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October 13th, 2009

FIRST Tour: The Blue Umbrella by Mike Mason

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

My Thoughts: This is one fun book!  Though it has some darker elements that would disturb younger children, this is a great read for older teens, and adults like me who love fantastical, allegorical tales.  Watch for my full review soon.

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
Mike Mason

and the book:

The Blue Umbrella

David C. Cook; New edition (October 1, 2009)

***Special thanks to Audra Jennings of The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Mike Mason is the best-selling, award-winning author of The Mystery of Marriage, The Gospel According to Job, Practicing the Presence of People, and many others. He has an M.A. in English and has studied theology at Regent College. He lives in Langley, BC, Canada, with his wife, Karen, a family physician. They have one daughter, Heather, who is pursuing a career in dance and the arts. The Blue Umbrella is Mike’s first novel.

Visit the author’s website.

The Blue Umbrella, by Mike Mason from David C. Cook on Vimeo.

Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 448 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook; New edition (October 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1434765261
ISBN-13: 978-1434765260

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

FIVE CORNERS

Not many people are killed by lightning.

Zac’s mother was.

Zachary Sparks, though small for ten years old, had a look perpetual astonishment that made him seem larger than life. His eyes were nearly the biggest part of him, round and wide, and his eyebrows had a natural arch as if held up with invisible strings. His voice was high and excitable and his whole body

seemed full of little springs. Even his hair, fiery red and frizzy, looked as if he was the one hit by lightning. Everything about Zac Sparks was up, up, up.

Until his mother died and everything changed.

Zac lived with his mother beside a golf course. Every day after school he picked up balls from his backyard to sell for fifty cents apiece. He was happy and carefree and his mother was good to him. He had no father. At least, he’d never known his father.

At night, when there were no golfers, Zac’s mother liked to go walking across the wide, rolling lawns of the course. To her it was like a big park. She never met anyone else out there. This was a small town and it was quite safe (except for lightning). She liked being in nature and she loved all kinds of weather, especially weather that had what she called character, the kind you could feel on your skin: wind, cold, hail, pelting rain, thunder, and lightning.

Whenever a good electrical storm happened in the middle of the night, Zac’s mother would wake him up and they’d sit on the veranda listening to the long, almost articulate rumbles and watching the lightning illuminate the great treed corridors of grass. The two wouldn’t say much. They didn’t have to. The sky did the talking for them. Some of Zac’s happiest memories were of sitting up with his mother at night to revel silently in storms.

The irony was that Zac’s mother was killed by something she loved. It happened one night when she went walking in the pouring rain, carrying, as usual, her umbrella. Of course, she knew better than to go walking on a golf course with an umbrella in a thunderstorm. But this was not a thunderstorm. On this night there just happened to be one stray bolt of lightning.

One was all it took. Her crumpled body was found the next morning in the center of a fairway. The canopy of her umbrella had been completely consumed, leaving nothing but the skeletal metal frame.

It was the first day of December, just weeks before Christmas, and Zac Sparks was an orphan.

That day and the next were a blur. Even the funeral, on the third day, Zac scarcely remembered—except for the moment when the coffin was being carried outside through the church doors. The weather was unseasonably mild; instead of snow a light drizzle fell. As the coffin moved down the steps and was

loaded into the hearse, the rain turned to sleet, then to hail. Small white pellets of ice filled the air and bounced all around like popcorn—one bounce, then still—as though the ground were alive. The clatter, especially loud on open umbrellas and on the wood of the coffin, was like applause.

Then Zac saw something he’d never seen before: a hailbow. Though he didn’t know to call it that, he knew it was special. It was one of those days when about five kinds of weather were in the sky at once. There were towering clouds, black ones very black and white ones very white and fierce-looking. Between the two the sun came out and brilliantly illuminated the hail. It was like being inside a living diamond. Then the ice wall began to move away and against its glitter he saw the hailbow. It was like a rainbow but pale, almost white, with just the loveliest hint of ghostly hue. The whole scene was so dramatic—huge clouds, falling ice, sunshine, the bow—and in a few minutes it was all over. But it stayed in Zac’s memory, just as if his mind’s eye had snapped a photograph.

After that, everything was swallowed up by the Aunties. Zac didn’t know them; they lived far away in a place called Five Corners. When he first met them at the funeral reception in his home, he began to understand why his mother had never mentioned them. They were horrible.

They were very, very old. Auntie Esmeralda, especially, was so ancient she looked ready to crumble away like a frail piece of lace. Her skin, where not obscured by a thick paste of makeup, was an unnatural, papery white, and she was draped in a long white fur coat. Very tall, she carried a cane, held herself rigid as a ruler, and wore her gray hair long and straight like a girl’s.

As Zac stood bewildered in the midst of the reception crowd, that gray curtain brushed his face and a thin, metallic voice rasped in his ear, “You poor, dear boy. How tragic to lose your mother. And in such a horrid way.” Auntie Esmeralda sounded as if she had a file stuck in her throat, scraping the human warmth off every word. “But don’t you worry. You’re coming home with us, isn’t he, Pris?”

Home with them? Zac’s home was here. With his mother gone, Mrs. Pottinger from next door had been staying with him, just as she had every evening when his mother went walking.

“Dear boy, you have nothing to fear. Your Aunties will take good care of you.” This came from Auntie Pris in a voice two octaves lower than Esmeralda’s. Much shorter than her sister, Pris seemed almost as wide as the other was tall. More than fat, she was big: squarish, broad-shouldered, solid as a stump. In contrast to Esmeralda’s fur, Pris was dressed in a short pink skirt with matching polka-dotted blouse. Perched on top of her blockish head was a pink pillbox hat. Zac was torn between amusement and horror.

Of course, the Aunties were terribly nice to him, hugging him to pieces, patting his extraordinary hair, crooning condolences, and plying him with cookies. Zac hated it all. These strange women were more suffocating than the stiff collar and suit he had to wear.

Sure enough, their tune soon changed. When the reception was over and everyone but the Aunties had left (including even Mrs. Pottinger), they began barking orders: Do this, do that, shut up, stop moping or we’ll give you something to mope about. Finally Zac was sent to his room, where he listened restlessly to a fitful wind that developed into driving rain, horrific lightning, and great claps of thunder exploding like bombs. Amidst this clamor, for some reason the most terrible sound was the occasional tap-tap-tapping of Esmeralda’s cane.

Early the next morning he was roughly awakened as the Aunties, each yanking one of his arms, dragged him from the house and shoved him into the backseat of their big black Cadillac. Throughout that long, stormy day they drove, stopping just once for gas and food. Where did these old women get such energy? It was bizarre—their mysterious vitality combined with an appearance of decrepitude. Throughout the trip

Zac sat silent, dozing or staring out the window, his left leg jiggling in a nervous tic.

Only once did the Aunties speak to him. Esmeralda, who was at the wheel, turned to him and glared. “Zachary”—she spoke his name as if it were a dead rat she held at arm’s length by its tail—“is a ridiculous name. From now on we’ll call you Boy.”

And so they did. But his name wasn’t all Zac lost that day. He’d had no chance to pack any of his belongings or toys—not his giant monkey, nor his collection of soldiers, nor his box of interesting bits of metal. Not even a toothbrush or his army camouflage pajamas. All he had was the suit on his back and a

photograph of his mother that he’d slipped into his pocket.

In this rude fashion was Zachary Sparks uprooted from his childhood home and whisked away to the town of Five Corners to live in a mansion with a plaque by the door that read THE MISSES ESMERALDA AND PRISCILLA HENBOTHER. The Aunties were, it seemed, his only living relatives; there was no one else to take him in. Their house, built of stone—even the floors were marble—had the bleak, dank feel of a castle. No

wonder Auntie Esmeralda always wore furs, though Auntie Pris huffed and puffed about in short sleeves, her bright pink skin glistening with sweat.

The place was loaded with china. Hundreds of figurines occupied coffee tables, glass cabinets, windowsills, every available surface. Zac noted a preponderance of elephants, but there were also large vases, luridly painted plates, baskets of swollen fruit. All were made of the most delicate-looking porcelain, as fragile as they were ugly. How did two such large and ancient ladies manage to navigate this glass jungle without breaking anything? All Zac knew was that it was no place for him.

From the moment they arrived, the Aunties bombarded him with warnings: “Don’t sit there, Boy … Be careful around that lamp … Do try to keep your leg still …” What was Zac to do? At least the Aunties’ silence in the car had left him to sort through his own thoughts. Now every word they spoke froze him tighter until he felt like one of those awful china figurines, condemned to hold one position forever. He was so nervous that, while trying to avoid a row of plates, he backed into a whatnot (a piece of furniture whose only purpose, he decided, was to hold knickknacks in ambush for boys) and broke a small pink elephant.

“Idiot! What have you done!” screamed Auntie Esmeralda in a voice itself like breaking glass. Auntie Pris, down on all fours to scoop together the fragments, sobbed as though tears might glue the elephant back together. How strange to see this huge woman crying over a trinket! Meanwhile Auntie Esmeralda, tall as a thunderhead, planted herself directly in front of Zac and croaked, “You … you wicked, clumsy imbecile! Go straight to your room.”

Zac didn’t move. He didn’t breathe.

“You heard me, young man. March!”

Still he didn’t move. He’d turned to stone.

“What’s wrong with you?” she demanded.

“Auntie,” he finally managed, “I don’t know where my room is.”

Esmeralda’s pale head on its long, wrinkled neck turned once to the left and then around to the right, like a bird’s, as though examining him with each eye separately. “Well, we’ll soon fix that. Pris, escort this boy to his room. Something tells me he’ll be spending a lot of time there.”

Leaving her precious pile of shattered china, Auntie Pris, with considerable effort, heaved herself to her feet. Drying her eyes with an enormous pink hankie, she growled, “That boy needs a cage, not a room.” Spinning him around with surprising force, and poking him in the back with a finger stiff as a billy club, she marched him out of the parlor, up a broad staircase, and along the hall to a door on the right. There, completely filling the door frame, she panted, “You’d better change your ways, Boy, or you won’t survive long around here.” Thrusting him inside, she shut the door and rattled a key in the lock.

So there he was. The room had a bed, an end table, a wooden chair. Its one window was already claimed by darkness. Though the storm had abated, a wind still blew and tree branches scraped against the pane. Rain drummed steadily.

For a long time Zac sat on the edge of the bed, his mind numb. Eventually he recalled the picture of his mother, still in his suit pocket. He pulled it out, but it was too dark to see and he couldn’t find a light. Cold, he climbed under the thin quilt and lay there, stiff as a corpse. He returned the photograph tohis pocket but kept his hand on it.

And so concluded Zachary Sparks’s first day in Five Corners, the first day of the end of his life. The Aunties might as well have put him in the coffin along with his mother and let the dull rain pound them both into the ground.

©2009 Cook Communications Ministries. The Blue Umbrella by Mike Mason. Used with permission. May not be further reproduced. All rights reserved.

CLICK HERE TO BY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK, AMAZON.COM, OR AMAZON.CA!

October 13th, 2009

Book Review: P is for Pinata: A Mexico Alphabet by Tony Johnston, Illustrated by John Parra

pinataWith National Hispanic Heritage month drawing to a close on October 15th, it’s still not too late to round up the kids, and head down to the local public library in search of some books that explore the strong influence the United State’s southern neighbour Mexico has contributed to American culture. Studying Mexico itself provides a wealth of understanding, and P is for Pinata: A Mexico Alphabet is a respectful and authentic picture book for beginning the journey of exploration with elementary age children.

As part of Sleeping Bear Press’ Discover the World series of alphabet books, each letter of the alphabet is given either a two-page spread, or single page, and dedicated to an aspect of Mexican culture, geography, history, art, food, etc. A simple two to four line poem draws young readers into the subject matter and builds interest for the fact-filled sidebar text. Truly picture books to grow by, preschoolers will enjoy browsing through the pictures and having the poetry read to them, while six-year-olds will sometimes want the sidebar text read aloud if the topic captures their interest, while 10-year-olds (and on up to adults) will pore through the work in it’s entirety, gleaning a diverse yet cohesive view of Mexico.

Author Tony Johnston pulls from her 15 years of living in Mexico to draw readers into a fascinating array of topics that bring Mexico to life. Johnston’s poetry is not as strong as some of the other authors I’ve read in the Discover the World series. Some of the rhymes are awkward, others lyrical free-style; the real heart of her work is found in the sidebar text. She regales us with the escuincle – an ancient Mexican “hot-dog”, used in the past as a personal body cleaner, foot-warmer, and as food, an ancient game resembling hacky-sack, and a 15th century “Renaissance Man” named Netzahualcoyotl, or Fasting Coyote (get your tongue warmed-up, there are some doozies here for pronunciation!). Taken together, this sampling of Mexico creates a vibrant, and diverse tapestry that matches the subdued brilliance of John Parra’s illustrations.

Raised in Southern California in an environment rich in Hispanic roots, Parra’s work evokes images of Mexican folk-art, architecture, and murals. A vast palette of muted, rich terra cotta, brick red, ochre, avocado green, cerulean blues, pinks, and greys bring life to the world Johnston describes in her text. Without his strongly regional artwork, Parra ‘makes’ P is for Pinata; without him it would surely be a lesser work.

Appealing to a wide range of age groups, and introducing a solid selection of cultural tidbits, historical figures, culture-shapers, I’d be hard-pressed to name a picture book better suited as a general Mexican primer.

As always, Sleeping Bear Press provides rich support resources for parents and educators. A free downloadable 25-page teaching guide extends the picture book into activities and assignments throughout the curriculum. Parents looking for some last minute Hispanic Heritage celebration ideas will find the suggestions at the Discover the World website a ready resource. Combining some of the suggested recipes, crafts, and hands-on-activities with P is for Pinata will result in an easy to plan family theme night – fun, educational, and enriching.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT AMAZON.COM OR AMAZON.CA!

October 12th, 2009

Book Review: Draw and Write Through History: Creation Through Jonah, Volume 1 by Carylee Gressman, Illustrated by Peggy Dick

drawwritehistoryAs the Gressman family traveled across the United States representing Miller Pads and Paper at a variety of homeschooling conferences, the seed idea for the Draw and Write Through History series was born. Having had the opportunity to speak with a wide variety of homeschoolers regarding their educational needs, experienced homeschool mom Carylee Gressman teamed with Peggy Dick – an accomplished and talented illustrator – to create a series of resources allowing students to draw and write their way through history.

Creation Through Jonah is the first volume in a four-part series, covering the time from creation of the world (c. 6000-4000 B.C.) through Jonah (a contemporary of the first Olympics c. 760 B.C.) Biblical history is well-covered in this volume, as well as a variety of notable events from world history.

Divided into eight major periods: Creation, Noah’s Ark/Ice Age, The Tower of Babel, Egypt: The Pyramid Age, China, Joseph/Moses, Trojan Horse/David, and Jonah – each features from one to four step-by-step ‘how-to-draw’ art instructions and a cursive copywork passage. Written for children ages 8 and over, it can easily be adapted for younger students. A non-consumable book, the drawings and copywork is designed to be completed outside of the book, making it a rich resource for years to come.

Peggy Dick’s step-by-step instructions are wonderfully easy to follow, with the new segments of each drawing displayed in a lighter brown. Helpful suggestions are given for shading, colouring, etc with full-colour, completed illustrations excuted in coloured pencils included for imitation. Some brief historical information is shared, and the provided copywork example summarizes the historical event from a Christian-worldview.

Art is my six-year-old’s favourite subject, yet when Creation through Jonah arrived, her perfectionist tendencies kicked in. The quality of Dick’s completed artwork seemed above her abilities and she was afraid she couldn’t ‘measure up’ in her own mind. However, when one of our homeschooling assignments required drawing a picture of Noah’s Ark, our book came out and we sat down together to draw our pictures.

kaelynnarkHaving both produced some fairly realistic-looking Arks, we’re both delighted with our results. I’m not at all artistic by nature, but after drawing a few projects from the book, I’ve been impressed by my results. My six-year-old also thinks the book is pretty neat after her successful drawing experience.

Easy to integrate with any existing history curriculum, we’re using Draw and Write Through History with Mystery of History Volume 1. Because our course of study covers so much ground this year, Creation through Jonah will get us half-way there, it looks like Greece and Rome would carry us the rest of the way with some left over for next year.

momsark

Whether used from front to back, eclectically, or as a source of inspiration for notebooking pages, or other projects; Creation through Jonah makes an excellent history and art supplement, as well as a wonderful gift for children who’ve been bit by the drawing bug.

A sample drawing lesson can be found online at the Draw and Write Through History website.  $12.00 when ordered from CPR Publishing (discount for the entire series available).

This is a Mama Buzz review. The product was provided by CPR Publishing for this review.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK OR AMAZON.COM!


October 11th, 2009

Creative Cooking?

jellocell

Well, we did try to eat it, but actually, that wasn’t my primary goal.  This is a snapshot of our ‘jello cell’ model that the children and I made together as one of our Christian Kids Explore Biology science projects from the Illuminations Year 1 curriculum we’re working through this year.  It should have been made with lemon jello to provide better visibility, but…it snuck up on me, so we used red!

We’ve got a bit of everything in there, hard-boiled egg nucleus, lettuce endoplasmic reticulum, noodle mitochondria, carrot lysosomes, and the peaches are…ehmm….well, I can say that hands-on-learning does work fairly well, that was all without referencing our text!  We had a blast making it, and my two youngest (3 and 1) even thought it was tasty.  The rest of us, well, let’s just say that the lettuce and carrots left the jello with a distinctive flavour that didn’t blend well with raspberry!  Mmm..cytoplasm!

I think that Kaelynn (6) wants to write a post (well, dictate one) about the whole experience, so I’ll link up there if she does in fact go ahead with that :) . UPDATE: Ah, she says that she DOESN’T want to write a post, because the jello was ‘gross’, LOL.

October 11th, 2009

Dr. Oetker, Take Me Away!

Well, maybe that’s not exactly the right sentiment – after all, Dr. Oetker IS offering a $20,000 kitchen makeover to one blessed Canadian winner (amongst other swell prizes), that is paid out as a CHEQUE!  Maybe Dr. Oetker, sweep me into to my brand-new kitchen would be more accurate, after all – I wouldn’t be going away ;) .

The Dr. Oetker Kitchen Makeover Contest is running until January, and Canadians can enter either by joining the Savoury Moments club online (free), sending in 50 word essays by mail, or by buying Casa di Mama pizzas!  Each one of these methods will give you a unique PIN number that needs to be entered online to in order to increase your chances of winning.

Though we all would love to win the big prize, eight winners will also receive major kitchen appliances, and 2,000 winners will receive a Casa di Mama pizza with a pizza cutter.

Hmm, what would I do with the grand prize?  I actually WOULD invest the cheque into my kitchen, because as it stands we don’t have many ‘traditional’ kitchen trappings (think cupboards, running water, floor tiles etc.)  We do have a plywood floor, rough shelving, a sink that drains to the outdoors etc. so it’s not too bad – but an infusion of cash would go a long way.  Oh, to have paint on the walls – the Lord has certainly been teaching me patience :) .  What would you do with the big prize if you won?

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October 11th, 2009

New Project on the Go

Before we became Christians, our family owned and operated an online store for several years that catered to parents of a certain educational philosophy that didn’t have roots in Jesus Christ.  It had many pagan influences – fairies, nature spirits, reincarnation – you name it.  So, when we became Christians it wasn’t long until the Lord laid it on our hearts to shut the business down, though it was only just beginning to provide a decent income.  We closed, and since then have been doing piece work in construction, renovation etc.

After praying, and thinking, and praying, we’re working on a new website - Bogart Family Resources – where we can share God-honouring resources with fellow homeschooling families that we create, as well as resources created by other families that we’ve been blessed by.

There’s nothing there yet, but never fear, I’ll keep you updated!  I’m busy working behind the scenes with our faithful (and ever so patient!) designer.  You can also look forward to some giveaways from our new product selections there (we’ll be starting slow and steady), chances to sign up for free downloads and more!

I hope you’ll join us on this new and exciting journey :) .

October 11th, 2009

Find Deals, Ask Questions

freshdealsOver the past 50 years family structures, and social structures have change dramatically.  With the incredible rise of nuclear families separated from older, more experienced relations, and an incredible reliance upon electronic forms of communication (re: the internet), people can often feel at a loss when they require answers to their questions.

These aren’t necessarily the ‘big’ questions of life, but the little ones, “Where can I buy this?  Will this item last?  Is it a good value for the money?  What is the best type of product that will accomplish this task?” and so on.  Freshdeals.com provides a unique combination of shopping search engine and advice column where people go to for their answers – the worldwide web.

Readers can look-up the latest deals, including coupon codes, discounts, and savings at a variety of online shops.  They can also ask and answer questions related to a wide range of shopping questions.  Anything from “Is there a baby sock that is made to stay on your baby’s feet?” to “Are they baby pants available with pads in the knee for when the baby starts crawling?“, they can be sorted by category and searched. Product searches can also be conducted with associated questions shown beneath them, as well as an option for price comparisons when more than one listed store offers the item.

Overall, Freshdeals is a unique site for shopping reconnaissance – I’ll certainly be heading there the next time I need a shopping question answered and I don’t want to do a lot of online ‘legwork’ myself.

October 10th, 2009

Book Review: Follow That Map!: A First Book of Mapping Skills by Scott Ritchie

followthatmapElaborate compass roses, legends, latitudes, longitudes, scale indicators, and landmark icons; the world of maps is a mysterious, and often-complex one. In Follow That Map!: A First Book of Mapping Skills, book creator Scott Ritchie brings mapping down to a fun, colourful, and manageable level for young children.

Ritchie begins by introducing young readers to the characters, and a diagram that explains the common features found on a map, When Pedro notices that Sally’s dog Max, and her cat Ollie are “missing”, the children are off on an imaginary voyage that will take them around the world and back in search of the missing pets.

At each stop along the way, new mapping skills are taught by placing the characters directly on landscapes that appear as detailed maps from the overhead, offset perspective the bold illustrations are drawn from. This perspective is consistent throughout, even when no mapping skills are being taught, adding to a consistent feel throughout the book.

As the children scour the neighborhood for Max and Ollie, legend skills are introduced, with an interactive question to engage children. At each progressive stop additional skills are folded in, sometimes in combination with each other. When the children strike out through the city in search of the zoo, using a compass rose is the main focus, with legend skills also included.

When I sat down to work through Follow That Map! with my daughter it seemed almost too easy – the learning that came from reading the simple story and asking her the included questions was effortless and fun for both of us. The introductory level skills explored are: legends, trails, compass rose, scale bar, weather map, following directions with the help of a map, topographical maps, landmarks, and world maps. A simple map of the planets in our solar system is also included, as well as instructions on how to create a simple, yet accurate map of a room in your home with a sheet of graph paper.

Incredibly appealing to young children visually, the cartoon-like illustrations fill most of each two-page spread, with a small amount of text, plenty of white space, and a large font for early readers. Written for four to seven-year-olds, Follow That Map! serves as a geography primer of sorts – an easily accessible sample to pique the interest of young learners, and to familiarize them with tools that they will use for the rest of their lives. The bright drawings, game-like activities, and subtle humor encourage repeat readings, browsing, and informal map-play times guided by improvised questions.

A free four-page teaching guide from publisher Kids Can Press provides additional hands-on activities for reinforce early mapping skills and the development of direction skills

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT AMAZON.COM OR AMAZON.CA!

October 9th, 2009

DVD Review: Veggie Tales: Minnesota Cuke and the Search for Noah’s Umbrella – A Lesson in Confidence

minnesotacukeMinnesota Cuke – the loveable children’s museum curator – is back for another Veggie Tales adventure! Following up on his eagerly received premiere appearance in Minnesota Cuke and the Search for Samson’s Hairbrush, Larry takes to the screen again in his role as Minnesota, with both halves of the disc dedicated to his search for Noah’s umbrella.

Written by the same team that brought us the original episode, Tim Hodge and Robert G. Lee spin a tale of intrigue and adventure that shows a distraught Larry that trusting in, and obeying God is all that matters. When some fellow fast food eaters ridicule Larry after singing a song of thanks over his chicken nuggets, Bob realizes that Larry is in need of his own story.

Minnesota Cuke hates being laughed at. Though he’s tried to do right since he was a wee cucumber, he’s just about had it with people making fun of him. The eccentric Mr Muffett (who made his fortune in a best-selling poem about his daughter – “Little Miss Muffett”) is building a Bible-themed goldfish pond in his backyard, and needs to find Noah’s ark to use as the centerpiece.

Larry’s quest takes him on a journey filled with mysterious clues, kidnapping, evil twins, and… lots of people laughing at him along the way. Bolstered by scriptural encouragement from his platonic sidekick Julia – Petunia Rhubarb – and challenged through his trials, he eventually comes to the conclusion that when God is happy with his actions, it doesn’t matter what others think.

After the release of a rather disappointing Abe and the Amazing Promise, I’m thrilled to see that Big Idea is back on track with this, their 38th Veggie Tales episode. With director Mike Narowcki at the helm, and John Wahba as a co-pilot, we’re once again seeing great messages, effectively conveyed through the traditional-style veggie humor that appeals to kids, while offering adults laughs through additional inside jokes and spoofs. The Veggie Tales team openly admits that they were pulling heavily from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade for laughs from older viewers.

I love this 45 minute disc’s format, with Minnesota Cuke filling both story slots, separated by an intermission of a fabulous silly song, “Sippy Cup” by Steve Taylor. This extended length episode almost gives the feeling of one of the Veggie Tales feature films such as Jonah, but remains sandwiched within the bookends of the intro sequence and closing scripture verse.

“Sippy Cup” has become a fast family favourite, hearkening back to the undeniable sing-along appeal and humor of earlier Veggie Tales favourites. It’s an inside joke here now to threaten our children with sippy cups when they spill, and both my six- and three-year-olds can be heard mumbling the tune under their breath throughout the day. The songs within the episode are just as catchy, only I’m the one you’ll find hollering, “The Lord told Noah to build Him an arky, arky… build it out of gopher barky, barky…”

The discs bonus features are even more fun than usual. The spontaneous, transparent, and revealing studio commentaries laid over the film, as well as lessons in drawing Minnesota Cuke and Julia are the high points. An art gallery, sing along with Larry segment, and discussion guide are also included. English and Spanish subtitles are available, along with 5.1 surround sound, and standard scene navigation options are also included. The CG animation is of course, fabulous. After watching these state-of-the-art releases, it makes returning to their older DVDs such as Esther somewhat painful.

I can’t definitively say who was responsible for the mediocre quality of Abe, but I can attest to the fact that Minnesota Cuke and the Search for Noah’s Umbrella is right up there amongst the Veggie Tales classics. My children have been asking to watch it incessantly, and I hardly mind. The message is great, unmistakably delivered, catchy tunes, lots of laughs – we’ve got a winner! Or as my oldest tells me, “I’d give it eight stars if I could!”

U.S. residents can enter to win a HUGE veggie prize pack at the Noah’s Umbrella website. By successfully completing the game there, you also qualify to receive an older Veggie Tales DVD for the cost of shipping.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK, AMAZON.COM, OR AMAZON.CA!

October 7th, 2009

Contest: Bo’s Cafe by John Lynch, Bill Thrall, and Bruce McNicol – 5 Copies!

boscafe

CONTEST CLOSED!

Thanks to everyone who entered!  Here is a list of our winners:

Susan

Amanda D.

Nancy M.

Nancy S.

Donna K.!

I pray that God will bless you all with this new title!

It isn’t often that we see fiction written by three distinct authors, but Windblown Media (the publishers of the runaway bestseller The Shack) specializes in what I call ‘teaching fiction’, somewhat of a category of it’s own.  Newly released in late September, Bo’s Cafe promises to have a large following based upon the large fan-base established with The Shack.  It’s already ranking very high at Amazon.

Having read several Windblown titles over the past year (and reviewed a couple), I’ve mostly enjoyed Windblown’s perspective, though there are some theological leanings I disagree with.  I’ve yet to read Bo’s Cafe, but am thrilled to share the opportunity to win one of five copies with a group of blessed winners in the US/Canada, who have street mailing addresses!

Here’s the summary:

High-powered executive Steven Kerner is living the dream in southern California. But when his bottled pain ignites in anger one night, his wife kicks him out. Then an eccentric mystery man named Andy Monroe befriends Steven and begins unravelling his tightly wound world. Andy leads Steven through a series of frustrating and revealing encounters to repair his life through genuine friendship and the grace and love of a God who has been waiting for him to accept it. A story to challenge and encourage, Bo’s Cafe is a model for all who struggle with unresolved problems and a performance-based life.

Well, I don’t know about you, but I’ve often struggled with performance-based insecurities in my Christian life…hmm, I guess I should dig into my copy!

CONTEST DETAILS:

To enter visit the Bo’s Cafe page at Hachette Publishing, and take a look around.  There you can find a longer description, read excerpts, learn about the authors, and more.  Then come on back and let me know why you’d like to read this title!

For additional entries:

1. Subscribe to this blog for updates – see the left hand sidebar. Leave an additional comment letting me know you’ve subscribed (or if you already subscribe).

2. Write a post on your blog promoting and linking to this contest. Leave an additional comment with a link to your post.

3. Add the Quiverfull Family button (see the code box in the right hand sidebar under BUTTON UP!) to your blog’s sidebar, or let me know if you already have the button displayed. Leave an additional comment with a link to your post.

4. Digg, Stumble, Tweet, Facebook or otherwise share this post on a social networking site. Leave an additional comment indicating how you shared this post.

5. Follow me on Twitter or let me know if you are an existing follower.

Each additional step taken counts for 1 additional entry. A total of 6 entries are available if you complete all of these steps. Please leave a separate comment for each entry!

The contest will close at 12 a.m. MST on Sunday, October 18th, 2009. Five (5) winners will be randomly drawn for a copy of Bo’s Cafe on Monday, October 19th, 2009 and notified by email. Please fill your email address in the comment form when you are completing your comment so that I can contact you. The winners must respond with a mailing address within 72 hours of my email, or new winners will be chosen. This contest is open to those living in the US and Canada, no P.O. boxes.

I look forward to seeing God bless five (5) readers with a copy of this exciting new title! Thanks for entering.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK, AMAZON.COM, OR AMAZON.CA!

Welcome!