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Book reviews for "Cole,_Brock" sorted by average review score:

George Washington's Teeth
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus & Giroux (Juv) (February, 2003)
Authors: Deborah Chandra, Madeleine Comora, and Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $11.20
List price: $16.00 (that's 30% off!)
Average review score:

WELL RESEARCHED AND WITTY
Here's the real truth on our first President's tooth! No, he didn't really have a set of wooden teeth. But, poor man, the Revolution wasn't the only battle he fought. We learn in this delightfully illustrated book that from the age of 24 he lost a tooth a year. Hence, by the time he reached the presidency there were only two teeth left. (Their whereabouts in his mouth seem to be unknown).

Based on historical records as well as Washington's letters and diaries this is a sprightly, fascinating account of the root of his problem (pun intended).

Youngsters will learn a bit of history as well as enjoy a rollicking good read. For instance, they'll learn about Washington crossing the Delaware, and that he then had only nine remaining teeth. He didn't have too many teeth to chatter during the frozen winter at Valley Forge as there were only seven left.

According to a letter Washington wrote he did at one time wear false teeth secured by wires hitched around his remaining teeth. His last set of dentures were made by a Dr. Greenwood, and carved from hippopotamus ivory.

This is a well researched book complete with excerpts from Washington's letters and diaries. Witty pastel illustrations enhance the text. For all ages.

- Gail Cooke

Fantastic fun, and history too!
Comora and Chandra have made a book to delight wordsmiths and history buffs alike. A verse narrative, each stanza informs by amusing. The great craft of the poem is never visible, but always in evidence -- none of the inane repetition that often informs such efforts is found here.
The whimsical illustrations are more than fine, and laid out to support and complement, rather than compete with the words.
A true delight for President's Day, and many others besides.
Bravi!


The King at the Door
Published in Paperback by Sunburst (September, 1992)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $4.95
Average review score:

classic picture book
Beautifully illustrated story, resembling a classic fairytale. The story is humorous, but has an important message. END


No More Baths
Published in Paperback by Sunburst (April, 1989)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $3.95
Average review score:

Jessie McWhistle has spunk!
My daughters and I enjoy this heartwarming story about a little girl who finds cleanliness to be quite loathsome. Brock Cole's illustrations are warm and depict Jessie's personality perfectly. After running away from home and "living" with a few farm friends she may find that baths aren't the worst things in the world-are they?


Celine
Published in Audio Cassette by Recorded Books (May, 1998)
Authors: Brock Cole and C. J. Critt
Amazon base price: $44.00
Average review score:

Portrait of the Artist as a Teenage Girl
In this book, Brock Cole introduces us to Celine Morienval, a sixteen-year-old high school student living in Chicago. Celine is a talented artist and all-around bright kid, who has a fairly good idea of what she wants to do. Her parents are divorced; her professor father has married one of his students, Catherine, who is only six years older than Celine. He has chosen to let stepmother and stepdaughter work out the details of their relationship while he attends to pressing academic business in Europe and remains an invisible presence throughout the story. Celine's has a well-developed sense of irony that she unleashes on her family situation with great humor. Her attitude towards family matters is remarkably mature.

Celine hopes to graduate from high school a year early, but is having trouble closing the deal. She has not fulfilled her athletic requirement and is under the gun to finish a paper on The Catcher in the Rye in order to pass English. She hopes to live her own life after graduation with friends in Europe, but has, at this point, neither a definite plan nor parental permission. When it comes to the nuts and bolts of life, she shows her youth and inexperience. Socially, she is well outside the confines of the female teenage "box." She has little interest in clothes, sex, drugs, rock'n'roll, etc. She relaxes by vegetating in front of the television.

Her time has been co-opted by Jake, an eight-year-old boy who lives in the next apartment and whose parents have separated. Celine always treats Jake kindly and respectfully, unlike his foolish parents. In doing so, she shows her essential good nature.

The novel ends before Celine can accomplish all her objectives. The plot deals mainly with the humorous obstacles that life places in her path. She maintains a remarkable narrative voice throughout the book (she is the narrator). In fact, it was impossible (for me) to separate her voice from that of the author, Brock Cole. This is by no means a defect of the book-it explains her remarkable fluency without detracting from her charm.

Hilarious, poignant, memorable; my favorite!
Brock Cole demonstrates an unparalleled poetry of language and an unforgettable sense of humor. A book populated thickly with absolutely realistic characters, from Celine herself to Lucile to Paul Barker. At once sad and hilarious, it ends as it should, undecided. I find myself recalling lines and situations from it often, even if I haven't read it in forever. My favorite for three years running! Deserves every single award it gets!

Hilarious!
This is one of the best Young Adult novels I have ever read. Celine is a fascinating character, and her outlook on life is refreshing and funny. Several passages made me laugh out loud, even on my third reading of it. The narrative is original, lively, and captivating. This book is a real gem.


Buttons
Published in Hardcover by Spoken Arts (December, 2001)
Authors: Brock Cole and David Hyde Pierce
Amazon base price: $26.95
Average review score:

Great for older children
This original fairy tale reads like a classic. The story is funny, and the illustrations support this humourous tone. There is plenty of detail in the pictures for older children to pore over. I would recommend this for 1st graders and up.

An Old Fashioned Fairy Tale
Brock Cole's, Buttons, begins...Once upon a time and after a very silly, funny, satisfying story, has a happily ever after, ending. Buttons will delight children of every age, as three daughters are sent out into the world, by their mother, to find new buttons for their father's trousers. Mr. Cole's beautiful water color illustrations add just the right old fashioned touch to this story. The perfect bedtime story for your little ones. Read and enjoy!

Thank heavens he's back!
Brock Cole began his career as author and illustrator of a number of lovely, marginally goofy picture books, illuminated with his own careful, exuberant watercolors. Mr. Cole took a break from picture book publishing to concentrate on chapter books for older kids (not that we mind - all 3 of his novels are themselves extraordinary achievements) but has returned with _Buttons_, his first picture book for more than a decade. This _Buttons_ is a particularly fetching send up of the fairy tale genre, replete with nobles, simpletons, paupers and princes, and blessedly full of Mr. Cole's sweet, ironic sensibilities. Let us hope that with his paintbrush freshly wetted Brock Cole will again decorate our bookshelves with a succession of similar charmers.


The Giant's Toe
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus & Giroux (Juv) (June, 1986)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $15.00
Average review score:

Very Good Book
The Giant's Toe is a tale with a moral, no matter how big you are, you can still be helped by someone that is much smaller. This story is about a giant who accidentally chops off his toe while hoeing in his cabbage garden. The toe ends up turning into a small boy when it's cut off, and the toe starts wreaking havoc. The giant is often annoyed with the toe, but the toe ends up helping him out in the end. I think that this is a very good book for people of all ages and can bring a smile to your face.

My kids absolutely love this book
I first saw this book in the public library. Everytime we went to the library, my oldest son, then 4, would head straight for The Giant's Toe every time. I found a copy in the bookstore and my kids still read it 2-3 times a week! It's not uncommon to hear "What are you doing, Toe?" in my house. This book is just a lot of fun.


The Goats
Published in Paperback by Farrar Straus & Giroux (Juv) (July, 1990)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $5.95
Average review score:

If you like adventure, you will like this book.
Being a twelve year old stranded on an island with no clothes and a person of the opposite sex might seem funny to the other campers, but to Howie and Laura its far from joke. Once left on a island together, these two children decide that the other kids are taking this joke too far, and that they will give them a taste of their own medicine. Escaping the island, and then running away from their camp, Howie and Laura are left with nothing. This forces them to steal, stow away on buses, break into houses/hotel rooms, and at times have to sleep out in the woods. This story is about a friendship that grows as two peope depend on eachother to survive. I enjoyed reading this book. Some of the parts you can tell would never happen. But the author understands what two teenagers would do in this situation. It keeps you on the edge of your seat. In every chapter something new happens that presents a problem to Howie and Laura. If you enjoy adventure, then you will enjoy this book.

Two teens find each other after being humiliated by peers.

As a voracious reader, I am always looking for a book that will take over my mind, my heart and my soul in one fell swoop. Imagine my surprise to find a book like this in a course on Children's Literature.

Brock Cole has written nothing less than a masterpiece. His book, The Goats, begins with two outcast, nerdy campers, a boy and a girl, who are stripped bare and left on Goat Island by their mean and nasty fellow campers. When they first find each other, naked and alone, they seem almost infantile in their needs. These two couldn't take care of themselves with clothes on, let alone off. Amazingly though, with the strength of their pride and humiliation behind them, they vow to get off the island and teach their fellow campers a lesson. What ensues is not quite plausible, yet totally believable. Abandoned not only by their camp mates, but on a much deeper level by their parents as well, these two goats manage to survive in the most extraordinary ways.

The most exceptional part of Cole's story is not how they survive physically, but how they survive mentally and emotionally. These two thirteen year olds, on the cusp of sexuality, develop an intensely intimate relationship. Cole has written something so beautiful, so adult-like, but it is doubtful that many adults ever really attain this level of intimacy. Literally stripped naked physically, the two characters find shelter and clothes within themseves, in their relationship with each other.

Anyone who wants to be touched in the deepest way, to come away from a book changed, will find the great satisfaction with Brock Cole's The Goats.

SURVIVING ON THE FRINGE OF SOCIETY
Wow, this book really holds your interest, hooking the reader's sympathy for the Boy and the Girl right from the start. You just Have to continue reading to see how they cope with sudden abandonment (supposed to be temporary) and decide to get even with the cruel kids at summer camp. Loss of clothing, money, self respect--just a malicious joke, you understand, to "punish" two social misfits.

Through no fault of their own, two pre teens were chosen to be their camp's annual sacrificial victims (i.e. goats), by being forced to spend a few embarrassing hours on a nearby island. Ha-ha--very funny to the terrified kids, who recognize their degrading situation and who ultimately reject the decision. Thus Howie and Laura (who did not even know each other) are forced to rely on each other's wits and daring (strengths they did not realize that they possessed) to reverse the kids' malicious decree. Not only to escape their dismal fate, but to survive on the outskirts of society for 3 days. They determine to get even, to pay them back for all the humiliation. Anything rather than endure the ridiule of returning to camp.

They decide to be proactive to preserve their own digntiy, to wait until the girl's mother comes up for Parents' Weekend. The plot rivets your attention for the kids must overcome incredible obstacles--posed by adutls and other kids--to live without the pale. It is unlikely that such social outcasts could be transformed so quickly into a cool "bandit" and a "fox wearing glasses", but the plot presents an interesting concept of social and physical survival. The book reads swiftly due to extensive dialogue, without the usual teenage platitudes. Their journey of self-discovery makes a fascinating read, with dark social undertones. For kids of all ages and adults harboring hurt kids inside. You will not be disappitned!


The Indian in the Cupboard
Published in Paperback by Camelot (07 September, 1999)
Authors: Lynne Reid Banks and Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $4.95
Average review score:

Great for people with imagination!
This book was amazing! I find many books that I liked but this one's in the top ten. Lynne Reid Banks must have a lot of imagination if she is able to create a full and exciting book with a boy and an action figure.
I remember that when I was growing up I always wanted to have my toys come alive. This story is terriffic and now that I have the sequel I can't wait to read it. I also plan on reading the other books. I got the list of this series and listed it below.

The Indian in the Cupboard

The Return of the Indian (the one I'm reading)

The Secret of the Indian

The Mystery of the Cupboard

The Key to the Indian.

I plan on reading all these books in order and enjoying them from cover to cover.

probably my favorite kid's book ever
Mrs. Bedwell read this book out loud to my third grade class, and years later as I finish up grad school it still holds a special place in my heart.
The adventure begins when Omri discovers that a magical cupboard given to him on his birthday brings to life plastic toys. When he animates Little Bear, a plastic indian that lived about the time of the French Indian War, Omri's perspective on life changes.
What's special about this book is the how resectfully and seriously it takes the it's young characters and their conflicts. Omri and his friend Patrick discover that Little Bear is no toy, he is a real human being with actual life experiences. He has killed people, eats and sleeps, and remembers his own life and culture. As the two boys deal with the reality of keeping a real person concealed from others, they realize that they can't trifle with others' lives. It is this realization, and Omri's ultimate decision regarding Little Bear that make this a lovely coming of age story. Omri and Patrick learn to repect others and their beliefs.
Although Little Bear, the Native American toy brought to life is called an Indian, this book, I feel, is not chracterized by racism or stereotypes. Little Bear is not a western move redman, he's a real human being with a real human personality, and portrayed respectfully and realistically (as much as he can be, considering the plot).
This book is a definite must read for any kid, or kid at heart, who wonders what would happen if toys came to life.
"The Indian in the Cupboard" is one of four books, thought this one is the best. The final book, in which readers learn what makes the cuboard magical in the first place, detracts from the magic amd mystery of the first three books.

This book is a magical return to childhood fantasies
One of the best read aloud books ever, Indian in the Cupboard takes us on a magical journey to childhood where fantasies seem real. A young boy is in charge of a tiny, feisty indian whom he keeps in a special cupboard with a key that only he holds. He learns the excitement, value and caretaking responsibility of another human being. The imagination and detail draw the reader right into the story. As a school teacher and mother, I have experienced an emotional bonding with my students and son through this book. My son, 9 at the time, put his hands over his face and said, "Mom, this is my favorite book in the whole world." I felt a surge of joy as I watched my son become hooked on reading. One student unknowingly gave Lynne Reid Banks a wonderful compliment when I attempted to show the class a sketch of a picture in the book..."No! Don't show us the pictures!", and quickly covered his face. The descriptions and story-line of this book make it a DON'T MISS for your child's growing up years! RaNae Palme


The Facts Speak for Themselves
Published in Hardcover by Front Street Press (December, 1997)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $16.95
Average review score:

review of this book
Sex, violence and other mature themes can all be found within the pages of The Facts Speak for Themselves by Brock Cole. This book tells us the story of a young girl by the name of Linda who is 13 years old. She tells the of her life for the last couple of years because of the death of two family friends. During this Linda lives in various southeastern states and attends various schools. The main problem she is dealing with is the separation from her mother and two younger brothers. This book fits into the young adult fiction, another book I've read in this genre is Go ask Alice. Some of the things these books have in common are that they are both young adult girls (teenagers), they both live in modern times and they both deals with the death of others in the book. One of the reasons that I chose this book is because it looked like it might be interesting and I had to read a book for class. This book should be read by a mature teenager or young adult because of the sexual content of this book. Due to the writers plot development I found the book hard to put down.

These Are The Facts
"The Facts Speak for Themselves" was a pretty good book. I wouldn't recommend it for younger kids who can't handle sex or violence though. I'd probably recommend it to teens 13-18.

The story is told in Linda's point of view. It is different because the story actually starts out with the conclusion, and the rest of the story tells what lead up to what is in the beginning (that sounds confusing, but once you read it, you will understand). Linda is a thirteen year old girl who was witness to the murder of her lover, who is twice her age. The killer, was actually her mother's boyfriend who was living with them. Linda tells the events in her life from the time she was little up until the murder, consisting of a very dysfunctional family life and a lot of moving around. The book was good all-in-all, but not really for children.

painfully real bibliotherapy
: This book is extremely well written and affecting. Since this book contains a realistic portrayal of sexual and emotional abuse, The Facts Speak For Themselves would be an excellent choice for bibliotherapy. I would recommend that a teenager have someone trusted to talk over the subject matter of this book. In fact, this book could be so upsetting that a person who reads this book might need a professional counselor.

Evaluation: The Facts Speak For Themselves by Brock Cole contains a sad and powerful story. Cole writes in a beautiful and simple style that gives us access to Linda's inner thoughts. The protagonist in this book, Linda, is a victim of years of psychological, sexual and emotional abuse. This abuse is so normal for Linda that she does not recognize it as abuse. As she describes her situation Linda writes in a flat tone about taking care of her little brothers, being molested and watching the murder of her adult lover. It is heartbreaking to see adult after adult either abuse Linda or not offer her any help. Although this is a sad book, in the end Linda is removed from her situation and in a group home. Linda seems relatively happy in the home and she is grateful for the small things like having access to pencils. This ending puts a happy ending on the book that otherwise could make a reader lose all hope.


Larky Mavis
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus & Giroux (Juv) (August, 2001)
Author: Brock Cole
Amazon base price: $11.20
List price: $16.00 (that's 30% off!)
Average review score:

Disturbing
I purchased the book for a young cousin and after reading it decided it wasn't appropriate. The book was disturbing with references to Larky Mavis's "baby" as a deformed bird and other descriptives that I found odd. While the descriptions of Larky's find are surprising, the characters in the book were very traditional (mostly men as professionals like the doctor and others Larky runs into). It seemed like a book for a young girl, but the role models were all men. The ending of the story is anti-climatic and doesn't provide much closure (the winged creature simply lifts Larky up into the sky). I was very disappointed with the purchase.

A Review of Brock Cole's Book Larky Mavis
Denise Welcsh
Children's Literature
Professor Jen Welsh
19 November, 2001
A Review of Brock Cole's Picture Book Larky Mavis
Brock Cole's picture book Larky Marvis, at first glance, reminds myself of a pastoral Norman Rockwell setting. A tall, freckled-faced red haired girl stands in the middle of a grassy field with pink and yellow butterflies about while she holds on to a sack which appears to have a rabbit or a angel's wings poking out at the sides. The sack is the most intriguing item I first see. The wondering and imaging what is in the sack I believe to be the thing that beckons the reader to open the book.
The story begins rather harmlessly with a girl named Mavis who is walking down a dirt path and stumbles upon three peanuts. She decides to eat them one by one. The first tasting like liver and onions and the second tasting like bread pudding and the third with what she believes to be a baby. She then shows the teacher of the nearby school and he believes she is showing him and his students a worm. Although, the teacher calls her baby a worm she decides to keep it in her pocket. The next Sunday Mavis takes her baby to the parson and asks if he can christen her baby, in the basket, she calls Hearts Delight. The parson is outraged and tells Mavis he can not baptize a mouse and tells her to run along. The next person she meets is the Doctor with Hearts Delight in a sack. She asks him if he could help the baby to say "Ma". Doctor is also outraged and says to her I can not make your bat say "Ma" because he does not think it fit for animals to be talking. As Hearts Delight grew, Mavis had to feed her baby potatoes and cabbage and whatever Hearts Delight didn't eat Mavis gave away. Every one in the town became very upset with Mavis and the thing in her sack and wanted to do something about it. They all tried to make Mavis believe that they were going to take her baby away and care for it elsewhere. But Mavis remembered how no one wanted to help her and Hearts Delight while it was growing up and she ran away with Hearts Delight. On the way, she met the teacher, the parson, the doctor and they all wanted Hearts Delight for their own selfish purposes. But in that instant when they were all grabbing on to her and Hearts Delight, it called for her to "Let Go Ma" and off Mavis and Hearts Delight flew into the sky.
With the pastoral Norman Rockwell images and the beautiful story of a young girls peanut baby, the story draws on simple times and simple things. Although the story seems to be very untraditional, the pictured and images are of time long forgotten by most, of a person on their porch reading The Saturday Evening Post .

Lovely, Whimsical Story.....
"Down the road came Larky Mavis, mooning about, mooning about." She's a kind-hearted, simple minded, ragtag of a woman with a mop of red hair. She trips over three peanuts, eats two, and when she opens the third, finds what she's convinced, is a baby inside. She names it Heart's Delight because it makes her glad and carefully feeds and nutures it, carrying her baby with her in a basket, wherever she goes. Soon, Heart's Delight has grown so large that Larky Mavis wraps it up in an old tablecloth and carries it on her back. The townspeople, at first show contempt and disdain for Mavis and Heart's Delight, calling her baby, when they get a peek, a mouse, a deformed bird or maybe a bat and as it grows, a turkey in molt, a calf and a half or even a dragon and try to take Heart's Delight away from her. But Mavis is its mother and protects it with all her might. As the townspeople descend, a voice is heard from the wrapped bundle we've never seen, "Let Go My Ma!" and Heart's Delight finally appears to save the day..... Brock Cole has authored a clever and appealing modern day fairy tale with a simple message about tolerance, that won't be lost on young readers. The gentle and engaging text is complemented by his evocative and detailed watercolor artwork in subdued tones and youngsters will be entranced as they watch and wait for a hidden Heart's Delight to finally appear. Perfect for children 4-8, Larky Mavis is a masterpiece, sure to become a classic, and a wonderful addition to all home bookshelves.


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