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The Trouble with Rules

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Trouble with Rules
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Leslie Bulion
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:160
Dimensions(mm): Height 215,Width 152
ISBN/Barcode 9781561455768
ClassificationsDewey:FIC
Audience
Children / Juvenile

Publishing Details

Publisher Peachtree Publishers,U.S.
Imprint Peachtree Publishers
Publication Date 3 May 2011
Publication Country United States

Description

Sometimes, breaking the rules is the best thing you can do, especially when the rules don't allow you to be yourself. For Nadine Rostraver, fourth grade comes with peer pressure and new social rules. For one thing, girls aren't supposed to hang out with boys anymore. So where does that leave Nadine and her best friend Nick? Then Summer Crawford arrives at their school and Nadine's life goes from bad to worse! Nadine loses her job on the class newspaper and gets in serious trouble with her teacher. But Summer has always been a free spirit, and together Nadine, Nick, and Summer realize that life is a lot more fun if you march to the beat of your own drum. Leslie Bulion's sensitive, realistic look at adolescence will resonate with young readers who will recognize themselves and their own dilemmas in her well-drawn characters and their responses to a complicated world.

Author Biography

Leslie Bulion has graduate degrees in oceanography and social work. She has written parenting and education articles and is the author of several children's science-related poetry books and novels. When she's not writing, she enjoys exploring nature with her binoculars, hand lens, and camera; collecting specimens to examine under her microscope; or going SCUBA diving and or kayaking. Leslie lives in Connecticut.

Reviews

"Readers will empathize with the protagonist and may see themselves in her"-School Library Journal "Readers will empathize with Nadie's thought-provoking predicaments and her personal responses as she struggles through the transition from lower to upper elementary school."-Kirkus Reviews