Sunday, June 22, 2025

Book Review: Two Tricksters Find Friendship by Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows (children's book)


photo by ldyck

Two Tricksters Find Friendship is a year in the life of a new mutually supportive friendship between Jessie, a white girl, and Johnny, an Indigenous boy.





Two Tricksters Find Friendship

Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows

Orca Book Publishers

Recommended for ages 6 to 8

first book of a series

2025


Jessie is new to the island. Her family moved there after her father became the new fire chief. Johnny lives on the reserve, and Jessie meets him in the summer when she is beachcombing. They bond over their love of nature and mutual interest in the Indigenous culture. When Jessie finds a feather, Johnny identifies it as a raven feather. Inspired by their mutual apprehension about returning to school after the summer break, Johnny invites Jessie to participate in a smudging ceremony, an Indigenous healing ritual. The friends are guided through their year of discovery by Jessie's aunt Chris and elders Grannie Annie and Steven.

In June, during the National Indigenous Peoples Day ceremony, Steven gives a short speech...

"'Johnny and Jessie clearly demonstrated support, caring, friendship and the importance of listening to each other. I've witnessed these two friends work through challenging times with love and respect.'" (p. 84-85) 

He's clearly proud of the friendship Johnny and Jessie have begun to build.

Two Tricksters Find Friendship is a cleverly written book. Authors Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows employ various techniques to bring the reader into the story, such as engaging the reader's sense of sound, sight, smell, and taste. Choosing to have the main characters walk into the story is an inviting way to begin the story. Additionally, Aitken and Willows have left threads throughout this story that they can use to recast and knit another installment to this series.


Illustrator Alyssa Koshi has significantly enhanced reader engagement. I loved searching for Raven on the pages of this book. Mayne Islanders will appreciate seeing Johnny and Jessie in front of "our" welcoming figure.

Huy ch q'u, Johnny, Jess and Alyssa for this finely crafted book.

 

photo by ldyck


 On this blog in June...


Sunday, June 29


Book Reviews: Canadian Reads (list)

a list of my book reviews of my favourite books written by Canadian authors


photo by ldyck

My fingers

on my keyboard

My head 

in the clouds

I relish

my days

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Tying Laces with My Dad (short story) by Leanne Dyck

 When I have trouble tying my shoelaces, my dad...

One of my earliest memories of my dad inspired this short story.


(my dad circa 1980s)

Tying Laces with My Dad


A lace in each hand, I glare at my shoe. I want to scream. I want to yell. I want to tear the shoe apart. Why won't these dumb, stupid laces work? What is wrong with them? What is wrong with me? 

The sound that explodes from my mouth makes my dad pause. "What's the matter, Honey?"

I look up at him with a face full of tears. I crawl onto his lap and find comfort in his arms.

He spins a tale just for me. "All the trains had tried to climb the tall mountain. All had failed. The only one left was the smallest engine. No one thought he could succeed. No one believed he could, but he kept saying, I think I can. I think I can. It took all the strength he had to climb that mountain. But he didn't give up, he just kept trying. I think I can. I think I can. And do you know what?"

My tears had stopped falling, and my face was dry. "What?"

"He made it all the way to the top of that mountain. He succeeded when everyone else had failed." My dad gave me a hug. "Just try. That's all we want--that's all anyone can ever ask from you--try." We exchanged a smile. "Would you like me to tie your shoes?"

I thought about his offer. I wanted to say yes, but the little engine hadn't given up, and so... and so... "You can tie this shoe," I stuck my left leg straight out so Dad could tie that shoe. "And I can tie this one." I bent over the shoe on my right foot.

"Let me see if I remember how this works," my dad said. "Make two rabbit ears." We made two rabbit ears. "Fold one rabbit ear over the other. Oh, this is the tricky part. I'll have to try that again. Okay, that time it worked. Let's do it one more time to make a good knot. And done."

"We did it," we sing.


And do you know what? To this very day, most of my shoes are... slip-ons. (My dad also taught me the importance of humour.)

written on Monday, May 12, 2025

photo by ldyck


On this blog in June...


Sunday, June 22

Book Review for Indigenous Day

Two Tricksters Find Friendship by Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows

...is a year in the life of a new mutually supportive friendship between Jessie, a white girl, and Johnny, an Indigenous boy

Sunday, June 29

Book Reviews for Canada Day

Canadian Reads: a collection of my favourite books by Canadian authors

photo by ldyck

My fingers

on my keyboard

My head 

in the clouds

I relish

my days


He’s Cool (short memoir)

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Dyslexic Assessment (short memoir) by Leanne Dyck

My grade one teacher, Mrs. Blue, wrote a comment on my report card, 'Leanne tries very hard but...' and advised my parents to have me tested at the children's hospital in Winnipeg. 

Over fifty years later, this is my account of being assessed with dyslexia.


(Me circa 1960s)

Dyslexic Assessment


Dad parks the car. I hop out and wait for my parents. We walk together to a big building that's as square as a building block.

“What’s that sign say?” I ask.

“The first word is Children’s. The second word is Hospital. It’s a special hospital, only for children.” Mom explains.

Hospital? But I’m not sick.

Dad holds the door open, and Mom leads me to a room with chairs. Dad goes to talk to a woman behind a desk. Books, games, puzzles and stuffed toys are on a low shelf. I want to play, but I’m too worried about my parents. All day I’ve asked, “What’s wrong?” But they just tell me, “Nothing”—which I know is a lie. So I sit here waiting for… Who?

Tap, tap, tap. I hear his shoes, and then I see him. He’s tall with a friendly face. “Hello, Leanne.” He squats to look at me--eye-to-eye. “My name is George. Would you like to come and play with me?”

That sounds fun, but I look at my parents. How can I go play when they look so worried?

But mom says, “Leanne, go play with the nice man.”

I follow George into a small white room with a window. When I look out the window, all I see is a night sky. George invites me to sit at the table with him and gives me some Play-Dough. I like how it feels as I squeeze through my fingers. I make a long snake.

“How many brothers do you have?” George asks.

“Three.” I like talking about my family. “Rick, Randy and Keith.”

“Are you the youngest?”

“Nope. Sam is.”

He flips through some papers in a file, searching for information. “Who’s Sam?”

“My dog. She’s the youngest.”

He laughs, but not in a mean way. “I like dogs. Is she a little dog?”

“She was little, but then she grew and grew and grew and now she’s big.” I throw my arms out so George can see how big.

“Do you like living with your family? Are you happy?”

I quickly say, “Yes.” Taking more time to think, I change my answer to, “Not always. Like one time when all my brothers wanted to watch hockey on TV, and I wanted to watch my show. I wanted my mom to tell them to watch what I wanted to watch. But she didn’t. That made me really mad. So I marched into my bedroom and slammed the door. Later, when I’d cooled down, Mom came in to talk to me. She asked me why I got so mad, and so I told her. She told me that we all have to share the TV. She said that sometimes we watch what I want to watch, and sometimes we have to watch what someone else wants to watch. She asked me if that sounded fair. I said, yes. And then we hugged. I played in my room until it was bedtime. The next day, everyone watched what I wanted to watch.”

George is really easy to talk to. He listens not only with his ears but also with his eyes. When I finish my story, he picks up a pen and writes something.

“Do you like playing with blocks?” George replaces the Play-Dough with a pile of red and blue wooden building blocks. “What can you build?”

I make a tower by stacking two blocks and a house with three blocks.

That’s neat,” he says, “Look what I can build.” He lines up four blocks end to end, sets two blocks on top of them and one block on the very top. “This is called a pyramid. Can you build one?”

“Sure, that’s easy.” I stack the blocks like he did.

“How about this?” He makes stairs.

I think I’ve stacked the blocks like he did, but George says, “Look closely. Is yours the same as mine?”

I’ve done it wrong. I’ve failed. And I know what happens when I fail. It’s like the papers I bring home without stickers and the report card that made Mom cry. And I worry that George will get mad at me like my teacher does. “I’m sorry,” I say.

“Hey, there’s no reason to be sorry. All I want you to do is try. I’m here to help you.”

That makes me feel better.

George turns a two-piece puzzle upside down on the table. The circle and square clatter out.

Putting the pieces back into the puzzle is so easy.

“Wow, you did that fast. You’re so smart. You need a harder puzzle.”

The more puzzles I do, the harder they get until they get too hard.

“Can we play with the Play-Dough again?” I ask.

George makes a bunny with long ears, and I roll the dough into a carrot and feed it to the bunny. Then I make a cookie as big as my hand. We play until George says, “It’s time to find your parents.”

Before we leave that room, George gives me a happy face sticker. “This is for being so smart,” he tells me.

My parents are waiting for me in a room that looks kind of like a living room. There’s a sofa but no TV.

Look what I got.” I pull on my t-shirt so my parents can see the sticker. 

“I had a lot of fun playing with Leanne,” George tells my parents. “She’s a smart girl. You should be very proud of her.”

My parents smile, but I can see that they’re still worried.

Mom almost whispers. “Is there a cure for her dys—, for her learning disability?”

“We don’t use labels here,” George tells her with a frown, like maybe he’s mad. “There’s no cure, but there are things you can do to help her.”

“Anything. We’ll do anything,” my parents say together.

“Do you enjoy reading?” George asks.

Dad always had a stack of books by his bed. Mom reads book after book after book. And they take turns reading to me. “Very much,” they say.

“Your good example will help,” George tells them. “And do what you can to build Leanne’s self-esteem. She needs to know that she is smart, capable and competent.”

We say goodbye to George and leave the building that looks like a block. We get into the car, and no one says anything until Mom mumbles something from the front seat. I listen carefully and hear her say, “It’s my fault. I should have known something was wrong. I should have… There must have been something I could have done.”

"You know, as they were talking about...about..." Dad stops talking, thinks a little and then says, "I kept thinking I had that. I had those problems. And it took me a while, but I excelled in school. I was too smart for my own good. And many of those things... I did many of those things."

I don’t know if they hear each other, but I hear them.


‘Dyslexia influences as many as 1 in 5 people and is a genetic difference in an individual’s ability to learn and process information. As a result, dyslexic individuals have differing abilities, with strengths in creative problem-solving and communication skills and challenges with spelling, reading and memorising facts.

Generally, a dyslexic cognitive profile will be uneven when compared to a neurotypical cognitive profile. This means that dyslexic individuals really do think differently.

Traditional benchmarking disadvantages dyslexics, measuring them against the very things they find challenging.’

“21st century definition of dyslexia”, Made by Dyslexia



‘No two people with dyslexia will look exactly alike in their symptoms and the manifestations of those symptoms. There are multiple symptoms, and they can range from mild to severe. The more severe the symptoms the earlier they will become apparent.’

 

Learned Helplessness” Identifying The Symtoms of Dyslexia  
by Tracy Block-Zaretsky, co-founder of the Dyslexia Training Institute


‘Having a child diagnosed with dyslexia can be a traumatic experience…

Parents...should seek out reading instruction that is based upon a

systematic and explicit understanding of language structure, including

phonics.’ “Dyslexia at a Glance”, The International Dyslexia Association


photo by ldyck


On this blog in June...


Sunday, June 15

Tying Laces with my Dad (short memoir)

 When I have trouble tying my shoelaces, my dad...

Sunday, June 22

Book Review for Indigenous Day

Two Tricksters Find Friendship by Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows

...is a year in the life of a new mutually supportive friendship between Jessie, a white girl, and Johnny, an Indigenous boy

Sunday, June 29

Book Reviews for Canada Day

Canadian Reads: a collection of my favourite books by Canadian authors

photo by ldyck

My fingers

on my keyboard

My head 

in the clouds

I relish

my days



More about dyslexia...

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Floating Away (children's story) by Leanne Dyck

 One night, rain leaks into the narrator’s bedroom. The leak becomes a stream, the stream a lake. Soon, he is floating away on his bed-boat, off on an adventure.

photo by ldyck

Floating Away

 The rain falling against the window sang a lullaby.

I snuggled into my pillow, pulled my blankets up to my chin and closed my eyes.

The rain got louder and sounded like a drum. Boom. Boom. Boom. A-rat-a-tat-tat. Boom. Boom. Boom. A-rat-a-tat-tat. One raindrop squeezed through a gap between the window and the window sill. His sisters, his brothers, his cousins and his whole family poured in.

I jumped off my bed and splashed on the soggy rug. It was like playing in a puddle. The water covered my feet, my knees, my tummy, my head. I tried to climb back onto my bed, but it was very slippery. I fell into the water over and over and over again. I grabbed hold of the bed frame and pulled myself up.

My bedroom wall washed away, and my bed-boat floated outside. I made a tent with my blankets and peered up at the sky. The moon was full. Stars twinkled through the rain. The world smelled like laundry in the washer.

A big fin swam right behind me. 

I paddled with my hands—faster and faster and faster. But I didn’t paddle fast enough. 

Big Fin opened his mouth and swallowed me and my boat.

I went around and around inside his stomach, like when you pull the plug in the bathtub. I held on tight so I wouldn’t fall off my boat. 

Big Fin pooped me and my boat out.

We landed on an island. There were lollipop trees and bubble gum fruit. Night became day, day became night. I ate seaweed spaghetti and drank moonbeam juice. It was fun on that island, but I missed Mom and Dad and even my big sister. 

I needed a paddle so I could paddle home. The beach was long. The beach was wide. It was full of sand, but you can’t make a paddle with that. In the tall grass jungle, I found an old boot. I kicked and kicked and kicked, but I couldn’t kick a lollipop tree down. So I couldn’t use it to make a paddle.

Way out in the water, Big Fin waited for me.

I sat on the beach, watched the water and waited and waited and waited for a paddle. Four pieces of driftwood floated up to the shore: one was too small, one was too heavy, one fell apart in my hands, but one was just right. I pushed my boat into the water and headed for home.

Big Fin swam straight at me.

I picked up a piece of driftwood. “Fetch,” I called to Big Fin and threw the driftwood as far as I could.

Big Fin swam after it, caught it and brought it back.

I kept throwing driftwood until Big Fin got too tired to swim back to me.

I paddled across the ocean, and it led to rivers that had been streets. Dogs with searchlight eyes barked from the shore. River after river after river until I was home. I paddled into my bedroom. 

Dawn’s light dried up all the rain.

“Wake up, sleepyhead. It’s morning.” My big sister flicked on the light.


photo by ldyck

On this blog in June...


Sunday, June 8

Children's Hospital (short memoir)

...about the day I was assessed as dyslexic

Sunday, June 15

Tying Laces with my Dad (short memoir)

 When I have trouble tying my shoelaces, my dad...

Sunday, June 22

Book Review for Indigenous Day

Two Tricksters Find Friendship by Johnny Aitken and Jess Willows

...is a year in the life of a new mutually supportive friendship between Jessie, a white girl, and Johnny, an Indigenous boy

Sunday, June 29

Book Reviews for Canada Day

Canadian Reads: a collection of my favourite books by Canadian authors

photo by ldyck

My fingers on the keyboard

My head in the clouds

I relish my days


Sharing my author journey...

I keep my past submissions organized in two white binders. These