![]() ![]() It’s pretty descriptive and it clearly shows a fifth grader’s life. I really like the way the author describes each character. First of all, I appreciate R.J Palacio to finally write something about a girl. ![]() Get ready because this is a novel-long review. I think the best thing that the “Wonder” series books deliver is that, no matter what, you still have to have at least a little bit it of kindness inside of you. It’s me again, the one who rates Palacio’s books. Readers who wanted more about Auggie will flock to this. Readers also spend time with Christopher, Auggie's best friend until his family moved to Connecticut, and Charlotte, a classmate chosen to help Auggie transition from homeschooling to fifth grade. Julian's story is the most didactic, but it will have classroom use as an "anatomy of a bully" lesson, suggesting that readers look behind a mean-spirited act to understand what drives it. ![]() the de facto sequel will never be written." Instead she offers the back stories of three kids in Auggie Pullman's orbit, beginning with the "much-loathed" Julian, who suffers from nightmares and anxiety. But despite requests from readers for a sequel, Palacio writes in her introduction to this collection of three previously released e-singles, "I can guarantee that. A bestseller since publication, it has also spawned a standalone companion book, 365 Days of Wonder: Mr. Few first novels beget a franchise, but Palacio's Wonder (2012), about a boy with a severe facial deformity, is a phenomenon. ![]()
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