Showing posts with label module 7: realistic fiction (young adults). Show all posts
Showing posts with label module 7: realistic fiction (young adults). Show all posts

Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants



Brashares, A. (2001). The sisterhood of the traveling pants. New York: Random House.

Summary

Four friends: Bridget, the bomb-shell blonde athlete; Tibby, the pessimistic film maker; Lena, the shy, beautiful, modest artist; and Carmen, the drama-living writer. One pair of jeans, found in a thrift store, mysteriously fits them all and becomes the glue that holds them all together in their first summer apart since they were born sixteen years ago. Bridget becomes dangerously obsessed with her young, hot coach at a soccer camp in southern California. Carmen, excited at the prospect of spending a whole summer with her father, learns he has been keeping secrets from her. Lena visits her grandparents in Greece, finding love and art in unexpected places. And Tibby, bitter at being left behind at home, befriends twelve-year-old Bailey, who teaches her lessons of life, love, and friendship that she will never forget. During this first summer of the Sisterhood, the girls begin to grow into themselves as individuals while realizing just how much they still need each other.

Worth a bookmark?

I absolutely love this book! Each of the girls gets to tell her story from her own perspective, yet the story of the group is woven together so gracefully that they are never really separate stories. Brashares writes in a way that invites you to be part of the Sisterhood, and you feel like you share in the girls' friendship. The characters are dynamic and far from perfect; it is agonizing to watch them work through their dilemmas yet wonderful to see how they come out on the other side stronger both as individuals and as a group.

In my library…

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series would make excellent reading for a book club for high school girls. Because the movies are extremely different from the books, it would be interesting to discuss the differences and why the filmmakers chose to change such an already wonderful story. Characterization would also be a great skill to teach using these books because each of the characters is so different, yet they complement each other as best friends.

Reviews

Any story that begins "Once upon a time..." has to be good, and this one is. It is hard to imagine that one pair of thrift shop jeans could play such an important role in the lives of four teenage girls. The story begins before the birth of four teenagers when their mothers meet in an aerobics class. Although the mothers drift apart, the girls become close friends. A trip to the local thrift shop and one non-descript pair of jeans become the catalyst for a summer of change. How can one pair of jeans look so incredibly good on four different girls with four dramatically different figures? Its magical, at least that is what the teens think. "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" is born when the girls decide to send the jeans to each other over the summer. The journey of the traveling jeans takes the denim talisman from Greece where Lena discovers herself, to California where Bridget learns a life lesson, to South Carolina where Carmen must learn about family, and finally back home where Tibby discovers the real magic in them-or is it life? (Rita Karr, Children's Literature)

Hoot



Hiaasen, C. (2002). Hoot. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Summary

Hoot is a mystery like no other. While Roy is trying to find a place to fit into his new home in the south Florida, a construction foreman repeatedly reports mysterious vandalism at the site of a new Mother Paula's All American Pancake House, keeping the newest addition to the police force busy figuring out how to report vandalism where nothing was broken. It seems as though the vandal's goal is not theft, but delay and disorder of the building site. Roy makes an unlikely friend in an older, tough girl at school named Beatrice, who eventually lets him in on secrets about her family and the mystery of the running boy he has been curious about since seeing him one morning from his bus window. When he realizes the running boy is the construction site vandal, Roy gets pulled into a complicated web of family issues, new friendships, business, politics, and environmental problems. He learns the boy's sole mission is to preserve the habitat of the small burrowing owls Mother Paula's is indifferent to destroying by building their new restaurant. Even after he decides he should help the owls, Roy has to be creative and gutsy to find a way to save the rare owls who win people's hearts with their tiny "hoot"s.

Worth a bookmark?

It is interesting that the creatures this book revolves around, the small burrowing owls, rarely make an appearance in the story. That they are talked about but rarely seen adds another element of mystery to this book. Although the main issue is preserving an environment there are many other problems Roy and the other characters must deal with in the story, problems like bullying, new friendships, and unique families which readers can learn valuable lessons from. I think this book is great for middle schoolers to learn that they do not have to wait until they are adults to make a positive impact on their world.

In my library…

I would use this book in a unit or display about the environment and endangered species. Although the burrowing owls aren't portrayed as "officially" endangered, it is important for students to learn that building new, exciting places like restaurants or shops often has environmental consequences attached, such as destroying many plants or animals' habitats.

Reviews

Hiaasen, a columnist for the Miami Herald and the author of many best-selling novels for adults about the wild and wacky side of the state of Florida, offers a hoot of a read here in his first novel for YAs. Roy is the new kid in town, a student at Trace Middle School in Coconut Cove. From the school bus window, as a bully is harassing him, Roy spots a barefoot boy his age running by, and he becomes intrigued. Roy follows the boy, and gradually learns that he is involved in trying to protect the nesting site of some rare burrowing owls. This site is currently an empty lot that is about to be turned into a pancake house by a corporate executive called Chuck Muckle, with the assistance of a bald foreman called Curly. Adventures and misadventures ensue—alligators pop up in portable potties and a tough girl takes a bite out of Roy's bike tire—before Roy works out a way to get revenge on the bully and help the barefoot boy save the owls. My 14-year-old daughter read this and liked it, calling it "clever and funny" and commenting "it was interesting how the plots came together." Hiaasen's trademark over-the-top humor and satire, along with his concern for safeguarding Florida's wildlife, come through clearly and will entertain readers. Here's hoping he continues to write for YAs. Recommended for junior high school students. (Paula Rohrlick; KLIATT – KLIATT)