On the Owl’s Calendar: Mary Elizabeth Nelson’s Catla and the Vikings

When: Thursday, 19 April 2012 at 7:00 pm
Where: Owl’s Nest Books, 815A 49th Avenue SW
Who: Mary Elizabeth Nelson, with her new young-adult historical Catla and the Vikings.

About the Book
In the fall of 1066, a thirteen-year-old Anglo-Saxon girl named Catla watches from afar as Viking raiders burn her village and imprison her family and the other villagers. No one sees her as she flees toward Aigber, the closest village, praying the people there will help. Catla must ignore her terror as she makes her way to the standing stones, a place of refuge, where she meets Sven, an older boy from her village. Together, they continue toward Aigber and are able to alert the village of the coming peril. Catla and Sven rally the villagers of Aigber, and with Catla’s help, a plan is put in place that will save both villages from the Nord-devils.

About the Author
Mary Elizabeth Nelson was born in Calgary, Alberta and spent most of her life there, some of it as a teacher and teacher-librarian at Springbank Junior high and for the Calgary Board of Education. She also has lived in Montreal and Winnipeg. Some years ago, she moved to Duncan, Vancouver Island. She has previously published bits of poetry and a textbook, Medieval Times, used by the Ontario school system. Catla and the Vikings, a novel for juvenile readers, was published by Orca Books, in March 2012. She has four grown children and three grandchildren. She enjoys the natural world, golf, quilting, calligraphy, and writing.

Junior Owlets: The Magician’s Elephant by Kate DiCamillo

The March selection for Junior Owlets was The Magician’s Elephant by Kate DiCamillo.

Peter has just enough money to buy some bread, but instead he gives his money to the fortune teller.  Peter is desperately looking for a sign that his sister Adele is alive.  The fortune teller reads that an elephant will appear and take him to his presumed-dead sister.  That very night, a magician brings an elephant crashing down on his audience.

Comments from the Junior Owlets:

- Beautifully written.
- Liked every character and the depth of every character.
- All characters seemed real.
-Magical story with realistic characters.
- Suspenseful.
- Would have liked not to know Adele is alive until the end.
- Would have it longer.
- Why did the magician feel he had to make an elephant?
- Dark story.
- Some confusion with so many characters.
- Found the plot too jumpy.
- Very descriptive.
- Are there too many characters?
- Problem was solved too easily.
- Loved the illustrations
- Very descriptive.
- Really liked how you wondered what would happen next.
- Wrapped up a bit too quickly.

Final score: 8.75 out of 10

The April book for Junior Owlets is 11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass and we’ll be discussing it Saturday, April 14th at 9:00am.

Amanda’s eleventh birthday should have been a happy occasion. Instead she’s dressed in an itchy costume her mother picked out for her Hollywood-themed party (Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, even though the flying monkeys have always creeped her out). Meanwhile, across town, her ex-best friend, Leo, is celebrating their joint birthday with a huge bash that includes a hypnotist, a football star, a giant iguana, and a rock band. SO not fair! Amanda can’t wait for the day AFTER her birthday so she can stop thinking about the fight that led her and Leo to have separate parties for the first time in their lives. There’s just one problem. The next day is her birthday all over again.

If you’re a kid in grades 3 to 6 and are interested in joining Junior Owlets, we’d love to have you.  Membership is free and open all year.  Just give us a call at 403-287-9557, email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca or just drop in to one of the meetings.

Published in: on March 13, 2012 at 10:50 am  Leave a Comment  

On the Owls’ Calendar: The Vanishing Track by Stephen Legault

When: Thursday, the 29th of March at 7:00pm
Who: Stephen Legault with his newest mystery The Vanishing Track.
Where: Owl’s Nest Books & Gifts
815A 49th Avenue SW
(Britannia Shopping Plaza at Elbow and 49th)

About the Book:

Cole Blackwater gets more than he bargained for when his best friend and advocate for the homeless, Denman Scott, asks him to help stop the demolition of the Lucky Strike, a once majestic hotel in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside that is now home to nearly three hundred of the city’s least fortunate residents.

Working with Vancouver Sun reporter Nancy Webber and street nurse Juliet Rose, Cole and Denman discover that homeless people in the area have been disappearing without a trace. As they venture into the dark corners of the city’s underworld, and into political corruption at City Hall, they find themselves in the middle of a dangerous cabal of city officials, high-ranking cops, condo developers, and crime bosses. Can Cole and his friends unravel the mystery behind the Lucky Strike—before any more of the Eastside’s homeless find themselves on the vanishing track?

Tackling the real big-city issues of housing shortages, political corruption, and murder, The Vanishing Track is the third Cole Blackwater Mystery and the most compelling yet.

About the Author

Stephen Legault is an author, conservation activist, and photographer who lives in Canmore, Alberta. He is the author of four previous books, including the first two installments in the Cole Blackwater mystery series, The Cardinal Divide and The Darkening Archipelago, as well as The End of the Line, the first book in the Durrant Wallace mystery series. Please visit Stephen online at stephenlegault.com or follow him on Twitter at @stephenlegault.

Fledglings: Sister Wife by Shelley Hrdlitschka

Back in February, our teen book club, Fledglings, read Sister Wife by Shelley Hrdlitschka.

Celeste was born in Unity.  Taviana was brought into Unity from the outside.  Unity is an isolated community.  People live simple lives there as members of the Movement, a religious sect that practices polygamy.  Celeste wishes to believe and be pure of heart like her sister Nanette.  But Taviana’s stories have started Celeste asking questions and wondering about the world outside Unity.

Comments from the Fledglings:

- Introduced reader to a different culture.
- Made reader think and realize that people live by their beliefs.
- Gave insight into the life of religious sects and the lack of knowledge of the outside world.
- Enjoyed the three different perspectives, although at times the voices sounded too similar.
- Found the naivete of the women very upsetting.
- Felt that the author didn’t let Celeste reach her full potential.
- Wanted Celeste to run earlier
- Felt characters were shallow.
- Found language was unbelievable in points.
- Liked discussion potential.
- Liked three different narrators.
- Felt that the ending was rushed.

Final score: 6.8333333 out of 10

There’s still time to read the March selection before the meeting, though you can always come just to hear the discussion.  We’ll be talking about Fire by Kristin Cashore on Tuesday, March 20th at 4:30pm.

It’s not a peaceful time in the Dells.  Young King Nash clings to the throne, while rebel lords, in the north and south, build armies to unseat him.  War is coming.  The mountains and forests are filled with spies and thieves.

This is where Fire lives, a girl whose startling appearance is impossibly irresistible and who can control the minds of everyone around her.

Everyone…except Prince Brigan.

If you’re a teen in grades 10 through 12 and are interested in joining Fledglings, please email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca, call us at 403-287-9557 or just drop into one of the meetings.

Published in: on March 12, 2012 at 2:07 pm  Leave a Comment  

Junior Owlets: Where the Moutain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin

For January, the Junior Owlets read Where the Moutain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin.

MinLi and her parents live in the shadow of the Fruitless Mountain, a bare mountain where nothing seems to flourish.  They work hard, but have barely enough to eat.  Every night, MinLi listens eagerly to the stories her father tells about the Jade Dragon, the evil Magistrate Tiger, and the Old Man in the Moon.  MinLi’s mother hates the stories.  She says they are useless, and only make MinLi a dreamer.  MinLi decides she will find the Old Man in the Moon to try and change her family’s fortune.

- Really liked how the legends tied into the story.
- Liked the characters, particularly Minli.
- Really kept your interest.
- Liked mystical creatures & magic.
- Liked how the characters evolved and came to udnerstand the true meaning of happiness.
- Very thought provoking.
- Lots of adventure.
- Ended way too soon.
- Good book for all ages.
- Loved the illustrations.
- Liked the multiple storylines and how they tied up. Stories within stories.
- Loved the language.
- Feel good book
- Some parts were slower.
- Liked everything tied up together.

Final score: 9.166661 out of 10.

The next meeting of Junior Owlets will be on Saturday the 4th of Feburary 2012 at 9:00am.   The book up for discussion is Feather Brain and we we have a special guest, the book’s author, Maureen Bush!

From the book’s description:

Lucas has dinosaurs on the brain, but he’s a little short on friends. When he gets a new book on how to make model dinosaurs, he’s inspired to make one immediately. He’s not so inspired by his new dinosaur-making kit: all the box contains is a test tube of clear liquid and a few instructions. But when he mixes the liquid into his papier-maché goop, he gets much more than he bargained for, including the most unlikely friend.

If you’re a kid in grades 3 to 6 and are interested in joining Junior Owlet’s, we’d love to have you.  Membership is free and open all year.  Just give us a call at 403-287-9557, email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca or just drop in to one of the meetings.

Senior Owlets: The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness

This month, the Senior Owlets read The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness.

Todd Hewitt has never seen a woman. His mother was the last to die. He doesn’t remember her. When his people came to the planet to colonize it, everyone was infected with the Noise germ. The infection caused men’s thoughts to become audible. The infection also killed all women. Todd is the youngest, counting down the days until his 13th birthday. The he will be considered a man, and let into the secrets. But the, Todd from the girl in The Swamp.

Comments from the Senior Owlets:
Believable characters.
Really liked the dog, Manchee
Author did incredible job with all characters.
Characters were all very distinct and believable.
Really liked the portrayal of The Noise. The different fonts helped.
Some parts dragged.
Possibly more for a male audience with some of the violence.
Very deep themes.
Very symbolic.
Great discussion.
Made reader think.

Final score: 8.025

For the next meeting (on Tuesday, February 7th, 2012) the book up for discussion is Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli.

From the book’s description:

Stargirl. From the day she arrives at quiet Mica High in a burst of color and sound, the hallways hum with the murmur of “Stargirl, Stargirl.” She captures Leo Borlock’s heart with just one smile. She sparks a school-spirit revolution with just one cheer. The students of Mica High are enchanted. At first.

Then they turn on her. Stargirl is suddenly shunned for everything that makes her different, and Leo, panicked and desperate with love, urges her to become the very thing that can destroy her: normal. In this celebration of nonconformity, Newbery Medalist Jerry Spinelli weaves a tense, emotional tale about the perils of popularity and the thrill and inspiration of first love.

If you’re a kid in grades 6 to 9 and are interested in joining Senior Owlets, we’d love to have you. Membership is free and you can join any time. If you’d like more information, call us at 403-287-9557, email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca or just pop into one of the meetings.

Fledglings: I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak

In the hubbub of the holiday season, we’ve fallen a bit behind on posting the reviews from Owlets and Fledglings, but as they say: better late than never.

The December selection for Fledglings was I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak.

Ed Kennedy admits he is a screw up.  He drifted in school, didn’t go to university, and now drives a cab because it’s easy.  But all that changes when Ed is hailed a hero after stopping a bank robber.  And now he has received a card in the mail.  It lists times and addresses.  Should he follow them?  Ed is not sure what to do, or what it all means.

Comments from the Fledglings:

Liked the characters.
Characters had depth and reasoning.
Liked interchange between characters.
Found them believeable.
Ending was a bit confusing.
Opening chapters sucked the reader in.
The whole idea was intriguing.
Really liked the characters, the plot, the seting.
Believeable dialogue.
Very funny in places, poignant in others.
Even secondary characters were well done.
Kept interest to very end.
Even the stinky dog was great.
Very deep book, multi-leveled.
Really like the author’s self insertion.

Final score: 8.8928571 out of 10.

The next meeting for Fledglings will be on Tuesday, January 24, 2012.  The book up for discussion is Revolution by Jennifer Donnelly.

From the book’s description:

BROOKLYN: Andi Alpers is on the edge. She’s angry at her father for leaving, angry at her mother for not being able to cope, and heartbroken by the loss of her younger brother, Truman. Rage and grief are destroying her. And she’s about to be expelled from Brooklyn Heights’ most prestigious private school when her father intervenes. Now Andi must accompany him to Paris for winter break.

PARIS: Alexandrine Paradis lived over two centuries ago. She dreamed of making her mark on the Paris stage, but a fateful encounter with a doomed prince of France cast her in a tragic role she didn’t want—and couldn’t escape.

Two girls, two centuries apart. One never knowing the other. But when Andi finds Alexandrine’s diary, she recognizes something in her words and is moved to the point of obsession. There’s comfort and distraction for Andi in the journal’s antique pages—until, on a midnight journey through the catacombs of Paris, Alexandrine’s words transcend paper and time, and the past becomes suddenly, terrifyingly present.

If your a teen in grades 10 through 12 and are interested in joining Fledglings, please email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca, call us at 403-287-9557 or just drop into one of the meetings.

Q/A: Quzzing the Author – Brenda Missen

Brenda with Maddy (photo by Darrell Neufeld)

Brenda Missen will be visiting the Owl’s Nest on Thursday, November 24th at 7:00pm with her new mystery Tell Anna She’s Safe, which is based on a real Canadian case.

Driving home alongside West Quebec’s Gatineau River one April afternoon, researcher Ellen McGinn spots a parked car that looks like it might belong to her friend and colleague, Lucy Stockman. Lucy, a freelance writer, lives in nearby Ottawa. Shortly after arriving home, Ellen receives a phone call from Lucy’s common-law partner: Lucy has disappeared. That night Ellen has an unusual dream in which she receives three clear messages: she is to search and to write everything down—and Lucy is safe. Through the intertwining stories of Ellen and Lucy and the enduring presence of the river, Tell Anna She’s Safe takes the reader below the sometimes frightening, uncontrollable surface circumstances of our lives, to reveal the steady current of power and knowing we all hold within.

Here’s a little more about Brenda:

What would you say is your most interesting writing quirk?

Unlike many writers, who need to cloister themselves within four walls that offer NO distractions, I need to be in aesthetically appealing surroundings, which is to say outdoors. So my favourite place to write (which I do with fountain pen and blank notebook) is sitting on a Canadian Shield rock beside the water, preferably with a white pine or two looking over my shoulder – and in good weather of course. Thankfully I have no shortage of rocks, pines and water out my door: I live on the Madawaska River in rural central Ontario for that very reason. I’ve also been known to put my paddle down and pick up my pen while canoeing in Algonquin Provincial Park.

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading a very disappointing novel, which I won’t name or bother to describe, for my book club. But I just finished reading several of Dorothy Sayers’ Lord Peter Whimsey series of detective novels. I love the sparring interaction between Lord Peter and Harriet Vane, whom he saves from a murder conviction in the first novel and then immediately starts asking her to marry him. Harriet hates that they are on uneven footing because she has to feel grateful to him for saving her life, and she keeps turning him down. It all makes for wonderful tension between them through the novels, and I love the way Sayers shows Harriet’s growing feelings for him. It’s all handled in a very realistic (i.e., non-typical romance-novel) way. Oh yes, and they solve crimes too. Dorothy Sayers has always been a favourite of my mother’s, and I grew up with the books on the family bookshelves, but unlike other authors that my mother got me reading (like Mary Stewart), I never picked up a D.S. novel until just recently. And wish I’d discovered her years ago! I’m delighted that the series is now continuing to be written by Jill Paton Walsh, who finished a manuscript that D.S. didn’t complete before she died, and has gone on to write two more, which are next on my list. You can’t tell where D.S. left off and J.P.W. started, so I’m sure she must be channelling her!

Do you have a pet? If so, why did you pick the name you did?

I have a 3-year-oldakita/Australian shepherd cross named Maddy, who is the best paddling (and therefore writing) partner in the world. She is named after the Madawaska River that we live on. When I told my niece that her full name was Madawaska, she said, ‘So when you get mad at her, do you say “Madawaska Missen, you get over here!’?” So I guess her full name is Madawaska Missen, but that could be my name too…

What is your favourite colour and why?

My favourite colour is blue, specifically indigo blue. Apparently blue is the colour of “clear communication” so that seems appropriate for me. The fact that it’s “mentally calming” doesn’t hurt either. I like indigo because it adds some warmth to the coolness of blue, but keeps the calming properties. Also when I wear indigo blue it makes my eyes even bluer than I think they actually have a right to call themselves.

What was your favourite childhood book?

The Year of Jubilo, by Ruth Sawyer (Dell, 1940)(sequel to the Newbery medal winner Roller Skates (1936).)

I first read The Year of Jubilo when I was maybe 11 or 12 and read it over and over again through my teens. Set in the 1890s, it’s a coming of age story of 14-year-old Lucinda, daughter of wealthy Bostonians whose life drastically changes when her father dies and leaves the family in financial straits. She and her frailmother and 3 older brothers go to live in their cottage on the Main coast and have to adjust to their reduced circumstances as well as to the harsh Atlantic winter. I loved this book for several reasons: I loved that she had older brothers since I never had any! I loved the “pioneering” life it depicted (I’m sure I was a pioneer in a previous life). I also loved the supportive community the family found in the people who had formerly only been their summer neighbours and how they helped them get through the winter. And when I reread it recently, I found something I had forgotten – which was Lucinda’s growing spiritual connection to the natural world around her. I read it at a time when “spiritual” for me would have been connected only to the church so I don’t remember being consciously struck by her perceptions in the sanctuary she finds for herself in the woods. But my path has, as it happens, taken me out of the church, and I now live in a near-wilderness area in central Ontario (though not quite like a pioneer) and find a connection with, and Presence in, the natural world around me. I’ve written a canoeing memoir called Going Solo: An Interior Journey in Algonquin Park (currently looking for a publisher), which explores the spiritual connection I – and I believe all of us – have with nature. On rereading this novel in adulthood, I do wonder if it was The Year of Jubilo that planted the seeds of that awareness in me.

If you could go anywhere in the world, where would you go?

It may not be exotic but I’ve been wanting to get to Ireland (andto return to Scotland, if I’m allowed two places). I have English/Scottish/Irish ancestry and have always been drawn to Celtic culture. If I’m allowed three places, I’d include Newfoundland on the list – for the same reason. I was there when I was 15 but I have this yearning to go back and join in a kitchen party…

The inevitable desert island question: what book would you take with you?

Jane Austen’s Persuasion. J.A. is my all-time favourite author – I love the nuanced interactions of her characters within the very rigid social structure of the time, the often witty repartee and her sense of irony. I love Persuasion the most because it portrays the most mature love of all of the characters in her novels – since Anne and Captain Wentworth already know each other intimately from a previous courtship that got aborted many years before and now have to suffer the awkwardness of meeting again and disentangling the misunderstandings about each other’s feelings from the truth. I could read Persuasion over and over on a desert island both for the story and for the joy of J.A.’s voice and her wonderful sentences.

Be sure to join Brenda and the Owl’s Nest staff on Thursday, November 24th, at 7:00pm to hear more about Tell Anna She’s Safe.

Published in: on November 18, 2011 at 5:46 pm  Leave a Comment  
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Fledglings: The Luxe by Anna Godbersen

The Fledglings book club met this week to discuss The Luxe by Anna Godbersen. 

1899. Manhatten, New York.  The Holland family is the envy of many.  They are old money.  The daughters, Elizabeth and Diana are everything young debutantes are expected to be.  Society is unaware that the family is struggling financially after Mr. Holland’s death.  It seems Elizabeth may have to marry rich to keep the family afloat.  But Elzabeth’s carriage slips on the icy roads and overturns near the East River.  Her body is never found. 

Comments from the Fledglings:

Well written. 
Typical plot.
Loved the descriptions of settings and clothing. 
Very like novels from the late 1800s. 
Setting was the best part of the book. 
Story itself was quite predictable. 
Descriptions were fabulous.
Characters were very believeable.
All of the characters were well drawn and had both good and bad qualities. 
Definitely better than thought it would be.
Everyone loved the cover — DRESSES!
Not a typical teen roamnce. 

Final rating: 7.625 out of 10

The next Fledglings meeting will be Tuesday, December 13th at 4:30pm.  The book being discussed is I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak. 

protect the diamonds
survive the clubs
dig deep through the spades
feel the hearts

Ed Kennedy is an underage cabdriver without much of a future. He’s pathetic at playing cards, hopelessly in love with his best friend, Audrey, and utterly devoted to his coffee-drinking dog, the Doorman. His life is one of peaceful routine and incompetence until he inadvertently stops a bank robbery.

That’s when the first ace arrives in the mail.

That’s when Ed becomes the messenger.

Chosen to care, he makes his way through town helping and hurting (when necessary) until only one question remains: Who’s behind Ed’s mission?

If your a teen in grades 10 through 12 and are interested in joining Fledglings, please email us at owlsnestbooks@shaw.ca, call us at 403-287-9557 or just drop into one of the meetings.

The FICTIONistas

The FICTIONistas are coming to Owl’s Nest!

Saturday, November 26th at 2:30pm.

FICTIONistas is Canadian independent publishers bringing together women writers from across Canada for an exciting, vibrant reading series unlike any other.

The discussions are lively, the performances are stellar, the secrets are…revealing! For the 2011 season, we return to our roots, with events at eclectic independent bookstores and coffee spots that provide the perfect vibe for our FICTIONistas’ voices. Find your new favourite author among our impressive lineup.

Hosted by Paul Matwychuk, general manager of NeWest Press.

The Calgary FICTIONistas are:

Sue Sorensen

A Large Harmonium (Coteau Books)

A sharply comical year-in-the-gloriously-unruly-life of English Lit professor Janey Erlicksen, as she struggles to put her academic career on the map while dealing with her despotic toddler, Little Max. Along the way she relies on husband Hector, boy-wonder babysitter Rene, crazy unreliable friend Jam, and on Jake, the understanding minister who helps her pick her way through it all.

Genni Gunn

Solitaria (Signature Editions)

When Vito Santoro’s body is inadvertently unearthed by a demolition crew in Fregene, Italy, his siblings are thrown into turmoil, having been told by their sister Piera that Vito had fled to Argentina fifty years earlier after abandoning his wife and son. Piera, the self-proclaimed matriarch, locks herself in her room, refusing to speak to anyone but her Canadian nephew, David. Now scattered over three continents, the family members regroup in Italy to try to discover the truth.

Alison Preston

The Girl in the Wall (Signature Editions)

After leaving the Winnipeg Police force, former Inspector Frank Foote has gone into home renovations. But his investigative instincts are still strong. When he and his partner come across the skeleton of a small female who had been imprisoned in a building they’re tearing down, Frank finds himself trying to track down her identity.

Judy Schultz

Freddy’s War (Brindle & Glass)

1946: Freddy McKeen returns home to Winnipeg after spending five years as a prisoner-of-war in Hong Kong. Three women — Joanna Keegan, her daughter Hope, and the beautiful and mysterious Su Li — feel the echoes of Freddy’s ordeal in each of their lives. For Freddy, the memory of war is a heavier burden than the weapon he once carried. He must fight to survive in a world that has left him behind.

Wendy McGrath

Santa Rosa (NeWest Press)

What is real when seen through the eyes of a child? When does the harshness of reality transform idyllic memories? The young narrator of Santa Rosa seeks the answers to these questions as she tries to make sense of the disintegration of her parents’ marriage — a process echoed by the slow disintegration of their neighbourhood.

Janice MacDonald

Hang Down Your Head (Turnstone Press)

Randy Craig has a talent for finding trouble. Maybe she should have turned down the job at the Folkways Collection library at the University of Alberta—a dream job that became a nightmare when a rich benefactor’s belligerent heir turned up dead. Randy tried to be good—honest!—but now she’s a prime suspect with a motive and no alibi in sight.

FICTIONistas is a collaboration spearheaded by Coteau Books, with NeWest Press, Signature Editions, Brindle & Glass, and Turnstone Press. Freehand Books is also thier partner in fine fiction.

Meet the FICTIONistas at Owl’s Nest Books on Saturday, November 26th starting at 2:30.