
Adam Canfield of the Slash
Adam Canfield of the Slash
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2011
Lexile Score
830
Reading Level
4-5
ATOS
5.4
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
Michael Wineripناشر
Candlewick Pressشابک
9780763654269
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Starred review from April 18, 2005
Winerip (9
Highland Road
, for adults) delivers a terrific crash course in Journalism 101 within this acerbic satire featuring a junior Woodward and Bernstein. Adam, "the most overprogrammed middle school student in America," and Jennifer, who keeps her many balls in the air with more ease, have been named co-editors of the Slash
. This award-winning Harris Elementary/Middle newspaper was named either for the diagonal line in the school's name or, according to a former editor, for villainous Principal Marris's tendency to " anything interesting out of every article." The team's tenure begins with a pesky but smart third-grade reporter's glowing profile of the unsung hero of a school janitor—which inadvertently reveals some shady dealings afoot, linked to the principal's gold-plated bathroom fixtures. Adam and Jennifer work to get the goods on Marris, and create enough outrage to overturn a law with fine print banning basketball hoops from front yards. Through his characters, Pulitzer prize–winning journalist Winerip makes a statement about standardized tests, onerous zoning regulations and mergers that land all local media in the hands of one "telecommunications magnate." Fans of Carl Hiaasen's Hoot
will find the same cynical humor at work here, as well as villains just as baldly caricatured. Between laughs, readers will also be prompted to think—about what constitutes truth, how the media massages it, and the importance of ethics, fairness and getting the facts right. Ages 8-12.

dxterminater - AMAZING BOOK. Winerp does excellent.

March 1, 2005
Gr 5-8 -Winerip has tapped on his experiences reporting on education issues for the "New York Times" to fashion this excellent novel. Adam is the reluctant new coeditor of the "Slash", his affluent suburb's "award-winning" elementary/middle school newspaper. While he has a precocious penchant for investigative reporting, he's decidedly less adept in the interpersonal arena and finds he has much to learn from his more poised partner, Jennifer, about meeting the subtler demands of the job. Among them is the matter of how to supervise Phoebe, a pesky third-grade cub reporter who, though annoyingly hyper, turns out to have a remarkably potent pen and a disturbing talent for sniffing out front-page scoops. The suspenseful central plot begins when these three journalists discover that their school's social-climbing principal -a woman who likes to try to dictate the paper's content and use it as a medium for feel-good community relations -may have misused funds from a bequest to install luxurious amenities in her office. Do they dare pursue the ugly story and risk staining their "permanent records?" This poignant tension between facing thorny truths or acquiescing to more comfortable, but nonetheless insidious, systemic falsehoods -particularly those perpetuated in education, the media, race relations, and government -is echoed in subplots throughout the story. This is a deceptively fun read that somehow manages to present kids with some of the most subtle social and ethical questions currently shaping their futures." -Jeffrey Hastings, Highlander Way Middle School, Howell, MI"
Copyright 2005 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

May 1, 2005
Gr. 4-7. Cub reporters hungry for a byline; editors fending off the intrusions of a powerful publisher: just another gritty newsroom drama, right? Sort of. With other media outlets in town run by an unethical tycoon, Harris Elementary/Middle School's student monthly the" Slash "is the last bastion of journalistic integrity. So it's up to scrappy Adam and his coeditor Jennifer to expose injustice, whether in city hall or the suspiciously spiffy renovation of the school principal's office. Alongside the Bernstein and Woodward-style investigative reporting, Winerip, an education columnist for the" New York Times," satirizes both standardized testing and the relentless rounds of activities that put Adam on the verge of getting "enriched to death." Kids may miss some of the satire, particularly in episodes involving ineffectual bureaucracy and precocious small fry engaging in sophisticated newsroom banter. But the characters' conviction that "truth is a mighty precious commodity" may inspire readers, as they are ensnared in the thrilling quest for the big scoop.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران