Peanut Butter Cookies

Recipe

I’ve been trying to find a peanut butter cookie recipe for years.  They’re not my personal favorite, but there are a couple people in the house who love them.  I’ve been disappointed by the last few recipes I’ve tried, and so I’m more and more hesitant to make these.  One of the big issues is that we use an all-natural peanut butter.  And I know the tips say to use a name-brand for p.b. cookies, but I just refuse.  The ‘extras’ in Jif and other brands give me the shivers and make the peanut butter taste plastic-y, in my opinion.  So, I’m left with more crumbly homemade peanut butter cookies at this point.  But, it’s worth it.  And maybe I’ll stumble across a way to fix this problem, while still sticking with our pure peanut butter.  But this recipe tastes yummy, despite the somewhat crumbly nature our p.b. gives them.  I think I should have been more patient with the mixing and actually had the egg at room temp.  I’ll try again in the future and update if I find a way that works better with the non-plastic, natural peanut butter.

Little Red Gliding Hood

Little Red Gliding Hood (2015)
written by Tara Lazar
illustrated by Troy Cummings

This picture book is a playful visit to the land of fairy tale and nursery rhyme characters.  Little Red’s ice skates aren’t looking so good anymore, and she’d like to win the brand-new skates offered as a prize at the skating competition.  The only problem is – slippery slush! – she doesn’t have a skating partner.  Everybody seems to have already paired up – the dish with the spoon, Bo Peep with her sheep, and so on.  Turns out the Big Bad Wolf is also looking for a partner, and he’s really a not-so-bad wolf after all.  We love the cute references to different fairy tales and nursery rhymes hidden in the story and pictures of this book.  A fun picture book to read and see!

The Value of Picture Books

Picture books haven’t always been such a big part of my life.  Sure, I remember the picture books that cropped up here and there in my young adulthood as ones with “bigger” messages for adults too —Oh, the Places You’ll Go, Hope for the Flowers, etc.– but even though children’s chapter books have been a love of mine throughout my life, I didn’t give picture books the place they deserved on my shelf until having children.  Here’s the thing:  Without mentioning specific ones, there are some REALLY not-so-great picture books.  There was a time when I thought picture books were somewhat interchangeable–that reading was the important part, but that these “temporary” books were just for babies and young kids.

Wow, was I wrong.  There are SO many gorgeous children’s books!  Beautiful stories and illustrations that I’m proud to have on our shelves and have no intention of downsizing when my kids are older.  My oldest is at the stage where reading chapter books at bedtime has been the norm for awhile.  And her younger brother is actually quite engaged by read-aloud chapter books as well.  But I still make a conscious choice to pause between chapter books every once in awhile and make sure we’re getting a good dose of picture books too.  Not that we don’t read these during the day, but I think it’s important to give them that sacred, snuggle-in-bed place as well.

Picture books beg to be read out loud, regardless of age.  I love listening to my husband read to the kids or hear Story Time librarians read to their circles of young library visitors.  Picture books lend themselves well to rhythm and humor and Life messages cleverly hidden in a concise and beautiful story.  In hearing the pacing and timing of these picture books, children learn much more than if they’re left to only read on their own.  Just because a child can read on their own doesn’t mean that read-alouds should be dropped.  And, as much as I love the ability to imagine the scenes of a chapter book, the illustrations of a really great picture book provide so much to the story and its readers.  I’ve often heard that writing picture books is far more challenging than writing other books.  To be able to tell your story and share your message in such a limited space?  It makes sense.  And the vocabulary?  I once tried to re-learn Spanish by checking out Spanish picture books from the library.  Even with the aid of a fluent speaker, we couldn’t make out many of the words.  Picture books–good ones– are rich in beautiful, new words.

When I worked at a school library, I used to cringe that students seemed to only be reading for “points” in their reward system.  They’d aim for longer and longer books that held more points for them.  It saddened me to see so many wonderful, shorter, “simpler” books go ignored.  Another thing I’d hear in my time working at schools was teachers telling students that a book was “below their level” and they had to read something else.  How can we expect to foster a love of reading when we can’t let children read what they would like?  I almost exclusively read children’s or young adult –or PICTURE!– books; this doesn’t mean I can’t read anything beyond these.  But these are the stories that grab me, that entertain me, that bring me joy and tears and a desire to read more.

Picture books – the good ones- are powerful and beautiful.  They aren’t just for the non-readers or early readers.  Those who don’t know this yet haven’t had the pleasure of a really great picture book.  I’m tired of the competitiveness of our society.  Children, and (let’s face it, mostly) parents, want bragging rights.  Having a child read long books at a young age has become some sort of strange milestone to boast about on social media.  Reading long books at a young age that a child can’t relate to yet sounds empty.  Connecting to a book (no matter the length or level), growing a love of reading and books (yes, even wordless ones!), being able to appreciate the subtleties of language and illustrations– THAT to me is the foundation for a reader.  We, as a society, need to discover and embrace the precious picture books that authors and illustrators have gifted us.  Not just for our children, but for all of us.

 

“With the popularity of e-books and DVDs and the push toward early chapter books, then the still-thicker books that follow, we may not realize that traditional picture books are endangered. They are. Publishers won’t keep publishing what there’s no market for. Which means that what picture books offer children–something they get no other way–is endangered, too.”  – Mary Lyn Ray

See this article by Mary Lyn Ray

City Spies

City Spies (March 2020)
by James Ponti

Sara Martinez has been in and out of foster homes her whole life.  But when she hacks the computer network for the juvenile justice system to prove her current “caretakers” are guilty of breaking the law and taking cruel advantage of the system, she catches the attention of a man named Mother.  He recruits her for his team of young secret agents based in Scotland.  There, Sara (now “Brooklyn”) meets her team – Sydney, Paris, Kat, and Rio.  She’s got a very short amount of time to prepare for her first very large mission.  The team will be attending an international youth summit in Paris, trying to protect lives, rig the contest, and solve the mystery of what’s really going on.

This book is like Mysterious Benedict Society meets Alias.  I don’t even remember how it ended up on my library list, but I’m so very grateful it did.  It’s definitely one that grabs you and keeps you reading past bedtime.  I am SOooo excited to see this is a trilogy, and I have the next one sitting on the library hold shelf with my name on it.  Here’s the thing–I’m a genuine wuss about books and movies that involve tense situations, death, murder, and all those things that usually come along with suspenseful, exciting stories like this.  I loved this book, because even though there were some of those elements, they didn’t overwhelm the plot.  It was like the action was there without the ucky parts getting in the way, if that makes sense.  But, I think it would also satisfy those readers who don’t shy away from things the same way I do.  Anyway, definitely a must-read.  If you want to get lost in a book or you have a reluctant reader, read this!

(Some very interesting plot points considering the timing of its release too…)

 

Update:

Read City Spies: Golden Gate (book 2) and it was also great!  Now patiently awaiting the release of Book 3….