Monday, November 25, 2013

Three Minutes Flying


Normanday #104: My cape is dry clean only.

Write for three minutes about…

…what it feels like to fly.

Email what you wrote to bigfootreads dot wernert at gmail dot com by the end of the day December 1 (put “Norman is Green, But Never With Envy” in the subject line). I’ll post as many of my favorite entries as I want next Monday. Include your first name (or, even better, use a pen name) and age (unless you’re tortoise-old).

Here is the single entry from last week when I asked you to write for three minutes about…

…what the cat dragged in.

 
Bigfoot
Lucky dragged it in. I wasn’t sure what it was exactly. It had fur and stringy bits that could have been whiskers or strands of dried up spaghetti. The only thing I was certain about was that it was dead. Lucky was proud of the dead thing. She placed it on the doorstep and stood next to it with her head held high and her chest thrust out as if she were waiting for me to pin a medal on her. I guess what she really wanted was a little appreciation. And isn’t that what you’re supposed to show when somebody brings you a gift, whether or not you like it? So I did. I thanked her and I made over the dead thing. Then I placed it in my curio cabinet along with all the other gifts the cat dragged in.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

ReRunday: HUCK RUNS AMUCK! (Picture Book)


Originally posted on July 2, 2011.

~

by Sean Taylor, illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds
Dial-Penguin, 2011

A Book Review by
Violet the Telekinetic Puppy

I’m Violet and I’m going to tell you about a funny picture book called HUCK RUNS AMUCK. HUCK RUNS AMUCK is about a goat named Huck who runs amuck. Amuck is a funny word and Huck is a funny goat and funny things happen when Huck runs amuck and that’s why HUCK RUNS AMUCK is a funny picture book.

Huck is a special type of goat and that type of goat is a mountain goat. That means Huck is good at climbing. It’s good that Huck is good at climbing because the other thing about Huck is that his favorite food is flowers and the flowers Huck wants to eat are all in high-up places. Huck is a good climber but when he sees flowers he gets excited and he goes amuck and then he isn’t a careful climber.

Huck does a lot of climbing in this book but he doesn’t do a lot of eating because every time he gets close to flowers something happens to keep him from eating the flowers. One time he gets close enough to eat some flowers when he climbs way up a tall cliff that has flowers on top of it. But Huck doesn’t get to eat those flowers because he falls off the tall cliff and that might sound sad but it is really funny because the picture of him falling off the tall cliff is so funny that you won’t be sad. And Huck doesn’t get sad either because right away he sees some more flowers to try to eat and that is another funny part because the flowers he sees aren’t the kind of flowers that grow in the ground they are the kind that are just pictures on underwear. Huck climbs a clothesline to get to the flowers that are really just pictures on underwear but a funny thing happens to keep him from eating the underwear flowers. I won’t tell you what the funny thing is because you will want to find out for yourself.

There are other funny parts where Huck gets close to flowers but doesn’t get to eat them. But there is one time he does get close to flowers and he could eat them if he wants and those are the flowers on a lady’s hat and the hat is on top of a church tower and Huck climbs the tower to get to the hat. But do you know what? Huck doesn’t eat the hat flowers because everybody in town thinks Huck is being a nice mountain goat and that he is climbing the church tower to get the lady’s hat for her. Even though he really wants to eat the hat flowers he doesn’t because he doesn’t want everybody to be mad at him and also because even though he is a hungry mountain goat he is also a nice mountain goat and so he doesn’t eat the hat flowers. The lady is happy and wants to give Huck a reward and you probably think you know what his reward is but if your guess is flowers you are only sort of right. If you think I’m going to tell you if Huck gets to eat flowers at the end of this book you are not even a little bit right.

The pictures in this book are fun to look at and I like the colors and I like the funny way Huck’s eyes look hungry and googly when he sees flowers. I also like the little bird that follows Huck around and I didn’t notice the little bird the first time I read the book but I liked this book so much that I read it a second time and that’s when I noticed the little bird. I don’t know why the little bird follows Huck around but I think maybe Huck ate his nest. That might sound strange but at the beginning of the book it says that goats can eat birds’ nests so maybe Huck ate the little bird’s nest. Except maybe Huck didn’t eat the little bird’s nest because the little bird doesn’t look mad. Probably the little bird is following Huck around because it is fun to watch Huck run amuck.

Here is a list of who will like this book:

Flowertarians.

Little birds.

Readers named Billy.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Three Minutes with Whiskers


Normanday #103: Thanks. I never think to get mice on my own.

Write for three minutes about…

…what the cat dragged in.

Email what you wrote to bigfootreads dot wernert at gmail dot com by the end of the day November 24 (put “Norman is a Top Notch Hula Hooper” in the subject line). I’ll post as many of my favorite entries as I want next Monday. Include your first name (or, even better, use a pen name) and age (unless you’re tortoise-old).

Here is the single entry from last week when I asked you to write for three minutes about…

…what you see when you look out the window.


Tren Rewy Steb
Looking out the window is like watching a TV show without the sound. It’s my show. I decide what’s happening. I write the dialogue.
A man in a hat is talking to an old lady hunched around her giant blue purse. The hat is a disguise, but not a good one. She recognizes him.
“I told you, I don’t have it,” the old lady says. Wrinkled hands clutching purse straps, she turns away.
“Give me the bag, you old bag,” Hat Man says.
She turns back to him. She hesitates only a moment before opening the bag. She rummages through it. Looking for what? Pepper spray? A phone to call for help? The money she owes him—money she planned to take to the track?
It’s a slip of paper. A secret code. The name of a criminal. The number of a safe deposit box containing a formula for invisibility. A breath mint.
She hands him a breath mint.
He goes on his way. She goes on hers.
I change the channel to a more exciting show. In this one a dog chases an alien. The alien has disguised himself as a squirrel.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

COALTOWN JESUS (YA)


by Ron Koertge
Candlewick, 2013

A Book Review by Bigfoot

Let’s imagine something terrible happens. This terrible happening makes you feel sad, guilty, and confused. I’m not talking about your average everyday frustration, like forgetting to use deodorant on gym day or dropping your phone in the toilet. I’m talking crushing, hit-you-like-a-band-of-gorillas, question-the-point-of-everything terrible.

For your average everyday frustration, a glazed donut might cheer you up a bit. It does me. But for those really terrible happenings, donuts aren’t going to cut it. You need somebody to talk to. A good listener. A compassionate and empathetic guide. A sense of humor wouldn’t hurt either. And to answer those big “why” questions, it would be nice if your new confidante is in the know.

You could do worse than Jesus.

After the death of his brother, Walker is visited by Jesus. Jesus is patient, understanding, and kind—he’s basically everything you’d hope Jesus would be if he showed up unexpectedly and started hanging out with you. He’s also kind of a smart aleck.

Walker and his mother are having trouble coping with their loss. Mixed in with Walker’s grief is a heavy dose of guilt, although the reason behind it isn’t revealed at first. With gentle coaxing and humor, Jesus helps Walker acknowledge the guilt and move past it. Jesus may not give Walker pat answers to his big “why” questions, but he helps Walker get back to living.

COALTOWN JESUS is a short poetry novel. It won’t take you long to read, but it’ll take you an eternity to forget. If you’re ever faced with a terrible happening (or even a bunch of discouraging everyday frustrations) that has you questioning the meaning of it all and searching for reassurance, you could do worse than COALTOWN JESUS.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Three Minutes with a View


Normanday #102: Somebody should really clean this pane.

Write for three minutes about…

…what you see when you look out the window.

Email what you wrote to bigfootreads dot wernert at gmail dot com by the end of the day November 17 (put “Norman has Perfect Vision” in the subject line). I’ll post as many of my favorite entries as I want next Monday. Include your first name (or, even better, use a pen name) and age (unless you’re tortoise-old).

Here is the single entry from last week when I asked you to write for three minutes about…

…something you would never do in a million years.


Tren Rewy Steb
Practice? No, why would I? I’m sure some people would, but not me. Tightrope walking isn’t so hard. I don’t think so anyway. It’s like walking on the ground except up high. If you don’t think about how high up you are, there’s no problem. So up I go. One foot in front of another. Am I wearing a sensible outfit? No, of course not. I have on a flashy, sequined pant suit with a purple feather boa wrapped around my neck. I may look funny, but how else are all the people below going to see me? And the boa blocks my vision so I can’t see the long drop to the hard ground. This may be the best idea I’ve ever had. I don’t know why I’ve never walked on a tightrope while wearing high heels and swim goggles before. When I’m done with this, the next thing I’m absolutely-why-shouldn’t-I going to do is go skydiving while grooming an Angora rabbit.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

ReRunday: GUYKU: A YEAR OF HAIKU FOR BOYS (Picture Book)

Originally posted on May 16, 2011.

~

by Bob Raczka, illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds
Houghton Mifflin, 2010

A Book Review by
Violet the Telekinetic Puppy

I’m Violet and I’m a girl puppy who likes a book called GUYKU. GUYKU is a book with lots of haiku poems about stuff boy people do outside in the spring and summer and fall and winter. Haiku is a kind of poem that has three lines and each line has a certain number of syllables and if you don’t know what a syllable is I will try to explain a syllable to you. I will try to explain a syllable to you by comparing a syllable to something else and the something else I will compare a syllable to is a tail wag.

A tail wag is when a tail goes back and then when a tail goes forth. If a tail wags back and then forth that is two tail wags. Sometimes I wag my tail back and forth when I am happy and sometimes I wag my tail back and forth when I am curious and there are other times when I wag my tail back and forth but I will tell you more about that another time. Right now I want to tell you about syllables and about how syllables help us count parts of a word and about how a tail wag is like a syllable.

Here is a picture of how a tail wag is like a syllable:


Now it is time to wag tails. Imagine I am saying a word and that the word I am saying is “frisbee” and for each part of the word “frisbee” I wag my tail once.

fris bee = wag wag

If each tail wag is one syllable then the word “frisbee” has two syllables.

I’m a puppy, so let’s see how many tail wags “puppy” has:

pup py = wag wag

It takes two tail wags to say the word “puppy” just like it takes two tail wags to say the word “frisbee” so the word “puppy” has two syllables just like the word “frisbee” has two syllables.

I’m a puppy but I am also telekinetic so let’s see how many times I wag my tail for the word “telekinetic.”

tel e ki ne tic = wag wag wag wag wag

Five tails wags means the word “telekinetic” has five syllables.

Do you understand? I hope you understand because I tried hard to explain syllables to you by comparing them to tail wags and I hope I did a good job. If I did a good job that would make me happy and I would wag my tail.

In haiku the first line has five syllables and the second line has seven syllables and the third line has five syllables again and the fourth line has zero syllables because in haiku there are only three lines.

In tail wags a haiku would look like this:

wag wag wag wag wag

wag wag wag wag wag wag wag

wag wag wag wag wag

In Guyku all the poems are haiku and they are all about boys doing stuff like fishing and flying kites and climbing trees and skipping stones and looking at stars and roasting marshmallows and throwing snowballs. There aren’t any girls in this book. There is a dog in this book but because this book is called GUYKU I bet the dog is a boy. There is also a seagull and another bird who isn’t a seagull but I don’t know what kind of bird that bird is and a squirrel and a fish and I bet they are all boys. It’s okay that there aren’t any girls in this book because it is still really good. The poems are really good and they make you see ordinary things in a special way like when the boy and the dog who is probably also a boy are looking at the stars and they think the stars look like a connect-the-dot puzzle or the boy who thinks a melted snowman has a spring allergy and he thinks the snowman’s allergy made the snowman melt. By the way, it is a snowman who melts and not a snowwoman.

I like the poems a lot and I also like the pictures that go with each poem. My favorite picture is the boy who is fishing and he doesn’t want to use worms for bait so the worms are squiggling away and the worms are probably boy worms. And my other favorite is the boy who is thinking of jumping into a puddle to get his sister wet. I just remembered there is one girl in this book and the one girl in the book is the sister of the boy who might jump in the puddle to get her wet. I just remembered something else. There is a girl mosquito in this book. A boy tries to splat her. I have lots of other favorite pictures but I won’t tell you about all of them because you can see them for yourself when you read GUYKU and you can read GUYKU even if you are a girl person or a girl seagull or a girl other type of bird or a girl fish or a girl worm or a girl telekinetic puppy.

Here is a list of who will like this book:


Boys.

Girls.

Amoebas.


The best part of this book is that it makes you want to try to write your own haiku. I wrote a haiku for spring and summer and fall and winter just like the author of GUYKU did but my haiku are not about boys. Here are my haiku:

My Spring Haiku
Rainy day odors:
wet grass, wet leaves, wet dirt (mud).
My nose is happy.

My Summer Haiku
It’s a sunny day.
Come out and play with me, Cat.
I won’t bite. Promise.

My Fall Haiku
I’m howling tonight
at the biscuit in the sky—
Yummy harvest moon.

My Winter Haiku
Bone, dead fish, or ball—
what’s hiding under the ice?
I’ll find out next spring.

Good-bye.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Briar’s Journal (October 29 to November 26, 2013)


Dream Entry*
March 16, 2007

Three puppies, a duck, and all my friends are sitting on the floor of Morzant’s lab, moaning. They have tummy aches from eating too much Halloween candy.

Dr. Flamingo comes into the room.

“I have just the remedy. Read these books and call me in the morning.”

These are the books Dr. Flamingo gives my friends to help them feel better.


BIGFOOT’s books:

GOD GOT A DOG
by Cynthia Rylant, with illustrations by Marla Frazee
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Beach Lane-Simon & Schuster
October 29, 2013

DOGS OF WAR
by Sheila Keenan, illustrated by Nathan Fox
[MIDDLE GRADE—GRAPHIC NOVEL]
Graphix-Scholastic
October 29, 2013

THE CARPET PEOPLE
by Terry Pratchett
[MIDDLE GRADE]
Clarion-Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
November 5, 2013

THE F– IT LIST
by Julie Halpern
[YOUNG ADULT]
Feiwel & Friends-Macmillan
November 12, 2013

FULL RIDE
by Margaret Peterson Haddix
[YOUNG ADULT]
Simon & Schuster
November 12, 2013

HE SAID, SHE SAID
by Kwame Alexander
[YOUNG ADULT]
Amistad-HarperCollins
November 19, 2013

BANDETTE VOLUME 1: PRESTO!
by Paul Tobin, illustrated by Colleen Coover
[YOUNG ADULT—GRAPHIC NOVEL]
Dark House
November 26, 2013


MORZANT’s books:

A MYSTERY WITH ELECTROMAGNETS, BURGLAR ALARMS, 
AND OTHER GADGETS YOU CAN BUILD YOURSELF
by Bob Pflugfelder and Steve Hockensmith, 
with illustrations by Scott Garrett
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE NICK AND TESLA’S 
HIGH-VOLTAGE DANGER LAB SERIES]
Quirk
November 5, 2013

SOPHIE SCOTT GOES SOUTH
by Alison Lester
[PICTURE BOOK]
Houghton Mifflin-Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
November 19, 2013


PENNY’s books: 

HORDE
by Ann Aguirre
[YOUNG ADULT—THIRD IN THE ENCLAVE TRILOGY]
Feiwel & Friends-Macmillan
October 29, 2013

MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN
by Ransom Riggs, illustrated by Cassandra Jean
[YOUNG ADULT—GRAPHIC NOVEL]
Yen Press-Hachette
October 29, 2013

RELIC
by Heather Terrell, with illustrations by Ricardo Cortés
[YOUNG ADULT—FIRST IN THE BOOKS OF EVA SERIES]
Soho Teen-Soho Press
October 29, 2013

AFTER EDEN
by Helen Douglas
[YOUNG ADULT]
Bloomsbury USA
November 5, 2013

BROKEN
by CJ Lyons
[YOUNG ADULT]
Sourcebooks Fire-Sourcebooks
November 5, 2013

CURTSIES & CONSPIRACIES
by Gail Carriger
[YOUNG ADULT—SEQUEL TO ETIQUETTE & ESPIONAGE]
Little, Brown-Hachette
November 5, 2013

ENGINES OF THE BROKEN WORLD
by Jason Vanhee
[YOUNG ADULT]
Henry Holt
November 5, 2013

THE NATURALS
by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
[YOUNG ADULT—FIRST IN THE SERIES]
Hyperion-Disney
November 5, 2013

THE TRAP
by Andrew Fukuda
[YOUNG ADULT—THIRD IN THE HUNT TRILOGY]
St. Martin's Griffin
November 5, 2013

TWINMAKER
by Sean Williams
[YOUNG ADULT]
Balzer & Bray-HarperCollins
November 5, 2013

THE LIVING
by Matt de la Peña
[YOUNG ADULT]
Delacorte-Random House
November 12, 2013

SAVE THE ENEMY
by Arin Greenwood
[YOUNG ADULT]
Soho Teen-Soho Press
November 12, 2013

THIS WICKED GAME
by Michelle Zink
[YOUNG ADULT]
Dial-Penguin
November 14, 2013

PAWN
by Aimée Carter
[YOUNG ADULT—FIRST IN THE 
BLACKCOAT REBELLION SERIES]
Harlequin Teen-Harlequin
November 26, 2013


THE DUCK’s books: 

SORROW’S KNOT
by Erin Bow
[YOUNG ADULT]
Arthur A. Levine-Scholastic
October 29, 2013

CINDERS: A CHICKEN CINDERELLA
by Jan Brett
[PICTURE BOOK]
Putnam-Penguin
November 5, 2013

COLD SPELL
by Jackson Pearce
[YOUNG ADULT]
Little, Brown-Hachette
November 5, 2013

ROSES
by G.R. Mannering
[YOUNG ADULT]
Sky Pony Press-Skyhorse
November 6, 2013

DREAD DESERT
by Marcus Sedgwick, 
with illustrations by Pete Williamson
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE 
ELF GIRL AND RAVEN BOY SERIES]
Orion Children’s-Orion
November 7, 2013

THE TALE OF JACK FROST
by David Melling
[PICTURE BOOK]
Hodder-Hachette
November 7, 2013

THE SONG OF THE GOLDEN HARE
by Jackie Morris
[PICTURE BOOK]
Frances Lincoln
November 15, 2013

ANGEL FEVER
by L.A. Weatherly
[YOUNG ADULT—FINAL IN THE ANGEL SERIES]
Candlewick
November 26, 2013


NORMAN’s books: 

THE CREATURE DEPARTMENT
by Robert Paul Weston, 
with illustrations by Framestore
[MIDDLE GRADE—FIRST IN THE SERIES]
Razorbill-Penguin
November 5, 2013

HARD LUCK
by Jeff Kinney
[MIDDLE GRADE—EIGHTH IN THE 
DIARY OF A WIMPY KID SERIES]
Amulet-Abrams
November 5, 2013

HOW TO BETRAY A DRAGON’S HERO
by Cressida Cowell
[MIDDLE GRADE—ELEVENTH IN THE 
HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON SERIES]
Little, Brown-Hachette
November 5, 2013

THE SANDMAN AND THE WAR OF DREAMS
by William Joyce
[MIDDLE GRADE—FOURTH IN THE GUARDIAN SERIES]
Atheneum-Simon & Schuster
November 5, 2013

FOUL TROUBLE
by John Feinstein
[YOUNG ADULT]
Knopf-Random House
November 12, 2013

HOSTAGE THREE
by Nick Lake
[YOUNG ADULT]
Bloomsbury USA
November 12, 2013

SON OF FORTUNE
by Victoria McKernan
[YOUNG ADULT]
Knopf-Random House
November 12, 2013

UNCRASHABLE DAKOTA
by Andy Marino
[YOUNG ADULT]
Henry Holt
November 12, 2013

FIREBRAND
by Antony John
[YOUNG ADULT—SEQUEL TO ELEMENTAL]
Dial-Penguin
November 14, 2013

ROMULUS BUCKLE & THE ENGINES OF WAR
by Richard Ellis Preston, Jr.
[YOUNG ADULT—SECOND IN THE 
CHRONICLES OF THE PNEUMATIC ZEPPELIN SERIES]
47North
November 19, 2013


BEVERLY’s books:

TROUPER
by Meg Kearney, illustrated by E.B. Lewis
[PICTURE BOOK]
Scholastic Press-Scholastic
October 29, 2013

SWAGGER
by Carl Deuker
[YOUNG ADULT]
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
November 5, 2013

KETCHUP CLOUDS
by Annabel Pitcher
[YOUNG ADULT]
Little, Brown-Hachette
November 12, 2013

LOUD AWAKE AND LOST
by Adele Griffin
[YOUNG ADULT]
Knopf-Random House
November 12, 2013


BRIAR’s books:

PALACE OF SPIES
by Sarah Zettel
[YOUNG ADULT—FIRST IN THE SERIES]
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
November 5, 2013


OLIVER’s books: 

SNOWFLAKES FALL
by Patricia MacLachlan, illustrated by Steven Kellogg
[PICTURE BOOK]
Random House
October 29, 2013

WINTER IS FOR SNOW
by Robert Neubecker
[PICTURE BOOK]
Disney-Hyperion
October 29, 2013

BALLAD
by Blexbolex
[PICTURE BOOK]
Enchanted Lion
November 5, 2013

CUB’S BIG WORLD
by Sarah L. Thomson, illustrated by Joe Cepeda
[PICTURE BOOK]
Harcourt-Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
November 5, 2013

FOSSIL
by Bill Thomson
[PICTURE BOOK]
Two Lions-Amazon
November 5, 2013

RED KNIT CAP GIRL TO THE RESCUE
by Naoko Stoop
[PICTURE BOOK—SEQUEL TO RED KNIT CAP GIRL]
Little, Brown-Hachette
November 5, 2013

RABBITS IN THE SNOW: A BOOK OF OPPOSITES
by Natalie Russell
[PICTURE BOOK]
Macmillan
November 7, 2013

AMY’S THREE BEST THINGS
by Philippa Pearce, illustrated by Helen Craig
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
November 12, 2013

ELLA AND THE BALLOONS IN THE SKY
by Danny Appleby, 
illustrated by Lauren Pirie
[PICTURE BOOK]
Tundra
November 12, 2013

FRIENDS
by Eric Carle
[PICTURE BOOK]
Philomel-Penguin
November 19, 2013


LENNY’s books: 

THE CROCODILE AND THE SCORPION
by Rebecca Emberley, 
illustrated by Ed Emberley
[PICTURE BOOK]
Roaring Brook
October 29, 2013

HOW TO DRAW A CHICKEN
by Jean-Vincent SĂ©nac
[PICTURE BOOK]
Tate
October 29, 2013

DON’T PUSH THE BUTTON!
by Bill Cotter
[PICTURE BOOK]
Sourcebooks Jabberwocky-Sourcebooks
November 1, 2013

WHALE SHINES: AN ARTISTIC TALE
by Fiona Robinson
[PICTURE BOOK]
Abrams
November 5, 2013

IF DINOSAURS LIVED IN MY TOWN
by Marianne Plumridge, 
illustrated by Bob Eggleton
[PICTURE BOOK]
Sky Pony Press-Skyhorse
November 6, 2013

THE NOWHERE BOX
by Sam Zuppardi
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
November 12, 2013

CITY CAT
by Kate Banks, illustrated by Lauren Castillo
[PICTURE BOOK]
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
November 19, 2013

CRABTREE
by Jon Nichols, illustrated by Tucker Nichols
[PICTURE BOOK]
McSweeney’s McMullens
November 19, 2013

PETE THE CAT: VALENTINE’S DAY IS COOL
by James Dean and Kimberly Dean, 
illustrated by James Dead
[PICTURE BOOK]
HarperFestival-HarperCollins
November 26, 2013


VIOLET’s books: 

DOT
by Randi Zuckerberg, illustrated by Joe Berger
[PICTURE BOOK]
HarperCollins
November 5, 2013

FRAIDYZOO
by Thyra Heder
[PICTURE BOOK]
Abrams
November 5, 2013

YOU ARE THE PEA, AND I AM THE CARROT
by J. Theron Elkins, illustrated by Pascal Lemaitre
[PICTURE BOOK]
Abrams
November 5, 2013

CHEESE BELONGS TO YOU!
by Alexis Deacon, illustrated by Viviane Schwarz
[PICTURE BOOK]
Candlewick
November 12, 2013

THE BAD BIRTHDAY IDEA
by Madeline Valentine
[PICTURE BOOK]
Knopf-Random House
November 12, 2013

RECIPE
by Angela Petrella and Michaelanne Petrella, 
illustrated by Mike Bertino and Erin Althea
[PICTURE BOOK]
McSweeney’s McMullens
November 19, 2013

FOXY IN LOVE
by Emma Dodd
[PICTURE BOOK—SEQUEL TO FOXY]
HarperCollins
November 26, 2013




* The dream entries from Briar’s journal contain premonitions of books that will be published in the future. Briar’s dream self foresees the books’ summaries and knows which will likely appeal to each of her friends. Briar always wakes up before she can see whether her friends will enjoy the books.