For Information on Six Flag's Read to Succeed Program, Scan the QR Code below!

qrcode

Search This Blog


Shelfari is a Fun Way to Keep Track of Books!

Shelfari: Book reviews on your book blog

Amazing Authors

One of my new favorite authors is Brian Selznick, author of The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Wonderstruck. As a child I was fascinated with museums and still love to visit them as an adult. In Selznick's newest book, the characters visit the Museum of Natural History in New York City. I am counting the minutes until I can sit down to enjoy reading and perusing the magnificent illustrations in Wonderstruck and go see the 3D movie Hugo. Here is what Booklist has to say about Wonderstruck:

Booklist starred (August 2011 (Vol. 107, No. 22))
Grades 4-8. Opening Selznick’s new book is like opening a cabinet of wonders—the early museum display case “filled with a nearly infinite variety of amazing things” that is so central to this story. Following the Caldecott Medal–winning The Invention of Hugo Cabret (2007), Selznick offers another visual narrative, one that feels even better suited to his inventive style. The beautifully crafted structure includes two stories set 50 years apart. The first, set in 1977, is told in text and follows Ben, who is grieving the sudden loss of his mother when he stumbles upon clues that point to his father’s identity. The second, told entirely in richly shaded pencil drawings, opens in 1927 as a young girl, Rose, gazes at a newspaper clipping. Rose is deaf, and Ben also loses his hearing, during a lightning strike. Both lonely children run away to New York City, and their parallel stories echo and reflect each other through nuanced details, which lead “like a treasure map” to a conjoined, deeply satisfying conclusion. Selznick plays with a plethora of interwoven themes, including deafness and silence, the ability to see and value the world, family, and the interconnectedness of life. Although the book is hefty, at more than 600 pages, the pace is nevertheless brisk, and the kid-appealing mystery propels the story. With appreciative nods to museums, libraries, and E. L. Konigsburg, Wonderstruck is a gift for the eye, mind, and heart.




Take a virtual field trip of the Museum of Natural History in New York City with Brian Selznick.