Archive for the ‘Reading level’ Category

Book review: The Fountainhead

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Ayn Rand
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 12 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 12 and up
Genre:Fiction
Year of publication:1946

At one point, I actually believed that Ayn Rand had overreacted and that most people respect and understand that they need intelligent, capable people around them.

Read The Fountainhead; Atlas Shrugged is identical except that it's much longer.


If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Fountainhead, The

Book review: The Amulet of Samarkand (Book One of the Bartimaeus Trilogy)

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Jonathan Stroud
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 12 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 12 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:2003

CAUTION:

This wonderful trilogy features characters with whom the reader will fall in love, and significant violence that has predictable consequences. Please, before recommending this first volume to a sensitive young reader, either read the whole trilogy or read our reviews of book two and, especially, book 3.

Sardonic musings of a demon summoned by an academically under-challenged 12 year old apprentice wizard.

Together, they save Civilization as they know it. First in a trilogy.

Luckily, unlike Inkheart and Eragon, this book's sequels are already in print.



-- Emily Berk

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Amulet of Samarkand, The (Book One of the Bartimaeus Trilogy)

Book review: Pride and Prejudice

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Jane Austen
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, historical
Year of publication:1813

It is amazing how a book that was written nearly two centuries ago can ring so true to this day.


It's an age-old story, obviously. A teenage girl is mortified by her family and lack of money and feels that they adversely affect her romantic prospects.
And, the young man she favors agrees.
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Pride and Prejudice

Book review: In the Beginning: A New Interpretation of Genesis

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Karen Armstrong
Reading Level (Conceptual):For grown-ups
Reading Level (Vocabulary):For grown-ups
Genre:non-fiction, religion
Year of publication:1997

Essays about the stories in Genesis.

Interesting to read before/after The Red Tent.

-- Emily Berk

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: In the Beginning: A New Interpretation of Genesis

Book review: The Explosive Child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically Inflexible Children

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Ross W. Greene
Reading Level (Conceptual):For grown-ups
Reading Level (Vocabulary):For grown-ups
Genre:Non-fiction: Child-raising
Year of publication:2001

Dr. Greene describes certain children who, although they are not intentionally rebellious, under certain circumstances become so caught up in their frustration that they lose the ability to reason. He suggests that parents carefully choose which battles to fight (with detailed descriptions about how to make these selections) and provides suggested techniques for helping these children control themselves.

The book includes little dialogues in which the author recounts both successful and unsuccessful attempts to diffuse explosive situations; these dialogues are followed by analyses of what might have been going on in both the parent's and the child's minds.

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Explosive Child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically Inflexible Children

Book review: The Pearl

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry

Book review: Kristen Lavransdatter trilogy

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Sigrid Undset
Reading Level (Conceptual):For grown-ups
Reading Level (Vocabulary):For grown-ups
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:1923

Undset won the Nobel Prize in literature for this work set in 14th century Norway.

Involving for an adult reading it, but very difficult to read, perhaps because the translation is old. The theme of the book: struggling to avoid pre-marital sex is difficult, even among church-loving people. Fascinating, detailed depictions of life on the farms, and in villages, towns and convents of medieval Norway.

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Kristen Lavransdatter trilogy

Book review: Dealing With Dragons

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Patricia C. Wrede
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction, dragons, fairy tale
Year of publication:1990

Highly politically correct fractured fairy tale about a princess who fashions a full life for herself even though she doesn't conform to the fairy tale standards for princesses.

My daughter was very amused at the way the author alludes to fairy tale conventions and plots.
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dealing With Dragons

Book review: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Betty Smith
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:autobiographical fiction
Year of publication:1943

Autobiographical novel about a girl growing up in abject poverty.
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Tree Grows in Brooklyn, A

How CAN this be out of print?????

Book review: Dear Mr. Henshaw

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Beverly Cleary
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:1983

A boy who aspires to become a writer learns about being a writer by writing to one.
My ten year old daughter felt somewhat cheated by the author's technique of presenting all the letters to Mr. Henshaw and none of the letters from him. I, on the other hand, think Cleary moves the plot along quite nicely in this way. When, in the middle of the book, the correspondence shifts to being in a diary rather than an exchange of letters, my daughter responded much more positively.

Anyway, we both got into the story of Leigh Botts, son of a newly-divorced trucker and a catering assistant.

Wishing all those reluctant or aspiring writers out there their own Mr. Henshaw!



-- Emily Berk

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dear Mr. Henshaw