My lad read this book over the month of September through mid-way October as his language arts component, I occasionally asked him what he was learning about, and he'd give me a verbal chapter synopsis, and what he thought of the ideas presented. It worked well for us.
What do you get?
20 chapters, with titles such as:
Trust me; Getting started; The Best Journal in the world is yours;The Writing Journal in action; Blank Slate; Story Maps; Good Habits lead to Great inspiration; Focused Drafts and much more.
Scattered throughout the pages are black and white illustrations that sometimes illustrate a point or add humour to the page.
Since I occasionally heard giggles while the lad was reading I assume that the author used humour to convey his message. Neither did I hear complaints about it taking too long to read, or being boring, or too difficult. The only thing I would hear was "Sorry mom, I forgot to read Writing Radar today. Can I do two chapters tomorrow instead?" I simply would say, it needs to be done in five weeks, how he managed that was up to him. From what I read, it seemed crafted for 9-12 year olds. A good middle school level book.
Leafing through I noticed they have these little grey boxes with "writing tip" at the top. handy those I thought. Asked the lad what he thought and he said "they told the point of the chapter or section".
The lad's Report:
Overall: Good book.
Liked: I don't know how to understand this part exactly. I liked most of it.
What did I learn: How to write a book or a story.
Specific example that I liked: How a draft of a story is like a wedding cake and you just add on layer after layer after layer.
Didn't like: I liked the whole book. I can't think of anything I didn't like.
I think, maybe, it would have been good to add some questions to answer after chapters or something.
Recommendation: Get it if you want to know how to write a story or a book.
Jack Gantos
Farrar Straus Giroux
202 pages
Trade Paperback
Language arts, story writing, journaling, writers, middle school
Middle school
Reviewed for : Raincoast Books
Where can you Find it?
Amazon.ca: Writing Radar.
Amazon.com: Writing Radar.
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Sounds like a really fun book to read. May have to bookmark this one to look at for a certain middle school child who is flying through her school work. :)
ReplyDeleteWell if she's flying through her schooling you may as well give her something else to do right., this one will do it
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