Having a bedroom all to yourself is the best thing in the world. I'm Lucy Wu, and I've been waiting for my older sister, Regina, to move out for some time now. Finally: the room is mine…all mine! I'm about to start sixth grade, and things are looking good for me: I'm getting better and better at basketball (my favorite sport) and I have a great best friend, Madison, who plays it with me. And no, as you can see, I am not tall. This school year is going to be the best ever. I'll update you in a few days… [quick exit and return]
No way. I mean it. No way. So I go out with my family and relatives to this amazing Chinese restaurant: normally, I'd have a great time, but I want to mention two things. I'm getting criticized by certain people (cough, cough, Regina!) for not appreciating Chinese culture and food and then later I get the real catastrophe - I'll be sharing my room with my grandma's sister, Yi Po, who is coming here from China and speaks no English. Yeah: sharing MY room. Did I mention that my command of Chinese is not very good? This is terrible. I have to share a room with someone I can't communicate with! Maybe I'll put up a wall…..
The Great Wall of Lucy Wu by Wendy Wan-Long Shang. 312 p. Scholastic: 2011. Booktalk to intermediate grades and middle school. 2011 Cybils Award for Middle Grade Fiction.
I read a lot of children's/teen literature for my job as a reference librarian on the youth services team. A booktalk is an effort to get a young reader to pick up the book and read it. It's not a book review - it's more like a brief sales pitch. My goal is to write the booktalks (as soon as I've read the books) and to make them accessible to my colleagues, parents, and other readers.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Book talk: Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made by Stephan Pastis
Timmy Failure runs his own detective agency, is flunking out of school, has a polar bear named Total, and rides his mom's Segway, which he's not ever, ever supposed to do. He's pretty good at keeping his mother in the dark, but the Segway - his Failuremobile - has been stolen, which means there will be pain and suffering on Timmy's part. A guy's gotta have wheels.
Come to think of it, there are two other females associated with pain and suffering: the first is Molly Moskins. She's in his class, and she smells like a tangerine. She's got a crush on Timmy, and he wants nothing to do with her.
But she's nothing compared to the evil one. The evil one is so evil that Timmy doesn't even want you to see her picture. He blocks out her head with a black square. I'm not even going to say her real name. You can call her the evil one, or Weevil Bun. Take your pick. She runs her own detective agency, and she's so good at school that she actually tutors other kids. But you know what? Timmy has her detective log. The Holy Grail. Ahhh....revenge....
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made by Stephan Pastis. 294 p. 2013: Candlewick. Booktalk to grades 3-7.
Come to think of it, there are two other females associated with pain and suffering: the first is Molly Moskins. She's in his class, and she smells like a tangerine. She's got a crush on Timmy, and he wants nothing to do with her.
But she's nothing compared to the evil one. The evil one is so evil that Timmy doesn't even want you to see her picture. He blocks out her head with a black square. I'm not even going to say her real name. You can call her the evil one, or Weevil Bun. Take your pick. She runs her own detective agency, and she's so good at school that she actually tutors other kids. But you know what? Timmy has her detective log. The Holy Grail. Ahhh....revenge....
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made by Stephan Pastis. 294 p. 2013: Candlewick. Booktalk to grades 3-7.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Book talk: Unspoken: A Story from the Underground Railroad by Henry Cole
Have you ever felt as if you were being watched?
Our protagonist – whose name we don’t know – is a young girl
who works on a farm during the time of the Civil War. She feeds the cow and the
chickens, and she does daily farm chores: cleaning, gathering food, helping her
family.
She has a busy but quiet life. She sees Confederate soldiers
riding by on their horses one day: the war is going on, but she and her family
have food and their health and one another.
But she’s being watched. When she’s alone in the shed, she
can feel an eye trained on her. Whose eye is this? Who would hide behind picked
corn stalks? And why is this person in her family’s shed?
There are no words in this book, but this is a powerful
story called Unspoken: A Story from the Underground Railroad by Henry Cole.
Unspoken: A Story from the Underground Railroad by Henry
Cole. Unpaged, wordless. Scholastic: New York, 2012. Booktalk to K-3. Would
work especially well for students learning about the Civil War. 2012 New York
Times Best Illustrated Children's Books Selection; 2012 Parents' Choice Award
for Picture Books Winner.
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Book talk: Hello! Hello! by Matthew Cordell (2012 New York Times Notable Children's Book)
[For this booktalk, enlist the help of another person –
adult or child (doesn’t matter) who holds a handheld electronic device and
ignores you as you say “Hello! Hello!” You’ll also need a copy of this book.]
[You approach the other person who is engrossed with his/her
device.] Hello! Hello! [You sigh, loudly.]
Okay, I’ll try again. [Walk away from the person, and then
come back.]
Hello! Hello! [Sigh.] Fine, I’ll go outside.
[Show pp. 13-14]. Hello, leaf.
[Show pp. 15-16] Hello, bug.
Gee, there’s a lot going on out here. I should probably go outside more often. This stuff seems pretty interactive, and you don't even have to plug it in.
[Show pp. 21-22] Hello, horse! [Turn page, quickly] Oh my
gosh! The horse said hello back to me! What is going on? [Turn a few more
pages..] Gee, they all know hello…
Hello! Hello! By Matthew Cordell. Unpaged. 2012: Hyperion. Booktalk
to pre-K through 2nd. Good readaloud. 2012 New York Times Notable Children’s
Book.
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Book talk: A Game for Swallows by Zeina Abirachad
Most of you have been at home alone while you waited for
your parents to return home, right? It’s a fairly typical teen experience. But
what if you had no way of contacting your parents when they were gone? What if
you worried they’d get hit by sniper fire when returning home? In this graphic
novel, Zeina drew us a map of how tricky it was to avoid the sniper near their
apartment.
| Avoiding the sniper in A Game for Swallows |
And what if the block and the area you lived in got bombed so
regularly that all your neighbors would come join you in the foyer of your
apartment because it was considered the safest spot? Imagine living with all
your neighbors in a tiny room for hours and hours and even days. It’s a hard
way to live, but Zeina and her little brother have grown up with this. They
live in Beirut, Lebanon, during a time of civil war, a civil war which dragged
on from 1975-1990. They know of people who have disappeared and were never seen
again. But there’s humor in this novel: her neighbors – virtually family since
they live in close quarters – are protective, loving, and quirky. If your world
shrank to one room, would you be able to laugh?
A Game for Swallows: To Die, To Leave, To Return by Zeina
Abirached. Graphic novel. 188 p. Booktalk to middle school, high school.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Book talk: The Hypnotists by Gordon Korman
If 12-year-old Jackson Opus sat next to you in class, you'd think he was pretty average. He's okay at school - but not great, he's okay at basketball - but not great, he has a best friend and normal parents, and he has really cool eyes that change color sometimes. Hey, we all have quirks. But something weird has been going on with Jackson: he's been having these brief visions in which he sees himself from another person's eyes. Immediately after these brief visions, the person acts unexpectedly: the bus driver lets all hell break loose to speed (like a maniac) Jackson to Jackson's destination on time, and the basketball player on the opposing team misses shots that he never, ever would've missed normally. Sounds like mind control? It was! But Jackson wasn't doing it on purpose! He was just inwardly wishing for these people to do his bidding. It wasn't as if he was actively trying to control them. It's scary, but it sounds like fun, doesn't it? You could get your teacher to change your test grade, and you could get your parents to buy you that computer you've always wanted. But this novel is called The Hypnotists -- plural. Other hypnotists? You mean there are other people who can do this? So why is one of them particularly interested in Jackson?
The Hypnotists by Gordon Korman. 232 p. Scholastic: 2013. Booktalk to intermediate grades (3rd-5th) and middle school.
The Hypnotists by Gordon Korman. 232 p. Scholastic: 2013. Booktalk to intermediate grades (3rd-5th) and middle school.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Book talk: 45 Pounds (More or Less) by K. A. Barson
It is hard to lose weight, especially when you love lasagna,
you don’t like to work out, your mother is super thin and only eats salads, and
you have a part-time job selling hot pretzels. So what’s your motivation going
to be? Being able to shop in “regular” clothing stores? Attracting the glance
of a cute boy? Wearing a nice dress to an important family wedding? Or just…not
being the target of mean girls’ comments?
For Ann it’s all of the above. She desperately wants to lose
45 pounds for her aunt Jackie’s wedding in which she’ll be the bridesmaid. And
yes, she has done Weight Watchers in the past. It works, but it’s not her
style.
So Ann watches an infomercial and orders this diet plan
which includes supplements which make her shaky. Not good. Luckily, Ann’s smart
enough to know that you don’t take those things. But calorie restriction is so….painful.
Let’s not even talk about exercise. The tape that came with her diet plan is
ridiculously impossible. Thank God no one is watching her attempt to do it. No…people
are only watching when you accidentally get drunk at a party and puke all over
the shoes of the cute boy whom you like and who surprisingly seems to like you
back. And it gets posted all over Facebook. There’s no motivation like
humiliation, you know?
45 Pounds (More or Less) by K. A. Barson. 264 p. Viking:
2013. Booktalk to 7th - 12th grades.
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