Stepping Stones

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افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (1)

Peapod Farm

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

2020

Lexile Score

500

Reading Level

0-2

ATOS

2.6

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Lucy Knisley

شابک

9781984896865
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
این رمان گرافیکی میانه‌ای معاصر در مورد خانواده و متعلق به نویسنده پرفروش نیویورک تایمز، لوسی نایسلی یک کتاب کامل برای طرفداران ناشیانه و اماده است. جن عادت داره که چیزی که میخواد رو بدست نیاره پس به طور ناگهانی جابجا کردن کشور و گرفتن خواهران ناتنی جدید نباید زیاد غافلگیر کننده باشه جین نمیخواست از شهر خارج بشه. او نمی‌خواست با دوست پسر جدید مادرش والتر به مزرعه‌ای نقل مکان کند. او نمی‌خواست دوستان و پدرش را ترک کند. بیشتر از همه، جن نمی خواست «خواهران» جدید بگیره، «اندی» و «ریس». انگار یاد گرفتن کارهای جدید توی مزرعه «پاپد» به اندازه کافی سخت نبود، مجبور بودم با همه چیز سر و کله بزنم... علاوه بر تمیز کردن مرغدانی، تلاش برای نگه داشتن مشتریان در بازار کشاورزان محلی، و از دست دادن زندگی گذشته خود را، جن باید با مشکلات خود در مورد این خانواده جدید مقابله کند. . و جایی که جا میشه. نویسنده نیویورک تایمز پرفروش، لوسی کنیزلی، داستانی الهام گرفته از دوران کودکی خود را در سفری شگفت‌انگیز از دوستان، خواهران و خانه‌اش، به زندگی می‌اورد. خنده دار، شیرین و واقعی جنیفر و متیو هولم، یکی از تولید‌کنندگان سریال بیبی موس»این کتاب بسیار عالی است. بسیار توصیه شده. کریستین گدانک خالق دوست پیدا کردن

نقد و بررسی

Kirkus

March 15, 2020
In her first graphic novel for kids, Knisley explores the struggles and joys of blending families. Jen is not happy about the newest change to her life: She and her mother are moving from the city to the country, where her mom and her mom's boyfriend, Walter, are starting a farm. This is her mom's dream, but it's certainly not Jen's. Forced to help out at the farmers market, an uncertain Jen is left to independently run the till (without a calculator) even though she's anxious about making change. Everything gets even worse when her new stepsisters arrive. While little Reese mostly stays out of the way, Andy is a confident know-it-all who completely gets on Jen's nerves, just like Andy's father, who ignores others' feelings and commands space in a way that some readers may recognize as abusive. Knisley expertly renders the shame and frustration Jen feels at her lack of agency, balancing it with a positive shift in her relationship with her new siblings as they begin to reveal their own vulnerabilities. Although Jen's stepsisters come around to see his behavior is hurtful, Walter is never held accountable. In her author's note, Knisley references "My 'Walter' " with some fondness and further explores the parallels between her own childhood and her semiautobiographical story. All characters seem white; the setting seems to be the 1990s. Painfully realistic, this is a strong addition to the middle-grade shelf. (Graphic historical fiction. 8-12)

COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Publisher's Weekly

March 30, 2020
Knisley’s autobiographical comics chops are on full display in her first graphic novel for kids, a fictionalized telling of her childhood experiences. When Jen moves to the country with her mother after her parents’ divorce, she is less than thrilled to trade urban comic book shops and Chinese takeout for chicken coop–related chores and her mother’s disagreeable new boyfriend, Walter. Resentment deepens as Jen helps her mom at
the farmers market—left alone to handle sales though math isn’t her strong suit—and Walter’s two daughters, Andy and Reese, begin arriving each weekend to share her room. Missing her old life and feeling unfavorably compared to know-it-all Andy, Jen tries to adjust, finding expression and self-worth in her art as she comes to love her “part-time sisters” and navigates Walter’s seeming inability to treat her as equal to them. With specificity that lends itself to universality, Knisley balances humor and deeply felt emotion to capture the particular unfairness of being a child at the mercy of parental decisions. Art centers around the gentle realism of Knisley’s established style, augmented with pencil drawings in the young protagonist’s developing hand. Age 8–12.



School Library Journal

Starred review from April 1, 2020

Gr 4-7-City girl Jen is overwhelmed. Following her parents' divorce, her mother uproots them to the country to live on a small farm. Instead of visiting comic book shops and eating Chinese food, Jen is struggling to make change at the family farm stand, taking care of the chickens, and learning to live with her mom's bossy, know-it-all boyfriend, Walter, and his daughters, Andy and Reese. Everyone in Jen's new household seems confident and perfect, especially Andy, who somehow outshines Jen at every turn. Inspired by the author's own childhood, Knisley's first middle grade graphic novel soars. She perceptively portrays the highs and lows of being a preteen, from the frustration of living with the fallout of adults' decisions to the joy of building new families. Her young characters are effectively and sympathetically depicted; all have individual talents and personalities and learn to work together despite their differences. However, the adults, particularly Walter, remain clueless and insensitive-an issue that will hopefully be addressed in future volumes (this title is the first of three interconnected books). The art is lively and colorful with beautifully detailed backgrounds. Jen frequently expresses her angst through charming, stick-figure artwork, which, along with Knisley's spot-on facial expressions, emphasizes the drama of blended family. VERDICT This candid, heartwarming look at a child grappling with major changes will resonate with fans of Raina Telgemeier and Svetlana Chmakova and anyone trying to find their place.-Kelley Gile, Cheshire Public Library, CT

Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

April 15, 2020
Grades 4-6 It's bad enough that Jen is forced to move to a farm in the country with her mom's new boyfriend, Walter, but when he brings his daughter Andy into the mix, Jen's feelings of isolation deepen. Walter is bossy and condescending, and Andy is Miss Perfect. As the makeshift family establishes their farm and a booth at the weekend market, Jen's struggles with math and clashes with Andy stoke familial tensions. Knisley's first foray into children's comics?a fictionalized version of her own experience?beautifully captures the loneliness of childhood. Dropped into a new life with relative strangers, Jen's only refuge is her notebook, the doodles of which serve as full-page chapter breaks and occasionally intrude on panels. Knisley's storytelling style is a natural fit for middle-grade readers, with her clean, inviting art tracking Jen's emotional journey through subtle shifts in expression and posture. While Walter's antagonism will make readers red in the face, Jen's growth and relationships ultimately provide a heartwarming arc to this quietly charming tale.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)



DOGO Books
bsc - Jen has now moved from the city to the country. She doesn't really like country life, but now when her mom' s mean boyfriend and his kids come to live with them, she doesn't like it at all. Except, maybe she can make friends with the girls and stand up to the mean boyfriend. I give this book 3 stars. It is a graphic novel.


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