White Bird

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

A Wonder Story

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

2019

Lexile Score

440

Reading Level

0-2

ATOS

3.5

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

R. J. Palacio

شابک

9780525645559
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
به زودی تبدیل به یک تصویر متحرک بزرگ با بازی هلن میرن و گیلیان اندرسون! با الهام از پدیده شگفت انگیز او، ار جی پالاسیو، اولین رمان گرافیکی خود را با یک داستان فراموش نشدنی، کتاب سیدنی تیلور داستان برنده از قدرت مهربانی و شجاعت بی وقفه در زمان جنگ. «من توسط پرنده سفید شیفته شدم. این کتاب حقایق دشوار را با صداقت و ارامش بیان می کند (تا خوانندگان جوان بتوانند انها را بشنوند). ار. جی. پالاسیو طبیعت قهرمانی و خطرات واقعی که امروز با ان مواجه هستیم را به زندگی می اورد. مگ مدینا، نویسنده برنده جایزه نیوبری مرسی سوارز مجموعه پرفروش داستان‌های اگگی و من را تغییر می‌دهد که با گسترش شخصیت‌ها در شگفتی، خوانندگان به مادربزرگ جولیان معرفی شدند. در اینجا، پالاسیو اولین رمان گرافیکی خود را با داستان غم انگیز پدربزرگ می سازد: دختر جوان یهودی در طی جنگ جهانی دوم توسط خانواده ای در یک روستای فرانسوی تحت اشغال نازی ها مخفی شده بود؛ که چگونه پسری که او و همکلاسی‌هایش از او دوری می‌کردند، نجات‌دهنده و بهترین دوست او شدند. تجربه سخت سارا نشان دهنده قدرت مهربانی برای تغییر قلب، ساخت پل، و حتی نجات جان افراد است. همانطور که مادربزرگ به جولیان می گوید: «همیشه شجاعت لازم است که مهربان باشیم، اما در ان روزها، چنین مهربانی ای می تواند برای همه چیز هزینه داشته باشد. با نمادگرایی برنده و اثار هنری زرق و برق دار که داستان سارا را از گذشته بیرون اورده است و ان را در این لحظه از تاریخ محکم می کند, پرنده سفید مطمئنا هر کسی که توسط کتاب شگفت یا فیلم پرفروش اقتباس شده است را مجذوب خود می کند. ستایش برای تعجب: # ۱ نیویورک تایمز پرفروش امروز USA پرفروش۱۰۰ کتاب جوان در تمام زمان»در شگفتی از شروع به کار، پالاسیو یک صفحه پر از کاراکترهایی که شما نمی توانید کمک کنید اما ریشه. یکی از سرگرمی‌های هفتگی»غنی و به‌یادماندنی. نیویورک تایمز (انگلیسی: New York Times) یک داستان زیبا و خنده‌دار و گاهی اوقات گریه‌اور دگرگونی ارام است. وال استریت ژورنال

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

July 1, 2019
Branded as “A Wonder Story,” Palacio’s well-paced graphic novel debut expands upon a story introduced in Auggie & Me—Grandmère’s tale of her childhood in German-occupied France. Asked by Julian, Wonder’s bully, to recount the story of Julien, a boy impacted by polio who helped her hide from Nazi soldiers as a child, Grandmère reluctantly agrees. Cruelly teased by schoolmates, Julien becomes Sara’s protector after Nazis invade their progressive school. The two make a sympathetic duo as Sara’s once-charmed life gives way to an existence of survival. Palacio elaborates on her previous books’ themes, including empathy, bullying, and othering, and a twist toward the end challenges assumptions about who “belongs” in a society. Final panels, which show contemporary Americans protesting family separation at the U.S./Mexico border, tether the story to current events. The volume’s visual style is at its most distinctive in its evocative settings and poetic moments, such as woods that sparkle with bluebells and the titular white bird soaring through time and space. Palacio, a confident storyteller, has crafted a work whose classroom-friendly packaging belies a gripping human story. Further resources include a glossary and suggested reading list. Ages 8–12.



Kirkus

Starred review from July 15, 2019
A grandmother shares her story of survival as a Jew in France during World War II. As part of a homework assignment, Julian (Auggie's chief tormentor in Wonder, 2012) video chats with Grandmère, who finally relates her wartime story. Born Sara Blum to a comfortable French Jewish family, she is indulged by her parents, who remain in Vichy France after 1940. Then, in 1943, after the German occupation, soldiers come to Sara's school to arrest her and the other Jewish students. Sara hides and is soon spirited away by "Tourteau," a student that she and the others had teased because of his crablike, crutch-assisted walk after being stricken by polio. Nonetheless, Tourteau, whose real name is Julien, and his parents shelter Sara in their barn loft for the duration of the war, often at great peril but always with care and love. Palacio begins each part of her story with quotations: from Muriel Rukeyser's poetry, Anne Frank, and George Santayana. Her digital drawings, inked by Czap, highlight facial close-ups that brilliantly depict emotions. The narrative thread, inspired by Palacio's mother-in-law, is spellbinding. In the final pages, the titular bird, seen in previous illustrations, soars skyward and connects readers to today's immigration tragedies. Extensive backmatter, including an afterword by Ruth Franklin, provides superb resources. Although the book is being marketed as middle-grade, the complexities of the Holocaust in Vichy France, the growing relationship between Sara and Julien, Julien's fate, and the mutual mistrust among neighbors will be most readily appreciated by Wonder's older graduates. A must-read graphic novel that is both heart-rending and beautifully hopeful. (author's note, glossary, suggested reading list, organizations and resources, bibliography, photographs) (Graphic historical fiction. 12-16)

COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



School Library Journal

September 1, 2019

Gr 4-6-This graphic novel expands on Grandmère's childhood story, which was referenced in The Julian Chapter, a companion to Palacio's Wonder. Grandmère tells Julian about her childhood in France. She describes how her comfortable, happy life changed in the summer of 1940, when the Germans occupied part of France. Though Grandmère, or Sara, and her family lived in the free zone, she tells Julian, "Nothing was really normal anymore. Not if you were Jewish, like us." As the war progresses, it becomes more real to Sara, but she doesn't understand the danger until the day that the Nazi soldiers arrive at Sara's school to take the Jewish children. Sara hides to escape capture but doesn't know what to do next until she is rescued by a classmate who leads her to safety. The boy, Julien, though she knows him by the cruel nickname Torteau (French for "crab"), uses crutches to walk because his legs were affected by polio. The two become friends, and their relationship even turns romantic as the years pass while Sara is in hiding, but Julien's character doesn't become more than a tragic hero. Moments set in the present featuring Julian and Grandmère frame the tale and draw parallels to family separation at the U.S. border, offering a powerful conclusion. An author's note discusses Palacio's connection to the story, and back matter provides further information about the war, the period, and more. VERDICT Sure to be popular among fans of Wonder and educators who want to connect past to present.-Mindy Rhiger, Hennepin County Library, MN

Copyright 2019 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

October 15, 2019
Grades 6-9 Palacio adds another layer to the Wonder universe with this graphic novel debut. Julian calls his grandmother, Sara, to interview her for a class project. What follows is a story of resistance, bravery, and survival, beginning in unoccupied France, during Hitler's rise. While her non-observant, affluent Jewish family is safe for some time, it isn't long before Sara's mother disappears and Jewish students are taken from the school. She escapes the roundup by hiding in the school and is discovered by Julian, an ostracized classmate badly disabled by a childhood bout of polio. Julian hides Sara in a barn near his house, where his family keeps her safe until the end of the war. It is this friend whom her grandson Julian is named for. This compelling story is served well by the graphic novel format; muted background colors and an emphasis on facial expressions center the emotional intensity of the story. The author effectively ties atrocities of WWII to current political issues, ending with a declaration of Never Again. Supplemental information includes a glossary, photographs, and further reading suggestions.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)



DOGO Books
White Bird 💕 - White bird is the best book ever. It is about a Jewish girl who goes to school one day and the Nazi's come to take every Jewish child to a concentration camp. A boy with polio who is awfully made fun of saves the girl from the Nazi's and lets her stay with his family. they soon fall in love. It made me laugh, cry, and want to make sure that excluding, killing, and ruining the lives of a certain race or religion never happens again and that we remember the terrible actions of our past so we can change how we act in the future


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