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Pair this audio version (two tracks, one with page-turn signals) with the print and find youngsters who enjoy the multisensory experiences the combination can offer.
Recommend that listeners read/hear Loot before launching into this sequel. For readers who like to live vicariously through kids who don't play by the rules.
Though listeners will miss out on the many illustrations included in the print versions and might be uninterested in the long lists of dates that conclude each selection, these are solid introductions to the subjects and periods of history for a wide audience.
Listeners who enjoyed Jazz Jennings's Being Jazz or Holly Goldberg Sloan's Counting by 7s will appreciate this unique tale, a timely novel suitable for any middle school kid who feels different.
Only libraries with high circulation of reimagined fairy tales should consider. ["Readers will enjoy the fairy-tale setting while identifying with the real-life problems of living in an appearance-obsessed society. A distinguished addition to any collection": SLJ 9/06 review of the HarperCollins book.]