
Monday, July 27, 2009
Julia's Kitchen by Brenda A. Ferber

Paint the Wind by Pam Munoz Ryan

The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall

The four Penderwick sisters (Rosalind, Jane, Skye and Batty) are spending the summer with their father in a cottage in the Berkshire mountains. The cottage happens to be located on the grounds of a mansion owned by the very snobbish Mrs. Tifton. Her son, Jeffrey becomes friends with the Penderwicks, and they have one adventure after another. Batty, age 4, accidentally enters a fenced in area with a bull. While she is telling it "nice horsey", Jeffrey bravely diverts the bull's attention so that Batty can narrowly escape. Jeffrey is a brilliant pianist, but his mother insists on his attending a military academy like her father. The Penderwick girls help Jeffrey figure out a way to convince Mrs. Tifton to let him attend a music school instead. A very well-written, humorous book.
Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls

One of the best children's books ever written. Billy Colman wants two coon hounds in the worst way. His parents don't have any extra money, so Billy works hard for two years to save $50 to buy the pups. When he gets them, he names them Old Dan and Little Ann. He teaches them to hunt racoons, and they rambles through the woods in the mountains all night long in complete freedom. Billy is strong, brave, honest, loyal and full of grit. Be prepare...you won't get through it without a good cry.
Code Talker by Joseph Bruchac

A Navajo boy named Ned Begay is sent to a white man's school when he is six years old. At the school he is forbidden to speak the Navajo language, and he is taught the ways of white men. When Ned is sixteen, he enlists in the U.S. Marines to serve in World War II. Ironically, he is trained to use the Navajo language in a special unit of Code Talkers who transmit messages in the Pacific at Guadalcanal, Bougainville and Iwo Jima.
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