Arts & Entertainment
Good Reads: Books 5-21-08
‘BABY & JOURNEY: Two Novels
by Patricia MacLachlan
“BABY”: When 12-year-old Larkin discovers a baby sitting in a basket in her family’s driveway, Larkin, her parents, and her grandmother welcome Sophie into their home. They know Sophie’s mother will return one day and take her from them. But in time, through poetry and song, Larkin and her family come to love this baby as their own — and to face an unspoken loss in their past.
“JOURNEY”: Journey is 11 the summer his mother leaves him and his sister with their grandparents. He is sad and angry, and searches family photographs for clues that will explain why his mother left. In the process, the camera becomes a means of finding things Journey’s naked eye has missed — like the inevitability of his mother’s departure and the love that still binds his family.
In these acclaimed novels about family ties, Newbery Award-winner Patricia MacLachlan explores the healing powers of language, memory and love.
‘THE MIDDLE OF SOMEWHERE’
by J.B. Cheaney
Twelve-year-old Veronica “Ronnie” Sparks is ready to “SuperSize” her life. Equipped with her beloved copy of “Seize the Way: Ten Weeks to SuperSize Your Life!” (written by her idol Kent Clark), she’s itching to get started on pursuing her list of long-term goals. Too bad for Ronnie she’s stuck in Partly, Mo., with her widowed mother and ADHD afflicted brother Gee. It looks like she’ll have to put her dreams on hold until an unusual set of circumstances land her exactly where she wants to be. “In the Middle of Somewhere,” Ronnie finally will get a chance to spread her wings on a roadtrip in an RV across the state of Kansas.
On this weird, wild and windy ride across the prairie, Ronnie will discover life includes things you just can’t plan for … and maybe a little chaos is just what a girl needs.
‘LEEPIKE RIDGE’
by N.D. Wilson
A corpse, a dog, a flashlight, a castaway, and buried treasure set the scene for N.D. Wilson’s novel, “Leepike Ridge.” This story of 11-year-old Thomas Hammond and his accidental journey under Leepike Ridge is a thrilling archeological adventure complete with images from classics like “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” and “The Odyssey.”
Tom and his mother always have lived next to Leepike Ridge. He never imagined he might end up lost beneath it. But that’s exactly what happens the night Tom’s school teacher proposes to his mother. Angry and embarrassed, Tom slips out of the house and escapes down a nearby stream on a floating slab of packing foam. The quiet night and stars lull Tom to sleep, and when he wakes, he finds he has ridden his foam raft all the way to the ridge itself — where the stream dives underground.
What Tom finds under Leepike Ridge changes his life forever and answers questions he hadn’t known to ask — including the answers to how and why his father mysteriously disappeared. Now if only he can find his way home again. …
‘MY DOG IS AS SMELLY AS DIRTY SOCKS’
by Hanoch Piven
Meet a little girl who can’t wait to tell you about her family members — even the dog — through revealing and hilarious portraits she’s made of them using everyday objects.
When a girl’s teacher asks her to draw a picture of her family, she draws them like she always does — with a pencil. But when she gets home, she thinks about each person and starts to re-imagine them. For example, what is her baby brother really like? Well, he is as sweet as candy, as loud as an alarm clock. No, louder. He’s as loud as a fire truck. And so what do you see when you turn the page? A new picture of her brother made using these objects.
She goes through each family member, including herself, and once she has imagined what everyone really looks like, she asks, what does your family look like?
‘TAKE OFF: AMERICAN ALL-GIRL BANDS DURING WWII’
By Tonya Bolden
The male dominated scene of big band, 1940s swing music experienced dramatic changes during World War II, when approximately 16 million American men left to fight — opening the door for female musicians to shine. Award-winning author Tonya Bolden tells the story of how women seized the opportunity in “Take-Off: American All-Girl Bands During WWII.” Included with the book is a 16-track swing CD with a selection of songs highlighted in the book.
Bolden places the fascinating journey of these pioneer female musicians — including Marian Pankey’s Female Orchestra (all black), Babe Egan’s Hollywood Redheads (all white) and the International Sweethearts of Rhythm (mixed) — in the rich context of the 1940s political and social culture, including issues related to the war, race relations and gender roles. This was a time when many refused to believe that women had a place in the jazz world, never mind wailing a sassy tune on a saxophone.
In “Take-Off,” Bolden brings to light the challenges and successes of the courageous and talented women who helped establish America’s legacy in jazz music.
‘SCRIBBLE’
by Deborah Freeman
This is the story of two sisters and their scribbling rivalry.
Emma likes to draw princesses. Her little sister Lucie prefers kitties. After drawing a “scribble cat” on Emma’s picture of Princess Aurora, young Lucie follows Scribble into the picture and tries to set things right. Emma and Lucie might not always get along, but can their drawings?
‘TOGETHER’
by Jane Simmons
Two dogs, Mousse and Nut, learn that even though they may like different things, they still can be best friends.
Have you ever noticed how being with your best friend makes your day brighter? Mousse and Nut have. They love walking together, playing together and laughing together.
Everything is wonderful — until they start to realize there are some things they just can’t do together. Can Mousse and Nut really be friends when they’re so different?
Of course they can.
These endearing, floppy dogs teach a gentle lesson about friendship.
‘CUTIE PIE!’
by Matthew J. Kempler
“You’re the apple of my eye. Are you an apple pie? No, sweetie! You’re not an apple pie.” So begins the interactive book for the youngest of readers. With artwork, liftable flaps and a mirror at the end of the book, children will be enchanted by this lively look at babies and toddlers and the pies they are compared to.
As the children lift the shaped flaps of the book’s pages, they discover babies and toddlers just like them. On the final page, babies can see exactly what type of pie they really are as they glance at their reflections in the circle-shaped mirror.
‘NAOMI AND ELY’S NO KISS LIST’
by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan
In “Naomi and Ely’s No Kiss List,” Naomi and Ely find themselves at a crossroads in their relationship — one that started in their apartment building when they were children. Ely is gay, so there’s no chance they’ll end up together, no matter how much Naomi wished it could be.
So, to avoid future heartache, they create a “No Kiss List” of people who are off-limits when it comes to romance. Now students at NYU, the unthinkable happens and a guy comes between them. Thus begin the ups and downs, and joys and heartache of young adult romance and friendship. Along the way, readers will meet a crazy cast of characters: the hot doorman, the not-hot girl who’s a rock-solid friend, Ely’s moms, Mrs. Loy, the British-style Bingo caller in their building, and Cutie Pie, the Chihuahua who seems to know all.
The story reminds teens that love can come in all forms, and is one that readers will recognize, pine for, and empathize with as they whiz through the pages, eager to find out what becomes of Naomi and Ely.
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‘Murderer’s Daughters’ looks at family violence
Lulu’s mother told her not to let her father in the apartment, but it’s hard for a 10-year-old to say “no” to a parent. So Lulu opened the door and then ran for help as her father stabbed her mother and sister.
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3-16 Good Reads: books
‘OUR FARM: BY THE ANIMALS OF FARM SANCTUARY”
BY MAYA GOTTFRIED
In “Our Farm” readers will meet Maya the cow, J.D. the piglet, Hilda the sheep and a dozen more animals in their own voices through Maya Gottfried’s poetry. Master watercolorist Robert Rahway Zakanitch provides a portrait and pen-and-ink sketches for each poem that capture each animal’s personality. -
‘She’s Out of My League’ a mild charmer
Boy-meets-girl films released in recent years have fallen into two wildly diverse categories: raunchy tales of lust, as seen in “American Pie,” or painfully bland stories (“I Love You Beth Cooper”).
“Pie” provided plenty of laughs but little romance. “Cooper” was heavy on romance but lacked humor. “She’s Out of My League” is the perfect hybrid that manages to pull at your heart and funny bone with equal force. -
UCO dancers spring onto center stage
The University of Central Oklahoma’s Kaleidoscope Dance Company will spring into a variety of dances, including a critically acclaimed and challenging contemporary ballet, at its spring concert 7:30 p.m. March 25-27 at Mitchell Hall Theater.
The spring concert includes jazz, hip-hop, modern, African and Flamenco dances, as well as the contemporary ballet “Solemn Opus: The Journey of Lost and Found.” -
‘Our Family Wedding’ induces stupor
Here’s all you need to know about “Our Family Wedding": It thinks that feeding a goat an entire bottle of Viagra is the height of hilarity.
New Yorkers Lucia and Marcus (“Ugly Betty’s” America Ferrera, Lance Gross) return to their native L.A.to announce their engagement. Slight problem: She’s Mexican-American, he’s African-American.
And their fathers — Miguel and Brad (Carlos Mencia, Forest Whitaker) — hate each other at first sight. -
‘Remember Me’ ineffective
“Remember Me” could have been called “The Many Moods of Robert Pattinson’s Hair.”
Scruffy, coiffed, combed, exploding like an M-80 in a haystack, flattened by sleep, wet from having a pot of spaghetti water dumped on him ... this young actor’s follicles are the star of the show.
Pattinson (of the “Twilight” saga, naturally) plays Tyler Hawkins, estranged from his rich, powerful and remote lawyer father (Pierce Brosnan) and living in abject squalor in a Soho apartment. He’s angry and sullen and rudely smokes in inappropriate situations. He audits classes at New York University but apparently has no ambition or goals. -
‘Green Zone’ misguided
The case has been made that the Bush Administration railroaded America into invading Iraq by ignoring evidence, facts and logic, and never considering the consequences.
With “Green Zone,” “Bourne” and “Bloody Sunday” filmmaker Paul Greengrass commits a similar sin with his film about that invasion and the search for phantom weapons of mass destruction. He has ignored inconvenient facts — and indeed the very book that the script (by Brian Helgeland) is based on — to conjure up an entertaining if sometimes risible ticking-clock thriller about what “they” didn’t want you to know in the run-up to war. -
Oklahoma History Center presents ‘Time Changes Everything’
The play “Time Changes Everything” makes its Oklahoma City debut at the Oklahoma History Center, 2401 North Laird Avenue, at 7 p.m. March 20. The two-act play features the music of Woody Guthrie, Bob Wills and the Red Dirt Rangers. The play will be performed in the Devon Energy Great Hall.
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Local actors evoke magic in Willy Wonka tale
Edmond Fine Art Institute’s annual spring children’s play, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” featured a cast of talented young thespians, many of whom appeared in the recent FAI productions “The Somewhat True Tale of Robin Hood” and “The Bremen Town Musicians.”
Directed by Peggy Hoshall with costume design and construction by FAI Junior Theatre Company director Susan Scott, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” is a story written by Roald Dahl and dramatized by Richard R. George. Gene Wilder and Johnny Depp starred in the 1971 and 2005 film versions. -
Memorial’s ‘How to Succeed’ offers Broadway finesse
Rivaling the the charm of some Broadway tour offerings at the Civic Center, Edmond Memorial High School’s musical, “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” offered a comical glimpse at corporate culture in the days of three-piece suits and steno pools.
Based on the 1952 book by Shepherd Mead, with music and lyrics by Frank Loesser and Abe Burrows of “Guys and Dolls” fame, the show boasts seven Tony Awards and a 1962 Pulitzer Prize. It was released on film in 1967 and revived on Broadway in 1995 with Matthew Broderick and Megan Mullaly. - More Arts & Entertainment Headlines
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‘Murderer’s Daughters’ looks at family violence


