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Intro
Hi and welcome to Books Between - a podcast for teachers, parents, librarians, and anyone who wants to connect kids between 8-12 to books they\\u2019ll love. I\\u2019m your host, Corrina Allen - a mom of two girls, a 5th grade teacher, and glad to be back after a brief hiatus to refocus and recharge. But - we\\u2019ve got a lot of great new books to talk about so you knew I wasn\\u2019t going to be gone for long!
This is Episode #38 and today I am chatting about the Wonder movie with a friend of mine, I\\u2019ll discuss three new graphic novels you\\u2019ll want to check out, and then I\\u2019ll answer a question about what to do when all your child wants to read is graphic novels and nothing else.
But first I am excited to tell you that today\\u2019s episode is brought to you by WriteAbout.com - a writing community and publishing platform that is perfect for classrooms. If you are like me and are looking for an engaging and authentic way for your students to share their ideas with a wider audience, you are absolutely going to want to visit WriteAbout.com to check it out. \\xa0\\xa0
Main Topic - Wonder Movie
A couple \\xa0weekends ago, I had the chance to go see the film adaptation of Wonder by RJ Polacio - one of my all-time favorite books and one I\\u2019ve read every year with my fifth graders since it came out in 2012. \\xa0And I am sure a lot of you also have a lot of love for this book. \\xa0So, when I saw that my #BookVoyage friend, Julie Kirchner, had also seen the movie - I asked her to come on the show so we could chat about it. \\xa0As you will hear, Julie is an amazing librarian and an all around amazing person and one of those people really worth connecting with Twitter.
Alright - take a listen.
Links to books and topics we chatted about:
Wonder by R.J. Palacio
Auggie & Me: Three Wonder Stories by R.J. Palacio
The Bad Seed by Jory John
Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds
Ghost by Jason Reynolds
Patina by Jason Reynolds
Sunny by Jason Reynolds
The Peculiar Incident on Shady Street by Lindsay Currie
Fenway & Hattie: Up to New Tricks by Victoria Coe
Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut by Derrick Barnes & Gordon C. James
Dazzle Ships by Chris Barton & Victo Ngai
Red and Lulu by Matt Tavares
Claymates by Devorah Petty & Lauren Eldridge
After the Fall by Dan Santat
Dan Santat\\u2019s Interviews on Picturebooking \\xa0and SharpRead
Come With Me by Holly M. McGhee and Pascal Lemaaitre
Most People by Michael Leannah & Jennifer E. Morris
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Book Talk - Three New SciFi/Fantasy Graphic Novels
In this section of the show, I share with you three books centered around a theme and discuss three things to love about each book. This week I want to share with you three brand new graphic novels with scifi /fantasy elements - Fish Girl by David Wiesner and Donna Jo Napoli, NewsPrints by Ru Xu, and Mighty Jack and the Goblin King by Ben Hatke.
Fish Girl
Let\\u2019s start with Fish Girl! This is the first graphic novel for both Caldecott medalist David Wiesner and linguist and children\\u2019s book writer Donna Jo Napoli. Fish Girl is about a young mermaid trapped inside a huckster\\u2019s multi-story aquarium on the boardwalk of an ocean-side town. But- she doesn\\u2019t REALIZE that her captor isn\\u2019t really Neptune, God of the Seas and when Fish Girl secretly becomes friends with one of the visitors, things get dicey. Here are three things to love about Fish Girl:
Fish Girl is a beautiful graphic novel about breaking free from the limits others place on us, it\\u2019s about identity, and the power of friends to broaden our world and make us see things from a new perspective.
NewsPrints
Our second new graphic novel featured this week is NewsPrints by debut author Ru Xu. This is the story of Blue - a young girl disguising herself as a newsboy for the newspaper called The Bugle. The only truth-telling paper left in Nautilene - a city struggling through war. When Blue meets a mysterious boy named Crow, they both make some some decisions about revealing who they really are. \\xa0Here are three things to love about NewsPrints:
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NewsPrints is gorgeous and if you know a child who liked The Nameless City or Compass South, this would be a great title to put in their hands next.
Mighty Jack and the Goblin King
Our third graphic novel suggestion this week for those who love a fairy tale inspired fantasy is Mighty Jack and the Goblin King by Ben Hatke - the sequel to the must-read Mighty Jack. \\xa0So, if you haven\\u2019t read that one yet - first of all - get on that. And second of all, I\\u2019m about to reveal a spoiler for the first book so\\u2026. you know, you might want to skip ahead a few seconds if that would bother you. Okay - \\xa0Mighty Jack and the Goblin King begins with Jack and his friend Lilly in pursuit of the ogre that abducted Jack\\u2019s sister, Maddy, and carried her up the beanstalk into another realm. Now, I\\u2019ve read Jack and the Beanstalk so I thought I knew what they would discover in this other world. But, no\\u2026. \\xa0completely and wonderfully different than what I was expecting! Here are three things to love about Mighty Jack and the Goblin King.
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The Mighty Jack books have been a huge hit with my students and my kids. And I love them because they have depth paired with a lot of action and humor. So if you have kids who loved Amulet or Hilo - this would be a great series to introduce to them next.
Q & A
Our last segment this week is Question & Answer time. This question came up multiple times during my parent-teacher conferences last month and honestly - it\\u2019s my MOST asked question about reading.
Question:
My child only wants to read graphic novels. How can I get them to read something else?
Answer:
Does that sound familiar to you? \\xa0Well, first off - reading a graphic novel IS real reading. It\\u2019s less and less common every year, but I still sometimes hear parents and teachers and even librarians disparage graphic novels as not \\u201ccounting\\u201d as \\u201creal\\u201d reading. Ugh!! \\xa0I mean - really??? I wish I could hand them Nathan Hale\\u2019s Treaties, Trenches, Mud & Blood and SHOW them that graphic novels are not \\u201ccheating\\u201d - they add layers, they add complexity, they add context for really challenging concepts and vocabulary. \\xa0Students are learning inferencing by interpreting the body language and facial expressions of characters\\u2026. Really, there is SO much complex thought happening when you read a graphic novel. (And honestly - I find the adults who are griping about them, haven\\u2019t read any.) \\xa0\\xa0And graphic novels lend themselves to being read over and over again because the first time, you are reading for plot and then you notice the interplay between the text and the images on further rereads. So - if your son or daughter is like mine and rereading Dog Man over and over - let them! \\xa0And maybe ask them what new things they are seeing.
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Now, with that said, I do think it\\u2019s important to encourage everyone - including children - to read a variety of genres and formats. And developing the stamina and focus to read and comprehend longer chunks of text is a vital skill to have. So for kids who really love graphic novels, but would benefit from some practice with longer stretches of text, I do have some really great suggestions that still include illustrations and graphic elements but are more on the continuum toward a traditional chapter book or novel.
Frazzled series by Booki Vivat - fantastic and funny realistic fiction books about a girl named Abbie Wu dealing with the tribulations of middle school. \\xa0Tons of black and white drawings on each page and short chapters keep you turning those pages. I featured Book 1 on episode 8 if you want to know more, but I just finished Book 2 last week and loved it just as much. It\\u2019s called Frazzled: Ordinary Mishaps and Inevitable Catastrophes.
Invisible Emmie by Terri Libenson is another great option that includes alternating chapters of comics and text. This is also a middle school story about fitting in and finding your place.
There\\u2019s also Olga and the Smelly Thing from Nowhere by Elise Gravel. (And I think the sequel just came out.) I haven\\u2019t yet read this one myself but a lot of my heavy graphic novel readers are also picking this one up.
Series like Timmy Failure, The Tapper Twins, The Terrible Two, or The House of Robots might be catch their fancy - they are funny and have lots of illustrations and graphic elements to break up the text a bit.
Another option might be to hand them the full novel version of a graphic novel they already like. For example, my 5th graders are loving the new Baby-sitters Club graphic novels and were thrilled when I brought in the \\u201cold school\\u201d originals from Ann M. Martin. They didn\\u2019t know that there was a whole series of books out there. I was flabbergasted by that, but they\\u2019ve been out of print for awhile, so maybe I shouldn\\u2019t be surprised.
Those are a few suggestions to tempt graphic novels readers. \\xa0But - if they don\\u2019t bite. It\\u2019s okay. Just get them another graphic novel.
Closing
Okay - that wraps up our show this week. If you have a question or an idea about a topic we should cover, let me know. You can email me at booksbetween@gmail.com or message me on Twitter/Instagram at the handle @Books_Between.
Thank you so much for joining me this week. You can find an outline of interviews and a full transcript of all the other parts of our show along with all of our previous episodes at AlltheWonders.com. And, if you are liking the show, please help others find us too by telling a friend, sharing on social media, or leaving a rating on iTunes or Stitcher.
And thanks again to WriteAbout.com for supporting the podcast this month - if you head over to their website you\\u2019ll find awesome ideas to get your students writing this year.
Thanks again and see you soon! \\xa0Bye!
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