The Landry News

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Overview

NEW STUDENT GETS OLD TEACHER

The bad news is that Cara Landry is the new kid at Denton Elementary School. The worse news is that her teacher, Mr. Larson, would rather read the paper and drink coffee than teach his students anything. So Cara decides to give Mr. Larson something else to read — her own newspaper, The Landry News.

Before she knows it, the whole fifth-grade class is in on the project. But then the principal finds a copy of The Landry News, with unexpected results. Tomorrow's headline: Will Cara's newspaper cost Mr. Larson his job?

A fifth-grader ...

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Overview

NEW STUDENT GETS OLD TEACHER

The bad news is that Cara Landry is the new kid at Denton Elementary School. The worse news is that her teacher, Mr. Larson, would rather read the paper and drink coffee than teach his students anything. So Cara decides to give Mr. Larson something else to read — her own newspaper, The Landry News.

Before she knows it, the whole fifth-grade class is in on the project. But then the principal finds a copy of The Landry News, with unexpected results. Tomorrow's headline: Will Cara's newspaper cost Mr. Larson his job?

A fifth-grader starts a newspaper with an editorial that prompts her burnt-out classroom teacher to really begin teaching again, but he is later threatened with disciplinary action as a result.

Editorial Reviews

Library Journal
Gr 4-6-A fifth grader's scathing editorial criticizing her burned-out teacher spurs him to take his duties seriously. A terrific read about free speech, the power of the pen, and the need to temper truth with mercy. (July) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
School Library Journal
Gr 4-6-Cara Landry, entering as a new fifth-grade student in Mr. Larson's class, is quiet and unassuming. Barely noticed by classmates or her teacher, she publishes her first edition of the Landry News creating a transformation of teacher, students, and even herself. Her editorial states simply, "There is a teacher in the classroom, but he does not teach." Emerging from years of disillusionment, he begins to teach again. Journalism with all its ramifications and responsibilities are his tools. All the fifth-graders decide to help Cara publish the Landry News regularly as their class project. This gives the principal just the right tool to rid himself of Mr. Larson something he has waited for patiently. What begins as a small school conflict grows into a First Amendment Rights issue that solidifies friendships for, and love of Mr. Larson. As in Frindle (S&S, 1996), author Andrew Clements (S&S, 1999) uses an everyday classroom setting to illuminate words and their importance. Using clear and simple sentence structure, hard issues such as divorce, loyalty, and responsibility are presented with sensitivity and a lot of humor. Listeners will appreciate Cara's visit to the principal's office and her gauge, the "mad-o-meter," to assess the situation. Academic issues summarized such as newspaper analysis, the Constitution, and the First Amendment are introduced and briefly summarized. Actor Andrew McCarthy uses inflection and tone with subtle voice changes to make the fifth grade girls and boys and the stodgy principal vital and believable characters. This is an enjoyable story that also provides a great deal of information on some important and current issues.-Tina Hudak, St. Bernard's School, Riverdale, MD Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Karen Carden
...[J]ust the book for refreshing summer fun....[T]his story is about...good writing, good truth-telling, and good motives....The book just might introduce young readers to their local [news]papers.
The Christian Science Monitor

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780689828683
  • Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers
  • Publication date: 9/28/2000
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 144
  • Sales rank: 55,444
  • Age range: 8 - 12 Years
  • Lexile: 950L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 5.30 (w) x 7.60 (h) x 0.40 (d)

Meet the Author

Andrew Clements is the author of the enormously popular Frindle. Over ten million of his books have sold to date and he has been nominated for a multitude of state awards and has won two Christopher Awards and an Edgar Award. His popular works include Extra Credit, Lost and Found, No Talking, Room One, Lunch Money and more. He is also the author of the Benjamin Pratt & the Keepers of the School series. Mr. Clements taught in the public schools near Chicago for seven years before moving East to begin a career in publishing and writing. He lives with his wife in central Massachusetts and has four grown children. His website is andrewclements.com.

Brian Selznick is the author and illustrator of the bestselling The Invention of Hugo Cabret, which was awarded the Caldecott Medal and was a National Book Award finalist. He is also the illustrator of many books for children, including Frindle and Lunch Money by Andrew Clements, as well as the Doll People trilogy by Ann M. Martin and Laura Godwin, and The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins by Barbara Kerley, which was a Caldecott Honor Book. Mr. Selznick divides his time between Brooklyn, New York, and San Diego, California.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One: NEW KID GETS OLD TEACHER

"Cara Louise, I am talking to you!"

Cara Landry didn't answer her mom. She was busy.

She sat at the gray folding table in the kitchenette, a heap of torn paper scraps in front of her. Using a roll of clear tape, Cara was putting the pieces back together. Little by little, they fell into place on a fresh sheet of paper about eighteen inches wide. The top part was already taking shape — a row of neat block letters, carefully drawn to look like newspaper type.

"Cara, honey, you promised you wouldn't start that again. Didn't you learn one little thing from the last time?"

Cara's mom was talking about what had happened at the school Cara had attended for most of fourth grade, just after her dad had left. There had been some problems.

"Don't worry, Mom," Cara said absentmindedly, absorbed in her task.

Cara Landry had only lived in Carlton for six months. From the day she moved to town, during April of fourth grade, everyone had completely ignored her. She had been easy for the other kids to ignore. Just another brainy, quiet girl, the kind who always turns in assignments on time, always aces tests. She dressed in a brown plaid skirt and a clean white blouse every day, dependable as the tile pattern on the classroom floor. Average height, skinny arms and legs, white socks, black shoes. Her light brown hair was always pulled back into a thin ponytail, and her pale blue eyes hardly ever connected with anyone else's. As far as the other kids were concerned, Cara was there, but just barely.

All that changed in one afternoon soon after Cara started fifth grade.

It was like any other Friday for Cara at Denton Elementary School. Math first thing in the morning, then science and gym, lunch and health, and finally, reading, language arts, and social studies in Mr. Larson's room.

Mr. Larson was the kind of teacher parents write letters to the principal about, letters like:

Dear Dr. Barnes:

We know our child is only in second grade this year, but please be sure that he [or she] is NOT put into Mr. Larson's class for fifth grade.

Our lawyer tells us that we have the right to make our educational choices known to the principal and that you are not allowed to tell anyone we have written you this letter.

So in closing, we again urge you to take steps to see that our son [or daughter] is not put into Mr. Larson's classroom.

Sincerely yours,

Mr. and Mrs. Everybody-who-lives-in-Carlton

Still, someone had to be in Mr. Larson's class; and if your mom was always too tired to join the PTA or a volunteer group, and if you mostly hung out at the library by yourself or sat around your apartment reading and doing homework, it was possible to live in Carlton for half a year and not know that Mr. Larson was a lousy teacher. And if your mom didn't know enough to write a letter to the principal, you were pretty much guaranteed to get Mr. Larson.

Mr. Larson said he believed in the open classroom. At parents' night every September, Mr. Larson explained that children learn best when they learn things on their own.

This was not a new idea. This idea about learning was being used successfully by practically every teacher in America.

But Mr. Larson used it in his own special way. Almost every day, he would get the class started on a story or a worksheet or a word list or some reading and then go to his desk, pour some coffee from his big red thermos, open up his newspaper, and sit.

Over the years, Mr. Larson had taught himself how to ignore the chaos that erupted in his classroom every day. Unless there was the sound of breaking glass, screams, or splintering furniture, Mr. Larson didn't even look up. If other teachers or the principal complained about the noise, he would ask a student to shut the door, and then go back to reading his newspaper.

Even though Mr. Larson had not done much day-to-day teaching for a number of years, quite a bit of learning happened in room 145 anyway. The room itself had a lot to do with that. Room 145 was like a giant educational glacier, with layer upon layer of accumulated materials. Mr. Larson read constantly, and every magazine he had subscribed to or purchased during the past twenty years had ended up in his classroom. Time, Good Housekeeping, U.S. News & World Report, Smithsonian, Cricket, Rolling Stone, National Geographic, Boys' Life, Organic Gardening, The New Yorker, Life, Highlights, Fine Woodworking, Reader's Digest, Popular Mechanics, and dozens of others. Heaps of them filled the shelves and cluttered the corners. Newspapers, too, were stacked in front of the windows; recent ones were piled next to Mr. Larson's chair. This stack was almost level with his desktop, and it made a convenient place to rest his coffee cup.

Each square inch of wall space and a good portion of the ceiling were covered with maps, old report covers, newspaper clippings, diagrammed sentences, cartoons, Halloween decorations, a cursive handwriting chart, quotations from the Gettysburg Address and the Declaration of Independence, and the complete Bill of Rights — a dizzying assortment of historical, grammatical, and literary information.

The bulletin boards were like huge paper time warps — shaggy, colorful collages. Whenever Mr. Larson happened to find an article or a poster or an illustration that looked interesting, he would staple it up, and he always invited the kids to do the same. But for the past eight or ten years, Mr. Larson had not bothered to take down the old papers — he just wallpapered over them with the new ones. Every few months — especially when it was hot and humid — the weight of the built-up paper would become too much for the staples, and a slow avalanche of clippings would lean forward and whisper to the floor. When that happened, a student repair committee would grab some staplers from the supply cabinet, and the room would shake as they pounded flat pieces of history back onto the wall.

Freestanding racks of books were scattered all around room 145. There were racks loaded with mysteries, Newbery winners, historical fiction, biographies, and short stories. There were racks of almanacs, nature books, world records books, old encyclopedias, and dictionaries. There was even a rack of well-worn picture books for those days when fifth-graders felt like looking back at the books they grew up on.

The reading corner was jammed with pillows and was sheltered by half of an old cardboard geodesic dome. The dome had won first prize at a school fair about fifteen years ago. Each triangle of the dome had been painted blue or yellow or green and was designed by kids to teach something — like the flags of African nations or the presidents of the United States or the last ten Indianapolis-500 winners — dozens and dozens of different minilessons. The dome was missing half its top and looked a little like an igloo after a week of warm weather. Still, every class period there would be a scramble to see which small group of friends would take possession of the dome.

The principal didn't approve of Mr. Larson's room one bit. It gave him the creeps. Dr. Barnes liked things to be spotless and orderly, like his own office — a place for everything, and everything in its place. Occasionally he threatened to make Mr. Larson change rooms — but there was really no other room he could move to. Besides, room 145 was on the lower level of the school in the back corner. It was the room that was the farthest away from the office, and Dr. Barnes couldn't bear the thought of Mr. Larson being one inch closer to him.

Even though it was chaotic and cluttered, Mr. Larson's class suited Cara Landry just fine. She was able to tune out the noise, and she liked being left alone for the last two hours of every day. She would always get to class early and pull a desk and chair over to the back corner by some low bookcases. Then she would pull the large map tripod up behind her chair. She would spread out her books and papers on the bookshelf to her right, and she would tack her plastic pencil case on the bulletin board to her left. It was a small private space, like her own little office, where Cara could just sit and read, think, and write.

Then, on the first Friday afternoon in October, Cara took what she'd been working on and without saying anything to anybody, she used four thumbtacks and stuck it onto the overloaded bulletin board at the back of Mr. Larson's room. It was Denton Elementary School's first edition of The Landry News.

Copyright © 1999 by Andrew Clements

First Chapter

Chapter One: NEW KID GETS OLD TEACHER "Cara Louise, I am talking to you!"

Cara Landry didn't answer her mom. She was busy.

She sat at the gray folding table in the kitchenette, a heap of torn paper scraps in front of her. Using a roll of clear tape, Cara was putting the pieces back together. Little by little, they fell into place on a fresh sheet of paper about eighteen inches wide. The top part was already taking shape -- a row of neat block letters, carefully drawn to look like newspaper type.

"Cara, honey, you promised you wouldn't start that again. Didn't you learn one little thing from the last time?"

Cara's mom was talking about what had happened at the school Cara had attended for most of fourth grade, just after her dad had left. There had been some problems.

"Don't worry, Mom," Cara said absentmindedly, absorbed in her task.

Cara Landry had only lived in Carlton for six months. From the day she moved to town, during April of fourth grade, everyone had completely ignored her. She had been easy for the other kids to ignore. Just another brainy, quiet girl, the kind who always turns in assignments on time, always aces tests. She dressed in a brown plaid skirt and a clean white blouse every day, dependable as the tile pattern on the classroom floor. Average height, skinny arms and legs, white socks, black shoes. Her light brown hair was always pulled back into a thin ponytail, and her pale blue eyes hardly ever connected with anyone else's. As far as the other kids were concerned, Cara was there, but just barely.

All that changed in one afternoon soon after Cara started fifth grade.


It was like any other Friday for Cara at Denton Elementary School. Math first thing in the morning, then science and gym, lunch and health, and finally, reading, language arts, and social studies in Mr. Larson's room.

Mr. Larson was the kind of teacher parents write letters to the principal about, letters like:


Dear Dr. Barnes:

We know our child is only in second grade this year, but please be sure that he [or she] is NOT put into Mr. Larson's class for fifth grade.

Our lawyer tells us that we have the right to make our educational choices known to the principal and that you are not allowed to tell anyone we have written you this letter.

So in closing, we again urge you to take steps to see that our son [or daughter] is not put into Mr. Larson's classroom.

Sincerely yours,
Mr. and Mrs. Everybody-who-lives-in-Carlton


Still, someone had to be in Mr. Larson's class; and if your mom was always too tired to join the PTA or a volunteer group, and if you mostly hung out at the library by yourself or sat around your apartment reading and doing homework, it was possible to live in Carlton for half a year and not know that Mr. Larson was a lousy teacher. And if your mom didn't know enough to write a letter to the principal, you were pretty much guaranteed to get Mr. Larson.

Mr. Larson said he believed in the open classroom. At parents' night every September, Mr. Larson explained that children learn best when they learn things on their own.

This was not a new idea. This idea about learning was being used successfully by practically every teacher in America.

But Mr. Larson used it in his own special way. Almost every day, he would get the class started on a story or a worksheet or a word list or some reading and then go to his desk, pour some coffee from his big red thermos, open up his newspaper, and sit.

Over the years, Mr. Larson had taught himself how to ignore the chaos that erupted in his classroom every day. Unless there was the sound of breaking glass, screams, or splintering furniture, Mr. Larson didn't even look up. If other teachers or the principal complained about the noise, he would ask a student to shut the door, and then go back to reading his newspaper.

Even though Mr. Larson had not done much day-to-day teaching for a number of years, quite a bit of learning happened in room 145 anyway. The room itself had a lot to do with that. Room 145 was like a giant educational glacier, with layer upon layer of accumulated materials. Mr. Larson read constantly, and every magazine he had subscribed to or purchased during the past twenty years had ended up in his classroom. Time, Good Housekeeping, U.S. News & World Report, Smithsonian, Cricket, Rolling Stone, National Geographic, Boys' Life, Organic Gardening, The New Yorker, Life, Highlights, Fine Woodworking, Reader's Digest, Popular Mechanics, and dozens of others. Heaps of them filled the shelves and cluttered the corners. Newspapers, too, were stacked in front of the windows; recent ones were piled next to Mr. Larson's chair. This stack was almost level with his desktop, and it made a convenient place to rest his coffee cup.

Each square inch of wall space and a good portion of the ceiling were covered with maps, old report covers, newspaper clippings, diagrammed sentences, cartoons, Halloween decorations, a cursive handwriting chart, quotations from the Gettysburg Address and the Declaration of Independence, and the complete Bill of Rights -- a dizzying assortment of historical, grammatical, and literary information.

The bulletin boards were like huge paper time warps -- shaggy, colorful collages. Whenever Mr. Larson happened to find an article or a poster or an illustration that looked interesting, he would staple it up, and he always invited the kids to do the same. But for the past eight or ten years, Mr. Larson had not bothered to take down the old papers -- he just wallpapered over them with the new ones. Every few months -- especially when it was hot and humid -- the weight of the built-up paper would become too much for the staples, and a slow avalanche of clippings would lean forward and whisper to the floor. When that happened, a student repair committee would grab some staplers from the supply cabinet, and the room would shake as they pounded flat pieces of history back onto the wall.

Freestanding racks of books were scattered all around room 145. There were racks loaded with mysteries, Newbery winners, historical fiction, biographies, and short stories. There were racks of almanacs, nature books, world records books, old encyclopedias, and dictionaries. There was even a rack of well-worn picture books for those days when fifth-graders felt like looking back at the books they grew up on.

The reading corner was jammed with pillows and was sheltered by half of an old cardboard geodesic dome. The dome had won first prize at a school fair about fifteen years ago. Each triangle of the dome had been painted blue or yellow or green and was designed by kids to teach something -- like the flags of African nations or the presidents of the United States or the last ten Indianapolis-500 winners -- dozens and dozens of different minilessons. The dome was missing half its top and looked a little like an igloo after a week of warm weather. Still, every class period there would be a scramble to see which small group of friends would take possession of the dome.

The principal didn't approve of Mr. Larson's room one bit. It gave him the creeps. Dr. Barnes liked things to be spotless and orderly, like his own office -- a place for everything, and everything in its place. Occasionally he threatened to make Mr. Larson change rooms -- but there was really no other room he could move to. Besides, room 145 was on the lower level of the school in the back corner. It was the room that was the farthest away from the office, and Dr. Barnes couldn't bear the thought of Mr. Larson being one inch closer to him.

Even though it was chaotic and cluttered, Mr. Larson's class suited Cara Landry just fine. She was able to tune out the noise, and she liked being left alone for the last two hours of every day. She would always get to class early and pull a desk and chair over to the back corner by some low bookcases. Then she would pull the large map tripod up behind her chair. She would spread out her books and papers on the bookshelf to her right, and she would tack her plastic pencil case on the bulletin board to her left. It was a small private space, like her own little office, where Cara could just sit and read, think, and write.

Then, on the first Friday afternoon in October, Cara took what she'd been working on and without saying anything to anybody, she used four thumbtacks and stuck it onto the overloaded bulletin board at the back of Mr. Larson's room. It was Denton Elementary School's first edition of The Landry News.

Copyright © 1999 by Andrew Clements

Introduction

Discussion Topics

Before Cara came to Denton Elementary School, she wrote a newspaper in her old school. What motivated her to start that newspaper? What was its tone?

"Truth is good," Cara's mother says. "But when you are publishing all that truth, just be sure there's some mercy, too." What does she mean by that? Do you agree that mercy is as important as truth?

Over the years, Mr. Larson became a lazy and sloppy teacher, and students became bored and restless in his classroom. How was the class's atmosphere good for Cara? Would it be good for you?

Mr. Larson was stung by Cara's first editorial, but The Landry News ended up reviving his love of teaching. How?

The Landry News starts small, but soon the whole school is reading it. How did Cara's duties change as the newspaper grew? What were the advantages of having a larger readership? What were the risks?

Mr. Larson's students know very little about his life outside of school. How much do you know about your teachers? What do you imagine they do on their own time? Do you believe they have different in-school and out-of-school personalities?

Why was the principal so upset by the "Lost and Found" article in The Landry News? Would you be?

"Some people are newsmakers," observes Cara, "and some aren't." Who are the newsmakers in your school or neighborhood? What makes them so interesting to others?

Activities and Research

Produce your own classroom or neighborhood newspaper inspired by The Landry News.

Newspaper stories begin with a headline and so does each chapter in The Landry News. Choose several of your favorite chapters and write an alternateheadline for each. Come up with headlines to describe specific days in your own life.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution is very short, and yet its meaning has long been the subject of heated debate. Read it for yourself. Research recent controversies over the freedom of the press. Perhaps your local newspaper or television station has been involved in First Amendment disputes.

Invite a local journalist to come speak about the profession. What are the satisfactions of the job? What are the frustrations? What skills does the job require? How do you learn them?

Cara discovers that there can be a big difference in the way newspapers and television cover the same story. Make your own comparisons. Track a single story through several news media. Which medium do you think is the most informative? Which is the most interesting?

Attend a meeting of your local school board. Who are the members? How are they selected? What are the important educational issues in your community?

Read the editorials in your local newspaper. Are they as well written and as clear as Cara's? Do you agree with them?

Reading Group Guide

Discussion Topics

Before Cara came to Denton Elementary School, she wrote a newspaper in her old school. What motivated her to start that newspaper? What was its tone?

"Truth is good," Cara's mother says. "But when you are publishing all that truth, just be sure there's some mercy, too." What does she mean by that? Do you agree that mercy is as important as truth?

Over the years, Mr. Larson became a lazy and sloppy teacher, and students became bored and restless in his classroom. How was the class's atmosphere good for Cara? Would it be good for you?

Mr. Larson was stung by Cara's first editorial, but The Landry News ended up reviving his love of teaching. How?

The Landry News starts small, but soon the whole school is reading it. How did Cara's duties change as the newspaper grew? What were the advantages of having a larger readership? What were the risks?

Mr. Larson's students know very little about his life outside of school. How much do you know about your teachers? What do you imagine they do on their own time? Do you believe they have different in-school and out-of-school personalities?

Why was the principal so upset by the "Lost and Found" article in The Landry News? Would you be?

"Some people are newsmakers," observes Cara, "and some aren't." Who are the newsmakers in your school or neighborhood? What makes them so interesting to others?

Activities and Research

Produce your own classroom or neighborhood newspaper inspired by The Landry News.

Newspaper stories begin with a headline and so does each chapter in The Landry News. Choose several of your favorite chapters and write an alternate headline for each. Come up with headlines to describe specific days in your own life.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution is very short, and yet its meaning has long been the subject of heated debate. Read it for yourself. Research recent controversies over the freedom of the press. Perhaps your local newspaper or television station has been involved in First Amendment disputes.

Invite a local journalist to come speak about the profession. What are the satisfactions of the job? What are the frustrations? What skills does the job require? How do you learn them?

Cara discovers that there can be a big difference in the way newspapers and television cover the same story. Make your own comparisons. Track a single story through several news media. Which medium do you think is the most informative? Which is the most interesting?

Attend a meeting of your local school board. Who are the members? How are they selected? What are the important educational issues in your community?

Read the editorials in your local newspaper. Are they as well written and as clear as Cara's? Do you agree with them?

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 44 )

Rating Distribution

5 Star

(33)

4 Star

(9)

3 Star

(1)

2 Star

(0)

1 Star

(1)

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 44 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 11, 2011

    I Also Recommend:

    It's ok

    I sort of lost intrest in the book at the near end, and think that means that the author, Andrew Clements, didn't make it interesting enough for readers.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 12, 2008

    The Landry New

    If you think school can¿t be funny, you are wrong and you should read books by Andrew Clements. You¿ll see that school is fun. In the book The Landry News, Cara loves making the Landry Newspaper for her school, but the principal said it was inappropriate. Cara must find a way to let kids read the newspaper without the principal knowing. Mr. Larson is an old teacher that thinks kid should learn by themselves. The parents and teachers don¿t like him, but the kids do. I recommend this to anyone who likes funny books. The age group is 9-15 years. Andrew Clements was born in 1949 in Camden, New Jersey. He wrote his first book in 1996. He lives in Maine with his wife and son. If you like the Landy New you will like Lunch Money, The Report Card and The Class Story.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 11, 2008

    The Landry News

    Ha! Ha! This is a very funny book! A girl named Cara is the nobody of her school. Nobody knows who she is until one day she posts a newsletter on the wall of her teacher's classroom. The teacher, Mr. Larson, is a really lazy teacher who doesn't do much while he is teaching. He just sits around and reads the newspaper. So, to shorten the story, Cara writes something mean about the lazy teacher Mr. Larson and he gets mad. Cara then apologizes and then Mr. Larson realizes he is a bad teacher and he decides that the class project will be to make a school newspaper. He then puts Cara in charge. The principal, Dr. Barnes finds a problem in the newspaper that he doesn't like and then tries to get Mr. Larson fired.
    This book is meant for students younger then twelve to read. The ending was good but I didn¿t under stand most of it. The pros to this book would be little nice short story that makes you feel good. Cons to this book are when the happy ending is a little predictable. I really liked the book and it is awesome that the author wrote about fifth grade. Andrew Clements has written many funny books about fifth grade. I have read three books from Andrew Clements.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 29, 2007

    The book you can't put down...

    When I first read one of Andrew Clemets books, I thought the book was okay, but then I read The Landry News. I finished the book in 2 hours, because i loved it so much. It is one of the best books for kids you will ever find.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 5, 2007

    Awesome Book!

    This story is great.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 26, 2007

    Great book

    The Landry News is about a girl, Cara and a teacher, Mr.Larson. Mr. Larson doesn¿t teach instead he reads the paper and drinks his coffee. Cara decides to write a newspaper on what going on in their school and it¿s called ¿The Landry News.¿ Cara almost made Mr. Larson lose his job. One important message in the book is never give up on what you start. Cara started a newspaper and had to stop that one, so she started one outside of school. I like this book because it had details, and had so much trouble they had to deal with. I would encourage people that are in 4th or 5th grade to read this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 10, 2006

    A reviewer

    This is a great story about a girl who writes her own newspaper. It has a rude editorial about her teacher, who lets them do whatever in his class. Upset, he challenges them to make a real newspaper. They succed, and are thrown into a whirlwind of events. This is a great Andrew Clements book, and I think it is AWESOME!!!!! :)

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 19, 2006

    it's a great book

    If you like realistic fiction you will like the book called the landry news. First it starts with a girl named Cara Laundry in New York. She isn¿t a friend with her teacher Mr. Larson. When they are supposed to do a project Cara writes a newspaper which talks about Mr. Larson. Mr. Larson doesn¿t like it because it has bad stuff about him Cara¿s mom hears about it Cara gets I n trouble for making a newspaper about Mr. Larson. Cara makes another newspaper this time the teacher actually likes it. One of the main characters is Cara. She is very observant and she likes writing newspapers. Another character is Mr. Larson. He is a teacher. He is strict and wants everybody to learn what he teaches them. Andrew Clements uses descriptions, feelings, visualizing, and characterization. He writes good books. The Landry News was so amazing it is one of the best books I¿ve ever read. I liked it because it used very good characterization, descriptions, and feelings. You have to read this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 5, 2006

    The Landry News

    This book is about Cara Landry,a fifth-grader who decides she has to do something about her teacher,Mr.Larson who hasn't been teaching.He says he believes students should learn to learn themselves.But Cara knows he was once a good teacher so she tries to bring that part of Mr.Larson that actually teaches.I am in love with this book it's so cool and it has lessons to be learnt.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 14, 2006

    Best

    This book is one of Andrew Clement's best. It is great. It leaves you thinking about different concepts and if certain subjects are acceptable.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 12, 2006

    A Newspaper Miracle

    This book was a great book.Cara writes some bad things about her teacher in her newspaper.Mr.Larson got really angry but he realized he needed to teach. He helped Cara realize she had to write nicer things.Soon the class helpped with the newspaper.Things were going great until the principal got a copy.He didn't like what he found.Will Mr.Larson get fired because of Cara's newspaper?

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 4, 2006

    Review on The Landry News

    Cara Landry is obsessed with writting newspapers.She can't write anything nice in it. Her teacher would rather read newspaper all day insted of teaching the class.So Cara writes a very mean newspaper artical about Mr.Larson.Soon Mr.Larson realized all the kids want is a teacher.He helps Cara learn a good news paper is one that is nice.The class helps Cara work on it.All is going well until the principal gets a copy of The Landry News.He finds some unexpected news. Now Mr.Larson might get fired because of Cara's newspaper.Will Mr.Larson get fired? Read The Landry News to find out!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 28, 2005

    Cara bursts the last bubble

    ¿There is a kind of writing that is appropriate in school, and there is a kind that is INappropriate.¿ Turning back to look directly at Cara, he held up the sheet and shook it. ¿THIS¿ he shouted, ¿is Inappropriate!¿ The Landry News is about a girl named Cara Landry. She is a shy fifth grade journalist that writes a paper called the Landry News. Her teacher is the most dreaded teacher in the school, Mr. Larson. He is dreaded because he doesn¿t teach his students anything. Everyday they go into his classroom and while he reads the paper they are free to do whatever they choose. Cara posts up a paper one day and in the editorial says that he doesn¿t teach them. He is so mad that he tears up the paper. The next Monday he comes back to school and does something new, he decides to have the entire class work on the paper as a class project. Everything goes smoothly until Mr. Barnes (the principle) decides that if everyone in the school reads a copy of the paper then it is considered a school paper and that he should decide what does and doesn¿t go in it. They continue to print the paper every week and Mr. Barnes finally finds a reason to fire Mr. Larson, but the kids aren¿t going to let him do it without a fight. This book was really good. Although it was an easy and quick read it was very exciting and grabbed you, and that¿s why this book deserves all five stars.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 13, 2004

    Landry News

    The Landry News is a great book! It`s about a girl named Cara Landry, that is in Mr.Larson`s class in her school. Cara likes to write newspapers. Mr. Larson did not like what Cara wrote. She wrote that Mr. Larson had not been teaching his class, and that he was a bad teacher. After that, Cara started writing good things in the newspaper, and it was called 'The Landry News'. In this book, I liked the author's style, he was making me think alot and wonder what will happen next. The author puts humor in the story, like when Cara wrote the first edition and told about a second grader gagging on overcooked Jello in the cafateria. I like the author`s ideas for the book, and I think you will, too. He makes me want to read the book over and over again. I recommend this book to kids who write newspapers for thier school. It shows what can happen at your school.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 14, 2004

    Landry News

    Have you ever read the book The Landry News? The Landry News is about a girl named Cara Landry who likes writing newspapers. One day Cara wrote a newspaper and it said that her teacher was not teaching. Mr. Larson couldn¿t believe it! Her class started lining up, reading Cara¿s newspaper. What will Mr. Larson do? Buy the book if you want to know what¿s going to happen to Cara next. The author of this book has a very creative imagination. Andrew Clements makes you wonder what¿s going to happen next because at the end of each chapter he leaves us with kind of like a mystery that makes us want to keep reading. You¿ll want to read on until the end of the story. I think the message of this story is that people can change. In the beginning, all Mr. Larson wanted to do was sit around, read the newspaper, and drink coffee, but at the end he changed. There was nothing I didn¿t like in this story. The whole story was so fun to read. My favorite part of the story is when Cara writes her first edition of The Landry News. I could read this book over, and over again. Many people should read this book because it is a great story!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 26, 2003

    The best book ever i have ever read and it's so juicy!

    It's one of the greatest books of all time! i think andrew clements is one of the best kids books author. his other books are very good to like Frindle,The Janitor's Boy ,&etc..

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 24, 2003

    Outstanding Book (don't mess with this book)

    This book is mostly about a girl who makes a newspaper called ' The Landry News'. The newspaper has gossip in it and her teacher doesn't like. she makes more issues. You should read the rest because I don't want to give it away!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 21, 2003

    Review of The Landry News

    I thought this was a very good book. It teaches a very good lesson. This is a very emotional book. Anybody can relate to this story. The middle and the end are the best parts. This book changed my life. My favorite character is Cara's best friend because she helps Cara out.Everybody should read this book from the word of Ian.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 21, 2003

    Review for The Landry News

    The Landry News was about a little girl who made her own newspaper.She wrote some things that made people angry,because she was upset about her dad leaving her mom.The principal thought one of the stories was too personal. The girl's teacher almost got fired over it. It was so good,I couldn't put it down.But I had to because it was for school and I was only allowed to read a few chapters at a time. If I could read it again,I would.Some of my class-mates could relate to the story about divorce.I can't relate to it,but alot of people can.I think its a great book and anyone would like to read it,but that's just my opinion.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 21, 2003

    Landry News

    Landry News was a great book and I would read it again. I would rate it 4 stars out of 5. I would recommend it because it was about divorce. It can help you if your parents are divorced. The story is about a girl who is in a class where the teacher, Mr. Larson doesn't teach. Mr. Larson gets angry when he reads a news paper article writen by her. Could the news paper change the teacher's career? Or does it end in the principal's office? Read the book in order to find out.I'm sure you would like it, I did. If I read it again I will read it all at once so I can remember all the thngs in it. If you want, recommend these great books to your teacher.

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