Thursday, August 23, 2012

Summer Reading

For my summer reading books I read Salvage the Bones and Never Let Me Go. I enjoyed Never Let Me Go much more than Salvage the Bones. It appealed to my interests much more because I felt like I could relate to the main character Kathy. I liked the way it was more suspenseful than Salvage the Bones. Salvage the Bones was too gory for my taste because of the vivid images of blood. Never Let Me Go was cool because it was set up like a reflection. I loved the way that the author had the relationships form more as the story progressed. I liked that  Kathy went through a journey were she learned a lot about her friends and herself, which I find many people, including myself, can relate to. In Salvage the Bones, it was very boring during the middle of the story because it was only about Skeetah and his dog China. The story really didn't become suspenseful until the last few chapters. I felt like they were both easy reads and not too difficult in general. I felt like the summer project reading journals took away from the book because I was too focused on the topic of the journal rather than the subjects of the books. The MWDS helped me a lot to review the books and it helped me review the characters and major themes too. I suggest for next year that a few less journals are required or a new aspect to the summer project overall . In the end, I felt like the books I read were outside of the range of books I normally read, so it expanded my reading expirence which was helpful.

2 comments:

  1. I'm glad you were exposed to different kinds of novels through the summer reading.

    I can relate to your thoughts on Salvage the Bones. It has won tons of awards and lots of critical recognition, but I just didn't connect with a lot of it. However, I did think it was brilliantly crafted.

    I'm curious on your views of the journals. I know they can be tedious, but I really like for students to reflect and engage their reactions to what they're reading. Any ideas on how to do that without journals?

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    Replies
    1. I can see how the journals help in the reflection process. Possibly have the students next year make a blog and have them make different entries throughout the book. Which would be similar to the journals, but with more clear prompts.

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