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Adventure Write - Literary Agency and Alaska Irish Dance Studio
Home
About
Books
    Our Books
    A Journey to Publication
    Colleen's Book Blog & Author Website
Adventure Write Literary Management
Contact
Irish Dance
Contest Archive
    Contest Details
    Contest News / Judging Updates
    Start Totem Head's Tutorial
    Contest Entry Form
    Contest Flyer
    Past Winners
    2016 Winners
    2015 Winners
    2014 Winners
    2013 Winners
    2012 Winners
    2011 Winners
    2010 Winners
    2009 Winners
  • Home
  • About
  • Books
    • Our Books
    • A Journey to Publication
    • Colleen’s Book Blog & Author Website
  • Adventure Write Literary Management
  • Contact
  • Irish Dance
  • Contest Archive
    • Contest Details
    • Contest News / Judging Updates
    • Start Totem Head’s Tutorial
    • Contest Entry Form
    • Contest Flyer
    • Past Winners
      • 2016 Winners
      • 2015 Winners
      • 2014 Winners
      • 2013 Winners
      • 2012 Winners
      • 2011 Winners
      • 2010 Winners
      • 2009 Winners
Early Readers / Middle Grade, Reviews

Review + Giveaway – THE SCHOOL IS ALIVE by Jack Chabert

THE SCHOOL IS ALIVE! (Eerie Elementary #1)
by Jack Chabert
Genre: Children’s Chapter Book, Scary Stories
Publisher: Scholastic (June 2014)
Format: Paperback, SALE $2.97 on Amazon

Summary
Eerie Elementary is one scary school!

This series is part of Scholastic’s early chapter book line called Branches, which is aimed at newly independent readers. With easy-to-read text, high-interest content, fast-paced plots, and illustrations on every page, these books will boost reading confidence and stamina. Branches books help readers grow!

In this first book in the series, Sam Graves discovers that his elementary school is ALIVE! Sam finds this out on his first day as the school hall monitor. Sam must defend himself and his fellow students against the evil school! Is Sam up to the challenge? He’ll find out soon enough: the class play is just around the corner. Sam teams up with friends Lucy and Antonio to stop this scary school before it’s too late!


Author Jack Chabert is a pen name for Max Brallier. Max is the author of more than twenty books for children, including the Galactic Hot Dogs and The Last Kids on Earth middle-grade series. He lives in New York City with his wife, Alyse.

WEBSITE | TWITTER


Colleen’s Review


Fun, picture-filled pages, perfect to read to pre-schoolers/Kindergarteners/First Graders.

THE SCHOOL IS ALIVE (Eerie Elementary #1) by Jack Chabert, is an early reader with black and white illustrations throughout. My 5-year-old loves illustrated books about kids, and the quirky title/cover of this book caught his eye and the creepy story line held his attention.

Sam Graves and his two friends, Lucy & Antonio, are students at Eerie Elementary School, where Sam discovers the school is trying to eat the students. As Hall Monitor, it’s up to Sam to fight the school and save the students. In this installment, during the class play, the stage and props come to life and try to swallow the students.

I read this book to my 5-year-old son, who thoroughly enjoyed Sam’s exciting adventure and looking at the pictures as I read. Though this is marketed as a book for newly independent young readers, I saw more than a few large words that might be too advanced for a newly independent reader. However, there may be enough repetition to help in comprehension. As a book read out loud to a pre-schooler, it was perfect. The chapters are numbered with digits, which made my son happy that he could “read” which chapter we were about to start. The print is large enough to point out sight words for him too. He’s excited to read the rest of the books in the Eerie Elementary series.

I’d recommend this book for parents who like to read to their pre-schoolers/kindergardeners/1st graders, and to 2nd-3rd graders who read independently, especially for kids who like adventure and won’t be scared by a dark tale with a student-eating villain.

4.5 Stars

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Note: CM McCoy’s Contest Policy applies. Rafflecopter terms and conditions also apply. No Purchase necessary to enter. Void where prohibited by law.

February 16, 2017by Colleen
Reviews

How to Write a Book Review

Some readers reached out to us, wanting to learn how to write a more helpful, professional-looking book review, and so we put together this quick “how-to” guide.

The bottom line is that you can write a book review however you want–even one sentence works. If you’re interested in writing a more thorough book review, read on 🙂


How to Write a Book Review


A professional book review includes:

0. A tagline/summation. Give your overall reaction to the book or a summation of your review.

Ex: Wow! <– That’s all you could get out of me for hours after reading this book. OR Hogwarts meets X-Men’s Xavier’s School with an unforgettable romance. OR My head hurts, my heart hearts, and I’m a little sick to my stomach (in a good way)

1. An intro. Give the title, author, genre, and series info (or stand-alone) for the book.

Ex: EERIE by CM McCoy is a young adult fantasy with romance and the first book in a series, which can be read as a stand-alone.

2. Why you decided to read the book. Did the cover call to you? Do you already know and love the author? Did you see a catchy ad and loved the blurb?

Ex: CM McCoy is a new author to me, but when I saw that EERIE had been featured in both PEOPLE magazine and on INSIDE EDITION and I wanted to check it out.

3. Expectations. How you felt going in to the book, how you felt when you finished, and whether the book met your expectations.

Ex: The EERIE blurb and reviews promised I’d find a quirky/dark story with unexpected humor and memorable characters and IT DELIVERED 🙂

4. Summary. Write a short summary of the plot (without spoilers).

Ex: Hailey Hartley suffers a devastating personal loss during her senior year of high school–her big sister is abducted–only to find that the supposedly mythical creatures called Envoys are to blame. Hailey follows an Envoy named Asher to a Paranormal University in Alaska, where Asher promises to protect her from other Envoys who really really want her dead. Things become more and more uncomfortable for Hailey as she struggles to survive her supernatural classes, avoid the campus’s paranormal perils, and get along with her roommate from Hell. When she accidentally ignites Asher’s jealously by spending time with another guy, Fin, things come to a head and Hailey hopes this one creature that can protect her from the other Envoys doesn’t end up killing her himself.

5. Commentary on what worked and what didn’t work for you. This can be however long or short you want to make it. Mention whether the main story line is tied up and whether there is a cliffhanger. Include whatever you want, but be sure to comment on the book the author wrote, and not the book you wish the author had written.

Ex: The world-building in EERIE and the sheer imagination involved in creating this new mythology are astounding. There are so many new creatures and characters I’ll never forget, like Hailey’s grumpy “loner” roommate, who just wants to be left alone but optimist Hailey can’t take a hint. And the villain, Cobon, who’s so creepy and gentlemanly at the same time and who’s so unapologetically sure of his “got to break a few eggs to make an omelet” attitude. The heroes are beautifully flawed, and I honestly didn’t know who to root for until the very heart-breaking end. This book is a perfectly paced, with great moments of edge-of-your-seat suspense coupled with the slow burn of unrequited love. Even though the book over 400 pages long, I read the whole thing in one night. I only wish it were LONGER so that I didn’t have to wait for the sequel to get more of the story. There is no happily ever after ending in this fairy tale, but the main story line is tied up wonderfully with a teaser chapter at the end to let us know more is coming (and hopefully soon).

6. How much (if any) you skimmed.

7. Romance / Language / Violence / Age Recommendation. If there’s romance, is it sweet, steamy, or for adults only? How much cussing is there? If there’s violence, is it mild, moderate, or gory? Recommend an age range for the book.

Ex: The romance is sweet, the violence mild, and I counted one F-bomb in this book. I’d recommend this for readers aged 14 and older. 

8. A recommendation and comparison for readers who like x, y, or z.

Ex: Fans of Moning’s DARKFEVER will like the adventure and supernatural suspense of EERIE. The romance in EERIE will appeal to fans of TWILIGHT, and fans of HARRY POTTER will love the unique world and new mythology in a remote school setting.

9. A star rating. You can rate a book however you want. This is the scale we use on our review blog:

5 stars = We loved the book enough that we’d buy it in hard cover or buy a copy as a gift for a friend.

4 stars = We’re keeping this book because we enjoyed it or parts of it so much we might read it again.

3 stars = We very much enjoyed this book, but we probably won’t read it again.

2 stars = We didn’t really enjoy the book as much as we wanted and on the whole, it simply fell flat for us.

1 star = We finished reading the book, but there were so many issues with the writing/editing/story line that we were sorely disappointed and can’t in good conscience recommend the book at all.

DNF = We didn’t finish reading this book, because for whatever reason, it simply wasn’t for us. If what we read warrants a star-rating, we’ll use the above scale to rate what we did read, and we’ll try to recommend an audience for this book.


Where to leave a review


Here are some places you can leave a book review:

  • Goodreads
  • Amazon
  • Barnes and Noble
  • Library Thing
  • YA Books Central

Save

February 16, 2017by Colleen

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