Saturday, February 11, 2017

Princess Labelmaker to the Rescue:
An Oragami Yoda Book
by Tom Angleberger


Angleberger, T. (2014). Princess Labelmaker to the rescue: An oragami Yoda book. New York, NY: Amulet Books.

The perfect book to go along with the recent hot topic discussion about standardized testing and “teaching to the test”.  Forced to participate in ‘FunTime’, a test prep video series with “cool” (lame) songs such as Oppa Funtime Style, a take on Gangam Style with Professor FunTime and his talking calculator, Gizmo, the students at McQuarrie Middle School are fed up. They have had all their fun extracurriculars taken away as the district shells out thousands on this FunTime program that the students hate.  The Rebel alliance has decided that as a whole they will do poorly on the test, actually they will barely pass so as not to be retained, to bring down the scores of the school to protest this new program.  The students are in for a surprise when the principal, Mrs. Rabbski, receives the case files and while they fear they will be in trouble, she actually sides with the students and backs them against the school board refusing to utilize the program at the school any longer.  Using origami Star Wars characters and phrases straight out of the movie, this book is sure to be a big hit with middle grade Star Wars fans.  

The Crossover by Kwame Alexander

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Alexander, K. (2014). The crossover. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Twelve-year-old Josh Bell, aka Filthy McNasty, is a basketball phenom.  He aims to be the next Kevin Durant or LeBron James.  His twin brother Jordan is just as good and idolizes another great, Michael Jordan.  The boys inherited their love of the game from the father, a former professional basketball player, Chuck “Da Man” Bell.  Everything is going great, the team is on their way to the championship and it seems that these boys just cannot be stopped.  Then a new girl in school catches Jordan’s attention and leaves Josh feeling more alone than ever.  As if that wasn’t enough, mom seems very concerned about their father’s health and the boys are starting to wonder if maybe they should be worried.  This story of family relationships, sibling dynamics and middle school drama is brilliantly told in a poetic form that upper elementary students and middle schoolers will not want to put down.  A great recommendation for reluctant readers!

In addition to family relationships the overriding theme of this story is basketball.  It’s what the men in this family live for.  If they’re not out on the court destroying other middle school teams, they’re shooting free throws in the driveway or hanging out at the rec center organizing games.  Alexander even uses the structure of basketball to divide the story into “quarters” rather than chapters and delivers life lessons in the form of “basketball rules.”  Novel-in-verse is the style of this book and Alexander does an amazing job of weaving in all the excitement of game play-by-plays to Josh’s inner struggles with his life and family in a form that is pure poetry in motion.


Time for Kids Interview with Kwame Alexander