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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

2017

Lexile Score

720

Reading Level

3

نویسنده

Deborah Ellis

شابک

9781773060873
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
نه داستان تلخ و قدرتمند از نویسنده نان اور. بچه نشسته. دبوره الیس با یک تصویر قدرتمند توجه ما را به نه فرزند و موقعیت هایی که در ان ها هستند و اغلب به خاطر شخص خودشان نیست، معطوف می کند. در هر داستان، کودک تصمیم می‌گیرد و وارد عمل می‌شود؛ در هر داستانی، کودک تصمیم می‌گیرد و وارد عمل می‌شود، به عنوان یک حرکت کوچک یا انتخاب تغییر دهنده زندگی. جعفر در یک کارخانه تولید صندلی کودک است و ارزو دارد به مدرسه برود. سو در حال تاب خوردن است و او و برادرش منتظر هستند تا با پدرشان در انجمن کمک به کودکان ملاقات کنند. گرتچن زندگی قربانیان اردوگاه کار اجباری را در یک تور مدرسه در اشویتس می‌داند. مایک به عنوان یک مجرم جوان هفتاد و دو روز انفرادی می ماند. بری روی صندلی راحتی می‌خزد و والدینش به او می‌گویند که از هم جدا شده‌اند. مکی روی صندلی خیلی کوچک نشسته و مادرش برای صرف چای به ملاقات‌کنندگان می‌اید. نوسالا در یک اپارتمان الوده و شلوغ در ازبکستان قوز کرده و منتظر است تا یک قاچاقچی بدطیع در مورد سرنوشت او تصمیم گیری کند. این کودکان شجاعت روبرو شدن با موقعیت خود را به صورت کوچک و بزرگ در این مجموعه فصیح از یک داستان سرا پیدا می کنند. ارتباط با استانداردهای دولتی هسته در زبان انگلیسی هنر: CCS. اموزش ELA. رادیو. ۶. ۳توضیح دهید که چگونه داستان یک داستان یا درام در یک سری از قسمت ها شروع می شود و همچنین چگونه شخصیت ها پاسخ یا تغییر می دهد در حالی که رسم به سمت یک وضوح حرکت می کند. سی سی اس اموزش ELA. رادیو. ۶. ۶ توضیح دهید که چگونه یک نویسنده می تواند نقطه نظر راوی یا گوینده را در یک متن توسعه دهد. سی سی اس اموزش ELA. رادیو. ۶. ۹ مقایسه و مقایسه متون در فرم ها و ژانرهای مختلف (e. گ. , داستان و شعر؛ رمان‌های تاریخی و داستان‌های خیال‌پردازی از نظر رویکردهای خود در زمینه‌ها و موضوعات مشابه.

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

July 31, 2017
The image of a seated child—a factory laborer, a boy imprisoned for reasons unknown, among others—opens each of these 11 taut stories, which span countries and cultures but are gracefully linked by themes of hope, identity, and resilience. Ellis (The Cat at the Wall) nimbly slips into the minds of her memorable characters, who weigh their options in the face of significant challenges. Humiliated by her mother and banished to the “time-out chair,” seven-year-old Macie takes refuge in the “forest house” of her imagination. A deeper psychological quandary emerges in “The Question Chair,” about Gretchen, a contemporary German girl who, after a field trip to Auschwitz, agonizes over what stance she and her parents would have taken during the Nazi regime. Several especially hard-hitting stories introduce children (an evacuee in the aftermath of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, an Afghan refugee escaping the Taliban) whose brave actions place them in life-threatening situations. Ellis’s protagonists share the common goal of survival—be it emotional, physical, or both—and her thought-provoking collection should spark wide-ranging discussions about choice and injustice. Ages 10–13.



School Library Journal

October 1, 2017

Gr 4-6-A collection of short stories comprised of 11 tales set in different countries. In each story, a child encounters some form of social injustice and overcomes it or finds a positive outcome through some action on their part, however small. Each chapter features and is named for a specific type of chair. In "The Singing Chair," Jafar, a child laborer in a chair factory, longs to go to school. He scratches a poem on the bottom of a chair being shipped out and feels emancipated ("With this chair, I am here."). In "The Questioning Chair," Gretchen visits the Auschwitz Memorial and Museum with her class. She sits on a hole in the middle of a long toilet and imagines what it must have been like for the prisoners of the concentration camp. She considers what her parents or grandparents might have done during the Holocaust. In "The Freedom Chair," Mike sits on the floor of his cell where he is serving time for a crime; he's in solitary confinement for 72 days. He relies on his own inner strength and the kindness of a stranger. Jed sits on a fence outside the Amish school where his sister was killed, Barry sits in a food court as his parents tell him they are separating, and Noosla sits in a crowded, stinking apartment in Uzbekistan, waiting for an unscrupulous smuggler to decide her fate. Every story is poignant and provocative. Ellis writes with deep compassion and intuitiveness. This book is ripe with discussable, debatable issues and thought-provoking questions. VERDICT An excellent addition for classrooms and libraries.-D. Maria LaRocco, Cuyahoga Public Library, Strongsville, OH

Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

August 1, 2017
A collection of short stories organized around the mental image of a sitting child.It begins with a young boy, Jafar, who works in a furniture factory under an abusive boss, secretly attending a school for working children. He attaches a short poem to one of the chairs that he's made to be shipped off into the world, leading right to the next story, about a little girl, Macie, who defiantly sits in a timeout chair. The stories progress from one character to the next, continuing the thread. In "The Question Chair," German student Gretchen ponders the Holocaust while seated on a communal toilet during a tour of a concentration camp. In another story, Jed, an Amish boy, sits on a schoolhouse fence, anxious about the task set before him: to help restore a school that was ambushed by a shooter. His little sister had been one of the fatalities. The apparent purpose of the book is to draw attention to traumatic events in the lives of children the world over, but Ellis' attempts to personalize these stories through the main characters often leave readers working to fill in the gaps. Without resolution, the stories provoke unease, and how readers respond to them may depend in large part on whether they have suffered trauma themselves. The book is dedicated "to all who just need a moment of peace," but it may leave readers feeling far from peaceful. (Short stories. 10-14)

COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



DOGO Books
mickeyd19 - A great book filled with stories about life ,problems,etc. You need read it !!! If Your in program called silver birch than get it from the fiction category. If you CaN connect to any situations in this book like , never going on family trips , than... read it !

Booklist

Starred review from October 1, 2017
Grades 5-8 *Starred Review* A verb, a command, and organizing concept, Ellis' title gives readers something to think about as each of the included short stories obliquely or directly centers on a chair, bench, or space of rest. In this way, young people around the world are linked. In an impoverished unnamed country, Jafar marks a poem into the chair he is sanding in a dusty factory, the act of creativity bringing him a sense of joy. A tatami in an evacuation center in Japan is where Miyuki sits as she hatches a plan to rescue her missing mother's pet donkey from the danger zone of a nuclear power plant leak caused by a tsunami. Other places to sit include fences, mats, a downtown bench, a molded plastic chair at a mall, and a pink time-out chair. Each provides a place that inspires its occupant to transcend the often-grim circumstances they face. These places act as catalysts to action and thought, where the protagonists mature as they face the future, whether it involves parental divorce, the death of a sister in a school shooting, or the world of political refugees. Beautifully wrought, the collection will appeal to thoughtful readers who appreciate Ellis' other globally aware works, like her well-known Breadwinner series. An excellent choice for all collections.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)




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