Welcome Readers! Robbinsdale Middle School is a grade 6-8 middle school located in Robbinsdale, Minnesota, and part of the Robbinsdale Area Schools, District #281.

These book reviews reflect the richness and diversity of our school community.
They reflect the views of our student reviewers and do not reflect the views and/or opinions of Robbinsdale Middle School. If you would like to become a part of our reviewing panel, please speak with the
Media Center staff.

Thank you!

Friday, October 31, 2014

Books by Blei: "Newbery Honor Book" - Surviving the Applewhites

Surviving the Applewhites
by Stephanie S. Tolan
(2003 Newbery Honor Book)

Recommended by: Sophia B.

Surviving the Applewhites is a real life fiction book that makes you want to keep reading. This book starts off with a girl named E.D. who likes good grades, and a boy named Jake who is always getting into trouble. Jake set his last school on fire and no other school wanted to take him in except for the Creative Academy run by the Applewhites. It is sort of like a homeschool. Everyone in the Applewhite family is creative except  for E.D. and sometimes I can relate to her. It is hard not being able to fit in. My favorite thing about the book is Winston, the Applewhite's dog, that is always following Jake around. Winston cracks me up. 

Surviving the Applewhites is written from two perspectives, Jake's and E.D.'s and I like it that way. Jake and E.D. grow a bunch in this book. They both become very different characters. If you like real life books that you can relate to, read this book. I promise you that you will not be disappointed. 

This book was: Very interesting in a good way!

I would recommend this book to:  People who like to read real life fiction!

I rate this book:


Books by Blei: "Newbery Award" - Bud, Not Buddy

Bud, Not Buddy
by Christopher Curtis
(2000 Newbery Medal )

Recommended by: Nolan B.

Bud, Not Buddy, is a book about a 10-year-old kid that has no mother due to sickness. The kid's name is Bud, and he lives in Michigan. Bud's goad is to find his father. He thinks his father is in Grand Rapids. Bud can not get to Grand Rapids unless he walks. This book is a historical fiction, set in the Great Depression. When I read this book, I connected with Bud a lot because I was just 10 years-old just two years ago, which is not a long time. 

Read to find out if Bud finds his dad.
My favorite part was when he pulled a prank on his foster brother.

This book was: Historical Fiction!

I would recommend this book to:  My brother!

I rate this book:

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Books By Blei: "Newbery Honor Book" - Pictures of Hollis Woods


pictures of hollis woods book cover images
Pictures of Hollis Woods
by Patricia Reilly Giff
(2003 Newbery Honor Book)

Recommended by: Juni H.

This book is from the point of view of Hollis Woods; a 12-year-old girl who has bounced around from foster homes since she was a baby. Hollis Woods is now in another foster home. An old lady named Josie and her cat, Henry, welcome her with open and arms and Hollis starts to like living there. Hollis begins noticing that Josie tends to forget things; not enough to be major, but enough to be a problem. Hollis has to make a choice to leave or run away from Josie so that Social Services doesn't put Josie in a home. 

"Pictures of Hollis Woods" is told largely through flashbacks of Hollis' past foster family, the Regans, who she has almost built a fire with. Hollis can't run from the past and can't face the future either. Only a "chance" encounter with a boy from her past will decide what she will do. My favorite part of the book is when Hollis and Josie visit Josie's sister, Beatrice, at the movie theater. 
This book fits into the genre of "real life"! I like that the writer could switch back and forth through flashbacks and still be able to communicate a clear message of the story. This book is bitter sweet with a perfect ending. 

This book was: Bitter-sweet with a perfect ending!

I would recommend this book to:  People who like "slice of life" stories.

I rate this book:


Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Books by Blei: "Newbery Honor Award" - The Wednesday Wars

The Wednesday Wars
by Gary D. Schmidt
(2008 Newbery Honor Award )
Recommended by: Mackenna T.

Holling Hoohood just started seventh grade with Mrs. Baker, a teacher he knows hates him. Why else would she make him, and only him, read Shakespeare...as homework! 

It's 1967 and everyone has bigger problems to worry about, like the Vietnam War. As far as Holling's father is concerned, the family business is the most important thing. All the Hoodhoods must be on their best behavior at all times. The success of Hoodhood and Associates rides on it. But how can Holling stay out of trouble when he has Mrs. Baker to deal with? 
My favorite part in the book was when Holling did a Shakespeare play and had to play a fairy, which the costume had wings on the butt. 

This book was: Delightful and intriguing!

I would recommend this book to: People who like to read realistic stories!

I rate this book:



Monday, October 27, 2014

RMS Hot Reads! October 24, 2014


Books by Blei: "Newbery Honor Award" - The Great Gilly Hopkins

The Great Gilly Hopkins
by Katherine Paterson
(1979 Newbery Honor Award)

Recommended by: Halli V.

The Great Gilly Hopkins is a funny book about a girl named Gilly, who is a foster child. Every foster home she goes to she purposefully drives the foster parents crazy, so that Gilly will not have to live with them anymore. All Gilly wants is to see her real mom. So Gilly sets out on a mission to find her real mom. During her mission something very strange happens! 

My favorite part of the book is when it is Gilly's first day at her new school, because Gilly drives her principal crazy since she is such a trouble maker! 
This book is set in the 1900's when African-American rights had just become legal. Will Gilly reunite with her mother?

This book was: Really Good!

I would recommend this book to:  Anyone who likes a funny book.

I rate this book:


Books by Blei: "Newbery Medal Award": A Wrinkle in Time


A Wrinkle in Time
by Madelein L'Engle
(1965 Newbery Medal Book)

Recommended by: Ellie T.

I read "A Wrinkle in Time". The story is about a girl who lives with her many brothers and mom. Their dad left years ago and now Meg wants to find him more than ever. Meg and her youngest brother go on a long and dangerous journey to find him and bring him back home. I won't tell you what happens - don't worry!

My favorite part was when they met the three old women who helped them travel. This books genre would be fantasy and young adult fiction. Something cool about this book is that it was originally written for adults, but they couldn't understand it. It is a book that takes a lot of imagination and a bit of patience.

This book was: Really Amazing!

I would recommend this book to:  All of my friends!

I rate this book:



Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Books by Blei: - "Newbery Medal Award" - Caddie Woodlawn


  
Caddie Woodlawn
by Carol Ryrie Brink
(1936 Newbery Medal Book)

Recommended by: Josie M.

The book, Caddie Woodlawn, is a lot like the Little House on the Prairie series. It is based on a little girl named Caddie Woodlawn. In the book, her father tries an experiment on her. He asks Caddie's mother if he could let just one of their daughters do all the things the boys do. It turns out that his experiment works! Caddie is strong and robust, unlike the other girls who are weak and sickly from staying in the house. One of the problems in the book involves the relationship between their small town and the Indian living nearby. The town is worried that the Indians will start a massacre. Another slight problem is that Caddie's dog, Nero, is taken by her uncle. At the end of the book, Caddie's father receives a letter that will change the rest of their lives. I like this book because it addresses a stereotype that all women must do "ladylike" things.


This book was: Not super jam-packed with action, but still a good read.

I would recommend this book to:  People who enjoy books that take place in the past.

I rate this book:


Books by Blei: "Newbery Award Medal" - The Twenty-One Balloons


  
The Twenty-One Balloons
by William Pene Du Bois
(1948 Newbery Medal Book)

Recommended by: Kadyn W.

The book, The Twenty-One Balloons, is about a man named Professor William Waterman Sherman. He decides to fly solo in a hot-air balloon over the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco. Unfortunately, he crashes on Krakatoa, a land of much wealth and fantastic inventions. He meets Mr. F, who shows the Professor all about the history and many inventions the island holds. One day, something tragic happens which I will not reveal to you. At the conclusion of his trip, Professor William Waterman Sherman tells his story in front of many friends from the Western American Explorer's Club.


My favorite part of the story is when Mr. F shows Professor William Waterman Sherman all of the inventions in Mr. M's house. I like how this book was adventurous and tragic at the same time. I also enjoyed how the story portrayed historical events and how the Krakatoans adapted to the island.

This book was: Adventurous and tragic.

I would recommend this book to:  Anyone who likes adventure and cool inventions.

I rate this book:


Books by Blei: "Newbery Awards" - The Animal Family


  Animalfamilycvr.jpg    

The Animal Family
by Randall Jarrell
(1965 Newbery Honor Book)

Recommended by: Kaiya R.

The Newbery-Award winning book, The Animal Family, is a great family to read before bed. It is about a lonely hunter who meets a mermaid one day while walking along the shore near his house in the woods. The hunter and the mermaid become fast friends and the mermaid moves in with the hunter. They become very lonely and want a child. the closest thing they can find to a human child is a bear cub. After the bear grows up, he finds a cave to hibernate in. The hunter and the mermaid get lonely again, so the hunter finds a lynx kitten. A few years later, the lynx and the bear are playing by the beach and find a shipwreck. What they find inside will change the animal family's life forever. I will not tell you what they found inside though. The animal family lives together in the woods happily ever after.


This book was: Calm and peaceful, but a bit boring.

I would recommend this book to:  People who like to read animal stories.

I rate this book:

Monday, October 20, 2014

RMS Media Center Recognizes October as Veterans' Voices Month


Minnesota is the first state to designate an entire month to honoring Veterans. The Minnesota Humanities Center worked with Minnesota Veterans,and State Representatives to write a bill designating October as Veterans’ Voices Month. After passing both Houses by unanimous vote, Governor Mark Dayton signed Veterans’ Voices Month into law on May 16, 2014. This law will not only honor and celebrate the accomplishments of Minnesota Veterans, but will also educate all Minnesotans by sharing and studying Veterans’ experiences. 

In honor of Veterans’ Voices Month,
 Robbinsdale Middle School has compiled some
great books sharing the experience of our Veterans.


Non-Fiction Books:
I Am a SEAL Team Six Warrior: Memoirs of an American Soldier
By Howards Wasdin with Stephen Templin
When the Navy sends their elite, they send the SEALs.  When the SEALs send their elite, they send SEAL Team Six - a secret unit made up of the finest soldiers in the country, if not the world. This is the dramatic tale of how Howard Wasdin overcame a tough childhood to live his dream and enter the exciting and dangerous world of U.S. Navy SEALS and Special Forces snipers.

Battle Heroes: Voices From Afghanistan
By Allan Zullo

In a remote Afghan village, Marine Lieutenant Stephen Boada picks up a chilling Taliban message on his radio scanner: "The Americans will never make it out alive." Can the outnumbered Marines fight their way out? Medic Mark DeCorte jumps from a chopper on a nighttime rescue mission. Can he save the life of a badly wounded soldier -- and escape from a deadly enemy? These and other American heroes risk their lives daily while serving their country in Afghanistan, and now readers can read their unforgettable true stories firsthand.


Basher Five-Two: The Story of F-16 Fighter Pilot Captain Scott O’GradyBy Captain Scott O’Grady
U.S. Air Force Captain Scott O'Grady was shot down in his F-16 over Bosnia while helping to keep the peace. The plane exploded, and Captain O'Grady fell 5 miles to the ground below. In exciting detail, Captain O'Grady tells how he evaded capture and how, with little water and no food, he was able to survive on his own in enemy territory.

War Heroes: Voices From IraqBy Allan Zullo
Ten True Tales from the combat heroes themselves. War Heroes :Voices from Iraq is a collection of ten short stories that really demonstrate the courage, honor and valor our armed forces are showing in Iraq.
Ghosts of War: The True Story of a 19-Year Old GI
By Ryan Smithson
Ryan Smithson joined the Army Resaerve when he was just out of highschool. At age nineteen he was deployed to Iraq. His year in combat changed his life. This is his story. It will change the way you feel about what it means to be an American.
Navy SEAL Dogs: My Tale of Training Canines for Combat
By Mike Ritland
Navy SEAL Mike Ritland discusses how he started his own company to train working and protection dogs, and shares the inside story of the elite K9 warriors.

Angels of Mercy: The Army nurses of WWII
By Betsy Kuhn
Relates the experiences of World War II Army nurses, who brought medical skills, courage, and cheer to hospitals throughout Europe, North Africa, and the Pacific.
Flags of Our Fathers : Heroes of Iwo Jima
By James Bradley
This book examines the lives of the six young men who raised the American flag over Iwo Jima in February 1945 and were immortalized by a famous photograph--one of whom was the author's father.
Ghosts in the fog : the untold story of Alaska's WWII invasionBy Samantha Seiple


A narrative, nonfiction account of the Japanese invasion and occupation of the Aleutian Islands during World War II, told from the perspectives of an American civilian and soldiers from both sides of the conflict. Includes more than eighty photographs.

Yankee Doodle Gals: Women Pilots of World War II
By Amy Nathan
The story of the Women Airforce Service Pilots of World War II focusing on their training and test flight functions.

Navajo Code TalkersBy Nathan Aaseng
Describes how the American military in World War II used a group of Navajo Indians to create an indecipherable code based on their native language.

The War to End All Wars: World War IBy Russell Freedman
Drawn from eyewitness accounts and archival photographs to paint a picture of World War I.
Behind Enemy Lines: True Stories of Amazing CourageBy Bill Doyle
Eight stories of real-life heroes who took risks for their country and others behind enemy lines.

The Tuskegee Airmenby Sarah E. De Capua
Describes the emergence of African American pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps. Focuses on the first group of black fighter pilots in 1941 who became known as the Tuskegee Airmen and led the way to full integration of African Americans in the armed forces.

Non-Fiction Books:
The Things They Carried
By Tim O’Brien
A collection of painful short stories on the Vietnam conflict, and focuses on malaria, loss, mine detectors, drugs, Bibles, and horrible war images.
Patrol: An American Soldier in Vietnam
By Walter Dean Myers
A frightened American soldier faces combat in the lush forests of Vietnam.
Sunrise Over Fallujah
By Walter Dean Myers
Robin "Birdy" Perry is sent to Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, but he soon learns that "winning" this war means little more than simply surviving.
The Last Mission
By Harry Mazer
In 1944 a fifteen-year-old Jewish boy tells his family he will travel in the West but instead, enlists in the United States Air Corps and is subsequently taken prisoner by the Germans.
Fallen Angels
By Walter Dean Myers
Seventeen-year-old Richie Perry, just out of his Harlem high school, enlists in the Army in the summer of 1967 and spends a devastating year on active duty in Vietnam.
Phantoms in the SnowBy Walter Dean Myers
Fifteen-year-old Noah Garrett, sent to live with his uncle in Camp Hale, Colorado, following the death of his parents in 1944, finds himself struggling between his upbringing as a pacifist, and life on a military base in the middle of World War II.
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Free-Fire ZoneBy Chris Lynch
Rudi is a newly drafted United States Marine in Vietnam, and he likes being part of a squad--but the way some of his fellow soldiers behave toward their officers, the Vietnamese, and the war itself, is starting to trouble him.
I Pledge AllegianceBy Chris Lynch
Four best friends serving in the Vietnam War make a pledge to one another that they will do all they can to return home safely together.
Purple HeartBy Patricia McCormick
While recuperating in a Baghdad hospital from a traumatic brain injury sustained during the Iraq War, eighteen-year-old soldier Matt Duffy struggles to recall what happened to him and how it relates to his ten-year-old friend, Ali.
Private PeacefulBy Michael Morpurgo
When Thomas Peaceful's older brother is forced to join the British Army, Thomas decides to sign up as well, although he is only fourteen years old, to prove himself to his country, his family, his childhood love, Molly, and himself.
On Enemy Soil : The Journal of James Edmond Pease: A Civil War Union Soldier
By Jim Murphy
James Edmond, a sixteen-year-old orphan, keeps a journal of his experiences and those of "G" Company which he joined as a volunteer in the Union Army during the Civil War.

Bloodlines: Fighting PhantomsBy Zachary Sherman
Shot down over Vietnam in 1968, Marine Lieutenant "Candy Man" Donovan must leave his seriously injured best friend behind in enemy territory while he tries to reach their rendezvous point.