Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Salem Main Library | J Moss, M. | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Dallas Public Library | + FICTION - MOSS | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... McMinnville Public Library | Moss, M. | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
If you haven't already met Amelia, what are you waiting for?
An ABA "Pick of the Lists" Book!
"Moss may have her name on the title page, but this is really Amelia's book....The feisty, make-believe nine-year-old takes on a life of her own". -- Booklist
"An on-target presentation". -- Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Amelia is so much fun, we wish she was the new kid on our block". -- Chicago Tribune
"Her notebook will be relished especially by young girls who will empathize with many of her emotions, but also by those teaching writing skills, journal-keeping, or helping children adapt to transitions". -- School Library Journal
Author Notes
Marissa Moss began as an illustrator of children's books. She is the author and illustrator of the Amelia series. She has written and illustrated more than 20 children's books including Amelia's Notebook, which was named a 1997 American Booksellers Association Pick of the Lists book. Her other books include Regina's Big Mistake and Knick Knack Paddywack.
My Notebook (with Help from Amelia) also won the 2000 Parent Council Outstanding Award Informational and Oh Boy, Amelia! won the 2001 Parent's Guide to Children's Media Award and the 2002 Children's Choice Award.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Moss (Mel's Diner) designs this upbeat, first-person story to resemble a real diary; the cover bears the familiar black-and-white abstract design of a composition book, decorated with color cartoons by Amelia, the book's nine-year-old ``author.'' Inside, on lined pages, Amelia writes about her recent move to a new town, doodles pictures of people she meets and saves such mementos as postage stamps and a birthday candle. She misses her best friend, Nadia, but her moments of sadness are balanced by optimism-she distracts herself by drawing and by writing short stories. In appropriately conversational terms, Amelia complains that her big sister invades her privacy (``So Cleo if you are reading this right now-BUG OFF and STAY OUT''); gripes about cafeteria food (``Henna says they use dog food. I believe it!''); and jokes in classic elementary-school gross-out fashion. Readers will understand Amelia's wish to put her ``top secret'' thoughts on paper, and they'll notice that even though she's uneasy about attending a different school, she's starting over successfully. An on-target presentation. Ages 7-up. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
Handwritten on blue-lined pages, Amelia's journal reveals her feelings about her family's move to a new town, including the misery of leaving her best friend, her adjustment to a new school, and a blossoming friendship with a classmate. The nine-year-old girl's candid comments about her older sister and her humorous captions for the childlike illustrations scattered throughout the pages will amuse readers. From HORN BOOK 1995, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Amelia is a bit smug and precocious, but then so are some of our favorite nine-year-olds. Her story is told in her own words, pictures, and handwriting in her own composition notebook (the design of the book supports this pretext). What she has to say is funny if unremarkable, but most importantly, she sounds like a real kid. Readers meet her as she moves to a new city, and follow her through her first days in a strange school with new friends. If this were an adult book, it would be labelled ``metafiction'' (or some other hip term that eventually means ``experimental''). Amelia scribbles notes in her margins about the writing process, revealing something interesting about creativity. Why not simply publish a real child's notebook? It's Moss's awareness of her material that allows her to thrust a narrative thread through the patchwork of doodles, postcards, memorabilia, and other icons of children's culture. The informality of the presentation may help demystify the writing process for others; Amelia's comments on the copyright page and elsewhere will certainly make them laugh. This is a carefully coordinated story that only seems like haphazard scribbling. (Picture book. 7+)
Booklist Review
Gr. 3-5. Moss may have her name on the title page, but this is really Amelia's book. The feisty, make-believe nine-year-old takes on a life of her own as she writes and draws her feelings about moving, starting a new school, and making new friends (some antagonism toward her older sister, Cleo, who "picks her nose with her little finger," sneaks in as well). A colorful riot of childlike drawings and lots of hand-printed text spill every which way across the pages. Both the language and the art style are on target for the age group--Amelia is droll and funny and not too sophisticated for her years; she's also poignant and real as she longs for her "far-away" friend and takes tentative steps to find one close by. --Stephanie Zvirin