So You Want
to Read Middle Grade? Booktalking Minus the Eye Rolls. Hopefully.
Anne Clark
is a children’s librarian with the Bay County Library System in Michigan. She
blogs about working with kids from birth through sixth grade (and related
shenanigans) at So Tomorrow (www.sotomorrowblog.com).
Meanwhile by Jason Shiga. Choose-your-own adventures are always a hit with
middle grade kids, who have so few choices in their schedule-packed days. Meanwhile
is a choose-your-own adventure graphic novel that starts with our hero picking
an ice cream flavor. I don’t want to spoil any of the 3,856 possible endings,
but you should give it a try. I booktalked this to elementary students (100 at
a time) using an Elmo and I thought that I would be killed in the ensuing
stampede of boys coming at me.
National Geographic Kids’s Weird but True series is
another great choice to share with a group of students. Each page has 1-4 facts
with full color photographs. The facts run everything from “piranhas bark” to
head-scratchers like “a month on Venus is longer than a decade on Venus” and
cover geography, science, performing arts, and other high interest topics. This
is also a great “bathroom book” if you’re looking to add to your commode
collection.
The Twits by Roald Dahl. If there is a child in your life whose tastes run
to the weird or macabre, than Dahl is the writer for him/her. I was that kid
and I devoured all of his books for kids and was very confused by the ones that
are definitely not for kids. Many of his stories run on the shorter side for
novels, so he is a great pick for reluctant readers. The Twits is no
exception. It’s also a great story,
about a married couple who hate everything in the world with one exception—they
love to play mean pranks on each other. I like to have the kids at my booktalks
guess some of the pranks, like Mrs. Twit putting worms in Mr. Twit’s spaghetti
or when he gets revenge by convincing her that she is shrinking. The kids
really get into whether the Twits will ever get their comeuppance.
The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander (Book 1 in the Chronicles
of Prydain). I stumbled upon The Chronicles of Prydain at my childhood public library
in middle school and I could not have been happier with that serendipitous
find. Alexander was truly one of the great fantasy writers and this series
(about an assistant-pigkeeper who longs to be a capital-h Hero) is a master at
the top of his game. Don’t watch the truly dreadful Disney film adaptation. Or
do because it’s hilariously awful.
Mr. Popper’s Penguins by Richard Atwater. Speaking of books that
have been turned into movies, the Jim Carrey vehicle ostensibly based on Mr.
Popper’s Penguins barely resembles its source material. The novel is, as
always, much better. The plot is simple: Mr. Popper, a house painter, is
surprised to receive a penguin delivered to his house. His family is at first
delighted but naturally some problems pop up. This is one of my favorites to
recommend to families who are looking for a more wholesome, classic story. It’s
definitely a charmer.
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