Be Prepared

اماده باشید
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (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

2018

Lexile Score

360

Reading Level

0-2

ATOS

2.6

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Vera Brosgol

ناشر

First Second

شابک

9781250313812
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
به زیبایی کشیده شده، بی رحمانه خنده دار، فوق العاده صادق ورا یه کارتونیست خوبه من تقریبا نمیتونم تحملش کنم رینا تلگماییر، نویسنده لبخند In اماده باش، همه ورا می خواهد انجام دهد مناسب است اما برای یک دختر روسی در حومه ها اسان نیست. دوستان او در خانه های مجلل زندگی می کنند و والدین انها می توانند انها را به بهترین اردوگاه های تابستانی بفرستند. مادر مجرد ورا نمی‌تواند چنین تجملاتی را تامین کند، اما یک اردوگاه تابستانی در محدوده قیمت خود در اردوگاه تابستانی روسیه وجود دارد. ورا مطمئن است که او تنها جایی را که می تواند در ان قرار گیرد پیدا کرده است، اما اردوگاه بسیار دور از ان چیزی است که او تصور می کرد. و هیچ چیز نمی‌توانست او را برای نمایش‌های «دختر باحال»، درس‌های بی‌پایان تاریخ روسیه، و کابوس‌ها اماده کند!

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from April 16, 2018
Unlike her debut, Anya's Ghost, Eisner-winner Brosgol's second graphic work is a summer camp memoir set in the real world. Without fantasy elements to distract, execution is crucial, and Brosgol delivers. Vera, Brosgol's nine-year-old self, is a wide-eyed Russian immigrant kid desperate to fit in with her suburban classmates. They all go to camp every summer, and when she finds out about a Russian Orthodox camp that her family's church will help pay for, she talks her mother into letting her go. It doesn't take her long to realize that she's wished for the wrong thing. Mean girls, stinking outhouses, and baffling camp traditions make her first weeks miserable. Triumphs come, but not before she undergoes moments of humiliation that are both funny and cringeworthy ("Is that candy?" Vera asks her older tentmates about a pack of maxi-pads). The dialogue rings true, the pace is seamless, and the panel artwork, in woodsy browns and greens, conveys feelings with clean, assured lines. By turns sardonic, adorable, and noble, Vera is a beguiling hero who learns how to recognize who's really on her side. Ages 10â14. Agent: Judy Hansen, Hansen Literary.



School Library Journal

May 1, 2018

Gr 5-8-Brosgol has worked on acclaimed animated films, but she was once a lonely nine-year-old aching for friendship. Here, she relates the story of her monthlong experience at Russian summer camp, where she coped with the horrors of outhouses, feral wildlife, and bug bites, as well as with mean older cabinmates and alienation from her fellow campers. The author/illustrator reprises her cartoony character art and her detailed yet subtle background work. The book eschews the plot-driven and suspenseful storytelling of Brosgol's Anya's Ghost in lieu of a slice-of-life narrative in which problems aren't always neatly resolved. This lends a hard realism to the memoir, in spite of the adorable art style, as young Vera earns small victories and an understanding of herself rather than soaring triumph. The text is simple and accessible, but the relaxed pacing, characters who go often unpunished for cruel behavior, and the brief inclusion of an ill-fated romance set this title apart from more gentle middle grade works. VERDICT A gorgeous, emotional memoir worthy of any graphic novel collection.-Matisse Mozer, Los Angeles Public Library

Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Kirkus

March 15, 2018
Brosgol (Leave Me Alone, 2016, etc.) draws on her bittersweet memories of attending Russian summer camp in this accessible graphic novel.Convinced that she will never fit in with the American girls in her class because her family is "too poor," "too Russian," and "too different," 9-year-old Vera jumps at the opportunity to attend Russian summer camp in hopes of finding a peer group she can belong to. However, Russian camp in the Connecticut woods is not at all what she had expected: Her tentmates are two mean girls five years her senior, she doesn't click with any of the other girls, and the outhouse, nicknamed "Hollywood," completely weirds her out. When all of Vera's misguided attempts to fit in with the other kids backfire, she resigns herself to waiting out the miserable days till her mother picks her up--until she unexpectedly succeeds in making one good friend. Vera's wide-eyed optimism and subsequent frustrations come to life through the vivid interplay between Brosgol's humorous text and her black, white, and olive-green illustrations, colored by Longstreth. While the culturally specific references will particularly resonate with kids of Russian heritage, the larger story will strike chords with any kid who has ever struggled to find a place to belong. It will especially speak to that segment of the population who dreads summer camp, an experience that translates across many cultures. Vera, her schoolmates, and her campmates are all pale-skinned.A funny summer-camp story with a culturally specific slant. (author's note) (Graphic memoir. 8-14)

COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



DOGO Books
ajg16 - Vera is a 9 year old girl who moved to America when she was 5 years old from Russia. At home she is different from the other girls and they treat her differently and think she is weird. When she finds out about a Russian camp she just has to go!! But it's not all she thought it to be the two girls she is sharing a tent with are older and mean. she doesn't really know how to read Russian and she just isn't having fun.. Good thing she is only staying for two weeks. Oh wait her mom says she has to stay two more weeks! How is she going to survive two more weeks at this Camp!? Read the book to find out! Recommended for 9+ Thanks for reading -Ajg16's reviews

Booklist

Starred review from April 15, 2018
Grades 6-9 *Starred Review* Vera feels too Russian for her friends in Albany. She can never quite get the hang of sleepover birthday parties, and she'll never have expensive toys like they do. So when she hears about a summer camp just for Russian American kids, she's sure she's finally found her place. But she's much younger than her tent-mates, and?impossibly?she's not Russian enough to fit in. She stumbles over the language, doesn't know all the songs, and generally can't quite get a handle on roughing it. But what's more Russian than suffering? With fantastic pacing and poignant emotional turns, Brosgol's winsome graphic memoir hilariously captures the lengths kids go to in order to fit in as well as the author's growth from a girl desperate for a place to belong into someone confident enough to stand up for herself. Brosgol's pitch-perfect art varies between serene, contemplative snapshot-like images of nature and comedic scenes between Vera?cartoonishly drawn with huge, goggle-eyed glasses?and her friends and campmates, all of whom appear in a relatively realistic style. Even though it's rendered only in black, white, and olive green, Brosgol's artwork has immense depth, from the facial expressions and gestures to the spot-on visual gags, and she strikes a perfect balance between heartfelt honesty and uproarious, self-deprecating humor. Perfect for fans of Shannon Hale's Real Friends (2017), this will easily lodge a place in readers' hearts, even as it has them rolling in the aisles.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)




دیدگاه کاربران

دیدگاه خود را بنویسید
|