Sunday, October 31, 2010

Bernie and the Bessledorf Ghost

By Phyllis Reynolds Naylor   ISBN 068931499X



For readers, especially tweens, this is a wonderfully comfortable read.  Lovers of mysteries will be pleased with the good, steady pace of the plot and the solution to this mystery will be quite touching and make somewhat sense to a number of the readers whether they be tweens or just general readers.

There is always something in this book to hold the interest of the reader be it the maneuvering and sleuthing activities of Bernie, the main character, or the supportive efforts of Bernie’s eccentric family as everyone in the family bands together to bring an end to the mystery of the nightly re-appearance of a ghostly boy, who coincidently appears to share Bernie’s age, eleven years.

Bernie’s mother, an imaginative person possibly due to the fact that she is a romance writer, leaps to the immediate conclusion that this boy wants to take Bernie away.  With this motivation, Bernie immediately gains his mother’s support and therefore also his father’s in the nightly mystery activities that take over the entire household and even the hotel occupants.  Readers who engage in a good amount of library use may especially get a laugh at Bernie’s imaginative use of his local library.  Bernie takes library use seriously.

While this work is part of a series of books that feature Bernie and his family, the Magruders, this work can be enjoyed on its own by readers who are totally new to this wonderfully entertaining family circle and tweens will be able to identify with the initiative efforts that Bernie, the main character, puts into this mystery solving.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Cam Jansen and the Mystery of the Stolen Diamonds

By David A. Cam
1980 ISBN 0670200395


We join Cam Jansen, as she and her friend Eric commence their spring vacation with a visit to the mall.  It may be time off from school but there is never time off for this sleuth when Cam and Eric find that they have been sitting right in the vicinity of an actual jewelry store robbery and all they were trying to do is baby-sit Eric’s baby brother, Howie.  Eric’s mother had left Eric in charge of Howie while she shopped with the remainder of Eric’s siblings, twin sisters.  In solving this robbery, the police are greatly puzzled when the person who seemed the culprit is found with no jewels on his person and no opportunity of disposing of the evidence.

As related in previous episodes, Cam has the advantage of possessing in her brain, the equivalent of a traveling surveillance but she actually still has to also use her detective’s reasoning and logical strategies for any mystery solving.  It is when Cam and Eric follow up on the missing facts and the original suspect, that they are able to solve this robbery.  The amount of action in this book is enough to keep the interest of the readers and most likely keep them as fans.  While Cam and Eric place themselves in danger fortunately they receive the proper amount of assistance and live to tell the tale.  Hopefully readers will not follow their risky example and risk their safety in any similar situations.  The illustrator, Susanna Natti continues to provide us with good insight into the characters and the action of the story.  We are given enough details to keep our interest in the story.  We get to know the characters well with the use of the illustrations.  Cam Jansen continues to be fun for all her readers.

Friday, October 29, 2010

The Cat Who Went To Heaven

By Coatsworth, Elizabeth. ISBN 9780027197105






This is the story of a cat who came to live in the household of a struggling Japanese artist and in the end brought him great luck. At the time that the cat enters the picture, the artist and his housekeeper barely have anything to eat but that does not stop the housekeeper from doing an illogical thing. She brings home another mouth to feed, the cat. The artist who knows better than to go along with this action is nevertheless so kind hearted that the cat stays. With the introduction of the cat into this household it seems that there is a change in the fortunes of this household. The artist is suddenly given an important commission to paint a portrait of Buddha by the local temple. While the artist commences to create his painting carefully and thoughtfully, the cat who may have had something to do with the reversal of fortune for this household, sticks by close to the artist almost begging to be included in the commissioned work. That a cat be included in a portrait of Buddha seems an insurmountable obstacle in that it is was believed that the cat along of all animals refused to accept the teachings of Buddha. The reader will no doubt be profoundly touched by the answer to the question as whether the cat will get his wish. This is a beautifully written and illustrated work. The pictures bring the work of the artist to us, a living canvas as the painting grows and grows. Whoever introduces this book to children does them a profound favor.

Friday, October 15, 2010

The Hobbit


By J.R.R. Tolkien
DVD V0371

We are invited to visit or revisit Middle Earth in another media so we may discover a fantastic place beyond our ordinary world.  Creatures such as hobbits, goblins and dwarfs populate the world depicted in this story.  Audiences of all ages including those of tween age will be fascinated with the differences in habits and customs they will be presented with in either reading this story or viewing it.

The Wizard of Oz




The Wizard of Oz Motion Picture DVD
ISBN 1419807730

For our continued pleasure we are presented (in the DVD format) with the adventures of Dorothy and her companions, Toto her dog, and Tin Man, Scarecrow and Cowardly Lion as they journey in the Land of Oz, all four with their individual goals.  This film has never fallen out of favor with audiences and in fact support for it has increased over the years.  With a heroine that has always appeared to be in the tween age range this is a work that would be a natural for this audience.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

When You Reach Me




 




By Rebecca Stead
9780385737425

In this book, awarded the 2010 Newbery Award, our main character is Miranda a sixth grader who presents the reader with a good representation of the present day life style of many young people around us.  Yes, Miranda is a Latchkey Kid living with her mom in New York City.  Miranda’s father is not in the picture.
Miranda and her next door neighbor, Sal, another sixth grader, negotiate their way every day back and forth to school past the homeless, in particular one man who sleeps at night under the mailbox, and the older youths who hang around and look menacing to the passing Miranda.  Miranda and her mother, a paralegal, have their dreams for a possible financial windfall should Miranda’s mom be successful on a game show.  The preparation for this game show has become a family project with even Richard, mom’s boyfriend, taking part by lending his support also.
Early in this story Miranda is presented with the challenge of trying to determine the identity of the sender of notes that are coming her way in mysterious methods.  These notes convey the baffling message that the writer will be coming to save the life of a friend of Miranda’s but that Miranda must write back to the writer of these notes.  For almost the entire length of the book the identity of the note sender is unclear.  However the reader to who takes note of Miranda’s interest in time travel will consider that the final turn of this book makes more sense.


The Westing Game

By Ellen Raskin
(1968) 0525471375

The “Westing Game” is thoroughly intriguing, complex in its plot and full of characters upon characters.  It is suggested that it’s reading is undertaken only by readers with a sufficient amount of time as well as a location where distractions can be held to a minimum.  The variety of twists and turns as well as character transformations in this work call for readers who are able to pay close attention.  It is the confident view of this reviewer that overall, readers will be well rewarded for their efforts.  There is never a dull moment in this book but it is necessary to focus fully from start to finish.  This book, winner of the Newbery Award in 1968, is one of the most enjoyable mystery books that this reader has ever encountered.

In that the main character, at least a very important one, is a 13 year old girl, this book seems ideal for the Tween audience.  This work however can be fully enjoyed by a very wide age group.  The interesting constant twists and turns that start from the beginning and end only when one closes the book ensure the attention of its audiences no matter who they are.
The main theme of the book is that of a huge fortune available to one of 16 potential candidates, with the winner to be the one who is able to determine who is person responsible for “taking the life of Samuel W. Westing”, the person who is the extremely wealthy person after whom this book is named.  To help you start solving this mystery, the immediately preceding sentence has been written so as to contain two important hints to get you started in the “Westing Game.”

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Sounder


By William Howard Armstrong
VHS 96 minutes.  ABC’s Wonderful World of Disney V1188


The struggles undergone by an African-American family living in Louisiana during the time of the Depression is the subject of this video/film based on the 1970 Newbery Award book by Armstrong.  The father in the family is driven by desperation to steal and getting caught is sent to prison thus setting the family further into poverty.  The son, referred to only as Boy has to assume the role of breadwinner by working in the farming chores.  Despite the tragedy that is portrayed in this book/video, it is the drive and the perseverance and love of the family that will stay with the reader/viewer.

A Series of Unfortunate Events: Book the First, The Bad Beginning





By Lemony Snicket
(1999) ISBN 0064407667

With warnings galore we decide to venture nevertheless into the unique world of the unfortunate Baudelaire children, Violet, Klaus and Sunny.  We start our acquaintanceship as their world falls apart with the deaths of their parents (we are told of the deaths, no bodies found) and the loss of their beautifully comfortable home, these incidents brought about by a great fire.  Their problems are compounded by the sketchiest of provisions for their care left by the parents.  There seems to be a good case for a malpractice suit against who was their attorney.  Per the terms of the parents instructions, only a relative can take charge of the trio and no specific persons were named and certainly no research was done so as to eliminate the odious and dangerous Count Olaf who claiming to be a relative immediately takes charge of the children and immediately set out to separated the children out of their huge fortune, a fortune that is not to be touched until Violet come of age and we quickly learn Olaf’s way around that problem.  It is due to their own resources that the Baudelaires do manage to live another day and escape from the Count’s clutches at least for the time being but since this is only the first volume in a series there is much suffering or fun to look forward to depending on how you like your reading or the bend of your sense of humor.  The Illustrations give the reader the proper start from the beginning and keep the mood in the right course, the unfortunate world of our friends, the Baudelaires.  This series is quite unique and the one comparison that comes to mind is the old films called The Perils of Pauline.

A Day No Pigs Would Die

By Robet Newton Peck
(2001) ISBN 0394482352
We meet Rob, full name Robert Peck, as he has struggled again to live with the ways of the Shaker holdings of his family.  How he longs to let go and light into a classmate who ridicules him.  Rob in handling the situation by leaving school in mid-morning encounters a situation that will bring about some good changes in his life and routine.  When Rob comes to the aid of a neighbor’s cow, he is rewarded with his own piglet who he raises in the hopes that she will become a brood sow and bring some financial relief to his family’s standing.  After becoming fond of Pinky, the pig, Rob finds that he must endure some of the pain of growing up as he realizes that he need to place the survival of his family above that of his beloved pet.  This is a touching and well-told story.  This is a recommended work for introducing young readers to the realities of farming with its hardships, its joys and the feelings of accomplishment that are a natural part of that style of life.  The recounting of farming life and the way that children cope with its aspects reminds one of the children’s life in the Laura Ingalls Wilder books although not as cheerful a tale.  This book deals more with the progression into adulthood than did the Little House in the Big Woods. 

ALA Notable Children's Books, 1995



Number the Stars





By Lois Lowry
(1989, 1998) ISBN 0440227534

Two friends are walking home together with a younger sister, or running as the mood strikes them when they are confronted by the realities of their world.  Their running catches the attention of German occupation soldiers patrolling the streets of Copenhagen and stopped for questioning.  No, they have done nothing illegal or threatening to the occupiers but have committed a tactical error by calling attention to themselves with their running.  It is 1943 and Denmark has been occupied since 1940 when as a survival tactic it surrendered to Germany.  Annemarie Johansen and her family are neighbors of the Rosen family whose daughter, Ellen is Annemarie’s friend.  Before we progress very far in the story we see Annemarie’s family and circle of friends endanger their lives to insure the safety of the Rosen family.  The Rosens and all Jewish people are being targeted by the occupiers for “relocation”, a term which in fact pertained to the attempts by the German occupiers to annihilate the Jewish People. Newbery Award 1990.