School Library Journal

Imagine my surprise as I was happily paging through my new volume of School Library Journal and found my KidsLit blog featured as part of the “Blograrian” Book Reviews column! The kind words said about my blog literally made me do a happy dance around my office. What a wonderful way to perk up a Wednesday lunch hour. I am still grinning ear to ear and probably will be all day long.
So welcome to any of you who visiting because of the SLJ article. Hope you find lots of love of children’s literature and the children themselves.

Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs



The Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs
by Betty G. Birney is a book with an old-fashioned, folk-tale feel.  Eben is fascinated by the seven wonders of the world, and his father challenges him to find seven wonders right in his small, rural home town of Sassafras Springs.  Eben doubts that it is possible, but his father says that he can travel to Colorado if he manages to find all seven wonders in seven days.  The reader is carried along with Eben and his faithful dog as they search the entire town for wonders, meeting all sorts of characters along the way.  

The writing and subject are perfectly matched.  The writing is as unadorned as Sassafras Springs but leads to the same sort of joy as the wonders. Unfortunately, the brown cover of the book will not draw children to reading it. This one will take some hand selling or direct sharing to find its audience.  

This is a perfect book to read aloud to third or fourth graders, especially those living in small towns.  It will inspire children to see their own communities in a different way, celebrating the small things that make us all unique and learning about the tale tales and ghost stories that may be right under their own noses.  

Student Blogs

USATODAY.com – Schools grapple with policing students’ online journals is an article from The Christian Science Monitor. It nicely covers the problems schools are facing with students doing inappropriate and questionable things on their personal blogs. Unfortunately, there are no easy answers to the problems, but the article does give some insight into what other schools are doing and where the legality gets shaky.