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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Seemingly written for a younger audience, this fictional piece will keep the attention for even the teacher. Postcards, letters, and memos work together to tell this charming tale of Flo Waters and her fountain for Dry Creek Middle School. The students in Sam N.'s class work on a history of Dry Creek Middle School for Dry Creek days. They also help to uncover the mystery of how Spring Creek suddenly became Dry Creek. The names are clever, drawings fun, and the story is really enjoyable. Get that drinking fountain in here on the double this book has some very interesting twists and turns, and is a book that will just make you keep on reading. Amazing read. I first read this around the age of 10 or so, and now, at 15, I'm still a fan of this book and the rest of the series. The author, Kate Klise, does an amazing job of engaging the reader and drawing them into this hilarious world, where this ordinary class of ordinary kids solves the most astounding mysteries. All kids should read this book and the rest of the series, and even adults. The format, especially, is great, as the entire book is written in letters, notes, postcards, etc. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0380793474, Paperback)How could a simple request for a new water fountain go so very, very off-track? When Principal Wally Russ writes to fountain designer Florence Waters to ask her to replace Dry Creek Middle School's busted drinking fountain, he little suspects that he is sparking the imagination of an artiste. Kate Klise's charming mystery novel is told entirely in letters and faxes, as the glamorous Florence visits Dry Creek and becomes friends with Mr. Sam N.'s fifth-grade class. The class helps Florence design the most outrageous water fountain ever, and along the way uncovers the dirty (and rather wet) secret that dwells underneath Dry Creek Middle School. Writes Florence to her new fifth-grade friends, "Your drawings are hanging in my studio. Pure inspiration. Of course a drinking fountain should have tropical fish and chocolate shakes!" The book reads like an inspired combination of the epistolary novels Daddy-Long-Legs and Griffin & Sabine. Line drawings by M. Sarah Klise adorn every page, with "snapshots" of the fifth-grade class, pages from the local paper, and coffee-stained While You Were Out notices thickening the stew. The emphasis on visual elements should make the book a hit with kids who claim they don't like to read. Author Klise knows her audience: bad puns flow as freely as water and the plot is just convoluted enough to challenge kids without frustrating them. The Klise sisters have created a classic of comic children's literature. (Ages 8 and older) --Claire Dederer(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 22:08:19 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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