Home :: Books :: Children's Books  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books

Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Utterly Me, Clarice Bean (Junior Library Guild Selection)

Utterly Me, Clarice Bean (Junior Library Guild Selection)

List Price: $15.99
Your Price: $10.87
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It's our new favorite
Review: I had to put it down by page ten; I cannot imagine anyone caring to read something so overflowing with the word "utterly," and when the words started spiraling around the pages, forget it. It may work with easy picture books, but not for juvenile fiction. Also, the story line is vacuous, at least the first ten pages! Sorry--this one is not worth the effort.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A schoolgirl detective determined to solve mysteries
Review: It's not easy to concentrate at school when mysteries are happening, especially if you're a schoolgirl detective determined to solve these mysteries. In Utterly Me, Clarice Bean, Clarice's diary charts her troubles between detective work and school work in this hilarious story, packed with simple but zany cartoon drawings throughout.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Purely fun entertainment!
Review: Sassy British girl Clarice Bean loves the Ruby Redfort mystery series. She tells us about the mysteries in her own life: What is Grandpa hiding? Where has her best friend, Betty Moody, gone? Why is her normally smelly and unfriendly brother out of his room and smelling like soap? One by one, Clarice tries to solve these puzzles.

Clarice's teacher assigns the class a book project, and there will be a prize for the best one. With Betty Moody gone, Clarice must work with Karl, the class problem boy, and is not happy about this turn of events. But she is amazed to discover that Karl is actually nice; he's fun to work with and makes Clarice laugh. Karl believes he can invent gadgets, such as detective walkie-talkies, to impress their teacher. To win the competition, though, they need to prove that Clarice has learned something important from her Ruby Redfort books.

Clarice is delighted when Betty Moody returns. But Betty is so jealous of Clarice's new friendship with Karl that the girls quarrel. Karl is disqualified for stealing the prize. Clarice knows that proving his innocence would also prove that she has learned to solve mysteries like Ruby Redfort. That would show that she has learned something important from the books. Can she do it? Clarice knows Karl didn't steal the prize, but who did? Will Betty help Clarice clear Karl's name?

You'll find many surprises as you turn the pages. Clarice's story is threaded through with adventures from the Ruby Redfort books. It has lots of illustrations; the pictures are wacky and wonderful, while the letters of the text sometimes swoop or swirl or become larger or smaller.

Will you learn something important from this book? Will your heartstrings be tugged? Maybe not, but you'll probably laugh out loud while reading about Clarice's shenanigans. If you're in the mood for purely fun entertainment, I utterly recommend UTTERLY ME, CLARICE BEAN.

--- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon (terryms2001@yahoo.com)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Utterly Love It
Review: This is a brilliant book for young girls, and grown ups who love kids. Lauren Child has bravely and successfully taken Clarice from picture books to a chapter book (with a few pictures), allowing her to grow up with her fans while keeping her quirky avant garde style. The typefaces still change with the voices, the words still make occasional spirals and shapes to add emphasis, and Clarice sustains her charming and precisely realistic stream of pre-teen consciousness as narrator.

There is lots of plot. Clarice wants to win the class prize for best book review, despite the low expectations of her teacher. But what book will she review? Dare she choose the low-brow story she is obsessively reading, the latest in the series about 'Ruby Redfort, girl detective'? The book Clarice can't put down is not only the book within this book, it inspires Ruby to solve a minor mystery of her own. Ruby Redfort is a gentle tribute to escapist fiction from Harry Potter down, as Clarice's climactic speech to her classmate makes clear. Meanwhile, the Bean family are in full effect in the background, providing plenty of humor and sub-plots.

Grown ups will notice the depth of this book - the shrewdly observed reality of Clarice's life, the pathos of her victimized school mates, the mild mascochism of her teacher and the telling points about the importance of reading and encouraging children to read.

Utterly wonderful.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Utterly Cute
Review: This story, written in a child like journal style, takes the reader through the adventures and emotions of Clarice Bean. Clarice is enthralled by a book series about a yound girl detective. As she encounters the turmoils of adolescence, family, and peers, she relies on her storybook character to guide her through the situations.

The story was definitely a 3-5 grade selection. I had to keep reminding myself of the intended grade level as I wanted the character to be more complex and have a deeper storyline. For an adult, reading a children's chapter book, the story was short of being so good that I got lost in the characters. However, the book was not intended to hold my interest, but the interest of an elementary student, which I think the story will do brilliantly. The characters and the story sound like students everywhere and I am sure that young girls will be able to connect with Clarice Bean and enjoy reading about her adventures.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Utterly Cute
Review: This story, written in a child like journal style, takes the reader through the adventures and emotions of Clarice Bean. Clarice is enthralled by a book series about a yound girl detective. As she encounters the turmoils of adolescence, family, and peers, she relies on her storybook character to guide her through the situations.

The story was definitely a 3-5 grade selection. I had to keep reminding myself of the intended grade level as I wanted the character to be more complex and have a deeper storyline. For an adult, reading a children's chapter book, the story was short of being so good that I got lost in the characters. However, the book was not intended to hold my interest, but the interest of an elementary student, which I think the story will do brilliantly. The characters and the story sound like students everywhere and I am sure that young girls will be able to connect with Clarice Bean and enjoy reading about her adventures.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates