Next book

ANNA, BANANA, AND THE FRIENDSHIP SPLIT

From the Anna, Banana series , Vol. 1

A realistic story for sensitive kids.

Jealousy threatens to tear best friends apart.

The story opens with best friends Anna and Sadie celebrating Anna’s birthday with her family. While all is well at first, Sadie’s behavior gets stranger and stranger—starting with general bossiness and escalating into a demand to wear Anna’s special birthday necklace before claiming it as her own. Empathetic Anna doesn’t understand why Sadie is so angry that she’s acting out, reflecting, “Even though I wasn’t sure exactly what I’d done wrong, I could still apologize, since I definitely was sorry that Sadie was mad.” There’s a surprising amount of tension as Anna struggles with her bafflement, narrated in an emotionally sensitive first-person voice. Anna’s parents eventually help their daughter understand that despite spoiled Sadie’s outward enjoyment of her divorced parents’ laxity and indulgence, Sadie is actually jealous of Anna’s close-knit family. Fairly realistically, the girls resolve their problems not through words but through actions—an exchange of kind gestures reconciles the friends. Children may wonder why Anna’s dog, Banana, gets such prominent billing, as although he is her boon companion, he does not figure much in the plot.

A realistic story for sensitive kids. (Fiction. 6-10)

Pub Date: May 5, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-4814-1605-4

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Feb. 15, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2015

Next book

DOG DAYS

From the Carver Chronicles series , Vol. 1

This outing lacks the sophistication of such category standards as Clementine; here’s hoping English amps things up for...

A gentle voice and familiar pitfalls characterize this tale of a boy navigating the risky road to responsibility. 

Gavin is new to his neighborhood and Carver Elementary. He likes his new friend, Richard, and has a typically contentious relationship with his older sister, Danielle. When Gavin’s desire to impress Richard sets off a disastrous chain of events, the boy struggles to evade responsibility for his actions. “After all, it isn’t his fault that Danielle’s snow globe got broken. Sure, he shouldn’t have been in her room—but then, she shouldn’t be keeping candy in her room to tempt him. Anybody would be tempted. Anybody!” opines Gavin once he learns the punishment for his crime. While Gavin has a charming Everyboy quality, and his aversion to Aunt Myrtle’s yapping little dog rings true, little about Gavin distinguishes him from other trouble-prone protagonists. He is, regrettably, forgettable. Coretta Scott King Honor winner English (Francie, 1999) is a teacher whose storytelling usually benefits from her day job. Unfortunately, the pizzazz of classroom chaos is largely absent from this series opener.

This outing lacks the sophistication of such category standards as Clementine; here’s hoping English amps things up for subsequent volumes. (Fiction. 6-9)

Pub Date: Dec. 17, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-547-97044-8

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Clarion Books

Review Posted Online: Oct. 1, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2013

Next book

THE TREE AND ME

From the Bea Garcia series , Vol. 4

A funny and timely primer for budding activists.

Problems are afoot at Emily Dickinson Elementary School, and it’s up to Bea Garcia to gather the troops and fight.

Bea Garcia and her best friend, Judith Einstein, sit every day under the 250-year-old oak tree in their schoolyard and imagine a face in its trunk. They name it “Emily” after their favorite American poet. Bea loves to draw both real and imagined pictures of their favorite place—the squirrels in the tree, the branches that reach for the sky, the view from the canopy even though she’s never climbed that high. Until the day a problem boy does climb that high, pelting the kids with acorns and then getting stuck. Bert causes such a scene that the school board declares Emily a nuisance and decides to chop it down. Bea and Einstein rally their friends with environmental facts, poetry, and artwork to try to convince the adults in their lives to change their minds. Bea must enlist Bert if she wants her plan to succeed. Can she use her imagination and Bert’s love of monsters to get him in line? In Bea’s fourth outing, Zemke gently encourages her protagonist to grow from an artist into an activist. Her energy and passion spill from both her narration and her frequent cartoons, which humorously extend the text. Spanish-speaking Bea’s Latinx, Einstein and Bert present white, and their classmates are diverse.

A funny and timely primer for budding activists. (Graphic/fiction hybrid. 6-9)

Pub Date: May 14, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-7352-2941-9

Page Count: 160

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: March 16, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2019

Close Quickview