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Sharon G. Flake, author of "Begging for Change," had an earlier book titled "Money Hungry" that was named a Coretta Scott King Honor Book. The title "Begging for Change" refers to the behavior of the book's main character's father who is a drug addict living on the streets. Teenager Raspberry Hill, by circumstances, is forced to live in an inner city neighborhood with her mother. The mother is working hard to overcome the financial loss that makes it necessary to live in a dangerous neighborhood. Meanwhile, the mother is trying to instill in her daughter values that will keep her from slipping into the behaviors she sees in the neighborhood surrounding them. Raspberry, like any daughter, wants a father that she can trust and depend on. She abhors her drug-addicted father's behavior and believes, in spite of evidence to the contrary, that she can help reform him. Above all, she doesn't want to fall into the bad behavior patterns that she sees in him. It's gritty material for a kids' book, but the author tries to bring it all to a happy ending. A pirate book for kids that is unusual in several ways"Ghost Ship," a novel by Dietlof Reiche, is different in several ways from most kids' books. First of all, it was written in German and published as a book for German kids before it was translated and made available to young American readers. Even though written for Germans, the setting was modern day New England. As is usual in kids' novels, two kids are setting out to unravel a mystery, mostly without any adult help. But the events they experience are highly unusual. A bay is left without water when the kids start to uncover certain truths about a ship's disappearance over two hundred years before. Then the wreckage of the ship appears at the bottom of the dried out bay. On board are the ghosts of the crew that had to have perished when the ship went down. These events make for good reading by kids whatever their language or nationality. A book that informs about recent history
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Richard Peck, author of "The Teacher's Funeral," is a Newbery Award-winning author of "A Year Down Yonder." His special talent is writing about early twentieth century rural and small town life in America, especially the Middle West. He manages to acquaint young readers with life as it might have been for their grandparents or great-grandparents, while infusing his stories with one humorous account after another. "The Teacher's Funeral" is one you might want to read yourself. Better yet, you might really enjoy reading it aloud to your own kids.
"Riding Freedom" by Pam Munoz Ryan is a story that appeals to those girls who love horse stories, but also supports a message that girls can aspire to be whatever they want to be. It is a short book that tells a fictionalized account of a real historical person in a very direct manner. A reader is not apprised that the story is reality-based until an ending note from the author. Many young readers are not likely to be aware that citizens, if they were female, were denied the right to vote until relatively recently. The discussion of women's suffrage was not part of this horse story until the ending of the book, but it was a logically related ending to cap the heroine's accomplishments.
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