3.28 It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? Eleanor&Park

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

{Celebrating the books we’ve read in the past week

&

the titles we are currently reading.}

This meme is originated by Jen and Kellee at TeachMentorTexts. Thanks!


Before we get going…Did you follow March Madness? Two weekends, and we’re already down from 64 teams to the Final Four. How’s YOUR bracket?


 

My family spent the first few days of vaca in NYC. What a great place. Here is a quick tour…

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Eleanor & Park
This is a little old for my 6th grade students, but my 8th-grade daughter read it and enjoyed it. We spent a good part of our NYC walk on our way to the Chelsea Market and High Line talking about it. A tragic and captivating love story and a whole lot more.
Did you catch my MrEtkinSHMS Instagram posts this past week?
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 How many books did students in each class read OVER VACATION?

PERIOD 1&2 READ 20 BOOKS THIS PAST WEEK.

PERIOD 5&6 READ 12 BOOKS THIS PAST WEEK.

 

For every parent who leaves a comment on TODAY’S POST with what YOU’RE reading, I’ll give your child a BUSTED ticket…

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 Book 1 of the Wingfeather Saga.
This came highly recommended from a trusted Twitter friend, Brian Wilhorn @HelpReaders. It’s a rollicking good adventure so far.
My 7th grader is reading
My 8th grader is reading
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 The Secret Life of Lincoln Jones
School of the Dead
Never Missing, Never Found
This is the Part Where You Laugh

3.18.16 {BOOKflix Friday} Middle School Rules and Out of My Mind

Today is BOOKflix Friday!

Few things can draw a reader to a new book like a book trailer can.

Get the popcorn ready.

Lights…Camera…Action!


 

Selected by Indie Booksellers for the Spring 2010 Kids’ Next List
“This is the touching story of a gifted child,trapped in a barely working body. Melody, age 11, struggles to communicate with a world of children and adults most of whom can’t see beyond her physical limitations. A provocative change of pace for Sharon Draper.”
— Peter Moore, The Blue Marble, Fort Thomas, KY

*

Description

“If there is one book teens and parents (and everyone else) should read this year, Out of My Mind should be it” (Denver Post).

Melody is not like most people. She cannot walk or talk, but she has a photographic memory; she can remember every detail of everything she has ever experienced. She is smarter than most of the adults who try to diagnose her and smarter than her classmates in her integrated classroom—the very same classmates who dismiss her as mentally challenged, because she cannot tell them otherwise. But Melody refuses to be defined by cerebral palsy. And she’s determined to let everyone know it…somehow. In this breakthrough story—reminiscent of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly—from multiple Coretta Scott King Award-winner Sharon Draper, readers will come to know a brilliant mind and a brave spirit who will change forever how they look at anyone with a disability.


3.14.16 IM! WAYR? Hunt the Dragon

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

 

{Celebrating the books we’ve read in the past week

&

the titles we are currently reading.}

This meme is originated by Jen and Kellee at TeachMentorTexts. Thanks!

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SEAL Team Six: Hunt the Dragon

Holy edge-of-my-seat-adrenaline-rush, Batman!

As I said last week, this is a rare “grown up read” in the middle of the year.

A Navy Seal mission to rescue a scientist from the evil clutches of the North Korean dictator who wants to use him to perfect a nuclear missile? Sounds like something that could come right out of our headlines.

North Korea is scary.

Want to watch some interesting—and rather scary—videos about North Korea? Check out THIS ONE and THIS ONE.

Did you catch my MrEtkinSHMS Instagram posts this past week?
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 How many books did students in each class read last week?

PERIOD 1&2 READ 12 BOOKS THIS PAST WEEK.

PERIOD 5&6 READ 14 BOOKS THIS PAST WEEK.

Tap here to see their BOOKselfies!

For every parent who leaves a comment on TODAY’S POST with what YOU’RE reading, I’ll give your child a BUSTED ticket…

Did anyone comment on last Monday’s blog post?

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Eleanor & Park
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 The Secret Life of Lincoln Jones
School of the Dead
Never Missing, Never Found
This is the Part Where You Laugh
 
Thanks,
David Etkin

3.7.16 It’s Monday! What are you Reading?

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

 

{Celebrating the books we’ve read in the past week

&

the titles we are currently reading.}

This meme is originated by Jen and Kellee at TeachMentorTexts. Thanks!

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It was a real honor to receive a Facebook message from Mrs Baskin asking me if I would like an ARC of her upcoming book. Of course I said yes—and a few days later it arrived. Wow.

 nine ten rev front cvr
To Be Born on June 28, 2016

Honestly, I expected this book to be more about 9/11… even though I was told that it wouldn’t be.

Instead, this was a four-person POV tale told about the days leading up to 9/11. At first that threw me for a loop. But the characters and their unique situations were fascinating—so diverse and compelling. Then what became interesting was figuring out how each character—Sergio, Will, Nadira, Amy—was going to be affected by the events that were around the corner.

Two planes going head-on into the World Trade Center in NYC.

One plane crashed into the side of the Pentagon in DC.

One more plane forced down by the passengers in Shanksville, PA.

This was the time before ultra-security in the airports. This was the time before we knew that our planes could be used as weapons against us.This was the time when September 10, 2001 was just another beautiful but insignificant day—instead of The Day Before.

Their lives will never be the same.

Our lives will never be the same.

Ask anyone: September 11, 2001, was serene and lovely, a perfect day—until a plane struck the World Trade Center.

But right now it is a few days earlier, and four kids in different parts of the country are going about their lives. Sergio, who lives in Brooklyn, is struggling to come to terms with the absentee father he hates and the grandmother he loves. Will’s father is gone, too, killed in a car accident that has left the family reeling. Nadira has never before felt uncomfortable about being Muslim, but at her new school she’s getting funny looks because of the head scarf she wears. Amy is starting a new school in a new city and missing her mom, who has to fly to New York on business.

These four don’t know one another, but their lives are about to intersect in ways they never could have imagined. Award-winning author Nora Raleigh Baskin weaves together their stories into an unforgettable novel about that seemingly perfect September day—the day our world changed forever.

This was a lot of fun to read. A great adventure involving animals, magic, and some cool botany. I’ll be looking forward to the next book in the series.

About the Book

From Newbery Medal–winning author Linda Sue Park comes a captivating fantasy-adventure about a boy, a bat, and an amazing transformation.

Raffa Santana has always loved the mysterious Forest of Wonders. For a gifted young apothecary like him, every leaf could unleash a kind of magic. When an injured bat crashes into his life, Raffa invents a cure from a rare crimson vine that he finds deep in the Forest. His remedy saves the animal but also transforms it into something much more than an ordinary bat, with far-reaching consequences. Raffa’s experiments lead him away from home to the forbidding city of Gilden, where troubling discoveries make him question whether exciting botanical inventions—including his own—might actually threaten the very creatures of the Forest he wants to protect.

The first book in an enchanting trilogy, Forest of Wonders richly explores the links between magic and botany, family and duty, environment and home.

This was amazing. TBWCH is one of three or four WWII books that I’ve read recently. Each one has left me in awe. What a time in history. The people who stood up to the evil of Hitler deserve our admiration. Would I have done it? Good question.

This question meshes perfectly with the reading we’ve done recently about China and Tiananmen square.

THE BOYS WHO CHALLENGED HITLER: KNUD PEDERSEN AND THE CHURCHILL CLUB

By Phillip Hoose
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

 

Awards & Accolades
The Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Honor
The Boston Globe-Horn Book NonFiction Honor Winner
School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
Kirkus Reviews 10 Teen Books You Can’t Miss This Summer 2015
Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year and Best Teen Book of the Year
Booklist Editor’s Choice
New York Public Library Notable Book
New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice
Washington Post Best Children’s Books of 2015
YALSA 2016 Nonfiction Award Nominations
Scholastic TAB Top 5 Buzz-worthy

About the Book
At the outset of World War II, Denmark did not resist German occupation. Deeply ashamed of his nation’s leaders, fifteen-year-old Knud Pedersen resolved with his brother and a handful of schoolmates to take action against the Nazis if the adults would not. Naming their secret club after the fiery British leader, the young patriots in the Churchill Club committed countless acts of sabotage, infuriating the Germans, who eventually had the boys tracked down and arrested. But their efforts were not in vain: the boys’ exploits and eventual imprisonment helped spark a full-blown Danish resistance. Interweaving his own narrative with the recollections of Knud himself, here is Phillip Hoose’s inspiring story of these young war heroes.

Did you catch my MrEtkinSHMS Instagram posts this past week?
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 How many books did students in each class read last week?

Period 1&2 read 12 books this past week.

Period 5&6 read 10 books this past week.

Tap here to see their BOOKselfies!

For every parent who leaves a comment on TODAY’S POST with what YOU’RE reading, I’ll give your child a BUSTED ticket…

Did anyone comment on last Monday’s blog post?

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 Something different for me—especially during the school year:

SEAL Team Six: Hunt the DragonCertainly a fast-paced, adult, action book. Whew!

 

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Eleanor & Park
School of the Dead
Never Missing, Never Found
This is the Part Where You Laugh
The Secret Life of Lincoln Jones
 
Thanks,
David Etkin