When a lion roars in the savannah, it strikes fear into the heart of all that listen to its long drawn out grunts.
But AZers have a different kind of roar. Their roars call to people, help build community, and with each comment they leave in the savannah of blogland, they make new friends, share new joys, acquire new knowledge.
How is the A to Z Challenge treating you? Are you roaring through, or do you sense a flag in energies? Have you made new friends? New followers? Earned comments and appreciation?
If you feel low, go into a room, close all the doors and windows, and roar!
Let all the air and sound and tension rush out of you, and then, when you attack the screen and the list of blogs you need to visit, you'll find renewed energy!
Here's to roaring through the A to Z Challenge!
Monday, April 21, 2014
Saturday, April 19, 2014
#atozchallenge - QUICK!!! Stormy has something to tell you!
We interrupt your regularly scheduled programming to bring you this special announcement.
This is Stormy the Weather Gnome bringing you some important, real-time, genuine, hot-off-the-presses information.
After today...
...you only have 11 more posts to go!
You guys are doing great!
Don't give up!
You are almost there!
Keep moving forward!
You can do it!
This message was paid for by the
Friends to Elect
Stormy the Weather Gnome.
Friday, April 18, 2014
P post for Pam!
P is for Pam!
Welcome to P day! Naturally I had to choose my letter day to share my thoughts with you, right? I'm so happy to be here today and I am thrilled to share a special book with you. The book is called
P.S. Be Eleven by Rita Williams-Garcia
What's important about this title is that the main characters are children of color, which children's literature is still sorely lacking. The author, Williams-Garcia, is an award winning author and one that I'm thrilled to share with you today. P.S. Be Eleven is the sequel to One Crazy Summer which describes the events of three young sisters who visit their estranged mother in California. Their mother is part of a radical activist group and leads a life very different from the one they are accustomed to living in Brooklyn with their father and grandmother.
As if that glimpse into life in the African American community in the 1960s isn't interesting enough, P.S. Be Eleven continues the story as the girls return to Brooklyn with a new found independence. Aside from the usual struggles of being sisters and starting school, family dynamics and change and the girls witness a relative return from Vietnam and the damage that the conflict has inflicted on him.
I remember being eleven years old. Barely. It's supposed to be a time of discovery and fun. I can't think of a better book to share with you on my name day!
Have you read any of Williams-Garcia's books? Do you have a book that starts with P?
Pam, An Unconventional Librarian
Pam, An Unconventional Librarian
Labels:
African American,
Black Panthers,
Brooklyn,
Coretta Scott King Award,
divorce,
families,
family,
Newberry Honor Book,
Oakland California,
P,
PTSD,
Rita Williams-Garcia,
sisters,
tween,
Vietnam,
war
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