Extra Credit

By Andrew Clements; Mark Elliott (Illustrator)
(Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Hardcover, 9781416949299, 192pp.)

Publication Date: June 23, 2009

Other Editions of This Title: Compact Disc, Paperback, Paperback

Categories: Family - Siblings, People & Places - Middle East, School & Education

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Selected by Indie Booksellers for the Autumn 2009 Kids' Indie Next List
“A sixth grader from Kansas is told that if her test scores don't improve, she'll be held back at year's end. Her mandatory extra credit assignment is to correspond with a pen pal from Afghanistan. Her letters are given, appropriately, to an Afghani girl, but, since her older brother is better at English, he secretly starts adding his opinions too. There will be complications for all of them, but the letters help them experience life outside of their own worlds, and allow them to look at their own cultures in a different way.”
-- Dianne Patrick, Snowbound Books, Marquette, MI


Description

It isn’t that Abby Carson can’t do her schoolwork. She just doesn’t like doing it. And in February a warning letter arrives at her home. Abby will have to repeat sixth grade—unless she meets some specific conditions, including taking on an extra-credit project to find a pen pal in a distant country. Seems simple enough. But when Abby’s first letter arrives at a small school in Afghanistan, the village elders agree that any letters going back to America must be written well. In English. And the only qualified student is a boy, Sadeed Bayat. Except in this village, it is not proper for a boy to correspond with a girl. So Sadeed’s younger sister will write the letters. Except she knows hardly any English. So Sadeed must write the letters. For his sister to sign. But what about the villagers who believe that girls should not be anywhere near a school? And what about those who believe that any contact with Americans is . . . unhealthy? Not so simple. But as letters flow back and forth—between the prairies of Illinois and the mountains of central Asia, across cultural and religious divides, through the minefields of different lifestyles and traditions—a small group of children begin to speak and listen to one another. And in just a few short weeks, they make important discoveries about their communities, about their world, and most of all, about themselves.




About the Author

Andrew Clements is the author of more than fifty books for children, including the New York Times bestsellers No Talking and Lunch Money and the enormously popular Frindle. He lives with his wife in western Massachusetts and has four grown children. Visit andrewclements.com. Mark Elliott is the illustrator of many books for young readers, including No Talking by Andrew Clements. He lives in New York’s Hudson Valley.

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