Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Shelf Number | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Avon-Washington Township Public Library | Juvenile Fiction Book Hardback | 120791002843612 | J DER | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
Meet an irrepressible kid doodler-turned-sketch artist, in this breakout illustrated diary fiction mystery from Drew Dernavich, Elvin Link, Please Report to the Principal's Office .
Meet Elvin Link--slacker, notorious doodler, and the only kid in fifth grade who hasn't (yet) received a wedgie from the school bully Peter Zorber. Can Elvin navigate the last few weeks of school without getting into trouble for his incessant doodling? How will he steer clear of the class wedgie-master? And is it possible to turn a hobby into a crime fighting skill and solve a school mystery? Elvin Link is about to find out all the answers, and he'll do it with a flip disc in one hand and a bottle of hot sauce in the other!
Christy Ottaviano Books
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 3--5--Fifth-grader Elvin is a talented artist but he runs into trouble at school. He doodles on his assignments, his desk, his locker, and even his lunch tray, in between threats from bully Peter Zorber, also known as the Wedgiemaster. In the end, Elvin's drawing skills help solve the mysterious disappearance of the school's field-day T-shirts, and brings an end to Peter's bullying. The mystery may be too mild to hold readers' interest, and Peter's redemption comes a little too easily: Immediately after he faces school-wide humiliation, he apologizes to Elvin and all of his victims. There is an uneven message about bullying in the narration: Even as he is tormented by Peter, Elvin complains a few times about a schoolmate named Clay who smells "like vinegar." This is never acknowledged as its own form of bullying or an unkind remark. Elvin's mother has a Latinx name, as does his best friend, Carlos. The text mentions students and staff with Asian and Latinx names, and the school's principal is depicted in the illustrations as female and African American; all other characters are depicted with light skin in the black-and-white illustrations. The skillful and expressive art, drawn in bold, fluid lines, appears on almost every page and captures Elvin's creativity, imagination, and taste for gross-out humor. VERDICT Weak on plot but strong on illustrations, this book contains plenty of laughs and school angst for fans of Jeff Kinney's "Wimpy Kid" series.--Lisa Goldstein, Brooklyn P.L.
Kirkus Review
How do you keep from being forever remembered as That Kid who made a fool of himself at the annual school Field Day? Fifth grader Elvin Link has a history of being called to the principal's office--and not for great reasons. His passion for drawing anything, anywhere, and with any kind of implement lands him in hot water on numerous occasions. But who wants a boring old desk when you can transform it into a spaceship? Yet when Elvin gets an opportunity to use his drawing skills as a composite-sketch artist to solve real-life problems, it changes his whole point of view--of himself and the world. Readers get to observe how he navigates his way through conflict with parents, classmates, siblings, grown-ups, and a wedgie-obsessed bully named Peter Zorber. The frequent cartoon illustrations are full of humor, spunk, and occasional references to turdmuffins and underwear. Whatever the plot lacks in tension, New Yorker cartoonist Dernavich makes up for in affection for his characters, their beloved made-up game of flipdisc (with rules only a fifth grader would make up), and the power of drawing as diplomacy. Elvin and his family seem to be white; the principal is a woman of color, and names point to a diverse student body. A good-natured illustrated story to warm the hearts of misunderstood boys and their friends. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Here Dernavich, a New Yorker cartoonist, pits a fifth-grader with a mania for doodling on things against a bully who has vowed to give him a huge wedgie the week before school ends. As if arranging his life so that hulking Peter Zorber never catches him unawares isn't tough enough, Elvin's extreme reluctance to leave any desk, wall, or other surface undecorated has landed him continuously in the soup. His talent--which is evident from his overdecorated room and other exploits depicted in the line drawings displayed on almost every page of this Wimpy Kid--style narrative--proves useful, though, after the team T-shirts for field day are stolen, and he volunteers both to create sketches of the culprit from the descriptions of witnesses and to custom paint replacement tees. Readers who prefer their heavily illustrated and wisecrack-laden accounts of pranks and mishaps on the sweeter side will be pleased to see Elvin, being no Greg Heffley, magnanimously mending fences with his remorseful nemesis at the end of this gentle mystery.