Sunday, August 8, 2010

Loser, by Jerry Spinelli

Donald Zinkoff is that kid. The awkward, sometimes loud and different kid who never fits in the neighborhood or at John W. Satterfield Elementary School. In a naive Junie B. Jones sort of way, Zincoff bumbles through life not noticing all the eyes cast his way with lids in widened amazement. We all know one of these stand-out kids who “just doesn’t get it.” One thing Zincoff does get is the freshness and excitement of a snow which is “sticking” and beacons to him one evening after supper. As he envelopes himself in visions of a forthcoming snow day and glances up and down his street, he spies some reflecting red lights which draw him to the next street and upon a crisis involving what he perceives to be to a search for a missing toddler named Claudia.

Zincoff uses his laser focus and takes off in a childlike search for the little one. In only Spinelli fashion is the reader drawn into Zincoff’s world and realizes only in the end what has happened. Perception becomes reality with OMG moments as young readers will learn to build empathy with those amongst us challenged cognitively and or socially.

Spinelli, J. (2002). Loser. New York: Harper Trophy. ISBN 978-0060540746

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