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The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom is a picture book written by Bettye Stroud and illustrated by Erin Susanne Bennett. The story follows a young slave girl named Hannah, who recalls the special quilt her mama once made for her, which includes secret meanings imbedded in the quilt patterns. “The monkey wrench turns the wagon wheel toward Canada on a bear paw’s trail to the crossroads,” Hannah remembers. Taking the quilt with them, Hannah and her father set out on a long journey on the Underground Railroad, keeping out of sight and stopping along the way at a church and a Quaker family’s safe house. While historians disagree as to the actual role quilts may have played in the Underground Railroad, oral histories continue to surface. In an author’s note, Stroud cites as her inspiration a 1999 book, Hidden in Plain View: A Secret Story of Quilts and the Underground Railroad.

Deborah Hopkinson’s newest book is Billy and the Rebel, a story for young readers inspired by a true incident at the Battle of Gettysburg.

The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom is a picture book written by Bettye Stroud and illustrated by Erin Susanne Bennett. The story follows a young slave girl named Hannah, who recalls the special quilt her mama once made for her, which includes secret…
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Since 1995, when he helped Oprah lose 90 pounds and train for a marathon, lifestyle coach Bob Greene has been in the media spotlight. But his crusade to help people lead healthier, fitter lives began years earlier, during his childhood, when Greene would lecture his father on his liberal use of the salt shaker. He went on to study health and exercise physiology in Delaware and Arizona, and was managing the fitness staff in a spa in Telluride, Colorado, when he had his life-changing encounter with the famous TV talk show host. "Oprah and I hit if off right away, although during our first meeting she wouldn’t look me in the eye. Despite her fame and accomplishments, Oprah felt ashamed of her weight," Greene recalls on his website. But the two soon settled into a successful routine. After a lifetime of gaining and losing large amounts of weight, Oprah reached her goal weight with Greene’s help and she’s stayed at a healthy weight for the past 10 years. He’s been a part of her life for those 10 years as well, making appearances on The Oprah Winfrey Show, contributing to O magazine and even helping Oprah find the perfect Hawaiian vacation home.

In his new book, The Best Life Diet, Greene expands on the fitness philosophy he’s developed over his long career (and in his other books, including Total Body Makeover and Get With the Program!). He believes that making a commitment to gradually increase your activity level and decrease your food intake (and winnow unhealthy foods from your daily diet) is the only way to lose weight and keep it off. He discusses the reasons people overeat, including the emotional ones. For Oprah, becoming aware of and dealing with her habit of burying her emotions under plates of food was the most critical component, Greene says. The Best Life Diet suggests that if you’re in the same boat, recognizing that fact will make it easier to avoid those destructive habits.

"After working one-on-one with many clients and talking to thousands of people through the years, I think I can say with some authority that the fast and furious approach to weight loss is also the fastest route to failure," writes Greene, and his slow-but-steady strategy is both simple and effective. In Phase One, which lasts four weeks, you raise your level of activity (which is as easy as doubling the number of steps you take each day if you’re totally inactive, and exercising three times a week if you’re somewhat active), change the way you eat (three healthy meals a day plus at least one snack) and take a multivitamin. Phases Two and Three each intensify the activity level, and increase food intake to three meals and two snacks per day. Ultimately, if you skip meals, you won’t save calories, cautions Greene, since skipping meals decreases your metabolism and increases the odds that you’ll overeat when you finally get a chance at food.

The Best Life Diet includes recipes for delicious meals and snacks that won’t make you feel deprived, like Salmon and Spinach Frittata, Black Bean Chipotle Burgers, Vanilla Caramel Truffle Lattes and Hazelnut Biscotti. More recipes, exercise routines and advice can be found on the book’s companion website, thebestlife.com. To help you make smarter decisions at the supermarket, Greene has joined forces with several major food manufacturers to place the Best Life Diet seal of approval (shown on the upper right-hand corner of his book’s cover) on products he believes meet the needs of anyone trying to lose weight and eat healthfully. Though Greene is an understanding, encouraging and empathetic guide through the wilds of weight loss, he’s also adamant that his followers adhere to the high standards he sets for them. " One thing you’ll never hear from me is that making changes in your life is easy. . . . Each step you take toward your weight-loss goal is a gift you give yourself." That about sums it up.

 

Since 1995, when he helped Oprah lose 90 pounds and train for a marathon, lifestyle coach Bob Greene has been in the media spotlight. But his crusade to help people lead healthier, fitter lives began years earlier, during his childhood, when Greene would lecture his…

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Loads of spice with a dash of sugar Just when you thought you’d seen every imaginable cake, pie or sugar rush-inducing treat, Sweet Memories: A Gingerbread Family Scrapbook will have you wondering who spiked the cookie dough. The answer is writer and cookbook author Sally Ryder Brady and her daughter Sarah Brady Underwood, a garden designer and cookie painter. Using a mixture of puns and other riffs on contemporary culture along with sprinkles, icing and anything else that can be applied to a cookie the pair let their imagination run wild in this kooky confection that tells the story of Fred and Ginger Bread in lovingly preserved photos (the old-fashioned photo corners are a nice touch).

Here is the couple’s wedding photo, the family’s cookie-cutter gingerbread house, the kids’ school pictures, Ginger wearing a black negligee while greeting the milkman. Witty illustrations by children’s book illustrator Sara Pinto augment the story. Pair this with cocoa or a box of tea, a set of cookie cutters and cookie dough (there’s a recipe at the end of the book) and you have a delicious gift package. *An occasional look at some of the stranger books.

Loads of spice with a dash of sugar Just when you thought you'd seen every imaginable cake, pie or sugar rush-inducing treat, Sweet Memories: A Gingerbread Family Scrapbook will have you wondering who spiked the cookie dough. The answer is writer and cookbook author…
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Alexa Daley lives in a land where the people are afraid, so afraid that they’ve built a wall around their city. Moreover, the roads themselves are walled, so that travelers can go from one town to another without ever seeing the countryside. This then, is the land of The Dark Hills Divide, the land of Elyon, where stones are set against an unseen (and unknown) evil that lurks in the dark forests of the distant hills. Alexa has seen these hills; as the daughter of a leader of Lathbury, she makes the yearly journey to Bridewell, where her father and others convene to discuss matters of import.

Their meeting place is an ancient prison which has been converted to a city hall of sorts, with an extensive library that Alexa loves, and from its tallest towers she can look out on the mysterious countryside which has haunted her from her earliest memories. That is, when she can get away with looking; the Captain of the Guard, a suspicious, arrogant man named Pervis Kotcher, seems to have it in for the 12-year-old. It’s almost as if he knows the desire in her heart to somehow escape the walls that surround her world and visit the hills that draw her.

She gets that chance through tragedy, when one of her dearest friends, a city elder named Warvold, tells her a strange riddle, then dies under mysterious circumstances. Taking a golden key from Warvold’s locket, a tattered book and an odd map, Alexa embarks on a journey that will have shattering consequences. She will find friends where she doesn’t expect to, powers she doesn’t understand and danger but not where she thinks it is.

Patrick Carman has created a fascinating world in Elyon, full of magic and puzzles, and a hero in Alexa Daley who is neither plucky nor scared, but instead is curious and resourceful. The young protagonist of The Dark Hills Divide, the first book in a new series, finds worlds opening to her through her love of books, and this well-written juvenile fantasy will do the same for its readers.

Alexa Daley lives in a land where the people are afraid, so afraid that they've built a wall around their city. Moreover, the roads themselves are walled, so that travelers can go from one town to another without ever seeing the countryside. This then,…
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Lauren Willig’s third installment in her Pink Carnation Series (after The Secret History of the Pink Carnation and The Masque of the Black Tulip) is another entertaining blend of chick lit and historical fiction. The Deception of the Emerald Ring explores the world of espionage and intrigue in 1803 England, when Napoleon supported a group of Irish rebels in their efforts against the British government, and continues the present-day tale of American doctoral candidate Eloise Kelly, who is researching 19th-century British spies. Eloise discovers that the spy known as the Purple Gentian may have been connected to Letty Alsworthy and Geoffrey Pinchingdale-Snipe, and begins researching their lives.

Geoff marries Letty after an elopement gone awry makes it impossible for him to wed her lovely older sister. Initially, Geoff believes he has married the wrong sister, but he soon finds that Letty has hidden depths. When the War Office requests Geoff’s help in Ireland, he leaves his new bride and travels to Dublin to uncover the identities of insurgents supported by Napoleon. But Letty follows him and ends up involved in the dangerous search.

The growing attraction between Geoff and Letty interspersed with Eloise’s own romantic adventures is very real and believable as the tension comes to a boiling point. Though the tone of the novel is decidedly modern, Willig, a Harvard Law School graduate, weaves in plenty of history (the Irish rebellion actually happened, though the floral spies are her own invention). Light and frothy fun, The Deception of the Emerald Ring is a delightful third third act.

Lauren Willig's third installment in her Pink Carnation Series (after The Secret History of the Pink Carnation and The Masque of the Black Tulip) is another entertaining blend of chick lit and historical fiction. The Deception of the Emerald Ring explores the world of espionage…
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Dorso Clayman is getting annoyed. Who wants to open a locker door and find a cadaver? Especially one partially cut open, with stink rolling out in a green cloud. Or 72 dead lab rats packed in tightly, or four cubic feet of dead, rotten earthworms. Who’s playing these pranks, and why? The future world depicted by Gary Paulsen in The Time Hackers is one in which time projections are a reality. Students are used to seeing and using holographic images in their studies. Dorso knows, for example, that Cleopatra wasn’t especially pretty, Shakespeare had bad teeth and the bad habit of picking them with his pen, and John Wilkes Booth looked like a drugged ferret. But these were only images brought forward in time; everyone accepts the paradox that one cannot go back in time or affect time. You could not go back in time and kill your ancestor, for example, because that would mean you wouldn’t exist to be able to go back in time to kill your ancestor. So, where do these ghastly critters come from? And how is it that the holographic image of Custer appears in the hallway next to Dorso and turns to look at him? It turns out that extreme gamesters have discovered how to cheat the time paradox and tap into the time line, and things from the past have begun appearing in the present.

When Dorso and his friend Frank realize the seriousness of these events and the potential for the destruction of the world, they go into action to stop the gamesters. As they are transported across time, Dorso sees Beethoven and is nearly punched by him, a wooly mammoth grabs Frank and throws him on the lawn at the library, and pirates abscond with the boys. During their travels, they notice a guy with a laptop who seems to be the source of their time travails. The chase is on, and Paulsen’s brief, fast-paced, plot-driven escapade will be a thrill to reluctant readers and to young science fiction fans. A sure-hit for those with time on their hands.

Dean Schneider is a middle school English teacher.

Dorso Clayman is getting annoyed. Who wants to open a locker door and find a cadaver? Especially one partially cut open, with stink rolling out in a green cloud. Or 72 dead lab rats packed in tightly, or four cubic feet of dead, rotten earthworms.…
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Identity, consciousness and memory are the subjects of the compelling new work by esteemed novelist Richard Powers. In The Echo Maker, he has produced an intricately crafted tale that poses challenging questions about the extent to which we can ever fully grasp the reality of our own existence and that of the people who surround us.

When Mark Schluter flips his pickup truck on an isolated stretch of Nebraska highway, his sister Karin abandons her life and rushes to his bedside. The circumstances of the accident are puzzling, made even more so when she discovers a cryptic note about it in her brother’s hospital room. But Karin is in for the most profound shock when Mark awakens from his coma firmly convinced an imposter has taken her place. He’s diagnosed with Capgras syndrome, a form of misidentification delusion only rarely induced by head trauma. Karin’s search for a cure leads her to Gerald Weber, a cognitive neurologist who’s well known for popularizing his field in best-selling books containing accounts of bizarre neurological disorders. Unfortunately for Weber, the critics have savaged his latest work, making the doctor himself feel like an imposter, and as he gropes toward a solution for Mark’s worsening delusions, he must wrestle with his own psychological demons.

Into this complex tale, Powers skillfully layers another plotline describing the fight to protect the migratory habitat of the sandhill cranes that stop on the Platte River on their way north each spring. In the battle waged by environmental activists and commercial developers over water rights, Karin finds herself caught between two men, adversaries in that confrontation, struggling to discern where her true loyalties lie.

Whether he’s plumbing the depths of his characters’ interior lives or describing the harsh Nebraska landscape, Powers’ writing is rich and evocative, and thoughtful readers will find themselves pausing to savor many well-crafted sentences. In The Echo Maker he’s applied his considerable gifts to chart a fascinating journey through the terrain of the human mind.

Harvey Freedenberg writes from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Identity, consciousness and memory are the subjects of the compelling new work by esteemed novelist Richard Powers. In The Echo Maker, he has produced an intricately crafted tale that poses challenging questions about the extent to which we can ever fully grasp the reality of…
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<B>John Feinstein’s winning shot</B> What would you do if you had the chance to be a reporter at the NCAA Final Four? For Stevie Thomas, it’s more than a daydream. In John Feinstein’s new novel, <B>Last Shot</B>, Stevie is one of the winners of a teen writing contest, and he’s in New Orleans with a press pass, on assignment for the U.S. Basketball Writer’s Association. Stevie’s co-winner is a pretty and ambitious girl from North Carolina named Susan Carol Anderson, whose looks aren’t the only thing unnerving him; the fact that she’s a rabid Duke fan also rankles the loyal young Big East follower. Still, they have the run of the place, and Susan Carol has a knack for getting the most imposing of celebrities to talk, a plus when you’re striving to get interesting copy on a short deadline.

Their enthusiasm and curiosity bring them more than they bargain for when, while snooping around the Minnesota State locker room, they overhear an attempt to blackmail MSU’s star player into throwing the Final Four. Stevie and Susan Carol are faced with an important decision: they can either tell the adult reporters who are overseeing them or they can investigate the story on their own. What would <I>you</I> do? For the two young journalists, the choice is obvious, but in order to get at the truth, they’ll have to use a combination of teenage guile and subterfuge to escape their chaperone fathers and their reporter guides. They’ll need to accomplish this while dodging loud sportswriters, crazed fans and most dangerous of all, the people behind the blackmail scheme.

A critically acclaimed sportswriter, Feinstein peppers his story with basketball jargon, realistic descriptions and sportscaster cameos. You’ll feel as if you have a courtside seat at the SuperDome.

<B>Last Shot</B> is Feinstein’s first entry into fiction for young people, and it’s an impressive one. The story is intriguing, the dialogue snappy and the finale exciting. If you’ve got a kid who’d rather watch ESPN than eat, tell him or her to go read a book <I>this</I> book. <I>James Neal Webb is living proof that white men can’t jump.</I>

<B>John Feinstein's winning shot</B> What would you do if you had the chance to be a reporter at the NCAA Final Four? For Stevie Thomas, it's more than a daydream. In John Feinstein's new novel, <B>Last Shot</B>, Stevie is one of the winners of a…
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A young, hungry assistant pays her dues while working for a near-impossible boss with a psychotic streak. Sound familiar? Yes, the easiest way to summarize Debra Ginsberg’s Blind Submission would be to call it The Devil Wears Prada set in the book publishing world, but this debut novel’s sharp writing and intriguing mystery elements turn what could be the same old story into something fresh and new.

Angel Robinson is completely happy living and breathing books in her job at an independent San Francisco bookstore. Then, slow business forces the store to close, leaving Angel unemployed. Encouraged by her novelist boyfriend, Angel successfully applies to be the new assistant to powerhouse literary agent Lucy Fiamma.

Angel quickly finds herself both fascinated with and overwhelmed by this new world. Lucy compliments Angel when she rescues a sexy Italian memoirist’s manuscript from the slush pile, but she also leaves impossible to-do lists and creates an atmosphere of instability with her fickle ways. And there’s the added drama of an anonymous writer submitting chapters of a novel one at a time. Angel is intrigued by this nameless scribe’s work, until the tale starts to eerily resemble Angel’s own life. Is someone spying on her? Her boss, her boyfriend and her co-workers all become suspects as Angel attempts to learn the identity of this mysterious writer.

The shell of the story is hardly novel (is the potential pay-off of a demanding entry-level job worth the sacrifice to sanity and relationships?), but the suspenseful who-wrote-it sets the novel apart from other so-called assistant lit Angel has bigger problems than fetching a complicated Starbucks order. Memoirist Ginsberg (Waiting, Raising Blaze and About My Sisters) clearly knows the ins-and-outs of the publishing world, and Blind Submission offers an engaging look at the backstabbing that takes place behind the books. Iris Blasi is a writer in New York City.

A young, hungry assistant pays her dues while working for a near-impossible boss with a psychotic streak. Sound familiar? Yes, the easiest way to summarize Debra Ginsberg's Blind Submission would be to call it The Devil Wears Prada set in the book publishing world, but…
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<B>Rubber Ducky, you’re the one</B> Author and illustrator Eric Carle has received numerous accolades over the years, including the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award for his lifetime contributions to children’s literature. Who doesn’t know and love <I>The Very Hungry Caterpillar</I>, after all, and many other books from this talented author? Carle is an absolute master at making a simple story heartwarming and visually compelling, especially for young preschoolers. He has done it again with <B>10 Little Rubber Ducks</B>, a picture book based on actual events. He was inspired by a 1992 news clipping of a shipment of 29,000 rubber bathtub toys that fell overboard from a container ship. The debris spread far and wide, from Alaska to the Atlantic. The title page of <B>10 Little Rubber Ducks</B> sets the stage with a view of 10 numbered cutouts of the ducks, and then the story begins, with the toys rolling through the factory assembly line, being painted, packed up and finally loaded onto a cargo ship. Alas, a storm hits the ship and sends the box into the sea, causing the captain to shout: “10 rubber ducks overboard!” The ducks float in many directions, one going with a dolphin, another with a seal, another with a polar bear, one with a flamingo and so on. The 10th duck finally meets a family of ducks and blends right in, except for the fact that he squeaks instead of quacks. Carle’s signature collages are beautifully vivid, filled with ocean greens, blues, oranges, and of course, rubber ducky yellow. The faces on each animal the ducks meet are simple, yet full of emotion, which is part of the reason Carle’s books are so appealing to all, especially the very young. They’re also applauded by weary parents at the end of the day because they’re substantial stories, yet blessedly short.

In this latest bedtime treat, all will be soothed by the closing spread of the duck family resting cozily underneath the stars and a bright full moon. Just make sure you have a rubber duck of your own, because little readers are sure to want to start playing with one after hearing Carle’s tale. <I>Alice Cary stays afloat in Groton, Massachusetts.</I>

<B>Rubber Ducky, you're the one</B> Author and illustrator Eric Carle has received numerous accolades over the years, including the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award for his lifetime contributions to children's literature. Who doesn't know and love <I>The Very Hungry Caterpillar</I>, after all, and many other books…
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We’ll close with a sweet new board book edition of a 2001 picture book: Little Tree, by Caldecott-winning illustrator Chris Raschka. The book starts with the e.e. cummings poem that inspired Raschka’s text. The poem is a poignant look at a tree from its days in a forest to its new holiday home with a family. With lines like, you are so little/you are more like a flower, it’s short and simple enough that even the youngest children can appreciate the warmth and wonder that cummings expresses. Raschka does the poem proud, presenting his own tale based on it. His version begins, The little tree had a little dream. The little tree dreamed of being a Christmas tree, a beautiful Christmas tree in a city, far, far away in a place he’d never seen but only dreamed of, with his own little family in his own little house. Raschka’s illustrations are always enormously popular, and they’re just right in Little Tree. His almost childlike artwork is colorful, cheerful, modern and energetic, and will no doubt inspire young artists. One final word: This little board book is not just for babies and toddlers it’s also perfect for beginning readers.

We'll close with a sweet new board book edition of a 2001 picture book: Little Tree, by Caldecott-winning illustrator Chris Raschka. The book starts with the e.e. cummings poem that inspired Raschka's text. The poem is a poignant look at a tree from its…
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If you’re looking for a lovely children’s book to display, put Through the Animal’s Eyes: The Story of the First Christmas on your coffee table. Author-illustrator Christopher Wormell has created absolutely stunning woodcuts that tell the story of Jesus’ birth. Wormell’s deep blue, purple and black tones contrast vividly with oranges and yellows, showing Mary and Joseph’s search for warmth and shelter on a dark night. The text is simple, a sentence for each spread that tells the famous story. Wormell shows animals responding to Christ’s coming, including rabbits, a Syrian brown bear and an Egyptian Mau. A fascinating appendix gives a few details about each animal and explains their presence during Biblical times.

If you're looking for a lovely children's book to display, put Through the Animal's Eyes: The Story of the First Christmas on your coffee table. Author-illustrator Christopher Wormell has created absolutely stunning woodcuts that tell the story of Jesus' birth. Wormell's deep blue, purple…
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Two-time Booker Prize winner Peter Carey is no stranger to praise, but Wrong About Japan: A Father’s Journey with His Son, could garner a more distinguished honor: his son’s love and respect. Clasping onto shy 12-year-old Charley’s new interest in Japanese comics and film animation, Carey joins his son’s Saturday morning jaunts cruising around Greenwich Village’s sci-fi and video stores. Together they discover their passion for Japan. With comedy, adventure and insight, Carey’s warm, first-person travelogue journeys across land, cultures and the daunting pre-teen/father generational divide. Carey’s initial suggestion of a trip to Japan gets a lukewarm response from his son. Charley yearns to check out “cool” locales, eat raw fish and buy comics, and that’s it. ” No Real Japan,’ said Charley. You’ve got to promise. No temples. No museums.’ ” Skipping the tourist destinations, the duo’s pilgrimage takes them to Tokyo where they wander past kimono-clad women and cartoon character impersonators, by the communal baths and through subway stations displaying “a very alien-looking ticket dispenser.” The father does manage to slip a slow-moving four-hour Kabuki theater performance onto the itinerary, and Charley’s response was the same as mine when my Japanese host-mom duped me into attending such a performance: “How could you do that to me?” The Careys’ journey leaves them with lingering questions of whether their thoughts about Japan were proven right or incorrect. Baffled by the toilet masterpieces of Japan, where commodes transform into seat-warming bidets, they discover Japan is notable for more than atomic bombs and Godzilla. Exploring the intricacy of a country and a culture where he “could not read or speak the simplest phrase,” Carey easily traverses the scene with his simple expressive writing. Arigato Carey-san. Thank you, Mr. Carey. Tiffany Speaks is a former editor for Newsweek Japan magazine.

Two-time Booker Prize winner Peter Carey is no stranger to praise, but Wrong About Japan: A Father's Journey with His Son, could garner a more distinguished honor: his son's love and respect. Clasping onto shy 12-year-old Charley's new interest in Japanese comics and film animation,…

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