Life.
      It gets in the way of plans sometimes. It’s been happening to me a
    lot   lately. The evidence is that this giveaway was to happen a 
month    ago  and  I'm just now getting to it!
So, here’s something else that might get in the way of all those nice, neat plans you have for your elementary kid: a whole entire pile of great new books to read! Zonderkidz is letting me do a giveaway for SEVEN new books! Some of these are especially incredible and I’d recommend everyone go buy themselves a copy if you don’t win the giveaway! :-)
So, here’s something else that might get in the way of all those nice, neat plans you have for your elementary kid: a whole entire pile of great new books to read! Zonderkidz is letting me do a giveaway for SEVEN new books! Some of these are especially incredible and I’d recommend everyone go buy themselves a copy if you don’t win the giveaway! :-)
To enter the giveaway:
1. Follow me on my blog with google friend connect for 1 point (including if you're already following)
2. Join my fb group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/116037821811737/ for 1 point 
(including if you're already in the group)
(including if you're already in the group)
3.
      Convince a friend to join my fb group - have them request to join 
  and    post a note telling me your name - for 1 point per friend
4. Buy any book I have reviewed on my blog using my amazon associate links - 2 points per book you buy 
5.
      E-mail me at egilkinc@juno.com with the subject title: CTF 
Devourer      Giveaway and tell me what all you did to enter the 
contest. The   person    with the most points will be chosen. If there 
is a tie, the   winner  will   be chosen at random.
The contest will end April 3. 
And now, here are the books one of you can win for your child: 
Book: Knock-Knock Jokes for Kids by Whee Winn, Zonderkidz, 2016
Notes: “Knock, knock”
“Oh
     no! Not that again” you groan. What is it with kids and knock-knock
     jokes? Why do they delight in telling the same thing over and over 
 and    over and over and over… (add a few hundred overs to that)
Yes, I’ve been there. I’ve known a couple of students who find knock-knock jokes to be the best thing ever. 
Well,
     here’s one solution: a whole entire book full of knock-knock jokes.
   If   they can memorize all of these it will be a while before they 
run   out  of  fresh content! :-D 
These are all focused on names. Here’s a great example:
“Knock, knock”
“Who’s there?”
“Howard.”
“Howard who?”
“Howard can it be to guess a knock-knock joke?”
Using names such as Greta, Les, Gladys, Mickey, Mia, Justin, Haman, Meg, this book contains over 250 jokes for children.
If you have a little on addicted to knock-knock jokes, this is one book you’re going to want to have on hand!
Book: The Purpose Driven Life Devotional For Kids by Rick Warren, Zonderkidz, 2016
Notes: When  Rick Warren wrote The Purpose Driven Life, his popularity soared.  Christians
  and Non-Christians read it. It was on display shelves, not  just at  
Christian bookstores, but even Wal-Mart. It provided direction  to a lot
  of people. In this book, he is taking the principles he taught  and  
turning them into a year’s worth of devotions for children. I’d say  the
  age group is targets is 3rd-6th grade. It  follows the standard 
devotional
  format – a verse on the top already  written out for you, a lesson in 
 the middle discussing what the author  thinks the verse means and how 
it  applies to the life of the reader, and  a written prayer at the 
bottom.  In general, I don’t recommend  devotionals like
   this as I think it’s best for kids to actually be reading the Bible  
 themselves, not just seeing verses printed in other books. However, it 
  does have good lessons. And it can be used as a really great starting 
  point for a Bible Study lesson. There’s no reason you couldn’t look up
   the verse and read the context in the Bible, read the lesson and 
discuss   your own application, then pray your own prayer. The lessons 
that are   here are well done though. In fact, on day 34, the Gospel 
message is   communicated and readers are encouraged to make a decision.
 I like how   the book closes as well. The last lesson is focused on 
summarizing and   responding to the overall take-away from the book by 
praising the God   learned about in the book. 
Another
   note on the book is that the author intentionally uses 9 different   
translations/paraphrases of the Bible in order to best communicate his  
 message and decrease the apathy that can sometimes come with something 
  being too familiar. 
Notes: This devotional looks and feels more like a book you’d read in one setting. The table
   of contents clearly shows it is divided into 90 days of devotions, 
but   once you open it to the actual devotions it presents a very 
different   feel. Each page is loaded with fun, colorful illustrations. 
Sometimes a   day’s devotion is on one page, sometimes it’s two pages 
and   occasionally, seems to even be three pages. The devotions aren’t  
 numbered, just titled. Each devo begins with a verse, then goes into a 
  creative, free form sort of design where it discusses an idea and 
gives   something to think about. It does not have a pre-written prayer.
 It   encourages you to make it a point to talk to God every day though.
The book is meant to be used along with the next book:
Book: The Plans I Have For You Journal by Amy Parker, Illustrated by Vanessa Brantley-Newton, Zonderkidz, 2016
Book: Big Dreams Big Prayers Bible For Kids
And now, for the books that impressed me the most, 2 books I did a review on a while ago: 
 
Maybe
 Mia was the one who’d usually lead a charge, but Maddie wasn’t going to
 let this criminal get away. Not only had she been waiting all day to 
see “Sun-Splattered Afternoon,” but it was wrong to take a painting, 
something that had been made so long ago and which could never be 
replaced. Maddie made up her mind. Even if it was against the rules to 
run in a museum, this situation was obviously the exception. “He’s 
getting away!” she called to her sisters. Maddie sprinted for the 
stairs.
Book: London Art Chase by Natalie Grant, Zonderkidz, 2016
Genre: Realistic Fiction/Adventure
Target Audience: Girls 9-13
Subjects: Identity, Courage, Obedience, Sibling Relationships, Parent Relationship
Summary:
 A trip to London with Mom’s tour sounds great! A fancy hotel, a 
beautiful art museum, famous landmarks – what could be better? Well, six
 year old Lulu can think of something, but neither of her ten year old 
sisters agree, at least not until Maddie spies a man sneakily removing a
 painting from the wall of the museum and disappearing with it! Now 
Maddie is fully convinced of the value of solving a mystery! The trouble
 is that no one wants to take her seriously. The museum workers 
certainly don’t. And her twin doesn’t. And Miss Julia, her nanny 
doesn’t. Maddie knows what she saw and heard though.
 And she recognizes that maybe everyone’s doubts are ok – it gives 
Maddie a chance to prove her worth. Maybe she can figure out what her 
role as a Glimmer sister is this way.
Notes:
 London Art Chase is the first in the Glimmer Girls series – a series by
 music artist, Natalie Grant. She writes a story comparable to her own 
life – 3 daughters, the oldest two twins, a singer mom, a producer dad. 
The strength of the story is in the way the family lives out their 
faith, making it a party of everything they do. It shows young girls 
asking the kinds of questions girls do at that age and parents giving 
them the answers they need, directing them to the right source. In this 
first book, one of the ten year old twins is trying to figure out her 
role in the family. Their family motto is 
“Glimmer
 girls glitter and shine, but most of all be kind”. Maddie can’t figure 
out how she glitters or shines. She’s shy, non-confrontational and 
terrified of being on stage. When she fixates on solving a mystery 
everyone doubts exists, she finally finds the courage to take a stand on
 something and finds her place in the family. The spiritual emphasis 
elements in this book are everywhere. As mentioned above, the family is 
portrayed as a godly family trying to let their faith determine all of 
their actions. The mom reacts to situations in a normal mode, then 
forces herself to calm down and patiently listen to her daughter, 
imparting wisdom and understanding, intentionally guiding her daughter 
to what is right. For me personally, that’s where the highlight of the 
book is – in a couple conversations the mom has with Maddie, patiently 
listening, showing her that someone will take her seriously, and then 
teaching her to respond to fears and worries with prayer – turning them 
over to God to let Him deal with them. She uses Philippians 4:6-7 to 
show Maddie how to respond correctly to the situation.  The mom and the 
dad encourage the girls to pray about anything, just openly telling God 
what they are thinking and feeling. There is some discussion about God’s
 will – in kid terms of course. Maddie tries to convince herself that 
God wants her to stop the thief – herself, and that it’s ok to break her
 parents’ rules for it, then recognizes that it’s not true at all. She 
finally learns that God made her with her own way to “glimmer” and she 
doesn’t need to break rules to solve mysteries to do it. I highly 
recommend this book to young girls at the age of asking questions about 
their faith and their identity.  It does a great job showing realistic 
characters they could relate to while giving firm answers to the 
questions they have.
Spiritual Content Recommendation Scale: 5/5
Reviewer: J:-)mi
1
 John 2:5-6 – But if anyone obeys his word, love for God is truly made 
complete in them. This is how we know we are in him: whoever claims to 
live in him must live as Jesus did.
Mia
 rolled her coin in her hand, and as they passed by the well, she tossed
 it in. Please, God, help me solve this mystery. She had no idea if God 
answered prayers like this one, but she had to at least try. It’s for 
me, kind of, because I want to solve a mystery of my own, like Maddie. 
But it’s also for the animals. I don’t want them to be in danger.
Book: A Dolphin Wish by Natalie Grant, Zonderkidz, 2016
Genre: Realistic Fiction/Adventure
Target Audience: Girls 9-13
Subjects: Identity, Obedience, Sibling Relationships, Parent Relationship
Summary: Something is just off. Mia has felt it ever since the trip to London when Maddie pulled her disobedience stunt to solve a mystery. She’s not quite sure who her sister is anymore. And she’s kind of jealous. Maddie got praised for solving the mystery and showing courage. Maybe it’s time for Mia to solve her own mystery. Maybe then things will get back to normal. What could be mysterious at an Adventure Park though? Well, perhaps animals randomly escaping their pens and walking free around the park! Who on earth would risk hurting the animals by letting them out? Don’t they know all the dangers the animals are going to face? Mia no longer wants to solve the mystery just for herself. She wants to help protect the animals too! 
In this second book, the second of the twins is now trying to figure out who she is as she is growing up. She feels as though she and her twin are starting to separate a bit, there’s just this distance between them. Mia “felt like the world had turned upside down. It was the strangest feeling, as though someone had swapped her sister for a stranger”. She’s also, just like Maddie in book one, trying to figure out her role in the Glimmer family – what makes her sparkle and shine? She tries a couple of different things to get her answers or to put her world right again, but fails. The harder she tries to push her own agenda, the further away from her family she feels. Just as in the last book, a strength of the story comes with the character of the mom. When Mia talks with her about what she’s feeling, her mom explains that God did not make everything black and white and simple. She tells Mia that from God’s “perspective, right and wrong are simple to see. But from our limited perspective, it’s not simple at all”. She talks with her about how Jesus messed up the black and white system of the Pharisees and wouldn’t always explain Himself or answer all the questions asked of Him. She encourages Mia to take her concerns to God, to pray about them. Then she encourages Mia that it’s ok for her and Maddie to be carving out their own identity, that it doesn’t make either of them not Glimmer Girls. 
I highly recommend this book to young girls at the age of asking questions about their faith and their identity.  It does a great job showing realistic characters they could relate to while giving firm answers to the questions they have.
Spiritual Content Recommendation Scale: 5/5
Reviewer: J:-)mi
James 1:5 - If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.
Matthew 5:23-24 - “Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to them; then come and offer your gift.
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