4th Grade and Up
Joe and Ravi might be from very different places, but
they’re both stuck in the same place: SCHOOL.
Joe’s lived in the same town all his life, and was
doing just fine until his best friends moved away and left him on his own.
Ravi’s family just moved to America from India, and
he’s finding it pretty hard to figure out where he fits in.
Joe and Ravi don’t think they have anything in common
but soon enough they have a common enemy (the biggest bully in their class) and
a common mission: to take control of their lives over the course of a single
crazy week.
The two things that I found so interesting about this
book were the books’ authors and the book cover. Just look at it. The top
tray’s American and the bottom tray is Indian obviously but check out the
authors’ names. Sarah Weeks, born and raised in the United States, and Gita
Varadarajan, born and raised in India. To learn more about these authors check
out ‘About the Authors’ at the end of the book.
Unlike ‘Mission Mumbai’, which is told in the American
boy’s point-of-view, this story is told in the point-of-view of the American
boy, Joe, and the Indian boy, Ravi. I liked hearing Ravi’s opinion on his
situation throughout the story.
Ravi doesn’t seem to get that he’s the weird new kid
from a different country and he expects to start school the same way he did in
India with him being the best in the class and being popular. Joe, on the other
hand, knows he’s different and has accepted it. Something that he and I have in
common.
I really related to the character Joe, who has
Auditory Processing Disorder (APD), a disorder I’ve never heard of until now. I
remember being a lot like him when I was in school, uncomfortable with loud
noises and being thought as stuck up when I was really just shy. Unlike him,
when I was taken to get extra help I didn’t understand why I was there.
The bully who always had his underwear showing really
confused me. When did it stop being embarrassing to be seen in your underwear?
I always wondered what would happen if someone came up and pulled down the
person’s pants completely. Would they be embarrassed or not? Then again I’ve
seen people walk around with their pants practically around their ankles so
probably not.
The bully in this story is the worst type of bully,
the popular kid who fools the teachers and everyone else into thinking he’s
great except for the person the kid is bullying. I think I would have been
bullied a lot more if I hadn’t hung around the grown ups so much back in
elementary school or was so good at hiding. If you have ever been bullied,
check out the song ‘Hey Bully’ sung by Morgan Frazier on YouTube. It’s pretty
inspiring.
This story is also great way to teach kids about
empathy and to never assume anything about anyone because you never know what’s
going on inside in someone else’s head.
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