Real Sisters Pretend

Real Sisters Pretend
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 4 (1)

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2016

Lexile Score

470

Reading Level

1-2

نویسنده

Nicole Tadgell

شابک

9780884484974
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
ماساچوست باید عنوان را بخواند: ۱۷th جایزه سالانه کتاب توده ای * CBC / NCSS کتاب تجاری قابل توجه مطالعات اجتماعی* * * *CBC انتخاب انتخاب* این داستان گرم و جذاب که به طور کامل از طریق مکالمه دو خواهر به فرزندی پذیرفته شده، الهام گرفته از دختران نویسنده، که او شنیده که چگونه به فرزند خواندگی انها را «خواهران واقعی» ساخته شده است، حتی اگر انها والدین مختلف تولد و نگاه نمی کنند. لامبرت می گوید: «من نحوه مراقبت انها از یکدیگر را در سناریوی نمایشی شان در مورد بالا رفتن از یک کوه دوست داشتم و من عاشق این بودم که انها در حین صحبت در مورد فرزند خواندگی به احساسات یکدیگر هم توجه می کردند. خواهران واقعی وانمود می‌کنند که این تعاملات را کاملا و تکان‌دهنده ثبت می‌کنند. این کتاب که با کلماتی ساده و تصاویر خنده‌دار تنظیم شده است به موضوعاتی همچون فرزندخواندگی، دو مادر و زندگی خانوادگی چندنژادی می‌پردازد. خانواده‌های مدرن می‌توانند بسیار متفاوت از خانواده‌های هسته‌ای سال گذشته باشند، اما همانطور که لامبرت در مقدمه کتاب می‌گوید، «مهم نیست که خانواده چگونه می‌شود، مهمترین چیز این است که همه احساس کنند که دوست دارند، ایمن و مراقبت می‌شوند. خواهران واقعی وانمود می کنند که وسیله ای عالی برای سهیم شدن در عشق و اطمینان است. فانتس و پینل سطح ال

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

May 30, 2016
Tayja and Mia may enjoy pretending to be "hiking princesses" who must scale the mountains of the family sofa, but as older sister Tayja makes clear, there's nothing pretend about them being sisters, even though they don't look alike (Tayja has brown skin, Mia white). "We are sisters," she says, staring into Mia's eyes. "Real sisters." In an extended dialogue between the girls, Lambert (A Crow of His Own) highlights the small but important conversations that happen among siblings trying to understand their place in the world and within their families. Tadgell (Friends for Freedom) emphasizes the girls' closeness in warm watercolor-and-pencil vignettes that show them talking about being adopted by two mothers (one is white, the other of Asian background) while playing with their stuffed toy lion, having a snack, and generally hanging all over each other. The sisters also talk frankly about the fact that "some people" don't instinctively see them as a family, remembering a recent grocery store encounter. Though the story is somewhat message-heavy, it's still a useful reminder of the varied ways families can take shape. Ages 4â7.



Kirkus

March 1, 2016
An adoption story explores the concept of "real sisters." It is obvious that Tadgell's sisters are not biologically related: Tayja is black, her hair in a topknot ponytail, while Mia is lighter-skinned with bright green eyes and tousled, short dark brown hair. But nevertheless, the two are real sisters--adoption made them so. Lambert's purposive tale follows the two as they play a game of pretend princesses climbing a mountain (the sofa). Mia is still getting the hang of pretending (she thought the word was "betend"), so when she suggests they pretend to be sisters, Tayja holds Mia's face in her hands, the two touching foreheads, and states, "No, Mia--we don't have to pretend that. We are sisters. Real sisters." She then helps Mia recall how they were adopted and became sisters and addresses the issue of outsiders' comments and queries. (Further pushing the diversity of this family, it is headed by two moms.) The story is told entirely in the color-coded dialogue bubbles between the two sisters, which means the girls sometimes sound stilted and unnatural. But their interactions and pure joy in togetherness are anything but in the watercolor illustrations. Adoption is such an individual event that it is difficult for one picture book to address every situation and circumstance. This is best used as a discussion starter with adopted children and for the outsiders who don't understand that adoption creates families. (author's note) (Picture book. 3-8)

COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



School Library Journal

June 1, 2016

PreS-Gr 2-In her author's note, Lambert describes how closely this story parallels the experience of her own adopted daughters. She was inspired to write it after overhearing how baffled they were by a stranger asking if they were "real sisters." Tadgell's lively watercolors depict Tayja, an African American girl of about seven, and Mia, a white preschooler with curly dark hair, who laugh at the absurdity of such a question. As they play, they imagine themselves as hiking princesses climbing up and down mountains, but when Mia says, "Let's pretend we are sisters," Tayja says, "No, Mia, we don't have to pretend that. We are sisters. Real sisters." Mia happily recalls how Tayja welcomed her to the family and shared her stuffed lion. They both relive how the judge let them bang his gavel when Mia's adoption was finalized, and concluded that they understood about adoption. Their happy faces and whimsical game of make-believe will engage young readers, and children who live in families touched by adoption will likely find the underlying message positive and affirming. Revealed in the last few pages is yet another way this family could be considered different-there are two mothers. Momma's reaction to the woman in the grocery store who asks if they are "real" sisters is a simple, direct statement: "Of course they are!" The girls are secure in their knowledge that they are part of a real, loving family with both Momma and Mommy. VERDICT This is an appealing story, recommended for general purchase, especially where Patricia Polacco's In Our Mother's House and Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell's And Tango Makes Three are popular.-Deborah Vose, Highlands Elementary School, Braintree, MA

Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.




دیدگاه کاربران

دیدگاه خود را بنویسید
|