![]() ![]() ![]() Still, kids who feel like the odd one out even among the odd ones will relate to Jake’s experience, and they’ll appreciate his ability to take things in stride. The humor is hit or miss throughout the book, and it especially falls flat in the climactic scene in which Jake improvs a comedy routine for the talent show. Knight’s black and white spot art is playfully wonky and frenetic, but the visual gags often lack the punch needed to bolster the comedy of the text. Jake’s a sympathetic kid, and his narration is an amusing combination of self-deprecating humor, insecurities, and yes, weirdness. ![]() Now he’s demanding to be called the Dentist and using garbage for art collages, but he’s worried the upcoming talent show/final project will finally reveal who the real Jake is. ![]() Save up to 80 versus print by going digital with VitalSource. He’s certain someone is going to notice his considerable lack of musical and/or artistic talent until he realizes that the only way to be “normal” at M&AA is to be weird, and he’s got the chops to out-weird the best of them. Jake the Fake Keeps it Real is written by Craig Robinson Adam Mansbach and published by Crown. Jake starts sixth grade tomorrow and he’s pretty sure he faked his way into the Music and Art Academy: he played the only song he knows on the piano (quite well, but still), cheated on the math portion, and got some extra tips from his sister, M&AA’s star student, to secure his admission. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |