Book Reviews - Browse Book Reviews Categories Book Reviews - Search Book Reviews Book Reviews - About Us Book Reviews - FAQ
 
Book Reviews Categories

Accessories Arts & Photography Audio CDs Audiocassettes Bargain Books Biographies & Memoirs Business & Investing Calendars Children's Books Computers & Internet Cooking, Food & Wine Entertainment Gay & Lesbian Health, Mind & Body History Holiday Greeting Cards Home & Garden Horror Large Print Literature & Fiction Mystery & Thrillers Non-Fiction Outdoors & Nature Parenting & Families Professional & Technical Reference Religion & Spirituality Romance Science Science Fiction & Fantasy Sheet Music & Scores Sports Teens Travel e-Books & e-Docs

Link Partners:
Literature Forums Define Words Electronic Dictionary Writers Wanted Writing Forums Writing Articles Writing Resources Cheat Literature Vault XBox Cheats Cheats Literary Escape Cheat Codes PS3 Demon Gaming PS3 Cheats XG Cheats



















































































































































 

Book Reviews

The Great Brain
Book: The Great Brain
Written by: JOHN FITZGERALD RON MCLARTY
Publisher: Listening Library
Average Customer Rating: 5.0 / 5

It Really is Great
Rating: 5 / 5
It was a fun loving story ans some nights kept me up till 2 in the morning reading


Not to be missed
Rating: 5 / 5
To my knowledge, John Dennis Fitzgerald never won any of the prestigious children's book awards or accolades for this book or any of the others in the series, but it is my opinion as an avid reader from childhood that these books constitute some of the best available children's literature. Fitzgerald was in his sixties when he started this series, but he clearly never lost touch with his childhood self and all of these books are brilliantly written so that J.d. and his big brother seem like kids you know, even though they lived in a small Utah town at the turn of the century. These books have it all: an interesting historical setting; believable characters that develop as the series progresses; plenty of humor, of both the laugh-out-loud and subtler varieties; tenderness and pathos; and even a few good scares.

I picked up a copy of More adventures of the Great Brain, the second in the series, at a book fair in elementary school. (It isn't strictly necessary to read the books in order, though of course it's nice.) I was the most avid reader in my family, though the youngest, and for some reason one summer day when we were bored I started reading the book aloud to my older sister and my uncle, who was only five years older than me (I was nine or ten at the time.) Pretty soon, all three of us were devouring the rest of the series, swapping them among ourselves. I can't be sure, but I think the books may have started my sister's love of reading, though my uncle had always been a reader and had turned me on to the Lord of the Rings. At any rate, these were favorites for years.

Parents, please, please don't be put off by the fact that these books are about a mischievous boy with a penchant for swindling his pals out of their prized possessions. I have not raised children myself, but from my own reading I think children's books that don't have an element of mischief and rebellion in them or quite dull, and as a kid I hated nothing worse than to read a book where I felt like I was being preached to. T.d. gets into plenty of trouble, but his conscience develops as the books progress and he learns that his great brain can be used to help others as well as to cheat them. Unlike some other kids' books where the grownups are simply the bad guys, the adults in these stories are firm but supportive, strict but loving. Despite their tendency to disobey, T.D. and his brothers love and admire their parents and their beloved Uncle Mark, the town's marshall and deputy sheriff who is portrayed as both heroic and down to earth. J.D. says at one point that he really likes his uncle because "he never talked down to Tom and me, but treated us just like grownups," and like his fictional uncle (who may have been based on a real person) Fitzgerald never makes the mistake of condescending to his readers. The tragic story of Abie Glassman in this first volume isn't the last time readers will encounter hard truths in these stories, but Fitzgerald writes about the ups and downs of life in a way that kids will find delightful to digest. The author also lets kids know that grownups screw up, too, and that we all have to learn from each other.

The Great Brain series, as a whole, has the very best of a Wild West adventure, one of Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer stories, and the best coming-of-age fiction. There are a few old-fashioned notions here that might not go down well with the PC crowd, like the episode in the second book in which the Fitzgerald family takes on the task of trying to get a tomboy to act more feminine, but none of this should keep you from reading these great stories or giving them to your kids. Despite J.D.'s quip in the first chapter of this book about there being noone more tolerant or understanding of your differences than a kid you can whip in a fight, these books are all about tolerance and treating your fellow man with decency and fairness and love. I am glad these books are still in print and I sincerely hope a whole new generation discovers them, as it would be nothing short of tragic for them to be lost in the dustbin of forgotten kids' lit. Buy them, read them, and pass them on.


Loved it as a child
Rating: 4 / 5
The Great Brain is terrific.
However, to the previous reviewer, I have to say: It's Harry Potter, not Henry, and to call those books trash is just ridiculous. J.K. Rowling is nothing short of brilliant. Try reading the books first.


 
 
 



Against All Enemies
by Richard A. Clarke

The Da Vinci Code
by Dan Brown

Worse Than Watergate
by John W. Dean

Eats, Shoots & Leaves
by Lynne Truss & Lynne Russ

The South Beach Diet Cookbook
by Arthur Agatston

The South Beach Diet
by Arthur Agatston

The Spiral Staircase
by Karen Armstrong

Angels & Demons
by Dan Brown

The Maker's Diet
by Jordan Rubin

South Beach Diet Good Fats/Good Carbs Guide
by Arthur Agatston

South Beach Diet Book by Arthur Agatston
Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown

The Purpose Driven Life by Lemony Snicket

© Copyright 2024 Book Reviews. All rights reserved.