Libraries, Schools Join In - School Library Journal
Log In to your Account                Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine


ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in a few seconds.

Library Journal: Library News, Reviews and Views

The Dunderheads by Paul Fleischman

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |

Wendy Lukehart, Washington DC Public Library -- School Library Journal, 06/10/2009

FLEISCHMAN, Paul. The Dunderheads. illus. by David Roberts. 56p. Candlewick. June 2009. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-0-7636-2498-9. LC 2008934579.

Gr 2-5–As long as children must endure the whims of tyrannical teachers, there will be an appreciative audience for a book such as this. Miss Breakbone suffers no fools; she refers to her class as "fiddling, twiddling, time-squandering...dunderheads!" Her militaristic form is capped by severe red hair and a menacing mouth; the latter is wide open and shrieking insults on the first page. Her alligator purse, warden-style key ring, and electric chair offer further inklings into her psyche. She makes Viola Swamp look like Glenda the Good Witch. When she confiscates Junkyard’s latest find and makes him cry, the class reaches the tipping point. They devise elaborate plans to retrieve the treasure from the teacher’s fortresslike home. The talents of the children in this diverse group are foreshadowed by their nicknames, e.g., Spider, Spitball, Google-Eyes, and Hollywood. Together, the Dunderheads are a formidable force, and Roberts’s quirky watercolor and ink interpretations of Fleischman’s deadpan humor and impeccable pacing produce hilarious results. The compositions are a pleasing mixture of busy scenes, with funny or important details rendered via judicious touches of color, gray washes, and black line work and ample white space. The spreads are sometimes defined by "panels," whose straight and curved lines form unexpected shapes and add another element of excitement to the dynamic diagonals and extreme perspectives. This book will raise an adult eyebrow or two, but young readers will relish each solution in this satisfying celebration of multiple intelligences, teamwork, and kid power.



E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |





 
Advertisement
-->

More Content

Blogs









Advertisements

-->

-->




About Us | Advertising Information | Submissions | Site Map | Contact Us | For Reviewers | RSS | Subscriptions
©2011 Media Source, Inc., All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc.