Sally Warner
Author of Ellray Jakes Is Not a Chicken
About the Author
Sally Warner is the author of many highly acclaimed novels for young people She and her husband live in southern California with a miniature wirehaired dachshund, Rocky
Image credit: via Goodreads
Series
Works by Sally Warner
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th Century
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Scripps College
Otis Art Institute - Occupations
- artist
teacher - Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
Connecticut, USA
California, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
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Reviews
I'm very excited about this new beginning chapter book series. It has so many elements I've been looking for!
Main character is a boy
He's a minority in a suburb (more on that later)
The story: EllRay is the smallest kid in third grade and two of the biggest boys are picking on him. Why? He doesn't know. He also likes to make people laugh and it's getting him in trouble in school. So, his dad makes a deal - behave for a week and he'll get to go to Disneyland. This turns out to be as hard as show more EllRay thinks it will probably be, but he manages it in the end and even has a temporary truce with the bully, Jared.
I've been frustrated for a long time by the lack of minorities in everyday fiction. Not high concept, not celebrating culture, not historical, and not stereotyped settings. Not every Hispanic kid is a migrant worker. Not every African-American lives in a poor urban area. This is exactly the kind of character that the kids in my predominantly white, small Midwestern town will read about - because it's focused on people, not their race or culture, and whether the kids are a minority or not they can relate to EllRay who has identifiable problems. His race isn't ignored - he wishes there were more kids who looked like him "just so it would come out even" and it's a sensitive point for his dad and the other adults who are worried that he's getting bullied because of it, but Ellray knows that's not the point "Jared would have said something if it was. He is not the type of kid to keep things to himself. That much is obvious. Anyway, there are plenty of other things that could make him want to pick on me."
There's a lesson to be learned by EllRay of course - that words can hurt as much as punches and his jokes have repercussions. EllRay and his little sister both think and talk about kids' interactions in school - the way girls are often mean to each other and how it's different than the way boys are mean and how sometimes you're friends one week and not friends the next. The adults mean well, but as EllRay points out "outside is when school really happens for kids." The adults' interference sometimes helps, but sometimes causes more problems and in the end the kids have to figure it out on their own and it's not easy.
Verdict: This new series is funny with some good points for thought. Parents might be uncomfortable with the kids resolving their issues with a fight - but it's a realistic portrayal of how kids relate to each other and they can use it to discuss ways kids can resolve their issues on their own. We've had this series for about three months now and it's very popular! Highly recommended.
ISBN: 9780142419885; Published May 2011 by Viking; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library show less
Main character is a boy
He's a minority in a suburb (more on that later)
The story: EllRay is the smallest kid in third grade and two of the biggest boys are picking on him. Why? He doesn't know. He also likes to make people laugh and it's getting him in trouble in school. So, his dad makes a deal - behave for a week and he'll get to go to Disneyland. This turns out to be as hard as show more EllRay thinks it will probably be, but he manages it in the end and even has a temporary truce with the bully, Jared.
I've been frustrated for a long time by the lack of minorities in everyday fiction. Not high concept, not celebrating culture, not historical, and not stereotyped settings. Not every Hispanic kid is a migrant worker. Not every African-American lives in a poor urban area. This is exactly the kind of character that the kids in my predominantly white, small Midwestern town will read about - because it's focused on people, not their race or culture, and whether the kids are a minority or not they can relate to EllRay who has identifiable problems. His race isn't ignored - he wishes there were more kids who looked like him "just so it would come out even" and it's a sensitive point for his dad and the other adults who are worried that he's getting bullied because of it, but Ellray knows that's not the point "Jared would have said something if it was. He is not the type of kid to keep things to himself. That much is obvious. Anyway, there are plenty of other things that could make him want to pick on me."
There's a lesson to be learned by EllRay of course - that words can hurt as much as punches and his jokes have repercussions. EllRay and his little sister both think and talk about kids' interactions in school - the way girls are often mean to each other and how it's different than the way boys are mean and how sometimes you're friends one week and not friends the next. The adults mean well, but as EllRay points out "outside is when school really happens for kids." The adults' interference sometimes helps, but sometimes causes more problems and in the end the kids have to figure it out on their own and it's not easy.
Verdict: This new series is funny with some good points for thought. Parents might be uncomfortable with the kids resolving their issues with a fight - but it's a realistic portrayal of how kids relate to each other and they can use it to discuss ways kids can resolve their issues on their own. We've had this series for about three months now and it's very popular! Highly recommended.
ISBN: 9780142419885; Published May 2011 by Viking; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library show less
This is an engaging novel about the trials and tribulations of being in the third grade, of trying to blend in, and of friendships, as well as what might be required to repair those friendships when someone gets their feelings hurt.
It is also a thoughtful examination the matter of skin color--whether it matters, and why it might matter. Warner deftly navigates this territory from the perspective of a 9 year-old boy, one of only two brown-skinned people in his class. While this delightful show more book addresses the skin-color issue, the approach warner takes is of Ellray trying to figure these things out for himself; Warner doesn't preach, which I appreciated.
My only issue with this audio book was that the narrator seemed to end most sentences on an up-note, making ever sentence seem like a question, which was particularly true when he was performing the children's parts. show less
It is also a thoughtful examination the matter of skin color--whether it matters, and why it might matter. Warner deftly navigates this territory from the perspective of a 9 year-old boy, one of only two brown-skinned people in his class. While this delightful show more book addresses the skin-color issue, the approach warner takes is of Ellray trying to figure these things out for himself; Warner doesn't preach, which I appreciated.
My only issue with this audio book was that the narrator seemed to end most sentences on an up-note, making ever sentence seem like a question, which was particularly true when he was performing the children's parts. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Eight-year-old EllRay is down to one-and-a-half best friends, which leads his little sister to point out the obvious: he needs new friends. A spare, at least. For emergencies. So EllRay decides to audition other boys for the role of Spare Best Friend. EllRay’s class is brimming with possibilities, but no one seems to share his exact interests. What’s so great about car parts? And why would anyone think boring instruction manuals are fun to read? But EllRay isn’t worried—he can fix show more any problems once he gets to know each kid. And the only way to get to know them is to come up with fun things to do at recess. When he’s the Recess King, everyone will want to be his friend! show less
The protagonist of the EllRay Jakes series is African-American, but his race is not the focus of the book. Instead, this transitional chapter book series takes issues any kid may experience and approaches them with sensitivity and humor. In this first book, EllRay is being bullied in school and as a result his behavior in class is slipping. He must go a full week without getting in trouble, and in return his father will take the family to Disneyland. The results are quite clever, including show more his mother's reaction to his father's bribery. The resolution isn't perfect, but is unique and a surprise to both protagonist and bully. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 46
- Members
- 5,159
- Popularity
- #4,820
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 53
- ISBNs
- 249
- Languages
- 5































