Book time for reading during children’s book week
Since 1919, the Children’s Book Council has declared the week
before Thanksgiving Children’s Book Week -- a time for young people
to relish the joys of reading.
Grade-schoolers can embrace this year’s theme, “Book Time,” with
new fiction from award-winning authors. Some of the best explores
dealing with social and emotional conflicts growing up.
From Newberry Medal-winning author Jerry Spinelli comes “Loser,” a
touching take on the plight of the class outcast -- the kid who
laughs too loudly, trips over his own feet and raises his hand with
all the wrong answers. While his classmates let enthusiastic Donald
Zinkoff’s ineptitude slide in the first years of school, they brand
him a “loser” by third grade.
Too busy being himself to notice, Zinkoff has what his peers lack:
a joie de vivre that keeps him smiling despite being the butt of
jokes, the last chosen for the team and a favorite prey of bullies.
How his sunny spirit pulls him through frames a tale about what it
really takes to be a winner.
The downside of grade school is also the stage for “Starting With
Alice,” a prequel to Phyllis Reynolds Naylor’s popular series. In
this introduction to the spunky 8-year-old, Alice gets off to a bumpy
start at her new school, where she has difficulty making friends in
unfamiliar territory. Other trials include keeping an eye on a
neighbor boy’s mom, who seems to have an eye on Alice’s dad -- a
scenario that could lead to other challenges.
More serious dilemmas beset Angel Morgan, heroine of Katherine
Paterson’s “The Same Stuff as Stars.” As functional head of a clan
that includes a father in jail and a mom who has abandoned the
preteen and her little brother, Angel has plenty on her plate. When a
mysterious “star man” introduces her to the wonders of the universe,
a positive perspective on life takes shape.
Keeping loneliness at bay is the challenge for 9-year-old Jon, who
lives with his parents in an isolated lighthouse in Theodore Taylor’s
“The Boy Who Could Fly Without a Motor.” After an article in Popular
Science connects him with the ghost of a magician who teaches him to
levitate, an adventure begins that almost launches an international
incident.
Equally unconventional are the newest adventures of John
Scieszka’s Time Warp Trio in “Sam Samurai.” Never expecting a
haiku-writing assignment to trigger a trip back in time to ancient
Japan, intrepid adventurers Joe, Sam and Fred are mystified when they
land face-to-face with an angry samurai warrior. Whether they can
make it back to Brooklyn is less important than the fun to be had
along the way in another hilarious romp that will make kids glad they
booked time for reading.
* 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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