Frindle Children's novel
Realistic fiction
Publisher
Aladdin Paperbacks
Publication date
1996
Media type
Print (Paperback)
Pages
105 pp
ISBN
0-689-81876-9
OCLC Number
38482602
Frindle is a 1996 children's novel written by American author Andrew Clements and illustrated by Brian Selznick.
Frindle is Clements's first novel. All his previous works had been picture books. The book has received more than 35 awards and honors, including the 1997 Christopher Award, the Georgia Children's Book Award, the Sasquatch Children's Book Award, the Zyakafoo Children's Book Award[citation needed], the Rhode Island Children's Book Award, and the Year 1999 Young Hoosier Book Award.Author: Andrew Clements Download "Frindle" from Google Books Frindle. Always one step ahead of his teachers, Nick not only can "feel a homework assignment coming the way a farmer can feel a rainstorm" but can dream up a distraction to prevent the assignment from being given. In fifth grade, however, he meets his match in tough language-arts teacher Mrs. Granger. Just to get under her skin?and despite her loud protests?he invents the word "frindle" and convinces the whole school to use it instead of the word "pen." The word spreads to the city, nation and world, and Clements (Big Al) fast-forwards the story by 10 years to show that "frindle" has made it into the dictionary. With this coup Nick gets a big surprise: the proof that Mrs. Granger was rooting for "frindle" all along. Like the Velveteen Rabbit, his well-worn word has become real. Dictionary lovers will cotton to this mild classroom fantasy, while readers who have a hard time believing that one person could invent a word out of thin air will be surprised to learn that the word "quiz" was invented the same way. Ages 8-12. |
|