100 Days and 99 Nights Guided Reading Level
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At least, I think I have, because most of the colorful local details Alan Madison has put in this book have nothing to do with MY hometown. Especially the nonsense about people around here speaking with a Southern drawl, since most of the folks in this area come from elsewhere. And if you come from Mankato, Minnesota, or Oklahoma City, or even :) the Bronx, you don't sound Perhaps I am prejudiced against this book because it is set in Alexandria, Virgina and I have lived in the area for 20 years.
At least, I think I have, because most of the colorful local details Alan Madison has put in this book have nothing to do with MY hometown. Especially the nonsense about people around here speaking with a Southern drawl, since most of the folks in this area come from elsewhere. And if you come from Mankato, Minnesota, or Oklahoma City, or even :) the Bronx, you don't sound like you came from the bad remake of Gone With the Wind...
But that's as maybe. This book is filled with stereotypes--people in Korea are all "the color of toasted marshmellows", while I note there is NO color comparison for people in Germany. The language is stilted. There are attempts at sounding like a 7 year old--saying "Hamburger" for Hamburg, but overall, the voice here sounds like an adult male writer, not a 7 year old girl.
Perhaps this book might bring some comfort to kids whose parents are deployed overseas. But I think there are better titles out there for that purpose--if books HAVE to have a purpose-- and a meaningful theme doesn't make up for an awkward piece of writing.
...moreFor children whose parents are in the military and have to handle this exact situation I
100 Days and 99 Nights is the story of Esme, a second-grader whose father is in the military and must leave for a tour of duty for 100 days and 99 nights. Esme narrates the story and I found myself completely absorbed in her journey as she navigates through the days without her father. The supporting characters of her mother, brother and Grandpa are well-defined and just as real as Esme in voice and action.For children whose parents are in the military and have to handle this exact situation I cannot imagine a better story to help them identify and express their own feelings. Esme's story is just as applicable to those of us who have not had the specific experience of a parent leaving for a military tour of duty. Anyone who has had to deal with the absence of a loved one for an extended period of time will feel the similarities in both Esme's sad and joyful moments.
The thing I like the best about Esme's story is that Esme does not simply suffer passively through her time without her dad. She actively finds things to do and think that help her move through the time in a way that creates love and support for those around her. She also finds a way to help her father and his fellow soldiers in a tangible way, which, in turn, helps her feel an active participant in bringing him home.
Esme is a great example for children AND adults of the choices we can make to buoy up those around us in difficult times, while still acknowledging our own fears and feelings of sadness. I think most of us usually feel better and stronger when we can do something that contributes in a very real way to a situation that feels out of our control; Esme is a dynamite role model in this area!
Esme's voice is genuinely that of a seven or eight-year-old. Her frustrations with the things grown-ups say and do will ring true to all her readers. Both her worries and her acknowledgement of her feelings and her fears also resonate with their honesty. As an older sibling myself I absolutely identified with both Esme's frustrations with and affections for her little brother Ike.
I think this is an excellent option for a read-aloud in a 2nd or 3rd grade class. It's also a great bedtime/family reading choice. Its advantages for any military family living through a similar situation are obvious, but it also provides a great platform for discussion about what we can do here for the men and women serving our country away from home, about feelings of loss, how to deal with serious worries, and about how families can love and support each other.
I am grateful this book was a Lovelace Award nominee. I don't think I would have chosen to read it otherwise and I am very glad that I did! I definitely recommend this book as either a read-aloud or an independent reading choice.
...moreI have issues with the narrative voice, especially when I found out that this first-person narrator is a 2nd grader (even if it is
Although I like this one, I have quite a few "issues" as well. I like it because it presents a contemporary soldier's family and what the children go through (fairly young -- 2nd grade and kindergarten) -- and what the mother goes through -- to try to hold everything together when the father has to do a tour of duty in the desert land. The tone is quiet and soothing.I have issues with the narrative voice, especially when I found out that this first-person narrator is a 2nd grader (even if it is looking back after 100 days...) Highly figurative and symbolic lines like these: p. 92 "... I watched the wall clock's thin black second hand collect minutes on its march toward dismissal." and p. 98 "Silent as fish, we traveled the hall upstream into the rush of students heading home." gave me pause. The adult, writer-y, authorial voice interferes with my belief in this 7-year-old character. (And earlier on in the book where she claims that she does not remember anything when she was 2 or 3 and then went on in quite some details describing certain events and how she felt at the time of those events also threw me off.)
On p. 63, the author tries to be very gentle about the casualty of war: "The days were difficult because that was when you were told bad news. When Principal Pershing poked her partly gray, all-the-way curly head into class we all held our breaths - one girl sent home -- one boy sent home. We were all so very brave. It was our duty." I wonder about how a young reader about the age of the protagonist would interpret and parse out the semi-hidden messages in this paragraph.
The chapter lead-ins with all her stuffed animals from A to Z do not tie in with the chapter each leads in. After a while, one stops caring about where and how she obtained each animal or what meaning each has for her so one could get on with the "story" which meanders (appropriately so, given the circumstances and the subject.)
...moreEsme is a second grader with an A-Z collection, literally, of stuffed animals. Each Ordering this book blindly through Scholastic, I was interested in all of the children's books being written lately about the war in the Middle East. I knew nothing about the book, but was purely interested in the topic. Having now read it, I would tentatively place it in my classroom library for my lower readers. I think a handful of those still struggling (dyslexic or ESOL population) might find it interesting.
Esme is a second grader with an A-Z collection, literally, of stuffed animals. Each chapter begins with the details of how her animals came to join her menagerie: "Goat: My dad's best buddy is Supply Sergeant Gabe Sutler. Dad says he has known him since "basic" (which is the beginning of being in the army). Gabe's job is to make sure every soldier has everything they need, from butter to bullets. By accident, a company once sent Gabe a box of stuffed goats instead of a crate of overcoats. This was unlucky for the army but lucky for me." (p. 39) Being the child of an Army sergeant hasn't been easy for Esme and her family. There are frequent moves to sometimes exotic locations, but her dad manages to keep everyone in ship-shape order thanks to his military affection of routines. When her father is shipped out to the war (for only 100 days and 99 nights?), Esme is left to hold the fort with her mom and brother. Will she be able to help her mom and brother Ike, or will missing her dad overshadow her days and nights?
Told with simple language in the voice of a seven year old, I do think most of my readers would not dain to pick it up. This book is better suited for a younger reader than my own who WOULD find the plot and language choice interesting. A recipe for Esme's dad's famous pancakes (with yogurt) can be found at the end of the book, for the culinary artists. ...more
Esme's father is a sergeant in the United States Army. Her family has lived in locations like Korea, Kenya, and Germany. Now they are settled in the United States and they enjoy spending time together as a family.
During one of those happy times her father announces that he must leave for duty. 100 days and 99 nights is a long time, but he knows that Esme will do her best to help her mother. Esme sends her treasured baby blanket along with him.
Daddy is
Reviewed by hoopsielv for TeensReadToo.comEsme's father is a sergeant in the United States Army. Her family has lived in locations like Korea, Kenya, and Germany. Now they are settled in the United States and they enjoy spending time together as a family.
During one of those happy times her father announces that he must leave for duty. 100 days and 99 nights is a long time, but he knows that Esme will do her best to help her mother. Esme sends her treasured baby blanket along with him.
Daddy is never far from Esme's thoughts. He misses things like her class play and soccer games, but Esme has the hardest time when he's not there to tuck her in at night or make breakfast on Saturday mornings. Grandpa tries to fill in but it's not the same.
At school the students discuss what they can do to help the soldiers. They want to plant a victory garden but that will have to wait until spring. They collect scrap metal and Esme is featured in a newspaper article showcasing their efforts. Daddy is so proud!
100 days and 99 nights is a long time, especially when things don't go so well. Esme becomes angry when daddy's not around. She knows he's a strong, brave person who is doing a great job, but she's counting the days until he comes home!
This is a poignant book about the impact of war on those who are left behind that even younger children will be able to relate to.
...moreNobody really talks about the fact that some Daddies come back hurt or not at all. It's always an
RL 970. A really sweet book for young children with parents in the service. 2nd grader Esme tries her best to be brave when her Army Sargent father does a tour of duty. So much changes when Dad is away-- from the pancakes they eat every Sunday, to the tuck-in routines and the funny stories and word-play. Nothing is the same. So she and her family find things to do and ways to cope with his absence.Nobody really talks about the fact that some Daddies come back hurt or not at all. It's always an unspoken possibility. It's mentioned lightly in the book--the way it's probably known at home.
Very sweet book. Makes you want to sacrifice and do something special for all of our servicemen and women who are missing their families while they are serving our country.
...moreThe chapters are named for the stuffed animals alphabetically and include the story of how each was added to her collection. The book gives a glimpse of This novel features Esme a second-grader whose father is a career soldier. The title refers to the length of a tour of duty, which Esme's father goes away on for a good portion of the book. Esme is a cute little girl, with the usual sibling issues with her younger brother Ike, a good attitude about school and friends and a zoo of stuffed animals.
The chapters are named for the stuffed animals alphabetically and include the story of how each was added to her collection. The book gives a glimpse of the life of a armed forces child and shows positive family situations. ...more
She is in the 2nd grade, and has a collection of stuffed animals.
We are not a military family.
She has chosen the rating above, of 4 stars for "it was amazing".
Her chosen reading lists generally consist of books like
Charlotte's Web(read 3 times), The Secret Garden, and Litt I personally only read the first chapter of this book, and knew immediately that my oldest would enjoy it. She noticed it on the bookshelf before I had a chance to read it any further, and finished it in an evening + a day.
She is in the 2nd grade, and has a collection of stuffed animals.
We are not a military family.
She has chosen the rating above, of 4 stars for "it was amazing".
Her chosen reading lists generally consist of books like
Charlotte's Web(read 3 times), The Secret Garden, and Little House on the Prairie series. ...more
describes the life of a little girl whose father is on a tour of duty in the military
This is the story Esme, Ike and their family.
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100 Days and 99 Nights Guided Reading Level
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