Saturday, October 24, 2015

Module 9: The Trouble with Chickens

Module 9: The Trouble with Chickens

Summary: J.J. Tully used to be a search-and-rescue dog. Now he lives on a farm with his owner, but the farm life is a bit boring for him. Therefore, when a chicken asks him to find her lost chicks J.J. is ready for the challenge. Vindictive house dogs and ambitious chickens lead J.J through the hoops and put in a predicament that his years of search and rescue have not prepared him for. How can he get out of the bolted cage?

Citation: Cronin, D. (2011). The trouble with chickens.  New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers.

Impression: J.J. Tully is a fun character for young readers to follow. The situations are silly and fun, and easy enough for beginning readers to follow. The jokes are cute, and most young readers would pick up on the jokes easily. The illustrations are well placed and give the reader just enough help with visualizing without taking away the imagination work. This is a great series to get children started with mysteries. 

Review: Popular farmyard chronicler Cronin (Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type, illustrated by Betsy Lewin, 2000, etc.) makes the jump to middle-grade fiction in this faux–hard-boiled mystery featuring talking animals. Her deadpan humor is much in evidence as she describes the circumstances under which retired search-and-rescue dog J.J. Tully undertakes the case of the missing chick. Puns abound, and J.J. is definitely not quite as clever as he believes himself to be, allowing readers to gently laugh at as well as with him. Sophisticated vocabulary and a complicated plot suggest the older range of readers as the most likely audience, but frequent illustrations and a relatively large font should make the story accessible to the younger end as well. Cornell’s black-and-white drawings extend both the humor and the action. In some pictures J.J. is slightly reminiscent of Scooby-Doo, another canine sleuth, while in others he is both distinctive and dogged in his determination to solve the puzzle. The chickens, mother and four chicks, are seriously silly looking and utterly adorable, which suits their surprisingly rounded characters just right.  Finding out how “Vince the Funnel” fits in, whether J.J. is being double-crossed by his client and how the climactic rescue will be resolved should keep readers engaged while Cronin’s constant word-play will keep them giggling. Fast and funny. (Comic mystery. 8-11)

(2011). The trouble with chickens [Book review of The Trouble with Chickens]. Kirkus Reviews.   Retrieved from https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/doreen-cronin/trouble- chickens/


Suggestions: This would be a great book for a book talk in an elementary school about mysteries. The book is simple enough for leisure with some dictionary worthy words to help young minds grow. 

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Module 8: Insurgent

Module 8: Insurgent

Summary: In the second installment of the Divergent series, Insurgent shows Tris’ next move after the massacre and battle between the factions. Tris and Four find themselves with other factions hiding out in the Amity faction. Tris’ guilt for killing Will has left her stunned and unable to use a gun. She hides this from Four and their companions. Tensions rise between the factions as the remaining leaders struggle for control and the safety of their people. Tris and Four’s relationship becomes strained as they fight their way through the factions, traitors, and torturous experiments that Jeanine Matthews conducts on them while they are imprisoned in Erudite headquarters.

Citation: Roth, V. (2012). Insurgent. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers.

Impression: Insurgent continues Tris’ story. However, Tris is no longer the same after killing her own friend and watching her parents die. This is understandable, but the frustrating aspect of Tris’ character is her lack of trust and knack for getting caught in every endeavor. The book is enjoyable, but some of Tris’ charm is lost when she loses confidence in herself and her friends. Although her self-sacrificing nature seems praise-worthy, even that is proven a lie when she realizes she doesn’t want to die and confesses she didn’t really think about death before. This book may be more suited for teenagers who will not be as frustrated with Tris’ teenage flaws, or I may just not have enough patience for this character to grow into a better protagonist.

Review: In this addictive sequel to the acclaimed Divergent (2011), a bleak post-apocalyptic Chicago ruled by "factions" exemplifying different personality traits collapses into all-out civil war.
With both the Dauntless and Abnegation factions shattered by the Erudite attack, Tris and her companions seek refuge with Amity and Candor, and even among the factionless. But the Erudite search for "Divergents" continues relentlessly. They have a secret to protect—one they fear could prove more catastrophic than open warfare; one they will slaughter to keep hidden... Rather than ease readers back into this convoluted narrative, the book plunges the characters into immediate danger without clues to their current relationships, let alone their elaborate back stories. The focus is firmly on the narrator Tris, who, devastated by guilt and grief, reveals new depth and vitality. While taking actions less Dauntless than recklessly suicidal, she retains her convenient knack for overhearing crucial conversations and infallibly sizing up others. Her romance with Tobias is achingly tender and passionate, and her friends and enemies alike display a realistic spectrum of mixed motivations and conflicted choices. The unrelenting suspense piles pursuit upon betrayal upon torture upon pitched battles; the violence is graphic, grisly and shockingly indiscriminate. The climactic reveal, hinting at the secret origins of their society, is neither surprising nor particularly plausible, but the frenzied response makes for another spectacular cliffhanger.
Anyone who read the first book was dying for this one months ago; they'll hardly be able to wait for the concluding volume. (Science fiction. 14 & up)

(2012). Insurgent [Review of the book Insurgent]. Kirkus Review. Retrieved from             https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/veronica-roth/insurgent/

Suggestion: This book would be good for a display on current book to movie releases. Although we always prefer to have the book read first, sometimes the movie inspires a reading which is still a win in my mind.


Sunday, October 11, 2015

Module 7: My Name is Mina

Module 7: My Name is Mina

Summary: This book follows the life and learnings of a young girl named Mina. Mina does not fit in at school, so she gets home schooled by her mom. Along with dealing with her father’s death Mina must look inside herself to better understand the world and people around her.

Citation: Almond, D. (2010). My Name is Mina. New York: Random House Inc.

Impression: Mina’s thoughts are beautifully messy. When she thinks of a words she likes she endearingly repeats and bolds it. Every realization and wandering thought is a joy to read because her strong spirit and bright mind keep the reader guessing as to what will happen next. The book covers some deep thoughts like death and other less intense concepts such as animal watching. I enjoyed this book, but I think certain “type A” people would be frustrated by the piece by piece thought process that Mina has and the lack of a strong plot and traditional storytelling. 

Review: This is an incredible book. It isn't a story; it is a collection of thoughts and words. Most of the time I was reading it I forgot it was written by David Almond; I read it like it was Mina writing it as she was thinking it.
I would usually give an insight to the book at this point, but there is no story to this book. It is almost more like a set of thoughts and guides to get more out of life, and for that reason I love it. This is a book about Mina that what happens to her. Mina is a girl who most people think is a weirdo. But she looks at life in completely different way to everyone else – she loves words and thinks that every word has a life of its own.

(2014). My name is Mina [Review of the book My Name is Mina].The Guardian.


Suggestion: This book would be good for a book talk to teenage girls or students that exhibit interest in diaries or realistic fiction. Since the thoughts and feelings are all straight from Mina, I feel that girls would enjoy it more. However, I'm sure there are some boys that would enjoy reading Mina's sprawling thoughts. 

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Module 6: No, David!

Module 6: No, David!

Summary: David is a mischievous young boy that gets into a lot of trouble because he plays too rough or breaks things. His mother constantly tells him no and to stop misbehaving, however she also shows her love for him.

Citation: Shannon, D. (1998). No, David! New York, NY: Scholastic Inc.

Impression: This is a fun book for young children because they can see how silly David is. The bright pictures and crazy antics demonstrated by David are sure to make readers laugh. The scene in which David goes running away naked is especially funny for children.The only thing that is concerning is that children may want to emulate his behavior, but that can be prevented by an early explanation that what he is doing is not correct behavior. Furthermore, it can lead to a discussion about why his behavior is not appropriate.

Review: This autobiographical (according to the author's note) story from Shannon (A Bad Case of Stripes, 1998, etc.) features a young hellion, also named David, who is forever at the receiving end of a sharp ""No!"" Among his prime escapades: over-reaching for the cookie jar, excavating his nose, tracking mud on the carpet, pounding pots, playing with food, making a naked escape from the house--classics all. ""That's enough,"" his mother shouts, and other familiar adult admonishments show up as well--be quiet, come back here, go to your room, settle down, stop that this instant, not in the house. This last comes as David prepares for a little indoor hardball. Does he listen? Does he break a vase? Does he get sent to the corner, nose to the wall? Readers or listeners will be gripped by this episode right out of their own lives, through to the stray tear, the look of contrition, and the moment of redemption: ""Davey, come here. Yes, David . . . I love you."" The illustrations are wonderful, full of good-time trouble-making tomfoolery, borrowing on the energy of children's drawings and the determined strokes of their early attempts at lettering. David is a small, snaggle-toothed piehead whose mischief--for those who don't have to clean up after him--is nothing short of exhilarating.

No, David! [Review of the book No, David!]. Kirkus Review. Retrieved from https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/david-shannon-6/no-david-2/


Suggestion: This would be a great book for a story time for young children and to introduce to parents to add to their night time story collections.