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  1 Miss Emily
Author: Muten, Burleigh Illustrator: Phelan, Matt
 
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Class: Fiction
Age: 8-12
Language: English
LC: PZ7.M972
Grade: 3-7
ISBN-13: 9780763657345
LCCN: 2013943089
Imprint: Candlewick Press
Pub Date: 03/25/2014
Availability: Available
List: $15.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: 134 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm H 8.51", W 6.53", D 0.66", 0.745 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Children
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles
Bibliographies:
Awards: Horn Book Guide Titles, Rated 1 - 4
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Historical Fiction
BISAC Subjects: JUVENILE FICTION / Historical / United States / 19th Century
JUVENILE FICTION / Biographical / United States
JUVENILE FICTION / Stories in Verse
LC Subjects: Circus trains, Fiction
Circus trains, Juvenile fiction
Dickinson, Emily,, 1830-1886, Fiction
Dickinson, Emily,, 1830-1886, Juvenile fiction
Historical fiction
Imagination, Fiction
Imagination, Juvenile fiction
SEARS Subjects: Circus, Fiction
Dickinson, Emily,, 1830-1886, Fiction
Reading Programs: Accelerated Reader Level: 5.3 , Points: 2.0
Lexile Level: 900
Reading Counts Level: 6.2 , Points: 5.0
 
Annotations
Brodart's TOP Juvenile Titles | 03/01/2014
Waiting for a midnight circus could not be more exciting as an invitation to the garden leads Mattie, Ned, Sally, and Mac to a new adventure with the ever-exciting Miss Emily, known to the rest of the world as poet Emily Dickinson. 144pp., Ill.
Journal Reviews
Booklist | 03/15/2014
Grades 3-5. In June 1877, Van Amburgh & Company's Great Golden Menagerie and Frost's Roman Circus and Royal Coliseum arrives in Amherst, Massachusetts, and four young children, led by the intrepid Miss Emily, sneak out one midnight to see the spectacle arrive by train. Miss Emily is Emily Dickinson herself, and her four charges are her niece and nephew and the son and daughter of the parson who lives across the street. Told from the point of view of Mac Jenkins, the youngest of the four, this slim verse novel celebrates the joys and troubles of a simpler time. Muten's free verse moves apace, capturing both the romance of the adventure and the plain beauty we associate with Dickinson's poetry. For their part, Phelan's graphite sketches, each identified by the line of text it depicts, convey an atmosphere of old-fashioned zeal. Based on actual relationships and events, this fantastical outing will foster curious readers' imaginations. Barthelmess, Thom. 144p. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2014.
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books | 03/01/2014
Ad. Gr. 4-6. The introduction to this slim, illustrated verse novel explains that the reclusive poet Emily Dickinson enjoyed the company of the children who lived nearby, often joining them in their pretend play. In this fictionalized account of those interactions, Dickinson takes the lead, inviting the children to dress as gypsies and slip out in the dead of night to greet the circus that is coming to town. Such an adventure is shockingly inappropriate and therefore must be undertaken in secrecy, which must be breached when the young narrator, Mac, sprains his ankle on the way home. A disgraced Mac is delighted by an unprecedented visit from Dickinson, who takes full responsibility and leaves the children with a story, and his punishment is lifted with a visit to the circus as well. While the tale has a measure of old-fashioned charm and mild historical interest, there is not much substance; the poetry, for the most part, is more prosaic than genuinely evocative of the elegant, significance-laden imagery of Dickinson's own work, and the sense of adventure is relatively slight. The adult-inspired imaginative play and Mac's pastor father's admonitions that his actions reflect on the family may have appeal for temperamentally earnest children and their parents, however, and the story may hold interest for children being introduced to Dickinson's poetry by presenting Dickinson herself as child-friendly. Historical notes on the characters and bibliography are included. Final art not seen. KC. 144p. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE UNIV. OF ILLINOIS, c2014.
Horn Book Guide | 11/01/2014
3. In nineteenth-century Amherst, Massachusetts, Miss Emily entices four neighbor children to sneak out into the night to await the arrival of a circus train to town, sparking their curiosity and imagination. This well-researched, whimsical yarn in verse about Emily Dickinson's playful nature is based on real people and facts (all specified in the historical notes). Phelan's light sketches visualize key moments. Bib. keh. 134pg. THE HORN BOOK, c2014.
Kirkus Reviews | 01/15/2014
The Belle of Amherst leads some young friends on a grand adventure. Drawing on Dickinson's playfulness and delight in children, Muten fashions this light verse story told from the perspective of young MacGregor "Mac" Jenkins, the pastor's son who lived across the street from the Dickinson residence (in real life) and was a playmate of the poet's niece and nephew. With the help of Phelan's wispy, textured drawings, Muten imagines the famously reclusive poet playfully disguised as "Proserpina--Queen of the Night," leading her tiny band of "Amherst gypsies" on a midnight quest to spy the arrival of the Great Golden Menagerie and Circus at the Amherst train station. Both poet and children thrill at the opportunity to meet a fortuneteller and witness the unloading of exotic circus animals, but as they speed home to avoid being recognized, Mac falls and injures himself. Mac's resulting convalescence, landing him "housebound / like a winter bee in the hive," draws not only an unprecedented visit from "Miss Emily," but the chance for her to treat Mac and friends to another tale. It also gives Muten an apt occasion to weave in a bit of actual correspondence from the poet to the children outlining her wish: "Please never improve--you are perfect now." Uplifting and clever, Muten's tale also includes a layer of biographical detail sure to tantalize Dickinson lovers everywhere. (biographical notes, bibliography) (Verse novel. 8-12). 144pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2014.
School Library Journal | 04/01/2014
Gr 3-5--"Miss Emily" is Emily Dickinson, and Muten's novel, appropriately penned in free verse, presents the poet as an engaging, warm, and somewhat whimsical personality. In this story, readers meet her through the eyes of her four young neighbors who gravitate to her garden for fun and adventure. Whether they must "slither like slugs" or pretend to be a band of Gypsies, Miss Emily always has surprises in store. She encourages the children to sneak out of their houses late at night because the traveling circus is coming to town. She wants them to experience the magical sight of the animals being unloaded, feel the excitement as the tents are set up, and be mesmerized by the fortune-teller. Of course, the adventure goes awry, and the children's escapades are discovered, but in the end, Miss Emily takes responsibility for the plan and saves the day. Phelan successfully uses softly muted black-and-white pencil sketches to capture this suspenseful tale of a midnight adventure. They gently imbue this charming story with a wonderful mix of humor and daredevilry. Miss Emily is a welcome middle grade novel for emergent readers as well as those who are more proficient. It draws readers in, captures their imagination, and does not disappoint. The inclusion of historical notes and a bibliography may prompt further inquiry by a new generation of Dickinson lovers. The light verse also makes for a wonderful read-aloud choice or can be used to enhance a poetry lesson. Carole Phillips, Greenacres Elementary School, Scarsdale, NY. 144p. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2014.
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Review Citations
New York Times Book Review | 05/11/2014