When A Dragon Moves In Again
by Jodi Moore (Author) and Howard McWilliam (Illustrator)
#kidlit Review Haiku:
Uh-oh! Is there room
in the castle for three: boy,
dragon, and baby?
Copyright © 2015 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Author & Developmental Editor
When A Dragon Moves In Again
by Jodi Moore (Author) and Howard McWilliam (Illustrator)
#kidlit Review Haiku:
Uh-oh! Is there room
in the castle for three: boy,
dragon, and baby?
Copyright © 2015 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
The Art of the Possible: An Everyday Guide to Politics
by Edward Keenan (Author), Julie McLaughlin (Illustrator)
Booktalk: We all know what a politician looks like, right? They’re old people who wear suits and make long, boring speeches full of indecipherable words. Ah, not so fast! This book presents another view, where everyone is a politician — even young people who aren’t yet eligible to vote. So what is politics, and why do we need it? Find out why we form societies and the basic types of governments. Explore the power of public opinion, methods of rhetoric, and the reasons why politicians “lie.”
Snippet:
What is politics, anyway?
Politics is how we decide to do things together as a group or society. In a society, we have to make rules, pick projects to work on, divide up the workload, and share things. And politics is how we do that.
Six Traits Mini Lesson
Trait: Organization Just in time for the political season, this informational book introduces the idea that everyone is a politician, even the tweens and teens who are reading the book! It does that by beginning at the beginning. An informational book begins by explaining the premise and defining the topic. One of the subheads in the book’s introduction says:
What is politics, anyway?
After asking this question, the book immediately provides an answer.
Politics is how we decide to do things together as a group or society.
The answer in the first sentence adds a new term, society. What a society does is explained in the second sentence.
In a society, we have to make rules, pick projects to work on, divide up the workload, and share things.
The paragraph ends with a summary statement.
And politics is how we do that.
In three sentences, the topic is defined and key details are added.
It’s Nonfiction Monday!
Copyright © 2015 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.