July 6 – National Anti-Boredom Month

Are your kids already starting to say “Now what do I do?” Or perhaps you’re hearing the ever-popular “I’m bored!” Having extra time on your hands can be a good thing, often leading to unexpected adventures, surprising creativity, and exciting discoveries. Reading is a wonderful way to incorporate all of these while introducing kids to new ideas, people, places, and experiences. With today’s book, kids can log their journey from “ho hum” to “that’s cool!” as they discover that some things are so much more than they could ever imagine.

Thank you to Ten Speed Young Readers for sending me a copy of this book for review!

I Am Not Boring: The True-Life Story of a Log

Want to hear a story? A boring story? Perhaps the most boring story ever told? You’ve come to the right place! This story—”hundreds of years long”—is about “a log that doesn’t do anything but sit in a forest doing nothing.” Sounds boring, right? Yet despite this, the log has an attitude—and rightly so. Because despite the dismissiveness of the narrator bringing you this story, the log proves it’s worth watching.

Text and illustration copyright © 2026 by Lena Podesta. Courtesy of Ten Speed Young Readers.

Sure, the log may not have flashy talents—it can’t even move on its own. Buuut . . . if, say, a bear would come along and roll it over, then you’d see! You’d see all of the critters hiding there and dining on its bark. And when you take a tour around the log, you’ll find that this humble log provides a home for a diverse population of nature’s wonders. You’ll also discover that the log is patient and resolute year after year, in the snow and the rain. It’s a quality that allows for some quiet, pretty amazing, even “glorious” and “life-changing” things to happen right before your eyes. If only the narrator would notice. But you, dear reader, are sure to!

Text and illustration copyright © 2026 by Lena Podesta. Courtesy of Ten Speed Young Readers.

Back matter recounts the various ways in which a fallen tree acts as a nurse log, fostering plants, creatures both small and large, and even seeds to contribute to the life of a forest. Lena Podesta also includes an Author’s Note in which she reveals her fascination with nurse logs and encourages readers to seek out logs where they live and learn their secrets.

Text and illustration copyright © 2026 by Lena Podesta. Courtesy of Ten Speed Young Readers.

Lena Podesta drops readers into the midst of a quibble between a testy narrator and a log who’s just minding its own business in her humorous and educational story about nurse logs and their importance to forest ecosystems. Children will giggle as the log turns the table on each of the narrator’s complaints about its character with good cheer backed up by remarkable and observable facts. A mix of speech bubbles and regular type distinguish the log’s dialogue from the narrator’s.

Kids will cheer on the adorable log as page by page Podesta reveals more and more the plants and creatures that rely on it. Her bright, uncluttered illustrations give children plenty of details to point out and talk about, from a wide-range of insects, amphibians, fungi, and animals. One vertical page and a final two-page spread of the forest will delight kids, invite closer study, and inspire their own observations in nature.

I Am Not Boring: The True-Life Story of a Log is a top pick for young nature lovers to explore with throughout the year and would be a favorite on any library or home bookshelf.

Ages 3 – 7

Ten Speed Young Readers, 2026 | ISBN 978-0593838297

Lena Podesta has been working as an artist in the animation industry and as an illustrator for more than two decades. Her work has included picture book illustration, editorial illustration, character development, design for animation, directing, story boarding, and character animation. Visit her for more on her books plus lots of activities for kids at lenapodesta.com.

Shake off the boredom and get cracking with these fun I Am Not Boring: The True-Life Story of a Log Activities from Lena Podesta! You’ll find coloring pages, a maze, a word search puzzle, games, and more to add excitement to any day on Lena Podesta’s website!

You can purchase I Am Not Boring: The True-Life Story of a Log from these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

November 14 – International Girls Day

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About the Holiday

Today’s holiday recognizes the spirit of girls and encourages girls and young women to pursue their dreams, talents, and abilities with the slogan “She Can Do Anything.” Around the world young women have a long way to go to overcome the stereotypes, conditions, and pressures in the media and other organizations that keep them from receiving an equal education and from both attempting and succeeding in their desired profession. Today, celebrate the uniqueness of the girls and women in your life, listen to what they really want and want to accomplish, and support them.

Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World

By Rachel Ignotofsky

 

“Nothing says trouble like a woman in pants.” With this revealing attitude from the 1930s, Rachel Ignotofsky introduces her scintillating biographies of 50 intelligent, self-confident, persevering, and inspiring women working in engineering, math, medicine, psychology, geology, physics, astronomy, and more sciences from ancient history through today. The book begins with Hypatia who lived in Greece in the late 300s to early 400s CE and became an expert in astronomy, philosophy,and mathematics, making “contributions to geometry and number theory.” She became one of Alexandria’s first female teachers, “invented a new version of the hydrometer,” and can be found among the intellects in Raphael’s painting “The School of Athens.”

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

Zipping ahead to 1647 readers find Maria Sibylla Merian, considered one of the “greatest scientific illustrators of all time.” Her specialty was entomology. By carefully documenting the lifespan of butterflies, she taught people about the science of metamorphosis, publishing a book on the subject filled with notes and illustrations in 1679. Later she scoured the rainforests of South America, gathering information on never-before-seen insects from that region. Her book, The Metamorphosis of the Insects of Suriname “was published in 1705 and became a hit all over Europe.” Maria was so famous, her picture appeared on German money and stamps.

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

Other women in the nature sciences include Mary Anning, who as a child discovered the first complete ichthyosaur skeleton and went on to become a paleontologist; Mary Agnes Chase, a botanist and expert on grasses; Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, who as a conservationist helped save the Florida Everglades; and Joan Beauchamp Procter, a zoologist specializing in reptiles who discovered the Peninsula Dragon Lizard in 1923; and more.

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

One of the earliest women astronomers and mathematicians was Wang Zhenyi, born in China in 1768. Creating her own eclipse model, she proved her advanced “theories about how the moon blocks our view of the sun—or the earth blocks the sun’s light from reaching the moon—during an eclipse.” She also measured the stars and explained the rotation of the solar system. At the age of 24 she published the 5-volume Simple Principles of Calculation. Zhenyi died at the age of 29, but in her short life she published many books on math and astronomy as well as books of poetry.

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

Women in Science includes many other women who have looked to the stars and mathematics for their careers. Some of these are: Ada Lovelace, the first person to write a computer program; Emmy Noether, who helped Albert Einstein develop his theory relativity, created the field of abstract algebra, and “made new connections between energy and time, and angular momentum”; Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin a quantum physicist in 1900s England who “discovered that the sun is made mostly of hydrogen and helium gas” and in 1956 became Harvard University’s first astronomy professor; Mae Jemison, who in 1992 became the first African-American woman in space and later started her own technology consulting firm as well as founding BioSentient Corporation, and a science camp for kids; plus many others.

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

The book also features Engineers, such as Hertha Ayrton who improved electric lights by inventing “a new rod that made a clean and quiet bright light” and the Ayrton fan that blew away mustard gas during World War I; and Lillian Gilbreth, who used her theories of “organizational psychology” in inventing the foot pedal for garbage cans, shelving for refrigerators, and even the “work triangle” for kitchens “that determines the distance from the sink to the stove” and saves time. There are Geneticists such as Nettie Stevens who discovered the “X” and “Y” chromosomes, and Barbara McClintock—the pants wearer from the beginning of the post—and the first person “to make a complete genetic map of corn” and discover jumping genes, or “transposons.”

The field of Medicine has benefited from women such as Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman doctor; Alice Ball, a chemist and the first African-American woman to graduate from the University of Hawaii, who helped cure leprosy with her chemical work; and Gerty Cori who discovered how our bodies covert glucose, helping us better understand diabetes. In 1947 she became the first American woman to win a Nobel Prize.

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Image and text copyright Rachel Ignotofsky, courtesy of rachelignotofskydesign.com

And this list only begins to scratch the surface of all the fascinating stories of women who overcame social, political, and personal obstacles to follow where their intelligence took them. Inspirational, entertaining, and undeniably eye-catching Rachel Ignotofsky’s Women in Science presents expertly written, one-page biographies that hit all the high (and sometimes unfortunate low) points in these scientist’s lives. The striking layout of both the text and illustrations keep readers riveted to the page, The left-hand side contains a representational drawing of the scientist surrounded by the subjects and materials of her work as well as trivia about her and a quotation. On the right-hand page, small illustrated facts frame the woman’s life story.

Interspersed between the biographies are pages offering a timeline of women’s milestones, depicting lab tools, and graphing statistics of women in STEM. The back matter is impressive, with two more pages presenting 15 more scientists, a four-page, illustrated glossary, resources including films, websites, and books, and an index. Rachel Ignotofsky concludes her book by saying, “Let us celebrate these trailblazers so we can inspire the next generation. Together, we can pick up where they left off and continue the search for knowledge. So go out and tackle new problems, find your answers and learn everything you can to make your own discoveries!”

Ages 7 and up

Ten Speed Press, 2016 | ISBN 978-160774976

To discover more books by Rachel Ignotofsky, visit her website!

International Girls Day Activity

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What Kind of Scientist Would You Be? Word Search

 

Find the 18 different scientists in this printable What Kind of Scientist Would You Be? Puzzle. Here’s the Solution!  Then pick one and write why you would like to be that type of scientist!

Picture Book Review