Friends Of The Library Spring Book Sale Kicks Off Wednesday power965.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from power965.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Perry High School teacher creates The Invincible Girls Club book series
A Perry High School English teacher, local mom and published author has a new series of books coming out aimed at shaping young readers. Author: Maureen Kyle Updated: 8:09 AM EDT April 26, 2021
CLEVELAND Who didn t love the
Babysitter s Club series while growing up? Or maybe all the Beverly Cleary books. Well, there s a new book series for your kids to read!
One of Perry High School s English teachers has created
The Invincible Girls Club. In this Mom Minute Monday, 3News Maureen Kyle got a chance to talk with author Rachele Alpine about her inspiration behind the books and how she hopes it will shape young readers.
04/23/2021 at 5:32 PM Posted by Kevin Edward White
By Rebekah Curtis, Public Discourse (Witherspoon Institute), April 14, 2021
Beverly Cleary did not make Ramona a specimen of moral improvement, or a Christian evangelist. She made her a Christian child. Unlike Christian families today, however, Ramona’s family lives a world in which traditional morality is the cultural default. Going to church makes you normal, and practicing Christianity garners social rewards. Christian life simply means living.
I met Ramona Quimby in third grade. My teacher introduced her to the class via Ramona the Brave maybe a strange choice, since Ramona is a lowly first grader in that volume of her story. But environmentally, the decision made sense.
Yoto is a podcast and audiobook machine built for kids engadget.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from engadget.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
After a year of isolation, Beverly Cleary’s 1983 Newbery-winning “Dear Mr. Henshaw” takes on new meaning, as protagonist Leigh navigates an unromanticized and bittersweet childhood full of loneliness and struggles against an elusive father figure. One look at Cleary’s book, and “Dear Mr. Henshaw” stands out as sad; far sadder than any of her other works. In fact, as she explained in a 2019 interview for WETA, Cleary wrote “Dear Mr. Henshaw” at the behest of two letters from children asking for a book about a child of divorce. “And I had never thought about it, but I said I’d give it a try,” she said.