Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Round About and Back Again!

 


Happy Groundhogs Day! We followed our shadow back to our old blog home. Moving just didn't feel right, so here we are, ready to bring you all sorts of unique stories and interesting things. Stay tuned! 

Here's a riddle to get you in the mood for mystery. Can you guess our theme? Tune in Monday for another excellent middle grade book review. It's good to see you all around the book block! 😃 

Mystical and pure, with a horn of white. Ride off with your imagination on a moonlit night.

What am I referring to? Stop by Friday for the answer

I gave you a clue!

Standard orbit. Live long and prosper.

Monday, November 23, 2020

Moving to a New Spot on the Book Block!

 

Dear Readers, 

We're not really going anywhere, we're shifting in the cloud. If you've been following Fairday's blog, you know we've been posing here on blogspot as our main characters, Fairday and Lizzy, bringing you riddles, middle grade and children's picture book reviews, author interviews, and tons of bookish shenanigans over the years—since 2011! Fairday's corner of the book block is still here, but we'll be posting as ourselves over at FairdaysFiles.com, the location of our website, and now book blog. We'll continue to review great middle grade fiction and children's picture books, plus all sorts of new and exciting things. We hope to continue to hear from you.

Happy reading!

Jess Haight & Stephanie Robinson 

Join us over at FairdaysFiles.com 

Monday, November 16, 2020

Marvelous Middle Grade Monday # MMGM Book Review: Unbound: A Novel in Verse by Ann E. Burg

 

Grace has been raised in slavery. She lives with her mama, Uncle Jim, and her brother is in a small cabin where they share nightly stories and love. But when Grace gets called to the Big House her mama is worried because Grace has a tendency to say what she thinks. That won’t do up there. Warned to keep her eyes down and her mouth closed Grace goes off to the Big House alone, unsure of what she is stepping into. She soon sees that things are even harder at the Big House than they were at the small cabin. The Missus of the house is mean to the core, and seems to take pleasure in asking Grace and the other slaves to do things twice or a third time.  Luckily a kindly woman in the kitchen befriends Grace and tries to help steer her through the tricky situations.  Unfortunately, Grace sees an injustice and doesn’t hold her tongue. She worries because she has she puts her whole family in danger. It gets even worse when she overhears the Master say they are going to sell her mama, or her brothers, or her. She can’t believe her family will no longer be together, and it’s her fault. Grace knows she has to get word to her mama and they may need to be on the run. What will they do? Where will they go? Is it even possible to flee to safety on the spur of the moment? Is freedom a possibility? Are the rumors of safety at the Great Dismal Swamp a reality? You’ll have to read this adventure and heartwarming story to find out.

Unbound: A Novel in Verse by Ann E. Burg is a beautifully written story that will draw the reader right in. I enjoyed that this book is historical fiction and the characters tugged at my heart. I completely agreed with Grace’s questions and the things she thought weren’t fair. Unfortunately, during slavery those questions and looks could get someone whipped, or even worse. I would have felt the same way as Grace because no human should be treated the way slaves were treated. Reading her story reminds readers of this horrible time in history, but her spirit gives you hope. I loved seeing the way her family connected with each other and how much they all loved each other. I also liked learning about what happened to the family and hoped they would make it to the freedom they so deserved. I won’t tell you what happens, but trying to make it to freedom was a dangerous journey and the outcome wasn’t guaranteed. The author’s note at the end helped me learn a lot about some parts of slavery, the Underground Railroad, aspects of escaping that I did not know about, and the Great Dismal Swamp which I had never heard of before. I recommend this book to people who like books told in verse, historical fiction, and characters and stories that stay with you. This is a story that should not be missed.

Has anyone else read Unbound: A Novel in Verse? Or have you read another book by Ann E. Burg? We would love to hear your thoughts!

Happy reading!

~L

For other MMGM posts, please visit Greg Pattridge's blog.

Friday, November 13, 2020

Answer to Fairday's Riddle: Free to Flourish~

Excellent guessing, Riddlers! Freedom is fundamental for beings to flourish. Tune in Monday to find out how the answer ties into the story. See you all around the book block! ~ F

If you are, no need to ask—nothing left to unmask. To the world you are bound, both feet set upon the ground. You might be put in a bind; silenced by a hateful mind; or left out in the cold, maybe win a pot of gold. You could climb high, just to fall, or be the belle of the ball. You might choose this over that, perhaps you're thin, maybe fat. It's possible you could fly, it's certain that you'll cry. Love and hate, fear and shame; guilt and anger, joy and pain— all these vibes you will know, everyday as you go. Breath in time—feel it all; ups and downs; rise and fall. No matter how things unfold, or which story you've been told, the universal song we sing plays the note our hearts ring.

What note rings? Answer: Freedom!

Monday, November 9, 2020

Fairday's Riddle: Hear It Ring?

Hello, Riddlers! Can you guess our theme? It's important to appreciate what this means. ~F  

If you are, no need to ask—nothing left to unmask. To the world you are bound, both feet set upon the ground. You might be put in a bind; silenced by a hateful mind; or left out in the cold, maybe win a pot of gold. You could climb high, just to fall, or be the belle of the ball. You might choose this over that, perhaps you're thin, maybe fat. It's possible you could fly, it's certain that you'll cry. Love and hate, fear and shame; guilt and anger, joy and pain— all these vibes you will know, everyday as you go. Breath in time—feel it all; ups and downs; rise and fall. No matter how things unfold, or which story you've been told, the universal song we sing plays the note our hearts ring.

What note rings? Stop by Friday for the answer

I gave you a clue!

Friday, October 30, 2020

Halloween 2020: Ferry Blackwell Strikes Again!


HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
Here's a scream. 😱

Reader beware! This tale is not to be told to wee children—their fingers and toes are too small for Ferry's taste.

“No way!” Georgie exclaimed. “Mom told you to stop making up stories.”
     “It's true. I saw Ferry Blackwell,” Macy said. “He had a head like a melon.”
       “You did not. Get your stuff and let’s go. We’re gonna be late.” Georgie walked out the door, and Macy followed, wishing her big brother would believe her this time. She did like to make up stories and their mom had asked her to knock it off, but this wasn’t a story. She had spotted Ferry Blackwell, she was sure of it.

 ***
Shifting from one foot to the other, Macy stared down the school driveway. All the buses had left; everyone was gone. Georgie was late. She had tried to call him on her cell phone, but he didn't answer. Her mom was at work. Macy knew interrupting her would guarantee a whole evening of arguing. Slipping the phone into her back pocket, she decided to walk home. 
As the pavement twisted and turned she found herself thinking about Ferry Blackwell again. Last week she had started reading a book about the history of her town, Devilsville, Maine. It hadn’t been very interesting, except for one phrase, which was handwritten on page thirty-three. It said: In the woods of Devilsville, you’re sure to find a gory thrill. When the bakerman wants to eat, hide your hands and cover your feet. With a head melon-sized and fire burning in his eyes, he’ll harvest your fingers and your toes, then hide the rest so no one knows. Murdered by an angry town, he swore revenge when they shot him down. So watch your children, but never tell- if Ferry Blackwell comes back from hell. 
Macy knew the words by heart. She had looked through a few other books, but found nothing else about Ferry Blackwell. Then, the other day, she saw him. There had been an odd rustling behind the bushes in her backyard, and when she went over to investigate, someone was there. It looked like a man, but with a huge head. He had flashed a mad, toothy grin at her, and then disappeared. Her mother had come running out when she heard Macy’s rants of terror.
 “Macy! What did I tell you about scaring people with your stories?” her mother had yelled. Macy knew that no one was ever going to believe her, and why should they? After all, she did have a long history of making things up, which had opened more than one can of worms for her parents to deal with. Things like, Ginny Wader, in the third grade, refusing to touch door handles ever again or Georgie wearing a helmet wherever he went for a year. The list was long, she mused. Her thoughts were suddenly cut short. Just ahead, at the bottom of the hill, a school bus was stopped in the middle of the road. Macy cautiously walked up to it and climbed the steps. Other than the backpacks strewn about on the seats it appeared empty.
“Hello?” she asked quietly. “Is anyone here?” Macy slowly made her way down the aisle. Midway something caught her eye, and when she turned to get a closer look, her mouth dropped open in horror. On the seat to her left was a bloody pile of shoes and socks, and what looked like fingernails tossed into the gruesome heap.
BANG! Something hit the side of the bus. “What was that?” she whispered. BANG! Again, the bus shook and teetered. Macy reacted fast. She ran up the aisle and grabbed the door handle. Just as it was about to latch, long fingers pried it back open. Two red, veined eyes zeroed in on their target. Terror forced the air out of her lungs, and she screamed. 

***

Macy was flat on her back when she woke. She was chained to the floor, and her feet were bare. A painful stinging in her fingers and toes sliced through her body. Where was she? What had happened?
“Who else is here?” she questioned the darkness.
“Shhhh,” a panicked voice ordered.
“Who’s there?” she said again.
      “Stop talking, you idiot. He’ll hear you.” It was a terrified sounding boy.
         “Why’s it so dark?” Macy continued. She had no intention of shutting up.
          “I think we’re in a basement,” another voice chimed in.
        Suddenly it dawned on her where they must be. It had to be the abandoned house on Hull Street. She and Georgie would come here when things around the house got too serious. It was their hiding spot, and she knew it well. Even the moldy, abandoned smells were familiar. “How many people are here?” she asked.
          “I’m here, Marcus Beltane,” came a nervous voice.
          “Me too, I’m Jen Andrews.”
      The voices started to pick up, “Justin Deluca, Melanie Grism...” There seemed to be about ten kids sitting in the dark with her; all scared, and all, she was certain, without their fingernails and toenails.
      The creaking of a door silenced the murmuring. A light flickered on, cutting through the blackness. Macy squinted her eyes open a bit and stared up at the ceiling, watching as a shadow with an enormous melon shaped head moved across the room. Its heavy footfalls came to a halt. Suddenly, a cackling voice bellowed out, “Looky here, girls and boys, forget your mommies and your toys. The fun and games will soon begin; to scare me back is how you win. But should you lose, you’ll pay a price, your fingers and toes I’ll surly dice. Just try to leave! It won’t do you well. For I’m back from hell. I’m the Bakerman, Ferry Blackwell.” His howling laugh sounded insane, like a hyena calling out for its prey. He did an odd little jig. Then, in an instant, he was gone.
       “Okay, this is really happening,” Macy said, more to herself than anyone else. She took a deep breath, then continued, “He said something about winning, didn’t he?"
       “Yeah, he said, to scare me back is how you win,” a trembling voice squeaked. “He also said that he was a bakerman. What’s he going to do? Cook us into bread or something?”
       “I think that’s exactly what he’s going to do,” Macy responded, remembering what she had read. “But, it sounds like if we scare him back, we win. Which, I guess, means we get to live.” 
       “How are we supposed to scare him? He’s a demon who makes bread out of kids’ fingers and toes. I mean, what’s scarier than that?” Macy recognized the voice of Jen Andrews.
       “I know, but—” Her mind was whirring. Then, it hit her. She remembered the cell phone in her pocket. The door opened. Macy threw caution to the wind and whispered, just audibly, “I have a plan.”

***

 Her heart thudded in her chest as a shadow moved into the room. “So kiddies, who’s it going to be? Who wants to be the first to try to scare me?” His voice sounded crazy.
        Macy mustered up all of her strength and called out, “I’ll go first, you don’t scare me. You’re going to be caught any minute.” She kept her breathing even as Ferry Blackwell loomed above her, searching her face with his terrifying eyes. He was so close that she could smell his putrid, stinking breath.       
        “You wait and see! I’ll show you how scary I can be!” He pulled her up by her hair and dragged her to a chopping block in the center of the room. Grabbing her left arm, he slapped her hand down on it.
She focused her mind on the weight in her back pocket, hoping beyond hope she hadn’t been knocked out for more than thirty minutes. The reminder alarm on her phone had been set to go off at exactly four o'clock, and it had to be about that time. Macy glared up at Ferry Blackwell and said, “Everyone in town already knows where we are. Kids today have GPS trackers implanted in our bodies that tells our parents exactly where we are at all times. You’ll see, the town’s people will be here any moment to shoot you down and send you back to hell, Ferry Blackwell.”
         He looked bemused, as he replied, “Clever girl! You know my name! Now, let’s begin our little game. Terribly funny to think you’ll be saved- when for a century, fingers and toes I’ve craved!” He raised a sharp blade above his head, poised to strike. Macy squeezed her eyes shut and braced herself. Please go off alarm, she prayed, believing that this would, at the very least, buy her more time. As if on cue, a loud beeping blared out from her pocket. Ferry leered at her, unsure. Just then, in a brilliant moment of pure luck, another cell phone rang out, perhaps a concerned parent. Another one went off with a mechanical jingle. The timing couldn’t have been better. Suddenly, there was a frantic banging on a door. The demon spun around wildly, looking terrified. “No, no, not to hell. Hide, I must and never tell,” he bellowed and dropped the blade. It landed with a clink just as Ferry Blackwell shot into the air and burst into flames, disappearing in a black puff of smoke. 
No one breathed. Somewhere above, Georgie’s worried voice called out, “Macy, are you in here?”

INTERVIEW WITH FERRY BLACKWELL
Hosted by Cate Masters 

Cate Masters: What do you love most about Halloween?

Ferry Blackwell: Halloween's a joke, that's what I say! It’s better in hell on that boring day. I can't even scare, so there's nothing to win- the people want horror and are likely to sin. I'd rather lay low and bide my time, when the moment's right, I'll get what's mine.

Cate Masters: Do you have a favorite memory of a Halloween past?

Ferry Blackwell: There was this one time, now let me see- I remember a Halloween treat that I baked just for me. I'd gathered my wits, then sought the ingredients, hoping to find a few fresh, young deviants. Mostly I needed fingers and toes, so I snatched them right up, despite all their woes. I sliced and diced, and baked my bread, even shared it graciously with those not yet dead.

Cate Masters: Have you ever had an unusual experience you can't explain?

Ferry Blackwell: I am an unusual experience you can't explain! You won't see me coming, and then you'll know pain. (Stands up, does a quick jig, then sits down again- grinning).

Cate Masters: What frightens you the most?

Ferry Blackwell: The time I told you about the treat, that Halloween was not so sweet. You see, though the bread did taste grand, the people found me, guns in hand. I was scared when they shot me down, but I swore I'd be back to haunt their town. Now here I am, as you can tell- Ferry Blackwell's back from hell! (Cackling laugh)

Cate Masters: Ever gone on a ghost tour? Or ghost hunting on your own?

Ferry Blackwell: Bah! Ghosts are for babies! They can't even speak. Nothing scary about them, they're flimsy and weak.

Cate Masters: Any favorite Halloween recipes you'd care to share?

Ferry Blackwell: Lookie here! I'll grant your wish- Toe Finger Bread's my signature dish! It's so scrumptious, you'll surly agree. Next time I bake it, I shall slice some for thee. 

Preview the book on Amazon
Ferry Blackwell Strikes Again is included in Lovecraft anthology published by the spooktacular Macabre Maine. Pick up a copy and give yourself a fright this Halloween!

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Bones for Books!

"Eleanor Skeleton here, and I'm happy to be back with a few more frightful stories to share with you. October is the season when the world shivers and throws on a colorful shawl of magic and mystery. Settle into the dark while seeking the light. Make no bones about it, story magic lives in you." 

What happens when a flower has all the power? 

Find out in The Flower Monster


Consider me Cornerstone Owl. I may or may not care. Stay or don't, the choice is yours. I've a tale to tell. But only if the rain persists. It's the chill in the sweeping wind that stiffens the vine, that's the buzz around here. Listen. Creaking bones of bark and burrowing bug, more or less paper flesh, or so the story goes.



In a time of none, and a half turn of spin, by the throat of a running river, six twinkling loves gathered under the shadow light of the blood moon to tell fantastical stories to each other.... continue reading 



"Now, I'm certain that you've met my good friend, Great Pumpkin. I know she's haunted Fairday's blog before. I'll let her talk you into whatever she has planned, but beware, she enjoys a good scare." 



"Ah, it's me great friend, Elly. Nice ta see ya bones rattlin' around here. Ya know me, I like ta pop in an' take em' all on a trip to Halloween town. 'Tis a hoot ta visit with them monstrous neighbors of mine, so grab yer bag o' tricks and skip over fer a fright— if ya dare." 

Visit Halloween town with Great Pumpkin (read the comments:) 




"On the hunt for more spooky fun? Follow me into an enchanted forest."

Take a spooky stroll 

Recommended October Reads

Middle grade- ages 8-12

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

Matilda by Roald Dahl

43 Old Cemetery Road; Dying to Meet You by Kate Klise

The House With a Clock in Its Walls by John Bellairs




Children's picture books

The Rainbow Goblins by Ul De Rico

The Witches' Supermarket by Susan Meddaugh

Frederick by Leo Lionni

Cinderella Skeleton by Robert D. San Souci


Stop by Friday for a fright fest with Ferry Blackwell!