Category Archives: Books

Guest Post for CMLE Reads Across MN: While the Locust Slept

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

This is a guest post from CMLE member Violet Fox. Want to write a book review for us? Let us know!

I picked up While the Locust Slept because the author is a member of the Fond du Lac Band of Ojibwe, and I’ve been trying to learn more about the cultures of the Native peoples who were here in Minnesota before settlement (i.e., the Dakota and the Ojibwe). But there’s little about Ojibwe culture in this book, as the author was cut off from his people when, shortly after his birth, his mother was sent to an asylum in St. Peter and his father abandoned him. While the Locust Slept is an autobiographical memoir of Peter Razor’s childhood and adolescence as a ward of the State of Minnesota from 1930 through the mid-1940s.

Though school officials claimed that children would stay there no longer than three months, Razor grew up at the State Public School for Dependent and Neglected Children in Owatonna, living there from infancy to age fifteen. His Indian heritage and dark skin made him a favorite target for abusive employees at the school, and made it unlikely that a white family would adopt him. Razor’s straightforward prose makes it easy to imagine the cruelty (both intentional and unintentional) endured by a child who had only known life in an institutional setting.
At age fifteen, Razor, like many orphaned boys at the State School, was placed with a family living on a farm in Rushford, Minnesota. He was treated badly and underfed, by the family who took him in as a hired hand. Because he was quite intelligent, he was able to make passing grades at high school when he was allowed to attend. After a particularly severe beating, social services could no longer ignore the abuse and Razor was moved to the farm of a family who treated him kindly.
While the Locust Slept is a fascinating look into the history of Minnesota and how children were seen by the state’s social services not as requiring any nurturing, but merely as small adults who needed discipline above all to become useful members of society. It’s also a testament to the author’s resilience, though his difficult childhood was not without serious consequence—as an adult he suffered from anxiety and depression. Razor’s moving memoir is heartbreaking, but not a bleak read.
The State School in Owatonna was shut down in 1947 and the grounds are now home to the Minnesota State Public School Orphanage Museum. You can take a self-guided tour to see the museum, one of the cottages where boys lived, and the cemetery where 198 State School children are buried. I’m planning on visiting this summer to learn more about this chapter of our state’s history.

CMLE Reads Across MN: Through No Fault of My Own: A Girl’s Diary of Life on Summit Avenue in the Jazz Age

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!This book sounds so interesting, and as someone who has always been curious about the lives of the people who have lived in the fancy mansions on Summit Avenue, I’m excited to read about a girl who lived there during the Jazz Age!

Through No Fault of My Own: A Girl’s Diary of Life on Summit Avenue in the Jazz Age by Coco Irvine (Author) and Peg Meier (Introduction) is about Coco, the daughter of a lumber baron, who grew up on Summit Avenue during the Jazz Age.

“Coco’s diary carefully records her adventures, problems, and romances, written with a lively wit and a droll sense of humor. Whether sneaking out to a dance hall in her mother’s clothes or getting in trouble for telling an off-color joke, Coco and her escapades will captivate and delight preteen readers as well as their mothers and grandmothers.
Peg Meier’s introduction describes St. Paul life in the 1920s and provides context for the privileged world that Coco inhabits, while an afterword tells what happens to Coco as an adult—and reveals surprises about some of the other characters in the diary.”
Is there a Minnesota book you think we should feature? Leave a comment, let us know!

 

Resources for the African-American Read In

February is Black History Month, and we wanted to share this event with you since it is a great addition to the existing festivities! From February 1st – 28th, participate in the African-American Read In.  The goal of the African-American Read In is to “document readers making the celebration of African American literacy a traditional part of Black History Month activities.”

The celebration encourages places like schools, churches, libraries, professional organizations and citizens to get involved in making literacy “a significant part of Black History Month by hosting and coordinating community Read-Ins.”

To help you plan your event, check out these resources from Read Write Think.org that include links to classroom activities, a Library of Congress exhibit, and a host report card for you to record what happened at your own event.

Also visit NCTE’s site, which has this toolkit to help you prepare for your read in event. The toolkit has links to multiple booklists to help you with reading material selection.

Plus, on Tues. February 20th, CMLE will host our own African-American Read In at our headquarters location! Join us (and Office Dog Lady Grey) to celebrate African-American literature. We’ll have library books available to read and some light refreshments. Stay tuned for more information as the date approaches! 

Book Suggestions: Doll Bones by Holly Black

We love to read books, and to talk about books. Check out our entire series here! Need more book chatting and suggestions in your life? Listen to our Books and Beverages podcast!It’s so fun to pick books from Overdrive, because it exposes you to titles you may never have normally seen! This book was one of those finds, and I’m just about finished with it.

Doll Bones by Holly Black has a freaky-looking doll on the cover, and the story is just as delightfully creepy. It’s middle grade fiction and about three friends dealing with some of the tough parts of being a young teenager – trying to  figure out where you “fit in,” strict guardians, mean siblings, separated parents, and of course, a quest to bury a potentially haunted doll.

The main character is Zach, who has a fantastic imagination and loves making up stories with his neighborhood friends Alice and Poppy. He is also a member of the basketball team and is struggling to accept his father back into his life.

The book has some very real descriptions of the expectations and definitions of masculinity and how parents and peers reinforce those expectations, particularly onto others that may not fit the traditional mold. There’s also a lot of humor in the story, including some great Lord of the Rings references. Plus, a Carnegie library and it’s pink-haired librarian play an important role! I’m definitely enjoying this book and recommend it to you!

From Goodreads: “Zach, Poppy and Alice have been friends for ever. They love playing with their action figure toys, imagining a magical world of adventure and heroism. But disaster strikes when, without warning, Zach’s father throws out all his toys, declaring he’s too old for them. Zach is furious, confused and embarrassed, deciding that the only way to cope is to stop playing . . . and stop being friends with Poppy and Alice.

But one night the girls pay Zach a visit, and tell him about a series of mysterious occurrences. Poppy swears that she is now being haunted by a china doll – who claims that it is made from the ground-up bones of a murdered girl. They must return the doll to where the girl lived, and bury it. Otherwise the three children will be cursed for eternity . . . “

Let’s read! Join a CMLE 2018 Goodreads book challenge!

check out this reader! he’s on top of his TBR pile of books! great work Carson!!

We love to read books!

You love to read books!

Let’s all read books this year!!

Building on people’s interest in the books we suggest in our Books And Beverages podcast, we have started two book challenges for everyone in 2018.

Here are a few FAQs you might ask:

Are these high-pressure, high-volume challenges?? NO!

  • One challenge will read 25 books (50 if you get ambitious); the other reads 30. If you don’t get them all? *shrug* Read what you enjoy!

Will everyone point and laugh at me if I read books about vampires or YA books instead of The Important Classics?? NO!

  • Actually – we’ll look forward to your recommendations! We like fun books here, and that can include anything that sounds fun to you, including important classics AND vampires.

I never know what to read next. Can I get some recommendations? YES!

  • We want this to be easy, so one book challenge actually follows our book group podcast topics; you can listen to the suggestions everyone gives, then read a fun book for yourself.

I’m pumped up and ready to read!! Where do I find these so-fun book challenges?

  • CMLE Reading Challenge: Read through our 25 reading prompts for an interesting year in discovery of ideas; read two of each for 50 chances to try more new things and to hear what people have to say in different ways.
  • CMLE Book Group Podcast Reading Challenge: We have a book group podcast, Books And Beverages, and each week we talk about a different genre. For this challenge, you can read a book from each of the first 30 genres we are discussing. If you need book suggestions, you can listen to the handy podcast episode for all kinds of ideas! Join our book group podcast here.