Summary: A retelling of some of the Jack and the Beanstalk stories.
I have made my love of KB Hoyle’s writing well known. I have read every book she has written, most more than once. I have never met her in person, but we are both in the facebook group for Christ and Pop Culture magazine where she is a regular writer and we have interacted a lot over the years. Hopefully we will meet someday.
Part of what I love about her books is that they are literary and still written for middle grade or young adult readers. By literary, I don’t mean esoteric or abstract or hard to understand, but I mean that there is depth that invites rereading. There is always a surface story that moves the story along and engages the reader. But there is also always depth to the story in allusions and references and underlying themes that may not be apparent to a young adult reader on the first reading.
One of the things that drives my kids crazy (but I think it is still important) is that I frequently will stop a movie or pause in reading and ask about a scene and what is going on. Sometimes they have understood the reference or know what the word means, but a lot of the time they haven’t. Part of what I am trying to do is invite them to look for the meaning below the surface.
I have been hosting a zoom book club since 2020. Right now we are reading James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time. It is a compilation of four biographical essays. Baldwin is a master of references and allusions. Some are easier to spot than others, but it is clear that he isn’t only a writer, but a deep reader, of scripture, the classics and the current literature of his time. It is a joy to read that in a group because we have different histories and experiences and we catch different things.








Summary: A theological novel about a woman grappling with God about her life.