Just Grace Goes Green
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
Grace can do a lot of things...but can she save the planet???? Or at the very least, can she help her best friend Mimi get her favorite stuffed animal back?
Lots of exciting things are happening to Grace and her friends. Most exciting of all, Mimi's older cousin Gwen is coming to stay with Mimi, and Miss Lois's class is GOING GREEN! For their "green" project, Grace and Mimi aim to inspire their friends and classmates to conserve plastic bottles. But a far more important issue is that Gwen has taken a strong liking to Mimi's favorite stuffed toy, Willoughby. Just Grace uses her empathy superpower to figure out ways to make her best friend feel better, and she makes a difference for the environment too. Yard sales, toy owls, decorated plastic water bottles, flaming onion rings, and a very entrepreneurial Sammy Stringer make this another winning entry in the JUST GRACE series.
Charise Mericle Harper
Charise Mericle Harper has written more than fifty books for children, not that she counted, but once when she was at school visit a kid put his hand up and said, “you wrote fifty-four books. I counted them on Amazon”. These books include chapter books, graphic novels, picture books and early readers, including the Crafty Cat, Fashion Kitty, and Just Grace series, and The Good For Nothing Button. Charise also wrote and illustrated the weekly comic strip Eye Spy. Charise is excited and slightly nervous to share Bad Sister with the world. It’s not easy to admit you were bad, even if now you are very, very good.
Read more from Charise Mericle Harper
Mae and June and the Wonder Wheel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Titles in the series (10)
Just Grace Walks the Dog Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsStill Just Grace Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace Goes Green Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace and the Snack Attack Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace and the Terrible Tutu Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace and the Trouble with Cupcakes Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace and the Super Sleepover Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace and the Flower Girl Power Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Just Grace Gets Crafty Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Just Grace Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for Just Grace Goes Green
12 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Enough facts about recycling to earn my respect, enough details about friends and feelings to seem apt for third-graders, but somehow the pace seemed breathless but the book long... which I found frustrating. I can imagine lots of kids liking it.... except this library copy is a decade old and doesn't look like it's been cracked open once. Hmm.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Just Grace Goes Green continues the adventures of elementary schooler, Just Grace, so named because of the multiple Graces in her class. In this 4th installment of the series, Grace’s class is learning about recycling, and her best friend, Mimi, has a cousin coming to visit.
While there are some amusing parts, such as when Grace goes shopping for a birthday present for cousin, Gwen,
“Mom said that she liked the present I picked out for Gwen so much that she thought I should have one too. Mom said it wasn’t fair for both Gwen and me to have one and not give one to Mimi. Then on the way home from the store Mom stopped at a bakery and we bought cupcakes. WHO IS THIS MOM? It was like a shopping alien had taken over her body or something,”
other humorous attempts fall flat, or appear to be targeted at adults. What elementary school reader will understand this reference to the Vapors 1980 hit, “Turning Japanese?”
“I could tell what we were going to have for dinner the minute I walked into the house. Mom has this silly way of asking Dad to order sushi for dinner. … When Mom wants sushi she plays her special sushi song on the CD player. I don’t really know what’s called but the main part of the song say, ‘I’m turning Japanese oh yes I’m turning Japanese I really think so.’ It’s kind of like their secret code.”
While a laudable attempt, much of the recycling message comes across as too academic. In several instances, the author uses Just Grace’s recycling or endangered species lessons to itemize factual information,
“6. Red pandas are endangered because their homes are disappearing. People are cutting down their trees to use the wood and then building farms and towns where the trees used to be.”
A final criticism is the author’s choice of Just Grace’s final recycling project – promoting the continuous use of disposable water bottles, decorating them to make them more attractive for re-use. I realize that there is no firm scientific backup for the claim that toxic chemicals may leach from disposable water bottles, however, there is certainly a suggestion that it may be possible. Given the fact that so many other recycling projects are possible, why did she choose this controversial one? Additionally, by having the characters decorate their bottles with glitter and glue; one can only assume that they won’t be well-washed before re-use.
Perhaps if I had read the earlier books, I would have formed a better bond with the main character and been slower to find fault. Overall, I think that the Just Grace series is popular (the many sketches and graphics interspersed throughout the story are simple and cute!) and has great potential for finding a loyal following of third and fourth grade readers; but for me, this particular title falls flat.
Book preview
Just Grace Goes Green - Charise Mericle Harper
Contents
Title Page
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Just Grace Goes Green
What Grace Will Be Thinking About In Her Next Book
Read More from the Just Grace Series
About the Author
Connect on Social Media
Copyright © 2009 by Charise Mericle Harper
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information address HarperCollins Children’s Books, a division of HarperCollins Publishers, 195 Broadway, New York, NY 10007.
clarionbooks.com
The illustrations in this book are pen and ink drawings digitally colored in Photoshop.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file.
ISBN 978-0-618-95957-0 hardcover
ISBN 978-0-547-24821-9 paperback
eISBN 978-0-547-39164-9
v4.0821
For my editor, Margaret Raymo,
who is patient, kind, and creatively cool!
The print edition of Just Grace Goes Green is printed on 100% recycled paper.
This means it . . .
1 contains 100% post-consumer fiber
2 is certified EcoLogo and processed chlorine-free
3 is certified FSC recycled
4 is manufactured using biogas energy
Using recycled paper instead of regular paper in Just Grace Goes Green helps the environment in the following ways:
1 Saves the equivalent of 17 mature trees
2 Reduces solid wastes by 1,081 pounds
3 Reduces the quantity of water used by 10,196 gallons
4 Reduces air emissions by 2,098 pounds
5 Reduces natural gas consumption by 2,478 cubic feet by using biogas
THINGS YOU CAN CHANGE
1 Your underpants. Hopefully every day and if you are a girl probably without your mother having to remind you about it one hundred and one times.
2 Your friends. Sometimes you might think that you have the perfect number of friends, but then you add a new friend to the list and suddenly you can’t believe that it used to be different, because now it seems so just right perfect, and just maybe even better than before.
3 Your mind. So that if you at first thought one thing, but then some time goes by and now you think another thing, then that’s okay.
THINGS YOU CANNOT CHANGE
1 Your family. Even if sometimes they absolutely and completely drive you crazy, and you can’t even believe you are really related to them.
2 Your messy room. No matter how much you clean it up, the new stuff you bring into it always makes it messy again. Though some rooms are more messy than others. Compared to Mimi’s room, my room is the castle of clean!
3 Your name on a teacher’s list, even if it is marked in pencil. I know this because I used to be called Grace, but now I’m called Just Grace, and it will probably be that way in my school life forever and ever. Plus, my name is now not even next to the other Graces’!
MY NAME IN MISS LOIS’S BOOK
MISS LOIS VS. ME
Miss Lois is my teacher at school. If her wants and my wants were in a wrestling match, her wants would always win. That’s how it goes with teachers and students. And that’s why my wants are sitting in the corner feeling sad. It’s no fun to always be the loser.
Even though my wants are the always-losers, I don’t hate Miss Lois.
THE NEW MISS LOIS
Miss Lois has been a more fun teacher lately. She used to be boring and serious most of the time, but now she is only those things some of the time. It’s a big improvement! I think it’s because she saw how much all her students loved Mr. Frank. He was fun 100 percent of the time. Mr. Frank was our student teacher, but he couldn’t stay with us forever because he had to go back to school to finish off getting his teacher license. It’s like a driver’s license, except when you get it you don’t get to do something fun like drive a car—you just get to stand in front of a classroom and talk.
Since Mr. Frank left, Miss Lois has been trying a lot of new things, and mostly that has been exciting for us. She likes to give out her new ideas on Monday mornings—that way she says we will be excited for the whole rest of the week about a fun, stimulating learning experience.
Stimulating means that the parts of your brain you use to learn stuff are excited and exploding like mini fireworks. Owen 1 said that Sunni’s head was probably going to explode one day, because she is the smartest kid in our class and she really likes learning. Then he started asking her lots of questions so she would use her brain and make it blow up right then and there.
Sunni just turned around and called him a peon. Of course, Owen 1 didn’t know what a peon was—none of us did. She is smart like that, and uses lots of words no one has ever heard of before. But for sure it was not a compliment, and since Owen 1 was being mean and is not one bit smart, I bet it meant something perfectly awful. I was definitely going to look it up in the dictionary. Mostly I don’t like looking stuff up, but it’s always good to know about new name-calling words, even if you’re not supposed to be using them. Just