Girl Force

A Girl’s Guidebook for the Body and Soul
by Nikki Goldstein
ages: it’s meant for teenage girls, but can go as young as 9/10

Review copy sent to me by the publisher

When this book came in the mail, it was snatched out of the pile almost immediately. My two oldest daughters — M, age 12, and C, age 9 — read through it, and were enthralled with the ideas in it. It’s not only a personality quiz, which are always fun, but a program to help teen girls get a handle on their busy life. Even though they’re both slightly younger than the audience Goldstein probably had in mind, they decided to embark upon a program to see if the ideas that Goldstein put out really worked. I noticed them often pouring over the book, writing things down, trying different foods (and beauty concoctions), and exercising more frequently than they used to. I sat down with them, a month into their project, to chat about the book.

There are three body/personality types: Earth, Fire and Air. What are each of you?
M: I’m an Air… kind of a eccentric personality, everywhere at once, impatient, enthusiastic and quick to learn. It’s a petit, slim, small body type with out of control hair.
C: I’m a Fire…I’m open to other people’s ideas, but I like to put my ideas out first. A born leader, passionate, outgoing, confident, and competitive. It’s a medium size, athletic, strong body type. Fire’s usually have blonde or red hair, and brunettes are pretty rare. I’ve got dark hair.

I came out as an Earth; between the three of us, we’ve got the entire book covered. What I want to know is if you think the description fits you?
M: It’s actually one of those quizzes that are fairly right. Even though I’m more a fire skin type, with the red hair and fair skin, the Air type fits me really well.
C: I kind of have a bit of Earth in me — my skin and hair are more Earth — but yeah, I’m mostly fire.
M: Everybody has a little bit of everything. It’s just focusing on your dominant energy.

Tell me a bit about the program in the book.
C: Goldstein tells you more about yourself, and getting used to people around you. It helps you become a bit more confident, and makes you a better you.
M: It’s a journey to self-love using different eating habits and exercise plans to help you become healthy and fit, and to help you be happy with who you are.

How about specifics?
M: She has lists of food that are better for your body types. There’s a stress management plan.
C: There are exercise recommendations for each body types, as well as yoga poses for each body type.
M: There are schedules you can follow if you need helping coming up with your plan.
C: It’s there to help you become a better you.
M: It’s suggestions rather than recommendations. She does this in a way that makes you actually want to try this program.

Tell me what you’ve learned about yourself from the book.
M: I’ve learned a lot about exercise and eating, habits and the actual method that she uses — an ancient medical system of India called Ayurveda — that’s really neat. It says that, “everyone has a unique Body Type made up of the elements Air, Fire and Earth and when you tap into the elemental-energies that dominate your bod and mind you’ll be destined for a happy, healthy and balanced life.”
C: Yeah, I agree. I learned many tips about colors that will look best on me, and ways to take care of my skin. It was all very interesting.

You two have been following the ideas put out in the book for about a month now. Has anything in your life changed?
M: We really haven’t been doing everything for a month, and we haven’t tried a lot of the things the book mentions because we don’t have all the supplies, but what we have tried we’ve liked. It has helped me manage my stress more, and stopped me from eating chocolate 24/7. Which is good.
C: For me, I’ve learned more about my eating; I need to have less condiments than I used to. I need to also lower my amount of chocolate, too. Because chocolate isn’t as good for me as other things that are sweet but have less sugar.
M: I haven’t been able to try the exercise recommendations, because it’s been cold out and Airs aren’t supposed to be out in the cold.
C: I’ve been able to do some of my exercise recommendations, like jogging and biking, and I’ve liked them. But I haven’t been able to go swimming yet.

Any thing else you’ve learned from the book?
M: It’s helped me appreciate nature more.
C: It’s helped me be less stressed, and helped me try new things that I didn’t think I liked to do.

Has it helped you think about yourself better?
M: Goldstein’s given me the direction I need to figure out things about myself. She starts you on the path, and lets you find your own way. She’s very open that way. I do think about myself better than I did before.
C: I did think less of myself than I do now. Whenever I looked at myself before, I would think that I need to stop and put on makeup to be pretty. I also thought that I was a little fat. Now, I know it’s just my body type. I seem to be more open to other people’s types and ideas now, too.
M: Goldstein tells you to read all of the types so you can get a picture of each type. And because of that, she helped me understand C better, so it helped with our relationship.

So, are you going to keep trying the program she sets out in the book? Why?
M: Yes: because it’s helped me balance my life more, as she’s promised, and it’s fun.
C: I agree; also, it’s helped me enjoy many different things in my life.

Will you recommend this book to others?
M: It’s designed for teen girls, but any girl would probably benefit from this.
C: Yeah. It’s for older kids, because it talks about a lot of things for older kids, but I’ve enjoyed doing it, too, even though I’m younger than the age she wrote the book for.

Tales from Outer Suburbia

by Shaun Tan
ages: 11+
First sentence: “When I was a kid, there was a big water buffalo living in the vacant lot at the end of our street, the one with the grass no one ever mowed.”

Someone — Tricia? Andi? Heather? — wrote in a review I read recently that one doesn’t read Shaun Tan books as much as experience them. Which I totally have to agree with: this isn’t a book (it’s not even really a proper graphic novel; more like a grown-up picture book; it reminded me of a more sophisticated Stinky Cheeseman) as much as it is an experience.

I also wasn’t expecting this book after reading The Arrival. It’s got the same surrealness, but I wasn’t expecting, well, words. The stories were odd, to say the least, but that’s one of the things I like about Tan: he takes the everyday and makes it fantastic. There are fifteen short stories in this collection, and all of them sound quite ordinary — The Nameless Holiday, Alert by not Alarmed, Stick Figures, Eric, and my favorite, Distant Rain — and yet, there’s this element that turns it from the ordinary to extraordinary: the art.

As was evident in The Arrival, Tan is an amazing artist. Which is really why you should pick up this book: to marvel at the genius that is Shaun Tan.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.

Keturah and Lord Death

by Martine Leavitt
ages: 12+
First sentence: “I was sixteen years old the day I was lost in the forest, sixteen the day I met my death.”

I’m trying to get a handle on this book. I really liked it, don’t get me wrong, but it’s one of those books that’s really hard to sum up. Keturah gets lost in the woods for three days, and is visited by Death — in the form of a man. She pleads, cajoles for her life, and it doesn’t work. Then, Scheherazade-like, she tells Death a story, withholding the end until the next day. She heads back to her village, suddenly aware of how blessed she is for just being alive. As the story progresses, her stories and bargains with Death become increasingly more varied — she bargains for lives of those in her village, mostly because she cannot bear to see them die. As an addendum for all this, she has to find her one True Love, for only if she finds him and marries him will Death truly set her free. Full of earthy magic — it strongly reminded me of A Curse Dark as Gold — high romance, mystery and Life Lessons, it truly is one of those tales that could be called timeless.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.

Library Loot #23

M is off to camp this week, and I didn’t have any holds to pick up (there are books on hold; they just haven’t come in), so it’s a really really small week.

For A/K:
Rosie’s Ballet Slippers, by Susan Hampshire/illus. by Maria Teresa Meloni
Ladybug Girl and Bumblebee Boy, by David Soman and Jacky Davis**
Some Things Are Scary: No Matter How Old You Are, by Florence Parry Heide/Illus. by Jules Feiffer
Annie Rose Is My Little Sister, by Shirley Hughes
Who Wants an Old Teddy Bear?, by Ginnie Hoffman
I Am NOT Going to School Today!, by Robie H. Harris/Illus. by Jan Ormerod
The Great Paper Caper, by Oliver Jeffers
Dora Saves Mermaid Kingdom! (Dora the Explorer) (requisite Dora was in this week)

For me (and M, if she wants):

Beastly, by Alex Finn*

The roundup is either at Reaing Adventures or A Striped Armchair.

*Ones that M eventually read.
**Picture books we really liked.

Wicked Lovely

by Melissa Marr
ages: 14+
First sentence: “The Summer King knelt before her.”

Aislinn can see faeries.

Granted, that’s not always a good thing. She’s not supposed to let on that she can see them, especially since they tend to get vindictive when they find out. So, for her whole life, she’s been going around pretending that what she can see doesn’t exist.

It works out fine, until one — Keenan, the Summer King — starts paying attention to her. See, he’s been bound by Beria, the Winter Queen, and he will not have his full power until he chooses one to be his queen. She has to willing give herself to him, and if she isn’t the One, she will carry the curse of the Winter Queen. Not an easy fate, and something that not many girls will choose. And it seems that for Keenan, Aislinn is The One. Except. She’s in love with Seth, an ordinary mortal, which makes things slightly more complicated.

You have everything in here: urban fairies, kicking heroine, love triangle (of sorts), faerie mythology, good overcoming evil… there’s nothing to not love. Except, while it was good and gripping and intriguing, I felt disconnected from it all. The was something missing, that I couldn’t quite put my finger on. Or maybe it was just disconcerting to read a dark faery tale, one where everything was harsh and edgy. However, it wasn’t enough to keep me from being curious as to what happens in the next book. I guess that’s a good thing.

Buy it from: Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

The Talented Clementine

by Sarah Pennypacker
ages: 7-10
First sentence: “I have noticed that teachers get exciting confused with boring a lot.”

Clementine’s school is having a fundraiser for the big spring trip. All the grades are pairing up to do something (car wash, bake sale), and the third and fourth grades are having… a talent show (“Talent-Palooza, Night of the Stars!”). Which is all fine and good, except Clementine doesn’t have a talent. Can’t sing. Can’t dance. Can’t even hop. (Has problems sitting on occasion.) So, in her own unique and hilarious way, she sets about trying to find a talent to share for the show, from begging her friend Margaret — who has talents to spare — to borrow a talent from her (in which she glues beer bottle caps — the bottles were full — to the bottom of her sneakers) to attempting to create her own talent (in which she puts a leash on her baby brother, whose name she keeps changing to different vegetables, in order to have a trained dog). Of course none of these work, and as the date for the talent show creeps closer, the stress (for Clementine, as well as for the reader) mounts. Will she be able to find a talent for the show in the end? Of course. And it’s pretty impressive — and very Clementine-ish — and quite delightful what she comes up with in the end.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

Forever Rose (Reread)

by Hilary McKay
ages: 10+
First sentence: “I do not like it when people shout.”

When I read this for the Cybils last November, my review wasn’t really a review, more like a bemused reaction to never having heard of the Casson family before. Since I didn’t write a “proper” review, and since I read the last one first, I figured I ought to go back and revisit Rose after having read the other four in the series.

I’m so glad I did; while it’s still funny, and sweet, and entertaining, and enjoyable, and I’m still in love with the Casson family, it’s a much more poignant book now that I know the “history”.

Without giving too much away, a year and a half after Caddy Ever After ended, it’s Christmas time and Rose is at home, alone. Eve is sequestered in the shed with illness (she, very sensibly, doesn’t want to spread germs); Bill is still in London, though he’s become increasingly dissatisfied with the arrangment (finally!); Caddy has disappeared after taking off in hopes of finding Michael; Saffy and Sarah are busy with school and are rarely home; same with Indigo. The only person left in the whole empty house is Rose, which she doesn’t like. Especially since it’s darker earlier. She doesn’t like that every one is still bossing her around: she is in Grade 6, after all, and while no one wants to worry about her, no one remembers that she doesn’t like worring about them. There’s also a subplot about Rose figuring out the magic of stories, which is very sweet (yay for fairy stories!). Typical to the Casson family books, it doesn’t stay that way: it begins when Indigo’s friend David starts coming around after fighting with his mother, and eventually, the house becomes full again.

There’s so much to love about this series, and I found this one to be a very satisfying end to the series (on the one hand, I do want it to go on, and watch them all grow up — but Rose has a blog to help with that — but this one did end remarkably well). Rose has always stolen the books from under her siblings, and to have a whole book focus on her works really well (especially since this one is much less soap-opera-y than the last book that focused on only Rose). As I said before, it’s quite poignant; there’s little references here and there to events in all the books: from Saffy’s angel and the picture Rose drew on her first day of school, through to the catastrophe of Caddy’s wedding (and everything inbetween).

I’m so glad I was introduced to the Casson family. I’m sure they’re books that I will revisit periodically when I need a smile or a pick-me-up. Because they’re just so loveable. Especially Rose.

Buy it at Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

Manga Shakespeare: The Tempest

by William Shakespeare/Illustrated by Paul Duffield
ages: anyone interested in Shakespeare

Since my on-line book group began reading a Shakespeare play every summer, I’ve struggled with the form. First of all, I think Shakespeare should be seen, not read, and I’ve found that just reading the text isn’t at all beneficial for me. I have tried watching movies and reading it at the same time (watch a scene, read a scene), and that works all right.

But now I have Manga Shakespeare! It’s like reading and seeing the play simultaneously: very helpful. (Actually in the spirit of full disclosure, I read the graphic novel once, read the introduction to the play in our Riverside Shakespeare, and then read the graphic novel again. And it worked beautifully.) I liked the drawings: it made it easy to figure out who was who, and even though I never quite got a grasp of the setting (it was this weird hybrid between modern and historical), it didn’t really bother me. I’m not one to comment on manga having never read it, but I do have to say that this was an excellent way to read the bard.

As for the play itself: I liked it. Reading the scholarly introduction helped, because it clued me in to the nuances of the play that I didn’t get the first time around (like why it ended the way it did). It’s a silly little play (not as funny as his comedies, though) with people wandering around the island, and a thwarted assasination attempt, fairies and sprites, and love at first sight (which was not as gag-inducing as many other love-at-first-sight plotlines).

Anyway. I’m not going to go out and recommend that you read The Tempest, but I will recommend Manga Shakespeare as a way to read the Bard. It’s really a very good way to access the plays.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.

Garden Spells

by Sarah Allen Addison
ages: adult
First sentence: “Every smiley moon, without fail, Claire dreamed of her childhood.”

The first thing I noticed about this novel is the descriptions. It’s there in the first sentence: “smiley moon” rather than crescent, or even sliver of a moon, sure. But, it doesn’t stop there; it’s scattered throughout the book. Addison’s talent, at least in my opinion, is not necessarily in plots or characters, but in lush, memorable descriptions of small-town South, with a magical twist.

Claire is a Waverly, which means she tends to a garden and knows its secrets — what the plants can do to a person — and how to use them. She runs a successful catering business, and everything is just fine, until her estranged sister, Sydney, moves back in town — she’s on the run from an abusive boyfriend — with her daughter Bay. Oh, and art professor Tyler moves in next door. Of course, Sydney will have difficulties readjusting to small-town life in Bascom, North Carolina. Of course there will be conflicts with her old school friends (who never really were her friends, and I felt the sub-plot was a bit forced, and kind of unnecessary). Of course Claire and Tyler will fall in love. Of course there will be a happily ever after.

But that’s not the point. The point is the nurturing and the giving and the growing. The point is characters like the sisters’ aunt, Evanelle, who’s magic is to give things. The point is family and belonging are what really matters. The point is Southern summer days. The point is food that makes you feel, makes you love, makes you regret. The point is an apple tree that wants to be a part of the family. The point is sentences where you can nearly feel and smell what they are describing.

And the result is a magical, sweet, delightful summer read.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

Girl at Sea

by Maureen Johnson
ages: 13+
First sentence: “Lightning flashed over Big Ben, and a bruise-like darkness draped over the dome of St. Paul’s.”

Ah, Maureen Johnson.

When life has got you down, or you need a bit of a pick me up after that really depressing novel, who else do you turn to provide a distraction? (Well, there are others, but since this is a review of Maureen Johnson’s book, we’ll just assume that she’s the best at it.)

I would say that this story is much like the others (except it’s nothing at all like Devilish or Bermudez Triangle): Clio, 17 years old, plucky artist, has a crush on Ollie who works at the local art store. What better way to get close to him than to work at the same store for the summer? Except fate (and her father) get in the way: he proposes (and since her mom’s going to be in Kansas — of all places, it’s so horribly boring here — she’s been force to accept) that Clio spend the summer with him. On a boat. Off the coast of Italy.

Sounds horrid — and to some extent it is; since her parent’s divorce, Clio and her father have been estranged. To help with the pain of… the weirdness of it all… there’s Elsa (who is your stereotypical Scandanavian Beauty: voluptuous, gorgeous, blonde… and nice) to be her friend. And Aiden — stuffy, snarky, Yale-educated — whom she can’t seem to get a handle on (even if we all know where it’s headed. Most deliciously headed.)

Sure the plot’s probably predictable, and some of the characters are one-dimensional (the over-protective mom, the snobby English workaholic who’s dating her dad, her dad’s buddy…), but that’s not why we read the books. Or why we like Maureen Johnson. No, we like these books because she captures that sweet romance, that first blush of falling in love, that *sigh* moment absolutely perfectly.

And we all need a little bit of that in our lives once in a while.

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.