
My mom is teaching 5th grade for the first time next year - she's taught 1st grade for the past 10 years - and she's looking for suggestions for books for 5th graders. I told her I would ask on LT, since the people here are so good at giving suggestions.
If you have any suggestions, PLEASE include a summary, since she doesn't have time to read all the books this summer.
Thank you!!
Edit: She's mostly looking for books for the kids to read by themselves, I think.
Mensagem editada pelo seu autor, Jun 4, 2007, 11:05am.
A long way from Chicago by
Richard Peck, which is told from the brother's point of view and starts off with a boffo story: "Shotgun Cheatham's Last Night Above Ground," a great read-aloud. Each story is a different summerthat a brother and sister spend with Grandma Dowdle in the sticks. Grandma is a gun-totin', beer-brewin', soap-makin', just short of a straight-razor-totin' granny. Laconic of speech and seemingly emotionless, Grandma is really a softy inside with her own personal sense of justice. Peck followed this up with the Newbery winner,
A year down yonder, told from the sister's point of view as she spends a school year at her grandmother's, if only to write about some great old-timey Halloween pranks.
Fair weather (not by Joe Matt, sigh) is another of his books that gives kids a taste of what the Olden Days was like, as a family goes from the farm to the aunt's house in Chicago in time for the World's Columbian Exposition. Even Chicago itself is an eye-opener for the kids, who have known nothing but the farm. They are "chaparoned" by their crusty grandfather with whom they by turns upset their aunt's (and his daughter's) quiet existence. Chicago and the Fair are fraught with sinfulness, such as the dance of Little Egypt, actresses, the unwashed public ... and more terrors too horrible to mention in polite society! Makes a nice contrast to today, where everyone bandies the "f" word. And there's the obligatory little boy who must put frogs where they are least expected. Peck continues to milk this old-timey theme with
The teacher's funeral. The teacher in a one-room school house dies and before one boy's dreams of the end of schoolin' come true, his older sister (immune to his tricks) takes up the job. This book is of interest to me because my dad (born about the time this book takes place) had to convince his parents to let him go to high school, which his older brother had not been allowed to do. His parents considered sixth grade to be schoolin' enough! What was not to like about high school? They had sports, girls,
indoor plumbing! One time when he misbehaved (involving drinking, I believe, although he claims to not remember) his pa told him, "One more time like that ...
and I'll take you right out of school!"
There are some really good audiobook versions of some of these as well. Haven't heard
The teacher's funeral yet, though.
Thank you for these suggestions, marfita, I'll pass them along.
Hi bluesalamanders,
This link is to a page showing a list of books for summer reading recommended by 62 5th graders:
www.epinions.com/book-reviewshelagh -
Fantastic! Thank you!
I love Artemis Fowl! I recommend choosing books that have boy appeal. Girls will read just about anything, generally. Boys at this age get harder to please. Also consider
Hatchet by Gary Paulsen. Purchase Jim Trelease's
The Read-aloud Handbook to get an annotated catalog of good reads for every age.
I would check the Newbery Award lists or the local school library association awards (in Missouri it's called the Mark Twain Award, in Texas the Bluebonnet Award, etc.._
Esta mensagem foi removida pelo seu autor.
My 5th grader just read
Chasing Vermeer all in one day, and really, really liked it -- "a really cool mystery" he says...
I'd like to suggest my new book "Sydney Wakefield: Into the Faraway" which has a big 4th and 5th grade following at my son's elementary school.
Also -- The Fablehaven series and Leven Thumps series are wonderful too. And the Percy Jackson books by Rick Riordan (The Lightning Thief) are hugely popular with the kids.
TeacherDad: probably synopses. synopsi?
ETA a hearty second to Riordan's
Percy Jackson and the Olympians series.
Mensagem editada pelo seu autor, Jun 20, 2008, 5:46pm.
I second Cornelia Funke. I love her. Also, the
Septimus Heap series is fantastic. Along the same lines as Harry Potter, only lighter and very funny.
The Children of the Red King by Jenny Nimmo
It reminds be of Harry Potter but the last ones arent really that mature but it`s a really great series.
I secound the Septimus Heap books also.
The Pure Dead series is in the same sort of magic vein and its exellent and good for people who are reluctant to read. Its also pretty funny.
I recommend
Sahara Special by Esme Raji Codell.
It's about a girl needing to repeat the Fifth grade. I read this with my daughter going into fifth grade herself, and we both enjoyed it. There are some big differences btwn Sahara's home life or classroom and my daughter's, but she could appreciate what was happening with the characters all the same. Kids can relate to having to write in journals and getting cool stickers...
I meant to add just above that my daughter and I read
Sahara Special separately. Yes, a fifth grader could read this on their own. It doesn't have magic or anything mythical in it, just kids being kids, which is hard to find these days that will keep their attention!
I read all of the Newbery books. They are really good. Especially good are Holes, Maniac Magee, and A Wrinkle in Time. I am currently reading the Doctor Doolittle books and they are really enjoyable.
Steve K
How to Steal a Dog is an excellent and thought-provoking book. A girl (5th or 6th grade I believe) is homeless and living in a car w/her mom & little brother. She sees a sign for a reward for a lost dog, and comes up w/a plan to steal a dog and claim the reward. I read it aloud to my 4th graders last year, and they were really intrigued.
Elijah of Buxton takes place in Canada, pre US Civil War. Elijah is the first free child born in the village in habited by escaped slaves.
Misadventures of Maud March; orphan girls mistakenly get taken for criminals and go on the run; I think it takes place in late 19th century Missouri.
My son (in 4th grade but usually reading above his grade level) just read and loved China Mieville's Un Lun Dun. He also blazed through the Redwall series, by Brian Jacques (and reread a few), loved Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson books (number 4 is due out v. soon), and is just starting on the Narnia books, by C. S. Lewis. I would add anything by Louis Sachar, Jerry Spinelli, Jon Scieszka, or E. L. Konigsburg. (Scieszka's Time Warp Trio series is great for this age, and his new memoir is funny too, and if the kids somehow missed his picture books--anything Scieszka and Lane Smith collaborated on--they'd probably enjoy them too.) Oh, and graphic novels, esp. Amulet, by Kazu Kibuishi, and the Bone series, by Jeff Smith.
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