

Technically, It’s Not My Fault: concrete poems to.How do I help my child learn to love reading if I.Smile, by Raina Telgemeier - wonderful graphic nov.The Wimpy Kid Movie Diary - great fun for kids age.Woods Runner, by Gary Paulsen (ages 11 to 14) - a.The Tooth Fairy Meets El Raton Perez - full of lau.Passover books for your family: Miriam's Cup, and.Noonie's Masterpiece - for the artist in you (ages.If you make a purchase on Amazon using these links, a small percentage will go to Great Kid Books. It's going to be my go-to present for girls turning 11 and 12! The ARC came from the ACL librarian group. She has a lovely style, full of action and emotions, and yet not too dense so the story shines through. She grew up in the San Francisco area, but made her way to New York City when she was 22 to attend the School of Visual Arts as an Illustration and Cartooning student.

Raina Telgemeier might be known to you as the illustrator of the Babysitter's Club comics. That night, she asked me to read it aloud to her (a treat!), and we did - staying up way past her bedtime to finish it! We just got our "real" copy in the mail, with full color and a glittery front, and my tween escaped with it again! When I brought home the ARC (advanced readers copy), my 5th grader took it to her room and read it straight through. Yes, this is a real story, based on all the dental drama that Raina really went through. Author/illustrator Raina Telgemeier does a wonderful job of capturing the emotions of a young tween/teenager - the joy, the angst, the pain, the drama. This coming-of-age true story is sure to resonate with tweens and teens who are trying to figure things out for themselves. On top of the dental drama, Raina goes through middle school and starts high school, dealing with friends who turn out to be not so friendly, boys and crushes, and a major earthquake. Definitely not the recipe for fitting in! What follows is a long and frustrating journey with braces, dental surgery, embarrassing headgear, and even a retainer with fake teeth attached. But one night after Girl Scouts she trips and falls flat on her face, severely injuring her two front teeth. Raina just wants to be a normal sixth grader - to fit in, to figure out the right clothes to wear, to have fun with her friends. Smile, by Raina Telgemeier, is a brilliant story that speaks to tweens on the brink of adolescence.Īvailable on Amazon or your local public library They love reading books with fewer words but all the ideas! So it warms my heart when I read a graphic novel or comic strip that has wonderful characters, a rich story, and all the details I'd hope for in a novel. So many kids are drawn to graphic novels and comic books - they love how visually stimulating they are, they love the laughs and the drama.
