Check It Out
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For kids enrolled in “Wrapped Up in Reading,” the Newport Beach Public
Library’s 2002 summer reading program, there’s fun, fantasy and revealing
takes on life in new children’s fiction.
For the preschool set, Claire Masurei paints a sensitive portrait of a
child with divorced parents in “Two Homes.” With comforting scenes at
Dad’s suburban house and Mom’s city apartment, this perceptive picture
book can help children learn they’re loved no matter which household
they’re living in at any given moment.
Every kid fears being different, and irrepressible Junie B. faces that
prospect with offbeat aplomb in “Junie B., First Grader (at last!).” In
the 18th installment of her popular chapter book series for kids, Barbara
Park sends spunky Junie into a new class where she has to make friends
while worrying about looking like a “goonie bird” in her new purple
glasses.
Worry is what small, freckled Bridget does best when she contemplates
doing anything remotely risky. When she gets lost on a day-care field
trip and meets six grumpy carnivores in Pija Lindenbaum’s “Bridget and
the Gray Wolves,” she tackles her predicament with uncharacteristic
confidence -- making the goofy beasts play “hospital,” feeding them mud
and singing them songs. Young grade-schoolers will be amused by the
transformation from scaredy-cat to bossy playmate, while finding
satisfaction in Bridget’s safe return to day-care.
The sassy heroine of “What Planet Are You From, Clarice Bean” is
decidedly unafraid of new adventures. When she becomes an eco-warrior to
save a neighborhood tree, her environmental class assignment takes on new
meaning in Lauren Child’s hilarious picture book for preschoolers through
second-graders.
For chapter book readers, Lee Kochenderfer takes a snapshot of World
War II Americana in “The Victory Garden.” As her brother’s flying a
fighter plane overseas, 11-year-old Teresa rallies classmates to tend a
neighbor’s garden, sells produce to support the war effort and befriends
the class bully. While the approach is sentimental, fourth- through
sixth-graders will applaud a preteen who unites people in a time of
crisis.
Preteens can be easily mortified by Mom, and many will identify with
Laura Stephan, narrator of “A Mother to Embarrass Me.” As she lists
things to change about a parent who has gone from cool to geek, the
12-year-old brings up age-old adolescent issues. Middle-graders will nod
in recognition, while moms who read Carol Williams’ book might learn much
about the teenage psyche.
Being branded “fatso” or “retard” is the ultimate humiliation in
seventh grade, and four friends combat such labels in James Howe’s “The
Misfits.” When the outcasts run for student council on a platform
protesting name-calling, they provide an upbeat model for standing tall
in the face of tough peer pressure.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Bonnie McLaren. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers
by accessing the catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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