Do you know what it means when your teacher tells you your writing has "voice"? He or she is letting you know that they can hear your personality shining through your words. It is as if the writer is speaking directly to the reader. With Home of the Brave, Katherine Applegate speaks with the clear, heartwarming voice of her character Kek. He is a young boy chased from his home in Africa by men "with their knives and their guns and their mysterious hate." But despite all Kek has to be sad about, (he doesn't even know if his mother is still alive), he struggles to fit in to his new life in the cold winter of Minnesota and never gives up hope. This is a "must read" book! First you must read it, and second you must tell me if you loved it as much as I did! And if you still need convincing, it's a fast read, written in short unrhymed poems. K.A. Applegate is also the author of The One and Only Ivan and the Animorph series.
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Navigate this blog through the labels in the blue word cloud on the right hand side of the page. Looking for a particular title/author? Use the search option. Click on the title of the book to visit the author's website. Posts are written by students. Look at the end of the posting for the username to see who reviewed the book. Please comment, writers are waiting for your feedback! Remember to use the Three C's when you comment: Compliment, Connect, ask a question and start a Conversation.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
The PS Brothers by Maribeth Boelts
The PS Brothers by Maribeth Boelts will make a great classroom read aloud. Basically it's about two boys, Shawn and Russ, who want a dog to protect them from all the bullies in school that pick on them because of the clothes they wear, and the fact that their families don't have much money. Russ lives in a pop-up camper behind his Uncle's house, because his father is in jail. Their lives are hard, but the friendship between the two boys is heartwarming. The boys come up with a scheme to raise money to buy a puppy, and yes, it involves poop! They also make a frightening discovery about the guy who is selling them the puppy. With so much stacked against these two young heros, can they beat the odds and win out in the end? Read the book and find out!
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes by Jonathan Auxier
Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes is Jonathan Auxier's first novel and it's a good one. If you like fantasy books, as I'm sure you know I do, you'll like this one. Honestly it took me a little while to get in to it. I think I was grossed out by the beginning of the book, when it explains that Peter Nimble is blind, found as an infant floating on the sea with his eyeballs pecked out by a raven. See what I mean, gross! But there is a reason for everything in a book and in the end you'll understand the strange beginning. This is an adventure story, Peter, a thief and orphan is sent on a quest to find someone who needs his help. He must follow the clues left on a note that was placed in a bottle and sent adrift on the sea. There is magic and mystery, danger and swashbuckling fight scenes, monsters and of course a maiden in distress. Are you interested yet?
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Labels:
adventure,
Blind,
Brothers and Sisters,
danger,
Mrs. Castro,
mystery,
princes,
princess,
thieves
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Small as an Elephant by Jennifer Jacobson
Small as an Elephant by Jennifer Jacobson is a gripping story about a boy named Jack, who is left at a campground in Maine by his mother. He attempts to make it home to Boston by himself, and keeps the fact that his mother is gone a secret. Two big problems are that he's only eleven years old and the campground is three states away from his home. How will he survive with no place to sleep, no food, almost no money, and no adult to take care of him? I felt so sorry for Jack as I read this story and was touched by the love and understanding he had for his mother and her "spinning" problems.
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Reviewed by Mrs. Castro
Labels:
abandonment,
elephants,
family life,
mothers,
Mrs. Castro,
road trips
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