Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Waterbrook Partner Review: God Speaks in Whispers by Mark Batterson and Summer Batterson Dailey

 



What I like about the book:
  • Physical book, good size, solid cover, thick pages to last over many hands and years.  
  • Illustrations by Benedetta Caprotti- realistic, diverse characters. including a wheelchair, different ages, skin tones, hair, etc.  Pictures are warm, endearing, and draw the reader in, perfectly kidlike.  
  • The rhythm/rhyme of the book adds to its charm. 
  • Questions that will build listener response and interactions, as well as conversations. 
  • Answers that will continue the conversation. 
  • Showing who God is.
  
Educational Connections
  • God's Voice- how does God talk to us since it's not audible? and answered- with His Word.
  • Sound
  • Emotions- identifying them. 
  • Elements of God's character, with you, waiting, pointing the way, ...

What I wonder about the book:  
  • why there are no verses within the pages.  
  • some of the rhymings seemed a bit forced.  
  • it's a long book will littles sit for the whole thing?

Partner Review: Prevail by Susie Larson

 


This 365-day devotional is unique in some fabulous ways.  

Physical Book:  The first surprise is the table of contents is topical so that you can find encouragement for specific situations.  The book is well-sized and feels good, the pages are thick and durable, and the whole book has color on every page with the waves/water theme similar to the cover.  This is a detail that makes a visual learner connect even better. Pages that I could write notes, comments on, and the notes would not bleed through.  Plus a white satin ribbon to hold your place. See for yourself -Read and see an excerpt from this book here. 

Content:  
  • The 365 days are chronological reading from Old Testament to New Testament.
  • Each day has a number, a verse written out, an explanation/connection to the biblical text, and personal connections, with a question.  Then a Learn- scripture to read, Flourish-mindset idea, habit, way to pray, Pray-Simple summary statement. 
  • Carefully focused themes, relatable, needed, and some hard to swallow, some comforting.  
  • Solid biblical connections and teaching.  
  • Short and sweet.  I could do this daily.  
Whispering the Word

I believe that this book will help parents have a God mindset and draw near to Him.  But I also believe that the topics would be appropriate for many children to share over breakfast or dinner, and ask them to wonder and search their hearts with you for how to draw closer to God. 

Disclaimer: I have not read all 365 pages, if I tried to read it like a regular book, it's so rich that I would lose the content and just be putting words through my eyes.  But I read many pages in preparing this review.  


Thursday, September 17, 2020

Partner Review: Slaying the Giant of Fear by Krissy Nelson




Lots of scripture.  Excellent points mentioned.  Lots and lots of biblical connections.  



Short review: I was hoping for more practical steps for slaying fear.  Scripture rich resource sharing about overcoming fear with obedience, stewardship, and faithfulness and looking to Christ.  I was hoping that this book would help me help my adult child cope with fear.  I think if I was new to dealing with fear it would have been more appropriate.  For my son, I think he’d get lost in this style.  





Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Goodbook company partner review: Deeper Still by Linda Allcock

 


A short, refreshing book with ideas for the busy woman who wants to meditate on the Word more completely.  The author teaches us why we need to meditate, but basically, the book is full of practical aspects and strategies to meditate.  


What I enjoyed most about this book is how practical it is, complete with questions to guide, examples of using those questions with two passages, and ideas to ponder so that you can set your mind on God, His son's redemptive plan, and the impact the Holy Spirit has in our hearts and minds when we CHOOSE to invite Him in.   

It really covered many things I have been taught from childhood at camp, to being trained as a camp leader, in Bible college courses, and in the rare message on how to focus our minds on the Lord.  I loved that the teaching on how to meditate chapters ended with bullet points, examples, and routines that you could follow to structure your time with the Lord. 

It's a great teaching tool for an individual, a parent, or a small group to navigate through and improve or learn how to focus on God's Word.  I highly recommend it.  

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Good Book Partner Book Review: Wherever You Go, I Want You to Know....

 

This book might just be my current favorite children's book!  And if you know me, that's a big deal! In my attempt to showcase children's books fairly, I'm sharing my what I like, educational connections, and what I wonder or would change or add... and if I write a book, editors I know make you pick and choose, but I have high standards!  

What I like about the book:

  • appealing rhyme and the rhythm it develops, making it appealing to ALL ages.  
  • Hardcover book in the style of the "I can Read books" of my childhood like Sammy the Seal, Danny and the Dinosaur, and more modern Dr. Seuss Hardback books.  Thick nice pages inside, make it a book that will endure a family with many children.  It feels good.  Right sized as well.  
  • Illustrations- the pages are fun, busy, and the characters and items are a bit silly or quirky, but it adds to the appeal. 
  • Multi-ethnic people throughout the book, children need to see people who look like they do. 
  • Formatting, the text is different sizes emphasizing key words, alliterations, descriptive words. 
  • The theme of the book, a BIG DREAM, is delivered by the Narrator of the book (hint, the one who reads it aloud- me or you!) has a BIG DREAM for YOU!  
  • The book brings in a mindset discussion with admitting we might win or loose, and suggesting we all have different feelings.  
  • Spoiler alert: The books purpose is that the audience/child "will love Jesus with all of your heart."
  • Message of who Jesus is, tells us who He is, and what He has done for us, and what He is doing for us. That represents the full gospel according to Titus 2:11-13, and I love the fun way this is the clear message. 
  • Loving Jesus with all of your Heart- brings in a God mindset discussion.  Deuteronomy 6:5
Educational Connections
  • Career choices
  • Travel--wherever you go... brings so many possibilities- missionaries, multi-ethnicity, geography, even  methods of travel, places we live and visit illustrations suggest farms, cities, museums, ...  
  • Rhyming Words/Poetry 
  • Adjectives, Adverbs, verbs
  • Science, Culture, Celebrations: Floating sky lanterns (traditionally Chinese, but modern America has events with these) 
  • Growth Mindset- Emotions, Adventures
  • Gospel message- past, present, future aspects- what God has done, is doing, and will do for those who believe.  
  • Walking and talking with Jesus- the Way, Truth, and Life.  Can easily teach about the Holy Spirit and God, full trinity.  Prayer. Following Jesus. King Jesus, His Word- the Bible, characteristics of God- faithful and true.  Sanctification- making things new.  
Here it is:  

Wonders or changes I might make to add value to the book:  

For the parents, teachers, camp counselors, grandparents who use this book...
  • Bible verses and references at the end or near the words/illustrations for the gospel message. 
  • How to lead a child to Christ
  • Key gospel points
Minor Wonders in illustrations:
  • a corded phone vs. chatting face to face, I suppose this is generic conversation, but this generation of parents have not all seen a corded phone!
  • Adults reading a red book with a cross on it- representing a Bible, but I wish it said BIBLE. 
I will be looking for more children's books by Melissa Kruger, who by the way has some other books for adults she's written, that intrigue me  As well as Isobel Lundie's illustrations.  

And if my thoughts were not enough, here is a review from Ann Voskamp, one of the authors/blogs that I follow. 



I've ordered 40 copies of the book so I don't need a disclaimer at the end of my review, and one via amazon for a baby shower already... but Westminster Bookstore (wtsbooks.com). My go to source for great deals on books I love that are well vetted.  Has it as a current special-- just a couple more days in August 2020.

Also the GoodBook website has coloring pages, free pdf of the gospel, and a contest going on right now as well.  So much goodness should brighten your day!  Now we just need to meet with all our beloved kids in person and share this message eye to eye!  

One last goodie...
Image may contain: 1 person, text that says '#Whereverdream HHaLY WHEREVER GO, Melissa Kruger WANT YOU Το KNOW. STAR BAKER Maggi ENTER TO WIN A KIDS' BOOK BUNDLE'

  Submit your photo here

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

thegoodbook Partner review: Beautifully Distinct edited by Trillia Newbell



Rarely do I give a five star rating, and this book has earned it through the great discomfort and response of my own heart, soul, and mind. It took me longer to read than most books of it's length, as I found myself having to reflect after a chapter, maybe two before I could move on.  Now that I'm finished, as I ponder the 11 themes covered (side note: by different women to show other women what a beautifully distinct believer might think, read, wonder, pursue, and focus on as she seeks to bring glory to God) this book makes me wriggle in my seat.  It produces just a bit of discomfort as each chapter examines an area of life, faith, and culture, and even more as the book is split into three parts: being thoughtful, listening well, and speaking well.  Yep, wriggle-- wriggle is a little different than wiggle.  Wriggle is more of a 3-d response or discomfort, while wiggling is just back and forth.  

I do recommend this book, wriggling in my thinking and choosing, is an appropriate place to be as I contemplate hospitality to believers, to believers with different theology, to non-believers in my home (really in my life).  As I contemplate my job as a believer to be wise biblically led advocate for all races of people by God's design, and Jesus modeling.  As I think about what story I share to other believers and non-believers alike- does my heart that shows in my thoughts, words, and deeds show the godly woman living with the Holy Spirit leading me? or does my story show more of me and less of my love and awe for God?  



It's a hard read, if you think and reflect your way through the book.  But now I have 11 wider and godly perspectives to discuss with my girlfriends, my new acquaintances, and my own children.  

Blessed to be a partner of thegoodbook company.  

If you want to whisper the Word to your children, this book will give you references and perspectives connected to each of the 11 themes to pray through, process, and determine how to apply these truths in your heart, soul, and mind so that you bring glory to God.

Monday, June 1, 2020

Good Book Partner Book Review: The Prisoners, The Earthquake, and the Midnight Song. By Bob Hartman



A True Story about How God Uses People to Save People.  

Tales that tell the Truth, a series of books from The Good Book company.  This book releasing today June 1st, is another fast favorite for this Mom, kidmin leader, curriculum writer, elementary educator who LOVES any way to whisper or even shout the Word of God to our children.  This book does not disappoint.  So many potential ways to engage your children, even during this pandemic and an upcoming summer of not all our normal activities.  


What I loved about this book:
  • This event in history from Acts 16:16-40.  The Philippian Jailer with Paul and Silas in jail accurately told with added themes to engage the readers. 
  • Illustrations by Catalina Echeverri, the right amount of reality blended with images to SEE the sounds you also listen for, and to understand what is occurring at this time. People of different skin colors are well represented in the people in the book.  So vital in children's books.  
  • Themes:
    • Light you see on the cover, coming out of their mouths and all around, is throughout the pages of the book and it represents sounds like praising God.  
    • Listen: lots of descriptive language, onomatopoeia:words visualized like earthquake, snoring or sawing a zigzag visual snore, ... and the light you see is really representing the sounds heard.  
    • Rich use of language: to represent opposites (up/down, beneath/rising up), to match the sound all can hear with a gray zigzag n the prison,  as well as teaching vocabulary a sword's scabbard,  and the concepts of complaining/grumbling opposite of praising God.  
    • Do you hear that? on every few pages. 
    • Image repeated throughout with the same wording describing the cross, the stone rolled away when Jesus is alive,and the Holy Spirit.   (Jesus forgives, lives so we can live forever, and follow Him as Our King).  What a great set of concepts repeated several times in the book, so it will be quickly memorized.  
What I wonder:
  • could the Bible reference be part of the subtitle so that in a quick scan, adults see the immediate connection?  
  • what age this is intended for?  The books in this series are picture books with a fair amount of text, so I've often used them in the primary ages from Kindergarten to Grade 3.  The amazon description says ages 3-6, but I like to use it with older kids as well, and think it would only work well for young kids if one on one. 
I plan to use this book in our Sunday School lessons from Acts with grades 1 and 2 children.  I would recommend this book for any child who would sit and want to interact with the adult reader from preschool on and I believe all ages will enjoy the book.  

Thankful to have an advanced copy of this book as a partner of The Good Book Company.