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Is the movie "She's The Man" based loosely on this book?
 
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GouriReads | Mar 21, 2023 |
 
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lcslibrarian | Aug 13, 2020 |
In "Grandma's smile," Kim helps her grandmother grow pumpkins. Now that it is time for the jack-o'-lantern contest, Kim has to help her grandmother bring the last pumpkin to the festival. Kim marks her name on a special pumpkin, one that is bigger than the rest of them. While at the festival, the two get doughnuts, apple cider, and dance to the do-si-do. Kim and her grandmother were having a great time together. After that, they head over to the pumpkin tent to carve the pumpkin for the contest. Kim picks out her pumpkin without even looking for her name. Kim thinks about how she could carve the pumpkin, but she could not come up with anything. Suddenly, she remembers her grandma's smile. She draws the pumpkin's smile to resemble her grandma and then her grandma carves it out. The ending does not tell the reader whose pumpkin won the contest, but I don't think Kim cared anyway. This book was set in the 1990's and I can definitely tell because of the illustration. The song that the two danced to and the clothes they were wearing suggest that the setting took place during that time period. I love fall and the feeling it gives me. Instead of drinking cider, I love drinking hot chocolate with marshmallows. This book brings back childhood memories of carving pumpkins with my family. We would often have contests of whose pumpkin looked the scariest. No matter what, we were always having fun. Maybe the next time I carve a pumpkin, it will be of my grandma’s smile.½
 
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Sierra.Coupel | 2 autres critiques | Sep 23, 2016 |
Kim is a little girl who goes to visit her grandma. Kim and her grandma go to the fall fest and enter their pumpkin into the contest. At the end, Kim draws the pumpkin's smile and said that she got the smile from her grandma and her grandma says that Kim put her smile there. I thought that this story was so beautiful and heart warming. I loved it because we all need grandma.
 
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Klefort | 2 autres critiques | Nov 13, 2012 |
If our teacher doesn't have a special valentines on Valentine's Day. I am going to be so sorry ,'' Lexi said to AnnMarie. I say we can't let it happen.'' All of Lexi hopes for Miss. Delaney depend on Saturday night's Sweetheart Skate. The kids in the Valentine Club have work hard and everything is in place for the big surpise. What can go wrong?
 
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janique | Oct 7, 2011 |
See You Later, Excavator uses simple rhymes and well labelled photographs to introduce children to large construction machinery. While appealing as a read-aloud for pre-schoolers, this is an excellent introductory reading text for beginning readers, particularly boys. The photographs are full-page with text on the opposite page. Each machine is clearly labelled in the photograph, as well as being identified in the rhyming text. As a mom who doesn't know much about big machines, it was nice to be able to sit down with my son and learn something new with him.
 
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cmcvittie | Aug 11, 2010 |
Grandma’s Promise is a book about a little girl’s adventure in the winter at Grandma’s house. The snow comes and the electricity goes out. As Kim and Grandma make food for the animals, Grandma tells Kim how the buds on the plum tree are a promise that she will be back in the summer. Grandma sends ice skates home with Kim as a reminder that she can always come back to Grandma’s house.

I love books about relationships and this is a good one. The time they spend together not only connects Kim and her Grandmother but also her Mother. It’s a sweet story.

We could use this book to talk about how the animals don’t have food in the winter. We could make peanut butter pine cones to feed the birds and put outside on trees or send home for the students to hang on trees at their homes.
 
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kdelker | Mar 26, 2010 |
Though it seems to not flow well in places, this is a very warm, relaxing sort of story. I really enjoyed the mellow illustrations and the setting of a Fall festival at a country church.
If religious convictions lead you to shy away from celebrating Halloween in popular, conventional ways, this story is safe for you.
 
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patsila | 2 autres critiques | Sep 29, 2008 |
not a book that would encourage me to go looking for the sequel. A Female vampire living over the centuries searches for peace. Cliched and very mary sue.
 
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wyvernfriend | Nov 17, 2005 |
 
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hcs_admin | Nov 9, 2023 |
 
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BRCSBooks | Sep 3, 2011 |
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