Free book for boys and reluctant readers

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices
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US$8.99 Paperback
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Reading is important
Any book that helps a child to form a habit of reading, to make reading one of his deep and continuing needs, is good for him. –Maya Angelou
Most adults would agree that reading is important, but many kids detest reading. Video games, devices, and TV are preferred entertainment and escape. They provide instant gratification. Reading takes time. For some kids, reading isn’t engaging.
I had this same problem with my son, so I solved the problem.
The classic stories I remember enjoying as a kid don’t interest my son and his immediate attention span. If he doesn’t enjoy the story from page one, he will not read further.

So how did I get my son to read?
I showed him how much fun it is to get sucked into a story.
Your book is amazing I can’t stop reading it – Joseph Young via twitter
Contemporary and Classic titles alike don’t interest many kids. Don’t worry, the love of reading is learned. We need a starting point. We need that one book that is just as engaging on the first read as the fifth, just like a really great movie that kids want to see again and again. A positive association with reading will make kids want to read more.
A love of reading is cited as the number one indicator of future success. My son didn’t have the desire to read. He didn’t care about the books I chose to read to him, and was overwhelmed with the selection at the library. I want my son to succeed, so I had to do something. Since we struggled to find books he cared to read, I wrote one. An epic saga about the things he loves. I put it in a world he loves and addressed the issues he faces in his life.
I just love your books I’ve been reading them over and over again. -Carson via twitter
But it’s a video game book
Don’t worry; it’s not a book about video games, nor is it a game strategy book. Flynn’s Log is a hero’s journey that takes place inside the Minecraft world that today’s kids know and love. The protagonist, Flynn, naturally flows through Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (builds shelter and tools, learns what to eat and discovers a digital friend) and faces questions about his destiny. He learns important life lessons about friendship, integrity, and trust. Flynn’s Log is good for kids without being boring.
Thank you so so much for the free ebook. My son loves Minecraft now with this book I can get him to read to me. – Jennifer Wilkins
Start your son or daughter on journey today, reading Flynn’s Log 1: Rescue Island. Free on available these devices and apps.

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices
Choose your device
KindleiPad/iPod/iPhoneGoogle Play (Android Tablets)nookkoboRead Online
US$8.99 Paperback
Why is Flynn’s Log 1 Free?
My son loves reading — finally. If you have experience with a reluctant reader then I know your pain and I want to help. I’ve seen thousands of kids transform with this book. My readers, who don’t usually read books during the summer, couldn’t put Flynn’s Log 1 down.
Good book I thought I would never read a book on my summer but I feel I’m gonna finish it soon – Multigamer 47 via twitter
Let this book change your kid’s life too. You have nothing to lose and an avid reader to gain.
Once you learn to read, you will be forever free.
–Frederick Douglas
I am giving away Flynn’s Log 1 free because I want to give you a risk-free way to hook your reluctant reader.
Please and I mean PLEASE, WRITE MORE! I absolutely love it! They’re outstanding books.
-Devon123321 via twitter
What are Books for Boys?
I spend lots of time with teachers and parents. I hear parents ask, “How do I get my son to read? Do you have books for boys?”
I wrote the Flynn’s Log series for my son, and this book is interesting for boys. However, the series is a non-stop read for both boys and girls, especially those who are interested in Minecraft.
The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you’ll go.
—Dr. Seuss
What are you waiting for?
You have nothing to lose!

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices
Choose your device
KindleiPad/iPod/iPhoneGoogle Play (Android Tablets)nookkoboRead Online
US$8.99 Paperback
News for Parents of Reluctant Readers
Get Reluctant Reader Book News from Stone Marshall
Is the Latest MINECRAFT POKÉMON the Coolest One Yet?
As has been well-documented, Minecraft is a sort of breeding ground for Pokémon fan recreations. Somebody made a working Game Boy Advance capable of playing Pokémon Fire Red last summer, while another fan created an entirely new 3D Pokémon adventure, all in Minecraft. If you’ve been reading the site for a while, you might also remember the fan who was working on a fully functional recreation of Pokémon Red. He was off to a strong start in 2015, and now, the project is finally finished (via Polygon).
When we last checked in on Mr. Squishy, who went by Magib1 at the time, he had the Pokédex, basic game mechanics, and the world map done. Now, he’s finally finished, and the game is a true port, meaning that he didn’t just make a Game Boy emulator in Minecraft and load the Pokémon Red ROM into it: He recreated the entire game from scratch.
In the above video interview with Polygon, Mr. Squishy explains how that process worked and why it was necessary:
Minecraft has command blocks, which allow you to write code in-game. There’s no easy way to just take the ROM for one of these old games and dump it into Minecraft. To get all of the functionality in the game, you basically need to re-code everything from the ground up inside the game, so that’s what I’ve done here.
Mr. Squishy also documented the process on Reddit and answered some questions there, revealing that so much effort went into this endeavor: He walked over 1,760 in-game miles and used 357,000 command blocks over the 21 months it took to finish the project. Even all of the game’s original glitches have been recreated. Now that’s dedication.
Of course, this Minecraft-based Pokémon game is a totally different beast from the other aforementioned efforts…
The Pokémon Fire Red remake is more graphically intensive since it’s a GBA game, but movement is a bit choppy and it’s still very much a work in progress (although the latest version of the game has made great strides and it looks fairly accurate at this point).
Then there’s Pokémon Cobalt and Amethyst, which is in a completely different league. Instead of recreating an existing game, this one is a completely new adventure in 3D. It copies the original game mechanics, and it’s sort of like a merge of Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Sun and Moon, so it’s very robust. It has an original plot and even a bunch of brand new Pokémon, so the game definitely goes beyond the call of duty.
Each of these fan projects are special in their own way, and a testament to how versatile of a creation environment Minecraft can be to people with good ideas and ambition.
Feel free to download the Pokémon Red remake for yourself and give it a go, right here. Are you going to try this out, or are you going to stick to your emulators, or perhaps an original cartridge? Hit up the comments below and let us know what you think!
Minecraft’ Snapshot 17w15a Introduces Colored Beds and Several Bug Fixes
Snapshot 17w15a has been released for “Minecraft,” and this latest update preview brings some new features as well as several bug fixes that players have been looking for.
image: http://d.christianpost.com/full/103559/590-218/minecraft.png

Before diving into what Snapshot 17w15a contains, players should know more about how to activate it for the game. They can do this by first navigating over to the Launch Options tab and then checking off the box that says “Enable Snapshots.” They should then save the change they just made.
Players who will be activating the newest Snapshot or any Snapshot for that matter are encouraged to back up their files first to avoid any issues that may stem from their worlds possibly being corrupted.
Once players have taken care of all that, they can go ahead and see what is inside the latest Snapshot.
According to the changelog posted over on the game’s official website, players now have access to colored beds, and these are ones they can make either by using dye on a white bed or by crafting one while using some colored wool.
“Minecraft” players can now also toggle the narrator between options such as off, chat only, system messages only, and chat & system. A new toast notification has also been added via Snapshot 17w15a for toggling the narrator.
Advancements should now also come with descriptions while some of the titles in the game have been changed as well.
Stairs have also been improved, and they are now designed to function better with things such as fences, glass panes and walls.
As for the bug fixes, one in particular addressed by Snapshot 17w15a ensures that the statistics page should now work properly.
Improvements for many of the tamed animals have also been applied, and several fixes for the game’s parrots have been added.
More news about “Minecraft” should be made available in the near future.
Minecraft’ Snapshot 17w15a Introduces Colored Beds and Several Bug Fixes
Santa Monica company bringing Minecraft tournaments to Valley
Super League Gaming, a Santa Monica, California-based gaming company, partnered with Harkins Theatres to host tournaments for kids and teens in one of its Gilbert locations.
“We’ve looked at Phoenix and long believed it was a great city due to its family-friendly focus — we partnered with Harkins, and they helped us decide that Gilbert’s audience in particular would be a great place for this offering,” said Ann Hand, CEO of Super League Gaming.
Competitors vie for a spot on the city teams, which include the Phoenix Blaze team, to compete nationally. Events kicked off in March and continue to run through May.
“Super League is bringing an experience that kids already love — playing Minecraft — to a local level,” said Hand. “With Super League, gamers have the opportunity to play face-to-face with their local team, building, creating and battling against other local communities which fosters a stronger sense of teamwork and city pride.”
Hand said the demographics for the tournaments historically has been between the ages of 9 and 13, while the gender skews male.
A Harkins representative for Scottsdale-based Harkins Theatres, said the partnership is part of the company’s venture into unique viewing experiences.
“Whether it’s broadcasting the NCAA Finals, showing the season premiere of BBC’s hit show Sherlock or allowing gamers to play their favorite games on the big screen, Harkins is always looking for new opportunities to create memorable experiences for guests,” said the Harkins spokesperson. “The in-theater Minecraft tournament is just one more opportunity to use the state-of- the-art technology and larger-than-life screens to bring fans together to share in an experience unlike anything available at home.”
The theater chain also has endeavored into eSports by broadcasting video game League of Legends national and global tournaments at various Valley locations. The Harkins representative said the company is in the process of planning for more eSports broadcasting.
Santa Monica company bringing Minecraft tournaments to Valley
Stamford students attend Minecraft camp
Children as young as 5 years old spent part of spring break working on their engineering skills.
The city’s Recreation Department held a variety of camps, several of which involved engineering and technology, across Stamford schools this week.
They included a Minecraft engineering camp for 5- and 6-year-olds and a Minecraft master camp for ages 7 through 12. Both were held at Newfield Elementary School and were run by Play-Well TEKnologies, which uses LEGO to teach engineering to children.
Minecraft: Nintendo Switch Version Release Date Announced
Nintendo announced today that Minecraft will come to Nintendo Switch on May 11 digitally, with a physical version to hit stores at a later date.
Minecraft will include multiplayer for eight players online or four players locally on Switch, offering split-screen as well as support for the Switch Pro Controller.
The Switch version will also include the Super Mario Mash-Up Pack that previously came to Wii U, which offers Mario-themed skins, textures, music, and much more from previous Mario games.

Minecraft was first confirmed for Nintendo Switch back in January. Earlier this week, Microsoft announced a new marketplace coming to the Windows 10 and mobile versions of Minecraft later this year, but it’s unknown for now how many PC features will be headed to the Switch version.
For more on Minecraft’s Mario mashup, check out our interview with Nintendo’s Damon Baker about the collaboration.
We Shall Get Another Look at Minecraft: Switch Edition on April 18
We finally found out that Minecraft is coming to the Nintendo Switch during the Nintendo Direct which took place earlier this week. We received a glimpse of the game and we will be getting more footage come on Tuesday, April 18th. Minecraft: Nintendo Switch Edition launches on Nintendo eShop on May 11th and in stores at a later date.
We Shall Get Another Look at Minecraft: Switch Edition on April 18
‘Minecraft’ Nintendo Switch Release Date News: Game to Get May 2017 Launch
Nintendo has announced that Microsoft’s popular video game “Minecraft” will launch digitally for the Nintendo Switch on May 11, with a physical release of the game arriving “at a later date.”
The Japanese game publisher confirmed the news during its Direct stream on Wednesday, April 11, in which “Splatoon 2” and “ARMS” also got release dates of July 21 and June 16, respectively.
image: http://d.christianpost.com/full/107471/590-218/a-promotional-photo-of-the-video-game-minecraft.jpg

Nintendo also confirmed that the Switch version of “Minecraft” will support local as well as online multiplayer modes. Four players can craft their “worlds” at once on the television in either split-screen or tabletop mode, while eight players can play together online. Its provisional U.S. pricing is apparently set at $29.99, according to Trusted Reviews.
Aside from this, a “Super Mario” mash-up pack for the 3D building game will also come to the Switch, allowing players to explore blocky versions of the Mushroom Kingdom-themed worlds with “Super Mario” characters such as Luigi and Waluigi.
The Switch edition of “Minecraft” is reportedly being handled by 4J Studios, the game developer who previously brought the PC version of Mojang’s Minecraft to the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, PS Vita and Wii U.
Telltale’s narrative-driven adaptation, titled “Minecraft: Story Mode,” has also been confirmed for the Nintendo Switch game console. However, it remains unclear when this particular game will be released.
Microsoft also recently revealed that some versions of the 3D building game will be getting a new marketplace where gamers will be able to buy user-generated skins and maps, as well as other items. However, it remains unclear whether the Minecraft Marketplace will be coming to the Switch version of the game as it is currently limited — for the time being at very least — to the game’s PC and mobile editions.
“Minecraft” arrives for the Nintendo Switch on the Nintendo eShop on May 11, while a physical release date will be announced in the near future.
‘Minecraft’ Nintendo Switch Release Date News: Game to Get May 2017 Launch
‘Minecraft’ and other eSports compete for legitimacy as kids’ activities
Ashley Griffin squeals as a sword-wielding opponent takes a jab at her avatar on her laptop screen.
“I need to run away,” yells Ashley, reaching quickly for her keypad.
On Saturday mornings, Cinemark at Seven Bridges theater in Woodridge hosts Super League Gaming’s “Minecraft” competition for kids like Ashley and Virginia, who collaborate together on a team instead of playing at home alone.
For the past month, area kids have been trying to qualify for the Chicago Force team, which will compete against city teams in Boston, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Miami, Phoenix and San Francisco. Besides bragging rights, winning team members receive college scholarships.
The City Champs season, which begins April 29, costs $60 and includes an official club jersey, admission to three events and the chance to qualify for the Grand Final. Registration is available at superleague.com.
Ann Hand, CEO of Super League Gaming in Santa Monica, Calif., said the “Minecraft” competition is meant to complement, not replace, other children’s activities.
“In the end, we award a scholarship to the best team in North America. We have a 5-year-old in L.A. who last year got a $2,500 scholarship to college,” Hand said. “That’s the beautiful thing. ‘Minecraft,’ too, is the ultimate equalizer. The best players don’t have to be the oldest and strongest.”
Getting parents on board with the concept has been fairly easy since launching a year and a half ago, Hand said. With Super League’s Minecraft competitions geared for ages 17 and younger, the majority of the participants can’t drive, so parental involvement is critical.
Hand said much of the parental buy-in is because “Minecraft” increasingly is used by school districts to promote STEM — science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
“Parents are starting to realize this is a positive game that they want to make time for their son or daughter to play because they appreciate how much their computer literacy increases,” she said.
In addition, parents appreciate the collaborative team aspects kids typically learn playing traditional sports, Hand said.
“They say if we’re going to put time into this game because it has all of these positive attributes, I would rather they do it in an environment with other kids than having him or her be alone in their room,” she said.
The competitive league is spreading into schools, too.
Teachers who coach after-school “Minecraft” clubs are starting to work with students to strategize and plan building tasks in order to compete better as a team on the weekends, Hand said.
“The educators, as well, see the positive aspects of it, and that helps parents get on board,” she said.
As enticing as it sounds, medical experts warn too much of one thing can lead to long-term physical and mental consequences.
Dr. Julie Jones, a family medicine physician in the Edward Medical Group, said children who experience too much screen time have a higher rate of obesity, which can lead to more serious heart and diabetes issues.
In fact, research published last month in the British Medical Journal shows children who spend more than three hours a day in front a television, computer, tablet or other hand-held devices are at greater risk of developing diabetes.
In addition, Jones said the American Academy of Pediatricians warns too much video use can alter a child’s sleep behavior pattern.
“Children who do not get quality sleep will have difficulty concentrating,” she said.
Repetitive motion can cause long-term damage to tendons and nerves, even in children, according to an occupational therapist.
Just as a child shouldn’t practice basketball for more than a few hours per day, kids shouldn’t play video games for hours on end, said Amy Kiesler, who works for Athletico in Naperville.
Not only can sitting for extended periods of time in a slumped position strain the back and neck, Kiesler said, constant wrist motion by gamers causes problems with carpel tunnel.
Kiesler said problems arise when gamers fail to give their wrists a break, thinking that a good night’s sleep will ease any symptoms. People generally sleep in fetal position, which curls the hands and exacerbates the tension on the wrists, she said.
Ways to counteract carpel tunnel involve stretching exercises and the use of wrist braces or other custom-made orthotics, Kiesler said.
“Protocol is to catch it early, before it gets worse. If someone is experiencing numbness or tingling, seek help immediately,” she said.
Injuries were the last thing on Ashley’s mind when she was playing “Minecraft” during a recent qualifying round.
“Who doesn’t like ‘Minecraft’? It’s fun for everyone because you get to play with your friends,” she said.
Her father, Ken Griffin, of Woodridge, said because they both like to play video games, “Minecraft” allows them to have a common interest. “It’s a good bonding thing. This ‘Minecraft’ thing — she can talk about it for hours,” Griffin said.
Virginia’s dad, Michael Warot, of Muenster, Ind., couldn’t agree more.
While he often spends some of the 90-minute sessions reading, he also enjoys observing what’s going on in some of the challenges. As a result, Warot has a deeper understanding of why his daughter likes “Minecraft” and can hold conversations with her on the way home.
Warot said he’s learned Virginia wants to become a video game artist when she gets older.
“Minecraft,” however, doesn’t dominate her life. Warot said Virginia plays “Minecraft” in her spare time, when she’s not attending after-school activities, such as Brownies and a running program.
“It’s nice and safe, and it’s fun to find people with the same interest,” Michael Warot said. “It’s her free time. Why not let her do that?”
While the girls are taking a more casual approach to the Super League competition, Dominic Bruno, 11, of Lemont, is out to be No. 1 on the Chicago Force team.
“He would play all day if he could,” said his mother, Jackie Bruno. “He told me, ‘I have to go to all four (qualifying rounds) so I can have a chance to get the best score.”
Despite his “Minecraft” devotion, it isn’t the only activity in Dominic’s life, she said. He plays soccer, collects superhero comic books and writes his own comic books.
‘Minecraft’ and other eSports compete for legitimacy as kids’ activities
Minecraft for Windows 10 and Mobile Is Finally Getting a Creator Marketplace
At some point in May, Minecraft will experience a kind of coda to Microsoft and Mojang’s grand synchronization of the original Java version and its newer, future-proofed Windows 10 and smartphone/tablet ones. It’s called the Discovery Update, and it will add the last few absent components — llamas, shulkers, spooky woodland mansions, ill-natured villagers and spectral vexes — to a game that has perhaps received more post-purchase content, gratis, than any other.
And then it will go a step further, adding features the Java version will never see. Like a new, curated, in-app marketplace for handpicked creators to offer things like skin packs, retextured overlays and entire worlds. Those creators, dubbed “Pioneer Partners” and limited to just nine at the outset, will be allowed to sell their wares alongside Microsoft and Mojang’s own. To buy them, players (with Xbox Live Silver or Gold accounts) will have to spend a new in-game currency dubbed “Minecraft Coins,” reserved in exchange for real world money ($1.99 for 300, $4.99 for 840 or $9.99 for 1,720) and intended to be the de facto means of buying all things Minecraft going forward.
Microsoft “We have nine creators today, but we’ll be growing that number at a measured pace,” John Thornton, Executive Producer of Minecraft Realms, says when asked how fast Microsoft hopes to scale things up. “We want to have high quality content, we want to be able to support each creator building what they want to build. To do that we need to pace ourselves and grow our team at the same time that we’re growing the marketplace. Every creator needs somebody to talk to, like an account rep, somebody to review content, so there’s a bunch of mechanics.” The plan right now, he says, is to add partners at a pace of roughly two to five a month.
One of those launch partners, an outfit calling itself Blockworks, is known for seemingly impossible feats. Like creating a scientific facility staged in a martian landscape composed of some 2 million blocks. The twist? It took five builders just two days to pull off. Or an ancient civilization at the bottom of the ocean composed of 33 million blocks that took 15 builders less than a month to complete. “Until now, all of our content’s been pretty much exclusively on Java,” says James Delaney, Blockworks’ founding and managing director. “So this is a chance to connect with all the other Minecraft platforms excluding Java and console. That’s a been a community that’s struggled to access quality content up to now.”
Each creator can only furnish so much content per month, explains Thornton, which makes for a natural bottleneck that should keep the curation process expedient. The content can also now be folded into Minecraft‘s worlds without requiring a full game update. The store itself will have its own approval guidelines, and includes a conventional 30% sales cut back to the app platform, after which the company says it will “seek to give the majority of the remainder to the creator.” What sort of content will Microsoft approve? “Our goal is to make content that’s appropriate for our audience,” says Thornton. “We’re not necessarily critiquing the art style or choice of gameplay. That’s up to the creator. But what we will do is make sure it fits with our brand and within the marketplace itself.”
Microsoft Could the store wind up catering to mass market brands? Is this what went around circa Mojang’s banning of advertising agencies and corporations using Minecraft as a promotional tool last year finally coming around, only with Microsoft at the wheel? Never say never, but Thornton stresses that the company’s plan at this point is to foster a community-driven marketplace. “The goal isn’t to call up Coca-Cola tomorrow and say ‘Come in and party with us’,” he says. “We want our community to come into the marketplace. That’s really our focus.”
And if you’re an original Java version player feeling threatened by any of this, don’t be, says Thornton. “We’re not changing the existing community at all. If you want to still make content for free, and feel the best way to get known is to go out there and just make stuff, that’s still encouraged,” he says. “We’re not changing anything there. Players and creators are still welcome to make free content and put it on social media sites to try to make a name for themselves.”
Microsoft Regardless, some of this is surely down to a company that paid $2.5 billion for the industry’s all-time second bestselling game a few years ago forging new, fire-walled profit channels for an experience that has to date flourished off unfettered user mods. But curation also entails safeguarding, and to that end, Microsoft says this is partly about creating a place for players to find content dependably free of viruses or malware. It’s also working on a way to enable a buy-once, play-anywhere framework through its Xbox Live service, though since this involves multi-platform coordination, all it’s committing to is to say more about how or when this might happen later this spring.
Minecraft for Windows 10 and Mobile Is Finally Getting a Creator Marketplace
‘SculptrVR’ brings ‘Minecraft’-style creation to Google Daydream
When Google’s Daydream headset came out, we praised it for its comfortable construction, but noted its bare game library. Little by little, the platform is adding experiences, even if many are ports that have already had successful runs on other VR platforms. Today, Daydream got its own version of SculptrVR, a Minecraft-like world-building sandbox game that had previously been released for Oculus Rift and HTC Vive.
‘SculptrVR’ brings ‘Minecraft’-style creation to Google Daydream

