This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book. My thanks to Chouette Publishing, CrackBoom! Books and NetGalley for the DRC of “A Starlit Trip to the Library”. Recommended for little ones who want to embark on a magical adventure before bedtime. The physical copy must be a treat for little eyes! My digital version was such a delight, with full-coloured pages and vibrant artwork. So there is plenty for kids to look at while their accompanying adult narrates the story to them. There are about 4-6 sentences per page and the text takes only a fourth or a fifth of each page.
Among the Stars for Mac OS, daily generated comparing over 40 000 video games across all platforms. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading A House Among the Trees: A Novel. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. But I suppose these can be explained to little readers as this is meant to be a bedtime readaloud book. A House Among the Trees: A Novel - Kindle edition by Julia Glass. There are a couple of difficult words such as ‘scintillating’ and ‘scavenging’. But boy, would I love to get my hands on the first book! Of course, this doesn’t make any difference to the understanding of the story – it works perfectly as a standalone. The characters thus show a great familiarity with each other. This is a sequel to “How to Catch a Bear Who Loves to Read”. Plus, there is some information about constellations, which adds to the educational factor. While it is of the standard length, there is so much of action and adventure. I was surprised to see how much the authors have been able to pack within this little picture book. Just in time, Bertrand Bear comes sailing down the river, and together, Julia and the animals embark on an informative and a fun adventure, that includes learning about the constellations, saving one of the animals’ flower crown, and of course, a trip to the library with the coolest night librarian! Now Rachel is alone, orbiting an unknown planet. She is a member of an elite group of scientists, chosen to embark on one of the most critical missions ever conceived on Earth. The story centers on Rachel Manners, a 35 year old astrobiologist. Unfortunately, Julia discovers that she has forgotten her book at home. Among the Stars is an innovative narrative driven adventure game. As the stars begin to twinkle, it is time for the most anticipated event – Storytelling by the firelight. Julia is camping out with her forest friends. She is the Murphy Visiting Fellow in Poetry at Hendrix College and lives in Little Rock, Arkansas with her two kids, cat, dog, and husband.A cute story, a sweet girl, plenty of animals, lots of adventure and a special library – all ingredients for a perfect children’s picture book! You can find her poems in POETRY, American Poetry Review, and The Nation, among others. Look out for her newest collection, 40 WEEKS, forthcoming from YesYes Books in 2023. Her second collection, Don’t Touch the Boneswon the 2019 Idaho Poetry Prize and is available from Lost Horse Press and perhaps your local book store. Julia is the author of The Many Names for Mother, selected by Ellen Bass as the winner of the 2018 Stan and Tom Wick Poetry prize and finalist for the Jewish Book Award.
She is the founder and host of Words Together, Worlds Apart, a virtual poetry reading series born out of pandemic but meant to outlast it. She earned a Ph.D in Comparative Literature and Literary Theory from the University of Pennsylvania for her dissertation, Lyric Witness: Intergenerational (Re)collection of the Holocaust in Contemporary American Poetry, which pays particular attention to the underrepresented atrocity in the former Soviet territories. She spent three years in Eugene, earning an MFA in Poetry from the University of Oregon. Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach came to the United States as a Jewish refugee in 1993, from Dnipro, Ukraine, and grew up in the DC metro area suburb of Rockville, Maryland.