Skip to main content

Sydney & Taylor and the Great Friend Expedition

Sydney & Taylor and the Great Friend Expedition

Written by Jacqueline Davies

Illustrated by Deborah Hocking

Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2022. Intermediate

Taylor has come up with another big idea that makes Sydney want to stay home and eat lunch. He wants to make friends! After Sydney sees how much Taylor wants more friends, he hops up and leads the expedition. Although making new friends can be scary, these two adventurers are not ones to give up easily. These two are always up to something and this third book in the series is just as fun and exciting as the first installments.

This book is an easier read but with a few bigger words the help Intermediate readers learn something new. This book would also be a great tool to help kids learn how to make friends. Although the pair of friendly animals are eager to meet people, it takes a little  work and proves to be a bit discouraging, but in the end, friends are easy to find when you care about others.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dude, That's Rude! (Get Some Manners) by Pamela Espeland & Elizabeth Verdick

If there's one book today's kids need to read, it is Dude, That's Rude! (Get Some Manners) . The authors provide a fun format for teaching etiquette to children. They discuss proper behavior at home, at school, at other people's homes and in public places. The information is completely up-to-date with cellphone manners and netiquette included. Fun, cartoony illustrations are on practically every page giving the book great visual appeal. This book is perfect for boys and girls in the fourth grade or older. WARNING: Bodily functions are discussed.

Faces of the Moon by Bob Crelin

Faces of the Moon by Bob Crelin Illustrated by Leslie Evans Charlesburg; 2009; unpaged Faces of the Moon is a short nonfiction book that describes the different phases of the moon and why the moon appears like it does on certain nights. This book is short and sweet so even the youngest of moon lovers will enjoy it. The layout is simplistic and easy to follow. I don’t know much about the moon so I found it very interesting.

Review: The Factory

The Factory By Catherine Egan New York, NY : Scholastic Inc., 2025. Fiction. 306 pages.  Thirteen-year-old Asher Doyle has been invited to join the Factory, a secretive research facility in the desert which ostensibly extracts renewable energy from the electromagnetic fields of its young recruits. But Asher soon realizes something sinister is going on. Kids are getting sick. The adults who run the Factory seem to be keeping secrets. And the extraction process is not only painful and exhausting, but existentially troubling. Asher makes a handful of new friends who help him with an investigation that turns into a resistance, which turns into...a cliffhanger! The Factory is a page-turning sci-fi with multidimensional characters, an intriguing plot, and refreshingly straight-forward writing. Egan weaves in detail about climate crises and social unrest, making the story's dystopian setting feel rich and plausible. With its sophisticated themes and accessible storytelling, I would recomm...