Friday, March 22, 2013

Twenty and Ten - Claire Bishop (1952)



Title: Twenty and Ten
Author: Claire Huchet Bishop

Genre: Historical fiction
Published: 1952
Number of pages: 78
Recommended for: Elementary school kids
Summary: (official) Looking for a story about courage to read to your child? One that instills character by virtue of its essence, and not by sermonizing? I always am, and this old favorite (read to me when I was nine) is luckily still in print.During the Nazi occupation of France, twenty ordinary French kids in a boarding school agree to hide ten Jewish children Then German soldiers arrive. Will the children be able to withstand the interrogation and harassment?

Twenty and Ten is based on a true story -- one of many similar incidents that took place all over Europe during World War II. It is a book that has much to say to children of any age.


Content Review

Sexual content: None.
Profanity: None.
Violence: Very minimal and done in a kid-friendly, appropriate manner
Drug content: None.

My opinion: Based on a true story, Twenty and Ten is about twenty fifth-grade French children who take in ten Jewish children during the Nazi occupation of France in 1944.
The story opens up and is told from the view of a young girl named Janet. She begins saying she wanted to write because she doesn't want to forget "it" when she becomes older.
She and a few other children are playing the Flight of Egypt, with Joseph, Mary, and Jesus fleeing King Herod. The game soon ends in a fight, and the children are called inside where a refugee sits. The refugee basically tells them they have to hide ten Jewish orphans, because, like Jesus, they are being persecuted and the Nazis are like Herod's soldiers.
The children, anxious for some adventure and "real life" instead of "make believe" willingly offer their help and promise not to say anything.
Through some rationed chocolate, the children stumble across a hidden cave, and that becomes their secret hiding place.
-
The storyline is similar to Newbery winner Number the Stars by Lois Lowry. Girl gets thrown into dangerous situation with the Nazis, and then girl has to do something extremely brave - and alone. The writing was nothing special, and I didn't really connect with the characters. I also would have liked to know more about the real characters. However, it is written in a way that grown-ups normally talk to kids, and has a slight Christian background. There was nothing in here I found kids would be REALLY scared of. Overall, this is an inspiring story of bravery in the midst of evil.

Life Code - Dr. Phil McGraw (2013)



Title: Life Code: The New Rules For Living in the Real World
Author: Dr. Phil McGraw

Genre: Advice
Published: 2013
Number of Pages: 244
Recommended for: Teenagers and adults
Summary: (official) In Life Code: The New Rules for Winning in the Real World, six-time New York Times #1 best-selling author Dr. Phil McGraw abandons traditional thinking and tells you the ugly truth about the users, abusers, and overall “bad guys” we all have in our lives. He also reveals the secrets of how they think and how they get to and exploit you and those you love.  Dr. Phil abandons convention to prepare you to claim what you deserve and claim it now.

Content Review

Sexual content: Some minor stuff.
Profanity: Some bleeped out quotes.
Violence: None.
Drug content: None.

My opinion: I love watching Dr. Phil and lately, all he has been talking about is Life Code "that my son published!" I liked some of the excerpts he used in the show, and I don't know anyone who doesn't have a BAITER (backstabbers, abusers, imposters, takers, exploiters, reckless) in their life.
~
The first part talks about BAITERs, and how to identify them. The second part is the new "playbook" and strengthening YOURSELF. The final chapter talks about protecting/raising your children in this world.

This is the first self-help book I've ever read. The first chapter is pretty boring, as he mostly rambles about why he wrote the book. If you get bored, don't give the book up - because it gets much better. I really enjoyed the first parts, which were about BAITERs and I loved the final chapter. The middle got a little boring, but I think that was because a lot of it didn't apply to me. My child isn't getting bullied (I don't have kids), nobody in my family is a drug addict, and I am not in a abusive relationship (I'm single). Nevertheless, it would still be useful to people in those situations. This book is packed with very useful information and advice.
I would very highly recommend this book.

Monday, March 4, 2013

The Invisible Wall - Harry Bernstein (2007)



Title: The Invisible Wall: A Love Story That Broke Barriers
Author: Henry Bernstein
Genre: Historical memoir
Published: 2007
Number of Pages: 300
Recommended for: 13+
Summary: (official) The narrow street where Harry Bernstein grew up, in a small English mill town, was seemingly unremarkable. It was identical to countless other streets in countless other working-class neighborhoods of the early 1900s, except for the “invisible wall” that ran down its center, dividing Jewish families on one side from Christian families on the other. Only a few feet of cobblestones separated Jews from Gentiles, but socially, it they were miles apart.
On the eve of World War I, Harry’s family struggles to make ends meet. His father earns little money at the Jewish tailoring shop and brings home even less, preferring to spend his wages drinking and gambling. Harry’s mother, devoted to her children and fiercely resilient, survives on her dreams: new shoes that might secure Harry’s admission to a fancy school; that her daughter might marry the local rabbi; that the entire family might one day be whisked off to the paradise of America.
Then Harry’s older sister, Lily, does the unthinkable: She falls in love with Arthur, a Christian boy from across the street.
When Harry unwittingly discovers their secret affair, he must choose between the morals he’s been taught all his life, his loyalty to his selfless mother, and what he knows to be true in his own heart.
A wonderfully charming memoir written when the author was ninety-three, The Invisible Wall vibrantly brings to life an all-but-forgotten time and place. It is a moving tale of working-class life, and of the boundaries that can be overcome by love.


Content Review


Sexual content: None, really. I mean, nothing that would really offend anyone. A circumcision is told in somewhat detail.
Profanity: "Bloody 'ell" hell, one use of s***, b***ard. Racial slurs.
Violence: Jews are beat up, Henry's father goes into rages, smacks Lily, and pulls her hair on one occasion. Nothing super serious.
Drug content: Henry's father is a drunken idiot.


My opinion: I don't have a little brother, but if I did, I would want him to be like Harry. A librarian recommended this to me, knowing how much I like this kind of stuff and I was not disappointed.
(some minor spoilers included)
What makes the story the most is the people. I mean, the way their religion, background, and personality.
Harry - a sweet little Jewish boy who tells the story
Lily - Harry's intelligent Socialist sister, who has been deeply in love with a Christian since she was 12. (the character I felt most sorry for)
Arthur Forshaw - Christian boy in love with Lily, who fought in WWI
Harry's Mom - like any mother, who wants the best for her children and always trying to make ends meet.
Harry's Dad - a big jerk who doesn't care about his family, and who drinks and smokes and doesn't ever acknowledge his family
Rose - Harry's snotty sister who acts like her Dad
Sarah - Jewish girl sent to Australia for kissing a Christian boy
Freddy - Christian boy who Sarah kissed, goes to war, loses both his legs, and commits suicide
As a Christian who has been passionately curious about Judaism, hearing stories of Christian anti-Semitism make me so angry!! I can completely see why Jews don't approve of inter-marry. Jews have been persecuted for quite some time, and they want to keep their religion and traditions. This book (and some parts of Fiddler on the Roof) tell just how important keeping traditions are to them.
I think perhaps (in some cases, such as the two mentioned in the book) they take it a little to far, but I can see their point of view.
Anyways, the title seems to really fit the story. I mean, 2 rows of houses on the same street - each acting like the other doesn't exist? And then it is a love story that seems to tear off a few bricks on that invisible wall. Towards the end, the wall lowers, and is only a few feet high - the two sides can see each other, and are so much closer than ever before, but there is still a wall. And in the end, it is a baby who tears down the wall.
I would recommend it to high schoolers and up. There are some difficult sentences and I don't think anyone younger would get the plot enough to enjoy it.

If the plot sounds interesting, you definitely won't be disappointed. Harry has also written 2 sequels which I will definitely try.


Thursday, February 14, 2013

A Coal Miner's Bride - Susan Campbell Bartoletti (2000)



Title: A Coal Miner's Bride: The Diary of Anetka Kaminska (Dear America; Lattimer, Pennsylvania, 1896)
Author: Susan Campbell Bartoletti

Genre: Historical fiction
Published: 2000
Number of Pages: 219
Recommended for: 10+
Summary: A diary account of thirteen-year-old Anetka's life in Poland in 1896, immigration to America, marriage to a coal miner, widowhood, and happiness in finally finding her true love.

Content Review

Sexual content: A few references to kissing, love, etc. Nothing major.
Profanity: None. 
Violence: This is a fictional account of the Lattimer Massacre. Some minimal violence.
Drug content: Drinking, whiskey, and cigarettes are mentioned.

My opinion: A Coal Miner's Bride is the diary of a young Polish girl who goes to America after her future husband, who she has never met, pays her fare. Her future husband, Stanley, has three little girls and his wife had died in childbirth. However a romance blossoms between Anetka and a soldier, Leon, who she claims not to like but anyone who has read a romance before knows they're in love. Leon as well as Anetka's little brother Josef go to America to be with their Papa, leaving behind Poland and all they have ever known.
The story was interesting, the characters were realistic (with flaws) and believable, and it tells the little known story of the Lattimer Massacre. The ending was sad, and it had an Epilogue which read like a nonfiction, with everyone's obituary which was kinda depressing. The ending included more information about the time period, pictures, and a pronunciation guide to some Polish words in the book.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Kisses From Katie - Katie Davis (2011)




Title: Kisses From Katie: A Story of Relentless Love and Redemption 
Author: Katie Davis with Beth Clark

Genre: Christian memoir
Published: 2011
Number of Pages: 288
Recommended for: 12+ (mostly junior high and up)
Summary: (Official) What would cause an eighteen-year-old senior class president and homecoming queen from Nashville, Tennessee, to disobey and disappoint her parents by forgoing college, break her little brother’s heart, lose all but a handful of her friends (because they think she has gone off the deep end), and break up with the love of her life, all so she could move to Uganda, where she knew only one person and didn’t even speak the language? A passion to follow Jesus.
Katie Davis left over Christmas break of her senior year for a short mission trip to Uganda and her life was turned completely inside out. She found herself so moved by the people of Uganda and the needs she saw that she knew her calling was to return and care for them. Katie, a charismatic and articulate young woman, is in the process of adopting thirteen children in Uganda and has established a ministry, Amazima, that feeds and sends hundreds more to school while teaching them the Word of Jesus Christ.

Content Review

Sexual content: A brief mention of women involved in prostitution to pay for food. 
Profanity: None. 
Violence: There is no violence in the typical since. However, this book is set in a Third World country and some of the stories will make your heart break.
Drug content: Drinking, and cigarettes are mentioned. It is said many people brew alcohol as a means of survival.

My opinion: God's miracles shine very brightly in this book. I really did enjoy this book. Katie truly is an inspirational to a lot of people, including me. Each chapter includes a "One Day" journal entry at the end, which was interesting. Raising 14 girls is enough to drive anyone nuts. What I did not like was how, unless she was comparing herself to Jesus (When I'm weak, He is strong) she pretty much portrayed herself as perfect. I mean, dealing with 14 young girls, who COULDN'T be stressed? Well, Katie never mentions once she is stressed. She seems to be perfect; trusting God all the time 100%, never getting angry, etc. etc. I understand God works miracles, but I don't know anyone (or heard of anyone) who hasn't gone through something life-changing (Louis Zamperini, Corrie ten Boom, etc.) and hasn't felt stressed to the point of breaking down and wanting to quit. I mean God purposely uses people who really aren't much to human eyes. Moses, Jonah, Noah, and David are a few biblical examples. Well anyway I haven't really read any modern memoirs so I don't know if portraying yourself in that manner is common.


One thing I DID like (and I wish more Christians did) was the way Katie ministers. She is not the type of person to force you become a Christian. She SHOWS what the love of Christ is. She doesn't judge, she is not pushy, she trusts the Lord and she LOVES. She realizes she can't end poverty or hunger, and she doesn't try. She LOVES. Whenever possible, she and her team feeds and clothes and cares for those she can. Most of these children who she cares for have never felt loved and she understands it would be impossible to explain Christ's love without loving because the children wouldn't understand. (and neither would I)

You can follow Katie's blog at: http://kissesfromkatie.blogspot.com/

In the language of Luganda, "Amazima" means "truth". Here is Katie's nonprofit: http://amazima.org/





I would recommend this book to any Christian out there!