Princess Academy

 
Princess Academy (2005) by Shannon Hale

Fourteen-year-old, Miri, lives in the small village of Mount Eskel where almost everyone works in the quarry mining a special stone called linder.  Miri, who is exceptionally small for her age, has been forbidden by her father to join in quarry work.  Although she has her insecurities about not being able to contribute, Miri covers them with her funny stories, carefree talk, and good-natured personality.  Life is rough on the mountain, but nobody ever leaves.  That is, until, one day, a delegate from the palace arrives to announce that Mount Eskel was prophesied as the location of the prince’s future bride.  Now a princess academy is being set up at the base of Mount Eskel for all girls of eligible age.  Not many are pleased by this news, but they must obey the king.  An unfair tutor presides over the small academy, but despite a rough start, Miri proves her intelligence, determination, and bravery will change the fate of their village forever.

This book is a beautiful story that hits all the marks–friendship, courage, romance, family, learning, suspense, self-worth, community, and, yes, even a ball.  I have read this book too many times to count, but I will say that when I first stumbled across it many years ago, I was hesitant.  I’m wary of the “princess” culture that has bombarded our young girls in recent years and wasn’t so sure how I would feel about a book with the title, “Princess Academy.”  In truth, it was the lovely folk art style of the cover that drew me to the book (which I cannot find a link to now), and I’m so glad I judged this book by its cover, because everything inside is beautiful and perfect.  I’m delighted beyond belief that this is only the first of a trilogy of books, but I’ll always return to this one as my favorite.  This was also the book that brought me to Shannon Hale, and for that, I am forever grateful.

 

You might also enjoy:
Princess Academy: The Palace of Stone
Princess Academy: The Forgotten Sisters

A-Z Book Reviews

The Actor’s Life: A Survival Guide
All Thirteen
The American Sign Language Phrase Book
Anne Arrives
Anne of Green Gables
Anne of the Island
Anne of Windy Poplars
Another Whole Nother Story
Astrid the Unstoppable
Austenland
An Awesome Book of Thanks
Ballerina Dreams: From Orphan to Dancer
The Ballad of Valentine
Bean Appetit
Bear by Himself
Bear Snores On
Bears in the Night
Becoming Better Grownups
Beehive
Before We Say “Goodnight”
Being a Bee
Belinda the Ballerina
Bella at Midnight
The Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations
Birth Without Violence
Blue in the Face
Book Scavenger
The Boy and the Bindi
Birds
The Brave Learner
The Boy on the Porch
Bridget Jones’s Baby
Chester van Chime Who Forgot How to Rhyme
Chirri and Chirra
City Spies
Coming to America: The Story of Immigration
The Curious Garden
Darth Vader and Son
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks
Dodsworth books
The Dot
Dreaming of America: An Ellis Island Story
Dumpling Days
Earth Dance
Ella Enchanted
Ever After: Book of Legends
Feeding the Whole Family
The 5 Love Languages
Flora and the Flamingo
The Forest Feast for Kids
Forest Born
Frindle
Frog and Toad books
The Gifts of Imperfection
The Girl Who Named Pluto
The Giver
The Gnome Project
Good Night, Gorilla
Hanukkah Bear
Heidi
Holes
The Homemade Pantry
The Honeybee
Hooray for Hat!
How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin?
How to Catch a Star
How to Have a Birthday
How to Manage Your Home Without Losing Your Mind
Hug Machine
I Capture the Castle
I Dreamt I Was a Dinosaur
The Invisible String
Jasmine Toguchi
Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life
Journey
Julie and Julia
Kingbird Highway
A Knot in the Grain and Other Stories
Latkes, Latkes, Good to Eat
Liar and Spy
Life Skills
Ling and Ting
Little Women
Littler Women: A Modern Retelling
The Little Yellow Leaf
Long Live the Queen
Love Monster
Love, Stargirl
Love Sugar Magic
Make the Bread, Buy the Butter
Marilyn’s Monster
Matched
Matchmaking for Beginners
Me, Jane
The Memory Box: A Book About Grief
Milli, Jack, and the Dancing Cat
Miss Fiona’s Pumpkin Pies
The Modern Ayurvedic Cookbook
Momma Zen
The Monster at the End of This Book
More Love, Less Panic
Mouseton Abbey
Mr. Men and Little Miss books
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
Mrs. McMurphy’s Pumpkin
Mysterious Benedict Society
Narwhal books
Nurse Matilda
Ogre Enchanted
On a Magical Do-Nothing Day
Our Subway Baby
Over the River and Through the Wood
Peanut Butter and Cupcake
The Philharmonic Gets Dressed
Pinkalicious Fairy House
Pollyanna
Pollyanna Grows Up
Princess Academy
Princess Academy: Palace of Stone
Princess Academy: The Forgotten Sisters
Princess in Black series
Room on the Broom
Ruby Holler
Rump
Our Seasons
The Secret Garden
Shakespeare’s Secret
Sophie Mouse
Snowflake Bentley
Sparkle Boy
Stargirl
Starry River in the Sky
The Story of Ferdinand
The Swedish Way to Parent and Play
Tea with Grandpa
The Teeny Tiny Woman
Ten, Nine Eight
Thank You, Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving at Our House
There is No Good Card for This
There’s No Such Thing as Bad Weather
Thunder Cake
A Time Apart
The Twelve Gifts of Birth
The Unfinished Angel
The Watermelon Seed
What Alice Forgot
What Was I Scared Of?
When Jessie Came Across the Sea
When You Were Small
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon
A Whole Nother Story
Winnie-the-Pooh
Witches: The Transformative Power of Women Working Together
The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding
The Woman’s Hour: Our Fight for the Right to Vote
The Word Collector
A Year Down Yonder
The Year of Living Danishly
The Year of the Dog
Yes, Please

 

Matchmaking for Beginners


Matchmaking for Beginners (2018) by Maddie Dawson

It is so rare that I read a book for adults.  This is probably because A) I use reading as an escape, so I don’t want to hear about adult difficulties, and B) There are SO many adult novels out there, that I usually have no idea where to begin to find a book I’ll like.

After a few suggestions of 2018 releases, and a couple ones that just weren’t for me at this time, I finally fell into Matchmaking for Beginners.  And while it does cover “adult” topics like failed marriage, death, infidelity, and tragedy, I still managed to zip right through it.

Elderly Blix Holliday is a bit of an eccentric and the “oddball” of her extended family.  She meets the young Marnie, her grandnephew’s fiancé at a family gathering and immediately connects with her.  While Marnie is a bit unsure of herself at the time, both women find out they can sense people’s energies and use it to find good love matches for other people.  Not so great at love matches for herself, however, Marnie’s doomed marriage ends during the honeymoon.  She sets about trying to piece her life back together in her childhood home.  Meanwhile, Blix is dying but hasn’t mentioned it to her family.  When Blix unexpectedly leaves her Brooklyn home to Marnie, instead of family, everyone is surprised.  Marnie has no intention of staying in the home, of course, but during her time in Brooklyn she becomes involved in the lives of those around her, finding herself in a role of helping others find love, including herself.

While I wouldn’t say that matchmaking is the central theme of this novel, despite what the title says, I found myself glued to the story and unable to stop myself from starting new chapters way past bedtime.  A very enjoyable read, even if it is a book for grown-ups.  =D

Pollyanna Grows Up

Pollyanna Grows Up

by Eleanor H. Porter (1927)

How could I have been such a fan of Pollyanna all these years and not read the sequel until now? I’ll admit that upon reading the short blurb on the back of this book, I almost didn’t give it the chance it deserved. Like Jimmy Bean initially felt, I just didn’t want Pollyanna to grow up. Her charming and unconscious optimism wouldn’t be quite the same coming from an adult. Needless to say though, the book did not disappoint, and I am rather glad I read it.
The book begins with Pollyanna still as a child, only she is on a stay with a family in Boston, where her Pollyanna ways spread to new friends. The book then does an abrupt 6-year fast forward midway through the book after Pollyanna’s long stay in Germany with her Aunt Polly and Dr. Chilton. Their circumstances have changed quite a lot by the time they return. Pollyanna, now 20, reconnects with her Boston friends and the Pendletons as she tries to figure out her new life.
After a bit of dramatic confusion, the book comes together like a perfect puzzle at the end, a bit unrealistically, but sweet, nonetheless.
Will I be rereading this one? Definitely. Maybe not as often as the first, but it’s surely worth revisiting.

Before We Say “Goodnight”

Before We Say “Goodnight” by Hank Frazee

Father of three kids and insurance agent by day, Mr. Frazee tells a real-life bedtime story to his kids every night, which he has calculated to be over 8,000 stories. This entertaining, quick read is a convincing argument for the importance of sharing life stories with your kids. While many families, including the author’s, believe in the importance of reading books to children before bed, Hank suggests there is also much to be gained by including a story about your own life. It’s a great opportunity not only for your children to snuggle close with you and learn from the way you structure your stories, but also to help them learn about their family’s history and perhaps be comforted in knowing that you faced similar challenges, embarrassments, and joys.


I have to say that when I first read through this book, I was immediately on board with the idea but thought that I couldn’t possibly have enough stories to share. I racked my brain only to come up with memories of accidents and humiliating moments from my life, not the kind of thing to lull my young daughter to sleep. But Mr. Frazee offers tips, ideas, and a few pages of story prompters to help the reader embark on this journey. It took a little bit of reflection for me. But, notebook in hand, (which Hank suggests you won’t necessarily need), I slowly began jotting down ideas of real-life stories I could tell. And once I began this process, I really started to “get it.” The stories didn’t have to be long or even highly entertaining. They could be stories from my own experiences or other family members’. I now have pages of ideas. Mr. Frazee’s book really has been an inspiration.

Now, years after my first reading of his book, I realize just how much this book has changed the way I parent.  Storytelling plays a central role in our each and every day, whether they be stories from our long-distant past, stories from our day, or stories from books or movies my kids have yet to experience.  With more and more practice, storytelling has become second nature for me, and has been a huge part of bonding with my kids.  Thank you, Mr. Frazee