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Book Reviews
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"What books will kids love?" On this website, we want to give you lots of ways to find good books.
If you are a teacher using literature circles, anywhere from Kindergarten through college, we want YOUR recommendations to appear here. Please send in short (one or two paragraph) reviews of books your students loved (or hated) to walloonsum@aol.com. Be sure to let us know your students' grade level.
We have student reviewers at several schools who are sharing their responses to a growing list of books. Take a look -- and submit your own to walloonsum@aol.com.
For some excellent high school book reviews, by both teachers and students, check the Read-a-Latte site sponsored by Lake Forest High School in Lake Forest, Illinois. If your school or library has a similar page of book reviews, let us know and we will add you to the list. |
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| ADULT REVIEWS | |
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The Perks of Being a Wallflower
by Stephen Chbosky (for middle and high school readers) reviewed by Brangien Davis of AMAZON.COM |
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What is most notable about this funny, touching, memorable first
novel from Stephen Chbosky is the resounding accuracy with which the author captures the
voice of a boy teetering on the brink of adulthood. Charlie is a freshman. And while's
he's not the biggest geek in the school, he is by no means popular.
He's a wallflower--shy
and introspective, and intelligent beyond his years, if not very savvy in the social arts.
We learn about Charlie through the letters he writes to someone of undisclosed name, age,
and gender, a stylistic technique that adds to the heart-wrenching earnestness saturating
this teen's story. Charlie encounters the same struggles that many kids face in high
school--how to make friends, the intensity of a crush, family tensions, a first
relationship, exploring sexuality, experimenting with drugs--but he must also deal with
his best friend's recent suicide. Charlie's letters take on the intimate feel of a journal
as he shares his day-to-day thoughts and feelings:
With the help of a teacher who recognizes his wisdom and intuition, and his two friends, seniors Samantha and Patrick, Charlie mostly manages to avoid the depression he feels creeping up like kudzu. When it all becomes too much, after a shocking realization about his beloved late Aunt Helen, Charlie retreats from reality for awhile. But he makes it back in due time, ready to face his sophomore year and all that it may bring. Charlie, sincerely searching for that feeling of "being infinite," is a kindred spirit to the generation that's been slapped with the label X. --Brangien Davis, AMAZON.COM | |
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