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Weekend Pick for July 26, 2024

7/26/2024

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Weekend Pick for July 26, 2024

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Dr. Rachelle Savitz, an associate professor of literacy at East Carolina University, prepared this weekend pick for you. In addition to teaching graduate students, Rachelle enjoys facilitating trauma-sensitive and culturally sustaining disciplinary literacy professional learning across the country. She loves sharing her passion for using books to connect with and learn about one another’s lived experiences.

Burn Down, Rise Up by Vincent Tirado
In her next suggestion, Burn Down, Rise Up by Vincent Tirado, readers encounter the following topics:
  • False promises;
  • Hypocrisy;
  • Governmental Injustice;
  • Burning and Fighting Back;
  • Grassroots Organizations;
  • Rebuilding, and Survival. 
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Vincent Tirado
The genre of YA Horror is often neglected. However, when an author combines horror, historical and contemporary racism, and connection to today’s time, it is a sure win for all readers. Burn Down, Rise Up by Vincent Tirado does all of this as readers learn about the cost of redlining, slumlords, White flight, intentional burning of low-income property, oppression - and how those policies continue to harm society today.

The story takes place in a version of the Bronx that connects teenagers to the past (1970s-80s) when they play the Echo game. People are disappearing from the Bronx, and others are developing a strange rash that looks like black mold spreading all over their skin until it kills them.
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​The rules of the game are simple: don’t leave the train for an hour, don’t talk or touch the passengers, and don’t turn around. If these rules aren’t followed, there are strict consequences, as the player becomes part of the echo. Sixty minutes doesn’t seem like a long time, but is it? Once the Echo takes hold, it doesn’t want to let go—and the Bronx is not the only Echo playing out in real life worldwide. Echoes exist all over as they represent the horrors and tragedies of particular regions and areas. 
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Our main characters are Raquel, her crush Charlize, her best friend Aaron, and his brother Mario. The group decides to investigate the Echo Game, conducting research and talking with people who have played and come out alive, albeit not the same as when they began. For Charlize, she wanted to find her cousin Cisco, who disappeared after calling her for help. Raquel's mom has the black mold rash spreading all over her body and is now in a medically induced coma. Yet, even choosing not to play doesn’t mean you are not impacted, as Raquel begins having recurring nightmares of fire and death that cause harm to her body in the real world. Therefore, the group decides to play the Echo game. So, at 3 A.M., they get onto the subway and chant, “We are Echobound.” Once part of the game, Raquel must learn about the racist policies and people who lived in the Bronx years ago and how these practices killed many residents – to fight back and survive the Echo – and know the stories, grief, and trauma of those who came before.
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As someone who enjoys historical fiction and believes in the power of literature to share about our lives and connections to the characters, this is a must-read novel. It is action-packed and showcases strong characters’ love for one another, their families and heritages, and their community. Throughout the book, I often found myself Googling to learn more about this time period, especially in the Bronx and NYC. While I knew many of the terms and issues with racist policies and practices that continue today, the way this book requires the reader to stop and reflect on how the past continues to harm the present is masterfully done. Trauma doesn’t simply go away – there is a need to pay reparations and collectively make changes that address the many issues in our society, especially for historically and contemporarily marginalized populations. Ultimately, we must know the history to rise from the ashes and start anew. 
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Weekend Pick for July 19, 2024

7/19/2024

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Weekend Pick for July 19, 2024

Vanessa Rogers, an educator, a traveler, and a lover of adventure brings you this Weekend's Pick.
Crowned: Magical Folk and Fairy Tales from the Diaspora
by Kahran and Regis Bethencourt 
and Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky by Kwame Mbalia
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Vanessa Rogers
What’s better than one great weekend read? Two great weekend reads! If you like adventure, traveling across worlds, or even realms, or possibly living in your favorite fairy tale - you are in the right place. 

We all, at one point or another have read, heard, or referenced: Goldie Locks and the Three Bears, Cinderella, The Little Mermaid, or even Hansel and Gretel; but how many of us know the tales of Anasi? Aku? Or John Henry? What about the legend of Princess Yennenga? Or even know how the zebra got their stripes? 
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To start this weekend’s recommendation we first take a look at the age-old stories that were likely to have been the very first stories heard by many children. Crowned: Magical Folk and Fairy Tales from the Diaspora, written by husband and wife duo Kahran and Regis Bethencourt, takes these very characters and weaves in the faces, cultures, and experiences of the historically overlooked.
This book is as much a page-turner as it is a piece of art. Story after story reimagine the lives of “our” classic characters by painting (quite literally) their lives in a different light. Instead of Goldie Locks and Cinderella, we meet Goldi the girl with the golden locks and Asha, the little cinder girl. 
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Kahran and Regis Bethencourt
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​These classical tales are then followed by stories from the Diaspora, including that of a spider who uses his mystical web to weave together the lives of folktales and legends alike - Anasi; an American hero renowned for his super strength, enormous imposing steel hammer, and dedication to his job - John Henry; and the toils of a cunning trickster rabbit and his respective foe, fox - Brer Rabbit and Brer Fox.
These culturally rooted stories serve as the foundation for this weekend’s second, and paired, reading: Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky.
The second reading follows a middle schooler across the country and into another realm! Tristan Strong finds himself grieving the loss of his best friend, the loss of his first boxing match, and the loss of his sense of direction as he is sent from Chicago to his grandparents’ farm all the way in Alabama. Leaving home filled with guilt, the stories and the cherished notebook of his late friend - his visit to the farm does not go quite as planned. Glowing journals, talking dolls, beloved legends, forgotten gods …and a hole in the sky - what could go wrong?
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Kwame Mbalia
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Pairing these two texts provides background knowledge, adventure, and a chance to see the world from a different perspective. Crowned: Magical Folk and Fairy Tales from the Diaspora serves as a great coffee table book, attracting the attention of all; while Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky perfectly balances humor, suspense, and accessibility - as it has additionally been formatted as a graphic novel and an audiobook. 

Whether you enjoy imagining the characters and events of a storyline, looking at pictures, or listening to a recording of your book - happy reading! 
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Weekend Pick for July 12, 2024

7/12/2024

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Weekend Pick for July 12, 2024

​Are you looking for something to read? 
​Check out our weekly suggestions!
Are your students looking for book recommendations?
Send them to browse through the picks for this or past years.
 For the picks from 2023 click here 
For the picks from 2022 click here
For the picks from 2021 click here
For the picks from 2020 click here.
For older picks click from 2019 click here.
For the even older picks click here.

​Welcome Rachelle Savitz, our Weekend Pick contributor.
Dr. Rachelle Savitz is an associate professor of literacy at East Carolina University. In addition to teaching graduate students, she enjoys facilitating trauma-sensitive and culturally sustaining disciplinary literacy professional learning across the country. She loves sharing her passion for using books to connect with and learn about one another’s lived experiences.
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Rachelle Savitz
This Woven Kingdom Series by Tahereh Mafi
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Tahereh Mafi
Many readers may be familiar with Tahereh Mafi’s Shatter Me series. It invites us on a journey with Alizah and others in a new series, This Woven Kingdom (2022), which has three books currently available and a fourth on its way. This Persian-inspired, Islamic folklore, mythological romance novel depicts a world where humans (Clay people) and Jinn coexist, although what this existence looks like in various parts of the realm varies, with the Clay people often prohibiting the magic and extra strength and abilities of the Jinn.

The reader is quickly introduced to Alizah, an eighteen-year-old who has endured extensive loss in her life, beginning with the deaths of her parents and all those who raised her. She was taught at an early age the true skills of a leader, yet she found herself constantly running for her survival, taking jobs that allowed her to remain unseen while in plain sight. While some question her ability to speak well and her intellect, she appears to all as a servant instead of a Jinn Queen. Readers later discover she is the long-lost Queen of the Jinn people and prophesied to be the downfall of at least one Clay kingdom. Throughout the novel, readers are attuned to her resiliency, agency, power, and ability to understand her traumas but do not let them control who she is or will be, constantly reflecting on what she is grateful for.
Kamran, the crown prince of Ardunia, where Alizah moves around in the shadows, has a life of privilege. He comes off as arrogant and not a man of his people, versus a person born into royalty. However, when he witnesses an attack on Alizah’s life, he steps in, leading those around him to question and scold him when he attempts to help a young servant recently attacked by a street urchin. At this time, and learning of another kingdom to the South, Prince Kamran questions if she is a spy. Unfortunately, for both of them, this curiosity leads to turmoil as Alizah is no longer in the shadows when he questions those who were in contact with her, finding out little until the court minister learns that she is the one prophesized to end his grandfather’s reign. Yet, he relies on his instincts, and they tell him she is not one to be feared but one in danger.
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Another unique twist is the impact of Iblees, the devil, who seeks to destroy all Clay people who cast him out. Throughout the series, Iblees’ role grows from an annoyance to Alizah to Iblees fully controlling a third sovereignty, King Cyrus. King Cyrus kidnaps Alizah to be his queen at the request, er, requirement, of Iblees.
The first novel of this series provides extensive world-building, unraveling who Alizah and Kamran are, how the Jinn (those forged by fire) and the Clay (those forged by clay) are forced to live in a society where the Clay people control the Jinn out of fear for their strength, power, and magic, and the questioning of a soon-to-be king’s loyalty toward love, family, and what is right for his kingdom. This series perfectly blends fantasy and forbidden and unrequited love, fire, ice, and magic! As you read, you are prompted to question who we are as individuals and as a society and how we view and treat those around us.
If you are not familiar with Tahereh Mafi’s Shatter Me series, you may check it out here as well.

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Shatter Me Series by Tahereh Mafi
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Weekend Pick for July 5, 2024

7/5/2024

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Weekend Pick for July 5, 2024

Meet Vanessa Rogers, our contributor for this issue: an educator, a traveler, a lover of giraffes.​
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​An obituary. A delivery. And a Nickel…  let me stop there. Without context, none of these things seem to have anything to do with my weekend pick - but without all three, it would cease to exist. So, let me start from the beginning.
April 11, 2024, The Washington Post’s author Harrison Smith detailed the life of a nearly forgotten trailblazer:  Anne Innis Dagg. A pioneer in giraffe research, an advocate for women's rights, and a name I will never forget. This weekend’s pick starts here. As I read Dr. Innis Dagg’s obituary, I sat in awe of the life she lived and could not help but imagine what it must be like to follow your dreams, travel where few have dared, and do it all out of one’s love and curiosity of the majestic giraffe. 
West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge
​Little did I know, the same father-in-law who shared the article on the life of Anne Innis Dagg had a surprise up his sleeve. “Part adventure, part historical saga, and part coming of age love story, West with Giraffes explores what it means to be changed by the grace of animals, the kindness of strangers, the passing of time, and a story told before it’s too late” (cover description). With a surprise Amazon delivery, I too was able to follow my dreams, travel where few have dared, and do it all out of my love for giraffes. So begins my journey with Woody Nickel, Boy, and Girl.

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Lynda Rutledge, the author
A teenage orphan boy, Woody, hopes to run away to escape his past when a once in a lifetime opportunity washes ashore. In the novel West with Giraffes, it is two giraffes that offer Woody the chance to travel from coast to coast on an unforgettable adventure and start anew.
As the author engages her audience through vivid imagery, intentional flashbacks, and thematically accessible content, we see that sometimes the past we try so hard to run from, finds a way of catching up to us. ​
As a person
  • who loves to learn: this novel can immerse readers into learning, self-discovery, and a sense of wonder that will leave the story at a standstill just to do some additional research.
  • who loves to travel: I was able to see the country from east to west, experience the terrors of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and breathe in the dust of Oklahoma.
  • who loves giraffes: I connected to the same sense of peace found in each character who truly had the opportunity to engage the gentle giants.


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"I just had the most remarkable experience...I woke up staring at a giraffe who was staring back at me. " - Lynda Rutledge, December 17, 2021.
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Through a professional lens: this is a teacher's dream!  A novel that can successfully be used for making and supporting inferences; tracking the development of theme and providing objective summaries; analyzing the interactions between characters, events, and ideas; utilizing context clues to understand the language and slang of the 1930s; deconstructing the structure of a text to determine its impact; and utilizing perspective and point of view to depict and fully appreciate elements of irony and suspense. Not to mention, the historical connections that allow a teacher to spiral informational text and primary documents into their instruction to build background knowledge and make interdisciplinary connections.
The novel leaves one to wonder: where am I most at peace? who/what am I willing to take a risk for? And how can my story leave an impact?
Additional topics worth exploring include societal/cultural norms, the importance of relationships, the protection of the underserved and underrepresented, how our experiences shape us, and the legacy we leave. 
Whether you need an easy read for the summer or some instructional inspiration, West with Giraffes may just be the next book on your list. ​
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    Leilya Pitre, Ph. D. is an Assistant Professor of English Education at Southeastern Louisiana University. She teaches methods courses for preservice teachers, linguistics, American and Young Adult Literature courses for undergraduate and graduate students. Her research interests include teacher preparation, secondary school teaching, and teaching and research of Young Adult literature. Together with her friend and colleague, Mike Cook, she co-authored a two-volume edition of Teaching Universal Themes Through Young Adult Novels (2021). Her latest edited and co-authored book, Where Stars Meet People: Teaching and Writing Poetry in Conversation (2023) invites readers to explore and write poetry.

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