Showing posts with label Sharon Draper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharon Draper. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Newbery Flags!

It is the eve of the 2016 ALA Youth Media Awards!  I can't believe a whole year has passed since students read, shared, debated, Skyped, made book trailers and just plain got  SO excited about  The Crossover that they missed football parties just to read or make a poster promoting the book. Incredible.  What an amazing year it was for Kwame, but definitely for all of us in Castleton, too.

Hard to believe that tomorrow we will have another Newbery winner.  How exciting!

On this eve of the ALAYMA, I wanted to share the Newbery flags that the fifth graders created.  They are pretty remarkable and are now hanging all over the library.  Is the winning book in there?  In 12 hours we should know!

I love the broken heart between Trent and Fallon.

I am thinking this book will win an honor!  And Cassie promises she will Skype with us to let us know the answer to the question, "What will you do if you win the Newbery?"
The kids in this book group LOVED LOVED LOVED Echo!  I love how they connected the stories in this flag with the harmonica.

It's clever how they made the three books here.
The winner of our Newbery consensus.  This is an amazing depiction of the book.
I love how they put the nicknames first.

The kids LOVED this book!  It got far (championship round) in our debates because they were so passionate about it.
This is a powerful flag.
I love the rainbow socks.  And did you know, today is Victoria Jamieson's birthday?  If she wins tomorrow that would be a pretty sweet birthday present!
I love this book for Newbery or Caldecott or both!  
We love Nikki Loftin and the kids LOVED Wish Girl! What a simple, but great way to depict the valley.
The kids also loved Fuzzy Mud.  Check out the rash going through the flag. Ewww...

So as you can see, the kids worked really hard on these and it paid off.  I love how they are flying throughout my library.  If one or more of these win, I will just have to put a gold or silver sticker right on the flag.

And if this whole 10+ week project (we've been doing it since October!) which has gotten 61 kids totally excited about reading and tomorrow's announcement doesn't show that author's need to go on the Ellen Show, I don't know what does!  #KidLitOnEllen  Pass it on!

Friday, August 28, 2015

Enchanted Air + Stella By Starlight = Double ** Reviews

I read two really great books in the past few days.  I must preface this post with saying that I'm not a very good book reviewer and I usually forget many details shortly after I've read a book.  That said, I wanted to jot down some of my thoughts so you could see that you should run out and get these books tomorrow!

Mr. Reischer, my 5th grade ELA teacher and collaborator, got five or six copies of Sharon Draper's Stella by Starlight  for me last Spring with his Scholastic points.  I can't believe they sat in the library untouched.  No longer!  This will definitely be on my Newbery 2016 list.

Stella lives in Bumblebee, North Carolina in the 1930s.  She goes to school with her younger brother in a one room school house.  Shoes are a luxury.  She comes from a good family and strong community. This is Stella's story.  It's about finding out who she is during a time when the Klan is present and the black men in her community are about to take advantage of their right to vote for the first time. It's a story of a young girl who wants to be a better writer and who is given the advice to "Find your family. Find your destiny. Find your wings." (p. 94) Then when Stella's dad and two other men in town try and register to vote, Papa says out loud for Stella to hear, "What's the sense of living if you're ashamed of yourself?" (p. 112) and later, when it could be dangerous to vote that he is "...standing up for all of us.  If I don't stand up, I feel like I'm crouching low.  And I ain't gonna feel low no more." (p. 228) Like her Papa, Stella stands strong in daylight and by the starlight, making us all crave more when it is over.

It took me a day to read Enchanted Air: Two Cultures, Two Wings by Margarita Engle.  This is a lovely memoir in verse about the author's life from birth till her teens.  Her mother is from the beautiful island of Cuba and her father is American.  They live in America but travel to Cuba up until the Cuban Missile Crisis.  The book opened up my mind and heart to the people of Cuba, their families and how life was in the early-mid 1960s.  It gave me a lot to think about, especially now since we are re-opening our doors to Cuba and it is in the news so often.

My favorite poem in the book is on page 54.  Here is an excerpt:

When I climb a tree, I take a book with me.
When I walk home from school, I carry
my own poems, inside my mind,
where no one else
can reach the words
that are entirely
completely
forever
mine.

Although I would love to have this on my 5th grade Newbery list, I think the content is a little mature.  But I will surely be watching out how it does during the Awards. The copy I borrowed from the library actually has a "YA" sticker on the spine.