More
of Robin Smith’s Favorite
School Stories
Marianthe’s Story: Painted Words
/ Spoken Memories written and illustrated by Aliki
64 pp. Greenwillow
Review 9/98
The story of a young immigrant girl from an unnamed country is told
in a pair of back-to-back picture books. The first describes Marianthe’s
adjustment to her American school; the second (arrived at by flipping
the book over) allows the girl to tell her own story of why she
and her mother came to this country. Aliki’s drawings are
warm and expansive, giving heart to the somewhat purposive text.
Grade level: K–3.

Ramona the Pest written by
Beverly Cleary, illustrated by Lois Darling
192 pp. Morrow
Review 8/68
Eight- or nine-year-olds who can look back upon their kindergarten
days will smile knowingly at Ramona’s first encounters with
school life. Ramona does not submit to the process of education
without a struggle, and the skirmishes, vividly described, will
remind the young reader of the child he once was (or wished he had
dared to be!). The author has a sure instinct for the thought and
expression of five-year-olds. Grade level: K–3.

First Day Jitters by Julie
Danneberg, illustrated by Judy Love
32 pp. Charlesbridge
Review 10/00
In spite of Mr. Hartwell’s entreaties, Sarah Jane Hartwell
does not want to start her first day in a new school. Like all newcomers,
she worries about having to begin again and wonders if there will
be nice children in her class. But the ending reveals that Sarah
is not a new student — she’s the teacher! Lively line
and watercolor illustrations bring Sarah’s plight to life.
Grade level: K–3.

Lilly’s
Purple Plastic Purse written and illustrated by Kevin Henkes
32 pp. Greenwillow
Review 9/96
Enchanted with school, Lilly wants to be a teacher until one fateful
Monday when she gets in trouble. She plots her revenge until her
teacher’s final gesture, a thoughtful note and a packet of
tasty snacks, makes her feel miserably small. With help, Lilly puts
her world to rights in a sensitively crafted, dazzlingly logical
conclusion. A skilled caricaturist, Henkes conveys variations in
mood with economy and charm. Grade level: K–3.

Chrysanthemum
written and illustrated by Kevin Henkes
32 pp. Greenwillow
Review 9/91
Young mouse Chrysanthemum loves her name — until she starts
school and finds the teasing of her peers unbearable. Then the beloved
music teacher, Mrs. Delphinium Twinkle, announces that she plans
to name her baby Chrysanthemum, and suddenly everyone wants to be
named after a flower. Another very engaging female protagonist from
Henkes. Grade level: K–3.

Starting School written by
Johanna Hurwitz, illustrated by Karen Dugan
102 pp. Morrow
Review 9/98
The twin brothers of Lucas Cott (of the Class Clown series) are
put in separate kindergartens in the same school. Marcus and Marius
decide to switch places to settle an argument about who has the
better teacher, but on the same day, their teachers decide to switch
places to settle their own argument. This is irony at its humorous
best for young readers, who will delight in anticipating the inevitable
chaos. Grade level: K–3.

Running the Road to ABC by
Denize Lauture, illustrated by Reynold Ruffins
32 pp. Simon
Review 5/96
Six children run “on the Road to ABC” to beat the rising
sun to their school. Though there is little story, the rich lyrical
language used by Lauture, a Haitian poet, creates a strong sense
of place, while imagery and patterns of text build tension. Warmly
detailed gouache paintings propel the reader to the next page in
this optimistic glimpse of Haitian children working for a brighter
future. Grade level: K–3.

Once upon an Ordinary School Day
by Colin McNaughton, illustrated by Satoshi Kitamura
32 pp. Farrar
Review 3/05
In this parable of the awakening imagination, an “ordinary
boy woke from his ordinary dreams . . . had an ordinary
pee . . . and ate his ordinary breakfast.”
At school a colorful new teacher demands that the class listen to
music and record what they imagine. While the art bursts into joyful
color, the boy begins to write; “and he was lost, lost in . . .
the storytelling game. And it was extraordinary.” Grade level:
K–3.

Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken
Identity written and illustrated by Mo Willems
48 pp. Hyperion
Review 11/07
When Trixie (older and more verbal than in Knuffle Bunny)
spots preschool classmate Sonja with a Knuffle Bunny look-alike,
the girls fight, and the bunnies are confiscated. Their teacher
reunites each girl with her toy . . . or so it seems.
Cartoon-style characters are set against black-and-white photographs
of an urban neighborhood. Willems’s page design and animation-inspired
panel illustrations are visually dynamic. Grade level: Preschool.

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