This wasn't entirely what I'd expected. I had briefly read a few reviews, and saw it on multiple lists, so purchased it feeling it would likely pan out as a good investment. What I didn't know until it arrived was that it was a story written as poetry. Poetry. Hmm. I'm not a real big poet, feeling like a fish out of water or a bull in a chinashop. I fear what I perceive to be the flow and rhythm. I fear not understanding the message the author is implying.
I dove into this head first, at least after the first few pages where I waded in cautiously. In conquering the above fears I found the story moving and powerful. It is the story of a girl living it Vietnam in a time of internal strife. Her father is gone missing, part of the war effort. Her family, struggling to survive, eventually leaves on a boat to Guam. From there they leave as refugees to the United States, Alabama to be exact. It is at that point that I truly felt Ha's (the girl) struggle. She is smart, kind, and strong, but mocked as a stranger in a new place. The struggle to fit in pulls at the heartstrings, and her interactions in the school brought me to my own classroom. I wondered about the ELL students in my classroom, and the struggles that they must experience (even on a much different level). The story made me wonder about my own practice and how I can develop into a champion for my ELL students.
Rating: 4.5 of 5. I struggled with it in the beginning but the middle to end were magnificent. Certainly a contender for the Newbery Award in 2012.
I've enjoyed reading about your summer reading!
ReplyDeleteTwo things: one is that in order to get kids to read, it is helpful to be fairly fluent in the books available to them. The second is that I plan to have kids regularly writing about the books they are reading, both formally and informally. If I am going to do that then I should practice what I want that to look like. Similar to some of the writing stuff I have read over on Two Writing Teachers.
ReplyDeleteWhat have you been reading?
Been reading a lot of the same books - stuff I plan to add to my classroom library. I especially enjoyed two Gary Schmidt novels (Wednesday Wars and Okay for Now), as well as Mockingbird, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, and The London Eye Mystery.
ReplyDelete