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Staff picks are selected each month and archived here. Check back
often to find more suggestions for great
reading.
To view previous staff picks, please click on the dates below:
Nov-Dec 2003
Jan-Mar 2004
April 2004
Back to Current Picks
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May 2004
The Report Card
Written by Andrew Clements
Published by Simon & Schuster $15.95
All D's except for one C in Spelling. Nora is disappointed about
that C, she'd meant to get a D. Nora Rose Rowley is a genius but
she has been hiding it from everybody since she was in kindergarten.
Now she is working on a plan to prove to people, especially her best friend
Stephen, that grades are not the most important thing in the world. The
story is funny and gripping with a theme relevant to children, parents and
educators alike: grades and testing. This novel gives us yet another
clever and resourceful main character coping with the everyday issues of
kids today and with the consequences of her choices. -Emma
Casale
The Outcasts of 19 Schuyler Place
Written by E.L. Konigsburg
Published by Simon & Schuster $16.95
In characteristic Konigsburg style, The Outcasts of 19 Schuyler
Place confronts real issues head-on with characters you wish you knew.
After outwitting some vicious camp mates, Margaret Rose is "rescued"
from summer camp by her great uncle, who, along with his brother, are her
very favorite people. For the last forty-five years, the uncles, whose
old world eccentricities are artfully described by Konigsburg, have been
constructing "art towers" in their yard. "Outsider" art is not considered
a plus in this neighborhood, which having gone through urban blight is now
"up and coming." Margaret Rose assigns herself the task of saving
the towers. The characters and problems she encounters along the way
are a microcosm of life in the early '80s. Although Konigsburg makes
very clear when the story takes place, the issues continue to be relevant,
and the central them of who decides what is art and what is not is certainly
relevant today. With pathos, humor, and as always, her superb story-telling
abilities, Konigsburg has once again written a charmer.
-JoAnn Fruchtman
Bad Bears in the Big City
by Daniel and Jill Pinkwater
Published by Houghton Mifflin $16.00
Another Irving and Muktuk story from the Pinkwaters, Bad Bears
in the Big City brings us up to date on the lives of our favorite muffin-loving
bad bears from the "far frozen North". Muktuk and Irving move from
Yellowtooth to the Bayonne New Jersey Zoo. Roy, their co-worker at
the zoo, gets to swipe his time card and go home to his apartment while
Irving and Muktuk are expected to live at the zoo because they "are not
to be trusted". Chaos ensues when the bears, feeling stir crazy and
muffin hungry, slip out to get muffins and visit Roy. With delightful
and endearing characters, fun illustrations, and a great sense of humor,
you'll be eager to see what Irving and Muktuk get into next.
-Sara Backstrom
Messenger
Written by Lois Lowry
Published by Houghton Mifflin $16.00
Lois Lowry's companion to The Giver and Gathering Blue
brings characters from each together in another society that is open, accepting
and welcoming. Lowry, yet again, masterfully creates another world
which causes us to explore our own values and beliefs as Leader (Jonas),
Kira, and Matty (Matt) use their gifts to try to keep Village from becoming
selfish and closing its borders to newcomers. While each book stands
on its own, I do recommend reading both The Giver and Gathering
Blue before reading Messenger so as not to rob yourself of experiencing
how artfully Lois Lowry has woven these tales together.
-Sara Backstrom
Heartbeat
Written by Sharon Creech
Published by HarperCollins $15.99
Written in prose poetry, Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech's
new novel is beautiful. Heartbeat follows 12-year-old Annie
as she tries to find her rhythm. A fervent runner, Annie uses her
passion as a way to sort through the turmoil of her increasingly complicated
friendship with Max, her grandfather's failing health, and a new sibling
on the way. Once again, Creech weaves a wonderful and feeling tale.
-Sara Backstrom
Last Chance Texaco
Written by Brent Hartinger
Published by HarperCollins $15.99
This is one of the best contemporary fiction YA novels I have
ever read (and those of you who know me, also know that I generally prefer
fantasy fiction to realistic). It is a fascinating look at foster kids
and group dynamics, full of hope and understanding. Last Chance Texaco
is the story of Kindle Home, a group home for teens, the dedicated people
who run it, and the teens who live there, especially Lucy. Kindle Home
is the "last chance texaco" for the teens who live there. If they
can't succeed in Kindle Home, they will be shipped off to Rabbit Island (known
as "Eat-Their-Young Island" to the teens) a high-security facility for those
who can't live in more normal settings.
Lucy is jaded by her previous group and foster
home experiences but is surprised and inspired by the staff in Kindle
Home, who seem to genuinely care and to even have faith that she can succeed.
Lucy may have decided to succeed but there are forces working against
her: her bullying housemate Joy and her cronie Melanie, the kids at the
public school who don't like "groupies" (kids from group homes), and the
psychiatrist for Kindle Home, who has already made up his mind about Lucy.
After she decides she wants to stay at Kindle Home, she learns that
the government wants to decrease funding and close Kindle Home and to top
it all off, someone has been setting fires in the neighborhood around Kindle
Home and the local residents blame the group home and want it closed down.
Lucy decides she has to do something to save her new home.
-Emma Casale
Story Time
Written by Edward Bloor
Published by Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich $17.00
This new offering by the author of Tangerine is great
fun. Like Andrew Clements' The Report Card it addresses the
issues of academic performance and standardized testing. George wants
to go to the Whittaker Magnet School, boasting the highest test scores in
the nation. Unfortunately, George's acceptance means that his niece
(a year older than he is) also has to attend the Whittaker Magnet School.
The entire school curriculum is based around beating standardized tests,
classes are in windowless rooms, teachers are known only by their subjects
not their names, and the children are forced to drink disgusting protein
shakes and run on treadmills to help improve their performance. But those
aren't the only problems at the Whittaker Magnet School: a murderous demon
has been set loose on the school. Suspenseful, creepy and wickedly funny,
this book is a great read.
-Emma Casale
The Bridge Is Up!
Written by Babs Bell
Published by HarperCollins $12.99
In this delightful cumulative story, a long line of vehicles needs
to wait until the drawbridge comes down. Soft illustrations and minimal
text convey the ideas of waiting and moving. -Debbie Nelson
A Mango-Shaped Space
Written by Wendy Moss
Published by Little Brown $16.95
With humor and sensitivity, Wendy Moss, in her first novel, has
created believable and memorable characters in Mia and her family. In
the novel, Mia deals with issues ranging from the ordinary to the extraordinary
(vegetarianism, death of a grandparent, an ailing pet, problems with friends
and synaesthia). When Mia thinks of sounds, numbers, and letters,
she sees colors. This condition causes many problems for her both
at home and at school, and the ways that Mia and her family cope with it
is essential to the story, but not the only theme. Synaesthia is the
catalyst which stimulates many important decisions for Mia in her search
for her identity. -JoAnn Fruchtman
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