Showing posts with label boys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boys. Show all posts

Ophelia Speaks Review

Ophelia Speaks
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Ophelia Speaks is a literary response to Mary Pipher's bestselling and sometimes controversial work Reviving Ophelia which was published in 1994. In this book psychologist Pipher, who works closely with adolescent girls, documented what she thought were the key issues and struggles for teenage females growing up in America. She did this through cases studies and careful analysis. Author Sara Shandler, a high school student at the time, took it upon herself to recruit girls from all over the United States to write about all aspects of being young and female. She was not opposed to Mary Pipher's work. In fact, it spoke to her positively in many ways. She just thought it would be a good idea for girls to speak for themselves. The result is Ophelia Speaks, a collection of essays on a variety of topics that girls chose to write about...family, friends, diseases, sexuality, death, depression, religion and others. The book is excellent in two regards. First, the stories often take you deep into the heart and mind of adolescent girls. You are struck by how insightful and analytical theses girls are, then thrown back by how fragile and complex their feelings are. The stories, picked by Sara Shandler, are well-written and sincere although a few of them were written in the abstract and therefore lacked the clarity to fully understand the issue at hand. The second part of the book I found to be outstanding were the introductions to each topic. These were written by Sara Shandler herself. They gave perspective on the topic in question and introduced each contribution by giving the reader a taste of what was in store. She also adds a little of her own experience so you get to know her a bit. My life revolves around coaching teenage girls in basketball. I also coach young girls in basketball. A book like this adds to my understanding of teenage girls and therefore helps me work with them more effectively. One of the things Shandler says in the introduction is that teenage " girls are incredibly complicated. " When you read the stories and begin to understand this, I believe it lends itself to patience and understanding. But the book's greatest value probably lies in the support adolescent girls can feel from reading these stories. These girls do not hold anything back and many of their reactions to life's experiences are probably universally felt by a lot of teenage girls. Any teenage girl who is feeling isolated or finding life to be difficult would probably benefit from reading this book. I highly recommend it.

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Goalkeeper in Charge (Matt Christopher Sports Bio Bookshelf) Review

Goalkeeper in Charge (Matt Christopher Sports Bio Bookshelf)
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This is a good book. In the story, shy Tina is a fan of soccer, especially the fact it's a team sport where she won't stand out to much, which is good, because Tina hates getting attention. When she joins a new soccer team, everything is great until her coach asks her to do something for the team...play keeper!!! That horrifies Tina. Everything about keeper, even the uniform, stands out! Can she overcome her shyness to play the best she can? This book appeals to me partly because I am rather shy, and play a lot of keeper on my team, so I stand out. However, playing keeper has helped me overcome most of my shyness and be a good player, on and off the field, just like Tina.

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Tina Esparza loves everything about soccer, but especially the fact that it is a team sport where no none player is in the spotlight.Imagine her surprise when the coach asks her to train as the team's goalkeeper!Will Tina be able to overcome her shyness and accept a position that puts her in the center of attention?

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Dr. Sylvia Rimm's Smart Parenting: How to Raise a Happy, Achieving Child Review

Dr. Sylvia Rimm's Smart Parenting: How to Raise a Happy, Achieving Child
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Dr. Rimm's explicit advice hit on a number of points for our family's individuals. . . amazingly correct assumptions on reactions to common mistakes and how to deal with them. I first brought it home from the library but after renewing it 5 times, I realized I might as well just purchase it for reference! I'd like to thank her in person, for she's saved my second son from his mom's poor reactions to her first son's problems. Thank you!!

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In Dr. Sylvia Rimm's Smart Parenting,Dr. Sylvia Rimm, contributing correspondent for NBC's Today show and the host of a popular public radio call-in show, presents her remedy for preventing children's early "shut down" to learningby providing a comprehensive, down-to-earth guide forall parents who want their children to be confident, successful, and independent in meeting the challenges of the classroom and life.Based on her twenty years of clinical experience working with families and the thousands of questions from concerned parents she has answered, Dr. Rimm shows that encouraging achievement in the home is often a difficult task and even the most experienced parents need a game plan. As Rimm argues, "Smart parent planning begins before birth and extends to young adulthood.Parents can't control their children's environment entirely, but they can set main directions that virtually assure achievement." Just as Rimm's Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades has helped thousands of families overcome the problems ofunderachieving children, Dr. Sylvia Rimm's Smart Parenting will help many parents foster a home environment that encourages the desire to learn.Most importantly, Dr. Rimm outlines the four basic principles for raising achieving children.Dr. Rimm shows parents how to: form a "united front" and avoid sending mixed messages; teach their children habits that encourage learning; set positive expectations by example and through direct praise; give children a sense of confidence without overempowering.In addition, Rimm offersadvice on dozens of topics, including how to improve your child's self-esteem through direct and indirect praise, selection of child-care providers, dealing with attention-deficit disorder and other learning disabilities,and test-taking tips for children with test anxiety. In an era when variations of the traditional two-parent family, step-families, grandparent families, families with gay or lesbian parents, foster families, and single-parent families, have increasingly challenged parents to redefine their familial roles and parental strategies, Dr. Rimm offers a no-nonsense, compassionate plan for parents to raise happy children who love to learn.

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Football Nightmare (Matt Christopher Sports Bio Bookshelf) Review

Football Nightmare (Matt Christopher Sports Bio Bookshelf)
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This exciting book starts when Keith Steadman drops the winning pass. He decides not to play football anymore because he feels like a loser. He has nightmares every night about the dropped pass. It is a good story because it shows how he overcomes his mistake with his family's help. I think you should read this book to find out more!

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Gray Baby Review

Gray Baby
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While not as much of a thriller has his previous book, Sanders shows tremendous insight into racial prejudices that still exist in America. As the son of a black father and a white mother, Clifton struggles with his own racial identity as he struggles with the realities of his father's death.
While not a sequel to his first work, there is a reference to the crimes which occurred in "The Hanging Woods" although these characters are not reintroduced. The tie in character and crime are not well described, mostly because it is only a backdrop to the real theme of the book, which is the relationship between the mixed raced Clifton and the older Swamper. Could this crime be the impetus for a third work?
Overall, a very enjoyable read which can be completed in one extended sitting.

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The Deer Dancer Review

The Deer Dancer
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I got this book at a bookstore the day it came in and I was so glad I did--it was a really inspiring story. The boy is dirt poor and he works his way up in life--dealing with many problems that seem real. I'd recommend it to anyone, of any age, who is interested in Indian life or in Mexico or the Zapatista uprisings, but would be especially right for very mature teenagers and twenty-somethings.

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Juan Araiza is a Yaqui Indian boy with no money, no shoes, no education, and no future. He leaves his village to search for his father a man he never knew in Mexico s second largest city. He doesn t find his father, but his native wit and grit take him all the way from the streets to a job in the federal government. He meets the charismatic Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos and soon finds himself feeling torn his head in the government job and his heart in the black-masked Zapatista fight for Indian rights.

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Roawr Review

Roawr
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I thought this book was "cute" the first time I read it to myself. I have discovered that not only is it better read aloud, but that it is also better with each subsequent reading. My 3-year-old chimes in with a lot of the words, and my 17-month-old (Liam) likes to ROAWR along, too.

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