Blog Archive
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2010
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March
(22)
- A Dog Called Kitty
- Pink and Say
- Lizzie Bright and the Bucknister Boy
- Good Dog
- Just in Case
- Ella Enchanted
- Kitten's First Full Moon
- Flotsam
- James and the Giant Peach
- On My Honor
- Duck for President
- There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom
- Fallen
- Here Lies Arthur
- Lord of Flies
- Crispin
- The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod
- The Hunger Games
- The Magician's Elephant
- The Tale of Despereaux
- Frog and Toad Together
- Because of Winn Dixie
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February
(28)
- Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
- Harry Potter and the Sorcer's Stone
- Savvy
- Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Rodrick Rules
- From the Belly Button of the Moon
- Laughing Tomatoes and Other Poems
- How to Heal a Broken Wing
- The Magician's Boy
- Wildfire
- A Wrinkle in Time
- Snot Stew
- Goosebumps, The Blob that Ate Everyone
- Rosa
- Martin's Big Words
- Hondo & Fabian
- The Wall
- Knuffle Bunny Too
- Sylvestor and the Magic Pebble
- Stage Fright on a Summer Night, Magic Tree House
- Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark
- The Stinky Cheese Man
- Verdi
- Junie B. Jones, Stupid Smelly Bus
- Breaking Dawn
- Eclipse
- New Moon
- Twilight
- The Invention of Hugo Cabret
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March
(22)
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Friday, July 2, 2010
Sunday, March 28, 2010
A Dog Called Kitty

Children will love the sweet story. Kids usually love stories of children with their pet. Children will be able to identify with the fear Ricky is feeling and hopefully it will help students through fears they may have.
Wallace, Bill. (2008). Core collection for children and young adults. Scarecrow Pr.
Pink and Say

Kids really enjoy this story even though it may seem above their heads. Kids need to learn and practice empathy and compassion especially in a world of such diversity. The pictures are also just as beautiful as the story.
Polacco, Patricia. (1994). Pink and say. Putnam Juvenile.
Lizzie Bright and the Bucknister Boy

Kids will like this story because of the good story of friendship. They will be able to relate to the characters. This book contains a lot of deep subject matter but it is an enjoyable journey.
Schmidt, Gary. (2008). Lizzie bright and the buckminster boy. Laurel Leaf.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Good Dog

Kids will love this book because kids always love to read about animals. Poetry can be introduced and enjoyed through the love of animals. The poems will make children laugh and it is good for all ages.
Gottfried, Maya, & Zakanitch, Robert. (2008). Good dog. Dragonfly Books.
Just in Case

Kids will love this book and will be drawn in by the beautiful pictures. Kids also love to hear the 2 languages read out loud back to back. Kids love to learn vocabulary in a new language.
Morales, Yuyi. (2008). Just In case. Roaring Brook.
Ella Enchanted

Kids, girls especially, will love this story. It is an easy read and then the kids can watch the movie. The movie was very well done. Everyone loves a good Cinderella story.
Levine, Gail. (2004). Ella enchanted (rack). HarperTeen.
Kitten's First Full Moon

This story is very sweet and innocent. The kitten mistakes a reflection of the moon for a bowl of milk. The kitten tries to drink the milk but never can. When the kitten arrives home she finds a bowl of milk so her hard work pays off. I love the pictures and of course Kevin Henkes is an amazing author.
Kids love stories about animals and this one is no different. Children will love the large black and white pictures and the simple story. Everyone can identify with getting what you are working for.
Henkes, Kevin, Schwedt, Rachel, & DeLong, Janice. (2008). Core collection for children and young adults. Scarecrow Pr.
Flotsam

Kids love wordless books because they can create their own story. The pictures are absolutely amazing in this book and kids will want to look at them over and over again. Sea creatures come to life.
Wiesner, David, Schwedt, Rachel, & DeLong, Janice. (2008). Flotsam. Scarecrow Pr.
James and the Giant Peach

This story feels like a classic read. I really enjoyed the adventure aspect and creativity of the journey inside a giant peach. I liked the morals weaved through the story in such an imaginative world.
The students will love the cloud men because of the creative weapons used to attack James in the peach. Students will learn how to work together and other life lessons.Roald Dahl creates amazing stories that most children are eager to read - he captivates his audience.
Dahl, Roald, & Blake, Quentin. (2007). James and the giant peach. Puffin.
On My Honor

Kids can learn to deal with death or connect with the characters in his time of grief. I would hope kids could also learn a lesson in not doing the dangerous things the kids did in the book. This book could start some good conversations about what really happens in life - and what is inevitable.
Bauer, Marion. (1986). On my honor. Yearling Books.
Duck for President

Kids absolutely love this series. They will listen to it over and over and over again. The pictures add to the text and it even teaches a bit about the electoral process.
Cronin, Doreen, & Lewin, Betsy. (2004). Duck for president. Simon & Schuster Children.
There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom

Students will like this story because it realistic and kids can relate to the character even if the boy makes extreme choices. The title will grab students' attention and make them want to know why a boy is in the girl's bathroom. This is a taboo subject and kids want to know!
Sachar, Louis. (1997). There's a boy in the girl's bathroom. Random House.
Fallen

This story is geared toward teenagers an the emotional conflict that comes when deciding between two boys. The author has a fantastic way of writing and explaining the emotions so the reader feels a connection - teenagers are always looking for connections. Girls will like it for the romance and boys will enjoy the action.
Kate, Lauren. (2009). Fallen. Delacorte Pr.
Here Lies Arthur

This books seems a little too advanced for kids. Older teenagers will probably love the book because it has so much in it to keep the reader's attention. This era usually draws attention from boys but this one is narrated by the female character, so girls might be drawn to it as well.
Reeve, Philip. (2010). Here Lies arthur. Scholastic Paperbacks.
Lord of Flies

Kids would probably like it because it is about kids on a deserted island left to fend for themselves. Kids can create their ideas about what they would do differently than the kids in the book. This story would spur a lot of conversation.
Golding, William, & Blumenthal, Bob. (2006). Lord of the flies. Trafford.
Crispin

Student's will be able to read what it is like to have nothing - most student's will understand what that is like for the first time and some will be able to relate to the character. This is not a bright and shiny book but kids need to read this side of life too. It is a bit sugar coated but it is an introduction to the dark side.
Avi. (2003). Crispin. New York, New York.
The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod

Teenage boys need more books like this one. Twilight is aimed at girls and has hit the big screen. This story should become a film as well to draw more boys into the world of reading.
Brewer, Heather. (2008). Eighth grade bites. Speak.
The Hunger Games

Boys and girls would both dive into this story. The boys will like the violence and actions and the girls will enjoy the romance in the story. The book looks like an adult book - reminiscent of John Grisham but it is made for teens.
Collins, Suzanne. (2008). The Hunger games. Scholastic.
The Magician's Elephant

I don't think kids will engage in this book either. My niece, an avid book reader, could not finish it either. I do not recommend it. Maybe boys would be interested in it because the main character is a boy.
DiCamillo, Kate. (2009). The Magician's elephant. Candlewick Pr.
The Tale of Despereaux

Kids would like it because it's fun, exciting, and magical. It has also been made into a movie - I find that kids like to read books when they can also watch a movie to put their pictures in their head onto the big screen.
DiCamillo, Kate, & Ering, Timothy. (2006). The Tale of despereaux. Candlewick Pr.
Frog and Toad Together

Kids will like the story of friendship of these two amphibians. They will love the simple pictures and the simple things the friends do together. A lot can be learned by reading about these two friends.
Lobel, Arnold, & Lobel, Arnold. (1972). Frog and toad together ;. HarperTrophy.
Because of Winn Dixie

Kids would love this book mainly because if the great dog and great people Opal meets. Opal and her dog bring the whole town back together. Kids will be able to identify with the characters. This book has also been made into a movie.
DiCamillo, Kate. (2009). Because of Winn-dixie. Candlewick Pr.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Characters are very strong and are very believable. Dialogue shows each of the characters in more depth and allows the reader in to see their personalities.
Rowling, J. (1999). Harry potter and the prisoner of azkaban. Scholastic Paperbacks.
Harry Potter and the Sorcer's Stone

Plot is a VERY strong element because so many details go into this story and series that carry the reader along. The characters are very believable even though they are doing things that normal humans cannot - magic. The characters still suffer everyday tribulations of teenagers.
Rowling, J. (1998). Harry potter and the sorcerer. Arthur A. Levine Books.
Savvy

The plot is very creative and interesting and takes the reader to an interesting world where the children have a bit of magic. Unexpected insights allow Mibs to discover her fathers Savvy.
Law, Ingrid. (2008). Savvy. New York, NY: Dial.
Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Rodrick Rules

This was a humorous tale. I thought it was very believable and everything in the book could actually happen. The children are creative in the story and turn a bland day into something great. The illustrations are great!
The book has a nice format (a diary) and engages kids that are not particularly interested in reading. Illustrations are cute and comical. Boys and girls will enjoy this boy and will be able to identify with the characters. It is also now a movie.
Kinney, Jeff. (2008). Diary of a wimpy kid. Amulet.
Monday, February 15, 2010
From the Belly Button of the Moon

This book is full of poems about summer. Some poems are short and choppy, others are longer and include Latino heritage. Some poems rhyme and others do not. The poems describe the joys that can be found on this earth and the beauty it holds. The poems also describe nature and how it mirrors other things in nature. Each poem has the poem in English and then in Spanish.
The pictures are brightly colored and use colors from the Latino culture as well as designs that come from the culture. The pictures fill 2 pages per poem and usually tell more than just the poem explains. The illustrations look as if they are from a dream.
Alarcon, Francisco. (1998). From the belly button of the moon and other summer poems. San Francisco, CA: Children's Book Press.
Laughing Tomatoes and Other Poems

This book is full of poems about spring. Some poems are short and choppy, others are longer and include Latino heritage. Famous Latinos like Cesar Chavez are even included in the poem to celebrate his birthday. Each poem has the poem in English and then in Spanish. The final poem tells how they are only new beginnings. The book gives a very positive message.
The pictures are brightly colored and use colors from the Latino culture as well as designs that come from the culture. The pictures fill 2 pages per poem and usually tell more than just the poem explains. The illustrations look as if they are from a dream.
Alarcón, Francisco, Gonzalez, Maya, & Wadham, Tim. (1997). Laughing tomatoes and other spring poems. Neal Schuman Pub.
How to Heal a Broken Wing

The pictures in the story add more to the story than just the few words in the story tell. The pictures are cartoon-like but are very sweet and colorful. Some pages have a full two page picture spread, others are asymmetrical or laid out like the Sunday comics.
Graham, Bob. (2008). How to Heal a broken wing. Cambridge, MA: Candlewick Pr.
The Magician's Boy

The pictures are bright and colorful to add to the magical mood of the story. The pictures add to the text of the story. The pictures also help to establish the setting because this story has so many setting changes in the Land of Story.
Cooper, Susan, & Riglietti, Serena. (2005). The Magician. New York, NY: Margaret K. McElderry.
Wildfire

The plot is a good one for children because the story teaches about making the right choices and what happens if you don't. The character does not really say much about how much he wants the dog but his desire is understated.
Hill, Elizabeth, & Shepperson, Rob. (2004). Wildfire!. Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR).
A Wrinkle in Time

Girls can completely connect with the main character Meg because she is working on knowing she is beautiful inside and out. Boys will like the story as well but girls will be able to understand it on a deeper level. Libraries need to upgrade to the new cover - the old one looks so dated that students might overlook it.
L'Engle, Madeleine. (2007). A Wrinkle in time. St. Martin.
Snot Stew

Dialogue is very important in this story because the story is from the point of view of kittens and their view of the world. This was not a very good book in my opinion but the kittens have unexpected insights because kittens see the world differently than humans.
Wallace, Bill, & McCue, Lisa. (2008). Snot stew. Aladdin.
Goosebumps, The Blob that Ate Everyone

The plot carries this story because it is an interesting concept of what could happen if you are zapped by electricity. The characters are believable because they could be any child from any school that embark on a crazy adventure.
Stine, R. (1997). The Blob that ate everyone. New York, NY: Parachute Press, Inc.
Rosa

The illustrator uses muted colors to establish the mood in this amazing story. The use of collage allows for a dynamic that reinforces the words written on the page. The pictures fill one and a half pages and are very realistic.
Giovanni, Nikki, & Collier, Bryan. (2005). Rosa. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR).
Martin's Big Words

This picture book is well illustrated and has beautiful paintings depicting the fight for segregation. The pictures help add to the mood by using color. The composition and use of mixed media and collage create an amazing addition to the beautiful words in the story.
Rappaport, Doreen, & Collier, Bryan. (2001). Martin. New York, NY: Jump At The Sun.
Hondo & Fabian
Hondo is a dog asleep on the floor in his home and Fabian is a cat asleep on the windowsill. When they wake up, Hondo goes on a drive to play at the beach with another dog named Fred. Fabian stays at home to play and escape from the baby. Hondo arrives home at eats his meal with and next to Fabian. The two pets go back to sleep on the floor and in the windowsill after a hard day of playing.
This story does not follow a traditional plot line. It is more of a circular story that allows the read to believe the characters will begin and end their adventures the same way each time.
The pictures in this story are quite beautiful and help to add to the text because there are very few words in the story. Illustrations fill one page while a few words in bold black fill the opposite page. Illustrations are very soft and realistic with muted colors.
McCarty, Peter. (2002). Hondo and fabian. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR).
This story does not follow a traditional plot line. It is more of a circular story that allows the read to believe the characters will begin and end their adventures the same way each time.
The pictures in this story are quite beautiful and help to add to the text because there are very few words in the story. Illustrations fill one page while a few words in bold black fill the opposite page. Illustrations are very soft and realistic with muted colors.
McCarty, Peter. (2002). Hondo and fabian. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR).

Sunday, February 14, 2010
The Wall

The pictures tell a detailed story of the fall of communism. Actual photographs of the author's childhood are mixed with asides - drawings and paintings explain details of the Soviet system. The drawings are mostly realistic and use texture and hatching with a splash of color. The dream sequence pictures are very bright and colorful to differentiate between living under the Soviet system (black and white) and being free in the author's dream.
Sís, Peter. (2007). The Wall. Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR)
Knuffle Bunny Too

Trixie was excited to walk to school with her dad because she was going to share her favorite stuffed animal Knuffle Bunny. When she arrived at school she learned that another student, Sonja, had the same stuffed animal so Knuffle Bunny wasn't as special as Trixie thought. All day at school the girls argued about the bunnies until the teacher took them up and put them away until the end of the day. The girls were given the bunnies back, they went home, then spent the evening with their families as usual. In the middle of the night Trixie realized she did not have her Knuffle Bunny, she had Sonja's! She woke up her parents and demanded her dad call Sonja's family to get her back when they received a phone call to meet to exchange bunnies. Both families travel through the neighborhood to exchange bunnies and the next day the girls were best friends.
This story is illustrated through black and white photographs on every page. Within the black and white photograph are cartoon drawings of Trixie and her story. The pictures definitely extend the plot because the words in the story are very few and very simple.
Willems, Mo. (2007). Knuffle bunny too. New York, NY: Hyperion.
Sylvestor and the Magic Pebble
Sylvester Duncan is a donkey who loved collecting pebbles of unusual shape and color and on vacation he found an extraordinary flaming red one that looked like a marble. Sylvester discovers that the pebble grants wishes but when he comes across a hungry lion, instead of wishing to be somewhere safe he wishes that he was a rock. Sylvester could no longer hold the magic pebble so he has to wait many seasons when his parents finally came to picnic by the large rock. Duncan's parents find the beautiful pebble and place the pebble on top of the rock. Duncan is able to wish himself back to normal and they have a lovely family reunion. The family places the pebble in a safe in case of the chance that they might need to use it.
I think the story is well illustrated. The drawings are simple and brightly colored. Most pictures span both pages and the pictures help to explain the story to the reader, they add to the text.
Steig, William. (2009). Sylvester and the magic pebble. Atheneum.
I think the story is well illustrated. The drawings are simple and brightly colored. Most pictures span both pages and the pictures help to explain the story to the reader, they add to the text.
Steig, William. (2009). Sylvester and the magic pebble. Atheneum.

Stage Fright on a Summer Night, Magic Tree House

I personally think this is a poorly written story but the characters are believable and have personalities that could teach young people how to be a better person. This story is full of precise vocabulary and teaches the reader new language from Elizabethan time.
Osborne, Mary, & Murdocca, Sal. (2002). Stage fright on a summer night. Random House Books for Young Readers.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark

The author creates a mood that children and adults love - fear. Even though the stories may not even be scary, the reader is meant to scare it's listener by jumping or screaming while telling the story. The black and white drawings seem to be scarier than the words in the book.
Schwartz, Alvin. (1986). Scary stories to tell in the dark. HarperTrophy.
The Stinky Cheese Man

This is a combination of chapter book and picture book. The pictures are made by collage and are very funny when added with the fractured fairy tales. Some pages have no illustrations or the characters have been cut out of the background and placed somewhere else. This is a very interesting book and there is a lot to look at and discover.
Scieszka, Jon. (1992). The stinky cheese man and other fairly stupid tales. Penguin Group.
Verdi

The illustrations are breathtaking. The artist chose bright vivid colors to set the mood as the we see Verdi come of age. The illustrations help to tell part of the story and add tho the characters personalities.
Cannon, Janell. (1997). Verdi. Harcourt Children.
Junie B. Jones, Stupid Smelly Bus

Junie uses figurative language to describe her thoughts, fears, and what angers her. Mood is very evident in this story to explain how this 5-6 year old girl feels about the world.
Park, Barbara, & Brunkus, Denise. (1992). Junie b. jones and the stupid smelly bus. Random House Childrens Books.
Breaking Dawn

The lovemaking is highly understated as the reader is left to infer what happens between Bella and Edward. The characters are in an amazingly well put together plot and the reader will have a hard time putting this book down!
Meyer, Stephenie. (2008). Breaking dawn. New York, NY: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
Eclipse

The tension between Jacob and Edward is magnified through understatement.
The point of view of each character is explained through thoughts instead of spoken dialogue and we learn more about the love for Bella and the hate for each other (between Jacob and Edward.)
Meyer, Stephenie. (2007). Eclipse. New York, NY: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
New Moon

Understatement is rampant in this story because of Bella's depression and how she loses herself when Edward leaves her in Forks alone. The reader is left to infer and add their own life experiences into the story. Internal dialogue allows the reader to see how each character feels about situations and relationships during the story.
Meyer, Stephenie. (2008). New moon. New York, NY: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
Twilight

Dialogue is very strong in this story because one of the best parts of the story is when Edward and Bella declare their love for each other without saying the words I love you.
This book has a lot of understatement because it is a teen story and the reader is left to let their imagination take them as far as their knowledge and inferring allows.
Meyer, Stephenie. (2006). Twilight. New York, NY: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
The Invention of Hugo Cabret
Hugo is a young boy in France living with his father. Hugo's father finds a broken robot in a museum attic but dies during the museum fire while trying to fix the robot. Hugo must go live with his uncle in the walls of the train station to maintain the station clocks but his uncle mysteriously disappears so Hugo must continue his uncle's job so he is not sent to an orphanage. Hugo must steal food in the train station as well as toy parts from the toymaker to try to fix the robot, but one day toymaker catches him. The toymaker takes Hugo's notebook of drawings and makes Hugo work in the shop to pay back his debt and Hugo begins to discover the mystery of the toymaker - Georges Melies. Hugo and Georges goddaughter Isabel learn that Georges was a very famous filmmaker and the two help bring him out of hiding to be honored by the film industry and Hugo is adopted by the Melies family.
This book is part picture book -many beautiful black and white drawings fill multiple pages to tell part of the story without words.
Inner dialogue is very important in this story to tell the story through Hugo's eyes.
View the following site for more info on Georges Melies.
http://www.theinventionofhugocabret.com/about_georges.htm
Selznick, Brian. (2007). The Invention of hugo cabret. Scholastic.
This book is part picture book -many beautiful black and white drawings fill multiple pages to tell part of the story without words.
Inner dialogue is very important in this story to tell the story through Hugo's eyes.
View the following site for more info on Georges Melies.
http://www.theinventionofhugocabret.com/about_georges.htm
Selznick, Brian. (2007). The Invention of hugo cabret. Scholastic.

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