JavaScript must be enabled on your browser for this PAC to work properly.

Syracuse City School District logo Syracuse City School District
725 Harrison Street •  Syracuse, New York 13210 
Databases
Easy Databases
NonPublic Databases
Websites
Easy Websites
NBC Learn K-12
Mackin Via/ Ebooks
Teacher Websites
Reading Lists
Portaportal
SRI
Earobics
SAM
Treasures
Naviance
Post Standard e-Edition
Syracuse.com
News Websites
Author Websites
ELA Live Binder Shelf
SCSD Home
HomeWebmail 7LMS Live BinderMoodleTeachersLMSParentsCalendarWebsitesDirectorySLSOCPLLS2 Circ
Search ALL Syracuse Libraries:    
Go to the new Kid's Catalog A new way to search! Una versión española del catálogo de la biblioteca. A spanish version of the library catalog.
 

Miracle Wimp

by Eric P. Kraft


Syndetic Solutions - [Book Review for 9780316011655]

Book Review

:

Publishers Weekly :

Terms of Use:

A Captain Underpants for the older bunch, Kraft's (Lenny and Mel) comedic riff on male adolescence is as nerdy and hormonally driven as they come. Written like an illustrated journal of sorts with titles for each page-length entry and in often fragmented sentences, the book reads like a haphazard, stream-of-consciousness rant—one 10th-grader's perspective on high school in a small Massachusetts town. My last name is Mayo, and I can't help but wonder if it were something different, would the Donkeys [the jocks] just ignore me? Maybe. But instead I'm Miracle Wimp, the narrator reports. He comments on everything from the varieties of wedgiesand the tortures of gym class to the difference between the cool kids and the dorks, to the nerves and eventual irritation that accompany his first date, to going to (and actually having fun at) the prom. Kraft rarely dips below the surface on any of these issues, preferring instead to try to see the humor (or the pathos) in it all. While girls may not get into the narrator's sensibility, boys who enjoy series of short takes—especially those infused with slapstick and sarcasm—will find this virtually plotless book a quick and entertaining read. Illustrations not seen by PW. Ages 12-up. (Aug.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

distributed by Syndetic Solutions, LLC.:
Syndetic Solutions - [Book Review for 9780316011655]

Book Review

:

School Library Journal :

Terms of Use:

Gr 8 Up—Tom Mayo hopes his sophomore year as a middling geek will improve with the help of two buddies, coffee, a car, and, perhaps, a girlfriend. In brief vignettes and accompanying drawings, Tom, called Miracle Wimp because of his last name, shares bits and pieces of high school life, describing Donkeys (beefy bullies), Heads (smoking druggies), and Wood Shop with weird Mr. Boort. Kraft brings deadpan commentaries to life through Tom's funny, doodled artwork. While the drawings consistently deliver comical (and sometimes poignant) punch lines, connecting text and art creates a lag and readers experience laughter almost as an afterthought. Tom's first-person account also undermines potentially comedic episodes as he tediously describes how other people find him funny. Readers find flashes of humor primarily in his drawings, not in his words. Tom's narration does effectively capture what it's like to just miss the mark of cool, an experience shared by most high school students. Like a comic strip, the teen's riffs and sketches work best when read individually, with time to digest and chuckle over clever moments. Readers who have trouble concentrating, an artistic hand, or a wry sense of humor will enjoy jumping in and out of Tom Mayo's amusing anecdotes.—Shelley Huntington, New York Public Library

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

distributed by Syndetic Solutions, LLC.:
Syndetic Solutions - [Book Review for 0316011657]

Book Review

:
BookList :

From BookList, , 2007, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

:
Terms of Use:

Tom Mayo chronicles a high-school year in which he makes and abandons friends, endures wood-shop class, copes with the bullying Donkeys, and acquires a driver's license and a girlfriend. In short appropriately titled first-person entries, he perfectly captures the insecurity and self-consciousness of his age. Often humorous, these vignettes also show Tom's social growth. At first he is only vaguely aware that teasing Larry, a special-ed student, is wrong. But Tom is a decent kid at heart, and his response to Larry's accidental death is to move away from the friends who made fun of the boy. Later Tom comes to recognize that picking on someone even lower in the social pecking order makes him no different from the Donkeys he hates. Tom's observations of the high-school world's factions and the complex social dance called going out together ring true. Easy, engaging reading with a serious side. Illustrated with the author's sketches. Isaacs, Kathleen.

:
distributed by Syndetic Solutions, LLC.:

Back

 

Go to Kid's Catalog Web
Powered by: YouSeeMore © The Library Corporation (TLC)