Showing posts with label middle school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label middle school. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2013

The Help - Kathryn Stockett


The Help
By Kathryn Stockett
★★★★★


Summary
Miss Skeeter is an independent thinking, Ole’ Miss college graduate.  She is a reporter and wanted to do more than write a help column for people looking for cleaning advice.  Skeeter decides to secretly write a book about “the Help”, black women working for white women, in the 1960’s, in the south.

Aibileen and Minny are two of the women who tell their stories and help Miss Skeeter write the book in private.  The stories range from daily cleaning and childcare to the once in a lifetime stories you just have to read about.  The friendship that develops between these women is unconventional for the time, but has a great sincerity from all participants.   

Review
The craftsmanship is great, and the voice and dialect changes when the story is told from the perspective of Minny, Aibileen or Miss Skeeter.  This is a fictional book, inspired by the author’s personal experiences and research, but each piece of the story could have been true on it’s own. 

This is a humorous book that made me laugh out loud on several occasions.  The book tells it how it was, with a constant leaning toward the better times to come.  While this book was probably not written for school aged children, I believe that middle school and high school students would get a lot out of reading this book.  It puts the Civil Rights movement in a much more relatable light than the Martin Luther King Jr. Day activities that are usually observed in schools. 

Author Website

I did not find her website very helpful, there were a few “no brainer” discussion questions, but mostly it served as a promotional tool.

Technical Stuff
Paperback: 544 pages
Publisher: Berkley Trade; Mti Rei edition (June 28, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0425245136
ISBN-13: 978-0425245132
Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Cat That Was Left Behind - C. S. Adler


The Cat That Was Left Behind
By C. S. Adler
★★★★☆


Summary

Chad is a foster child who has been transferred so many times he is not expecting to stay with the Sorenics past the summer months.  His mother, April Anne, has promised year after year that she would come for him.  Chad would like nothing more, when he is devastated by a letter telling him that she is getting married and doesn’t want him any more.  Chad feels like the cat he has spent all summer taming that was tossed aside by another family.  He is eventually open to the Sorenics and can finally see their open arms welcoming him to their family, not as a foster child but as an adopted son.

Review

This is a great story about fitting into a family group, and what learning what true family is all about.  Chad must find his place in the world, just as we all must learn to transition from being told what to do all of the time to making our own decisions, and accepting the rewards and consequences for those decisions.  I would recommend this book for 4-8th graders.

Author Website

http://www.c-s-adler.com/

Technical Stuff

Adler, C.S. The Cat That Was Left Behind. Clarion Books, New York. 1981

ISBN 0-395-31020-2

Monday, July 16, 2012

The Journal of Douglas Allen Deeds - Rodman Philbrick


The Journal of Douglas Allen Deeds : The Donner Party Expedition, 1846

by Rodman Philbrick


Summary
This is a journal style book written from the point of view of 16 year old Douglas Deeds in 1846.  He is alone, just him and his horse until he joins up with the Donner Party as they head toward the Oregon Territory. He is loyal to the party, even when they hit hard times and he could have left.  He and the Donner party cross with many hardships, including the issue of cannibalism when members of the party are dying and others are starving to death. 

Review 
Love, Love, Love this series!  This is a wonderful historical fiction piece based on the true story of the fated Donner Party.  The story of the Donner Party is a hard one to speak to students about, but this book does a wonderful job of explaining it from a young man's point of view.  I would recommend this book for small book groups for mature 5-6th graders.  5-8th grade students could learn a lot about the Oregon Trail and the hard decisions that had to be made to survive just 160 years ago in American History.  The Journal of Douglas Allen Deeds is book 13 in the "My Name is America" book series, a series for middle grade boys. 

Technical Stuff (From Amazon)
  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Hardcover: 158 pages
  • Publisher: Scholastic Inc.; 1st edition (November 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0439216001
  • ISBN-13: 978-0439216005







Thursday, July 12, 2012

Callie's Rules - Naomi Zucker

Callie's Rules
by Naomi Zucker



Summary

A sixth grader in her first month, Callie, finds out that Halloween in Hillcrest is cancelled.  This is big news for her family and she works hard to keep a family tradition alive while staying within the town's rules.  Callie does have to break a few social "rules" that she has painstakingly learned from her peers in order to do this, but it is worth it!

Review

I think that this book could inspire young girls to be themselves, and stay original even when it is hard, and everyone else is tiptoeing around the unspoken social rules of middle school.  I would recommend this book for 5th-7th graders.

For Teachers 
The Author Website contains some discussion guides with questions and talking points.  I think that this book and discussion guide would work well in small group reading circles.  Girls would probably get the most out of this book.

Technical Stuff
Zucker, Naomi, Callie's Rules. Egmont. New York. 2009