What Parents Should Know
Like all of Clements' books, this one can lead kids to
examine aspects of their own school lives -- in this case, the
natures of popularity and leadership, the roles of teachers and
students in education, the workings of peer groups and school
institutions, and what makes for a meaningful performance.
Common Sense Media Review
Right now Andrew Clements is the king of the middle-grade
novel, for four reasons. Nobody knows the ins and outs of
elementary school life, and the workings of gifted students and
teachers, as well as he does. Nobody writes endings so purely
satisfying. Few are writing with this kind of depth and
emotional complexity for this age group. And Clements is the
leading, perhaps even the only, writer for kids of a genre one
might call Realistic Fantasy (think "The West Wing"), in which
things happen not as they do in real life, but as they
should.
Readers won't be able to put this book down, not because it is filled with action and suspense (it isn't), or to find out if the villain will win (there are no villains), but because it is, from beginning to end, so completely delightful, so satisfying, so right. It's the kind of book that makes the reader sigh happily after finishing it, then turn back to the beginning and read it again, just for the pleasure of it. It's a book that thousands of music teachers all over the country will be given as a holiday present by grateful students, a book that may inspire both teachers and students to new ideas and new understandings of each other. And, in a time when both movies and books seem to take delight in trashing the holidays and making fun of traditions, it's a book that will surely become a holiday classic because it does neither.
From the Book:
"Well, just wait until December twenty-second, a little
after seven-thirty. That's when the
real fun begins. ... Because from this moment on, the
holiday concert is all up to you. ... You don't like the songs
I've picked? Fine. Pick your own. You don't like the way I run
the rehearsals? No problem. Run them yourselves. You don't want
to sing at all? Then you can just stand up in front of your
parents and the rest of the school for half an hour and do
nothing. Who knows what will happen on December twenty-second?
Not me. Right now there is only one thing that I'm sure of. On
December twenty-second a little after seven thirty in the
evening, I will make sure that all of you are on that stage in
the auditorium. What happens once you're there ... that's all
up to
you."
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.



