If you don’t think cyber bullying is a huge problem for all of us, watch fifteen year old Amanda Todd’s story. She’s the BC teen who recently took her own life after being cyber bullied by someone who tracked her and made her life hell for three years and through two school changes. The thing that’s so distressing about this particular young woman’s situation is that she had family and school support.
Isn’t it time that we protected our children from this kind of abuse?

In my humble opinion, A Monster Calls deserves to be the monster hit it seems to have become, despite the initial reluctance on the part of some gate keepers who found it too dark and too sad for children. It is sad. It is dark. How could it not be? It’s the story of a thirteen year old boy whose mother is dying. Frankly, children sometimes need to read dark, sad books. Sometimes children have to deal with terrible things in their lives; the loss of a parent, bullying, poverty, rejection. Reading about sad things that happen to a protagonist in a book can make a child feel less alone. It can help children whose lives have not been touched by strife understand and empathize with those who have been less fortunate.

A downloadable Kindle version of Scars by Cheryl Rainfield is
Most of us can afford to help fund the arts if we all do it a buck or two at a time. So, come on and give up that extra latte and put the money towards your favorite kickstart project. 