Friday, May 22, 2015

El Deafo and Brown Girl Dreaming

If you enjoyed Smile by Raina Telgemeier, then you are also going to like Cece Bell's El Deafo, one of the two 2015 Newbery Honor Books.  Bell uses a graphic novel format to tell about her difficult time growing up with hearing loss.  I loved the Bell's artwork, and she masterfully weaves together humor and serious moments that leave you wanting to learn more about her life.  Enjoy this great book!


From the Publisher:
A 2015 Newbery Honor Book Going to school and making new friends can be tough. But going to school and making new friends while wearing a bulky hearing aid strapped to your chest? That requires superpowers! In this funny, poignant graphic novel memoir, author/illustrator Cece Bell chronicles her hearing loss at a young age and her subsequent experiences with the Phonic Ear, a very powerful--and very awkward--hearing aid.
The Phonic Ear gives Cece the ability to hear--sometimes things she shouldn't--but also isolates her from her classmates. She really just wants to fit in and find a true friend, someone who appreciates her as she is. After some trouble, she is finally able to harness the power of the Phonic Ear and become "El Deafo, Listener for All." And more importantly, declare a place for herself in the world and find the friend she's longed for.



Brown Girl Dreaming is the second Newbery honor book this year, and the winner of the National Book Award.  The author Jaqueline Woodson has written a number of books about based her experiences growing up in South Carolina in the 1960s and 1970s, but this book of poems might be the most powerful she has ever written.  Woodson uses her poems to tell of her struggle to learn how to read, and find her place in a nation where there were still Jim Crow laws.  This is a powerful book that will leave you thinking about it long after the story is done.  

Booklist starred August 2014 (Vol. 110, No. 22)
Grades 5-8. What is this book about? In an appended author’s note, Woodson says it best: “my past, my people, my memories, my story.” The resulting memoir in verse is a marvel, as it turns deeply felt remembrances of Woodson’s preadolescent life into art, through memories of her homes in Ohio, South Carolina, and, finally, New York City, and of her friends and family. Small things—ice cream from the candy store, her grandfather’s garden, fireflies in jelly jars—become large as she recalls them and translates them into words. She gives context to her life as she writes about racial discrimination, the civil rights movement, and, later, Black Power. But her focus is always on her family. Her earliest years are spent in Ohio, but after her parents separate, her mother moves her children to South Carolina to live with Woodson’s beloved grandparents, and then to New York City, a place, Woodson recalls, “of gray rock, cold and treeless as a bad dream.” But in time it, too, becomes home; she makes a best friend, Maria, and begins to dream of becoming a writer when she gets her first composition notebook and then discovers she has a talent for telling stories. Her mother cautions her not to write about her family, but, happily, many years later she has—and the result is both elegant and eloquent, a haunting book about memory that is itself altogether memorable.