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A Child’s Dream: Santa’s Parking Ticket & an Empty Sled
Posted by Literary Titan

A Child’s Dream follows Krystal, a sleepy middle kid in an Appalachian town who keeps seeing the same wild dream of her whole community building a shining silver sled for the children. The book then zips up to the North Pole, where Santa is staring down a weird elf plague, a possible Christmas with an empty sled, and even a parking ticket, all while a whole cast of elves, doctors, and family members stumble through big problems, big feelings, and goofy adventures until everything comes together in a huge snowy Christmas parade.
Anita Yates’ writing is wonderfully talky and dramatic, with lots of arguments in kitchens, bus rides on twisty mountain roads, and Santa trying to fix things with karaoke and a Journey song. I liked how often the story slows down for tiny details, like stale biscuits that no one wants to eat or thrift-store finds that suddenly feel like treasure, because these little bits ground the wild North Pole stuff and made the people feel real. At the same time, the book is rich with scenes that jump from Krystal’s messy bedroom to medical lectures with elf interns to fashion makeovers for Mrs. Claus. I still found myself smiling a lot, especially in the funny family arguments and the moments where characters try hard to cheer each other up, even when money is tight and the future looks shaky.
What really stuck with me was the mix of silly and serious ideas. Under all the jokes, there is a heavy focus on second chances, being prepared for the moments that matter, and choosing purpose over comfort. You see it in Krystal, trying to help her parents by joking about those awful biscuits instead of complaining, in Lisa wanting to be a doctor after saving a baby on a mission trip, and in Robert walking away from sports glory to study medicine so he can treat wounded soldiers. The story also keeps circling back to grown-up ideas like job loss, the elders who refuse to leave home, refugees, and faith. Sometimes the shifts in tone felt a little jarring for me, like one page had me giggling at silly elf diseases and the next page dropped a heavy quote about suffering or sacrifice, yet I could tell the author cares a lot about every theme and wants readers to feel both seen and challenged.
I had fun with this book. A Child’s Dream feels like a full season of a holiday TV show rather than a quick bedtime read. I would recommend it for tweens who prefer busy stories with tons of side characters, plus adults who grew up in or care about Appalachian communities and enjoy Christmas tales that lean hard into hope, faith, and service. If you like chaotic family energy, heart-on-its-sleeve moral lessons, and a Santa who messes up, sings, and learns right along with the kids, then this is the perfect book for you.
ASIN : B0DY7JQSPX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A Child's Dream: Santa's Parking Ticket & an Empty Sled, action, adventure, Anita Yates, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, drama, ebook, Family Life Fiction, Family Life Fiction for Children, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, middle-grade readers, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, tweens, writer, writing
Peeps in Bloom
Posted by Literary Titan

Isaac is in a new school, making new friends, and carrying an old secret. As he is trying to settle into his role as the boy trying to get noticed on the first day, he makes a couple of discoveries. First, there could actually be a witch living in his new neighborhood, second, he just might have made friends with the school activist. Meg, intent on saving the school’s courtyard, has enlisted the help of her friends, including Issac, and is determined to preserve her favorite part of their school environment. Isaac, willing to help but fighting his own battle, must figure out what is going on with himself before he can help anyone else.
Peeps in Bloom, by J.D. Suhre, is the story of two friends both facing their own very different obstacles but simultaneously solving their own little mystery. Suhre has included several parallel plot lines to capture young readers’ attention and keep them guessing throughout the book. Told in chapters that alternate between the first-person points of view of the two main characters, Suhre’s story offers two unique perspectives of the same plot.
Isaac’s problem is a tricky one. While it is difficult as a parent to watch him face his own health issue virtually alone, I am sure this is a dilemma experienced by many children daily, especially at this upper elementary/middle school age. In fact, his apprehension in telling anyone about his strange episodes reminds me of the story of Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes. There is a great lesson to be learned from both stories, and Suhre touches on a hard reality with Isaac’s storyline.
I was pleasantly surprised at the turn the story takes when it comes to rumors of the witch in the neighborhood. There are so many ways a plot like this one can take; it was refreshing to see the way Suhre incorporated Mrs. Peekers into Meg and Isaac’s stories. As an adult reader, if I had an aha moment, young readers are sure to experience a thrill when they realize the truth.
Peeps in Bloom is a short creative novel geared for upper elementary and tweens. It carries within its pages some difficult lessons and wonderful examples of what strength, determination, and courage can do. Young readers will benefit from taking this journey with Issac and Meg.
Pages: 126 | ASIN : B09R1ZDN46
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chapter Books, childrens books, childrens literature, ebook, education, elementry, fiction, friendship, goodreads, J.D. Suhre, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, Middle Grades, middle school, nook, novel, Peeps in Bloom, read, reader, reading, story, tweens, writer, writing





