Showing posts with label Uma Krishnaswami. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uma Krishnaswami. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2017

MMGM: The Grand Plan to Fix Everything

Today's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday pick

The Grand Plan to Fix Everything,
by Uma Krishnaswami and Abigail Halpin
The Grand Plan To Fix Everything
Written by Uma Krishnaswami
Illustrated by Abigail Halpin

Atheneum Books For Young Readers, 2011
Ages 8-12
272 pages, 41000 words, 770L


Themes:
Humor, Bollywood, Separation, Moving


Opening:
       Dolly Singh's fabulous face floats across the screen of the TV in the living room. Two happy sighs float off the couch, one from Dini and the other from her best friend, Maddie.
       Dini is a Dolly fan. She has been forever, from the time she discovered that Dolly's first movie, in which she was just a kid, came out the day—the very day!—that Dini was born. You can't be more closely connected than that.
       Maddie is a fan because best friends share everything.


Thoughts:
Dini and Maddie are best friends. Their summer plans include attending Bollywood dance camp together. They don't include Dini's family moving to a village in India, miles from Mumbai and thousands of miles from each other.

Dini is adorable and her voice shines through. Her voice is authentic. Her fangirl side rings true with girls her age. That is not to say this story is realistic. It is a perfectly Bollywood-style fairytale, complete with happy ending.

I appreciate how the author writes about Dini's relationship with her parents. She is respectful, though she doesn't understand her parents' decisions. She allows her love for her parents to guide her thoughts and actions. I get tired of MCs who exhibit unbridled anger and allow disagreements to fester into actual hatred for family members. That may reflect some kids, but not the kind my children like reading about. Nothing turns my daughter off faster than an unreasonable  protagonist who must get her way, who lashes out at those closest to her. She's drawn to those who use their wits and perseverance to find their happily-ever-after.


Bonus: 
 1. If you enjoyed The Grand Plan to Fix Everything, you're in luck, Krishnaswami has written a sequel, The Problem With Being Slightly Heroic. Dini and Maddie are back in America. And so is Dolly Singh! Uma's other books for middle grader's include Book Uncle and Me and Naming Maya.

The Problem With Being Slightly Heroic,
second of the Dini books
 
Book Uncle and Me, Ages 7-10,
illustrated by Julianna Swaney.
Naming Maya, Ages 10-15


2. For more friendship books, check my MMGM review of Save Me A Seat, or pick up a copy of The Year of the Book, by Andrea Cheng, illustrations by Abigail Halpin, or Granny Torrelli Makes Soup by Sharon Creech.


Save Me a Seat,
by Sarah Weeks
and Gita Varadarajan
The Year of the Book,
by Andrea Cheng
and Abby Halpin
Granny Torrelli Makes Soup,
by Sharon Creech


 
3. Mia Wenjen and Valarie Budayr have developed Multicultural Children's Book Day. January 27, 2017 is designated to "raise awareness for the kid’s books that celebrate diversity" and "to get more of these of books into classrooms and libraries." I hope you will make an effort to share a book you love which features cross-cultural relationships or highlights cultural diversity.

#READYOURWORLD
4. If you haven't experienced an Indian filum (as Dini would say) my absolute favorite romantic comedy is Hum Tum. This picture's got it all love, music, and animation. Does it get any better?

Starring Saif Ali Khan and Rani Mukerji




Have you reviewed a Marvelous Middle Grade Book along this theme? Please leave the link in the comments below. Thanks!

Check out all the Marvelous Middle Grade Monday recommendations for January 2, 2017.

MMGM started way back in 2010 by Shannon Messenger, author of Keeper of Lost Cities. Each week, participating bloggers review our favorite books for ages 8-12. Why not join us?

Monday, October 3, 2016

MMGM: Save Me A Seat

Today's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday pick:

Save me a Seat,
by Sarah Weeks and Gita Varadarajan
Save Me A Seat

Written by Sarah Weeks and Gita Varadarajan
(Note:  I couldn't find a webite for Gita, but you can follow her on Twitter @GitaVarad1 )
Cover illustration by Mark Elliott
Scholastic, 2016
Ages 8-12, reading level 4.8,  Lexile 780
240 pages, 31,200 words


Themes:
Fitting In, Friendships, Diversity, Disability


Opening:
Most people in America cannot pronounce my name.
        On the first day at my new school, my teacher, Mrs. Beam, is brave enough to try. "Sur-yan-yay-nay," she says, her eyebrows twitching as she attempts to sound it out.
       "Sur-ee-ah-neh-RI-ya-nan," I say slowly.
       She tries again, but it is no better.
       "I'm going to have to work on that," she says with a laugh.
       I laugh too.
       Suryanarayanan is my surname. My first name is Ravi. It's pronounced rah-VEE, with a soft rah and a strong VEE. In Sanskrit, it means "the sun." In America, people call me RAH-vee, with the stress on the first syllable. That doesn't mean anything.


Thoughts:
Save Me A Seat was a guaranteed read because I love Sarah's Pie series and I am an incurable Indiaphile. Predictably, I couldn't put it down, but when my 20-yr old son asked where "that book with the lunch trays" had gone and even my husband was reading it in his spare time, I knew Save Me A Seat was priceless.

Ravi and Joe's voices are so believable and their relationships with their parents so authentic that readers are immediately drawn into their shoes and even adults are right back in those awkward middle school years. The message is gentle but persistent: Ask not a saint of his cast, ask of his knowledge or don't judge a book by its cover.

We often think we know how a new situation will turn out, but people can and do surprise us. Save Me A Seat is sweet and bittersweet, bursting some childhood illusions, but ultimately filling the gap with a rosy hope for the future.

Read it and recommend it to someone today.


Bonus: 

1. I love the double author interview from School Library Journal.

2. Sarah has written plenty of other amazing books. I most recommend Pie, cover by Mark Elliott and So B. It, cover by Anna Palma.

Reviewed by Joanne
Reviewed by Jasmine


3. For a book with a similar Indian-American vibe, I recommend the lovely and lighthearted Lowji Discovers America,by Candace Fleming, cover art by Tim Jessell  and one of my all-time favorites, The Grand Plan to Fix Everything, by Uma Krishnaswami, illustrated by Abigail Halpin.

4. Other MMGM bloggers recommend Mission Mumbai, by Mahtab Narsimhan, Cover by Kelley McMorris, and Chloe in India, by Kate Darnton, cover art by Elena and Anna Balbusso.

Lowji Discovers America,
 by Candace Fleming
The Grand Plan To Fix Everything,
by Uma Krishnaswami

Reviewed by Karen
Reviewed by Jess




Check out all the recommended titles for Marvelous Middle Grade Monday for October 3, 2016 available on Shannon Messenger's Ramblings of a Wannabe Scribe.

Feel free to leave your MG recommendations in the comments. Thanks!

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Reading Recap: Overdue

Most Deserving of  the Hype
Aaron Becker's Journey
Every successful writer is also a reader. But I am a reader by addiction, not because of duty.

In addition to my annual 50-book goal, I attempted to read 300 picture books as part of the 300 Picture Book Challenge. I missed my goals last year, but not by much. I totaled 225 picture books and 48 Chapter and above. You can see the entire list of picture books on my Pinterest board.

Every year there are books which live up to my expectations, some which disappoint, a few fabulous random finds from the library shelves, and each year there are books which astonish me in their perfection.

I'd like to share some of my favorites:

Favorite Book , 2013
Uma Krishnaswami's
The Grand Plan
to Fix Everything
Best Series
Marie Rutkoski's
The Cabinet of Wonders
Kronos Chronicles: Book 1
Best Random Pick
Rebecca Stead's
Liar & Spy

















Best Bargain Table Find
Michelle Ivy Davis's
Evangeline Brown
and the Cadillac Motel
Best Illustrations
Lenore Look's
Alvin Ho
is Allergic to Camping
and other Natural Disasters
,
Illustrated by LeUyen Pham
Longest Overdue
Dodie Smith's
I Capture the Castle



This year's goals are 250 picture books, 50 chapter and above, reread the Prydain Chronicles, and 2 books on the crafts of writing or illustration from beginning to end.

Thus far in 2014, I've read 6 novels, 2 books on writing, and 22 picture books.

So what were some of the fabulous books you read in 2013? What goals have you set for this year? How are you keeping on track?


Monday, January 27, 2014

Multicultural Children's Book Day

Celebrate January 27, 2014

Congratulations to Mia Wenjen and Valarie Budayr for their initiative to promote diversity in books. To celebrate cultural awareness, several participants in Perfect Picture Book Friday chose books with cultural themes or subplots. Follow the link to see my review of Mice and Beans.

Check back this Friday, my PPBF Pick will continue the theme with a review of  Laundry Day, by Maurie J. Manning

JumpIntoABook lists useful resources and culturally focused reading lists. They also have a giveaway scheduled for this week, so make that your next stop!
In addition, Here are some of my favorite cross-cultural reads from 2013. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did.

by Uma Krishnaswami
by Candace Fleming

by Gary D. Schmidt
by Thanhha Lai

And these picture books
Grandfather's Journey, by Allen Say
Unspoken, by Henry Cole
Uncle Jed's Barber Shop, by Margaree King Mitchell and James Ransome
The Sandwich Swap, by Queen Rania of Jordan Al Abdullah, Kelly DiPucchio, and Tricia Tusa
A Child's Calendar, by John Updike and Trina Schart Hyman
Bearskin, by Howard Pyle and Trina Schart Hyman
The Serpent Slayer and Other Stories of Strong Women, by Katrin Tchana and Trina Schart Hyman