
Book News
Flash! The autobiography of the great Cardinal sports
announcer, Jack Buck, called "That's a Winner,"
was reviewed in the December 2000 issue of Young Saint
Louis.com.
Reading
Good Books
as Part of Summer Fun
Some kids look
forward to summer as a great time to catch up on reading the
good books that they didn't have time for during the school
year. For them, the message here is to remind them of the
good books that have been reviewed on Young Saint Louis.com
each month during the past year or so. For those kids who
don't see reading as much fun in the summer, the message here
is to try to get them to realize that books are like good
clothes - if you just look around a little bit you will find
something you like that fits you perfectly.
As the guy who
writes the book reviews for Young Saint Louis.com,
I've read over a hundred kids' books since YSL.com has been
on line. How do I pick the books to review?
I just go to
the bookstore at the mall and look in the intermediate and
teens section. Most of the time I just browse and I try to
find paperbacks that are fairly recent publications, look
like they would be interesting (to me and to the kids I write
for), and are fairly inexpensive. Once and awhile, I find
a kid there who is eager to recommend a book he or she especially
liked.
Sometimes I read
and review more expensive hardbacks, if I have a special reason
to report on them right away. The Harry Potter books or are
an example. All the books reviewed can be purchased at discount
prices from Walden Books or Borders or ordered on line from
Amazon.com. Of course, many of them can be borrowed for free
from the local public library.
It's hard for
me to pick favorites from the hundred or more books reviewed
over the months since May of 2000. If you want to read about
all of them, just go to the past issues tab at the top of
the home page for YSL.com, and read the reviews in
the book sections for each month. To make it more visual,
the colorful covers of each book are also shown with the review.
The reason it's hard to name favorites is that I liked almost
all of them - each for a different reason. I read a lot of
books in the summertime when I was a kid, but kids today have
a much greater variety to pick from. There are plenty of interesting
books that aren't too long and are fairly easy reading - you
don't have to spend weeks plowing through one book but can
fit reading several of them in while you are doing lots of
other things.
Boys might enjoy
"A Boy at War", the story of a boy caught in the
attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 while he was out fishing with
a friend (November 2001). They might also enjoy "Against
the Odds", which is about a boy on a vacation trapped
in a cabin with a couple of younger kids while an 800-pound
grizzly bear is tearing the cabin apart to get at them (April
2001). Girls might find hilarious reading in "The Top-secret
Journal of Fiona Claire Jardin" (July 2000). Girls might
also find good summer reading in "Taking Chances",
one in the Heartland series of books about a girl who works
at saving and retraining mistreated or injured horses (March
2001).
For readers interested
in sports stories, there is "Long Shot", which is
about girls' basketball (March 2002) or "Long Arm Quarterback"
about boys and football (November 2000). For non-fiction readers
there are a number of biographies, including that of the famous
woman aviator, Amelia Earhart, (February 2002) or the great
magician and escape artist, Harry Houdini, (January 2002).
Good historical
novels include "An Eye for An Eye", the adventures
of a "tom boy" in the Revolutionary War (April 2001)
or "Bushwhacker", about a brother and sister separated
from their family in Missouri during the Civil War period
(January 2002). For fans of mysteries, among several choices
are "The Shakespeare Stealer" (April 2002) or "The
Scream Museum" (September 2001).
Whatever your
tastes or interests might be, just remember that there are
books out there that were written with you in mind. Don't
miss out on the fun this summer that comes from reading them.
As a final note,
remember books are even more fun if they are shared. As this
reviewer sometimes points out on the website in the reviews
for parents, a surprising number of these books are just as
much fun for adults as they are for kids. Some of them need
lots of family discussion to be fully appreciated. Examples
would be "Kit's Wilderness" (February 2002) or ""Gathering
Blue" (November 2000).
A final final
note - just a brainstorming idea - how about kids collecting
and trading paperbacks instead of baseball cards or other
types of collectibles? You could even specialize in categories
- history, mysteries, biographies, sports, particular authors,
fantasy, humor, horse stories, dog stories, trivia, and who
knows what else...