Mrs. B's Starred Reviews :-)

  1. Mrs.' B's RECENT READS with STARRED RATINGS
  2. STAR KEY:
  3. Student Submitted Book Reviews:



Mrs.' B's RECENT READS with STARRED RATINGS

The following is a list of titles (alphabetized by author) that 
Mrs. B has read and rated by a STAR method in order for students 
to get an idea of what she thought about the book. There is a 
brief summary provided about the book which was not written by 
Mrs. B. If you would like Mrs. B to give her own summary of the 
book, just e-mail her or stop in at the library and she would be 
happy to give her views! 

                   
Alexie, Sherman.  The absolutely true diary of a part-time 
                           Indian. *****
                New York : Little, Brown, 2007.  Budding
                cartoonist Junior leaves his troubled school on 
                the Spokane Indian Reservation to attend an all-
                white farm town school
                where the only other Native American is the 
                school mascot.

Anderson, Laurie Halse.  Fever, 1793.  *****
                New York : Aladdin Paperbacks, 2002.  In 1793
                Philadelphia, sixteen-year-old Matilda Cook, 
                separated from her sick mother, learns about    
                perseverance and 
                self-reliance when she is forced to cope with the 
                horrors of a yellow fever epidemic.

               
           Anderson, Laurie Halse.  Speak.        *****     
                New York : Puffin, 2001. A traumatic event near 
                the end of the summer 
                has a devastating effect on Melinda's freshman 
                year in high
                school.
          
   Balliett, Blue.  The Calder game.    ***
                    New York: Scholastic Press, 2008.  When  
                    seventh-grader Calder Pillay disappears from 
                    a remote English village--along with an
                    Alexander Calder sculpture to which he has  
                    felt strangely drawn--his friends Petra and 
                    Tommy fly from Chicago to help his father 
                    find him.

  Bell, Ted.  Nick of time.        ****
                New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2008.  Twelve-
                year-old Nick McIver tries to help his father and 
                sister send vital information to England about 
                imminent Nazi invasion, until he finds
                himself transported through time to help his 
                ancestor stop a mutinous captain who is aiding 
                the French fleet endangering British sailors.

Bloor, Edward.  London calling.   *** 
                New York : Knopf, 2008.  Seventh-grader Martin 
                Conway believes that his life is monotonous and 
                dull until the night the antique radio he uses as 
                a night-light transports
                him to the bombing of London in 1940.        

Boyne, John.  The boy in the striped pajamas : a fable.   *****
                New York : David Fickling Books, 2006.  
                Bored and lonely after his family moves from 
                Berlin to a place called "Out-With" in 1942, 
                Bruno, the son of a Nazi officer, befriends a boy 
                in striped pajamas who lives behind a wire fence.

 Brashares, Ann.  The second summer of the sisterhood.    *****
                  New York: Delacorte, 2003.  A sequel to "The 
                  Sisterhood of The Traveling Pants" in which the 
                  four girls, now sixteen, embark on another 
                  summer of travels and life lessons charmed
                  by a shared pair of seemingly magical thrift-
                  store jeans.

                   
           Brashares, Ann.  The sisterhood of the traveling 
                                     pants.  ****
                New York : Delacorte, [2003], c2001.  Carmen 
                decides to discard an old pair of jeans, but 
                Tibby, Lena, and Bridget think they
                are great and decide that whoever the pants fit 
                best will get them. When the jeans fit everyone 
                perfectly, a sisterhood and a memorable summer 
                begin.

                   
           Brooks, Kevin.  Martyn Pig : a novel.   ***
                New York : PUSH, 2003, c2002.  Faced with the 
                possibility of living with a 
                dreadful aunt, fifteen-year-old Martyn Pig 
decides not to tell
                authorities when his alcoholic father dies 
accidentally,
                instead asking a friend for her help in disposing 
of the
                body.


           Butler, Dori Hillestad.  The truth about Truman 
School.   ****
                Morton  Grove, Ill. : Albert Whitman & Co., 
2008.  Tired of being
                told what to write by the school newspaper's 
advisor, Zibby
                and her friend Amr start an underground newspaper 
online
                where everyone is free to post anything, but 
things spiral
                out of control when a cyberbully starts using the 
site to
                harrass one popular girl.

Carter, Ally.  I'd tell you I love you, but then I'd have to kill 
you. ****
                New York : Hyperion Paperbacks, 2007.  As a 
sophomore at a secret spy
                school and the daughter of a former CIA 
operative, Cammie is
                sheltered from "normal teenage life" until she 
meets a local
                boy while on a class surveillance mission.

Choldenko, Gennifer. Al Capone Does my Shirts.   *****

                 
           Creech, Sharon.  Granny Torrelli Makes Soup.    ****  
                New York : Joanna Cotler Books, c2003.  With the 
help of her wise old
                grandmother, twelve-year-old Rosie manages to 
work out some
                problems in her relationship with her best 
friend, Bailey,
                the boy next door.

                  
           DiCamillo, Kate.  The Tale of Despereaux : being the 
story of a
                mouse, a princess, some soup, and a spool of 
thread.  *****
                Cambridge, MA : Candlewick Press, 2003.  The 
adventures
                of Desperaux Tilling, a small mouse of unusual 
talents, the
                princess that he loves, the servant girl who 
longs to be a
                princess, and a devious rat determined to bring 
them all to
                ruin.

                   
           Gantos, Jack.  Joey Pigza Loses Control.   ***
                New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000.  
Joey, who is still taking
                medication to keep him from getting too wired, 
goes to spend
                the summer with the hard-drinking father he has 
never known
                and tries to help the baseball team he coaches 
win the
                championship.

                  
           Geary, Rick.  The Fatal Bullet : a true account of 
the    ***
                assassination, lingering pain, death, and burial 
of James A.
                Garfield, twentieth president of the United 
States; also
                including the inglorious life and career of the 
despised
                assassin Guiteau.  New York : NBM, 1999.  
                       A true account of the assassination and 
death of President James A. 
                       Garfield, presented in comic art.

    Hale, Shannon.  Book of a thousand days.   *****
                New York: [S.l.] : Holtzbrinck Publishers, 2007.  
                Fifteen-year-old Dashti, sworn to obey her 
sixteen-year-old mistress, the Lady  
                Saren, shares Saren's years of punishment locked 
in a tower, then
                brings her safely to the lands of her true love, 
where both
                must hide who they are as they work as kitchen 
maids.
                   
           Hart, Christopher.  Kids draw Manga.  ***
                New York : Watson-Guptill, 2004.  
                Introduces the basics of manga sketching and shows
                how to draw twenty-two types of manga characters, 
including
                battle robots.

       Henkes, Kevin.  Bird Lake moon.   ***
                New York : Greenwillow  Books, 2008.  
                Twelve-year-old Mitch, spending the summer
                with his grandparents at Bird Lake after his 
parents'
                separation, becomes friends with ten-year-old 
Spencer, who
                has returned with his family to the lake where 
his little
                brother drowned years earlier, and as the boys 
spend time
                together and their friendship grows, each of them 
begins to
                heal.

Johnston, Tony. Bone by bone by bone *****
     
           Korman, Gordon.  No more dead dogs. **** 
                New York : Hyperion Books for Children, c2000.  
                Eighth-grade football hero
                Wallace Wallace is sentenced to detention 
attending
                rehearsals of the school play where, in spite of 
himself, he
                becomes wrapped up in the production and begins 
to suggest
                changes that improve not only the play but his 
life as well.

                   
          Law, Ingrid.  Savvy.  ***
                New York : Boston: Dial Books for Young Readers ; 
Walton Media, c2008.   
                Recounts the adventures of Mibs Beaumont, whose 
thirteenth birthday has
                revealed her "savvy"--a magical power unique to 
each member
                of her family--just as her father is injured in a 
terrible
                accident. 

Levine, Gail Carson.  Ella Enchanted. ****  
                New York, NY : Harper Collins Publishers, 1997.  
                In this novel based on the story of Cinderella, 
Ella struggles 
                against the childhood curse that forces her to 
obey any order given to her.

                
           Mackler, Carolyn.  The earth, my butt, and other big, 
round things.   ***   
                Cambridge, Mass. : Candlewick Press,
                c2003.  Feeling like she does not fit in with the 
other
                members of her family, who are all thin, 
brilliant, and
                good-looking, fifteen-year-old Virginia tries to 
deal with
                her self-image, her first physical relationship, 
and her
                disillusionment with some of the people closest 
to her.

               
          Meyer, Stephanie. Twilight.    *****+
                A vampire tale. You will also want to read the 
sequels. New Moon, Eclipse and 
                Breaking Dawn.

Myers, Walter Dean.  Sunrise over Fallujah.   ****
                New York : Scholastic Press, 2008.  Robin Perry, 
from Harlem, is
                sent to Iraq in 2003 as a member of the Civilian 
Affairs
                Battalion, and his time there profoundly changes 
him.

          Park, Linda Sue.  A Single Shard.  ****    
                New York : Clarion Books,  2001.  Tree-ear, a 
thirteen-year-old 
                orphan in medieval Korea, lives under a bridge in 
a potters' village, and longs
                to learn how to throw the delicate celadon 
ceramics himself.

                   
           Park, Linda Sue.  When My Name was Keoko.  ****
                New York : Clarion Books, 2002.  
                With national pride and occasional fear, a
                brother and sister face the increasingly 
oppressive
                occupation of Korea by Japan during World War II, 
which
                threatens to suppress Korean culture entirely.

Pearson, Mary (Mary E.).  The adoration of Jenna Fox.   **** 
                New York : Henry Holt, 2008.  In the not-too-
distant future,
                when biotechnological advances have made 
synthetic bodies
                and brains possible but illegal, a seventeen-year-
old girl,
                recovering from a serious accident and suffering 
from memory
                lapses, learns a startling secret about her 
existence.

        Peck, Richard. The Teacher's Funeral.  ****

                 
           Peck, Richard, 1934-.  A Year Down Yonder.  ***  
                New York : Dial Books for Young Readers, 2000.  
                During the recession of 1937,
                fifteen-year-old Mary Alice is sent to live with 
her feisty,
                larger-than-life grandmother in rural Illinois 
and comes to
                a better understanding of this fearsome woman.
            
           Sachar, Louis, 1954-.  Holes.  ***   
                New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998.  
                As further evidence of his family's bad
                fortune which they attribute to a curse on a 
distant
                relative, Stanley Yelnats is sent to a hellish 
correctional
                camp in the Texas desert where he finds his first 
real
                friend, a treasure, and a new sense of himself.

         Sachar, Louis. Small Steps.  *****
                 Sequel to Holes.

                 
         Snicket, Lemony.  The bad beginning.  ****   
                New York : HarperCollins, 1999.  
                After the sudden death of their parents, the three
                Baudelaire children must depend on each other and 
their wits
                when it turns out that the distant relative who 
is appointed
                their guardian is determined to use any means 
necessary to
                get their fortune.

                  
           Sones, Sonya.  What my mother doesn't know.  ***
                New York : Simon Pulse, 2003.  Sophie describes 
her
                relationships with a series of boys as she 
searches for Mr.
                Right.

                 
           Spiegelman, Art.  Maus : a survivor's tale.  ***
                New York : Pantheon Books, 1986.  
                A memoir about Vladek Spiegleman, a Jewish
                survivor of Hitler's Europe, and about his son, a 
cartoonist
                who tries to come to terms with his father, his 
story, and
                with history itself. Cartoon format portrays Jews 
as mice
                and Nazis as cats.

                  
           Spinelli, Jerry.  Stargirl.  *****
                New York : A. Knopf, 2000.  Stargirl, a teen who 
animates quiet
                Mica High with her colorful personality, suddenly 
finds
                herself shunned for her refusal to conform.

       Stewart, Trenton Lee.  The mysterious Benedict Society.   
*** 
                New York : Little, Brown, 2007.  After passing a 
series of
                mind-bending tests, four children are selected 
for a secret
                mission that requires them to go undercover at 
the Learning
                Institute for the Very Enlightened, where the 
only rule is
                that there are no rules.
      
           Van Draanen, Wendelin.  Flipped.  *****
                 New York : A.A. Knopf, 2001.  In alternating
                chapters, two teenagers describe how their 
feelings about
                themselves, each other, and their families have 
changed over
                the years.


           Van Draanen, Wendelin. Sammy Keyes Series.  *****
                 (REALLY GREAT!)    

  
Wells, Rosemary. Red Moon at Sharpburg.   
***                               

          Zusack, Markus.  The Book Thief.     *****+
                            
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STAR KEY:

***** = You cannot pass this one up!!
****  = You shouldn't pass this one up!
***   = You may like it, depending on your interests.
**    = You may want to try it.
*     = You may not even want to read the title.
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Student Submitted Book Reviews:

Book reviews will be added periodically.

Students are encouraged to submit book reviews. Excellent book 
reviews 
submitted by students, will be featured on this webpage.
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