Wednesday, January 30, 2008
The Case of the Missing Marquess: An Enola Holmes Mystery by Nancy Springer
Unwind by Neal Shusterman
Imagine a future in which parents can choose to get rid of their kids when they turn 13. Even stranger, the parents can feel good about themselves because their kids are being "unwound" and their body parts are used to save other people's lives. Kids end up as "unwinds" for many reasons. Connor's parents didn't like his behavior, Risa was an orphan, and Lev's parents actually gave him away as a "tithe" or a kind of sacrifice to God. They meet on a highway on the way to being unwound, and that's when their adventures begin. They need to survive until they're 18 years old, when they can no longer be unwound. This book made me think about some big questions like who should decide whether a life has value and how will we deal with future technology that gives us the power to transplant more and more organs. It's a powerful book, but also disturbing (especially the "harvest" at the end). Neal Shusterman really knows how to write books that interest middle school kids. Recommended for readers who liked The Giver and Among the Hidden and House of the Scorpion.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Beastly by Alex Flinn
Day of Tears by Julius Lester
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Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney
This is a hot title right now and I finally grabbed a copy and got it read in one night. Greg, the somewhat nerdy hero of the books, says he's not going to keep a diary, but he does, and it includes lots and lots of cartoons. Greg's entering middle school fully aware of his social status (pretty low). His really nerdy best friend is even lower on the social ladder than he is, but he doesn't seem to know or care. Things never seem to go right for Greg--with his parents, his brothers, or his friend Rowley. In the end I felt like I read a comic strip rather than a fully developed novel, but it was a fun read and the cartoons are the best part of it. I think this book (and it's sequels) will be enjoyed by kids from 4th-7th grades.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Emi and the Rhino Scientist by Mary Kay Carson
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Thursday, January 03, 2008
Elephant Run by Roland Smith
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Freak by Marcella Pixley
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Miriam Fisher is different. She likes to read the dictionary, write in her diary that she named Clyde, and recite Shakespeare. She's an outsider at her middle school and for the most part doesn't care that she has only one good friend. What she does care about is that her older sister, a former nerd like Miriam, has changed and is rejecting her. She also has a big crush on a high school boy who treats her as an intellectual equal but really is interested in her older sister. The real conflict of the book is that Jenny, a girl at school, starts to humiliate and harass Miriam on a regular basis. Jenny seems to be desperately trying to be popular, and her way of appealing to popular kids is to harass Miriam and let boys take advantage of her. Miriam takes a lot of abuse without telling a parent or teacher, and toward the end she snaps and fights back. Then in the very end she does a courageous thing to help Jenny. For some reason this book did not appeal to me in spite of the fact that it has gotten great reviews and it's about a timely subject. Maybe it was because Miriam was just a little too much of a "freak." I read this book thinking it might be the next big hit with middle school girls. After reading it, I don't think it's a book with the same kind of appeal as Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson or Just Listen by Sarah Dessen. If you read the book, please let me know what you thought...maybe I missed something.
Castle Corona by Sharon Creech
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In this fantasy fairy tale, Pia and Enzo are orphaned peasant children who find a mysterious pouch and shortly afterwards are summoned to the castle to be tasters for the King. They don't know why they were chosen, but they soon come to enjoy eating good food, roaming the castle, and meeting the prince and princess. The royal family is a bit ridiculous and stereotypical, which keeps the book lighthearted and mildly humorous, but kept me from really getting engaged with the story. Creech is a fine writer, and this light, breezy story that ends with a predictable twist will probably be popular with younger kids (grades 3-5). This fantasy fairy tale reminded me of Once Upon a Marigold by Jean Ferris, which I didn't like all that well, either. Personally, I much prefer the fairy tale stories with more depth of character such as The Goose Girl and others by Shannon Hale, Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine, and Beauty by Robin McKinley.
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