Four Great Chapter Books for Intermediate Readers
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Big Bad Sheep
By Bettina Wegenast Illustrated by Katharina Busshoff Recommended age range: 8-12 When a job opening for a Big Bad Wolf suddenly opens up, Karl the sheep decides to apply. But he's barely slipped on the wolf's skin when he starts to change before his friends' very eyes, becoming perhaps a bit more wolf (and a lot more bully) than anyone expected. This fractured fairy tale of the "sheep in wolf's clothing" has a lot of humor, a little bite, and an important message about what can happen when sheep (or children) forget who they really are. The simple, expressive strokes of Katharina Busshoff's black-and-white drawings on every page perfectly complement this quirky and profound new novel.
Extraordinary Ernie and Marvelous Maud
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By Frances Watts
Illustrations by Judy Watson
Recommended age range: 7-10
In this first book in the Ernie and Maud series, Ernie Eggers isn't exactly what you'd call a likely superhero -- he's neither a star athlete nor a stellar student. But when a group of aging superheroes goes looking for a new recruit, Ernie answers the call and becomes Extraordinary Ernie (after school on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, and all day Saturday). He is thrilled -- until he discovers that his sidekick is a sheep. It doesn't take him long to realize, though, that there has never been another sheep quite like Marvelous Maud.
With fun illustrations and engaging characters, this hilarious and fast-paced book offers plenty to entertain young readers
-- and with four books now available in the Ernie and Maud adventure series, there's plenty to keep those young readers entertained throughout a large chunk of the summer.
Alice's Birthday Pig
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By Tim Kennemore Recommended age range: 7-10
When Alice meets an adorable pig on her class's special outing to a farm, she decides that a pig is what she wants most for her eighth birthday. She'd also like to learn to say the word "animal" -- or is it "aminal"? -- properly so that her know-it-all older brother Oliver will stop teasing her about it.
Oliver is smart and talented, but Alice chafes at his condescending attitude. Alice also has to contend with her baby sister Rosie, a toddling tornado who continually leaves disaster in her wake.
This charming novel will have young readers cheering for in-the-middle Alice as she finds a clever way to outwit her brother and amaze her sister with an unexpected birthday surprise.
(And with two more Alice novels available -- Alice's World Record and Alice's Shooting Star -- parents of those young readers will be be cheering, too!)
The Cricket Winter
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By Felice Holman Illustrated by Robyn Thomas Recommended age range: 8-12
Simms Sylvanus is nine years old and enormously wise. He knows more about volcanoes than his father knows about business and more about electromagnetic fields than anyone in his class. His ideas to improve things are amazing! Yet nobody -- not even his parents -- will listen to him.
A cricket is living a solitary life beneath the floorboards in Simms's room. His bride-to-be has left him after a fight, and in his loneliness he turns for companionship to the other creatures who live underground. Soon he finds himself deeply involved in their struggle for survival.
Everything changes one winter's day when Simms and Cricket discover they can communicate with each other. Through Morse code, the two tell of their troubles, listen to each other's ideas, and together learn that it's sometimes difficult to do the right thing.
Reissued in 2006 with charming new illustrations, this beloved classic (originally published in 1967) is sure to delight a new generation of young readers.
[And just one more . . . ]
Even though it won't be released until summer's nearly gone, we can't resist telling you about one more illustrated chapter book now making its way toward publication: Meet at the Ark at Eight.
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In this book, three penguins are in the middle of an age-old argument about God -- who is he? and can we even be sure he exists? -- when the news reaches them about a great flood that is coming to cover the earth. Two (and only two) of the penguins are chosen to board Noah's Ark -- but those lucky two decide stow their unfortunate friend away in a suitcase and bring him aboard. A wild forty-day journey ensues. This creative twist on the classic biblical tale encourages readers to ask questions about God, though it never presumes that the answers will be quick and easy. Ulrich Hub's humorous yet thought-provoking retelling of this well-known Bible story is well complemented by J�rg M�hle's witty illustrations.
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