The View from Saturday
By E. L. Konigsburg
1998, Aladdin
PaperbacksSummary:
This book is
about a journey that four children and a teacher take during their year in
sixth grade. It begins by introducing each child and the special events in
their lives, that each must deal with, before they can continue on. Mrs.
Olinski, their teacher, must also journey to gain her balance back with life as
she returns to teaching as a paraplegic. These four students each bring unique
talents and personality to the group they call the Souls. This book follows
their growth and change as they strive to be the first sixth grade class to win
the academic bowl at their school and then all the way to the state finals.
Impressions:
The author
uses an unconventional approach of introducing each student in between chapters
of their ongoing attempt to win the academic contests. So you are going back
and forth in time, learning about their characters as you see them progress in
the contest. This style of writing did draw you into the story and keep you
wondering about the outcome as it moved quickly through the story. As you read
through it, you saw the characters resolve their own problems and help others resolve
theirs. Excellent book. I will enjoy reading it over and over again. Winner of
the Newbery Award in 1997. Recommended for grades 5-9.
Reviews:
E. L. Konigsburg won her second Newbery
Medal, for ''The View From Saturday,'' a comic novel about a team of
sixth-grade Academic Bowl competitors. Ms. Konigsburg first won the American
Library Association's prize for children's literature in 1968, for ''From the
Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.''
The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/1997/02/18/nyregion/news-summary-681229.html?pagewanted=2
“In no other book this year were the potentials of
both heart and mind in children laid out with such persuasive clarity…it’s a
jubilant, unique tour de force.”
John Peters, Chair, 1997 Newbery
Committee
Retrieved from back book cover
“A jewel in the author’s crown of
outstanding work.” School Library
Journal
Retrieved from back book cover
Suggestions:
I would make
a booktalk or booktrailer with this story to get the kids interested. Perhaps
make a poster with glogster that announces the academic bowl contest with the
characters and have it running as the students enter the library to get their
attention.
By Pam Munoz Ryan
2000, Scholastic Press
Summary:
Esperanza is
a girl that has grown up on a ranch in Mexico not wanting for anything.
Circumstances change quickly when her father is killed and the uncle ask
Ramona, Esperanza’s mother, to marry him. Displeasing him with her answer, the uncle
burns the family home and fields. Esperanza, Ramona, and a faithful servant
family make their way to the United States for a promise of a better life. But life in America isn’t what Esperanza
expected and she must grow to realize that the past is gone but tomorrow holds
promise.
Impressions:
The author’s
writing is based upon the experiences that her grandmother lived through,
beginning as a wealthy child living in Mexico to working as a farm laborer in
California. This emotional connection helps the author write convincingly and
bring the characters and their plight to life. This book won the Pura Belpre
Award. Recommended for grades 3-8.
Reviews:
From Publishers Weekly
Told in a lyrical, fairy tale - like style, Ryan's (riding
Freedom) robust novel set in 1930 captures a Mexican girl's fall from riches,
her immigration to California and her growing awareness of class and ethnic
tensions… Ryan poetically conveys Esperanza's ties to the land by crafting
her story to the rhythms of the seasons. Each chapter's title takes its name
from the fruits Esperanza and her countrymen harvest, firs in Aguascalientes,
then in California's San Joaquin Valley. Ryan fluidly juxtaposes world events
(Mexico's post-revolution tensions, the arrival of Oklahoma's Dust Bowl victims
and the struggles between the U.S. government and Mexican workers trying to
organize) with one family's will to survive - while introducing readers to
Spanish words and Mexican customs. Readers will be swept up by vivid
descriptions of California dust storms or by the police crackdown on a labor
strike ("The picket signs lay on the ground, discarded, and like a mass of
marbles that had already been hit, the strikers scattered?"). Ryan
delivers subtle metaphors via Abuelita's pearl's of wisdom, and not until
story's end will readers recognize how carefully they have been strung. Ages
9-14. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library
Journal
Set against the multiethnic,
labor-organizing era of the Depression, the story of Esperanza remaking herself
is satisfyingly complete, including dire illness and a difficult romance.
Except for the evil uncles, all of the characters are rounded, their motives
genuine, with class issues honestly portrayed. Easy to booktalk, useful in
classroom discussions, and accessible as pleasure reading, this well-written
novel belongs in all collections.
Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
http://www.amazon.com/Esperanza-Rising-Pam-Munoz-Ryan/dp/0756910560/ref=tmm_hrd_title_0
Suggestions:
This book
could be used to introduce realistic or historic fiction or for a character
study. The story could also be used as a discussion starter for a number of
topics including importance of family, overcoming adversity, growing up, etc.