
Charlie Joe Jackson's Guide to Not Reading
Charlie Joe Jackson Series, Book 1
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2011
Lexile Score
830
Reading Level
4-5
ATOS
5.4
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
JP Coovertناشر
Roaring Brook Pressشابک
9781429976466
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

bibliophile - For fans of Diary of the Wimpy Kid or Tom Gates series... this book is for you! I really liked how everything played out at the end... This may seem like your tale of a middle schooler... and you're a 100% right... but there are ACTION.... SUSPENSE...which gives it a more exciting way to read this book... Although it has a boy perspective, it's totally fine, and I understood that all boys act the way they act... well maybe not... but most boys... Meet Charlie Joe Jackson, he thinks reading is redundant and he does not enjoy it... not even one little bit... I REPEAT he thinks reading is redundant and he does not enjoy it... not even one little bit... Okay to be honest... this is DOGObooks here... and we are here to write reviews about amazing books and movies, give our input about the news, and meet amazing people here... .So I thought it is pretty ironic while I am typing my reviews... but this story was hilarious.. and for some of you readers out there...it's pretty ridiculous and quirky... I am an avid reader myself, so all these tips that Charlie gave in the beginning of the chapter... were pretty funny... So it starts off with Charlie's friend, Timmy, won't write any more book reports.. Now Charlie Joe is in trouble... he has to find a person to write his reviews for him... or Plan B... he has to do it!!! This middle school adventure was pretty hilarious.. With cartoonish illustration... this story made my day... So for those who do not like reading... this book is for you... to just people who want to have something to laugh and smile.. this books is totally for you! Enjoy! :D

May 30, 2011
Greenwald pulls off a clever bit of reverse psychology in his debut, first in a series starring a cheeky middle grader who goes to great lengths to avoid readingâand whose humor and rapid-fire delivery should draw in like-minded kids. From the start, Charlie Joe schmoozes playfully with readers, promising short chapters and shorter words ("One syllable. Or less"). Kids who, upon entering the school library, may have been asked (as Charlie Joe is), "did you take a wrong turn somewhere?" will find an enthusiastic advocate in the boy. Throughout, he provides "tips" that dedicated nonreaders will enjoy ("If you have to read a book, make sure it has short chapters"). The novel chronicles Charlie Joe's machinations to avoid reading, which involve getting his classmates to do so for him; using this tactic for a research paper about school cliques yields revelations about clique mentality, but lands Charlie Joe in more trouble. Doth Charlie Joe protest too much? Maybe, but
Greenwald wisely eschews an end-of-story reformation for his comic antihero, ensuring that readers will be treated to more of his entertaining circumlocutions in future books. Ages 9â12.

June 15, 2011
Charlie Joe will do just about anything to avoid reading in this humorous cautionary tale for book-hating middle-grade students.
Debut author Greenwald takes on the persona of Charlie Joe Jackson, a middle-school boy who hates reading. His avoidance techniques get him into serious trouble with his parents, his teachers and his friends. After a year of avoiding reading—paying off a friend in ice-cream sandwiches to read books for him and manipulating his friends so he won't have to read for the all-important position-paper project—Charlie Joe is forced to spend his summer vacation writing a book about his poor choices. Charlie Joe's insider knowledge of the inner machinations of middle-school cliques will make younger readers smile in anticipation, and his direct address to readers makes make him feel like an older buddy showing the way. Sprinkled into the narrative are "Charlie Joe's Tips" to avoiding reading books, written on faux notebook paper, that serve as a little diversion from the plot. As amusing as this is, Charlie Joe's voice is not consistent and occasionally jars with the intelligent, smart-guy sarcasm that characterizes most of Charlie Joe's prose.
That aside, slackers everywhere have a new, likable hero in Charlie Joe Jackson. (Fiction. 10-12)(COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

August 1, 2011
Gr 5-7-Charlie Joe Jackson is a likable middle schooler and an unabashed nonreader. In fact, he's so against the practice that he constantly flirts with danger to ensure that he never has to crack a book. He makes deals with friends to fill him in on assigned reading. When he is caught, it becomes much more difficult to pull off his year-end, research-heavy "Position Paper." He nails it, but there is no happy ending, and he writes a book-this book-as punishment. Greenwald believably inhabits the mind of a tween, with the cliques and short-lived first romances that come with it. Charlie Joe narrates his story while providing humorous tips between chapters about reading and avoiding it. This is a fun, fast-moving look at middle-school life through the eyes of a kid who would rather clean his room than pick up a book. Reluctant readers will be pleased.-Travis Jonker, Dorr Elementary School, MI
Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Starred review from May 1, 2011
Grades 4-7 *Starred Review* With his deep-seated love of not reading, this titles young narrator, Charlie Joe, speaks straight to other book-averse middle-schoolers. But avid readers will equally enjoy Charlie Joes story, with its wild parodies and surprises that continue to the very end. The elaborate plot revolves around Charlie Joes complicated tactics to avoid reading. He sets up bookworm Jake with cheerleader Hannah, for example, so that grateful Jake will read Charlie Joes books for a class project about school cliques, but things dont go as planned; as Charlie Joe warns, Always be wary of plot twists. Charlie Joes wry first-person narrative, interspersed with anti-reading tips and occasional small cartoons, mocks nearly everyone, also himself, and the hilarious wordplay adds to the fun: Charlie Joe is in love with Hannah, but if she is flawless, her twin brother is flawful. Not all books are bad, though: Charlie Joe does like checkbooks (a source of gifts from grandparents), comic books, and Facebook. A perfect read-aloud, this debut is filled with passages that beg to be shared: It is impossible to concentrate because I dont have my cell phone to text my friends to break up my concentration. With its subversive humor and contemporary details drawn straight from kids worlds, this clever title should attract a wide following.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)
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