Mallory enters fourth grade with high hopes for her best year ever, but instead she starts by breaking the teacher's rules and then feels left out when her best friend likes the same boy she does. 10,000 first printing.
Laurie Friedman is the author and ghostwriter of over 300 award-winning picture books, easy readers, chapter books, and novels for young readers including the bestselling Mallory McDonald series, the Moose the Dog easy reader series, the Camp Creepy Lake and Wendy & Willow chapter books, and may picture books including Cows in the House and Love, Ruby Valentine.
This is a fairly enjoyable story about a girl who is having a hard time adjusting for fourth grade. As I was reading this, I kept thinking to myself ... "no, no, don't do that ... oh, no, you did it ... ahhhh!!!" Some of the pages were pretty funny and had me laughing. I thought the teacher was too strict/tough on Mallory, though I'm not a teacher, and maybe they really do have to be so stuffy in fourth grade, who knows?!? There were some illustrations, and they had a cartoon appearance(check out the picture on the cover, they're all sort of like that). Girls in third or fourth grade who like humorous stories might like this.
My child finds these both terrifying and fascinating because she doesn't know the topoi yet and, unlike Mallory, is nowhere near nine or ten. Heh. She does know that Mallory's plans are often unsound, but I have warned her cheerfully that while she's aged 8-12, she will probably forget how bad such plans are....
I liked this book because Mallory is going into 4th grade and her mom is teaching at her school so mallory has to deal with a new teacher and her mom being at her school as a music teacher.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
WAY too preachy and Afterschool Special! I love this series for children. KEEP IT LIGHT, Ms. Friedman. Not every book has to have a moral message. Otherwise, WONDERFUL entertaining writing.
When I started reading this book, it held great promise. Overall, it was a good book. However, there was one thematic element that bothered me and would make it hard for me to recommend. The premise is that Mallory McDonald is starting 4th grade and she excited to meet her new teacher. The new teacher has certain rules and Mallory can't help herself but inadvertantly break them. That aspect of the book is great. Mallory keeps making mistakes where you want to yell at her through the book not to do that. It is really funny and she learns quite a bit overall.
The part I had a hard time with was that she has this big crush on a new boy and a good chunk of the book revolves around this crush. I just feel like a 9-year-old girl is not going to be that preoccupied with boys yet. Maybe I'm off-base, but I feel like that storyline is more fitting for a middle school story, not 4th grade. Maybe the author is having a hard time generating new conflict for her heroine, but I think the book would have been stronger without that piece.
Step Fourth Mallory is a great book!It's about a kid who has a strict teacher and she keeps breaking the rules of her teacher.She tries giving fashion advice to her teacher and more. But it never works out! She tries a lot of strategies for her teacher to like her more, but read the rest to find out which way works for.I'm not telling you...
mallory gets in trouble with mr knight her teacher. there's a boy in her class named carlos who she likes but mary ann is spending a lot of time with him. she does a washington monument project with carlos, mary ann, and pamela. mallory makes a poster for mr knight which apologizes for all the rules she broke.