Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2015

This Librarian's Quick Picks: Tales of Bunjitzu Bunny

Tales of Bunjitzu Bunny by John Himmelman book cover Tales of Bunjitzu Bunny
by John Himmelman
Henry Holt & Company (October 18, 2014)
Beginning Chapter Book

Summary:

Although she can throw farther, kick higher, and hit harder than anyone else at school, Isabel, aka Bunjitsu Bunny, never hurts another creature, unless she has to.

Why You'll Love It:
  •  With a female protagonist and a boy-friendly subject, this book will have a wide appeal for the early chapter book audience.
  • The spare illustrations support the text but leave much to the imagination of the reader.
  • Each chapter contains a moral or lesson disguised in an entertaining package that's easy to take in.
Who Should Read It:

Great for 1st-3rd graders.



What Else You Should Read:

Monday, May 21, 2012

What I'm Reading: You Know When The Men Are Gone

You know when the men are gone by Siobhan Fallon book cover short stories
You Know When The Men Are Gone
by Siobhan Fallon
Amy Einhorn Books, 2011

Summary in a Sentence:

A collection of loosely-connected short stories that describe the lives of military wives at Fort Hood, Texas, and relate their experiences of life when the men are deployed.

Read it if...

you are not usually a fan of short stories (like me), or if you want to read about the Iraq war and its effects on the homefront from an unsentimental perspective. 4.5 stars.

Read the Reviews:

Everyday I Write the Book | Devourer of Books | The Book Lady's Blog


 

Monday, March 22, 2010

Books By Theme: Short Stories

stairs short story grandma

Some of my most memorable reading experiences in high school come from short story collections, especially F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tales of the Jazz Age. I've been trying to get into some of the modern masters lately. Here are a few to peruse...

short stories Elizabeth Berg fiction
Investigating women's lives and expectations, Elizabeth Berg's lively collection The Day I Ate Whatever I Wanted: And Other Small Acts of Liberation offers solace and comfort while exploring deeper themes. The melancholy “Rain” traces a woman's friendship with an old pal, who dropped his successful corporate life to live closer to nature. Rocky terrain is covered: fidelity, brain cancer, and mortality. Other stories are lighter, such as the title story in which the narrator kicks up her heels and skips her Weight Watchers meeting to indulge in her food cravings.

short stories fiction Amy bloom book
 The poignant coming-of-age tales of Amy Bloom's Come to Me: Stories explore the rich, intricate textures of family life. At her mother's funeral, reminiscing about her family's long summers spent with another family, the main character of “Love Is Not a Pie” realizes that her mother shared both a lover and a husband during those long, lazy days.
Unaccustomed Earth Jhumpa Lahiri short stories fiction
Like her Pulitzer Prize–winning Interpreter of Maladies , Jhumpa Lahiri's second volume of stories, Unaccustomed Earth, focuses on aspects of dislocation and assimilation. The titular selection features a woman in mourning, relocated from Brooklyn to Seattle, wondering if she should invite her recently widowed father, visiting from Pennsylvania, to share her home. The father has his own worries: he hopes his daughter will remain in the dark about a new relationship he is cultivating. Lahiri's characters' sense of loss is haunting, and her prose is gemlike. Readers will strike gold with this dazzling work, which also highlights Bengali customs and traditional Indian arrangements.


Each of the nine wry selections in Julie Orringer's debut, How to Breathe Underwater: Stories,
resembles a mininovel. Complex, spellbinding, and illuminating, “Stars of Motown Shining Bright” focuses on two girls retracing their sudden divergent paths. “Note to My Sixth Grade Self” is an acutely rendered study of the pain felt by a socially ostracized girl. Orringer's straightforward compassionate voice exposes the fears, secrets, and cruelties that children and adolescents experience. Her tender tales, overflowing with the turbulent longing and agonies of youth, testify to the enduring promise of the short story.



~ For more themed book lists, check out Listless by One Librarian's Book Reviews and Listed by Once Upon a Bookshelf ~

~ All summaries from Library Journal ~

Who are your favorite contemporary short story authors? 

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