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Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Emma-Jean Lazarus is the smartest–and definitely the strangest–girl at William Gladstone Middle School. Her fellow seventh graders don't understand her. But that's okay, since Emma-Jean doesn't understand them either. Emma-Jean has always considered it prudent to keep her distance, to observe from afar. Until one afternoon, when she walks into the girls' room and discovers Colleen Pomerantz sobbing at the sink.
Colleen is one of those girls who cares a lot! About everything! And now the meanest girl in school is trying to steal her best friend, and the only one who seems to care is Emma-Jean Lazarus.
So our story begins, in the girls' room, as two very different girls begin a journey that is sure to send one of them tumbling out of a tree . . .
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Seventh-grader Emma-Jean has always maintained an emotional distance from the messy life around her. In fact, she behaves like a scientist observing creatures under a microscope. So when she's asked for help in combating one of her school's mean girls, Emma-Jean attacks the problem in her usual logical fashion. Narrating from the alternating perspectives of aloof Emma-Jean and kind, vulnerable Colleen, who wants only to be popular, Mamie Gummer skillfully distinguishes the diverse cast that makes up Emma-Jean's world. Gummer has obviously inherited a facility for accents from her mother, Meryl Streep. She gives each character a subtly distinct voice while sustaining the detachment that is quintessential Emma-Jean. S.G. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 5, 2007
      Through a compelling third-person narrative, first novelist Tarshis completely inhabits the character of an eccentric seventh-grader who will quickly win over readers. Emma-Jean Lazarus misses her father, who died two years ago and from whom she inherited an analytical mind. She does not always understand her "often irrational" peers and finds their lives "messy." She "thus made it her habit to keep herself separate, to observe from afar." One day, however, she discovers kind, sensitive Colleen in the girls' bathroom and decides to come to her aid. (The narrative occasionally shifts to Colleen's perspective, offering insight into how the heroine comes across to her classmates.) Emma-Jean takes her cue from the philosophy of Jules Henri Poincaré (a French mathematician whom her late father revered), who believed that "even the most complex problems could be solved through a process of creative thinking." Her well-intentioned efforts with Colleen and with others don't always hit their mark, but this slightly socially awkward, big-hearted outsider learns from her experiences. Other fully realized characters who show compassion and understanding to Emma-Jean include her mother, a wise and kind custodian, her teacher and especially Vikram, a doctoral student and the Lazaruses' boarder, who takes on a special significance to both mother and daughter. Readers will cheer on Emma-Jean as she begins to see more clearly and enter more fully the world around her, messiness and all. Ages 8-up.

    • School Library Journal

      October 1, 2007
      Gr 5-8-Emma-Jean Lazarus is like no other middle-school girl you have ever met. She doesn't do messy friendships. She doesn't waste a thought on boys. Most astonishing of all, she doesn't care what her peers think about her. So of course, Emma-Jean Lazarus is the freak of William Gladstone Middle School. She takes after her deceased father, a mathematical wizard, and his heroFrench mathematician Jules Henri Poincare. Emma-Jean believes "even the most complex problems could be solved through a process of creative thinking." When Emma-Jean discovers Colleen sobbing in the girl's restroom over an encounter with the school's "female alpha chimp," she steps in, uses the power of logic, and solves her classmate's problem. Bolstered by her success, Emma-Jean looks around for other people to assist. The results are disastrous. Real lifeand real emotionsare simply too complex. Emma-Jean moves from being the observer to being involved. As Poincare said, "It is by logic that we prove, but it is in our hearts that we discover life's possibilities." In her first novel (Dial, 2007), Lauren Tarshis has created an original character who will delight youngsters. Narrator Mamie Gummer, daughter of Meryl Streep, delivers a wonderfully nuanced performance. Her Emma-Jean is Rainman-like in voice, and adults might ponder the possibility of Emma-Jean having a touch of autism. Younger listeners will simply listen and relish this wonderfully crafted story. Booktalking will be necessary to overcome the dreadful cover art. A superb addition to audiobook collections.Tricia Melgaard, Centennial Middle School, Broken Arrow, OK

      Copyright 2007 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 13, 2009
      Tarshis proves she “gets” adolescent female friendships (not to mention seventh grade) in this funny and empathetic follow-up to Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree
      . For the first time, the intensely analytical Emma-Jean has friends among her peers (as she refers to them) and, like them, she is preoccupied with the girl-invite Spring Fling. Emma-Jean considers asking basketball star Will, though they have little in common—he's been kind to her and causes a “fluttering of her heart.” But she ends up sorting out the dance-related woes of fragile Colleen (whose point of view is explored in certain chapters). Fans of the first book will be pleased that the deadpan narration (“as a single cell can reveal the DNA code of an entire organism, the look in Kaitlin's eyes told Emma-Jean everything she needed to know”) and Emma-Jean's observations are as amusing as ever. (“Adolescent males engage in conspicuous displays to attract the attention of females,” is her explanation of cafeteria boisterousness.) Her blossoming appreciation for emotions that logic can't explain, sympathetic supporting characters and an uplifting finale will warm hearts. Ages 10–14.

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  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:830
  • Text Difficulty:4-5

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