Photo de l'auteur

Stephanie S. Tolan

Auteur de Surviving the Applewhites

35+ oeuvres 4,888 utilisateurs 150 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Stephanie S. Tolan

Surviving the Applewhites (2002) 3,016 exemplaires
Listen! (2006) 686 exemplaires
Welcome to the Ark (1996) 312 exemplaires
Applewhites at Wit's End (2012) 131 exemplaires
Wishworks, Inc. (2009) 114 exemplaires
Plague Year (1990) 83 exemplaires
Ordinary Miracles (1644) 59 exemplaires
Flight of the Raven (2001) 58 exemplaires
Who's There? (1994) 35 exemplaires
Save Halloween! (1883) 33 exemplaires
A Good Courage (1988) 28 exemplaires
The Face in the Mirror (1998) 27 exemplaires
Applewhites Coast to Coast (2017) 25 exemplaires
A Time to Fly Free (1983) 20 exemplaires
Bartholomew's Blessing (2004) 18 exemplaires
Sophie and the Sidewalk Man (1992) 14 exemplaires
The Last of Eden (1980) 13 exemplaires
The Great Skinner Strike (1983) 9 exemplaires
Grandpa and Me (1978) 9 exemplaires
The Witch of Maple Park (1992) 8 exemplaires
The Great Skinner Getaway (1987) 8 exemplaires
The Great Skinner Homestead (1988) 8 exemplaires
The Great Skinner Enterprise (1986) 7 exemplaires
Pride of the Peacock (1986) 7 exemplaires
The Liberation of Tansy Warner (1980) 6 exemplaires
No Safe Harbors (1981) 5 exemplaires
Out of Sync: Essays on Giftedness (2016) 2 exemplaires
Listen 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out (2008) — Contributeur — 349 exemplaires
The Big Book For Our Planet (1993) — Contributeur — 135 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1942
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
Charlotte, North Carolina, USA

Membres

Critiques

When an unscrupulous manager absconds with most of the Applewhite family fortunes, Randolph Applewhite hatches a plan to turn their finances around: hosting a summer camp for creative children. After all, their particular brand of insanity worked for Jake, who's now pretty much an honorary Applewhite. Between the lot of them, they can teach workshops in pretty much any art that kids could care to learn, and they have plenty of space in the cabins on-site (Wit's End, the Applewhite homestead, was once a motor lodge). They all dive into preparations, with E.D. coordinating schedules and everyone else planning curriculum and fixing up the property. Of course, what nobody thinks to do is arrange for permits from the state, so when a man purporting to be a state inspector shows up, everyone is thrown into a bit of a tizzy...

This is another fun foray into the world of the Applewhites. I knock off half a star for something unnecessary that happened at the very end of the book, but still, an enjoyable read for fans of the first book.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
foggidawn | 5 autres critiques | Apr 23, 2024 |
Jake Semple has been kicked out of every school he's ever attended -- in fact, it's rumored that he burned one of them down. Now, his only options are juvie or the Applewhites' Creative Academy. The Applewhites are like nobody Jake has ever met: a multigenerational conglomeration of artists who believe in creativity and independence. And then there's E.D., who shares none of her family's creative genius, but is instead the only one who appears to be capable of organization and administration. When Randolph Applewhite, E.D.'s father, agrees to direct a local production of The Sound of Music, it at first just seems like another layer to the chaos -- until Randolph hears Jake singing one day and insists that he has the voice he needs to fill an empty space in the cast. Jake gets his first taste of being part of a larger endeavor, but then the show is in peril when the technical staff walk off en masse, and the entire Applewhite clan dives in to lend a hand.

I would have read this book a lot sooner if I'd known it was about community theatre, you all. As it is, I rescued it from the discard pile at my library because it's a Newbery Honor book and gave it a perfunctory read. I love a story about a big, quirky, creative family (Hilary McKay's Casson Family series being my favorite example), and the Applewhites are that in spades. Plus, as stated earlier, books about theatre are catnip to me, so this was bound to be a hit. Even if those things aren't your specific jam, the plot, characters, and setting are bound to draw you in. Highly recommended to readers of middle grade fiction.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
foggidawn | 117 autres critiques | Apr 23, 2024 |
I Pearl Ruled this book at page 60. I don't like any of the characters, and even eccentric characters should be somewhat likable. The Penderwick and Blossoms (Betsy Byars) series have likable, 3 dimensional eccentric characters, so it can be done well. It wasn't here.

What really amazes me is this book won a Newbery. I don't see how.
½
 
Signalé
fuzzi | 117 autres critiques | Jan 13, 2024 |
3rd grader Max is very imaginative. He uses his imagination to escape from his problems (he's bullied at school, his parents have divorced, he doesn't have a dog).

One day Max imagines himself into the Wishworks, where he is promised that the wish he makes will come true in real life. Then the story turns into a version of the old story where the husband and wife get three wishes (the man wishes for a fish and the woman is mad at him so she wishes the fish on the man's nose and then they have to use their last wish to get the fish off the nose) only with a a dog.

It was a little boring for me because it was completely obvious what was going to happen, and lot of the story is taken up with Max's adventure fantasies, which do not contribute much to the story but may be enjoyable for kids who have similar fantasies (fighting dragons and stuff like that).

The black and white illustrations are very nice.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
LibrarianDest | 5 autres critiques | Jan 3, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
35
Aussi par
2
Membres
4,888
Popularité
#5,143
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
150
ISBN
136
Langues
3

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