Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Math Literature

We generally think of math and literacy as different subjects however there are many interesting books that include math concepts.


2 x 2 = Boo! : A Set of Spooky Multiplication Stories by Leedy, Loreen. Holiday House, 1995. Grades 2-4
Halloween characters including bats and witches introduce the multiplication table.

Anno's Mysterious Multiplying Jar by Masaichiro and Mitsumasa Anno. Philomel Books, 1983. Grades 2-5

This story is about one jar and what was inside it. The concept of factorials is illustrated inside a mysterious jar where there is some water, that becomes a sea, in that sea, there is an island, and so on until the reader has counted to the 10 factorial or 3,628,800!


 The Cat in Numberland by Ivar Ekeland. Cricket Books, 2006.  Grades 3-5

The resident cat at Numberland's Hotel Infinity, where there's never a vacancy, but there's always room for more, is perplexed. All the rooms are full of Numbers, both Odds and Evens when Zero, the Letters and the Fractions show up. After some room switching everyone still has a room.

Counting on Frank by Rod Clement. G. Stevens Children's Books, 1991. K-Grade 3
 A boy and his dog Frank illustrate counting, size comparison, and mathematical facts in an amusing style.

 

 

 

Edgar Allan Poe's Pie Math Puzzlers in Classic Poems by Patrick Lewis.  Harcourt Children's Books, 2012.  Grades 3-7

Classic poems, such as Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven and Langston Hughes' April Rain Song, are rewritten with the addition of math.



Do the Math: Secrets, Lies, and Algebra by Wendy Lichtman.  Greenwillow Books, 2007. Sequel Do the Math: the Writing on the Wall. Grades 6-8
In California thirteen-year-old Tess uses mathematical concepts to help her understand things in her life including her changing friendships, discovering a classmate stole a test and a investigating suspicious death.


Frankie Pickle and the Mathematical Menace by Eric Wight. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2011. Grades 2-5
In the third Frankie Pickle book Frankie must use his division skills to overcome the Mathematical Menace when he is transported by his math quiz to Arithmecca, a world filled with number monsters.


Geek High. by Piper Banks. NAL Jam, 2007.
Grades 8-10
After fifteen-year-old math genius Miranda Bloom is forced to plan the Notting Hill Independent School for the Gifted’s Snowflake Gala, she has to find a date because her stepsister is going with her crush. Sequel: Geek Abroad.

The Great Math Tattle Battle by Anne Bowen. A. Whitman, 2006.Grades 1-3
Harley has been best math student and the biggest tattle-tale in second grade until Emma Jean joins his class. Soon the two become rivals that use their math skills to tattle on each other.

How Much is a Million? by David M. Schwartz. HarperCollins, 1985. Grades K-3
The Mathematical Magician Marvelossissimo helps a group of children visualize with some amazing examples how much is a million really is. For example, if you wanted to count to a million, it would take 23 days! A similar approached is explored in A Million Dots by Andrew Clements.

Island of The Unknowns by Benedict Carey. Amulet Books, 2009. Grades 6-10.
The summer before seventh grade Lady Di and Tom Jones solve math equations to crack a code from their beloved math tutor who is one of the many people that mysteriously disappearing from their small island. Previously published under the title The Unknowns.

Marvelous Math: a Book of Poems selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins.  Simon & Schuster, 1997. Grades 3-7
A collection of poems about math topics such as fractions, time and Pythagoras by a variety of poets.

Math created by Basher, written by Dan Green. Kingfisher, 2010. Grades 4-7.
Mathematical terms such as zero, subtract, pi, quadrilaterals, and ratio are personified as Japanese-style cartoon that explain who they are.



Math Curse by Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith. Viking, 1995. Grades 2-4
A girl’s math anxiety increases when her math teacher, Mrs. Fibonacci , tells the class that almost everything can be thought of as a math problem. The next morning she wakes up to find that she is cursed because everything she sees is in terms of math such as how can twenty-four birthday cupcakes can be split among twenty-five people.

One Grain of Rice: A Mathmatical Folktale by Demi. Scholastic Press, 1997. Grades 2-4
During a famine in India a clever village girl named Rani outwits the raja by asking for one grain of rice as a reward. Then she asks “each day for thirty days you will give me double the rice you gave me the day before. Thus, tomorrow you will give me two grains of rice, the next day four grains of rice, and so on for thirty day."

Sir Cumference Series by Cindy Neuschwander. Charlesbridge, 1999. Grades 3-7
In each book Radius, the son of Sir Cumference and Lady Di of Ameter, needs to complete a mathematical quest. In the first book Radius must find the magic number known as pi in order to restore his father, who has been turned into a dragon, to his original shape.

Two of Everything : a Chinese folktale  retold by Lily Toy Hong. Whitman, 1993. Preschool-Grade 2
One spring morning Mr. Haktak, a poor old Chinese farmer, discovers a brass pot that magically doubles whatever is placed inside it. Once at home Mr. and Mrs. Haktak think their luck has finally changed until Mrs. Haktak doubles after falling into the pot.  

A Very Improbable Story: a Math Adventure by Edward Einhorn.  Charlesbridge, 2008. Grades 2-5
Ethan wakes up one morning with a talking cat on his head. The cat tells Ethan that he will get off only after Ethan wins a game of probability. The two look at groups of coins, socks, and cereal pieces, but will Ethan beat Odds before leaving for the big soccer game?

What's Your Angle Pythagoras? Charlesbridge, 2004.  Grades 3-5.
In ancient Greece, young Pythagoras is a curious child who discovers a special number pattern and uses it to solve problems involving right triangles. Sequel: Pythagoras and the Ratios.

 



Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Sweet Stories

In a time where paranormal and dystopian stories reign there are readers who are interested in sweet stories that comfort the soul. For the youngest readers I have highlighted picturebooks about tasty treats like cupcakes, donuts, and cookies.

Bake Sale by Sara Varon. First Second, 2011. Grades 3-8.
This graphic novel is about the sacrifices one will make for a friend. In New York Cupcake owns a bakery and plays in a marching band with his friend Eggplant. Eggplant is planning a trip to Turkey to visit family and he has invited Cupcake along to meet the famous pastry chef Turkish Delight. To raise the money for the trip Cupcake quits the band so he can sell extra cupcakes, but when Eggplant losses his job Cupcake gives the money to his friend. Illustrated recipes are included. 



The Baker's Dozen by Dan Andreasen. Henry Holt, 2007. Preschool- K.
In rhyming text count to thirteen as the baker makes treats for his bakery; one éclair, two German cakes, three cherry pies ect… Warning this book will leave you carving sweets.




Close to Famous. By Joan Bauer. Viking, 2011. Grades 5-8.
To get away from her mom’s abusive boyfriend 12-year-old Foster McKee and her mother quickly leave Memphis and end up in the small town of Culpepper, West Virginia where they encounter many who have a dream. Foster is a talented baker and it her dream to be the host of her own cooking show like her idol Sonny Kroll. Foster’s cupcakes and muffins help bring a change to the town and Foster is able to overcome her learning disability in this heartwarming tale.

Cupcake: a Journey to Special by Charise Mericle Harper. Disney/Hyperion Books, 2010. Pre-School- Grade 1.
Cupcake is a perfectly delicious vanilla cupcake who feels plain next to his fancy brothers and sisters, like rainbow sprinkle and chocolaty chocolate, until his friend Candle comes up with the bright idea that Cupcake just needs a special topping. A recipe for vanilla cupcakes is included.

 
The Cupcake Club: (Peace, Love and Cupcakes). By Sheryl and Carrie Berk. Sourcebooks/Jabberwocky, 2012. Grades 3-6.
In this new series Kylie Carson starts out as a quiet fourth-grader who is being bullied by popular mean-girl Meredith. As a new student Kylie is an outsider with almost no friends until her drama teacher proposes that Kylie start a cupcake club at school. Soon Kylie and her three new friends deal with the bullying while becoming a baking success. Three recipes are included at the end of the novel.

The Cupcake Diaries Series.
Katie and the Cupcake Cure by Coco Simon. Simon Spotlight, 2011. Grades 3-6.
In the first book of The Cupcake Diaries series Katie Brown learns that things quickly change in middle school when her best friend comes back from camp as a member of the Popular Girls Club and Katie is not allowed to sit with them at lunch. Katie meets a new group of friends and together they form their own Cupcake Club.

The Cupcake Queen. By Heather Hepler. Dutton Children's Books, 2009.  Grades 6-9.

When thirteen-year-old Penny moves from New York City to the small seaside town of Hogs Hollow where her mother opens a cupcake bakery Penny hides in the shop and tries to avoid talking about her parents separation and the popular mean girl who is pulling daily pranks on her. Over time Penny makes friends, gets her first boyfriend and accepts her new life.


The Donut Chef by Bob Staake. Golden Books, p2008. Grades K-3.
The baker is happy with the selling and making donuts in his new shop until an aggressive rival opens up on the same block. The two bakers go to ridiculous rates trying to outdo each other with crazy flavor donuts like Kiwi Jam. The baker remembers his true calling when a when a little girl asks for a simple glazed donut. Told in rhyming text with humorous illustrations.   




It's Raining Cupcakes by Lisa Schroeder. Aladdin, 2010. Grades 4-7.
While her mom is preparing to open a cupcake shop twelve-year-old Isabel dreams of the world outside her home state Oregon when her best friend tells her about a baking contest where the finalist wins a trip to New York City for a bake-off. Cupcake recipes included. Sequel: Sprinkles and Secrets.

          The Little Bitty Bakery by Leslie Muir.   
          Disney/Hyperion  Books, 2011. Pre-school-
          Grade 2.
          In Paris, Elephant is a pastry chef who has 
         worked all through her birthday. While she is
         asleep the mice who live in her shop surprise
         Elephant by making delicious crumble jumble
         birthday cake. A recipe is for the cake is included.
   


 Little Mouse and the Big Cupcake by Thomas Taylor. Boxer Books, 2010. Pre-School- Grade 1.
Little Mouse is excited to discover a big chocolate-chip raspberry cream cupcake, unfortunately it is too big for him to carry home. When Mouse asks a bird, frog, mole, snail, possum and a chipmunk to help move the cupcake each animal has a bite of the cupcake which leaves Mouse one big piece and many new friends.





Recipe for Disaster by Fergus, Maureen. KCP Fiction, 2009. Grades 6-9.
Ninth-grader Francie Freewater is a talented baker with dreams of working at the Lorenzo LaRue cooking show and having her own bakery business. Disaster strikes when the new girl Darleen steals her best friend and crush of a lab partner and makes fun of Francie’s baking aspirations.







Save the Cupcake! (Confectionately Yours #1) By Lisa Papademetriou. 
Hayley is a middle school student who uses her talent for baking cupcakes to deal with the problems in her life like her parents’ divorce, her mom’s recent job loss and most importantly that she is drifting apart from her best friend Artie.



Scones and Sensibility by Lindsay Eland. Egmont USA, 2010.
Grades 4-7.
During summer vacation in a New Jersey beach town, twelve-year-old Polly Madassa is a romantic determined to play matchmaker while making deliveries for her parents' bakery. Very funny!