By John D. Fitzgerald, 1972-
"When my brother Tom began telling people in Adenville, Utah, that he had a great brain everybody laughed at him, including his own family. We all thought he was playing some kind of kid's joke on us. But after he had used his great brain to swindle all the kids in town and fools of a lot of grown ups, nobody laughed at my brother anymore."
Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer may be the original good-hearted kid with mischievous ways, but John D. Fitzgerald manages to keep his fun-loving young schemers busy throughout a series of great reads for boys and girls. Starring Tom Fitzgerald as the subject and narrated by the younger over-swindled J.D., these books may give your summer-bored kids their own ideas ... parents beware. Illustrated by the beloved Mercer Mayer (Where the Wild Things Are). />
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The Trumpet of the Swan
By E.B. White, 1970"Some people," continued the cob, "go through life chattering and making a lot of noise with their mouth and never really listen to anything - they are too busy expressing their opinions, which are often unsound or based on bad information. Therefore, my son, be of good cheer! Enjoy life; learn to fly � use your ears; use your eyes! And someday I will make it possible for you to use your voice."
E.B. White, children's author supreme, is best remembered for his endearing Charlotte's Web and triumphant Stuart Little. His The Trumpet of the Swan introduces us to another of those amazing animals - the ones who think and feel and reason. Here, Louis is a trumpeter swan who can read and write, but can make no sound. So he does what any voiceless swan would do - he learns to play the trumpet. The storyline is a bit loopy, but also imaginative, keen, and sentimental. White does his own fantastic reading on the audio book version (Bantam Doubleday 1992).
Mandy
"Her desire to see over the wall became an obsession. She felt that just a glimpse of the other side might reveal what she always seemed to be searching for."
Madonna was certainly not the first celebrity/singer to pen a children's book. Julie Andrews, songstress and actress extraordinaire (Mary Poppins, The Princess Diaries) and most recently Shrek's mother-in-law, wrote this lovely story (under her married name) for her daughter Abbie. The story, a simple one suitable for 8-11 year olds, introduces us to another winsome orphan, Mandy. This would be an excellent book for Grandma to read aloud on your next visit!
P
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My good friend Pixel says if you finish those books, try these great summer reads:
Ruby Holler (Sharon Creech, 2002), Upchuck and the Rotten Willy (Bill Wallace, 1998), and The Silent Storm (Sherry Garland, 1993).
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The Great Brain (Series) |
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May Trivia: The question in last month's column was: How many of the "Mom-umental" films were adapted from, or based on, books? The Answer: 12 titles. They are: Stella Dallas by Olivia Higgins Prouty, Mrs. Miniver, based on essays by Jan Struthers, Mildred Pierce, by James M. Cain, I Remember Mama, by Kathryn Forbes (Mama's Bank Account), Safe Passage, by Ellyn Bache, Sound of Music, by Maria Von Trapp (The Story of the Trapp Family Singers), Cheaper by the Dozen and Belles on Their Toes, by Frank Gilbreth and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey, Kramer Vs. Kramer by Avery Corman, Terms of Endearment by Larry McMurtry, Postcards from the Edge, by Carrie Fisher, and Freaky Friday by Mary Rodgers. |
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C. Merriman, a South Dakota writer, will attempt to go to the drive-in this summer and relive her past. Born and raised in Chicago, she studied film and creative writing . |
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Anthony G. Alessi, MD
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