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    So Totally Emily Ebers (The Millicent Min Trilogy, Book 3)

    So Totally Emily Ebers (The Millicent Min Trilogy, Book 3)

    4.5 12

    by Lisa Yee


    eBook

    $3.99
    $3.99

    Customer Reviews


    Lisa Yee’s novels include Millicent Min, Girl Genius; Stanford Wong Flunks Big-Time (an ALA Notable Book); the first Bobby book, Bobby vs. Girls (Accidentally); and most recently WARP SPEED. She lives in South Pasadena, California, with her family. Please visit her website at www.lisayee.com.

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    This companion to MILLICENT MIN, GIRL GENIUS introduces us to Emily Ebers, average girl extraordinaire, and brings Lisa Yee's funny, touching story of friendship and family full circle. Lisa Yee charmed audiences with the hilarious MILLICENT MIN, GIRL GENIUS and revealed another side of the story in STANFORD WONG FLUNKS BIG-TIME. Now readers can meet Millie's best friend and Stanford's big crush! After her parents' divorce, Emily had to move to California with her mom. Now she writes letters to her rock-star dad about travel ("How did the pioneers do it? Did they have to ride with their mothers?"), her new friends, and how much she misses him -- though she does still have his credit card.... Emily Ebers may be starting over, but she's going to come out on top.

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    Children's Literature - Jennifer Mitchell
    Emily Ebers' life as she knows it is over. Her parents have gotten a divorce. Her father has gone on a tour with his band and now her mother is moving across the U.S. Emily has to leave behind everything she loves. Her two best friends are going off to camp without her. Will they remember her? Things get worse when her mother signs her up for volleyball and the local Neighborhood Watch program. Emily's mother begins to act strangely and Emily finds herself adrift until she makes some new friends. Emily discovers that not all her friends are being honest with her and not all of them are sincere friends. She is torn in two directions. Which path will she choose? This is a good book to discuss feelings about divorce and choosing friends. Some other books on friendship include Secrets of My Hollywood Life by Jen Calonita, or Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis. Oy! Joy by Lucy Frank is also a good book about divorce.
    Children's Literature - Ashley Sayers
    Twelve year-old Emily Ebers is on a journey—physically and emotionally. Her summer starts out in a slump as her parents divorce and—according to Emily—her mother forces her to move all the way across the country from New Jersey to start a new life with new friends at a new school in Rancho Rosetta, California. Bitter from the start, Emily is extremely pessimistic about the new opportunities that lie ahead. In this epistolary novel, Emily composes letters to her father, which await his return from touring with his rock band. Readers can see the average preteen that Emily is, obsessed with clothes, makeup, shopping, sleepovers, boys, and fitting in with the popular crowd; however, the letters reveal much more about Emily than one might expect. As she struggles to discover her true identity, she places all her faith in her father, whom she believes will come back for her one day, or at least call! The summer, however, passes by without any effort on her father's part at reuniting with his daughter. Emily's feelings toward her father change from hopefulness to anger and finally forgiveness. Over time, as Emily realizes all that her mother has sacrificed to give her the best life possible, she gradually grows to love, respect, and appreciate her. Readers watch Emily live and learn as she takes on volleyball, makes new friends, develops her first crush, and most importantly, overcomes all the obstacles that she fears will keep her from enjoying her new life. Emily discovers that being with the people who truly care about her is what is ultimately important in life because they make a point of showing and telling her so. Her detailed and fun-filled letters reveal theday-to-day happenings in her life as well as her journey toward seeking her true identity as Emily Ebers. The novel is an excellent example of how children are affected on a personal level by divorce as well as how it impacts the parent-child relationships in the long-term. The novel teaches that children must confront the problems and emotions that result from such an unfortunate event and eventually learn to accept the changes that take place in their lives. This is the major step that Emily takes as she overcomes the main conflict in the novel, and she comes out of it a mentally and emotionally stronger and more mature Emily Ebers. Reviewer: Ashley Sayers
    Kirkus Reviews
    It's deja vu all over again for Yee in her new companion to Millicent Min, Girl Genius (2003) and Stanford Wong Flunks Big-Time (2005). This time she tells the story of the fateful summer Millicent tutors Stanford, and they both lie about it from the point of view of the third member of the triumvirate, Emily Ebers, in a series of letters she's writing (but not sending) to her newly divorced father. The letters become increasingly heartbreaking as the reader comes to understand that Emily's dad, a second-rate rock star trying to recapture his past glory, is not the loving and concerned father she wants him to be. The tutoring plot follows the track of its companions, but because Emily is the person being duped rather than the one doing the deceiving, she's the least active of the protagonists. Although there is new information about Emily and the story is both touching and amusing, the reader feels its essential sameness and hopes that Yee, a prodigious talent, will move on. (Fiction. 8-12)

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