Every Man for Himself: Ten Short Stories About Being a Guy (Nancy Mercado, ed.)

August 16, 2010

I don’t know how I missed this one, but I did. And I’m a bit upset about that, because there are some fine stories in here. I warmed to this book from the very beginning, because Nancy Mercado tells us …what these stories are not. They are not stories about… (Keep reading)

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My Name is Brain Brian (Jeanne Betancourt)

August 14, 2010

If you’ve read my posts up to now, you’ll know how strongly I feel about what makes a book work or not. And if you’ve read my “10+ Rules” page (see the link above) and I tell you that the first chapter of this book is called “The Jokers Club”… (Keep reading)

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Lawn Boy (Gary Paulsen)

August 11, 2010

Worried about finding enough money to buy a new inner tube for his bike, a twelve-year-old boy gets an old riding mower from his grandmother for his birthday. Soon he is mowing his neighbors’ lawns, and making more money than he thought possible. When he meets Arnold, a stockbroker who… (Keep reading)

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Attack of the Growling Eyeballs (Lin Oliver)

August 8, 2010

I’ve reviewed the Hank Zipzer books twice, and while I’ve had plenty to say about Hank Zipzer and Henry Winkler, I said nothing about Mr. Winkler’s cowriter, Lin Oliver, because I had never heard of her until I encountered the Hank Zipzer books, and knew nothing of her writing. So… (Keep reading)

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Hank Zipzer Revisited: A Tale of Two Tails (Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver)

August 4, 2010

A while back, I wrote a less than favorable review of Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver’s first book in the Hank Zipzer series, Niagara Falls, or Does It? I have since learned that they have recently published the seventeenth novel in the series, A Brand New Me! (a title which… (Keep reading)

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I Am the Messenger (Markus Zusak)

July 27, 2010

Nineteen-year-old Ed Kennedy, a cabdriver in Australia, almost accidentally stops a bank robbery and nabs the would-be thief, thus achieving his Warholian fifteen minutes of fame. This would seem to be the high point in a life of mediocrity, but then a series of playing cards begin arriving in Ed’s… (Keep reading)

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Hank Zipzer: Niagara Falls, Or Does It? (Henry Winkler & Lin Oliver)

May 29, 2010

Hank Zipzer isn’t your average fourth-grader. He’s intelligent, creative, and incredibly likeable. Yet he does terribly at school because he’s dyslexic. Although the “d-word” doesn’t appear anywhere in this book, Hank mentions his brain and his “learning differences” enough for it to become annoying. I’m starting to feel as if… (Keep reading)

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What Would Joey Do? (Jack Gantos)

May 23, 2010

If you’ve already read what I’ve written about the first two books in this series (Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key and Joey Pigza Loses Control) you can guess pretty easily that I love this book as well and heartily recommend it to you. And you would be right. There really… (Keep reading)

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Joey Pigza Loses Control (Jack Gantos)

May 11, 2010

At the end of Joey Pigza swallowed the Key, Joey finally had it together. He was living with his working mom in a more stable home, he was on the right meds, and he had gained enough self-control to get a dog, a dachshund/Chihuahua cross he christens Pablo. Alas, nothing… (Keep reading)

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Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key (Jack Gantos)

April 18, 2010

You don’t have to spend much time in a school—say a month or so—before you run into a kid (or kids) who is (or are) at once your biggest delight and your biggest terror. They’re charming, they’re delightful, they’re friendly and helpful, and yet, like that semi-wild housecat who keeps… (Keep reading)

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Matisse on the Loose (Georgia Bragg)

April 2, 2010

It took me forever to write about this book, and it’s only now that I realize it’s because I wanted to say a lot more nice things about than I actually can. Which is sad in a way, because looking back, I wish that this book had been around when… (Keep reading)

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Kensuke’s Kingdom (Michael Morpurgo)

December 20, 2009

One of the worst things about being an adult is that when you read a really good kids’ book, you’re still focusing on all those “English teacher” things: theme, symbolism, characterization, etc. It is all too easy to forget that when a young person reads a book, they’re not looking… (Keep reading)

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The Chocolate War (Robert Cormier)

February 12, 2009

This is a problematic book in many ways. It has been (seemingly forever) on lists of banned or challenged books almost as long as it has been on many high school reading lists. It’s almost as if the teachers who long ago laminated their lesson plans and teach this book… (Keep reading)

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