Get ready for a road trip!
Jimmy and his grandpa, both Lakota Native Americans, travel together one summer through what is now South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Montana to walk in the footsteps of their famous ancestor, Tasunke Witko, who is better known to us as Crazy Horse.
The pair drive, hike, and camp to explore the full life of a boy who grows into a leader as the grandpa teaches Jimmy about the man behind the legend.
Walk along with them through Crazy Horse’s boyhood home, the hunting plains, Army forts, and battle sites as they uncover this story of life, love, war, hope, and heartbreak.
Joseph Marshall III, historian and storyteller, has written several nonfiction books for adults and now offers this children’s book to engage young readers in the rich history of indigenous people. Note: This book includes details of battles and forceful displacement.
Family
The Island of the Sea Women
The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See
Format: Book
Who it’s for: Adults
This book is a One Maryland One Book selection for 2020.
This historical fiction novel is set on the island of Jeju in Korea. Over many decades, beginning with the Japanese occupation during the 1930 – 1940’s and during World War II and the Korean War.
During this turbulent time in history, two young girls Young-sook and Mi-ja, both from different backgrounds bond. Their close friendship begins over their love of the sea and working in their villages’ all-female diving collective. The haenyeo woman are trained from a young age to expand their lungs and go diving on the ocean floor to harvest food. Their livelihood and traditions are intertwined. Their diving skills are handed down for generations.
Mi-ja, a city born orphan living nearby with a neglectful aunt and uncle is caught stealing food in the fields of Jeju by Young-sook and her mother. Her mother as head of the collective, decides to take Mi-ja on and teaches her alongside Young-sook to dive. The girls become lifelong friends enduring many life altering events that impact their lives growing up.
The political unrest and unspeakable tragedies inflicted upon the villagers are part of the horrors of war. The impact on their island from famine, to extreme punishment, and demands of the opposing government regimes are inflicted upon the villagers who struggle to comply.
Young-sook and Mi-ja endure impossible choices that tear their friendship apart causing disappointment, anger and judgement that take generations to understand and forgive.
Hearts Beat Loud
Hearts Beat Loud
Format: Digital Movie, DVD, Blu-ray
Who it’s for: Adults, Teens
If you like feel-good movies, about fathers and daughters, with great soundtracks, well, I’ve got a film for you:
Hearts Beat Loud stars Nick Offerman as Frank, and Kiersey Clemons as his daughter Sam. Frank and Sam’s mother were musicians. She died when Sam was little, and Frank never re-married. He’s been running a record shop for 17 years, but things are going to have to change. Sam is heading across the country soon, to pursue her dream of studying to become a doctor, and the record shop won’t support her out-of-state pre-med tuition.
Frank and Sam have regular jam sessions, and one night they play a song Sam has written, about her budding summer romance, which Frank records, and uploads to Spotify on a whim. To their surprise, the song becomes a hit, and the opportunity to pursue a career in music opens up to Sam and Frank. Frank has fantasies of their daddy-daughter-duo sweeping the indie rock scene, while Sam is firm about going to school, despite developing strong feelings for her new love. What will they do?
I thought Hearts Beat Loud was really sweet, and just what I needed to escape the complicated world we find ourselves in, just for a few hours. Offerman and Clemons have great chemistry, and the movie also features entertaining performances from Toni Collette as Frank’s landlady, and Ted Danson as his bar-owning best friend. This intergenerational story may also be a good movie for parents to share with their older children (it’s rated PG-13). Put the DVD or Blu-ray on hold, or stream it via Hoopla today!
New Year’s Celebrations for Kids
The New Year, a time to reflect on what has passed and to celebrate new beginnings, is just around the corner! How do you celebrate? These vibrant and lively stories offer a doorway inside two young girls’ celebration of family culture and tradition.
Shante Keys and the New Year’s Peas by Gail Piernas-Davenport
Format: Book
Who it’s For: Kids
We set out with Shante on her quest to find the missing ingredient for her family’s New Year tradition. Told in rhyme, this mission unfolds on the streets of Shante’s neighborhood but ultimately becomes a journey through the cultures and traditions of her neighbors too. By the end of the story, it’s clear she can experience the beauty of the wide world just by looking at what makes the people she sees everyday unique. What I love about this story are the underlying messages of diversity, community, teamwork and sharing! Also, included at the back of the book are a fun recipe to try at home and a resource for the cultures of other countries, their traditions and celebrations.
Freedom Soup by Tami Charles
Format: Book, DVD, Digital Audiobook, Digital Movie
Who it’s For: Kids
In this story, we meet Belle and her Ti Gran as we are dropped into their gloriously delicious adventure in cooking set against a backdrop of their Haitian history. The dynamic and bright pictures dance off the page taking us with them. You can almost feel and taste the freedom Ti Gran talks about while she cooks. Luckily for us, the recipe for Freedom Soup is in the back of the book! And as an extra tidbit, the author offers up a little information about the real Ti Gran as well!
Find it in the catalog and on Hoopla as an audiobook or streaming video.
Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan
Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan
Format: Book
Who It’s For: Adults
After graduating from college and working for a year, Kelly Corrigan and a good friend decided to set out on the adventure of a lifetime. Everything was great until they began to run out of money in Australia. Instead of asking their parents to wire them money, Kelly and her friend decided to get jobs.
Kelly took a job as a live-in nanny for the Tanner family. The mother of the family had just passed away after battling cancer. Kelly was responsible for taking the children to school, doing their laundry, cooking their meals, taking care of them when they returned home, cleaning up after them, and getting them ready for bed.
Glitter and Glue is a memoir in which Kelly examines her relationship with her mother while being the substitute mother for the Tanner children. The book is heartwarming. Kelly has a style of writing that will leave you laughing and sometimes crying. It will leave you thinking of your relationship with your own mother and reflecting on what it means for one parent to be the “glitter” and one parent to be the “glue”. This is a book that you won’t be able to put down.
Untamed
Untamed by Glennon Doyle
Format: Book, Ebook, Overdrive Audio
Who it’s for: Adults
Glennon Doyle is the author of a blog and two best-selling memoirs, a public speaker, and the founder of a nonprofit organization Together Rising. These accomplishments show that she is a successful woman, but Untamed her third memoir, shows that Doyle is a painfully honest woman as well.
Doyle begins the first chapter of her book describing a trip to the zoo with her children. While there, they watch a cheetah who has been trained to chase a stuffed bunny like a dog. Watching this performance presents Doyle with the sudden insight that her life as a woman has been like that cheetah’s. She realizes that she has spent her entire life feeling “caged” and trying to be loved by doing what she has been “trained” to do.
In Untamed, Doyle explains how she finally broke free of feeling caged. She empowers all women, through her incredible insight and experiences, to find their own version of humanity and follow it. Doyle encourages women to trust their intuition and to “find what makes your heart ache and follow it”.
As you read this book you’ll find yourself highlighting inspirational quotes and stories that you’ll want to refer back to later. You will experience the art of a great storyteller and her willingness to break free of cultural norms in order to establish a life that works best for her and her children. I listened to this book through RB Digital and found that I wanted to check the hardback copy out as well, just so that I could re-read some of the most inspiring parts.
In Untamed, Doyle teaches us what it means to be brave enough to abandon what the world expects of us instead of abandoning our true selves. Doyle challenges women to ask themselves “What do I love? What makes me come alive?, What is beauty to me, and when do I take the time to fill up with it? Who is the soul beneath all of these roles?” Those are great questions for all of us to ponder.