Hello, My Name Is Scrambled Eggs (Minstrel Book)

by Jamie Gilson

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Description

When his folks host a Vietnamese family that has come to settle in their town, Harvey enjoys Americanizing twelve-year-old Tuan.

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3 reviews
I really worried that this was going to be racist/culturally inappropriate and was really worried about reading it, but it ended up being really good.

The bully in the story ended up being so well-written I wanted to beat him up, just like I wanted to beat up all the bullies in my childhood (and never did because they were all bigger than me).

The best part for me was probably the end, the way things came together and Harvey and Tuan mature because of circumstances and come to recognize each other as ... individual persons.

Adrianne
Although intended to be humorus, this is also a story of intercultural relationships. Harvey and Tuan work through the difficulties of learning each other's language, often without the help of an interpreter. The story also highlights the often difficult academic issues kids face, such as Harvey being called "Zilch" because he can't seem to grasp math and frequently scores zeros on tests and quizzes. I also enjoyed seeing kids who do not give into peer pressure - in the case of Tuan agreeing to not call Harvey "Zilch", just because others do. It's a good story of quiet integrity.

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Author Information

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21 Works 1,825 Members
Children's author Jamie Gilson was born in Beardstown, Illinois on July 4, 1933. She received her B.A. from the Northwestern University School of Speech after starting out her education at the University if Missouri. Before becoming an author, she was a teacher, a staff writer and producer for the Chicago Board of Education radio station, a writer show more of Encyclopaedia Brittanica films, and was a monthly columnist for Chicago magazine. She wrote commercials for radio station WFMT in Chicago as well as writing film and film strips for Encyclopedia Britannica Films. Most of her novels are humorous contemporary works set in Illinois. She draws on her own childhood as well as visits to local schools for book ideas. As a child, she lived in Pittsfield, Illinois for a few years which later became the setting for two of her novels. Her book Wagon Train 911 was based on her experience of spending two weeks with an entire fifth grade class while they studied the Western Movement using total immersion. The students took pioneer identities, joined a wagon train, and made decisions concerning their trip. Her books have won numerous awards including the 2005 Prairie State Award for Excellence in Writing for Children presented by the Illinois Reading Council. Two of her books, Thirteen Ways to Sink a Sub and Do Bananas Chew Gum?, have won state child-voted awards from Florida, Ohio, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1985
People/Characters
Harvey Trumble; Nguyen Tuan; Quint Calkins; Jeff Zito

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Kids, Children's Books
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PZ7 .G4385 .HLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
310
Popularity
102,364
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.75)
Languages
Czech, English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
15
ASINs
5