BRBC week 14: Skewered like a daggerfish

The Florid Sword scenes are so fun to read out loud in a swashbuckly voice! But this scene, right before he appears, cracked me up this week.


“Sneem!” called Glag, now on the tower platform.Only a few steps from the cobbler’s door, Sneem stopped and turned. “Eh?”“Forgot to tell you. Word has it he’s back.”“The Florid Sword?” Sneem asked.“Or whatever he calls himself. He was spotted on the west side of town already tonight, so be wary.”“Bah! Let him come. I’ll skewer him like a daggerfish.”After a moment Glag said, “Do you mean, you’re the daggerfish doing the skewering, or do you mean you’ll skewer him like he’s a daggerfish that you’re trying to stab in the river?”Sneem cocked his snaky head sideways to sort out the question. “Either way, the Florid Sword gets skewered, don’t he?”“I sssuppose,” said Glag, “but it might be harder to stab him if he was swimming about in the water like a daggerfish. Them are fast. But if you was the daggerfish, you’d just leap out of the river and jab him, right?”Sneem thought about this for a moment, then said, “I’ll get ‘im. Like a fish.”
Discussion: Have you ever tried to do the right thing, only to have it fail?Would you be a better ruler or Strander?What was your favorite passage from chapters 29-34? Post it below!

Art by Ava

Guys, check out this gorgeous dragon, drawn by a fourth grader named Ava. I love the colors swirling all around! And those scales are so intricate and tiny and perfect. Thank you, Ava!


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 29-34 of North! Or Be Eaten. Check back on Friday for an excerpt and discussion! Meanwhile, we've got some conversation-starters on chapters 1-28 in the forum. :-)Other news: Nicholas Kole and Madame Sidler had a fun conversation last week! Stay tuned for interview posts as we get the interview transcribed and edited.Andrew will be in the Carolinas this weekend. If you're nearby, go see him. :-)

BRBC week 13: Tackleball in the fog

There's something about today's excerpt that I love, and it's not just that it reminds me of my girlhood in the Hollows. Something about the fog changes the sound of the passage in my ears, even when (particularly when) I'm reading to myself silently. Do you know what I mean?


Janner woke to a world shrouded in fog.It draped the ground, creeping up from the river and collecting in eerie pools around tree trunks and depressions in the land, coursing between the rickety buildings that made up the settlement of the clan of the East Bend. The structures were made of planks and shutter boards, leftovers from the ravaging of Skree at the end of the Great War. They reminded Janner of Peet’s tree house, but unlike Peet’s castle, these buildings were shabby and unkempt, constructed without imagination or care. Stranders slept in or near the shacks, nothing for their beds but dirt, no pillows but their dingy hair and dirty arms. Beyond the shacks, deeper in the fog, squatted the cages.Janner could see nothing inside them, and the iron gates hung open. The Strander children had been so timid when they approached the camp the night before. May we come near? the girl Maraly had asked, and they hadn’t approached until Claxton gave his permission. Why were the children so careful around the adults? And where were their parents?Then he realized Tink was gone. The rest of the company lay fast asleep by the ashes of the fire, but Tink was nowhere to be seen. Janner scrambled to his feet.In the trees to his left, he heard voices, then a giggle. Tink appeared out of the fog at a trot, holding a leather ball under his arm. Janner breathed a sigh of relief and waved. Tink waved back, put a finger to his lips, and vanished into the fog again.Janner tiptoed away from the fire and followed Tink into the fog. Before he had taken two steps, Maraly materialized out of the mist like a ghost. Janner gasped and braced himself for a fight—the girl had a wild, mean look in her eyes.Out of the fog flew the ball Tink had been carrying. It smashed into the side of Maraly’s head, and she staggered sideways, scooped up the ball, and disappeared into the fog again, whispering, “Kalmar! I’ll get you. You can’t outsmart Maraly Weaver.”
Discussion: What was your favorite passage this week?Activity: Write a poem about fog.Play Tackleball! Download the book club kit for North! Or Be Eaten for the official rules. You can find the kit on our Book Club Kits page. :-)

Resurrection Letters tour

Andrew's swinging into tour mode right now to play songs from his new album! Check his music site to see if he's coming near you. He loves to meet readers!https://www.instagram.com/p/BhmKogUn4UO/Find dates and ticket info here!


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 22-28 of North! Or Be Eaten. Come back on Friday for an excerpt! Meanwhile, we've got all kinds of fun happening in our forum. :-)

BRBC week 12: Yes.

After the end of last week's reading, we might all be wondering whether the heartache and uprooting are worth what the Igibys hope to gain. In this week's excerpt, Janner is wondering too.(If you haven't read the first book yet, this excerpt will be a bit spoilery.)


As Peet screamed on the road to Lamendron, morning birds chirped in the clearing where the Igibys slept. Cold blue light crept through the slit in the tent door.Janner stretched, forcing his eyes open and shaking the cobwebs from his mind. To his left, Podo snored so loudly that Janner wondered how it hadn’t woken him sooner. Oskar didn’t snore, but with every long exhale of breath, his lips made a windy pfffffhhhhhhh.Janner propped himself on one elbow and rubbed his eyes. In the faint light he could see Tink asleep with his head on Podo’s leg and Leeli curled up beside Nia with her backpack cuddled to her chest the way she used to hold Nugget. Janner crept from the tent.The clearing was soft with dewy mist. Chunks of rubble rose out of the fog like gravestones, but the effect wasn’t unpleasant. He had been awake for many sunrises before, but never so close to the cliffs that he could watch the fiery ball lift itself from the sea. He walked through wet grass and sat with his feet dangling over the cliff.The Dark Sea of Darkness wasn’t dark at all at this hour. Feathery clouds at the edge of the world glowed orange and savage yellow. Birds wheeled in the bright air far below.Janner thought of his life only weeks ago, in the dregs of summer, when hay needed baling, the hogpig needed feeding, the garden needed weeding, and life was boring. So much had happened to the Janner he used to be. His life had been in danger countless times. More tears had been shed in these last weeks than in his whole life before. Nugget was dead, the Glipwood Township ravaged. Before, he lived under the oppression of the Fangs of Dang, but now he was on the run from them.Then he thought of his father, Esben, and remembered the picture of him sailing on his twelfth birthday, an image Janner considered the essence of freedom. He thought about the royal blood in his veins and about the long-gone glory of his kingdom.He had been too busy to think much about the real Anniera. It hovered in the distance of his best dreams but remained a dream only. It was hard to believe it actually existed, that across these very waters a home awaited him. A real island where there had once been real towns, where there stood a real castle—the castle where he was born. Janner ached to see it. He remembered the words of his father’s letter: “This is your land, and nothing can change that.” He imagined lying in the warm wind of a heathery slope, eyes closed so he could feel the heartbeat of his land.He was only twelve, but he knew enough to realize that the way before him would be hard. Is it worth it? he asked himself. Was it worth losing his old life in order to learn the truth of who he was and who he was becoming?Yes.Like the pluck of a stringed instrument, the first edge of the sun broke loose and poured light over the world.
Discussion: Can we talk about the right kind of tears?If you haven't read the books before, what do you think of Yurgen's warning?What was your favorite passage this week?Forum fun: Anyone for a writing challenge? What book would you want your skeleton found with? How do you pronounce Anniera (or Oood, or Nia, or Leeli)? Who would win in a fight?

Wingfeather sculptures—while they last!

Sculptor Scott Lee Johnson made a set of Wingfeather pieces in 2017—matching bookends, a relief of Oskar, and a beautiful piece depicting the Warden and the Wolf King. Take a look:https://youtu.be/1pmAF-d4dhMOnce Scott makes an original piece he can craft molds from them so he can replicate them. Those molds don't last forever—the process of casting from them takes something out of them each time. Scott recently posted that the molds are deteriorating and in a short while he won't be able to make any more castings. That means if you want one of his Wingfeather sculptures, now is the time. Visit his store to see which ones are still available and to check out his other work.


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 15-21 of North! Or Be Eaten. Check back on Friday for an excerpt and discussion! Meanwhile, there are some great conversations happening in the forum. We'd love to hear your voice.

BRBC week 11: Fingap Falls

Good day, readers! This segment of North! Or Be Eaten (chapters 8-14) was intense, wasn't it? The gargan rockroach, the trolls and Fangs, the spray of the falls, Podo's and Nugget's scenes in chapter 14... whew. There were several moments I wish we could've read together, but I settled on this one below. It combines tension, sadness, and a sort of high beauty that (thank you, Leeli) makes me feel a little fierce too.


Finally, they rounded the bend in the river and beheld, far below, a plume of rainbow-lit mist, the hissing cloud that churned up from Fingap Falls. The river was split by jagged, towering crags into hundreds of roaring courses that tumbled downward in white madness. Far beyond and below the mist lay the wide, silent gray of the Dark Sea of Darkness.Such a view demanded that the company stop in its tracks. They huddled together, sopping wet and weary. If Janner had been able to read minds, he would’ve learned that each of them had the same thought: with the Fangs behind and the falls ahead, it seemed certain the river would kill them. It would suck them in and hurl them into the cold black Deep.Tink stood in front of his grandfather, trying to be heard above the roar of the falls.“What?” yelled Podo.“I said, I don’t see a bridge!” Tink shouted.Tink was right. The idea that there had ever been a bridge at Fingap Falls struck Janner as ridiculous now that he could see the place with his own eyes.“What do we do?” Janner cried.“We go!” said Leeli. Wind whipped her hair across her face, and she looked at the sea with a familiar look of fierce determination.Podo’s face, however, was ashen. He stood with a steadying hand on Oskar’s shoulder, and his eyes shot every which way but toward the sea. The two men were a pitiful sight. Oskar’s belly was wrapped in bloody bandages, and the top of his head glistened with moisture. Water and sweat dripped from Podo’s eyebrows. Their shoulders sagged, and their mouths hung open. It was unfair that two old men—two good men who ought to be sitting by the fire with their feet up and their bellies full—clung to each other on the banks of the Mighty Blapp with death before them and death behind.“Grandpa,” Leeli said. “I can see the sea from here, and it’s not dark at all. It’s wide and terrible and beautiful. We’re supposed to go that way. I don’t know why, and I know I should be afraid, but there’s something…right about it. Something about the size of the ocean, about the way it stretches out forever and flat—it makes me want to sing.”
Discussion: Have you ever seen the sea? What did it make you feel?"Don't just follow your heart," Podo says. "Your heart will betray you." Come talk with us about this in the forum.What was your favorite scene from this week's reading?

The All About Wingfeather review

All About Learning Press, a spelling and reading curriculum company, created a library checklist and review for the Wingfeather Saga this spring. Here's what they've got to say about North! Or Be Eaten, which we just started reading in the book club. :-)

North! Or Be Eaten, the second book in the series, finds the Igiby family on the run from the Fangs. To evade their hungry pursuers, they set out for the Ice Prairies in the North. But along the way, the family encounters deadly hunters, a seemingly endless series of scary situations, and even more Fangs. When they reach the Ice Prairies, a battle breaks out and the family is forced to set sail for the safety of Green Hollows. But will they really be safe?

To read the rest of the spoiler-free review and download the checklist, visit All About Learning Press here. Thanks to Marie for highlighting the series!


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading chapters 8-14 of North! Or Be Eaten. Check back on Friday for an excerpt and discussion! And while you're here... who do you think would win in a fight? Can you guess the quote? These are two games currently being played in our forum. :-)