
Channel 9’s a waste of time.
Channel 10 is off, my child.
Wouldn’t you like to talk awhile?

 

SENSES

A Mouth was talking to a Nose and an Eye.
A passing listening Ear
Said “Pardon me, but you spoke so loud,
I couldn’t help but overhear.”
But the Mouth just closed and the Nose turned up
And the Eye just looked away,
And the Ear with nothing more to hear
Went sadly on its way.

 

I just felt the time was right.

 

 

 

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Children’s Events April 7 and 8

This week is a big week for children’s events at Lemuria Bookstore! Stop by to meet the authors and hear them read from their books.

HESTER BASS will be here on Tuesday April 7 at 3:30 p.m.

Hester Bass  photoHester Bass is the author of the picture book biography The Secret World of Walter Anderson, which won an Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children and a SIBA award; and is illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Her newest picture book is Seeds of Freedom: The Peaceful Integration of Huntsville, Alabama and is also illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Formerly residing in Huntsville, Alabama, she now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her biography (and Lewis’ illustrations) on Mississippi artist Walter Anderson capture the spirit of the Mississippi coast and the artist’s life. Bass writes, “Art was an adventure, and Walter Anderson was an explorer, first class.”
Lewis’s watercolors pay homage from one watercolorist to another. Likewise, the medium of watercolor is useful in depicting the peaceful integration in Huntsville, Alabama in 1963. The book is
illustrated in a combination of muted grays, browns, whites, and bright blues, and there is a beautifully illustrated scene with children releasing colorful balloons in the air. Lewis’ illustrations and Bass’ writing introduce children to interesting people and history in the South.

walter anderson pb9780763669195

 

J.A. WHITE will be here Wednesday April 8 at 4:30 p.m.

thickety jacketJA White Author Photothickety 2 jacket

J.A. White is the author of The Thickety series. For fans of Neil Gaiman, The Thickety series feels like a modern-day tale from the Brothers Grimm. J.A. White’s first book, The Thickety: A Path Begins, was chosen as Publisher’s Weekly Best book and was on several “Best Summer Reading for Kids” lists including Washington Post’s Summer Book Club and Huffington Post’s “Summer Reading List for Kids.” Discover the second installment in this hit-series with The Thickety: The Whispering Trees. Kara and Taff have ridden into the Thickety with no hope of returning to the village. What’s beyond the Thickety? Join J.A. White on April 8 at Lemuria to find out!

 

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National Poetry Month: Collecting Inaugural Poems

on the pulse of morning maya angelou“On the Pulse of Morning” by Maya Angelou. New York, NY: Random House, 1993.

National Poetry Month was established in April 1996 to highlight the achievements of American poets, support teachers, encourage the reading and writing of poems, and increase the attention given to poetry in the media. We’ve been digging through our poetry section at Lemuria, thinking and talking about our favorite poets, and I remembered that we have a collectible edition of the late Maya Angelou’s inaugural poem “On the Pulse of Morning.”

Even though the United States has had 57 presidential inaugurations, we have had only five inaugural poems. John F. Kennedy was the first to have a famous poet read at the ceremony in 1961. Robert Frost was to read a poem called “Dedication” which he had written for the occasion with references to Kennedy’s slim victory over Nixon. When Frost looked down to read, the glare was so strong from the heavy blanket of snow that he could not see the words–even though someone tried to shield the paper with his hat. The 86-year-old Frost simply recited a poem from memory called “The Gift Outright.”

robert frost inauguration
It was not until 1993 that a poem was read again. Maya Angelou read “On the Pulse of Morning” at Bill Clinton’s inauguration. In a 1993 interview with the New York Times, she said that she wanted to communicate “that as human beings we are more alike that we are unalike.” As she prepared to deliver her poem, she admitted that it was an overwhelming honor. Perhaps, Angelou knew of Frost’s trouble at Kennedy’s ceremony. She asked every one to pray for her:

“I ask everybody to pray for me all the time. Pray. Pray. Pray. Just send me some good energies. Last night I said to this group of hundreds of people, I said: ‘Pray for me please, for the inaugural poem. Not in general. Pray for me by name.’ Say: ‘Lord! Help Maya Angelou’ Don’t just say ‘Lord help six-foot-tall black ladies or poets or anything like that. Lord. Help Maya Angelou. Please!’”

So far we’ve had three more inaugural poets: Miller Williams read “Of History and Hope” at the 1997 inaugural of Bill Clinton; Elizabeth Alexander read “Praise Song for the Day” at the 2009 inaugural of Barack Obama; and Richard Blanco read “One Today” at the 2013 inaugural of Barack Obama.

Since Robert Frost’s inaugural poem, most of the poems are published in a special inaugural edition. Random House issued Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse of Morning” in a signed limited edition of 500 numbered copies. It was also published in a pamphlet format in dark maroon wrappers. Collecting these inaugural poets is a unique way to collect poetry and a piece of American history. It is also curious to see which presidents will carry on this tradition.

This is video footage of Maya Angelou reciting her poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at the 1993 Presidential Inaugural. This footage is official public record produced by the White House Television (WHTV) crew, provided by the Clinton Presidential Library.

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Children’s Author Events April 7 & April 8

This week is a big week for children’s events at Lemuria Bookstore! Stop by to meet the authors and hear them read from their books.

HESTER BASS will be here on Tuesday April 7 at 3:30 p.m.

Hester Bass  photoHester Bass is the author of the picture-book biography The Secret World of Walter Anderson, which won an Orbis Pictus Award for Outstanding Nonfiction for Children and a SIBA award, and is illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Her newest picture-book is Seeds of Freedom: The Peaceful Integration of Huntsville, Alabama and is also illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Formerly residing in Huntsville, Alabama, she now lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her biography (and Lewis’ illustrations) on Mississippi artist Walter Anderson capture the spirit of the Mississippi coast and the artist’s life. Bass writes, “Art was an adventure, and Walter Anderson was an explorer, first class.”
Lewis’s watercolors pay homage from one watercolorist to another. Likewise, the medium of watercolor is useful in depicting the peaceful integration in Huntsville, Alabama in 1963. The book is
illustrated in a combination of muted grays, browns, whites, and bright blues, and there is a beautifully illustrated scene with children releasing colorful balloons in the air. Lewis’ illustrations and Bass’ writing introduce children to interesting people and history in the South.

walter anderson pb9780763669195

 

J.A. WHITE will be here Wednesday April 8 at 4:30 p.m.

thickety jacketJA White Author Photothickety 2 jacket

J.A. White is the author of The Thickety series. For fans of Neil Gaiman, The Thickety series feels like a modern-day tale from the Brothers Grimm. J.A. White’s first book, The Thickety: A Path Begins, was chosen as Publisher’s Weekly Best book and was on several “Best Summer Reading for Kids” lists including Washington Post’s Summer Book Club and Huffington Post’s “Summer Reading List for Kids.” Discover the second installment in this hit-series with The Thickety: The Whispering Trees. Kara and Taff have ridden into the Thickety with no hope of returning to the village. What’s beyond the Thickety? Join J.A. White on April 8 at Lemuria to find out!

 

Share

Collecting Inaugural Poems

on the pulse of morning maya angelou“On the Pulse of Morning” by Maya Angelou. New York, NY: Random House, 1993.

National Poetry Month was established in April 1996 to highlight the achievements of American poets, support teachers, encourage the reading and writing of poems, and increase the attention given to poetry in the media. We’ve been digging through our poetry section at Lemuria, thinking and talking about our favorite poets, and I remembered that we have a collectible edition of the late Maya Angelou’s inaugural poem “On the Pulse of Morning.”

Even though the United States has had 57 presidential inaugurations, we have had only five inaugural poems. John F. Kennedy was the first to have a famous poet read at the ceremony in 1961. Robert Frost was to read a poem called “Dedication” which he had written for the occasion with references to Kennedy’s slim victory over Nixon. When Frost looked down to read, the glare was so strong from the heavy blanket of snow that he could not see the words–even though someone tried to shield the paper with his hat. The 86-year-old Frost simply recited a poem from memory called “The Gift Outright.”

robert frost inauguration
It was not until 1993 that a poem was read again. Maya Angelou read “On the Pulse of Morning” at Bill Clinton’s inauguration. In a 1993 interview with the New York Times, she said that she wanted to communicate “that as human beings we are more alike that we are unalike.” As she prepared to deliver her poem, she admitted that it was an overwhelming honor. Perhaps, Angelou knew of Frost’s trouble at Kennedy’s ceremony. She asked every one to pray for her:

“I ask everybody to pray for me all the time. Pray. Pray. Pray. Just send me some good energies. Last night I said to this group of hundreds of people, I said: ‘Pray for me please, for the inaugural poem. Not in general. Pray for me by name.’ Say: ‘Lord! Help Maya Angelou’ Don’t just say ‘Lord help six-foot-tall black ladies or poets or anything like that. Lord. Help Maya Angelou. Please!’”

So far we’ve had three more inaugural poets: Miller Williams read “Of History and Hope” at the 1997 inaugural of Bill Clinton; Elizabeth Alexander read “Praise Song for the Day” at the 2009 inaugural of Barack Obama; and Richard Blanco read “One Today” at the 2013 inaugural of Barack Obama.

on the pulse of morningSince Robert Frost’s inaugural poem, most of the poems are published in a special inaugural edition. Random House issued Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse of Morning” in a signed limited edition of 500 numbered copies. It was also published in a pamphlet format in dark maroon wrappers. Collecting these inaugural poets is a unique way to collect poetry and a piece of American history. It is also curious to see which presidents will carry on this tradition.

See all of Lemuria’s first editions by Maya Angelou here

This is video footage of Maya Angelou reciting her poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at the 1993 Presidential Inaugural. This footage is official public record produced by the White House Television (WHTV) crew, provided by the Clinton Presidential Library.

 

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National Poetry Month: Trethewey in the Middle

This poem by Mississippi native Natasha Trethewey reminds me that my story isn’t the only story in the world.  Trethewey, growing up the daughter of a black mother and white father was sometimes able to “pass” as white.  Yet, she often found herself occupying a strange third world—neither black nor white— and this only added to the awkwardness of growing up.  “White Lies” uses language cleverly (the pun of the title, the nod toward Ivory Soap’s “99.4% Pure” slogan, and the ambiguity at the end) to create something that hangs with me long after I’ve read it.

 

White Lies

The lies I could tell,

when I was growing up

light-bright, near-white,

high-yellow, red-boned

in a black place,

were just white lies.

 

I could easily tell the white folks

that we lived uptown,

not in that shanty-fied shotgun section

along the tracks.  I could act

like my homemade dresses

came straight out the window

of Maison Blanche.  I could even

keep quiet, quiet as kept,

like the time a white girl said

(squeezing my hand), Now

we have three of us in this class.

 

But I paid for it ever time

Mama found out.

She laid her hands on me,

then washed out my mouth

with Ivory soap.  This

is to purify, she said,

to cleanse your lying tongue.

Believing her, I swallowed suds

thinking they’d work

from the inside out.

 

[from Domestic Work]

200567

 

Written by Jamie 

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YA: It’s a Point of View

On March 31, 2015 Y.A. authors Claudia Gray and Moriah McStay will be at Lemuria Bookstore. Signing at 5 p.m., Reading at 5:30 p.m.

Y.A. is a publishing term that stands for Young Adult, and is a genre marketed to high school students. This genre of “children’s literature” borders between adolescence and adulthood, and often features themes that explore that transition in a young person’s life. Young Adult authors have written books that are fun to read, and some of the best Y.A. books are sharp and well-written, so that there is a far-reaching crowd beyond the age of 17 that enjoys reading Y.A. (looking at you, John Green).

I am delighted to bring the sharpest and wittiest pair of Y.A. authors from the South to Jackson.

Attend an exciting panel at Lemuria Books this Tuesday, featuring Claudia Gray and Moriah McStay. I interviewed Claudia back in November when A Thousand Pieces of You hit the shelves, but now she will be visiting Jackson and Lemuria, along with Memphis author Moriah McStay with her debut Y.A. novel, Everything That Makes You. I can’t sing their praises enough, and will divide and conquer each book.

 

A Thousand Pieces of You

by Claudia Gray

claudia

 

“Orphan Black” meets “Cloud Atlas” in the first book of this epic dimension-bending trilogy about a girl who must chase her father’s killer through multiple dimensions. A little Dr. Who, a little “Wrinkle in Time” that takes place not only in different dimensions, but in different cities around the world. Gray began her writing career with the Evernight series: four YA novels set in an eerie gothic boarding school. The Evernight books received critical acclaim from national media, earned Gray the title of New York Times bestseller, and jumpstarted her career. She is also the author of the popular and highly praised Spellcaster series, the Firebird Trilogy, and the upcoming Star Wars novel, “Lost Stars.”

Though she has worked as a lawyer, journalist, disc jockey, and extremely poor waitress, she currently writes full time. She resides in New Orleans.

Fun facts: Claudia’s favorite childhood book was “A Little Princess” by Frances Hodgson Burnett, and if she could be any fictional character, she would be Hermione.

 

Everything That Makes You

by Moriah McStay

headshot-cropped-282x300

What if your life had two trajectories that were almost the same, but with slight nuances. What if you never had that scar on your face? These are the questions “Everything That Makes You” asks. The reader follows the same girl in two stories. Moving between them feels like a game, or a great song—exciting, unpredictable, and so compelling. Because luck may determine our paths, but maybe it’s who we are that determines our luck. You will not be able to put this book down—all the more reason to come listen to McStay read this Tuesday!

Moriah says: “I love Mr. Darcy, guacamole, Hob Nobs, indie music, consignment stores, Harry Potter, and love stories.”

While these books may be for the young “adults” of the world, they are also for the young at heart! Visit Lemuria on Tuesday at 5 p.m. to hear Gray and McStay read from their books and explain their writing process.

 

Written by Clara 

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The Penderwicks are Back!

It has been 10 years since the The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy by Jeanne Birdsall won the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature in 2005. With the publication of a fourth book, The Penderwicks in  Spring, now would be the perfect time to start the series if you haven’t read it before.

In their breakout book, the four Penderwick sisters paved their way as this generation’s “The Saturdays” (by Elizabeth Enright) or Moffat family (by Eleanor Estes), but with a spunk that is all their own. When the Penderwicks’ story begins, Rosalind is 12, Skye is 11, Jane is 10, and Batty, the youngest, is 4.

This first book allows the reader to tumble into a wonderful world. Two subsequent books, The Penderwicks on Gardam Street and The Penderwicks at Point Mouette feature more of the Penderwick sisters, their best friend Jeffrey, and their adventures as a family.

In The Penderwicks in Spring, the sisters have grown up—Rosalind is in college and Skye and Jane are teenagers. Batty, now eleven, runs a dog-walking business where an overweight daschund named Duchess and a sharpei named Cilantro are her first clients. Ben is a second-grader who is fiercely adored by the newest addition to the Penderwick family, two-year-old Lydia. She will be instrumental in the fifth and final book in the series.

This fourth book has the same hilarity and laughter as the others, but as the sisters grow up, the story gains more gravitas. It is Jeffrey, honorary Penderwick and music mentore, who says to Batty, “Listen to me, Batty. Dogs die. People die. We do the best they can while they’re alive, and then they die anyway.”

And after death, there is always the quiet crescendo of a new spring blooming. The Penderwicks in Spring is Batty’s story to tell, and it is her voice the reader has been listening for all along.

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