Showing posts with label middle grade fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label middle grade fiction. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2022

Harley James and the Peril of the Pirate's Curse by Leah Cupps (VBB, excerpt, and GIVEAWAY) GFT


Harley James and the Peril of the Pirate's Curse

by 

Leah Cupps

 

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GENRE: Middle Grade Fiction

 

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BLURB:

 

Will Harley find the magic pearl before Port Royal is destroyed?

 

Harley James, explorer and amateur cryptologist, has just arrived in Port Royal, Jamaica—home to the Caribbean’s famous sunken pirate city. Her latest mission? Prevent a mysterious, mythical blue pearl from being discovered and prevent city’s total destruction.

 

No sweat for an adventurer like Harley, right?

 

But just when Harley thinks she’s on the right track, everything she believes is turned upside-down. Her friends become enemies; her enemies become friends; and Harley isn’t sure who to trust—including the ghost who’s started following her around.

 

With time running out, Harley must rely on her codebreaking expertise to discover the truth, solve the riddles, and save the city from certain disaster!

 

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EXCERPT

 

Standing next to Dad was the captain of the ship, Tom. He was really tall—six foot something—and had teeth that lit up against his dark skin when he grinned.

I looked back toward the city of Port Royal, with all its boats and bustle. From where I stood, it was only about two inches tall on the horizon. Definitely far enough away that we weren’t going to crash into a wharf, especially with Captain Tom at the helm. Except for the fact that he was now standing next to me on the deck.

“Wait a minute,” I said, glancing at Tom. “If you’re here, who’s driving this thing?”

It’s bad enough being seasick, but being seasick on an out-of-control ship? That’s even worse, I thought.

“Oh, we’ll be fine for a bit,” Tom said. “This ship, she can almost steer herself.”

I clutched my stomach, not because I didn’t believe him but because another wave hit up against the ship, sending my guts into a nosedive.

Tom laughed. “You worried about your tummy? I have some tricks that may help. Walk with me.”

Dad nodded to me, signaling it was okay to follow. Dad is very overprotective of me, to the point where I get completely annoyed. Granted, I’m only eleven years old, but I am very capable of taking care of myself. In fact, last year, I saved the world from an army of Mayan zombies by stealing back a magical statue from a super bad guy.


The book is $.99 for a limited time

(please check price before purchase)

Amazon link 


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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

Leah Cupps is an author, designer and entrepreneur. She came up with the idea for Harley James with her oldest daughter Savannah. Savannah had taken an interest in Mayan history and so the two of them worked together to come up with the idea for the first Harley James book; the Mystery of the Mayan Kings.

 

Leah lives in Indiana with her husband and three children. She is also the cofounder of Vision Forty Press, a small family owned publishing company.

  

Author website

 

 

Author social media links

Instagram

Facebook


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GIVEAWAY


a Rafflecopter giveaway


The tour dates can be found here

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

KidVenture: Twelve Weeks To Midnight Blue by Steve Searfoss (Spotlight, excerpt, review, and GIVEAWAY) GFT

 


 

 

KidVenture: Twelve Weeks To Midnight Blue

by 

Steve Searfoss

 

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GENRE:   Middle Grade Fiction

 

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BLURB:

 

Chance Sterling launches a pool cleaning business over the summer. Join Chance as he looks for new customers, discovers how much to charge them, takes on a business partner, recruits an employee, deals with difficult clients, and figures out how to make a profit. He has twelve weeks to reach his goal. Will he make it? Only if he takes some chances.

KidVenture stories are business adventures where kids figure out how to market their company, understand risk, and negotiate. Each chapter ends with a challenge, including business decisions, ethical dilemmas and interpersonal conflict for young readers to wrestle with. As the story progresses, the characters track revenue, costs, profit margin, and other key metrics which are explained in simple, fun ways that tie into the story.

 

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EXCERPT

 

If anyone tells you that kids can’t start a business, don’t listen to them. They can. I should know, because I did. People sometimes ask me how KidVenture started and how it got its name. Well, I’ll tell you. It all started the summer before sixth grade. All I remember about that summer is that it was hot, so hot I thought I would melt. That and my sister Addison kept annoying me. You could say I was boiling and steaming that summer.

 

My dad told me he would pay me ten bucks to clean the pool. It was a pretty good deal. I’d take a net and scoop out all the leaves and dead bugs that had landed in the water. It took me about two hours to clean the pool so I figure I was making about five dollars an hour. Not bad for a ten-year-old kid.

 

I thought it was going to be a one-time gig, but the following week my dad asked me if I wanted to clean the pool again.

 

“But I already did,” I said. He told me to go take a look. I couldn’t believe it. The pool was full of leaves and dead bugs again. I had spent all the money I made from cleaning the pool the week before on a slingshot, two comic books and an ice cream cone. I needed the cash so I said yes.

 

Next thing you know, I’m cleaning the pool every week and making an easy ten bucks each time. After a couple weeks, I realized I could save my money and buy that bicycle I had seen one time at that big sporting goods store on Wilson Street. The bike was super cool. When I looked at the sticker, it said the color was midnight blue. I didn’t know what that meant, except that it sounded dangerous and I liked that. I asked my dad if we could get it and he said, which is the grown-up way of saying No, but I want to let you down easy.

 

The bike, the dangerous one, cost $225. Which is way more money than a ten-year-old could ever hope to get. That is, unless said impoverished ten-year-old had a job, which I now apparently had.

 

“It’s going to take forever to save up for that bike,” I said, after I had just finished cleaning the pool for the second time, and my dad handed me a crisp ten dollar bill.

 

“No, not forever,” my dad retorted.  “You’ll save up $225 in no time.”

 

“Not when I’m only making ten bucks a week.” I started to feel sorry for myself and walked away.

 

Then I turned around.  “Dad, how long will it take if I save all my pool cleaning money?”

 

“You figure it out,” my dad said, and handed me a paper and pencil.

 

“But I hate math!” I protested.

 

“Well then you’re right. It will take forever,” my dad said and returned to reading his newspaper.

 

“Oh all right,” I sighed. “Hand me the pencil.”

 

I started scribbling some numbers.

 

“Twenty…Twenty-two…Twenty-three! No, wait. Twenty-two and a half weeks!” I shouted excitedly.

 

“How many months is that?” my dad asked.

 

“Ugh. More math? Seriously?”

 

“Seriously.”

 

My dad has a way with words. I began scribbling numbers again. “Let’s see, four weeks in a month, approximately, so that works out to…” I mumbled.

 

“Five-point-six-two-3ve months.” I said triumphantly.

 

“That’s right,” my dad smiled. “So about five and a half months.”

 

“Wait…” I said dejectedly. “Oh no!”

 

“What?” “That’s five and a half months, if I don’t buy any more ice cream.”

 

“True.”

 

“Better call it six months.”

 

“Six months is not a long time,” my dad insisted.

 

“It is!” I scowled. “At this rate I might was well just wait till Christmas.”

 

A couple more weeks went by, and even though I dreamed of mint chocolate chip ice cream almost every night, I had managed to save all of my pool money. I had $30 tucked away in my bike fund when I suddenly had an idea.

 

I went straight to my dad and declared, “Dad! Dad! I have an idea.” He put his newspaper down slowly and raised an eyebrow.

 

“Yes?”

 

I could barely contain myself. “How about you pay me $20 for cleaning the pool!”

 

“$20?”

 

“Yes! Yes! Twenty buckaroos. I can’t believe I didn’t think of this sooner. Twenty dollars for cleaning the pool instead of ten.”

 

“Hm….I like it.”

 

“You do?” I have to admit, even as excited as I was, I wasn’t really expecting the conversation to go so well.

 

“You’re negotiating,” my dad said. “I like that.”

 

“Great!” I exclaimed. “Wait, what’s negotiating?”

 

“It’s what you’re doing now,” my dad said. “Asking for more.”

 

“Great! Awesome. So, is that a yes?”

 

“No.”

 

“But why not? I’m negotiating, just like you said.”

 

“Yes,” my dad said. And then he smiled. I recognized that same smile. It was the smile he had when he told me when I was three years old that Santa had made a wrong turn somewhere east of Winnipeg on his way to our house and there would be no Christmas presents that year.

 

“You’re forgetting that I’m negotiating too.”

 

My mom had her own smile. It was the smile that immediately told my dad to stop making the children cry on Christmas Eve.

 

“And I want to know,” my Dad continued, still smiling, “why would I pay more for the exact same pool cleaning service you’re already providing for the handsome sum of $10.”

 

I had to admit he had a point. Where was Mom? I could really use her help right now.

 

 “You raise an interesting question,” I said, trying to sound as serious as I could. “I’ll have to think about that and get back to you.”

 

I couldn’t sleep that night. I was thinking about what I could do that would be different than just the same pool cleaning service I offered. What could I offer my dad that would be of more value, so I could charge more?

 

Buy links:


Amazon

Barnes & Noble

 

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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

I wrote my first KidVenture book after years of making up stories to teach my kids about business and economics. Whenever they'd ask how something works or why things were a certain way, I would say, "Let's pretend you have a business that sells..." and off we'd go. What would start as a simple hypothetical to explain a concept would become an adventure spanning several days as my kids would come back with new questions which would spawn more plot twists. Rather than give them quick answers, I tried to create cliffhangers to get them to really think through an idea and make the experience as interactive as possible.


 

I try to bring that same spirit of fun, curiosity and challenge to each KidVenture book. That’s why every chapter ends with a dilemma and a set of questions. KidVenture books are fun for kids to read alone, and even more fun to read together and discuss. There are plenty of books where kids learn about being doctors and astronauts and firefighters. There are hardly any where they learn what it’s like to run small business. KidVenture is different. The companies the kids start are modest and simple, but the themes are serious and important.


 

I’m an entrepreneur who has started a half dozen or so businesses and have had my share of failures. My dad was an entrepreneur and as a kid I used to love asking him about his business and learning the ins and outs of what to do and not do. Mistakes make the best stories — and the best lessons. I wanted to write a business book that was realistic, where you get to see the characters stumble and wander and reset, the way entrepreneurs do in real life. Unlike most books and movies where business is portrayed as easy, where all you need is one good idea and the desire to be successful, the characters in KidVenture find that every day brings new problems to solve.

 

KidVenture Links

 

Website

 

Amazon author page

 

Goodreads

 

Facebook

 

Twitter

 

Instagram

 

Pinterest

 

 

 

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GIVEAWAY

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

The tour dates can be found here

 

 

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 My review:

 

4.5 out of 5 stars

 

 

KidVenture: Twelve Weeks to Midnight Blue by Steve Searfoss follows ten-year-old Chance Sterling as he parlays a chore into a quest to obtain a new bike and learns the principles of entrepeneurship during the journey.

 

 

This children’s book is both an entertaining story and a fantastic way to explain the concepts involved in setting up a business. I love that things gradually get more and more complicated but the terms and concepts are demonstrated in an easy to understand and relevant fashion. The math problems that accompany the progression of Chance’s undertaking are straightforward and illustrate the concepts he is trying to grasp. The ideas of dependability, creativity, partnership, and friendship are explored in a fun and enjoyable manner. I hope there are even more of these educational and enlightening tales to come.

 

 

A copy of this title was provided for review

 

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Sophie Washington: Lemonade Day by Tonya Duncan Ellis (Spotlight, excerpt, review, and GIVEAWAY) GFT


 

Sophie Washington: Lemonade Day

by 

Tonya Duncan Ellis

 

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GENRE:   Children's Middle Grade

 

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BLURB:

 

When Life Gives You Lemons…Make Lemonade
Sixth-grader Sophie Washington and friends learn lessons about entrepreneurship and team work when they sign up for a city-wide, Lemonade Day event. Sophie wants to buy her mother something special for her birthday, but she’s short on cash. Her bestie, Chloe, comes up with the perfect solution. Build their own lemonade stand to raise money at Lemonade Day! The girls add friends Carly and Nathan, and Sophie’s little brother, Cole, to their team, and decide to donate some of their earnings to a local animal shelter to help save stray animals. Things are going great, until the family dog destroys their supplies. They get worse when Sophie tries to impress another boy in their class and upsets Nathan. Can they save their business in time for the event?

 

 

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EXCERPT

 

  

Lemonade (clap, clap, clap)

 

Crunchy ice (clap, clap, clap)

 

Sip it once (clap, clap, clap)

 

Sip it twice (clap, clap, clap)

 

Lemonade

 

Crunchy Ice

 

Sip it once

 

Sip it twice

 

Turn around

 

Touch the ground

 

Kick your partner out of town!

 

Freeze!

 

"Watch out, Sophie!" Chloe yells.

 

"Whoa!"

 

I accidentally kick a ginormous, cardboard box off the coffee table before freezing into an Egyptian pose.

 

My best friend and I are teaching Alexis, the five year-old we're babysitting, a hand game called Lemonade. Back in kindergarten, I was a Lemonade champ. Six years later, not so much.

 

"Oops!" I squat to pick up the box and tip it over. Papers and file folders spill on the floor.

 

"Let me help!" Chloe sweeps some of the printouts into a pile with her hands.

 

"Me too!" Alexis drops her robot pose and slides behind us, tumbling into Chloe. We twist like a pretzel, spreading paperwork all over the rug.

 

Wiggling near the fireplace, Alexis fans her arms and legs to make a paper snow angel. "This is fun!"

 

Our spacious den has copy paper everywhere.

 

"OMG!" I hold my hand over my mouth to cover my giggles.

 

"Get up, Alexis!" Chloe snickers, scooting to us on her bottom, and one of the papers rips.

 

"Girls!" Mom rushes into the room, and we freeze for real. "What are you doing?! I spent two hours organizing these files!"

 

My stomach drops.

 

 

  

Amazon (e-book)

Amazon (print)

 

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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

 

Tonya Duncan Ellis is author of the award winning, bestselling, Sophie Washington children's book series, geared toward readers ages 8 to 12, and is a member of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI). Her independently published books have been featured in the Houston Chronicle and the Baltimore Sun and have seen over 70,000 downloads and sales in the United States, India, Canada, and Great Britain. She has worked as a journalist and a freelance magazine writer, and is a graduate of Centre College of Kentucky and holds an M.B.A. degree from Washington University in St. Louis.

 

The twelve book Sophie Washington series stars a sweet and sassy African American preteen from Houston, TX and her diverse group of friends. Each funny and heartwarming story teaches lessons about friendship, responsibility, truthfulness, and perseverance.

Tonya loves to travel and has visited 49 American states, 20 countries, and three continents, but some of her best journeys have been between the pages of a novel. As a girl she could always be found with a book in her hand, and reading is still one of her favorite hobbies. When she's not reading or writing, the author likes to ride her bike, swim, and spend time with her husband and three children. She lives in Missouri City. 





 

 

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GIVEAWAY


a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

 

The tour dates can be found here

 

 

 

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My review:

 

 


4.5 stars

 

 

Sophie Washington: Lemonade Day by Tonya Duncan Ellis is part of the ‘Sophie Washington’ series that details the adventures of a young preteen in Texas. This book follows Sophie as she learns about teamwork, accountability, and hard work while she and her friends become junior business owners and participate in a citywide “Lemonade Day” event, with assistance from friends and family.

 

One of the reasons I enjoy this author so much is the way lessons about life are presented in such a relatable fashion in these middle-grade adventures. There is no problem understanding the sibling rivalry, or jealousy of a friend who seems to have more (beauty, friends, allure, material items, etc.), or even how a thoughtless statement can have a hurtful impact when none was intended. I love the way I can identify with the emotions that Sophie experiences (even though childhood was a LONG time ago, lol) and the way she works her way through challenges until something positive results from them. This story does a great job of exploring the idea of entrepreneurship, teamwork, planning, and charitable giving. I love the diversity and variety of talents these kids embody, and the reminder not to discount anyone just because you can’t immediately tell what they can contribute. I love this series, and this is my favorite story yet!

  

A copy of this title was provided for review