Free book for boys and reluctant readers

Minecraft Adventures - Books for boys

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices

Choose your device

KindleiPad/iPod/iPhoneGoogle Play (Android Tablets)nookkoboRead Online

US$8.99 Paperback

Shop LocalAmazon-USAmazon-UKAmazon-Canada

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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.

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.

Minecraft Adventures - Books for boys

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.

Minecraft Adventures - Books for boys

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices

Choose your device

KindleiPad/iPod/iPhoneGoogle Play (Android Tablets)nookkoboRead Online

US$8.99 Paperback

Shop LocalAmazon-USAmazon-UKAmazon-Canada

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!

Minecraft Adventures - Books for boys

Flynn’s Log is free on the following devices

Choose your device

KindleiPad/iPod/iPhoneGoogle Play (Android Tablets)nookkoboRead Online

US$8.99 Paperback

Shop LocalAmazon-USAmazon-UKAmazon-Canada

News for Parents of Reluctant Readers

Get Reluctant Reader Book News from Stone Marshall

We hate SPAM and promise to keep your email address safe.

Click here to learn more

Be sure you get your bonuses, send an email to Stone@StoneMarshall.com and say Hi, or add Stone@StoneMarshall.com to your address book now. Gmail users, make sure your entry is confirmed. Add email from Stone@StoneMarshall.com to your Primary Tab. This video explains it well. https://stonemarshall.com/email-from-promo-to-primary Don't have an email address? Get gmail here, free.

Giveaway-Free Minecraft Book – Stone Marshall-Author

October 2014 Giveaway-Free Minecraft Paperback Book

Signed by Stone Marshall

As a thank you to true fans I’m giving away one Free copy of my Minecraft Adventure book, Flynn’s Log 1: Rescue Island.

The winner will be chosen at random on November 1, 2014. If you win, I’ll email you to get your mailing address.

Many fans ask what a paperback is. Paperbacks are real books, you know like a book made of paper pages and a normal cover.

Good Luck!

Enter to win a Free Minecraft Book

via Giveaway-Free Minecraft Book – Stone Marshall-Author.

How Minecraft Helps Kids Learn to Read | WIRED

How Videogames Like Minecraft Actually Help Kids Learn to Read | WIRED

Minecraft is the hot new videogame among teachers and parents. It’s considered genuinely educational: Like an infinite set of programmable Lego blocks, it’s a way to instill spatial reasoning, math, and logic—the skills beloved by science and technology educators. But from what I’ve seen, it also teaches something else: good old-fashioned reading and writing.

How does it do this? The secret lies not inside the game itself but in the players’ activities outside of it. Minecraft is surrounded by a culture of literacy. The game comes with minimal instructions or tutorials, so new players immediately set about hunting for info on how it works. That means watching YouTube videos of experts at play, of course, but it also means poring over how-to texts at Minecraft wikis and “walk-through” sites, written by gamers for gamers. Or digging into printed manuals like The Ultimate Player’s Guide to Minecraft or the official Minecraft Redstone Handbook, some of which are now best sellers.

This is complex, challenging material. I analyzed several chunks of The Ultimate Player’s Guide using the Flesch-Kincaid Reading Ease scale, and they scored from grade 8 to grade 11. Yet in my neighborhood they’re being devoured by kids in the early phases of elementary school. Games, it seems, can motivate kids to read—and to read way above their level. This is what Constance Steinkuehler, a games researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, discovered. She asked middle and high school students who were struggling readers (one 11th-grade student read at a 6th-grade level) to choose a game topic they were interested in, and then she picked texts from game sites for them to read—some as difficult as first-year-college language. The kids devoured them with no help and nearly perfect accuracy.

How could they do this? “Because they’re really, really motivated,” Steinkuehler tells me. It wasn’t just that the students knew the domain well; there were plenty of unfamiliar words. But they persisted more because they cared about the task. “It’s situated knowledge. They see a piece of language, a turn of phrase, and they figure it out.”

Hannah Gerber, a literacy researcher at Sam Houston State University, found much the same thing. She monitored several 10th-grade students at school and at home and saw that they read only 10 minutes a day in English class—but an astonishing 70 minutes at home as they boned up on games. Again, it was challenging stuff. Steinkuehler found that videogame sites devoted to World of Warcraft, for example, are written at nearly 12th-grade level, with a 2 to 6 percent incidence of “academic” jargon.

Passion for games drives writing too. When Steinkuehler informally observes kids contributing to game sites and discussions online, she sees serious craft. “Suddenly, being a writer is sexy and hip and cool. They have an audience that knows their stuff, and they expect you to be knowledgeable,” she says. What about fiction? Oh, games have you covered there too: Behold the teeming seas of Minecraft fan stories at sites like FanFiction.net or Wattpad. My kids are deep into a trilogy of Minecraft novellas—written by a 13-year-old girl in Missouri.

I’m praising Minecraft, but nearly all games have this effect. The lesson here is the same one John Dewey instructed us in a century ago: To get kids reading and writing, give them a real-world task they care about. These days that’s games.

via How Videogames Like Minecraft Actually Help Kids Learn to Read | WIRED.

The Minecraft Parent – The New Yorker

A generation raised on the delights of Donkey Kong, Super Mario, Sonic the Hedgehog, and Game Boy Tetris has now grown up. We have iPhones that wake us in the morning, Kindles that put us to sleep, and Facebook news feeds that annoy and entice us during the day. Many of us also have children. These children see us on our screens, want to play with these screens, and eventually ask to have their own screens. The discussion about how much screen time a child should be allowed is central to modern parenting. It’s the inescapable question.

The fervor and complications behind this issue were brought into relief by two recent news stories. The first was a report in the Times, by Nick Bilton, about how, in 2010, Steve Jobs was a “low-tech parent” who did not let his children have access to Apple’s new gadget, the iPad. Bilton quotes Walter Isaacson, who describes how Jobs instead “made a point of having dinner at the big long table in their kitchen, discussing books and history and a variety of things.” Then, on Monday, Microsoft paid $2.5 billion for Minecraft, the hugely popular game in which players build, explore, and destroy Lego-like virtual worlds. When the Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella was asked why his company bought Minecraft, he replied, “If you think about it, it’s the one game parents want their kids to play.”

via The Minecraft Parent – The New Yorker.

Book Review: ‘Boy Who Drew Monsters’ a chilling family tale set alongside foreboding Maine coast – The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

The Boy Who Drew Monsters” starts with dreams: a home in Maine by the sea; an only, precious child; stories spun in sleep. Quickly, dreams become nightmares as reality slowly warps, and dark, childish imaginings infiltrate even the adult world.

Jack Peter is the boy in the title. He’s a bright 10-year-old on the autism spectrum, prone to obsession. He wants only to read comic books, then he focuses only on playing war with plastic figurines. As the story begins, Jack has begun to spend all of his hours drawing imaginary creatures. He refuses to leave the house, venturing out only a few times a year for doctors appointments. His only friend is Nick Weller, a kind and quiet boy who indulges Jack’s quirks.

via Book Review: ‘Boy Who Drew Monsters’ a chilling family tale set alongside foreboding Maine coast – The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Blog: Mark’s Say: Minecraft and the vitality of the printed book · Readings.com.au

If you are the parent or grandparent of boys aged between five to 12, chances are you are familiar with Minecraft, a computer game. Minecraft has spawned a range of official books, rather ugly affairs, which the developers insist can only be printed at one particular European printer. As the whole demographic worldwide wants these books, it’s often hard for the printer to keep up. For local publisher, Hardie Grant Egmont, the book has been a bonanza. In November, the Minecraft Blockopedia will be published and will retail for $59.95. One large Australian retailer reputedly wants 100,000 copies. We want quite a few too. But the Minecraft books are creating a bit of confusion on our shop floor. A customer recently asked one of our children’s specialists if we had Minecraft. ‘Of course,’ she answered, ‘it’s in the children’s section.’ ‘What? You keep it in the children’s section?’ ‘Oh yes, it’s very popular with five to 12-year-old boys.’ ‘I can’t believe that Mein Kampf could appeal like that!’ Red faces all round!

via Blog: Mark’s Say: Minecraft and the vitality of the printed book · Readings.com.au.

Shannon and Dean Hale introduce a superhero princess in ‘The Princess in Black’ | Deseret News

Princess Magnolia does things a proper princess should do — she sits primly and is polite while receiving an unexpected visit from the nosy Duchess Wigtower.

But when her glitterstone ring goes off, it’s an alarm that a monster is getting too close to the entrance to Monster Land, which is located in a goat field not far from the castle.

via Shannon and Dean Hale introduce a superhero princess in ‘The Princess in Black’ | Deseret News.

Reluctant readers get in the game with books about sport

For any parent of a child who’d rather be outside kicking a football than inside reading a book, book selection can be a fine art. You can try fantasy, you can try mystery but often they drift wide of the goalposts, so to speak. My own 11-year-old son is one of these boys. A few years ago I stumbled across Michael Wagner’s books, Maxx Rumble Cricket. It was a compendium of eight smaller books rolled into one, a season full of stories and statistics about a young cricket team. It was the first book he read cover to cover. Now, with more regularity than a Glenn McGrath over, it makes an appearance at the start of each cricket season, to be read again.

via Reluctant readers get in the game with books about sport.

7 Books That Will Get Young Boys Reading | Bob Shea

Bob Shea: In celebration of the publication of our comedic dinosaur-tinged western, Kid Sheriff and the Terrible Toads Lane and I were asked to recommend excellent books every boy is sure to love.

Lane Smith: There’s only one problem, all boys are different. Who are these boys? I don’t know these boys. One might be into tales of high speed rail travel while another might love nothing more than a good ol’ yarn of the mischievous and colorful Fiddler Crab.

Bob Shea: This was clear when I attempted to foist Harry Potter on my son. He took one look and said, “Pass!”

“Why?” I said, “Kids your age go nuts for this stuff! It’s got ghosts and monsters, and

THERE’S A MOVIE! Fall in line, son.”

“Yeah, but none of that stuff really happened. Peddle your lies somewhere else,” he said. Then we read Diary of a Plausibly Wimpy Kid again for the five hundredth time.

I was just glad he was reading. So the book every boy should read? Whatever they want. As long as they are reading. That’s the trick. So you can pretty much ignore this list right now.

Lane Smith: But if you’re still reading, we put together our 7 Picks Every Boy Should Read, but don’t have to if they don’t feel like it. Also, girls are more than welcome to read any of these titles, just be discreet.

via 7 Books That Will Get Young Boys Reading | Bob Shea.