Great Pianists and Pedagogues: In Conversation with Carola Grindea
Book
These forty-eight interviews conducted during the 1980s and '90s with some of the great pianists of...
The Berenstain Bears Go Christmas Caroling
Mike Berenstain and Jan Berenstain
Book
Young readers will enjoy reading about the Bear family going Christmas caroling on Christmas Eve in...
The Berenstain Bears Children Faith Holiday Christmas Christmas Caroling
Rambee Boo & Christmas Sock! (The Rambee Boo Series: Book #6)
Book
Christmas is around the corner and the Rambee Boo crew is getting ready to enjoy their holiday...
Holiday Christmas Children Kids dogs Picture Books
Debbiereadsbook (1202 KP) rated Tutus and Tinsel (Half Moon Bay 2.5) in Books
Dec 21, 2018
This is a little catch up, if you will, with the Harris-Reid family, and you really SHOULD at least read Fish Stick Fridays before this one. Hanging the Stars ain't too shabby either, but this is more about Zig and her dads.
Zig is eleven, and blindsided by a school project. Her dads go about rallying around and making the project a little less painful for her.
I'm not usually one for Holiday/Christmas stories, but I loved Zig, and Deacon and Lang, so really had to catch up with them! And I LOVED this! It packs quite an emotional punch for some 90 odd pages!
Zig has to do a project on Christmas traditions on her family. But she doesn't have any, not really. So Deacon and Lang go all out about making NEW traditions: using some from Lang's grandmother, some from their friends and making some up as they go along.
They do cracker house decorations, the chopping of trees down. Trees in each and every room. Making salt dough ornaments. Lots of different things, from a whole host of backgrounds, and choosing which ones to make their own.
I loved that we caught up with Deke and Lang, but also with West, Angel and Rome. Loved the plans the adults have for the kids should something happen to either set of parents.
But Zig, again, made this book! Set 3 years after Fish Stick Fridays, and she still has her eclectic taste in tutus and boots, and it's so great she hasn't lost her swear jar! Indeed, opening line in the book is Zig swearing her little head off and realising that Deke can hear her! Loved it!
And even though Zig was sick, and not actually able to do her presentation at school, loved that she WAS able to still show her dads what did. I cried at that point! Because even though it was about making NEW traditions, Zig still draws on her painful past and how important it is to remember where you came from, and that past is a part of you, always. And new families need new traditions.
5 full and sparkly stars!
ps, we ALWAYS have take out Christmas Eve!
**same worded review will appear elsewhere**
Science and Socio-Religious Revolution in India: Moving the Mountains
Pankaj Jain and George Alfred James
Book
Scholars have long noticed a discrepancy in the way non-Western and Western peoples conceptualize...
Thinking Through Technology: The Path Between Engineering and Philosophy
Book
What does it mean to think about technology philosophically? Why try? These are the issues that Carl...
Ancestral Medicine: Rituals for Personal and Family Healing
Book
Offering a practical guide to understanding and navigating relationships with the spirits of those...
Jewish Festival Food: Eating for Special Occasions
Book
This book features 75 delicious dishes for every holiday and celebration. You can discover the...
Into the Mystic: The Visionary and Ecstatic Roots of 1960s Rock and Roll
Book
Exploring how 1960s rock and roll music became a school of visionary art, Christopher Hill shows how...
Perspectives on the Performance of French Piano Music
Lesley A. Wright and Scott McCarrey
Book
Perspectives on the Performance of French Piano Music offers a range of approaches central to the...