Thursday, August 14, 2014

50. The Nancy Drew Notebooks: #1 The Slumber Party Secret

The Nancy Drew Notebooks: #1 The Slumber Party Secrets
By Carolyn Keene
Illustrated by Anthony Accardo
Simon & Schuster, 1994

Genre
Mystery

Awards
None Known

Review
For parents who loved reading Nancy Drew Mystery Stories growing up, Keene has created a series intended for younger readers so they can begin loving Nancy's sleuthing skills even earlier! This series opener finds Nancy working to solve her first mystery, what happened to her friend Rebecca's party invitations and who is threatening to ruin her party? Using cleaver techniques, Nancy matches handwriting of her classmates to a threatening note Rebecca found, investigates desks looking for clues, and trying to get to the bottom of the mystery.  In true sleuthing style, she cracks the case the night of the party.  Readers are introduced Bess and George, best friends of Nancy even in the original series.  A good mystery that younger children will love seeing if they can solve before Nancy does!

Opinion
Definitely intended for a younger audience, this book contains much larger print and simple full page illustrations that will keep young readers involved.  In the cover illustration, the children look like real people, but in the book's black and white illustrations, the characters look more like Barbie dolls, which I thought was unnecessary.

Ideas
A great way to introduce the lowest of the tween age range to mysteries, this book would be great to read to a younger class to see if they can solve the mystery before Nancy.

49. Number the Stars

Number the Stars
By Lois Lowry
Sandpiper, 1989

Genre
Historical Fiction

Awards
  • Newbery Award (1990)
  • National Jewish Book Award for Children's Literature (1990)
  • Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award (1991)
Review
This touching story about the difficulties of growing up is cast during WWII.  Annemarie Johansen is growing up during the German occupation of Denmark and sees how the German policies and prejudices are affecting her best friend's family, who is Jewish.  Annemarie is torn through most of the story between the world of children, where innocence and lack of understanding are a protective shield that prevent her from having to deal with the atrocities going on around her (like the death of her older sister, Lise), and the world of adults, where she feels like she is being drawn when she is called upon to help protect her friend's family but she doesn't feel like she quite belongs here yet.  Tweens can relate to this main character; despite not being a situation similar to WWII, they will recognize Annemarie's struggles with growing up and be able to see things in their own life that put them between childhood and adulthood, teetering on an edge and unsure of which way to land.

Opinion
Lois Lowry's writing style does not disappoint.  Just like her previous books, this story draws the reader into the world of the characters, causing their emotions to be felt by the reader.  Since this is written at a level intended for elementary school, possibly middle school, more girls are likely to identify with the book as there is a female main character, but boys can identify slightly with Peter Neilsen and his part in the Resistance.

Ideas
Great for a project on WWII or for an assignment about historical fiction; also good for a display of younger age appropriate books for these two topics.

48. Goosebumps Most Wanted: Zombie Halloween

Goosebumps Most Wanted: Zombie Halloween
By R. L. Stine
Scholastic, 2014

Genre
Horror

Awards
None Known

Review
When Mario, his brother, and their friend Ivy decide to explore the basement of Mario's new creepy home across from a graveyard, they discover a tunnel leading from the graveyard underground to an area under their basement.  When they see the zombies climbing the ladder to get from the tunnel to the home and hear their mother coming home, the boys beat the zombies off the ladder and make their way up, closing the door behind them...and leaving Ivy stuck, turned into a zombie herself! Years later, Ivy is still waiting to get revenge for her death when Mario is a grandfather and his grandkids are having a Halloween party in the basement, where Ivy makes her move.  After dealing with the zombies, Mario and his grandchildren think they can take a breath, when their new neighbors show up and reveal themselves to be vampires! True to its name, this new addition the long line of Goosebump books will send shivers down the spines of middle school readers as they eagerly tear through the cliffhanger chapters to see how the characters will survive the terrors of the night.

Opinion
I have never been much of an R. L. Stine fan.  I find his writing to be choppy, unengaging and predictable.  I also dislike how his books, like this one, seem to end with yet another scary event, causing the reader to wonder what happened to the characters and how anyone could be alive in a world where monstrosities rise around every corner the second the first one wakes.  This book was no exception, but for those readers who do like his former books, they will love this one.  True to his style, Stine includes false monster sightings to increase the suspense and has middle school aged protagonists left to fight off the terrors when their parents don't believe them (though their grandfather obviously does).

Ideas
Great for a Halloween display, a horror/ghost story display, or a display about zombies, since they are a very popular topic currently.

47. Maniac Magee

Maniac Magee
By Jerry Spinelli
Little, Brown, 1990
Narrated by S. Epatha Merkerson

Genre
Realistic Fiction

Awards
  •  Newbery Medal (1991)
  • Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award (1992)
Review
Orphaned at a young age, Jeffery Magee was sent to live with an aunt and uncle who hated each other so much they had two of everything so they didn't have to share or talk.  Jeffery couldn't stand it, so he ran away and just kept running until he reached a town separated, east and west, blacks and whites.  But, for a while, Jeffery didn't understand why people were called white or black because he saw a rainbow of different colors, until he finally understood and he left the black family he had come to live with because he was white and they were being harassed.  A wonderful story about how one boy, through running, untying knots, and being friendly, made great strides, with the help of parents on both sides, in breaking down the racial barriers of a town that began revering him as Maniac Magee, and learning what it might be like to accept having a family again.

Opinion
This book was a fabulous example of how racial lines can be drawn, even by children when they've never visited the home of someone from the other race.  The author did a great job of showing the lives of all the characters and the changes in their attitude the more they got to know Jeffery.  The suggestion that Jeffery didn't want to be part of a family because he was afraid he would hurt them (like he lost his parents, a guardian he found working at a zoo died, and his family in the black neighborhood was being harassed) seemed underdeveloped and then forced on the reader, even though it made sense for the character to feel this way.

Ideas
A great story to add to any display or curriculum about race relations.  Also something most children can relate to on some level, not feeling like they belong in a specific group of people.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

46. George's Marvelous Medicine

George's Marvelous Medicine
By Ronald Dahl
Illustrated by Quentin Blake
Scholastic, 1981

Genre
Low Fantasy

Awards
None Known

Review
Prolific children's fiction writer Ronald Dahl shows children yet again that magic may be more than a thing in their imaginations.  When left alone with his grouch grandmother, George sets out to make her a medicine that will help her loosen up a bit (he reasons she needs a new medicine since the one she had been taking at length hasn't helped her).  Making a sickening concoction of random liquids and pills found in his home, including paint, hairspray, perfume, and animal medicine, George gives his grandmother the medicine and watches her reaction amused and slightly worried.  When his parents arrive home, his mother is worried about the grandmother (her mother), but the father just encourages George to make more of his concoction, seeing possible financial gain from how it effects the farm animals.  This funny, yet slightly disturbing story also has sketched illustrations to accompany the text, making the effects of the potion unmistakable.

Opinion
Compared to some of Dahl's previous work, like BFG, I found this book boring and was disturbed that when the grandmother simply shrunk until she disappeared that not even her daughter gave it more than a second thought.  As entertaining as the idea is of mixing household items to make potentially attitude-changing and money-making substances, I think it may be important for parents to address the idea that none of these chemicals being used in the book should be mixed or taken like this in real life.

Ideas
Since everything George uses in his mixture seems to have some kind of reasoning behind it, as small as it may be, it might be a fun project to have young readers make their own "potion", thinking of things they would mix together and what the desired effects would be.

45. Clever Beatrice

Clever Beatrice
By Margaret Willey
Illustrated by Heather Solomon
Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2001

Genre
Fables

Awards
  • Parents' Choice Award (2001)
  • Charlotte Zolotow Award (2002)
  • Horn Book Fanfare Award (2001)

  • Review
    Though the author admits, after explaining what a contes is, that she strays from the tradition telling of these folktales to cast a young and clever girl as the main character, readers can't help but be amused by the antics of Beatrice.  In order to get some money to help her mother keep food on the table, Beatrice ventures far into the woods to a giant known to be rich, hoping that he isn't very smart.  She makes bets with him to win his gold and indeed, wins his entire fortune by doing nothing but talk.  A humorous story that children will love, Clever Beatrice can be read over and over without losing its charm.

    Ideas
    This is great for a display about fables from different cultures, as well as for humorous books for children.  This would also be a great book to read to a class as they will likely find the giant to be dumb and silly.

    44. Red Riding Hood

    Red Riding Hood
    By Sarah Blakley-Cartwright
    Poppy, 2011

    Genre
    Fairy Tale

    Awards
    None Known

    Review
    Inspired by the movie of the same name that was released later in 2011, Red Riding Hood has many things: romance, mystery, paranormal (werewolves), and fanatic religious zeal.  The young heroine, a tomboy apparently unaware of good looks everyone else seems to notice, finds the idea of falling in love alluring but confusing, wondering if there's even a point to it if you don't marry the one you love or you stop loving the one you marry.  Not long into the book though, there is not one, but two, love interests for this fickle teenage: the blast from the past "bad boy" and the son of the wealthy blacksmith.  The town has been in an uneasy peace with a werewolf who they give livestock sacrifices to at the full moon.  Heroine Valerie witnesses a sacrifice being taken by the wolf when she was a child and it forever changed her.  She later is accused of witchcraft and offered as bait for the wolf when the uneasy peace was broken when he killed Valerie's sister.  This book is enticing for those who particularly enjoy supernatural romance, but has disappointing follow through with flat characters, a capricious heroine, and an incomplete plot.

    Opinion
    I enjoyed the idea behind this book, though it is not unique.  However, Valerie soon wore my patience thin.  Though being indecisive is a human trait, it is very overplayed and makes her a frustrating character.  Aside from her struggle with love, mixed with her sudden desires to be eternally alone or chase the werewolf on her own, she has no depth.  There is also no depth to the two love interests and the other villagers are just as flat.  Seemingly the person with the most character is the religious fanatic that comes into the story about half-way through.  There is a difference between an ending that wraps many things up but leaves a full conclusion to the imagination and an ending that is carelessly written, leaving many loose ends; unfortunately this book ended sloppily.

    Ideas
    This book is a good suggestion for those who like books similar to the Twilight Saga and other supernatural romances, but mostly I would suggest recommending something else.

    43. Hatchet

    Hatchet
    By Gary Paulsen
    First Aladdin Paperbacks, 1987
    Narrated by Peter Coyote

    Genre
    Survival Fiction

    Awards
    • Newbery Award (1988)
    • Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award (1989)

    Review
    This classic story of survival finds Brian on a plane flying over the Canadian wilderness to visit his father after his parents' divorce.  The pilot suffers a heart attack during flight and the plane crashes, leaving Brian to fend for himself in an uninhabited forest with nothing but the hatchet his mother had given him before he left.  Brian survives many struggles, not the least of which is finding the motivation to keep living and trying to survive after he realizes he missed the first, and likely only, rescue plane to fly near his camp area.  A distressing tale about a boy alone in the woods is also extremely inspiring to young readers, showing the intensity of the human will to survive.

    Opinion
    This book was much more captivating than I thought it would be.  Peter Coyote did a great job narrating, bringing life to the scenery and Brian's emotions.  The book was repetitive at places; at first I found this annoying and it stood out to me more in audio form than if I had read it, but then it seemed to fall into a pattern, representing the thought patterns Brian was developing to survive.  There are some dark times in the book, like when Brian tries to cut his wrists in despair after missing the rescue plane, but this is quickly followed by a "new" Brian, resolute and determined to survive, pulling away from the darkness that he briefly explored.

    Ideas
    Great book for reluctant readers, especially young boys as they can identify with the main character.  Though it seems more intended for late elementary or middle school children, high school aged students can also enjoy this book, especially if they are behind in their reading level or for nostalgia's sake.

    42. Smart Feller, Fart Smeller: And Other Spoonerisms

    Smart Feller, Fart Smeller: And Other Spoonerisms
    By Jon Agee
    Michael Di Capua Books, 2006

    Genre
    Humor

    Awards
    None Known

    Review
    This book full of funny tongue-twisting word mix-ups that will make kids laugh.  An introduction explains what a "Spoonerism" is for those not lucky enough to have know this professor and the book closes with a translation of all the Spoonerisms for those who couldn't quite guess them all while reading.  These laughable verbal missteps are accompanied by pictures of just how ridiculous some of the things said would look ("What did the gardener say to her assistant? Please put this pants in their plots"), which just makes the phrases funnier.

    Opinion
    Younger tweens will definitely get a kick out of this book and likely memorize many of the sayings.  The pictures help to point out what the misspoken phrase is if the reader had difficulty guessing, but they can always check the back of the book for the answers! Hearing these saying, or reading them, may get old quickly, and some readers may be bored by the end of the book, but others will want to read it over and over.

    Ideas
    I think this would be a great book for an April Fool's Day display.  Even though it doesn't have practical jokes, the reader could challenge themselves to speak like the characters for the day.  Also a great addition to any humor collection, or just to read to a class for a laugh.

    41. Lost and Found

    Lost and Found
    By Shaun Tan (mostly)
    Arthur A. Levine Books, 2011

    Genre
    Picture Book

    Awards

    • Ditmar Award: Best Artwork - The Lost Thing (2011)

    Review
    This book combines three stories: The Red Tree, The Lost Thing, and The Rabbits.  All three were illustrated by Shaun Tan, but The Rabbits is written by John Marsden.  All of these stories are poignant reminders of times when we feel alone, out of place, or uncertain about where we belong and what our futures might look like.  All are memorably illustrated with beautiful use of color, some pages continuing the stories with just pictures.  Definitely intended for older tweens and teens, this book can still be appreciated by younger readers to an extent, though some words may be too difficult.

    Opinion
    The first story really hit me; it is a great description of feeling lost in the thralls of depression, mostly expressed through the art, which is sometimes the only way to express feelings like that.  The story of The Lost Thing was also moving, reminding me of how we categorize people and how we often stop seeing things that appear out of place, because we are too busy with something else to help.

    Ideas
    This is a good example of a picture book intended for an older audience and can be displayed as such.  It's a great way to show older tween and teen readers that if they see books that look like children's picture books, that's not always who they are intended for.