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  • fairrosa 10:47 am on February 11, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , friendship, magical story,   

    11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass 

    I listened to this one. Ever since my daughter read and really liked this book, I wanted to fit it in my reading schedule. Time passed, and I never got around to do that — until I downloaded it on my Android phone from the New York Public Library and had the chance to have some fun with it nightly when I wash dishes! And what fun I had!

    This has been a steadily popular book in my middle school library with 4th and 5th grade girls for the past 2 or 3 years and it has good reasons to be so. The ingredients are delicious: an old family feud, an enchantment placed on the two friends, the re-living of the same day with variations depending on one’s choices (which include some REALLY poor but thrilling ones,) and the reforge of a lost friendship. What not to love? I am also grateful that the narrator has a pleasant voice. A delightful ride, for sure.

     
  • fairrosa 9:20 am on November 20, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story   

    Secrets at Sea by Richard Peck 

    Who would have thought? Richard Peck: the 21st Century Austen for the 8 to 10 set? But he IS! This little gem of a book has all the good stuff:

    A cast of talking mice whose actions and living conditions are completely believable and are in tune with children’s fantasy play; a twisting, surprising, and humorous upstairs/downstairs comedy that involves Royalty and seafaring; the perennial favorite plot progression allowing the lower class main characters go up the social ladder due to good luck and hard work; and clean grown-up romances.

    Peck’s deft hand also created a great protagonist in the no-nonsense Helena and made her think and speak properly like one would have from the late 1800s. I was completely charmed!

    (And the full-page incidental illustrations add to its charm even more!)

    Quick – go and get a copy and treat yourself and your young readers!!

     
  • fairrosa 4:54 pm on November 29, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story   

    The Unnameables 

    The UnnameablesAuthor: Ellen Booraem
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 4th to 6th

    Pages: 318
    Publisher: Harcourt
    Edition: Hardcover, 2008

    This is an allegory that works on many levels, made rich with well-portrayed and multi-faceted characters. Which, I guess, renders it not a true allegory since the characters are not all confined to single traits or symbolic equivalents. At the very beginning, I was dubious: thinking that the symbolism and “names” are all too transparent and too easy to predict. And yet, with the blusterous arrival of the Goatman and then all the tangential but significant side trails and events, the story drew me in and kept me highly interested and entertained. I bated my breath, hoping for a satisfying and well paced ending, and was not let down.

    I very much appreciate the rich imagery, the successful world-building, and the economy of the text — also its gentle humor in the friendly way these simple folks behave. I’m also so pleased that the Unnameable acts (what one might easily interpret as “art” or “craft”) are given a made-up name of “runyuin” (which has the word “ruin” embedded — I wonder if this is even intentional) so that the interpretations can be surprising from minds not as set as mine. I can see how this book might be of great use in a 4th-6th grade classroom since it is both well-crafted and can generate good conversations!

    View all my goodreads reviews.

     
  • fairrosa 10:11 pm on September 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story,   

    Emmy and the Incredible Shrinking Rat 


    Author: Lynne Jonell
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 4th – 6th grade

    Pages: 352
    Publisher: Henry Holt
    Edition: Hardcover, 2007

    It’s impressive how Jonell manages to inform the readers of all characters’ personalities, feelings, and actions without ever straying away from Emmy’s perspective: readers only know what she sees, hears, and thinks. The outlandish circumstances with all the super(magical?)-powers of the rodents are accompanied by a gentle tale of friendship, longing for parental love, and the essence of stable families. I mentally applauded the several jabs at the absurdity of the over-scheduling of our children.

    The illustration with the flip-book margin of Rat falling and Emmy catching him ceases being a gimmick when it visually sums up the spirit of the story: “Don’t worry. We’re friends. I will catch you if you fall.”

     
    • Erin 2:04 pm on September 9, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      This sounds really fun. Thanks for the rec!

    • fairrosa 3:36 pm on September 9, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Someone compares this to a Dahl story and I asked my 3rd grade daughter if she feels that way. She disagreed, saying that there is a deliberate "mystery and problem solving" going on (actually, there are more than one mystery in the story) which makes it different from stories by Roald Dahl. She couldn't put it down, finishing it in 2 days!

    • L.J. 11:18 pm on September 10, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Reading that your daughter couldn't put it down is the best review of all. Thanks for passing that on!

  • fairrosa 11:03 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story   

    Magpie Gabbard and the Quest for the Buried Moon 

    Author: Sally M. Keehn
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 4th – 6th


    Publisher: Philomel
    Edition: Hardcover, 2007 (ARC)

    It is definitely Quirky, with that capital Q! The tall-tale tone and the magical and outlandish plotline are consistent and coherent in their own way. Very strong opening scene and concluding passages.

     
  • fairrosa 4:39 pm on November 30, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story   

    Gossamer 


    Author: Lois Lowry
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 4th – 6th

    Pages: 140
    Publisher: Hougton Mifflin/Walter Lorraine
    Edition: Hardcover, 2006

    Since so many people love this book, I was unwilling to read it, afraid that I’d find it undeserving in some way. But, I, too, fell in love with it right away. My admiration of the author’s skill in telling a simple and yet complex story sustains until the very last word on the very last page. What a refreshing experience.

    The characters, major or minor alike, have such depth. Many things are unsaid about them, but the reader senses a strong “knowing” of their souls from the few key moments in life Lowry chooses to present. The elegant text, deceptively simple, reminds me of my favorite Dickinson poems: a few words, arranged just right, describing the most common personal experiences, can encompass the immensity of the collective human minds — conscious or subconscious.

     
  • fairrosa 9:58 am on November 26, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , magical story,   

    The Legend of Hong Kil Dong: The Robin Hood of Korea 


    Author/Illustrator: Anne Sibley O’Brien
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 2nd – 5th grade

    Pages: unpaged
    Publisher: Charlesbridge
    Edition: Hardcover, 2006

    This picture book in comic book style is near perfect in every way. The narrative is fluid, the story is exciting, the cultural details are accurately portrayed both in text and illustraion, and the pictures are expertly rendered. I am impressed at how O’Brien effectively conveys varied moods by simple changes of each facial feature.

     
  • fairrosa 10:50 am on November 1, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , magical story,   

    Pish Posh 


    Author: Ellen Potter
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 4th grade and up

    Pages: 166
    Publisher: Philomel Books
    Edition: Hardcover 2006

    Ellen Potter really knows how to build upon the utterly unbelievable scenarios and make them seem oh-so-plausible. Her New York City apartment buildings (as in the Olivia Kidney books)expand into wonderlands that even the lovers for Carrollian twists and turns will find tantalizing. The mystery, the unique characters, (11-year-old Clara Francofile who owns nothing but simple black dresses and a keen sense of the social standings of each celebrity coming through her parents’ restaurant and her co-star Annabelle Arbutnot, pre-teen master burglar, for example) and the satisfying resolution all just WORK! A truly fun read.

     
    • Morgan 4:18 pm on February 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I think this is a good book and it has lost of good detils and if u do not want to read this you have promples

    • Anonymous 11:12 am on July 20, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I am reading it right now and I love it!

    • Shannon 6:41 pm on March 17, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I absolutely love this book! But whenever i look in my library, they never have it! Another good book is something like ‘How i became a fourth grade spy’. i know it has the words fourth grade spy in it. it is hilarious and u will love it.

  • fairrosa 10:51 pm on October 17, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , magical story   

    Lily Reads: Jack and the Seven Deadly Giants 

    Author: Sam Swope
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 2nd – 5th

    Pages: 99
    Publisher: FSG
    Edition: Hardcover, 2004

     
  • fairrosa 12:18 pm on September 17, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , magical story,   

    American Born Chinese 


    Author: Gene Luen Yang
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 7th and up

    Pages: 240
    Publisher: First Second, Roaring Brooks
    Edition: Paperback original, 2006

    I cannot pin down my own reaction to this graphic novel. It is beautifully produced: glossy paper, clean layout, the comic illustrations are quite skillfully done, and the storytelling is at moments quite intelligent. But, that what I felt most reading the book was how all parts of it are “adequate” and how I was aware of all these components at the same time finding myself not terribly moved in any way. I was not offended, either — even by the buck-teethed, slant-eyed, Engrish-speaking caricature of a Chinese cousin (I knew that he served some form of purpose other than ridiculing the Chinese as a whole.) I felt little revelation — even when the three story lines finally get twisted together, the surprise factor only lasted a short moment and then the bigger lingering question remains: “Are these three stories organically entwined due to an unyielding internal creative force or are they forced together because it seems like a cool idea to connect a current day ABC’s destiny to an old Chinese Legend?” For me, the resolution definitely lacks the power to convince me that this tale cannot be told better.

    The best part of the book actually is the very short, very straightforward, very truthful retelling of the Monkey King story — I wanted more of that!

     
  • fairrosa 6:37 am on September 5, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , magical story   

    The Chocolate Touch 

    Author: Patrick Caitling
    Rating:
    Reading Level: 1st – 3rd

    Pages:
    Publisher:
    Edition:

    Lily and I took turns reading aloud to each other and had a blast. This is definitely a “messegey” book: don’t eat too much junk food! but it works well as a highly entertaining and imaginative story. I read it a long time ago and this time around, I still enjoyed it.

     
    • Anonymous 4:35 pm on September 18, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      i loved this book. i read it in 2nd grade for a school project and we made our own short story of it. i read it all the time for fun and i definitly reccomend it!

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