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Penguin Days

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the award-winning creators of Slug Days

Lauren and her family drive to a farm in North Dakota to visit relatives and celebrate her Aunt Jossie's wedding. But Lauren finds to her dismay that she is expected to do more than meet adults who hug her and invade her personal space. Lauren is going to be—horror of all horrors—a flower girl.

Lauren has Autism Spectrum Disorder, and she sees the world a little differently from other kids. What makes her comfortable are her routines and her coping mechanisms for her anxiety, which can get out of control in no time. So it is a challenge to deal with her rambunctious cousins, try on scratchy dresses, and follow impossible directions about going down aisles slowly-but-not-like-a-sloth and tossing pretend flowers around. So is it any surprise that Lauren flips her lid more than once? But while having an extended family seems like a lot of trouble at first, she's about to learn just how much they can care for one another.

In Penguin Days, two award winners revisit second-grader Lauren from the acclaimed Slug Days with equal humor and empathy. Drawing on her experience teaching children with ASD, Sara Leach creates an energetic character who stomps eloquently off the page. And Rebecca Bender's delightful black-and-white illustrations show in Lauren's fraught situations and facial expressions all the love and assertiveness that could possibly dwell together in one unique little person.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2018
      Lauren, who has autism spectrum disorder, is back for a second outing following Slug Days (2017).Lauren, her parents, and her baby sister have made the long car trip ("two days, eight movies, four chapter books, and three throw-ups") to get to Auntie Joss' North Dakota farm. Lauren is--very reluctantly--going to be one of three flower girls in her aunt's wedding. A scratchy dress, a little vomit, and an accidental fall into the calves' stall will all get in the way, although Lauren's dislike of new situations and a bad case of stage fright are the biggest challenges. Lauren relates her prickly feelings in a believably forthright voice that offers readers welcome insight into her perspective. Her emerging understanding of facial expressions helps her relate her parents' and teacher's periodic frustrations with her difficulties, yet their occasional annoyance is neatly juxtaposed against her thoughts and feelings. Just when she's feeling the most vulnerable and alone, her cousins find the perfect way to smooth her bumpy path, cementing their role in her life. Bender's soft, gentle illustrations expand and illuminate Lauren's narrative. Plenty of white space and short chapters make this empathetic effort extra accessible to a broad audience. Lauren and her family present white; her cousins, who all have straight, black hair, are biracial, but their ethnicity is unspecified.Another fine and enlightening peek into Lauren's unique, often challenging world that displays her differences but highlights the needs she shares with all children: love, acceptance and friendship. (Fiction. 5-9)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      December 15, 2018
      Grades 2-4 A trip to a North Dakota farm for Auntie Joss' wedding? That's not easy for eight-year-old Lauren, who has autism spectrum disorder, as she must deal with unwelcome changes in her routine, as well as boisterous cousins and other unfamiliar family members. Remembering suggestions from her special-helper teacher, she tries to be polite while controlling the tension building within her. When she freezes before walking down the aisle as flower girl, her cousins rally to give her just the help she needs, and Lauren decides that she likes having them as relatives after all. In this sequel to Slug Days (2017), Lauren again narrates the story, offering insights into how she sees the world and what helps her cope with stressful situations. While she faces particular challenges, Lauren's misadventures (dealing with loud relatives, letting calves out of their stall, throwing up on her flower girl dress) could have happened to any kid. Other kids will enjoy reading about them from her point of view. Bender's winsome pencil drawings with gray shading illustrate the story with sensitivity and humor.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2019
      A visit to North Dakota for her aunt's wedding throws a new set of challenges at flower girl Lauren (�cf2]Slug Days�cf1]), a second grader with autism spectrum disorder. Many of the laughs come from Lauren's precise narration: "It took us two days, eight movies, four chapter books, and three throw-ups to reach Auntie Joss's house." Black-and-white pencil and digital illustrations help clarify Lauren's (and others') emotions.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2019
      In Slug Days (rev. 3/18) readers met Lauren, a second grader with autism spectrum disorder; they learned about the effects her ASD had on her everyday routine and also learned some of her coping strategies. Penguin Days throws a new set of challenges at Lauren: a visit to North Dakota for her aunt's wedding means coping with an unfamiliar rural environment, wearing a scratchy flower girl dress, and interacting with a set of relatives she isn't used to?and who aren't used to her, or to making adjustments when she needs them. (It takes a little explaining for her cousins to accept her eventual appointment as a flower girl of honor who wears a more comfortable dress.) As in the first book, Leach gets into Lauren's head, showing how she feels when others laugh at her for reasons she doesn't understand?even though those reasons may be clear to readers. Linguistic mix-ups play a repeat role, given Lauren's tendency to take things literally; the fact that a penguin suit turns out to be a tuxedo is a major disappointment. But many of the laughs come from Lauren's precise narration: It took us two days, eight movies, four chapter books, and three throw-ups to reach Auntie Joss's house. Black-and-white pencil and digital illustrations should help early-elementary-age readers understand Lauren's emotions and those of the people around her. shoshana flax

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:620
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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