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Room 101

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David Anderson has led a perfect life until his 6th grade year. With his dad out of work, David will have to leave Good Shepherd Elementary and go to Milltown public school. He is terrified to go to Milltown because he fears he will be bullied. David looks and acts differently from everyone else in his new school. So do the kids in Room 101. When David is asked to help Keven Meyers, a boy with disabilities, participate in the school Spelling Bee, he has to look beyond his own desire to win and trust that God will help him make a difference in the lives of the kids in Room 101. With encouragement from his parents, David tackles an even harder challenge; to change the heart of a bully.

158 pages, Paperback

Published December 12, 2017

5 people want to read

About the author

Mary T. Wilkinson

6 books6 followers
Mary T. Wilkinson is the second oldest of thirteen children. She loved reading and telling stories to her siblings. She decided to be a teacher and graduated from Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana with Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Elementary Education. Mary met her husband, Paul, there. They married and raised three children; Ben, Bob, and Maria. Mary taught almost 30 years in public school. She became an Indiana Writing Project Fellow at Ball State University. There she put the beginnings of her first novel, Call Me Lizzy, on paper. Encouraged by her IWP fellows and her family, she decided to pursue a career in writing. Call Me Lizzy is an inspiring example of her work.

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90 reviews6 followers
April 9, 2018
Mary T. Wilkinson understands middle grade readers. Her career as a teacher pays big dividends in this realistc chapter book for young readers. As my nine-year-old daughter put it, “She writes realistic fiction really well. Some authors try, but it’s just not this good.” From understanding the way kids think to their daily routines at school, Mary T. Wilkinson gets it right.

Things my daughter could relate to:
- moving to a new school
- making new friends
- dealing with bullies
- academic competition

She also enjoyed:
- The mystery of what’s behind room 101
- Attempting to spell the words in the spelling bee competition
- The short chapters. So many nights of, “We can’t stop there! One more, please!”

It can be difficult to find books for a precocious third grader that are challenging in just the right ways, and this was perfect.

This book does have an overtly Christian perspective, and for many that will be a bonus, but should not prevent others from enjoying it either. One of the things I appreciated the most was that his Christianity was only one quality of the main character, not his only defining characteristic. He is funny and insightful, but a typical kid struggling to do right by his friends and his school.
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