Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Our Universe

Sophie Shares the Stars by Heather Smith and Catherine Petit

March 6, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

Sophie Shares the Stars by Heather Smith and Catherine Petit is an interesting book due to the different layers it has. First, it is an adoption story. Sophie has lived with “”My Michael” since she was three. And this is why she calls him what she does and his mother “Our Julia.” But the second level is he is a “real” parent as he does the things all good parents do, takes care of her when she is sick, helps her clean up messes, and […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fiction, Health Tagged With: adoption, Catherine Petit, chronic illness, community, daughters, family, fathers, Heather Smith, Heather Smith and Catherine Petit, Illness, invisible illness, Social Themes

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:133 · Genres: Children's Books, Fiction, Health · Tags: adoption, Catherine Petit, chronic illness, community, daughters, family, fathers, Heather Smith, Heather Smith and Catherine Petit, Illness, invisible illness, Social Themes ·
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The community of solstice

Winter Solstice Wish by Kate Allen Fox and Elisa Paganelli

February 13, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

I am not jumping up and down and saying Winter Solstice Wish by Kate Allen Fox and illustrated by Elisa Paganelli (currently available, but I read via an online reader copy) is the best solstice book ever, but I am jumping in to say this is a nice and slightly different approach to the subject. What I have seen for solstice books tend to show more winter scenes and events done to celebrate the seasonal moment. When we find the shortest day of the year, […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fiction, Health, Non-Fiction, Poetry Tagged With: celebrations, community, earth science, Elisa Paganelli, holidays, Kate Allen Fox, Kate Allen Fox and Elisa Paganelli, nature, seasons, winter, winter solstice

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:93 · Genres: Children's Books, Fiction, Health, Non-Fiction, Poetry · Tags: celebrations, community, earth science, Elisa Paganelli, holidays, Kate Allen Fox, Kate Allen Fox and Elisa Paganelli, nature, seasons, winter, winter solstice ·
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Great for the Holidays and Any Days

The House Without Lights: A glowing celebration of joy, warmth, and home by Reem Faruqi

December 6, 2024 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

I don’t think I saw The House Without Lights: A glowing celebration of joy, warmth, and home by Reem Faruqi and illustrated by Nadia Alam on my online reading site. If I had, I didn’t remember seeing and/or saving it. But one day I had an email that said, “Here is a book we are promoting and we hope you consider reading it.” I said, “Why not?” and I found an online copy. That is not where this book journey ends though. I will be […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, History, Religion Tagged With: celebrations, community, decorations, dwelling, family, Fasts and Feasts, holidays, Home, Muslim, Muslim families, Nadia Alam, Reem Faruqi

BlackRaven's CBR16 Review No:582 · Genres: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, History, Religion · Tags: celebrations, community, decorations, dwelling, family, Fasts and Feasts, holidays, Home, Muslim, Muslim families, Nadia Alam, Reem Faruqi ·
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Powerful story of climate change

Dust by Alison Stine

December 2, 2024 by LB Leave a Comment

There was so much of this I loved, but also this was a book that felt really slow through most of the middle. Thea is partially deaf and after her family’s home in Ohio flooded, her dad brought them to Bloodless Valley in Colorado in order to live a simple life and return to basic farming lifestyle. But there is nothing simple about living in the Valley. There’s been a drought for a long time and corporate farms keep buying the water, making it harder […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: Alison Stine, alt-history, climate change, community, deaf, hard of hearing, Own voices, Speculative Fiction

LB's CBR16 Review No:7 · Genres: Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: Alison Stine, alt-history, climate change, community, deaf, hard of hearing, Own voices, Speculative Fiction ·
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The Food Cart, The Girl and the Community

Noodle & Bao by Shaina Lu

October 11, 2024 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

The story of Noodle & Bao is obvious (the little guy taking on the big guy/the small town getting taken over by big money), but overall it is fun and fresh. There were a few bumps in the flow of things and the animals and human living side-by-side is odd (maybe it is because the people are that type of personalities?) but it keeps things light as we see gentrification at work. The use of details and colors are minimal but important. The extras at […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Health, History Tagged With: Asian-American, community, family, friendship, gentrification, Shaina Lu, Social Themes, values

BlackRaven's CBR16 Review No:476 · Genres: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Health, History · Tags: Asian-American, community, family, friendship, gentrification, Shaina Lu, Social Themes, values ·
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The philosophy of tikkun olam

One Small Spark: A Tikkun Olam Story by Victoria Tentler-Krylov

September 11, 2024 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

Recently published (in August 2024), One Small Spark: A Tikkun Olam Story by Ruth Spiro and illustrated by Victoria Tentler-Krylov, explores the concept of Tikkun Olam, which has several meanings, but basically is to “improve your surroundings.” The authors afterwards is important because it not only helps expand on this idea, but allows you to know that while it is told via a “Jewish lens” in the book (authors words), it is not limited to this religion. Many religions and cultures practice this idea. The […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fiction, Health, Religion Tagged With: community, jewish, Social Themes, Tikkun Olam, values, Victoria Tentler-Krylov

BlackRaven's CBR16 Review No:441 · Genres: Children's Books, Fiction, Health, Religion · Tags: community, jewish, Social Themes, Tikkun Olam, values, Victoria Tentler-Krylov ·
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