Tag Archives: summer reading

Summer Reading 2021

Hooray for summer! Sure, we usually say something along those lines this time of year, but this year? ONCE MORE WITH FEELING. And with that, we turn to our Tarrant correspondents for a peek into the reading bags, shelves, carts and– *squints* — trees, that keep our folks out of trouble.* 

We’re off reading and resting for the summer, on our annual publishing hiatus. We’ll rejoin all you fine folks come autumn.

Without further ado…

IT’S THE SUMMER READING GUIDE 2021 EDITION

*fires off airhorns*

*launches coffee pot into the air*

 

Jeanie Phillips

I cannot wait to dig into summer reading, and paradoxically, I wish I had waited on two books because I’d love to read them again for the very first time!

Angeline Boulley’s The Firekeeper’s Daughter is a mystery set in an Ojibwe community in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. I read it quickly for the plot and then reread it to soak up the indigenous ways of knowing and being. It was definitely my very favorite YA book of the year…

Until I devoured A Sitting in St. James by Rita Williams-Garcia, which is now tied for first! Williams-Garcia tells the story of a white family and the people they enslave with such nuance and skill. It was the perfect companion book to Scott’s recommendation How the Word is Passed: A Reckoning With the History of Slavery Across America.

Speaking of re-reading, I’ve got plans for that as well! 

Ross Gay’s The Book of Delights delighted me indeed, and I plan to read a delight a day this summer. (Here is a sample delight to whet your appetite.)

And I’m going to re-read an old favorite in anticipation of the sequel that is scheduled to arrive this fall.

I adored Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe when I first read it, and I can hardly wait to read Benjamin Alire Sáenz’s Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World.

summer reading 2021

 

And then there is the stack of books I am taking with me to the beach to be read in the sunshine and salt air.

Happy summer and happy reading to all of you!

 

 


Life LeGeros

Books come to us in so many different ways. Sometimes we find them the old fashion way: perusing library shelves.

Right now I’m reading The Kingdom of Copper, which is the second book in a series. I found the first one randomly, without ever hearing about the book or the author, and it is one of my absolute favorites. The author, S.A. Chakraborty, is an expert in medieval Islam and she is such a good writer that I can’t put it down — it is one of the rare books where I put all my others aside until I’m finished. I might just have to listen to the Hidden Djinn podcast to stay steeped in djinn lore.

A new way that I’ve been finding books in the last few years is when a friend or colleague is published. Alex Shevrin Venet’s Equity-Centered Trauma-Informed Education falls in that category. I’ve learned so much from Alex over the years, and followed (from afar) her writing process. To now have her book in my hand, and to see the education world going gaga over her genius, is so exciting. The parts that I’ve read so far are as profound and practical as I’d expect from somebody with Alex’s brilliance, compassion, and experience.

Then there are those books that you just need. Like when you need to talk to your tween daughter about something complicated or embarrassing.

That’s how I found and ordered (to my local independent bookstore, of course) Fourteen Talks by Age Fourteen by Michelle Icard. She seems to have a good handle on adolescent psychology so I’ll be leaning on this one heavily for the next few years.

More and more often I have the experience of being introduced to books (and music and TV shows) that my daughters bring home. Interestingly, both of my daughters recently brought home books from the library that center trans characters.

Ayla, 9 years old, says I simply must read Zenobia July

And Zoe, 11, has invited me to read with her Sissy: A Coming-of-Gender Story, which is a memoir by Jacob Tobia (who apparently played a character on one of our family fave shows, She-Ra).

Finally, there’s always the To Be Read pile.

I look forward to continuing my lifelong project of unlearning/relearning history via Clint Smith’s How the Word is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America. Along with many of the other books already in that pile (or recently added due to my fine colleagues!)

Here’s hoping that some good books make their way to you and that you have as much time to read this summer as you’d like. You deserve it!

Photo of a stack of books

 

 

 


Susan Hennessey

Shifting into summer mode sometimes is nuanced. Even when I’m no longer in scheduled meetings or following a strict timeline, I still find myself stuck in a schedule mindset.

A kick in the pants for me to shift modes is my summer reading stack.

This summer I am eager to start a new book, revisit two old favorites, and dig deep into something I only skimmed the surface of.

And just like every Zoom meeting I’ve engaged with over this past year, my cat Tink needs to make her presence known. She’ll be right there with me while I dig in.

summer reading 2021
Editorial note: there is, in fact, a cat in this picture.

 

We Contain Multitudes by Sarah Henstra tops my list because who doesn’t want to dive head first into a first-love love story revealed through letters exchanged, and one that alludes to Walt Whitman’s writing throughout.

Next, I plan to revisit two old favorites: one for a laugh at the absurdity of things —  When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris — and one that fills me with hope, as I laugh: Almost Everything: Notes on Hope by Anne Lamott.

And finally on the list, a book I purchased this year and skimmed for insights, but didn’t give it the time it deserved: Myron Dueck’s Giving Students a Say: Smatter Assessment Practices to Empower and Engage.

 


Emily Hoyler

Last summer I bought a camping hammock, the kind that comes with its own straps and fastens anywhere fitting. It’s an essential summer reading accessory for me.

And being slung between two trees is an especially apt setting for my some of my summer reading selections.

First I’ll be diving into Suzanne Simard’s Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest. This is doubly exciting, because Simard was the inspiration for one of the characters in a previous, glorious summer read, The Overstory by Richard Powers. My arboreal daydreams will continue with Peter Wohlleben’s The Heartbeat of Trees: Embracing Our Ancient Bond with Forests and Nature. But I won’t spend the whole summer in the trees.

(Ok, actually, I might.)


 

I can’t wait to dive into adrienne maree brown’s Holding Change: The Way of Emergent Strategy Facilitation and Mediation. I’ve shared before my love of brown’s Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds, so I’m excited for this more practical facilitation guide.

I’ve been lovingly admiring Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019,edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain, perched on my nightstand for months, and it’s collection of essays will lend themselves nicely to short bursts of reading.

And of course there will need to be some escape fiction. Of course.

While much of that will be determined impulsively and intuitively, I can not wait to get my hands on Chris Bohjalian’s Hour of the Witch.The most disappointing part about this choice is that it will probably be devoured in a day. Good thing that there are so many other treasures waiting to be discovered!

 


Scott Thompson

For those who know me… I’m a list person. I need them to keep me focused and on task but I get stressed when they get too long. The book list follows a different set of rules.  I’d say a book a day gets added to the “you need to read this” list. So when summer rolls around the list gets some special attention. When things slow down a bit, here are my first two reads for the summer.

  • How the Word is Passed: A Reckoning with The History of Slavery In America by Clint Smith.
  • The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race by Walter Isaacson

 


Rachel Mark

I love reading in the summertime. For one, reading during the day always feels like such a luxury. Whether I’m in the backyard, in a beach chair, or just reading in bed at 8 am, it feels like a delicious treat.

These are the books that I hope to devour this summer.

Too Bright to See by Kyle Lukoff is one of our MGI reads for this June. I am already into this middle grade novel, and I know it’s so good. The main character, Bug has experienced an important loss and she’s grieving and searching for her identity in a small town in Vermont. It’s a great story that involves some ghosts, gender identity, and coming of age. I highly recommend it to teachers!

Another book on my list is You Are Your Best Thing: Vulnerability, Shame Resilience, and the Black Experience edited by Tarana Burke and Brene Brown. This book is an anthology of essays by black writers discussing topics on shame and healing. I have deep respect for these two women and know that this book will shape my heart and my head.

My book group has chosen to read The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid. I don’t know too much about this except it’s the fictional story of an old Hollywood icon – probably loosely based on Elizabeth Taylor. I was eager to read it since I loved the author’s book Daisy Jones & the Six.

The final book on my summer shortlist is The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave. I chose this book as my “candy” reading. It looks like a page-turner mystery about a woman whose husband goes missing. She has to discover his hidden past and protect his daughter. While reading this book is not going to raise my IQ, I can’t resist; I can just get lost in the story and let time fly by. Isn’t that what summer reading is about?!


 

 

 


Audrey Homan

Hoo. This particular summer reading list’s a little bittersweet. After 11 years at the Tarrant Institute, in July I’ll be leaving to join the crew at the UVM Center on Disability and Community Inclusion (CDCI). I could not be more excited about the chance to work with the team there. Could not.

At the same time, I am intensely grateful for the chance to have worked with the kind and generous people both at the Tarrant Institute and in every classroom generous enough to invite me in for a chat. I have learned so much from all of you.

So what’s in the reading to-go bag? 

I Didn’t Choose The Late-Night DJ Life…

It continues to choose me, even while recording from home. 

I’m on a deep dive into the history of radio in the United States. After having worked through Lonesome Cowgirls & Honky Tonk Angels: The Women of Barn Dance Radio, I’m on to Voice Over: The Making of Black Radio. I’m also reading Rebel Radio: The Story of El Salvador’s Radio Venceremos, although I am aware that El Salvador is not in the United States.

Oh! And in case that wasn’t enough, I’ve finally gotten hold of the final book in Joyce Krieg’s Sacramento-set radio mystery series, Riding Gain.

It’s Never the Sharks’ Year, Dude

At the point of this writing it’s 108 days until October 12, 2021, also known as the start of the NHL 2021-2022 season. A little light hockey reading should tide me over. 

First up, Zamboni Rodeo: Chasing Hockey Dreams from Austin to Albuquerque, telling the story of one season in the late great career of the Texas-based WPHL’s Ice Bats (real team; not making that up). On deck (which is not a hockey term) is Shorthanded: The Untold Story of the Seals, Hockey’s Most Colorful Team. Who knew that Oakland and Cleveland spent 1976 fighting over an NHL team? Now just look at them (hockey-wise). Tsk tsk. 

Plus! Crossing the Line: The Outrageous Story of a Hockey Original, the rip-roaring 1970s autobiography of Boston Bruins tough guy Derek Sanderson and his hair. Cannot wait.  

And with that, my young onions, your editor is out. Thank you very much for reading.

Audrey Homan, 2014 edition.
2014 summer reading flashback.

 

 


Happy reading, everyone! We wish you a restful and rejuvenating summer break.

 

 

*Don’t quote us on that come September.

Summertiiiiiiiiiiiiime

And the reading is eeeeeasy.

Time to pull out your bicycle, kayak, or barbecue. Or curl up in the hammock, on a lounge chair, or with your beach towel and READ!  It’s easy to lose yourself in a book as you relax, rejoice and rejuvenate after a long school year. We’ve got some great summertime book suggestions for you. And we’d love to hear what you are reading for summer 2019 (because our lists are not quite long enough). So, get out your library cards, here we go!

Katy Farber

I read aloud Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga to my daughters. We loved meeting Jude, who moves from Syria to Cincinnati to live with relatives, leaving behind her older brother and father. Jude’s spirit is humorous, inspiring, and contagious. I particularly loved the safe and supportive culture the ELL teacher established at Jude’s school, and Jude navigating growing up, a new school, and wanting to be seen and heard, all at the same time.

I am reading aloud The Benefits of Being an Octopus by Ann Braden to get ready to meet the author and have a book club discussion at the Middle Grades Institute which we are all very excited about. We are currently cheering for Zoey and her family as they make some big decisions.

Katy with her summer reads

I’m also reading Troublemakers: Lessons in Freedom from Young Children at School by Carla Shalaby. This book is truly transformative in terms of framing education as

teaching love and learning freedom

and a place to imagine school as a

deeply human, wildly revolutionary site of possibility.

It is a close look at classroom cultures, structures, and teacher practices and how these impact students that are outside of the “norm.” It unflinchingly illuminates what this does to them, over time — how compliance and punishment cultures can harm our most vulnerable students, often for a lifetime.

I can’t wait to listen to the Ani Difranco read her book No Walls and the Recurring Dream. Ani’s songs were transformative for me as a woman in my 20s and still resonate today. I look forward to hearing about how and why she wrote many of the songs that impacted my life and understanding about finding my voice, speaking up, and artistic expression. And, if you haven’t heard it, she released an album with the songs mentioned in the book, redone, acoustically, and it is a stunning thing of beauty.

Jeanie Phillips

I loved The Overstory by Richard Powers, which made me look at trees differently, and summertime is a great time for looking at trees!  What begins as a series of short stories centering trees becomes a complex ecosystem that was so compelling I may just have to read it again.

When I interviewed VT students about the books they love I heard two messages loud and clear: books with diverse representation AND fantasy!  

Once & Future meets both of those requirements. It’s a retelling of King Arthur set in a future without homophobia, racism, sexism, or reliance on the gender binary. BUT also without a viable earth or checks on the Mercer Corporation, Capitalists in Chief. Ari Helix is the 42nd incarnation of King Arthur. With the help of Merlin and her motley band of knights, she finds herself on a quest to find her parents, avenge her home planet, defeat Mercer, and unite the universe.

Favorite reading chair

Finally, teaching is hard work!  I need all of the resilience I can get, so I’m spending some time this summer with Elena Aguilar’s Onward: Cultivating Emotional Resilience in Educators and the Onward Workbook.

Life LeGeros

Ivy Aberdeen’s Letter to the World by Ashley Herring Blake is written in simple yet elegant language that expresses complex ideas beautifully. I have never read a book that so perfectly captures what it feels like to have a crush. Almost everybody in my family read it separately but I bet it would make a wonderful read aloud.

Small Spaces by Katherine Arden is on this coming years Vermont Middle Grades choice award list. This book, written by a Vermont author, has become one of my daughter’s favorites. She says it is super scary and very cool. I can’t wait to read it!

Black Appetite. White Food. Issues of Race, Voice, and Justice Within and Beyond the Classroom by Jamila Lyiscott is a book that I look forward to reading, savoring, and then re-reading many times. I saw the author speak last fall and was deeply moved by her insights about education and systemic racism. The book interweaves critical analysis, poetry, and practical tools to inspire and support transformation. Ever the teacher, Dr. Lyiscott even includes optional exercises at the end of each chapter to deepen understanding.

The City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty is a whirlwind of adventure, magic, and hilarious dialogue. The author calls her work “historical fan fiction” or “speculative fiction.” She draws on Islamic lore to vividly paint a fascinating world (or city, rather) of the djinn. The main character is morally ambiguous, brave, and did I mention hilarious? She’s the best protagonist I’ve met in a long while. I can’t wait to dig into the rest of the trilogy this summer.

Rachel Mark

I’m reading two highly recommended new YA books that come with rave reviews.  The first book is The 57 Bus by Dashka Slater, based on recommendations from so many great reader friends. The second is Hey, Kiddo by Jarrett Krosozcka. This graphic novel was my gift to my fifteen-year-old son, but I want to read it myself.

I’m looking forward to reading the newest book by Daniel Pink, When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing. I love Pink’s readable psychology, and I think there are always great transfer and applicability to education settings.

I’m really excited to read Educated by Tara Westover. I have literally been saving this book for summer 2019. Memoirs always interest me, and this one unites with my love of education.

Susan Hennessey

Books and flowers

The image above is of my pleasure reads…at least a second if not third run through of Anne Lamott’s book Almost Everything: Notes on Hope on the top of the list, because who doesn’t need more hope?!  The Nightingale is historical fiction set in France during the second world war and promises to sweep me away to another time and place.  Jennifer Egan’s Manhattan Beach is also set during WWII, but is more of a thriller. And speaking of thrills…Denise Mina’s Conviction is described as a wild weird suspense tale whose main character is a podcast addict (reminds me of someone I know). Thrilled to escape with her.

Jay McTighe & Judy Willis’s Upgrade Your Teaching: Understanding by Design Meets Neuroscience combines two of my professional interests: the science of learning AND thoughtful instructional planning.

Audrey Homan

I’m continuing a long-standing policy of doing absolutely nada in terms of work-related reading during the summer vacation.

(See also: vacation, winter).

My plan is to positively wallow in crime. First order of business? Catching up with Jessica McDaniels, Manchester-based detective inspector and troublemaker extraordinaire. The latest three books in the 13-book series are Nothing But Trouble, Eye for An Eye, and Silent Suspect. No, you can’t read them out of order. At this point in the series, some very old chickens are coming home to roost and it’s all a bit nail-biting. Speaking of sins of the fathers, Rebus may finally have run out of rope in Ian Rankin’s latest, In A House of Lies. I’m much more agnostic about reading this series in order. Just grab one and knock yourself out.

Out of order and proud of it is #3 in Val McDermid’s new Edinburgh-based series: The Skeleton Road. It’s lovely and terrible and filled with buildings and weather, which I heartily approve of, and long sins of war, which I don’t. Still, a really good read. Passes the Bechdel Test.

The new Logan McRae isn’t out until next April and the next Vera Stanhope mystery’s set in November, so that leaves me with Dervla McTiernan’s The Ruin, with its promise of both gritty mystery and a potentially haunted house. Victories all around!

Should I mention the rest of the large stack of fictional criminal endeavors I have cued up to read this summer? Or are we already all worried enough? Oh, all right, one more: Boom Town: The Fantastical Saga of the Founding of Oklahoma City, Its Chaotic Founding, Its Apocalyptic Weather, Purloined Basketball Team and the Dream of Becoming a World-Class Metropolis.

What’s that, you say? Sounds more like American history than crime?

Buddy, do I have some bad news for you about Manifest Destiny.

Emily Hoyler

Emily reading in a hammock

I’ve got at least two purely professional books in my stack this summer.  I’ve never read Parker Palmer’s classic The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher’s Life, but it keeps getting mentioned, so I’m going to give it a go. I’m also very interested in how we cultivate growth cultures for both students and adults, so I’ve also got An Everyone Culture: Becoming a Developmentally Deliberate Organization by Bob Kegan & Lisa Laskow Lahey in the stack.  This one was recommended at a workshop I attended at the Deeper Learning conference at High Tech High.

I feel a little bit like Chicken Little lately, as my concern panic about climate change (i.e. the apocalypse) has really ramped up after diving more into the current science and politics.

(Especially as summarized in this paper, Deep Adaptation: A Map for Navigating Climate Tragedy, by University of Cambria sustainability leadership professor Jem Bendell).  My Facebook feed has become a horror show of climate change headlines. I’ve been thinking a lot about what to do with my climate reckoning.  So, obviously, I’m going to do some reading.  My penchant for dystopian literature comes in handy here, and I’m currently reading Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower (Earthseed #1). This story follows a young woman living in an eerily familiar near-future world wracked by climate tragedy as she navigates the nature of change itself.

Inspired by Butler’s musings on the nature of change, adrienne maree brown’s Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds encourages us to embrace and dance with change rather than futilely resist. I’ve also been grappling with how to connect with others around these concerns, so I’ve collected Say What You Mean: A Mindful Approach to Non-violent Communication by Oren Jay Sofer and Coming Back to Life: The Updated Guide to the Work that Reconnects Joanna Macy & Molly Young Brown as texts to help me navigate these conversations.  Finally, inspired by numerous recommendations by friends, I have Richard Powers’ The Overstory on my nightstand so that I might touch some beauty in all of this.

Scott Thompson

The above books capture my excitement for exploration and travel. My last trip driving cross country was in 1997 and I think it’s time for another. I have been specifically reading about the Northwest. I was there 3 years ago to visit a friend and was amazed by the beauty. If you are looking for a destination, please consider the Northwest. My other “Northwest” interest is, and has been, Alaska. It’s a bit of a wish but maybe one day it will happen.

As a self-confessed foodie, I love to try my hand at pretending to be a chef. I’ve been following Chef Jamie Oliver for a few years now and get excited every time I get a new cookbook from him. I was raised by British parents, thus British meals, and can connect with Jamie as his cooking represents the Brits very well. He has a rustic and simple style and he’s quite a character as well. Also wanted to keep it local! The Vermont Farm Table Cookbook brings it a little closer to home with a similar style to Jamie but with a Vermont infused menu.

What are you reading this summer?

Learn Like a Pirate: Key takeaways

Katy’s 2016 Summer Reading

reflection for educatorsSomething about this book title and summer reading fits perfectly. The open ocean, pirates, and fierce independence. I’m hoping you have a bit of time to settle into some reading for fun and some that inspires you in the classroom to have students take on more leadership and develop their own independence.

Continue reading Learn Like a Pirate: Key takeaways