Monday, August 29, 2011

Books to Borrow

Teachers, these are the books I currently have available for read-aloud or to loan out:

*The Strange Case of Origami Yoda

*We the Children (Benjamin Pratt and the Keepers of the School)

*Out of My Mind

*A Tale Dark & Grimm

*The Batboy

*The Sixty-Eight Rooms

*The Fantastic Secret of Owen Jester

*Cloud Tea Monkeys

*The Red Pyramid

*Dark Emperor & Other Poems of the Night

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Letter to MVE 4th & 5th Grade Teachers:

This school year, all 4th & 5th grade Mount View Elementary School students are invited to take part in the MSBA program, which will run through March 2012, with the students then voting in April for their favorite book from the list. As the school year gets underway, I expect the program to be a part of the students’ regular library time coordinated by Ms. Harrington, but I am also available to individual classrooms to schedule book discussions, read alouds, or help with students’ reading. Along the way will be several engaging activities, including a “Battle of the Books”!

Thursday, August 4, 2011

We the Children (Benjamin Pratt and the Keepers of the School)




Benjamin Pratt’s school is about to become the site of a new amusement park. It sounds like a dream come true! But lately, Ben has been wondering if he’s going to like an amusement park in the middle of his town—with all the buses and traffic and eight dollar slices of pizza. It’s going to change everything. And, Ben is not so big on all the new changes in his life, like how his dad has moved out and started living in the marina on what used to be the "family” sailboat. Maybe it would be nice if the school just stayed as it is. He likes the school. Loves it, actually. It’s over 200 years old and sits right on the harbor. The playground has ocean breezes and the classrooms have million dollar views. And after a chance—and final—run-in with the school janitor, Ben starts to discover that these million dollar views have a lot to do with the deal to sell the school property. But, as much as the town wants to believe it, the school does not belong to the local government. It belongs to the children and these children have the right to defend it!

Monday, August 1, 2011

The Search for Wondla



Written by Tony DiTerlizzi? What else needs to be said, other than I'm very anxious to read the second book of the series when it's released in the Spring of 2012!


From the School Library Journal:

Gr 5-8–Twelve-year-old Eva Nine is being raised by Muthr, a pale blue robot who is loving and maternal (she speaks in the sweet, unflappable tones of a 1950s sit-com mom), in an underground home on the planet Orbona. When a marauder destroys her home, she leaves Sanctuary in a quest to find other humans like herself. Aboveground she finds a fantastic and frightening world populated by malevolent wandering trees, a giant beast who is pursuing her, nasty sand-snipers, and more. With the aid of Rovender, a lanky blue creature with backward-bending knees, and Otto, a giant water bear with whom she can communicate telepathically, Eva faces many dangers, including capture by a taxidermist who wants to skin her in order to create a living fossil for display. This first book in the series concludes with her arrival at her destination in the ancient city of ruins. The abundant illustrations, drawn in a flat, two-tone style, are lush and enhance readers' understanding of this unique universe. In addition, augmented reality is used in three places. By holding up the page from the book to a webcam, an interactive map appears on the screen. Readers can watch as the landscape where Eva Nine is traveling unfolds. DiTerlizzi is pushing the envelope in his latest work, nearly creating a new format that combines a traditional novel with a graphic novel and with the interactivity of the computer. Yet, beneath this impressive package lies a theme readers will easily relate to: the need to belong, to connect, to figure out one's place in the world. The novel's ending is a stunning shocker that will leave kids frantically awaiting the next installment. -Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME© Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc.