This
month's book reviews
A
book that tries to uncover
what it takes to make a dork a winner
Sixth grader,
Jerry Flack, was in a new school. At his last one, he had
hated being labeled the class dork. So now he was trying hard
to be cool and not get known as a dork by his new classmates.
The best thing he had going for him was his friendship with
Brenda McAdams. She was smart and popular with the sixth graders
and she admired Jerry for the good qualities she saw in him.
Unfortunately, Jerry couldn't shake the image he had of himself
as a dork. He wore thick glasses. He wasn't any good at sports.
He couldn't ice skate. He had skinny legs. He was afraid to
stand up to the class bully. He really liked being a member
of the science club. How else could you define "dork?"
Brenda managed
to convince Jerry that he should run for sixth grade class
president. When the class bully, Glen Marshall, heard that
Jerry was running for class president, he decided to run for
the office himself. After all, what trouble would a cool guy
like him have in defeating a dork like Jerry? Glen figured
all he really had to do was use every trick he could think
of to make Jerry Flack's dorkiness apparent to everyone.
So most of the
plot for "Dork on the Run" is concerned with the
campaign for sixth grade class president. Glen Marshall and
his fellow bullies run a campaign of dirty tricks. Jerry Flack
tried one trick in retaliation and humiliated Glen temporarily.
But Jerry felt so bad about it, he decided it wasn't worth
being class president if it meant resorting to a campaign
of dirty tricks.
Brenda won't let
Jerry give up in his campaign, even though he really just
wants out of the whole thing. Glen has made Jerry Flack the
laughing stock of the whole school. But Jerry figures out
how to turn the tables on Glen. To find out how, you need
to read the book.
Sometimes
you read a good book
only after seeing the movie version
Everybody kept
telling me I should read Louis Sachar's book "Holes."
I picked up the paperback to look at in the bookstore several
times. But it just didn't sound interesting to me - a story
about boys imprisoned in a camp stuck in the middle of a hot
desert - I could do better than that! Then I saw the movie.
The book that I thought might be dark and depressing had been
turned into a hilarious comedy!
Usually, you read
a book and then see the movie. Often you are disappointed
because the characters don't match the image you had in mind.
Sometimes the filmmakers leaves out something you thought
was important to the plot. Other times they change the ending.
For good readers, often the pictures they have made in their
minds are better than the ones in the movies.
Since I saw the
movie first, I kept looking to see how the book as I read
it differed from the movie. Of course, when you see the movie
first, it's hard not to see the movie actors as you read their
descriptions in the book. For "Holes", the moviemakers
did a great job of matching actors to the book's characters.
The Camp Green Lake setting was perfect. The desert scenes
with the boys' digging their "character-building"
holes were realistic enough to make you hot and thirsty, even
in the theater.
There was one
main advantage, though, from seeing the movie first. You knew
from the beginning that the extremely bad situation at Camp
Green Lake, as described by the author, had been presented
for one purpose - to provide a contrast for the exaggerated
humor that it was the author's real intent to present. Every
time the villainous chief guard, Mr. Sir, appears in the book,
you know to laugh rather than be nervous. You even know not
to be horrified when the deadly yellow-spotted lizards appear.
If you haven't
already read "Holes", I wholeheartedly recommend
it. For that matter, I recommend the movie version also. And
I apologize for not reviewing "Holes" some time
ago.
A
newspaper strike ruins a softball
season and almost ruins a family
Gwen loves playing
softball on the girls' team sponsored by the Press Gazette,
the city's major newspaper. Jess, her cousin, also plays on
the team. Gwen's dad works for the newspaper as a copy editor.
His twin brother, Dave, also works for the paper. He is Jess's
dad, and, of course, is Gwen's Uncle Dave. They are a close
family and Jess happens to be Gwen's best friend as well as
her cousin.
When a strike
is called by the union at the Press Gazette, Gwen's family
is affected more than most of the paper's employees. Her father
is a member of the union and a strong supporter of the strike.
Her Uncle Dave, Jess's father, is in the newspaper's management
and is strongly opposed to the strike and the union's demands.
At first, the
strike doesn't seem to have much affect on the kid's lives.
Gwen's dad is home all the time because he is on strike. Uncle
Dave is working all the time because the management at the
paper is trying to keep publishing daily issues without most
of the workers available for work. As the strike wears on,
however, the ill feelings between strikers and non-strikers
intensify. Gradually, the two families pull apart and the
softball team loses all the players who are kids of the strikers.
Even Jess and Gwen
reach the point where they can no longer talk to each other
without hurtful arguing.
Even though she
is only a seventh grader, Gwen wants to do something to make
the terrible situation better. But what can she do? Maybe,
just maybe, some healing can be brought about if the kids
can start playing softball together again.
"Strike
Two" is more of a story about newspapers and the problems
created by large city newspaper strikes than it is about softball.
A reader comes away with a better understanding of how strikes
can destroy friendships and even families if those involved,
including the kids, don't work at separating issues and feelings.
A
kids' book that tries to imitate
grown-ups' private eye mystery novels
Sammy in "Sammy
Keyes and the Hollywood Mummy" is really thirteen-year-old
Samantha Keyes. Her best friend is Marissa McKenzie. When
the story starts the two girls are going to slip away to take
a bus to Hollywood to find Sammy's mother. It seems Sammy's
mother, Lana, had left Sammy with her grandmother while she
(Lana) tried to make it big in Hollywood as an actress.
Even the bus ride
turns out to be an adventure, but the two girls finally locate
Sammy's mom. She is living in a big old mansion that's been
turned into live-in rooms for aspiring actresses. All the
women there have contracted with an elderly Hollywood agent
who is schooling them in acting and promising to land them
all acting jobs.
Sammy's mother
is horrified to see the girls. She is afraid they will get
her kicked out of the "school" because she is pretending
to be only twenty-five years old and is calling herself Dominique
instead of Lana Keyes. And, of course, she can't very will
be twenty-five and the mother of a thirteen-year-old daughter.
Since it is nighttime
when the girls arrive, they have to be provided some place
to sleep until they can be shipped back home the next day.
Sammy's mom is able to trade her small bedroom for a little
larger one so the girls will have a bed to sleep in. During
the night, Sammy wakes up and sees that her mother is gone.
She hears knocking on the wall from a neighboring room, but
ignores it and goes back to sleep. The next morning they all
wake up to find that one of the residents in a neighboring
room is dead. They think she has taken an overdose of pills.
Sammy, though, is a natural born detective, and she realizes
that there is no glass in the room with the dead body. The
victim couldn't have swallowed all those pills without water.
She has to have been murdered!
Now the girls
can't go home. Sammy has to find out who killed the murdered
woman. She has to solve the mystery, especially since her
mother could be suspected of being the murderer. She wasn't
in the room when Sammy woke up and heard the pounding on the
wall from the victim's bedroom. Oh, what a mess!
This is mystery
book you might like if you can identify with a wisecracking
thirteen-year-old girl who acts like a private eye from old-time
murder mysteries. The characters, for the most part, aren't
very nice people. The plot takes all kinds of weird twists
and turns. Sammy finally solves the mystery but only after
she puts herself and Melissa in a number of dangerous situations.
And yes, there is not only one, but two mummies that pop up
in the plot.