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We hope you’re already planning to join us Thursday, May 8th at Avenue nightclub for an unforgettable evening in support of foster care awareness. If not, you can still get tickets here!

Here is just a sampling of the items we’ll have available for your bidding pleasure!

 

-Tiffany & Co. Necklace

-4 passes to the 17th annual WhiskyFest at the New York Marriott Marquis on October 29

-Yankees vs. Red Sox VIP Experience at Yankee Stadium

-Tiffany Sunglasses

-Tickets to Mets/Diamondbacks on May 24

-Farewell to Derek Jeter “The Final Season” Luxury Shadowbox with a Hand Signed Baseball

-Kate Spade Harmony Tote Handbag

 

Plus restaurant gift certificates, spa treatments, more memorabilia and more!

By Foundling Friend Celia McGee

 

Captain Cat

Written and illustrated by Inga Moore (Candlewick Press)

Ages 5-8

 

   It’s probably fair to say that from the days of sailing ships to the present, it was and remains highly out-of-the-ordinary to find a ship’s captain who is happiest criss-crossing the high seas in the company of many, many cats. In Inga Moore’s entertaining and beautiful new book, a captain, Captain Cat, has more cats than crew. More cats than an adorably handsome crew, made up of more than one creed and color.

 

   Boss of a three-master, it’s hard to find fault with him. Not only does he have fluffy white hair and a fluffy white beard that make him look a bit like a cat, he has so many reasons to have cats around. They’re very decorative perched all the way around the ship. Reading in his cozy berth at night, Captain Cat has a bunch of cats, purring and warm, on his tired legs, a cat by his shoulder to admire his colorful teacup, two to amuse him playing a game of tag, another studying the night sky next to a telescope, and art in the form of cat portraits hanging on his cabin’s walls.

 

  But there are actually loads of people for whom cats are not their cup of milk. Captain Cat’s pals from port to port are traders just like him—“Trading is a bit like swapping,” Moore explains—and they can’t believe what he’s forever trading prized and exotic objects for. (Cats.) Moore, famed for her book illustrations, gets even a camel to laughing at Captain Cat while glancing slyly out from the page.

 

   Doing the same thing year in and year out can get pretty tiresome. Yet boredom can also bring results. Captain Cat decides his change will be to sail seas where he’s never ventured, which he thoroughly enjoys. But not a ferocious storm in which he almost drowns.

 

   Basing her story on an old Italian folk tale, Moore beaches Captain Cat’s ship on a far-flung island. Captain Cat doesn’t seem to find it at all odd that the Queen is a darling girl of about ten with corkscrewed, dreadlocked hair topped by a tiny crown, that she rides a bike and reads piles of books, or that her Prime Minister isn’t much older. All that matters is that they know how to have a good time, inside the castle and out, which should apply as well to their banquets and feasts. But every time they sit down to eat, out come hordes and rows and bundles of rats. It’s Captain Cat to the rescue, or rather his cats!

 

  Naturally the Queen showers him with gems and jewels from her treasure room. But once a seaman always a seaman, and Captain Cat has many seas left to roam. Stopping briefly by his homeport, though, he inadvertently fills his cat-averse friends with greedy dreams of the wealth they can surely win from the Queen. Off they go to their just desserts.

 

 Moore makes sure these are no bowls of cream.  

 

Eddie Red Undercover: Mystery on Museum Mile

By Marcia Wells, illustrated by Marcos Calo (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Ages 9-12

 

   What’s in a name—more precisely, what’s in Edmund Xavier Lonnrot’s name, which comes attached to the occasional and, more often, accidental, hero of Marcia Wells’s debut novel? One reason 11-year-old  E.X.L. is not embarrassed by his interminable, dorky moniker—and for the time being accepts that he is a short, bespectacled nerd, albeit with a photographic memory–is that his parents have taught him to take pride in the history of his unusual surname.

 

His father, a librarian who “truly knows everything about everything,” has chronicled for him how their forebears, slaves in the antebellum South, were saddled with the last name of the man that owned them, apparently a German. The Edmund and Xavier part—go figure. But when the junior Lonnrot unexpectedly goes to work for the NYPD, a smart-aleck detective, who knows that “rot” means “red” in German, nicknames him Eddie Red.

 

   Eddie first gets tangled up with the police because of a bloody incident he witnessed in an unfriendly alley . Wells’s spot-on sense of the humor never abandons her: Grilled by the cops, a typical New York private-school kid, our hero thinks, “Where’s the trauma counselor? The psychiatric attention? I’ve been through a lot tonight.”

 

   From bad to worse, his father tells him that, because of cutbacks at the library, the family can no longer afford Senate, the Upper East Side school Eddie adores. That means leaving behind his best friend, Jonah, a likable, super-kinetic genius sporting both Attention Deficit and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, and an out-of-proportion fascination with history’s military leaders.The rest bothers Eddie not so much, though there is Jenny Miller, the prettiest and shyest girl in his class. Unlike “the rest of the girls…who were all abducted by aliens last year and came back wearing weird eye makeup and speaking only in giggles,” it gives him shivers just to think about her. He offers to get an afterschool job. Maybe for the Mafia?

 

   Lickety-split, the cops pick up on Eddie’s photographic memory and his ability to perfectly sketch anything and anyone that has come to rest there. It’s the gumshoe life for him—he is enlisted to stake out (after school and on weekends, of course) the notorious Picasso Gang, a group of art thieves specializing in museum hits. A paying job! Could it help him stay at Senate? For Eddie there follow boring surveillance daysand days and days–at the Neue Gallery and the Jewish Museum. In his earnest yet jokey narrative voice, he also relays useful information: The Frick is not a swear word.

 

  Sadly, such arcane knowledge can’t prevent him from making wrong turns, taking crooked cops at their word, almost getting offed by the bad guys, and generally riling Detective Bovano (the grumpy source of his nickname). Some clues may reside in a map of Manhattan, but darned if anybody can figure out where they areAh, here comes zany Jonah. Yet catching the thieves red-handed is not so easy, and involves Jonah convincing Eddie to dress up as a Girl Scout. Eddie in a wig is not his finest hour.

 

   But it does go to show that friendship matters, that smart is as smart does, and that shy, pretty girls are preferable to fake Girl Scouts.  And that Eddie’s parents will always love him no matter what. That at least he’s an ace at museums, and he loves his parents too.

 

 

Dirt Bikes, Drones, and Other Ways to Fly

By Conrad Wesselhoeft (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Ages 14 and up

 

   It’s amazing where video games can get you. 17-year-old Arlo Santiago lives in the town of Clay Allison (named for a grubby gunfighter), in Orphan County that says it all) in northeastern New Mexico, where he’s dealing, not very well, with his mother’s needless, violent death, his father’s descent from respected newspaper publisher to alcoholic, and his formerly rootin-tootin’ younger sister, Sioux-sie’s,  death-knell diagnosis of Huntington’s disease. Not versed in grieving, Arlo instead withdraws deeper into the escape that, besides riding his Yam 25 dirt bike, shuts out bleakness–he has recently placed Number One in the world at the scary video game Drone Pilot.

 

   That’s when the USAF comes calling from nearby White Sands air force base, luring him with cash and dreams of “T.F.O.G.” (Air Force speak for flying as though “touching the face of God”) if he will use his video skills on real drone reconnaissance in the so far unsuccessful attempt to locate and kill Caracal, the powerful Al Qaeda leader hiding in Pakistan’s North West Territories. Promised that he won’t have to go near the kill zone level—he draws the line at collateral human damage–he thinks, of his video-gaming, “For me it isn’t about violence and darkness. It’s about getting through the violence and darkness.” Whether or not this may be wishful thinking, he cranks his Yam up to mind-blurring, sorrow-transcending speeds between the shiny kill-testing base and home—which can be full of surprises.

 

   Home also means high school, and anyone not on the football team–like Arlo, his dirt-biker buddies and an intriguing, tall-for-a-girl newcomer–is a nobody. Arlo’s passion for the wild, open, mountainous landscape beyond the “scabby dog of a town” sets him further apart. Some of Wesselhoeft’s finest writing is rooted in the beauty and torments of the Southwest’s rugged nature, with Arlo as his modern-day frontiersman.

 

   Wesselhoeft is also a benign stealth bomber with his frequent moral and biblical implications. Arlo instructs his father that the full name of his chosen game “is Drone Pilot World War III: In the Valley of the Shadow.” He will also learn to see the distinctions among good, bad and self-destructive, and to act on them. He has already noticed that Drone Pilot “is extremely biased: every zone is a Muslim country,” just as he will realize the corruption of city officials siphoning off all water from the high-lying ranches and hillsides above town.  A girl is his guide.

 

   He has glimpsed, though shyly at first, with his habitual tough-guy stance, the possibility of downright love when the new student, an out-of-towner named Lee Fields, shows up from Seattle. Smarter than anyone, pretty, funny, and a spitfire on a Harley, she’s come to stay with her aunt while her father serves his fifth tour in the real Middle East. She becomes Arlo’s heart-throb and moral compass, which eventually adds up to his girlfriend. Her struggles are to recruit him away from deadly military exercises, from reckless daredevil bike jumping, and from signing onto a biker reality show with a $100,000 prize, presumably dead or alive.

 

  Arlo’s code name at White Sands was Rope Thrower. He will have to lasso life very differently from now on.

 

 

The Here and the Now

By Anne Brashares (Delacorte Press)

Ages 12 and up.

 

   There are no traveling pants in The Here and the Now, Ann Brashares’s return to teen fiction.  It is time traveling. But don’t assume trips to someplace like King Arthur’s court (Mark Twain took care of that), Jack the Ripper’s London, or a witchy New England. No aliens light-years ahead of earth come in for a landing, and no humans are transported to the future by creatures with antennae and three eyes. Brashares conceives temporal complications in a fresh way, with truth melded to frightening possibilities, happiness always shadowed by sadness, and fully requited love as nutritious as a poisoned apple.  

 

   It’s 2010, and Ethan Jarves, a teenager from suburban New York, is enjoying the solitude of casting for fish in Haverstraw Creek. Then out of the thin air left by what Ethan experiences as a turbulent storm appears a girl, naked, shivering and with a sequence of numbers scrawled on her arm. Fending off his help—except for his offer of his New York Giants sweatshirt, a true sign of love waiting in the wings—she disappears. Two years later: she walks into Ethan’s pre-calculus class, he finds out her name is Prenna, and she narrates the novel from then on. 

 

   Prenna’s having materialized by the fishing stream turns out to be far from the most unusual thing about her.  Along with some 1000 others, who arrived the same air-cleaving way, she has emigrated from the future, the year 2098. There all the ravages predicted about climate change had come true, and worse, and mankind was dying in an invincible epidemic caused by large, blood-sucking mosquitoes. Waiting among those chosen to leave their present—the future—to embed in a distant past they presumably hoped to change, were Prenna and her mother, but her father was missing and never joined them. Why and how this happened will be part of Prenna’s quest back in time.

 

   Brashares imagines a world–an everyday one by our standards–where Prenna and her ilk must watch TV constantly to learn how to talk, act, and react like 21st-century citizens of the larger metropolitan area. They’re big on “Friends.” Prenna, by necessity elusive, and Ethan don’t get to know each other well for another two years, occupied as Prenna is with trying to internalize the increasingly rigid rules with which the “counselors” in her carefully regimented, secretive community keep control over their fellow immigrants, training them to terminate any outsider who gets onto them. (Here in the present it’s called brainwashing.)

 

   The original reason handed down was that their unsuspecting ancestors had to be kept at arm’s length so they wouldn’t be contaminated by the germs of the future. In this calculation, the worst trespass is falling in love and “becoming intimate” with someone beyond their ranks. Not until the rules and rule-makers turn ever more dictatorial and lethal toward their own does Prenna decide that torturing and killing those who overstep certain bounds is not cool, especially since she and Ethan are falling in love. This is also what a cult looks like, or fabricated rationales for going to war.

 

   Somehow the belief that love can overcome all has stuck with humanity for a long time. The young couple’s sweet tenderness and longing for physical consummation makes them put their faith in it too. The death of a homeless man, a key to a Bronx storage space, an ancient (for some) drawing, and a fateful glance at a future newspaper clipping conspire to transform their love story into a cliffhanger. Some of those end happily, others not. Brashares explores the territory where the alternatives overlap.  

 

 

 

 This May, Billy’s Bakery will donate 50 cents of every Red Velvet cupcake sold online and at its Tribeca and Chelsea locations to The New York Foundling in support of National Foster Care Month. 

 

In 2003, Billy’s Bakery was founded with the goal of providing customers with classic American baked goods in a warm, friendly atmosphere. By baking all products on-site, Billy’s fill their 1940s-style stores with the delicious smells of fresh cakes and pies to bring back that delightful, warm feeling of Grandma’s kitchen. 

 

Enjoy a sweet treat and support The Foundling by visiting Billy’s Bakery online or in stores at 75 Franklin Street (b/w Broadway and Church) or 184 9th Avenue (b/w 21st and 22nd) this May!

April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. Here is a list of tips and resources aimed at helping to empower communities in the fight against child abuse. 

By Foundling Friend Celia McGee

 

Almost Super

by Marion Jensen (Harper)

AGES 8-12

 

   Leap years—when April hangs a 29th day on its rear–have a few, frankly corny, traditions attached. Among the rich and famous, Ja Rule has a Leap Year birthday. So did Lord Byron

 

  But it has a whole different meaning for the Bailey and Johnson families of Split Rock, an ordinary town in Middle America, where every April 29, those over 12 (in real years) in both families are granted superpowers. The zany result is that they also have to try very hard to blend in with their non-super-powered neighbors. One way appears to be with dorkiness (unless that’s not intentional), and with dorky names like Verna or Rodney or Rafter (that’s the first name of the teenage Bailey who narrates this tale, and what kind of name is that, anyway?). “Technically,” Rafter’s grandfather says, “we’re a bunch of freaks.”

 

   The problem is that the Baileys and Johnsons are sworn enemies—the Baileys proud they’re the super heroes, and the Johnsons the super villains. They fight all the time  (Rafter has begun to notice that Johnsons always show up in tea, which he suspects is a slick move). Some can fly, some are shape-shifters, others shoot fire or water out of their fingertips, others are just plain super-smart (this comes in handy in this Internet, computer science, and hacking age). Rafter is particularly scared of Juanita Johnson, who goes to his school, has been sending him dirty looks even before they get their superpowers, and, truth be told, strikes Rafter at inopportune moments as rather pretty. They are both about to learn that there are some qualities  in life even better than super powers, and that super powers are, in fact, pretty useless without them.

 

  Dawns April 29, with Rafter, his younger brother, Benny, and, doubtless, Juanita waiting with bated, about to be super-powered breath. But something goes terribly wrong. Their super power gifts are duds. Benny can turn his belly button from an innie to an outie and back again. Rafter can light polyester on fire with the touch of a hand. While Juanita—dud gift, too, and it has to do with spitting. As the three huddle drearily in their duddliness, they become close. To their shock, they learn each family thinks it’s the super heroes, and the other, the super villains. That leaves the dud-scarred threesome with the realization that maybe people, super-powered or not, are meant to get along. And that super powers make you feel better if you use them for good rather battling. Juanita has an uncle,for instance, who, though not of the super ilk, is a painter, and uses his art like a super power to bring out an inner truth in his sitters (his portrait of Juanita is lovely indeed).

 

   Thankfully, these three super-duds have not been robbed of their quick minds—put three heads together and their emerges a notably superior intelligence—or of the sense that something weird is happening in Split Rock. All three glimpsed unprecedented flashes of light, for example, just before they got their non-super powers.  Might someone just have been practicing on them before getting around to the destroying the fully super-powered? With courageous snooping, they encounter some sinister super-whackos bent on just that. Rafter, Benny and Juanita have to get to this scary scoundrel before he gets to the other Baileys and Johnsons.

 

   They’re resourceful, especially when acting as one, and once their families find out about the dastardly fellow—October Jones by name, and the leader of a super criminal clan—they not only strike a permanent truce, but consolidate to hunt down October and his gang before the bad guys get ideas about Baileys and Johnsons in other towns.

 

   Super hero or not, anyone can look into that future and figure there will be a sequel.    

 

 

The Ghost of the Mary Celeste

by Valerie Martin (Doubleday/Nan.A.Talese)

AGES 14 AND UP, AND ADULTS

 

   Hannah Briggs is 13 when the spirits of the dead start manifesting themselves to her, speaking of their loved ones, their passions and hopes for them—some rather creepy. It’s 1872 and the height of the 19th-centry Spiritualist movement. Hannah’s particular spirit visitor is her sister Sarah, who disappeared, under unknown circumstances, along with her young daughter and husband, off the merchant ship the Mary Celeste, which her husband captained. Nor was the crew anywhere to be found when the vessel was sighted, adrift and bereft of any human presence, in the waters off the Azores. It was towed o Gibraltar, to much rumor and speculation. Mutiny? Pirates?

 

 

   In the enthralling novel that Valerie Martin has conjured from this notorious piece of maritime history, we are made witness to what could have happened to the ship instead–horrifying, pitiless, inescapably violent, and beyond control of man. History is never just history. It’s a shifting, variable, subjective record of things past. Martin has extensive knowledge of how this lends itself to perhaps our favorite form of literary expression, fiction–which The Ghost of the Mary Celeste is also about.

 

   Hannah and generations of her seafaring Massachusetts family have lost many to the sea. So many that there is talk of a family “curse.” It is just such losses—traumatizing to those left behind and inexorably longing for the dead’s every familiar touch—that, not so many years after the Mary Celeste incident, sends hundreds flocking to see the famed and beautiful spirit medium and public speaker Violet Petra. They seek her out in private séances to help them communicate with and gain solace from their dear departed. For Violet’s message is this: take joy in the fact that the spirits are among us at all times, for the human and the supernatural world are as one. Spirits are here to announce, through Violet in her trances, that they are waiting patiently and tenderly for us to join them in their transcendently harmonious, picturesque and eternally spring-like beyond.

 

   Violet, then, is all the fashion, taken up by wealthy families whose sadness she has lifted, traveling in style, gracing the attractive campgrounds and vacation communities that have sprung up for the Spiritualist faithful, and mesmerizing all with her strange eyes and flowing hair. But she’s also under the scrutiny of the young female reporter Phoebe Grant, who is determined to prove that, like all so-called mediums, Violet is a fake. What she does find out is that Violet suffers from her own heartbreaks, her own cruelly brief love affair, and the growing fear that her powers are diminishing, her glories along with them. She and Phoebe become friendly, and one day, just by chance—or is it?—she thrusts into her hands the issue of Cornhill, the English magazine, with a version of the story of the Mary Celeste written under a pseudonym by a then unknown Conan Doyle. Doyle really did write and publish such a story, which helped start his career, and he threads through Martin’s novel, under often fictional circumstances, but with his factual racism stupendously intact and only momentarily shaken when he ends up making the acquaintance of an African-American intellectual and civil rights pioneer (also based on an historical figure). Throw in William James and the American Society for Psychical Research, the religious and historical forces that erupted at the height of the, Spiritualist fervor, and, in Martin’s hands, the blend becomes half-shrouded mystery mixed with cunning clues.

 

   I’d also like to note that the novelist Colleen Gleason recently published her first YA novel, the captivating Clockwork Scarab (Chronicle Books), about a detective duo formed by Mina Holmes (Sherlock’s niece) and Evaline Stoker (Bram Stoker is her dad). Sir Conan Doyle would be both shocked and proud.

 

The Tyrant’s Daughter

by J.C. Carleson (Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers)

AGES 12 AND UP

 

   Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, North Korea, Ukraine—over the decades and also in recent weeks we have watched these countries and others like them, at their most unstable and vicious, scroll across our television and computer screens, kick starting our outrage at dictators, totalitarians and self-appointed royal dynasties. Some of the more sickening images involve the mind-blowingly immense, incalculably costly, invariably vulgar palaces and estates built on the backs of the citizens their rulers have impoverished and oppressed, while sending the rest of their untold millions flying off to Swiss bank accounts.

 

   Author J.C. Carleson, a former undercover C.I.A. officer, draws on her experiences—mainly Baghdad, she writes in her Author’s Note—to open the doors on the intrigue, carelessness, frivolities, family bonds and close-bound murders that live within those mighty, well-guarded walls. There the families of the tyrants—unless displaced by coups or revolutionary eruptions —tend to remain, with few exceptions, obliviously cut off from economic and political realities, and also the ugly truths about those who may do evil but genuinely love them. Tyranny has a human face unseen by those kept innocent and ignorant by the very people who would sell out all others, wives, siblings, and trusted associates included.

 

   Such is the world Laila thinks she has left behind when, at 15, she, her mother and her little brother (at 6 already “The Little King”) are forced to flee their unnamed Muslim country after an overthrow orchestrated by her father’s brother, who murders him in front of his wife. Now, escorted there by a shady C.I.A. agent, they live in shabby, lonely togetherness in suburban Washington, D.C. Laila’s beautiful, perfect mother tries to keep up appearances while shopping at J.C.Penney, and beginning to drink. Laila is so desperate to fit into American culture that, about to enter the local high school, she asks for an “interpreter” not of the English language (which she has been taught to speak perfectly, with a British accent) but the customs of American adolescence. She finds that in Emmy, her first sincere friend.

 

   But, like the layers of burka, veils, scarves and formless clothing Laila’s mother used to shed in airplane bathrooms on their trips to Paris and other shopping  and social meccas, Laila begins to catch disturbing incongruities. Strange mountain tribesmen from her country hold meetings with her mother in the family living room. She picks up on unsettling conversations between her mother and Darren, their C.I.A. shadow, and must face not only the atrocious facts about her father and their background but what her mother’s increasingly stealthy and cold-blooded behavior might mean. In Laila’s psychological unraveling and depression, she even suspects Ian, the cool and kind-hearted schoolmate she takes as her boyfriend. She is also forced to change her her mind about Amir, the youngest of the tribesmen, when she hears why he is really in the U.S., and listens to him describe the chemical weapons used against his village back home. Declaring herself “The Invisible Queen,” she decides to plot against the plotters—whomever they may reveal themselves to be. That’s not so easy, more like devastating. But Laila will carry on with the quality most lacking in how she was raised—as her briefly honest mother says, “love.” It’s an informed, open-hearted, lessons-learned love for individuals with a right to her affection, for for those shut out of palaces and denied freedom, everywhere. Whether the people and life choices she encounters along her path are worthy, she will now be able to be the judge. 

 

 

Meeting Cezanne

by Michael Morpurgo, illustrated by Francois Place (Candlewick Press)

AGES 7-10

 

   If Michael Morpurgo’s name rings a bell with American parents, it’s likely they know him as the author of War Horse, which started life as a book for young readers, then morphed into a play that took audiences by storm. He was also the British Children’s Laureate from 2003 to 2005.

 

   That he has a profound understanding of troubled boys War Horse showed us, and Meeting Cezanne, though a far gentler, slimmer, more sunny book, has some of that element. The sunny part especially comes through in the alluring illustrations by Francois Place, Morpurgo’s frequent collaborator, which evoke the 60s of the book’s time period and sharing the glories and details of Provence.   

 

    It’s hard for a youngster to part from a parent, and Yannick really doesn’t get why he must leaves the mother he loves dearly–there seems not to be a father in the picture of their Parisian existence—to stay with relatives in distant Provence when she has to have an unspecified operation and spend a month in bed. Will they all be like his “big and bustling” Aunt Mathilde, who visits from the south on occasion and irritatingly smothers Yannick with hugs and kisses, and pinches his cheek, way to hard. His mother tries to convince him with stories of his Uncle Bruno’s convivial inn, and shows him a book of Cezanne paintings of the countryside near Aunt Mathilde’s house, “and he loved it there,” she says, “and he’s the greatest painter in the world.”

 

  Good to her word, Provence is beautiful and Yannick is picked up in a Deux Chevaux, no less, though his gorgeous, older cousin Amandine is snooty and rude, and he is expected to pitch in like the rest of the family working at the inn. Uncle Bruno takes a fatherly pity on the lonely Yannick, and starts teaching him cookery’s craft. Little does Bruno know that, despite this new education, he’s about to commit a terrible crime when the inn’s “best customer” comes to dine and leaves a doodle in one corner of the paper tablecloth. After dinner, Yannick discards the table cover with all the others, not realizing that this honored guest always leaves a little drawing for Uncle Bruno like this–treasured because “he’s the most famous painter in the world.” Soldiers don’t have a premium on courage, and young Yannick seeks out the great man, identifiable throughout by his striped cotton sweater. He apologizes, and gets a drawing from him (along with another father figure?) in return. But there’s something about that striped sweater…. Hiking back proudly to the inn with his drawing, everyone is impressed that he’s been befriended by…Picasso, Cezanne’s artistic heir.  That earns Bruno respect all around—and a heavenly kiss from Amandine. As for his meeting the great artists, “They’re both wonderful, and I’ve met both of them—if you see what I’m saying.” For his part, Yannick feels called to become a writer. If you see what I’m saying.

 

 

 

At The New York Foundling, we believe that love is as necessary as the water we drink and the air we breathe, and we’re committed to ensuring that every child feels the warmth of loving home. 

 

This February, help us show our kids that #LoveIsEverywhere. 

 

For every picture posted on Facebook and Instagram featuring a heart and tagged @TheNYFoundling and #LoveIsEverywhere, Foundling Board Member David Mullane will donate $1 to help us bring love to the lives of New York City’s children.

 

4th and 5th grade scholars from Haven Academy are featured in a commercial for the New York Lottery as part of the Gamble for Good campaign

Many thanks to Foundling friend Celia McGee for the latest issue of our Foundling Family Book Reviews. The characters in this month’s selections are embarking on new adventures, and we hope you are too! Happy 2014!

 

AGES 4-8

Paul Meets Bernadette, written and illustrated by Rosy Lamb (Candlewick Press)

   Going around in circles is the sad opposite of moving forward, of making a fresh start. In Paul Meets Bernadette, author Rosy Lamb, whose non-writing life is as a painter and sculptor, takes this familiar phrase and runs with it. Or rather swims. Paul is a solitary goldfish who thinks he’s perfectly content swimming round and round in a goldfish bowl that, in Lamb’s painterly illustrations, appears as an orb drawn in the shape of the world Paul completely ignores. (The different directions his circles take are also a subtle way of instilling in young readers just how many permutations of movement there are.) But then Bernadette, a fetching young lady goldfish, “drops in” from above, and encourages Paul to look at the world outside the bowl. You could say, though, that the seemingly sophisticated Bernadette is really an innocent—with the transformative vision of an artist—at heart. She’ll crack youngsters up as she instructs Paul that two bananas on a plate are a boat, a vase of flowers a “forest with trees of every color,” or a teapot, an elephant, of course, feeding its young when pouring tea into dainty cups. By this time Paul is head over tail in love with Bernadette. She reciprocates, and they swim happily ever after.

 

AGES 8-12

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, by Kathi Appelt (Atheneum)

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp

   It’s usually hard for young’uns to say good-by to their parents. But not for raccoon brothers Bingo and J’miah, as they excitedly part from Little Mama and Daddy-O. They’re proudly start their first jobs, as Official Sugar Man Swamp Scouts.  Appelt spins their epic in the best south Texas good-ole-boy, tall-tale-telling style. Yet she works in animal facts and Latin names, history and pre-history, and the skullduggery of greedy developers, a female alligator wrestler intent on turning the swamp into a theme park, and an evil-minded landowner aiming to kick young Chap Brayburn (he’s a human boy) and his mother out of their Paradise Pies Café. But there’s more trouble a-brewing in Blue Man Swamp, named after the gigantic, antediluvian, mostly sound- asleep creature who nonetheless rules the swamp, guarded by his trusty rattlesnake Gertrude—if he can be provoked to wake. Down from the north is sweeping a ravenous, destructive family of feral hogs, and only Blue Man can scare them away. Appelt, simultaneously hilarious and instructive, weaves her swamp-dweller thriller like a storyteller by a campfire or rocking slowly on the porch of the Paradise Pies Café. She has the knack of speaking directly, drawl and all, to the reader. (The swamp critters talk, too.) This should not take away from the sense of the downright mythical—the Blue Man is cousin, Appelt lets on, to “Bamanou, Sasquatch and Yeti.” Eat some of those Brayburn sweet sugar pies, and you’ll believe anything too.

 

AGES 12 AND UP

Defy, by Barbara B. Larson (Scholastic Press)  

Defy

   Transformation can be physical or psychological, of the mind and of the heart. Having watched most of her family and village brutally slaughtered in front of her by the army of her country’s arch-enemy, Blevon, young Alexa Hollen cuts off her hair, changes her voice and her stride, and starts a new life as Alex, a boy. Already a consummate swordsman, she joins her twin brother, Marcel, in the Prince’s Guard. While Larson, another debut novelist, is a little wobbly with her story’s vaguely medieval setting—it also runs to sorcerers and magic—when it comes to mano a mano fighting, matters of loyalty and trust, and the stirrings of young, carnal love, she is, as she might say in one of her modern slippages, more than ok. This is a smartly, lushly plotted book, mixing Alex/Alexa’s bravery and brief but agonizing captivity, her passion for yet distrust of her nation’s crown prince, Damian of Antion (his father is a cruel king), and the opposing forces of pride and sacrifice into a boiling cauldron of warfare and desire. There is a saying, Prince Damian tells her at one point, that “it’s better for one man to die than a whole nation to suffer.” Only toward the end does Alexa think she knows what he means. Luckily she is outsmarting herself, and the unexpected is the novel’s conclusion.

 

AGES 12 AND UP

Pioneer Girl, by Bich Minh Nguyen (Viking)

Pioneer girl

  Though published for grownups, this is a novel the young adult set can equally enjoy. The award-winning Nguyen, at once a longtime fan of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s pioneer life books and a sharp-eyed, tender chronicler of the immigrant experience (her family fled Vietnam in 1975), pulls off a novel that combines both.  Her main character, Lee Lien, a young Vietnamese- American struggling to finish her dissertation on Edith Wharton while unsuccessful at job-hunting and boyfriend complications, is forced into a fraught new life. She moves back in with her cold, widowed mother and sweet, aging grandfather. For years they have been moving from grim place to grim place running “Chinese buffet” restaurants throughout the mid-West, much like the Ingalls family and its perennial efforts to find a better life. But Lee is convinced she has an actual tie to Laura Ingalls Wilder, in the form of a gold pin engraved with a little house given to her grandfather at his Saigon café by an elderly American journalist named Rose during the Vietnam War. Since Wilder’s daughter’s name was also Rose, Lee impulsively sets out on a quest to find the truth about the pin—and more. She learns more about herself, her father’s death, the Ingalls family’s real and long history, and certainly that she’s more a Laura gal than an Edith. In Nguyen’s finely rendered novel, Lee is thrust into a detective story with very personal consequences. Just as her mother and grandfather learn to prosper from the new American taste for authentic ethnic cuisine, Lee gives Nguyen an unbelievably believable mystery not only to solve but to understand.   

Our friends at Ellary’s Greens are all about healthy eating for kids and adults! They’ve offered these great tips to help you and your family survive the holidays without overindulging (while still enjoying the festivities of course!).

 

1. Feed your kids a light meal or snack before going to the big party.  Things like: whole grain crackers, dried or fresh fruit, nuts, raw veggies, and hummus. 

 

2. When your kids arrive home starving and ready to eat, have healthy snacks sitting out on a counter, desk or table ready to go. 

-Try veggies and hummus on a platter cut up and ready to go when your kids come in the door.  You can buy baby carrots, baby tomatoes, red, yellow, and orange peppers, and cucumbers (only needing to cut the cucumbers and the peppers). 

-Unsalted peanuts and almonds are GREAT in a bowl with raisins for a savory-sweet treat.

-Grapes are nice too!

 

3.    When heading to parties try this philosophy: “Let’s have one here, and take the rest home”.  Delayed gratification means they won’t make impulsive decisions.  Often kids are of the mindset “If I don’t have it now, it will never be here again.”  They may get home and realize they don’t even want the sweets.  Or they may see all of the other healthy eating options at home.  They may get home and see there are too many sweets in their bag to handle.

 

4.    Offer to bring a dish to the party, so you know there will be at least one healthy item available.

 

5.   Teach your kids that it’s okay to say ‘No’.  If they are not hungry, they don’t need to accept the treats being offered to them.  And they can always bring the treats home, so they don’t have the feeling they’re missing out.

 

6. Trading can work: trading in Halloween candy for a toy or money.  The same can hold true for Christmas and Hanukkah candy.  Then bring the treats to your local police or fire station – they always appreciate it!

 

7. Save treats to donate and give to someone in need or who isn’t invited to parties.  Help your child feel good about sharing treats and foregoing gorging in the name of helping someone else and brightening his/her day.

 

Happy and Healthy Holidays to all! 

 

Precious, a resident in The Foundling’s Supportive Housing Program for youth aging out of foster care, speaks about her experience in foster care, and hopes for the future.

 

Help more people like Precious become better prepared for successful adulthood by donating to our Annual Appeal!

 

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