Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Module 7 - The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy

The Pinderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy, by Jeanne Birdsall

Summary

The four Penderwick daughters and their absent-minded professor father are spending the summer at the Arundel.  The cottage they are renting is on Mrs. Tifton's estate.  She is a very pretentious woman that does not enjoy the girls' escapades.  Her son, Jeffrey, joins the girls in adventures.  The girls spend a lot of time trying to stay out of trouble.   The girls must also try to help Jeffrey avoid military school.  This story has it all: adventures, disobedience, running away, first loves, bunnies, and a hound dog.  

Birdsall, J. (2005). The Pinderwicks:a summer tale of four sisters, two rabbits, and a very interesting boy. New York, NY: Knopf : Distributed by Random House.

Impressions

I didn't expect to enjoy this book as much as I did!  The Penderwicks was a pleasant surprise.  Even though the book was published in 2005, when viewing the book jacket, I thought it felt like a much older publication.  Once I began reading, it was hard to put the book down.  I wanted to see just what adventure, or mishap, might be awaiting the girls.  This book will definitely be easy to recommend to my students.

Reviews

This timeless tale from a first-time author introduces the thoroughly likable Penderwicks, on vacation in a rental cottage on Arundel, a sprawling Massachusetts estate. Their spirited family dynamics and repartee call to mind those in Hilary McKay's novels, and the sisters' delightfully diverse personalities propel the plot. For instance, when they pull up to the estate's mansion, 10-year-old Jane feels certain she has spied a "lonely boy" in a window and promptly begins a novel about him once they reach their cottage. Skye, 11, elated to have her own room with two beds (she plans to use both), immediately "wrote the bed schedule next to her favorite word problem about trains traveling in different directions." Batty, a shy four-year-old, faithfully wears her butterfly wings and is devoted to her dog, Hound (who "insisted on licking faces in the middle of the night"). The girls' loving, amusingly distracted father is a botany professor with a fondness for spouting Latin phrases. Rosalind, the oldest at 12, has looked after the others since their mother's death (shortly after Batty's birth), and when she meets gentle Cagney, the estate's teenage gardener, he captures her heart. The "lonely boy" turns out to be sensitive, sincere Jeffrey, a talented musician. Tension arises when Jeffrey's pretentious mother and her fiancĂ© decide to send the boy to military school. Certain to be as sorry as the sisters are when it's time to leave Arundel, readers will hope for a return visit from this memorable cast. 

The Penderwicks: A summer tale of four sisters, two rabbits, and a very interesting boy. (2005, July 25). Publisher's weekly, Retrieved from http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-375-83143-0

Suggestions for Use in Library

  • Book talk - unexpected pleasures
  • Display - summer vacations

No comments:

Post a Comment