Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Netgalley Partner; Breath as Prayer: Calm Your Anxiety, Focus Your Mind, Renew Your Soul by Jennifer Tucker

 

I am giving this book 5 stars.  Likely for some of the reasons that others gave it fewer stars.  I learned of this book because I follow this blogger for her strategies (and since she openly admits that she has mental health struggles) on anxiety and stress overwhelm.  I have printed her free resources, laminated them, and shared them with many people.  


I loved the intro chapters that talked simply and directly about all the brain-based research on mindset, deep breathing, etc.  Having been an avid reader of all things mental health, trauma-informed, neurodiversity, and the Bible for many years now, I found her short and informative chapters shared clearly and simply the reasons that these strategies work based on science.  She also shared why she prefers to use her breath to calm anxiety, focus her mind, AND renew her soul.  So to her, it made it natural to add scripture and shorten phrases from key verses, to help support the rhythm of her intentional calming breath.  So if you too seek the Word of God in your life, you know that only focusing on the truth will really set your mind free.   


Some criticize why she doesn't use the direct quote, her examples, etc.  But I think they are missing the point of the book, I believe it is a teaching tool to model how breathing for calming anxiety, focusing, and bringing calm and peace to your inner self, fits naturally as a form of prayer.  She refers to the fact that some who practice liturgical strategies have done some of this. But as someone who has not been directly exposed to those practices in my local church, I appreciate the modeling and examples she gives. 


As a teacher, I recognize that if you want to change the words, or rephrase, feel free.  She is doing her thinking aloud (metacognition) for the reader and sharing her story/experience with these phrases and offering that in a written beautiful book since she cannot come to sit next to each of her readers and show them how it works in her life.  Her breath prayer examples have been free online as a resource for a few years now, and I believe this work is a response to people wanting more explanation, modeling, and the reasons why this is a healthy restorative practice.  


I enjoy her examples, I am stalking my mailbox for the physical copy to arrive, and have a visual to keep out and remind me to use my breath and pray when needed, model it, and support my teens and young adult in adopting this practice for themselves as all of my children have very high anxiety naturally.  I look forward to giving away copies to those who want to try it and need this tool for support. It's great for visual and experiential learners in the book format!  


Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher to review and online advanced copy and share my thoughts.

Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Goodreads Partner Review: Draw Near, Your Creative Spiritual Journal by Sophie Killingley

 


From the Publisher: 

This 365-day devotional journal brings a unique combination of creativity, reflection, and structure into your daily walk with God.

Just like a bullet journal, it includes monthly, weekly, and daily sections, creative prompts, space for sermon notes and doodling, habit trackers, and blank dot pages for extra journalling, lists, or notes.

The first six months of Bible-based creative prompts cover Psalm 103, an amazing psalm full of imagery describing God’s vastness, character, and loving care. The second six months look at Ephesians 1:1-14, which explores what happens to us when we are united to this great, vast, loving God through Jesus. These prompts will help you to meditate and reflect on God’s word and find new delight in Jesus.

This spiritual journal will also help you to:

• connect your creativity with your faith  

• maintain consistent habits of Bible-reading and prayer

• remember what you learned in sermons or quiet times

• reflect more actively on your personal journey with the Lord

So use this innovative resource to be creative, organized, and intentional in your spiritual life. Makes a beautiful gift.

My Review: 

What I like about the book:

  • this is an option for those who need ideas on how to creatively document their time with God, or to get them going in a habit, and it also encourages documenting what you learn in your personal walk with God as well as in your local church and bible study.  
  • It leaves blank dot pages for adding your own notes, doodles, designs, etc.  Plenty of room for the individual to take the suggested concepts and add their own structure or format to the book.
  • It is the right size to take with you and seems durable and well made.  
  • It provides a model in the structure for the first 6 months of studying two specific passages in depth, and it's always good to try a new way to dig into the Word.  
  • The two passages selected Psalm 103 and Ephesians 1 are appropriate to a new believer or a more mature follower of Christ with rich concepts to reflect on and learn from.  
What I wonder about the book:
  • Is there enough structure for someone to pick it up and meditate on the Word with the tool?  Is it too much structure for those who already enjoy dot pages?  Will the user expect a completed example to guide the process?  
  • Would it also be a tool for a group of women to bring to a girl's night out and share something every month or so?  Would that improve its accountability and use of it?  
  • How long someone will stick with the habit trackers?  I love the idea of picking it up daily to keep documenting the progress you are making, and that the author included documenting God's love for you, which is unconditional daily.  
I am not a dot journal kind of person, the blank pages and doodles that it inspires and the desire to look at it repeatedly are not my giftings.  But in this format, those dot journal pages are set up, and I suspect I will find notes and visuals that help me remember and apply the concepts to use.  

Thankful to partner with Goodreads and receive a copy of this new release. 

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Netgalley Partner: Signals

 



As a trained elementary teacher, I was really curious about a book that was going to use the red, yellow, and green traffic light signals for a new behavior system for parents.  Since these colors have become so well known as a behavior management system that does NOT work for many children, especially those from trauma and hard places. 

But to my utter delight, not only has Cherilynn Orr used this long-time behavior management model and color system to redeem that original common classroom strategy.  She has really made it work!  The goal was always to motivate students to improve, learn, and manage their behavior in a classroom, and yet so many kids were failed by the original levels, since once you moved to yellow or red, you identified to the whole room that you were struggling today, and this often was counterproductive and created shame and stress worsening the behavior.  

The model that is taught in this book reflects three levels of a person's brain and regulation.  It also links the truth of God's Word to the science and research on supporting kids from a hard place, and in reality ALL kids in learning to regulate and strengthen their brain functions to reach their pre-frontal cortex and manage their emotions rather than reacting.  The model also expects that the adult embraces new levels of awareness of which mental state the parent is in when interacting with their children.  


Who is the audience for this book:

  • someone who wants to be given instructions, a mindset change, and techniques for supporting children.  The author teaches the regulation system to all people including the adults involved.  This tone in the audiobook especially may be misinterpreted by the listener.  
  • a believer or follower of Christ who not only wants up-to-date brain research but also follows the Word of God as a way of life and for self-reflection and instruction. 
  • A parent, teacher, or adult who is seeking advice for managing the children in their lives who are struggling without the best techniques to seek love, support, and to function more appropriately with others. 
  • It is written directly to parents. 
  • It is labeled a Christian living book but really functions as a 'self-help' book giving the reader a mindset of ideas, strategies, and questions to consider in how the reader manages and processes their interactions with the children in their lives.  
What I like about the book:

The content shared, the strategies and ideas offered, and the research explained in this book from my many years of learning brain-based best practice strategies to support children are excellent.  As well as the why behind many of the concepts that may be questionable to those new to parenting in this way.  Time Ins, offering a treat and beverage, praising and connecting with the child to re-regulate over tackling the problem or inappropriate behavior immediately, which looks like permissive parenting, but is not when done correctly, as a child needs to connect before he or she can be redirected and learn how to resolve the need, problem, or learn the missing skill.  
  • The author is an educator, and the way the book is written in her 'meta cognition' or thinking about her thinking and thinking about what needs the child has that is unmet, by looking at the scenarios as a detective, to identify the why behind the behavior, and a plan to help change the concern immediately and move to a level of thinking where the child can learn a better way.
  • Strategies, techniques, and methods to support regulation are fully integrated across the book.    
  • Images, cartoons, and visuals to support the concepts which make interpretation of the teaching clearer and the tone clear, the goal is just to help the reader grasp what this strategy looks like, sounds like, and how it relates to God's design for humanity and clarifies the tone from advice to content.  
  • The focus on how much managing and modeling our children's regulation rests on the adult remaining functional, aware that the child is not intentionally creating problems, but that they have unmet needs, unsolved problems, or a lack of skills.  
  • Recognition that fatigue, hydration, nutrition, hunger, activity, etc all make the above regulation struggles amplified.  
  • Stoplight Connections: Questions and tasks to complete as you read, that are educationally valuable in applying the concepts to your thinking.  
  • Prayer: ends each chapter and gives a true glimpse of the author's recognition that parenting is hard, often a struggle, and shows our humanness and flaws regularly keeping us dependent on the support of the Holy Spirit molding us. 
What I wonder about the book:
  • Would the audiobook version have seemed less cheesy or more authentic if read by the author herself? I'm not sure.  
  • How many diverse learners may miss the quality instruction, content, and thinking that is so well done in this book because they are triggered by the tone, style, or their misperception of the style of writing?
  • If the unique aspects of biblical integration will be appreciated by readers or will create another trigger or struggle in hearing the much-needed message.    
Thankful to partner with Netgalley and Thomas Nelson to read an e-copy of the newly released book, and thankful for Hoopla to have the opportunity to also listen to parts of the book as I wanted to continue to think and process the book before completing my review.  

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Goodbook Partner Review: Board Books with Truth for Toddlers

Releasing August 23, 2022 three new board books just for your little ones!  

Wherever You Go, I Want You to Know by Melissa Krueger and illustrated by Isobel Lundie Board Book  

My thoughts on the picture book here.

I am not often a fan of the board book version of a real children's hardback book, I'd compare it to whether or not you like the movie version of a book, and most of us find that it just doesn't measure up to our own imagination and love of the book.  I'm happy to report I LOVE this version of the book.  All the important aspects of the love of Jesus are still present.  So if you have a board book-age kid, it's a great connection to the bigger version for their older siblings or friends.  

I like the picture book version so much that I bought two cases when it came out and continue to give it as a gift.  Rhyme, repetition, and the truth of Jesus' love are a total delight!  This is simpler but the point is still clear.  

The Awesome, Super Fantastic Forever Party by Joni Erickson Tada and illustrated by Catalina Echeverri

My thoughts on the picture book are here.  This simplified board book will communicate the truth of God's Word for your toddler and give each listener, including adults, a good view of the Heaven we all await for when Jesus returns, and we start a forever party!  




Any time, Any Place, Any Prayer by Laura Wifler and Illustrated by Catalina Echeverri

My thoughts on the picture book are here.  

This book simplifies the original book into clear, understandable language for the little ones, and does not disappoint.  It clearly defines prayer and simplifies the original book without losing its purpose.  I love the speech bubbles with real-life models of prayer.


Thankful to partner with the goodbook company and 
review early copies of these soon-to-be available board books!

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

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


The second book from a new series, each book is a Story of God, and a young girl.  

What I Like About the Book:

  • These characters are young girls and different ethnicities, so more children can read books that have people that resemble them.  
  • The concept is that God and Kiki are like each other because God made it that way and the comparison threads throughout the book in delightful ways sharing truth from God's Word.   
  • The Artwork has personality, style, and life, and definitely builds style in the text and concepts of the book. 
  • The author's perspective and tone share Kiki's perspective (a very imaginative kid). 
  • The concepts communicated through the book are that there are differences between Kiki and God, and the book communicates the truth about who God is, as well as how God thinks Kiki is awesome and Kiki thinks God is awesome
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 connection is that God writes 'stories' like Kiki when her stories are obviously fiction and not quite true, but God's writing shares the joy, light, and a new heaven and earth.   So not all adults will appreciate this element, as the growing awareness in children's ministry is that the bible is a book of historical events that really occurred and that show us who God is.  This aspect is leaned into in this book, but the word 'stories' bothers some as a child thinks of stories as fiction and not true.   
Thankful to partner with Waterbrook and read a pdf copy of the book.  

Friday, June 3, 2022

Goodbook Partner Review: He Will Be Enough: How God Takes You by the Hand Through Your Hardest Days by Katie Faris


From the introduction:  "The question I was faced with on that day, and on many days since, was this: Will Jesus be enough, even now? Even when I don't understand?  Even when the future I mapped out has been upended? Even ... In the years since that day, I've discovered that the answer to those questions is Yes, Jesus is enough."  


We are living in hard days, and this book is an excellent tool for whatever hard situation you are facing, it will draw you in, you will relate to the anecdotes of the author's life, and others that she knows, and it is a huge blessing, as each of the 20 readings points you to a new way that God is present in all of life, and especially the angles of hard.  


Each of the chapters focus on who God is in a different relatable aspect.  The author shares truth from the Word of God, examples in life, and a sample prayer, and ends each reflection with questions to answer, and a scripture to read and consider this aspect of who God is to YOU!  

This book is directed to believers, who use the Bible, as a lens of how to see God in all of life, and as our life.  If that perspective, isn't one you can embrace or be challenged with this book isn't for you.  But for anyone willing to recognize that God is present even today and who needs reminders in those 'soul amnesia' moments we all have, it is for you.  Thankful to partner with the Goodbook company and read an early release.  It's a book worth owning and sharing with others.  

Monday, May 9, 2022

Bethany House Partner Review: Trusting God in All the Things by Karen Ehman and Ruth Schwenk (90 Devotions)

 

90 Devotions for Finding Peace in Your Every Day Life is the subtitle of the book.   

The book description reminds us: When Life is Filled with All the Things,

Begin Your Days with the Most Important Thing of All


This devotional in physical book form, is interactive, write and respond, hardback book with gold accents on the navy/chalk white pages to appeal to women.  Each of the devotions has a title, and the book begins with a table of contents of all the engaging titles.  The authors took turns writing the devotions based on one or two simple verses to study for the day, then the author shares a personal connection, and helps the reader think aloud, reflect and apply possible responses to this biblical truth.  The author also helps focus the reader on the achievable and beneficial application of the thoughts.  

It's not a devotional for someone who is looking to be drawn into a deep scriptural study, think about greek or Hebrew words, or have a passage or other connected references to consider how God is present.  It's meant to be a simple, mindset, life-giving focus on God's presence in the seasons of life when it's easy to lose that focus. 

I find this book very appropriate for a woman who needs the peace and calm brought to her to focus her day and ultimately mind on who God is in her life moment by moment.   It's a book for those seasons, days, and points in life where being able to have a wise older woman share her life story and thinking will help refocus your spirit.  This book also can help you know you are not alone, you are loved, seen, and you can let God be your calm and peace in all the things, at all the times.  

Thankful to partner with the publisher and review a copy.   


Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Goodbook Partner Review: His Grace is Enough by Melissa Krueger Illustrated by Isobel Lundie

 


Alright, Melissa Krueger's last book made one of my all-time favorite children's book list!  (that link is my review in 2020 of Wherever You Go).  So I wondered what I would think about her second children's book.  

Things I like about the book:

  • The words rhyme!! there is a great rhythm to enjoy!
  • The truth about God's grace is communicated clearly, addresses common misconceptions, and is repeated throughout the story.  
  • This is realistic fiction about God's saving grace.  It's not boring non-fiction, it's the truth we all need to be communicated to us with these real-life applications applied.  
  • The illustrations are kid-friendly, represent diversity, and are realistic, yet quirky to draw the reader in. 
  • The theme that is repeated, which is another reason I love the book, "God's grace is enough, it's so big and so free, His grace is enough both for you and for me!"
What I wonder:
  • Why not include a scripture reference?  Ephesians 2:8 &9 maybe?  
  • Will the children reading this book look for one main character throughout the book?  or will the illustrator's approach with so many children and experiences that resemble ordinary thoughts mean that the readers don't notice? I didn't.  
  • How many parents will memorize this book that I hope will become a classic addition to many family libraries?  
Back Cover:
From the Book Description: 

This illustrated, rhyming book will help parents explain to children the unique and wonderful Christian message of God’s grace—that Jesus offers forgiveness and allows us to move on from our mistakes.

It can be used to share the heart of the Christian faith with children or to remind them that Jesus is the person to run to when they mess up.

Children will learn that God’s grace is enough to cleanse and change us every day, as the book itself says...

My child, here’s the truth:
From God, you can’t hide
He sees what you’ve done
He knows what’s inside

But please don’t despair
There’s good news, I say!
Whatever you do
God’s grace makes a way

Yes, his grace is enough
It’s so big and so free
His grace is enough
Both for you and for me

This beautiful hardback book makes a great gift for children ages 3-6 and even beyond.

Written by Melissa Kruger: author of Wherever You Go I Want You to Know and Five Things to Pray for Your Kids; Director of Women’s Content at The Gospel Coalition; speaker, blogger, and mother of three.

Thankful to partner with the goodbook for children publishing and I wonder how many copies I will give away of this new favorite book!  This one goes to my favorite children's book list!

Thursday, April 14, 2022

GoodBook Partner Review: The Awesome Fantastic Forever Party by Joni Eareckson Tada & Illustrated by Catalina Echeverri

 


A brand new Tales from the Truth picture book for reading aloud and readers.  I have reviewed other books about heaven and never felt like I had one I could embrace well.  Well, that has changed!

Things I liked about the book:

  • Engaging opening: "Have you ever been invited?" 
  • Defines the best invitations, "to unforgettable events with amazing people."  
  • Jesus is connected to this teaching about Heaven so intimately, and who He is as our King and Rescuer is established clearly. 
  • John 3:16 paraphrased as the invitation.  
  • In true fashion for this series, myths of heaven are addressed and the Truth of the Bible is taught.
  • The illustrations enhance the descriptive language, and the celebratory tone of the book, and build connections for the reader. 
  • Heaven is described well and with the Truth from the Bible- a place of no more sin as well as splendor and glory.  

Things I wonder about the story:

  • Could there have been bible references on the footers or headers of pages that connected to the truth shared? (The author's letter at the end shares verses).  
  • Is the connection between sin and eternal life clear enough?  it's so well written with Truth, and I trust that those who will choose to share this book will also know the Truth.  
  • I'm reviewing a pdf and I wonder if the little picture envelope at the end of the book is just an image or if it is an envelope that opens?    


Joni reading part of 


the book....


The Goodbook company really wants those who are in children's ministry to be able to use their products to teach.  They provide the book illustrations to share on a screen, and often related handouts, and this time it's a whole party pack!  https://www.thegoodbook.com/foreverparty  If you pre-order the book you can even get extra bonus goodies when you submit your info.  

The book launches to the world- May 1st so order before then to get the pre-order bonuses.  You won't be disappointed!  

Thankful to partner with the goodbook company and read an early release, I'll update my review when my physical copy arrives.  

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Bethany House Partner Review: May His Face Shine Upon You 90 Biblical Blessings for Mother and Child by Susie Larson

 



Susie Larson as an author is a blessing. This book pairs a blessing for the Mom with a blessing to share or pray for her child and a scripture verse.

I like books written by this author because they are founded and communicate well a real authentic relationship with God. She communicates effortlessly natural attributes and aspects of God's character and how those fit into a human's daily life- in this case, Moms and children. She does a great job modeling for the reader ways to think about God in a lot of different scenarios in life. I highly recommend it as a great resource.

Thankful to partner with Bethany House and review the book.

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Goodbook Partner Review: Welcome to Bible World by Mike Nappa and illustrated by Emiliano Migliardo

 



What I like about the book:
  • This book will build interest in the Books of the Bible, and help create more biblical literate kids. 
  • The pictures and seek and find are super fun and mirror secular books, but the hidden items and the attractions in the amusement park are connected to events in the Bible, and events that engage children in the events of the Bible and wonder if these concepts are really true.  
  • Scripture references with hidden items that connect to a specific passage that will create a more biblically literate person.  
  • The theme park entrances to different areas each lead to a different subset or genre of the Books of the Bible.  The titles given are more fun than traditional titles, and also more memorable.  
  • The intro to each park area share the main themes of this section of the Bible, and teach the reader what important concepts connect in each genre.
  • The author asks questions to the reader to build the interaction with the kids and the book. 
What I wonder about the book:
  • The glossy pages are thick and seem enduring, but I wonder if it will show fingerprints and attract dirt to the pages more than matte format.  

Educational Connections:
  • Teach the books of the Bible, teach the genres, and even the timeline as you build interest with this book. 
  • Have your children create their own hidden items for new pages or add to these pages with the bible references.  
  • Take away- ask the kids to see if other people know what books of the Bible belong in each theme park.  (The kids will need to remember the answer to know if adults or others are correct.) 

Thankful to partner with the Goodbook company and read a review copy of the book.  



Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Netgalley Partner Review: WayMaker: Finding the Way to the Life You’ve Always Dreamed Of by Ann Voskamp




Ann Voskamp's gift is the ability to share her spiritual growth, grasp of the Word of God, greek/Hebrew words, and their meanings, and her personal story for others to learn from her experiences.  This book is her most vulnerable and personal of all her books.   Because of this, I suspect it is not as applicable for all readers.  It's more complex, more biblically, and theologically in-depth than her previous books.   In some ways it builds on some concepts, she's lived out loud for her readers before, but in many, she is sharing her own personal journey and exodus of sin and losing her way, as well as remembering just what truly her life's focus is. 


As a biblically literate person, about her age, I appreciate her thoughts, her self-discovery of how to focus on God,  abide in the Way, focus on stepping into cruciform, and praise, over choosing to curve to your own desires, addictions, and way.  She continues with the repetition and building on concepts throughout the book as she has in previous writing, but she has learned through her marriage, adoption, and broken heart, each as their own metaphor and dimension, which I believe is more complex than her other books.  As well as the shocking events in her life that many of her readers will not comprehend her experience at all.  But we can all choose to learn from her.  


She continues to share her learning from therapeutic concepts, attachment/adoption with real-life experience, and she is brutally honest about her own experiences.  In her poetic way, she reveals how to live a life focused on dying to self, living in Him, and how easy it can be to alter your own course with minor life changes, but how large an impact that has on your soul your people.  This book is not as easily replicated in the reader's life, as her daily habits and focus require a lot of commitment to the Word of God, the Holy Spirit, and personal soul-care/reflection.  But for me, they are healthy habits to weave into who I am, and it encourages me to press on and grow in Him.


Thankful to read an Advanced Netgalley copy.  

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.