Saturday, March 5, 2022

Goodbook Partner Review: The Prisoners, the Earthquake, and the Midnight Song, a True Story about how God uses People to Save People.

 



See my review of the original edition here

What I like about the book:

  • Listening Theme.
  • Shortened version of the full hardback book.  
  • Still gives the gospel.  
  • Nice size board book. 
What I wonder about the book:
  • Why the image is repeated just as in the hardcover book- but the words are not. From my review of the hardback: 
    • 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).  
  • The cover is a matte finish, and I wish the pages were as well.  
Thankful to partner with the Goodbook company and review this book, all ideas are my own. 

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Waterbrook Partner Review: Hues of You by Lucretia Carter Berry, PhD Illustrated by Adia Carter

 


Hues of You is an activity book for learning all about the skin you are in.  This book is very different from a typical Waterbrook kids book.  Although Crowned with glory, started to alter my view of the types of books Waterbrook publishes, it was informed with a biblical perspective and foundation.  

Hues of You has no evidence in the entire book that this is from a bible focused book publisher.  Perhaps I need to change my thinking to a Christian publisher that is entering the same genre as most other publishers I know of, and their trademark books appeal to the masses, and not a particularly biblically literate audience.  I'm disappointed as this book is well written in educating a child on race, ethnicity, culture, etc.  But it sticks to just the large concepts and does not take advantage of the truth from the Word of God, that no matter what hue you are, you are an Imager Bearer of God.  

From a teacher's perspective, this book approaches these delicate topics that could lead to upheaval amongst parents and community members, in a very neutral, secular informed way.  It speaks of accepting what others believe about themselves.  It speaks of recognizing that no two people are the same, but even that I have an issue with, as I am an identical mirror-image twin, and my sister and I share the same DNA.  Our kids as babies struggled to tell us apart.  So while this book attempts to be structured for anyone to recognize how unique and varied an individual is, twins are not always that unique in skin tone, hair, etc.   But it is interesting that when we spend time in the sun, our skin reacts very differently. Likely because my twin has been a lifeguard for 30 years and spent a lot more time in the sun than I ever have.  

If you want to learn how to be open-minded and approach this sensitive topic with a child, this book might be for you.  But honestly, my own children, and many whom I have loved and led in my decades of being kid-focused, do not really see the hues of people's skin tone as a deal- it's really not any different than eyes or hair being different.  The concepts that I suspect this book is trying to reduce or reframe from remaining commonplace, are often taught or caught, in light of recent events in the US, yes our kids may need tools to understand the ignorance of many grown-ups who judge another person by their skin hue.  But I have to wonder if we focus on this celebration of hues, will it help or hurt in the long run if a child hasn't spelled out hues with a connection to one being better or worse than the other.  

Thankful to partner with Waterbrook and get a copy of the book to review.  These are my thoughts, and mine alone.  

I did get a physical copy- and must say, the book itself is a lovely size, has thick nice pages, that will endure coloring, sharing, and using this as the activity book it is intended to be.  But I did not like all of the print and font selections, finding aspects of the book challenging to read, and not really child-friendly when it is so tiny and fancy at the same time.  

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Waterbrook Partner Review: Crowned with Glory by Dorena Williamson Illustrated by Shellene Rodney



Releasing February 8, 2022  

 What I like about the book: 

  • I am grateful to discover a book that integrates faith into the concept of a child's identity and builds up the beauty of ethnic hair as well as the concept that a girl has so much potential. 
  • It is good to see a book that will normalize that our 'crowning glory' can be very different from another person, but it still reflects our glory.  I Corinthians 11 alive for girls. 
  • I love the fact that this is a book about celebrating a girl's full potential that incorporates learning to Worship and the Word.  It's a natural aspect not the focus of the book. 
  • This book builds up girls that have often not been portrayed in picture books.  It promotes the concept that different is not bad, it is beautiful and worth celebrating. 
  • I learned a new word: Melanated. This means highly pigmented.  
  • I love the spirit and personality that is expressed in the girl's life details. 
What I wonder:
  • there are biblical concepts implied in the story, the references at the end would be nice.  
  • will this be appreciated by those it represents? or will it be seen with a critical lens? 

Thankful to partner with Waterbrok-Multnomah and review this book. 


Friday, December 24, 2021

Waterbrook Partner Review: The Inventions of God (and Eva) by Dave Connis Art by: Amy Domingo

 


What I Like About the Book:

  • The concept- that God invented Eva, and Eva invents things too, I believe an attempt to build STEM education with a biblical worldview perhaps?  
  • The Artwork has personality, style, life, and definitely builds style in the text and concepts of the book. 
  • The book connects how God views Eva and the reader/listener. 
  • The author's perspective and tone to share from Eva's perspective (a creative kid). 
  • The concepts communicated through the book- God made Eva to be like Him, God makes all things new, even the hint at what makes God happy.  
  • The book has a good kid perspective with fun words like "whirligig, loofapus, dazzle, pizzazz,...) As well as the character's facial expressions that sell her thoughts. 
What I Wonder About the Book:
  • The art on some pages is so bright and busy, it distracts me, will it distract the littles who are the intended audience?  I think the style of the book will encourage re-reads, and noticing the details, so I'm not sure. 
  • The 'third' comparison is a bit awkward to me, we hear about God- He's compared to Eva- and Eva's compared to her creations, repeated in what she likes, what God likes, etc.  I'm just not sure that it doesn't need a different transition- I can't quite put my finger on it, but there is an element that is a bit awkward to me.  
Thankful to partner with Waterbrook and read a physical copy of the book.  It was released in November, but my new job has distracted me a lot from reviewing books.  

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

thegoodbook partner review: Two New Books by Steph Williams

These books are 6.7" by 6.7"inch books.  Made of thick paper, and the perfect size for little hands.

What I like about the book:

  • Physical size, structure, illustrations, limited words per page, illustrations. 
  • 1st page: A story Jesus told or a true story from the Bible.
  • well-done illustrations- friendly, warm, unique. The stories have life. 
  • Note for grownups in the back- so helpful and clear. 
  • Scripture Text included in full. 
What I wonder about the books:
  • how many more will there be? 
  • how the author makes the concepts so relatable and within a child's grasp and understanding.  

goodbook partner review: New Testament Seek and Find

 


What I like about the book: 

  • Great Bible Events Featured  
    • Baby Jesus is Born.
    • Jesus in the Temple Court
    • A Paralysed Man is Healed
    • Jesus Calms a Storm
    • Jesus Love the Little Children.
    • Zacheus Meets Jesus
    • The Special Meal
    • Jesus is Alive
  • Bible References for each Biblical Event. 
  • The cover pages feature extra items to hunt for in each event. 
  • Counting up items for each event, 1... 2...
  • Each description ends with a clear truth about Jesus. 
What I wonder about: 
  • English spellings and language use, may not be recognized in the States.  
Educational Connections:
  • counting to figure out the 450 items- Math concepts!
  • What else could you add to count as items that fit in the event?  
Thankful to partner with goodbook company and read an advanced pdf.  

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Netgalley/IVP partner review: A Spacious Life: Trading Hustle and Hurry for the Goodness of Limits by Ashley Hales

 






Oh my, it's not often that you read a book, relate well, and are sad that it ended. This book is that kind of book for me. I will re-read this book. I found it to be biblical, relatable, and created a picture of a gospel-focused life with the beauty and surrender it entails. It challenged me, it resonated with me, and it has me thinking and is pushing me to grow in my own relationship with the Lord. That's a book worthy of high honor in my opinion.

This book focuses on gospel living. It's focused on life in the limits of Our Good and Gracious God, Jesus' work on the cross for us, His sending of the Holy Spirit, who lives within us, and brings us much space. It's focused on real community, real abiding in Jesus, real life, and a real invitation to live like Jesus models for us. The author shares relatable aspects of learning her limits, with scripture concepts and examples of Jesus living and teaching on earth, and the larger concepts of gospel living in real authentic community, with all the sacrifice that brings.

At the start of the book-this concept, I identified with: "What I didn’t know, at least not then in a deep-in-your-bones sort of way, was that these limitations on my time, body, and affections were actually an invitation. Instead, I fought them. For years I fought God about the gap between my imagined life and my given one. My crash course in acknowledging my limits was parenthood."

"We are made by Love for love, and love joyfully accepts constraints in order to love others particularly and fully."

"The goodness of gathered salt is that it shows us how food works and tastes best. Might the people of God show us how we work best as humans—not overly individualistic, but bearing a communal identity of love? Might we be more concerned about enhancing the flavor of others than enamored with our own saltiness? May the people of God minimize bitterness, temper saccharine sweetness, and heighten the aroma of Christ. What does this look like? Love. Joy. Peace. Patience. To be the gathered salt of God, we must consent to the constraints of community."

"But to be the gathered salt of God, we must consent to the constraints of community—of being for others instead of using others—often through limiting our time, desires, and even those secondary identities we hold dear."

"Rich community in the church, that first family that Jesus adopts us into—like a beef bourguignon or homemade pasta—builds and grows in its flavor only through constraints. It happens slowly. To build thicker communities, we’ll have to stick around, live under gracious and loving authority, forgive each other, and choose to spend time together, rather than making the best choice for any one individual."

"Rich community happens through diverse people, layered and simmering together."

"We crave the goodness of gathered salt. But to actually be the community we crave, we must limit ourselves. We limit ourselves by choosing to show up when at times we’d rather not. We limit ourselves when we give of our time to listen, talk, and pray. We limit ourselves when we participate in weekly liturgy even when we do not feel like it. "

"Part of our work as followers of Jesus is resisting the limit to create our own purpose and instead to receive the one God gives us, even if it doesn’t look like what we imagined. . . Jesus, who limited himself for love, asks us to follow him: to steward our limits for others. Limits create conditions for community."

Thankful to partner with IVP through Netgalley and read an advanced copy of this book. Off to purchase a hard copy!!

A few other quotes: 


“Limits create for us a home; they create the condition for flourishing.”


“Limits, given to the world by a loving God, are the conditions for life.”