Friday, September 17, 2010

Review: The Penderwicks



The Penderwick sisters, Rosalind, Skye, Jane and Batty have many adventures in store for them when they return to their summer vacation spot with their widower father.  At first glance, this book reminded me of one of those stereotypical idyllic children’s stories, the types that Francie Nolan detests in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.  However, the Penderwick sisters would be the first to agree with Francie that a good story should mirror the trials of real life, and while the girls are not plagued by the themes used in dramatic hooks to advertise some tween fiction, they have problems to deal with, and problems to solve.  Rosalind’s trying to bake her way into an older boy’s heart, Skye is plotting strategies with her new best friend to keep him out of military school, Jane wants to write the next great American novel and is slowly realizing that all the information she needs for a good plot is happening all around her, Batty is coping with growing up without a mom and not being lost in the crowd as the youngest sibling.  Each sister is unique, sympathetic and likable.

This book is the first in the Penderwicks series.  The second book, The Penderwicks on Gardam Street is available, and the third installment, The Penderwicks at Point Mouette will be available later next year.

This book would be perfect for a precocious fourth grader, a fifth grader who enjoys to read, or a sixth, seventh, or eighth grader who is in need of a good story to help them see how fun reading can be.

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