Saturday, April 16, 2011
The Sweetest Fig
Title: Jumanji
Friday, April 15, 2011
The Stranger
Title: The Stranger
The Wreck of the Zephyr
Thursday, April 14, 2011
¡Quiero Ayudar! Let Me help!
Title: ¡Quiero Ayudar! Let Me help!
Author: Alma Flor Ada
Illustrator: Angela Dominguez
Publisher: Children's Book Press http://www.childrensbookpress.org/
Publication Date: 2010
Genre: Multicultural, Animals, Picture Book
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: This is a book about a parrot who just wants to help! His family is getting ready for the Cinco de Mayo celebration. The family has a barge and they planned to have a picnic on the San Antonio River. He goes all around the house asking for help, but everyone shoos him away! Finally when they are on the river, there barge goes under a bridge and their topmost decoration got knocked off. This was Percio the parrot's chance to help. You will have to read the book to see what happened!
Activity: This book has he words written in bot English and Spanish. What you could do with the is book is to incorporate both languages into a lesson about Cinco De Mayo. By using both languages students of all backgrounds can learn something new.
Reviewer’s Name: Paige Martin
One Morning in Maine
Title: Young Pele: Soccer's First Star
Fly High Fly Low
Mama's Day
Title: Mama's Day
Author: Linda Ashman
Illustrator: Jan Ormerod
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
http://imprints.simonandschuster.biz/bfyr
Publication Date: 2006
Genre: Picture Book
Audience: PreK - 2nd Grade
Overview: A rhyming book about all of the things mothers do to take care for and love their children. From waking up in the middle of the night to providing unconditional love, this book is great to honor dedicated mothers everywhere.
Activity: I remember in Elementary School we would have Moms and Muffins day (which would be around Mothers Day). This would be a great book to read aloud to the children and mothers. Ask the students what they love about their moms. They could even draw a picture and have reasons below of why they appreciate their moms.
Reviewer's Name: Rachel Bartee
The Secret Science Projec that Almost Ate the School
Title: The Secret Science Project that Almost Ate the School
Author: Judy Sierra
Illustrator: Stephen Gammell
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Publication Date: 2006
Genre: Picture Book
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: The Secret Science Project that Almost Ate the School is a picture book about a student who is struggling to come up with a project for the science fair, as he witnesses all of his classmates come up with great ideas. He does some research on the internet and finds something that he believes will easily win first place at the science fair, "Super Slime." However, this "slime" isn't all it is cracked up to be when it starts to take over and digest everything in sight. He finally comes up with a way to calm down his super freaky science fair project and, although doesn't win first place, has undoubtedly the most memorable project of them all.
Activity: This book would be great to introduce a science lesson. Since the book is aimed at a younger crowd who may not be participating in a science fair, it would be the perfect opportunity to explain what a science fair is and could perhaps host a mock-science fair, where the students would research a topic and pick something that they think they would like to do research on.
Reviewer's Name: Moira Schafle
Boxes For Katje
Title: Boxes for Katje
Author: Candace Flemin
Illustrator: Stacey Dressen-McQueen
Publisher: Melanie Kroupa Books http://us.macmillan.com/splash/publishers/farrar-straus-giroux.html
Publication Date: 2003
Genre: Non-Fiction, Picture Book, Multicultural
Audience: Gr. 3-5
Overview: After World War II there was little left in Katje’s town in
Activity: A great activity for this book would be to get your students pen-pals of there own. It doesn't have to be with students in another country, it could even be with student from a nearby school. This will works on the students letter writing skills as well s make a new friend. You could even incorporate technology by doing the pen-pals through email.
Reviewer’s Name: Paige Martin
Compost Stew
Title: Compost Stew
Author: Mary McKenna Siddals
Illustrator: Ashley Wolff
Publisher: Tricycle Press
Publication Date: 2010
Genre: Picture Book, Science & Nature
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: Compost Stew is a picture book for young students about the different ways that recycling can be used in order to make what is known as a compost stew. The narrator addresses "environmental chefs" to inform them of a new recipe. Things such as old/used fruits, egg shells, flowers, tree shavings, and many more are part of this inventive recipe.
Activity: This book would be great to teach young students about recycling and the different things that used products can make. A teacher can ask their students to collect different used items in the classroom, perhaps from the recycling bin, and make them into a "compost stew." It teaches students the significance of recycling and to think twice before throwing something away.
Reviewer's Name: Moira Schafle
Author: Margo Theis Raven
Illustrator: Gijsbert van Frankenhuyzen
Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press http://www.sleepingbearpress.com/
Publication Date: 2002
Genre: Non-Fiction, Picture Book, History
Audience: Gr. 3-5
Overview: This book is about a girl names Mercedes that lived in
Activity: You could read this book when you are teaching your students about WWII. By reading this book you students can somewhat to relate to Mercedes because it about a girl who is around their own age.
Reviewer’s Name: Paige Martin
How to Steal a Dog
Title: How to Steal a Dog
Author: Barbara O’ Connor
Publisher: Square Fish (Macmillan)
http://us.macmillan.com/squarefish.aspx
Publication Date:2007
Genre: Realistic Fiction
Audience: Gr. 3-5
Overview: Georgina Hayes lives with her mother and younger brother, Toby, in their family car. They are living in poverty, and cannot afford a house. Their clothes are dirty, and the food is minimal. Georgina’s mother has to take two jobs in order to support the trio, but Georgina has another plan. She decides to steal a dog, and collect the reward money from the owner when she returns it. Georgina finds a house like a mansion and steals the owner’s dog, Willy, keeping it behind an old house. She visits with the Willy’s owner, Carmella, and finds out that she is not much better off financially than Georgina’s family. To make things more interesting, a homeless man named Mookie starts living near the house where Georgina is keeping Willy. Mookie ends up sharing his enthusiasm of life with Georgina, and combined with her new knowledge that Carmella is poor, decides to give Willy back. Georgina confesses to stealing Willy, and expects Carmella to be angry. Instead, Carmella forgives Georgina, who finds out later that her mother has found a friend who will let them live in her house.
Activity: This story is easily relatable for students who may be dealing with poverty themselves, and could be used to explain how some people do live in these conditions. The students could also be asked to think of other ways Georgina could have helped support her family without stealing, and ways they can think of to save money.
Reviewer’s Name: Zack Zajaczkowski
The Young Man and the Sea
Title: The Young Man and The Sea
Author: Rodman Philbrick
Publisher: The Blue Sky Press (Scholastic)
http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/home.jsp
Publication Date: 2004
Genre: Realistic Fiction
Audience: Gr. 6-8 (Young Adult)
Overview: Skiff Beaman, a twelve-year-old boy who lives alone with his father, has to deal with various issues in his life. His mother has died, leaving his father depressed and lonely. There is also a bully who for some reason will not leave Skiff alone. Skiff takes pride in his family’s boat, the Mary Rose, but he comes home form school one day to find it has sunk. In order to pay for it’s repairs, Skiff sets out into the ocean alone on his own small boat to catch a monster fish and sell it for a hefty sum. Skiff does not have much luck, until suddenly an absolutely enormous tuna appears. Skiff manages to harpoon it, but it drags him into the water. Although he makes it back to his boat, Skiff’s motor burns out and he is forced to row for what seems like days on end back to shore. Skiff’s hands are badly tore apart by the constant rowing, and he nearly gives up, but the thought of his mother keeps him going. Eventually Skiff is rescued by his father who comes on a rescue boat, and takes him back to shore. Skiff’s fish sells for a great deal of money, and he is able to repair the Mary Rose.
Activity: This novel would be a fantastic introduction to “The Old Man and the Sea” by Earnest Hemingway, as it is a simpler read and would appeal and relate more to students. It could also be used in conjunction with a lesson on marine wildlife, fishing, or the ocean in general.
Reviewer’s Name: Zack Zajaczkowski
A Fine St. Patrick's Day
Title: A Fine St. Patrick’s Day
Author: Susan Wojciechowski
Illustrator: Tom Curry
Publisher: Random House
Publication Date: 2004
Genre: Fairy Tale
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: The towns of Tralee and Tralah have a competition every year on St. Patrick’s Day to see which town can better decorate for the holiday. Tralee has never won, but this year they have a master plan thanks to six-year old Fiona. Her idea is to paint the entire town green (except for the mailboxes and fire hydrants). The people of Tralah decide to cut out shamrocks and hang them from every branch of every tree. While both towns are busy preparing, an odd man rides into Tralah trying to find help for his cows, who are stuck in the mud. No one in Tralah will help him because they are too busy trying to win the competition, so he rides to Tralee to seek help there. The town desperately wants to beat Tralah, but they decide helping the cows is more important. They give the strange man help, but do not have enough time to paint the town. The people of Tralee give up and decide to wait until next year. The next morning, the people awake to find that Tralee has turned completely green! They win the competition, but no one can find the strange man. Instead of trying to beat Tralah again next year, Tralee decides to celebrate and appreciate their special win on St. Patrick’s Day annually.
Activity: This book could be used to introduce St. Patrick’s Day themes if conducting a lesson or unit around the holiday. The students could also be asked to think of their own way to celebrate the holiday, and think up their own ways they would have decorated their town.
Reviewers name: Zack Zajaczkowski
A Sick Day for Amos McGee
Title: A Sick Day For Amos McGee
Author: Philip C. Stead
Illustrator: Erin E. Stead
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
http://us.macmillan.com/RoaringBrook.aspx
Publication Date: 2010
Genre: Picture Book
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Awards: The Caldecott Medal
Overview: Amos McGee wakes up every morning and goes to visit his friends at the local zoo. He plays chess with the elephant, races the tortoise, sits with the shy penguin, wipes the rhino’s nose, and reads to the owl. When Amos wakes up sick one day, his friends at the zoo wait for him, but he never comes. They then decide to take a trip to Amos’s house to take care of him like he takes care of them. They all make Amos feel better by playing and reading and helping Amos get better.
Activity: This story would work well with a lesson where the students are asked how they would help a sick friend or relate the story to a time they were sick. They could also be asked to predict what would happen if Amos was still sick, or if one of the animals was feeling under the weather the next day.
Reviewer’s Name: Zack Zajaczkowski
The Hello, Goodbye Window
Title: The Hello, Goodbye Window
Author: Norton Juster
Illustrator: Chris Raschka
Publisher: Hyperion Books for Children http://www.jacketflap.com/disney-publishing-hyperion-books-for-children-publisher-3190
Publication Date: 2005
Genre: Picture Book,
Audience: Gr. PreK - 2
Overview: This book is about a young girl who goes to visit her grandparents. Her grandparents has have this large window in the front of their house that the little girls called the hello, goodbye window. You can see everything out of this window but mostly you can wave to Nana and Poppy from the outside to either say hello or say goodbye. This little girls spends all day with her grandparents and waves to everyone she see outside of the window.
Activity: An activity you could do with this book could be ask the students, how do you say hello and goodbye to your family? Ask them to draw a picture and them have them share with the class what they has drawn.
Reviewer’s Name: Paige Martin
I Love the Night
Title: I Love The Night
Shark vs. Train
Title: Shark vs. Train
Author: Chris Barton
Illustrator: Tom Lichtenheld
Publisher: LB-Kids (part of the Hachette Book Group)
http://www.hachettebookgroup.com/kids_index.aspx
Publication Date: 2010
Genre: Picture Book
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: The favorite toys of two competitive brothers, a Shark and a Train, compete with each other in a wide variety of contests, to see who exactly is the better toy. There are contests where one has a definite favorite, like when they go swimming in the ocean or give rides at a carnival, and then there are times when no one seems to have an advantage or gain anything from competition, like when they play hide and seek or sword-fight on a tightrope. Eventually, the brothers are called away for dinner, and the rival shark and train decide to settle things later.
Activity: The various events that the shark and train engage in would make it easy for students to envision their own competitions between the shark and train, or their own favorite toys. There is also a lesson to be taught from Shark vs. Train, in that the conflict between Shark and Train makes them both look rather silly throughout. The lesson could be taught revolving around the idea that conflict and competition is not always the best way to solve problems with others.
Reviewer’s Name: Zack Zajaczkowski
New York's Bravest
Title:
Author: Mary Pope Osborne
Illustrator: Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher
Publisher: Knoph Publishers http://knopf.knopfdoubleday.com/
Publication Date: 2002
Genre: Folk Tale, Picture Book
Audience: Gr. 3 – 5
Overview:
Activity: This book could be paired with a lesson about tall tales inspired by real people. For example, Johnny Appleseed. You could have he children create a class tall tale that is collaboratively written.
Reviewer’s Name: Paige Martin
Thump, Quack, Moo: A whacky adventure
Title: Thump, Quack, Moo: A whacky adventure
Author: Doreen Cronin
Illustrator: Betsy Lewin
Publisher: Scholastic
http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/home.jsp
Publication Date: 2008
Genre: Picture Book
Audience: Gr. PreK-2
Overview: Farmer Brown rallies his farm animals to prepare the farm for the annual Corn Maze Festival. The chickens build fences, the cows paint, the mice become meteorologists to check the weather, and Farmer Brown convinces Duck to help too. All of the animals and Farmer Brown work very hard to prepare a corn maze, except for Duck, who seems to be planning something of his own. When the preparations are complete, Farmer Brown and Duck fly in a hot air balloon to see their work from above. When the balloon gets into the sky, Farmer Brown sees what Duck has been planning. The corn maze is in the shape of a duck! Duck jumps out of the balloon wearing a parachute, very excited with his work, while Farmer Brown fumes above.
Activity: There is plenty of imagination present in this story, so it could be interesting to have the students add their own parts to this book by creating their own illustrations where additional farm animals put in work to help around the farm for the festival.
Reviewer’s Name: Zack Zajaczkowski
Chicken Sunday
Title: Chicken Sunday
Ben's Trumpet
Dex the Heart of a Hero
Title: Dex the Heart of a Hero
Author: Caralyn Buehner
Illustrator: Mark Buehner
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
http://www.harpercollins.com/
Publication Date: 2004
Genre: Picture Book, Animals
Audience: K-3rd
Overview: Dexter is a little dog that is made fun of and overlooked by both cats and dogs. His biggest dream is to become a super hero. He realizes that his dream can come true after much training and hard work. Dexter gains respect in his community by helping anyone who is in need, and even helps a tomcat Cleever (who is not very nice to Dexter) who is stuck in a tree. After Dexter heroically saves him, the whole community, and even Cleever, realize how great of a hero Dexter really is.
Activity: This would be a good book to read before introducing a fun project to younger children. Each student can invent their very own superhero along with a short story. They could draw their superhero helping out their own community. Another idea is discussing and honoring the heros in their own community, people who do helpful things for others everyday.
Reviewer's Name: Rachel Bartee
Grandfather's Dream
Title: Grandfather's Dream
Author: Holly Keller
Publisher: Greenwillow Books Publishing
http://www.harpercollins.com/imprints/index.aspx?imprintid=517996
Publication Date: 1994
Genre: Picture Book, Realistic Fiction
Audience: K - 4th grade
Overview: After the Vietnam War, the cranes that inhabited Nam's village have disappeared. It is Nam's Grandfather's dream that the cranes will come back. The only way the cranes would come back now is if the dikes that are built in the river work, the rains come and flood the banks, and vegetation will grow. After several months, everyone is growing impatient and some think that the lands should be used for growing more rice than for inhabiting cranes. Nam and his grandfather never lose hope, and they awake one morning to hundreds of cranes flying over their village.
Activity: This story is about never giving up on a community and it's future. This book could be used to help children think of ways in which they can preserve the nature in their communities and set up habitats for the animals living in their area. This book also contains a lot of Vietnam culture. For younger students researching different countries, this book could provide a different insight.
Reviewer's Name: Rachel Bartee
I'm the Best
Title: I'm the Best
Author: Lucy Cousins
Publisher: Candlewick Press Publishing
http://www.candlewick.com/
Publication Date: 2010
Genre: Picture Book, Animals
Audience: PreK-2nd
Overview: This book contains several different animal characters. Dog has several friends (ladybug, mole, duck, and donkey). He convinces all of his friends that he is the best at everything. His friends end up being very hurt by dog but eventually let dog know that sometimes they are better than him at some things. Dog gets very upset and apologizes to his friends for being so arrogant. The moral of the story is that everyone is the best at something, but no one is ultimately better than the other.
Activity: This would be a great book for younger children when teaching them to respect their friends and realize that everyone is good at something. I think it would be a great idea for each student to be paired up with another student in the classroom and create an art project based on what their partner is the best at. For example, "Lucy is the best at singing" and the student could draw a picture of Lucy singing. Just like the cover of the book.
Reviewer's Name: Rachel Bartee
There's a Wocket in My Pocket
Title: There's a Wocket in My Pocket
Penguin
Title: Penguin
Author: Polly Dunbar
Publisher: Candlewick Press
http://www.candlewick.com/
Publication Date: 2007
Genre: Picture book, animals
Audience: preK - 2nd grade
Overview: Ben receives a penguin as a gift. All Ben wants the penguin to do is talk to him, but the penguin does not say a word. Frustrated and desperate, Ben tries everything to try to get the penguin to talk. He tries tickling the penguin, singing songs, dancing, poking the penguin, strapping penguin to a rocket, and even trying to feed penguin to a lion! The lion does not want to eat penguin but is annoyed with Ben for making so much noise and ends up eating him. The penguin then bites the lion on the nose so it will spit up Ben. The penguin showed that through it's actions it is a true friend, even though it does not talk.
Activity: I would use this book to discuss with my class how to respect animals. Even though they are very different and do not talk to us, we must respect them and treat them nicely. They can still be a valuable friend even though they cannot hold conversations. The children can have the opportunity to share what they do with their pets to have fun.
Reviewer's Name: Rachel Bartee
The Cat in the Hat
Pete & Pickles
Title: Pete & Pickles
Author: Berkeley Breathed
Illustrator: Berkeley Breathed
Publisher: Philomel Books
http://us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/1,,9780399250828,00.html
Publication Date: 2008
Genre:Fantasy
Audience: Gr. 2-4
Overview: "Pete was a perfectly predictable pig." He liked everything and everyday to be perfect. One night Pete decided to go to bed early because he hated thunderstorms, and that's just what was coming. As he dreamed of drowning he suddenly awoke and new something was wrong. A giant elephant picked Pete. Then at the door was a clown in search of an elephant, so the clown and the elephant left the pig's house. But when Pete was cleaning he found Dandelions in his room and he decided to take a walk to find where they came from. He found himself at a circus tent and the elephant was there too. Her name was Pickles, and Pickles was a very sad, locked up circus elephant. Pete unlocked her chain and the two sneaked away. Pickles followed Pete back to his house. She took over his bed, his clothes, his garden, and his bathtub. But as the days past, Pete became less predictable and more spontaneous. The two swam, imagined, ate ice cream, went sledding. But Pete became fed up with Pickles. He wanted his belongings in place, his days on schedule, and his life back to normal. So, he yelled at Pickles and told her to leave but she didn't. She stayed and tried to clean the house...but she flooded it. The firefighters came in and found the two and rescued them. The pig and the elephant slept for a long long time. When they woke up and enjoyed themselves together.
Activity: This book is great on creating diversity or friendship. Some people (or animals) can be so different to you, until you take the time to get to know them. A lesson could be about judgment of others and how in most cases we are wrong in our initial perception. With young kids, they could add pages to the book, or write a story with a similar scenario.
Reviewer's Name: Emily Trees
Tsunami!
Title: Tsunami!