Falling In

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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

2010

Lexile Score

850

Reading Level

4-5

ATOS

5.3

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

شابک

9781416999027
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
افرادی در این دنیا هستند که کمی بیشتر اگاه هستند، کمی بیشتر با انچه در اطرافشان می گذرد هماهنگ هستند. ایزابل بین یکی از این افراد است، و وقتی او در کلاس منظم و متوسط خود می‌نشیند، به یک صدای عجیب و غریب وهمهمهٔ گوش می‌دهد و احساس می‌کند که انگار در لبه‌ی جهان به سر می‌برد. اون زیاد از حقیقت دور نیست. ایزابل مثل الیس که از اینه رد می‌شود، خیلی زود خودش را در یک دنیای موازی پیدا می‌کند، جایی که او به اشتباه یک جادوگر است، سپس متوجه می‌شود که مادربزرگش جادوگر است، و بعد می‌فهمد که او نیست، اما هیچ کس او را باور نمی‌کند، که این تمام دلیلی است که ایزابل به این دنیا ریخته است - تا همه را در کار جادوگر و غیر جادوگر قرار دهد. و یه دوست واقعی پیدا کنم اولین کار فانتزی دوول، اره، واقعا، الهام بخشه

نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
book_nerd_anna - This book was A-mazing. I liked the mystery sort of thing in it. The witch, OH yeah, LOVED LOVED LOVED it. So so so so good for young readers. I'd say ages 7-11, since there is a little bit of violence and childish beliefs.

Publisher's Weekly

February 8, 2010
Dowell’s (Shooting the Moon
) first fantasy novel features sixth-grader Isabelle Bean, an unconventional protagonist who prefers thrift stores to malls and demonstrates an “impressive talent for irritating teachers.” Isabelle’s adventure begins in the school nurse’s office, where she discovers an entrance into another world and meets a group of children fleeing from a witch. As fate would have it, the “witch”—mistreated and misunderstood by villagers—turns out to be Isabelle’s biological grandmother. Much of the novel focuses on the healing powers and sad history of Isabelle’s grandmother and Isabelle’s effort to set the record straight. Readers may be amused by the narrator’s digressions, backtracking, direct addresses (“You want me to tell you where Isabelle is, don’t you? You want me to spell it out for you, draw you a map, paint a picture. Well, I’m not going to do it”), and impish tone, though it can feel a bit forced. Perhaps too many facts are left to the imagination: how Isabelle has changed and what she has gained from her experiences remain questionable at the end of the book. Ages 8–12.



School Library Journal

April 1, 2010
Gr 3-6-Isabelle Bean has no friends since her classmates consider her weird and even scary. She prefers thrift shops to the mall and dresses in whatever she feels like at the moment. One day, sitting in class concentrating on a strange buzzing sound, she is sent to the principal's office for not paying attention. She opens the door to a supply closet and is plunged into a fairy-talelike world in an alternate universe. She encounters children traveling to the "camps" to avoid being eaten by the Witch of the Woods and meets Hen, and they set out on their own in the opposite direction. Arriving at a cozy cottage, the girls are welcomed by Grete, an elderly woman who uses plants to heal. Isabelle learns that Grete is her grandmother and that she may be the "witch" the people have been taught to fear. Armed with only her determination and intuitive nature, Isabelle marches off to the camps to dispel the rumor of the witch. It is here the plot thickens as Dowell offers twists, turns, and a tragic near-death. Throughout the book she addresses readers directly as though she is telling the story to them. Isabelle's adventures come to a satisfying conclusion as she "falls out" of her school closet a little wiser and maybe a bit more likely to make a friend, and she reminds readers to just believe that "the doors are out there. Don't be afraid to turn the knob.""D. Maria LaRocco, Cuyahoga Public Library, Strongsville, OH"

Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from January 1, 2010
Grades 4-7 *Starred Review* Feeling like a changeling in her own world, sixth-grader Isabelle Bean falls into another, where she meets her healer grandmother, Grete, and corrects a misunderstanding that had terrorized generations of children. Although it uses traditional tropes and the faintly medieval setting of much of childrens fantasy, this perfectly paced story has enough realistic elements to appeal even to nonfantasy readers. The plot centers on Isabelles efforts to convince the other worlds children that her grandmother is not a wicked witch. This task is complicated but ultimately accomplished by Gretes accidental poisoning at the hands of a small boy. The storytellers voice is evidenced by the opening line (On the morning this story begins) and occasionally interrupts the narrative with explanation and rumination. The decidedly opinionated narrators privileged stance lends a sense of directness and immediacy to the telling, and the adult perspective allows for more complex language and deeper understanding. Dreamy and distractible, Isabelle is an appealing protagonist whose newfound gift for hearing calls for help reflects how she has grown up enough to see beyond herself. Like Isabelle, her story has that barely visible edge of otherworldliness that gives it power.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)




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