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The Normal Kid

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Sylvan has been angry ever since his parents split up. And now that an embarrassing photo has appeared in the paper, he's stuck with a lame nickname too. Charity is back in the United States after several years in Africa. And she's learning that home can be a strange place when you've been away for a while. Neither of them knows what's up with Brian. He spends whole afternoons alone on his trampoline. From the first day of school, Sylvan knows he doesn't want to hang out with weirdoes like Charity or Brian. He'd rather just be a normal kid. But when the principal gets ready to fire their favorite teacher, Sylvan, Charity, and Brian have to find a way to work together.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 3, 2012
      Holmes (Tracktown Summer), in her third middle-grade novel, explores what it means to be an outsider through two distinctive voices. Though 10-year-old Sylvan is mocked by his fellow fifth graders for participating in environmental protests with his hippie mother, he insists that he's nothing like the two indisputable weirdoes in his class, Charity and Brian. Charity, whose family of missionaries has just returned to New York from Kenya in defeat, now feels like a stranger in her home countryâshe doesn't wear the right clothes and doesn't say the right things. When class presentations and the threat of losing a supportive teacher bring together Sylvan, Charity, and Brian (a highly intelligent loner with Asperger's-like characteristics), they develop a connection that is built on the individuality that sets them apart. Holmes constructs a sturdy story that examines preconceptions and the sting of social rejection, combined with credible character development. Sylvan and Charity's alternating perspectives reveal how taking chances on friendships can broaden and enrich one's awareness of the world. Ages 8â12. Agent: Sarah Crowe, Harvey Klinger.

    • School Library Journal

      September 1, 2012

      Gr 4-6-On the first day of fifth grade, two new kids walk into Sylvan's class and he thinks that they are both weird. Charity, having just returned from several years in Kenya, earns the nickname Preacher Girl for her religious upbringing and odd questions. Brian, known as the Trampoline Kid, behaves strangely, often making loud noises and constantly fidgeting. Sylvan, who beat up a fellow classmate last term, wants nothing more than to be considered normal. His mother, a social activist, doesn't make it easy for him, making him join her causes and picket lines. Then he's forced to socialize with Charity when their mothers become friends, and his teacher, Mr. In, pairs him with Brian for a social-studies class project. Intrigued by Charity's vibrant and complex past and youthful enough to want to join Brian on his trampoline, Sylvan empathizes and matures alongside these two different but good classmates. When the children think that their beloved teacher's position is in jeopardy, they bring their classmates together in an effort to save it. Sylvan and Charity take turns narrating, and readers will understand and relate to the social pressure they struggle to navigate and their desire to fit in.-Nicole Politi, The Ocean County Library, Lavallette, NJ

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2012
      In a changing world, what can "normal" mean? Lately, change has rocked Sylvan's world--and not in a good way: family breakup, an embarrassing newspaper photo and now a new fifth-grade teacher. Sylvan tells himself he's a "normal, average, everyday kid." Sylvan's classmate and co-narrator, Charity, has bigger changes to process: Her missionary dad's abruptly returned the family to the States after five years in rural Kenya. Now he works as a house painter and won't say grace. Charity's classmates think she's weird to shake hands with their teacher, but next to Brian, she is normal. Brian, on the autism spectrum (his depiction is realistic and low-key), makes loud noises in class, avoids eye contact and spends hours alone jumping on his trampoline. This well-told story captures a pivotal life experience: What we've assumed was permanent, bedrock reality can shift beneath us without warning. "Normal" changes. If it's a tough lesson, it's also liberating. Sylvan's mom drags him with her to protest demonstrations (hence that embarrassing photo). That's her normal--but is it Sylvan's? Charity's beliefs are her own, to keep or lose, whatever her dad believes. Pre-adolescent angst--funny, perplexing humiliating--is perennially fertile ground for middle-grade fiction. Holmes shows us where it comes from and where it can take us if we let it. (Fiction. 8-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      November 1, 2012
      Grades 5-7 Fifth-grader Sylvan is a self-described normal kid, while his classmate Charity has just arrived at school after five years of living in Kenya, where her parents were missionaries. Also new at school is a boy who exhibits Asperger's symptoms, which inhibit his interpersonal interactions. Told in the voices of Sylvan and Charity, this novel offers a well-balanced look at two kids who are realizing how events affect individualsand how they themselves are affected deeply by events they want to ignore. Without ever feeling overstretched, the story packs in a lot about what it's like to have an activist mom or an embittered former-preacher dad; how an excellent teacher can still lose students; and the dramatic impact that's possible when a bunch of 10-year-olds put the group's interests ahead of their own personal concerns. Fans of school stories by Gary Schmidt or Jerry Spinelli will find this engaging as well as thought provoking.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2013
      Despite acting out over his parents' divorce, Sylvan desperately wants to be a normal fifth grader and avoids weirdos such as "Trampoline Boy" Brian and Charity, a missionary's daughter from Kenya. A class project forces them to work together for the benefit of their favorite teacher, whose job may be on the line. The lesson--that there is no normal--is obvious, and yet, universally relevant.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.9
  • Lexile® Measure:780
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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