Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

Can math-loving Talia crack the code of being cool in middle school? Marissa Moss, creator of the internationally best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, makes a welcome, STEM-oriented return to the comics diary form.

Talia loves math puzzles and code-breaking, but the new social rules of middle school have her stumped. Her best friend, Dash, is now embarrassed to be best friends with a girl, so he only wants to hang out with Talia outside of school. And although Talia is excited to make the math team, the strict team captain doubts her abilities . . . just because she’s a girl. But Talia has a great idea: she’ll start her own all-girls math team! As the first competition approaches, Talia is determined to bring her fledgling team to victory, get her best friend back, and break the social code of preteen life. In the spirit of her best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, Marissa Moss brings Talia’s adventures to life through charming text, illustrations, doodles, graphs, and puzzles. This delightful new series is for all math-lovers, doodlers, and anyone who has ever had to navigate the unfamiliar conventions of a new school.

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Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

Can math-loving Talia crack the code of being cool in middle school? Marissa Moss, creator of the internationally best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, makes a welcome, STEM-oriented return to the comics diary form.

Talia loves math puzzles and code-breaking, but the new social rules of middle school have her stumped. Her best friend, Dash, is now embarrassed to be best friends with a girl, so he only wants to hang out with Talia outside of school. And although Talia is excited to make the math team, the strict team captain doubts her abilities . . . just because she’s a girl. But Talia has a great idea: she’ll start her own all-girls math team! As the first competition approaches, Talia is determined to bring her fledgling team to victory, get her best friend back, and break the social code of preteen life. In the spirit of her best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, Marissa Moss brings Talia’s adventures to life through charming text, illustrations, doodles, graphs, and puzzles. This delightful new series is for all math-lovers, doodlers, and anyone who has ever had to navigate the unfamiliar conventions of a new school.

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Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

Talia's Codebook for Mathletes

eBook(NOOK Kids)

$12.99 

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Overview

Can math-loving Talia crack the code of being cool in middle school? Marissa Moss, creator of the internationally best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, makes a welcome, STEM-oriented return to the comics diary form.

Talia loves math puzzles and code-breaking, but the new social rules of middle school have her stumped. Her best friend, Dash, is now embarrassed to be best friends with a girl, so he only wants to hang out with Talia outside of school. And although Talia is excited to make the math team, the strict team captain doubts her abilities . . . just because she’s a girl. But Talia has a great idea: she’ll start her own all-girls math team! As the first competition approaches, Talia is determined to bring her fledgling team to victory, get her best friend back, and break the social code of preteen life. In the spirit of her best-selling Amelia’s Notebook series, Marissa Moss brings Talia’s adventures to life through charming text, illustrations, doodles, graphs, and puzzles. This delightful new series is for all math-lovers, doodlers, and anyone who has ever had to navigate the unfamiliar conventions of a new school.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781536224597
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Publication date: 06/13/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 99 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Marissa Moss is an award-winning author-illustrator who has written more than seventy children’s books, from picture books to middle-grade and young adult historical novels. She’s best known for the Amelia’s Notebook series, which has sold 6 million copies, been translated into several languages, and helped start the journal format craze in children’s books. Marissa Moss lives in California.

I’ve been making children’s books for a looooong time. I sent my first picture book to publishers when I was nine, but it wasn’t very good and they didn’t publish it. I didn’t try again until I was a grown-up and then it took five years of sending out stories, getting them rejected, revising them, and sending them back over and over until I got my first book. Now I’ve published more than forty books and each new one is still hard in its own way. Each one takes a lot of revising because I never get things right the first time. That used to frustrate me. Now I expect it. And I don’t mind, because that gives me permission to make mistakes. It means I can take risks and try new things because I don’t have to be perfect—I can always make changes.

I had already published nearly a dozen books when I got the idea for Amelia’s Notebook. I was buying school supplies for my son when I saw one of the black-and-white composition books. It reminded me of the notebook I had when I was a kid, so I bought it (for myself, not my son) and I wrote and drew what I remembered from when I was nine. Amelia’s what came out. I didn’t plan on the book becoming a series, but the first one sold so well and Amelia had so much to say, I kept on going.

Now I’m playing with other notebook formats, like in the historical journals and Max Disaster: Alien Eraser (where I get to play around with making comics, something I love).

Read an Excerpt

This journal belongs to: Talia Zargari

I’m starting this notebook to help me figure out middle school. Getting things out of my head and onto the page always helps me think—or at least it’s fun to do. Problems seem smaller once you can draw them. And 6th grade is full of problems!

1
Middle school is not what I expected.
   Sixth grade was supposed to be great—a new, big school, getting a locker, having real science classes and labs instead of just a handout on caterpillars becoming butterflies. The end of being a little kid!

Elementary School: How it is

MATH
Baby problems, like 1 + 1 = 2.
Or worse, memorizing the times tables—again!

SCIENCE
Plant a seed.
Wait. Wait.
Wait. Wait.
Finally, a sprout!

ENGLISH
Read a book.
Sometimes good, sometimes boring.
 
Middle School: How it is

MATH
Complicated, challenging problems—finally more math fun for me.

SCIENCE
Build a robot.

ENGLISH
Write . . . and publish your own story!
 
   Some of that stuff is true, but there are other things about 6th grade that aren’t so great. One thing I didn’t expect at all.
 
2
The things you don’t worry about can turn out to be the worst things of all.
   My (maybe) best friend
   Dash!
   For the first couple of weeks of middle school, everything was fine with us, just the way it should be. Dash was in most of my classes, so I always had someone to sit with.
   Then this happened:
   I’m sorry, we can’t be friends anymore.
   Everyone teases me. They say you’re my girlfriend.
   First I was shocked. Then I got mad.
 
   What do you care what “they” say? And who are they anyway?
 
   So what?!
 
   I knew I shouldn’t yell. I mean, who wants to be friends with someone who screams at you? But I couldn’t stop myself.
 
   We can be secret friends—at home, not in school.
 
   That could be cool.
   NO!!!
 
   That’s terrible!
   It felt like Dash was ashamed of me, that I embarrassed him in front of his other friends. And the way I was screaming, I was pretty embarrassing. Luckily we were walking home, far from other people. I could see Dash was miserable. But I was even more miserable.
   I told him that he was talking the way a grown-up does when they try to convince their kid something awful is really neat, like getting a shot or going to the dentist.
   Calling something rotten a secret doesn’t turn it into something cool. And this was definitely NOT cool.
   I started imagining lunch all by myself, not having an instant partner in our shared classes, not walking in the hallways together.
   I was deep in imagined misery, not even noticing where I was walking, when Dash grabbed my arm.
 
   Please! I know you’re upset, but can we try it my way for a while, just so I have time to show the guys I’m OK, like a regular guy?
   A regular guy? Since when do you want to be regular?
   Please!
   If you really are my friend . . .
   Just give me a chance, Talia.
   We can still walk to school together until we get to Echo Park. After that, we should walk on opposite sides of the street.
   I’m not trying to be popular.
   I just want things to be easier.
   Middle school is tricky.

   He’s right about that! And he was making it even trickier. I needed my best friend around more than ever.
   It was our first big fight since 2nd grade, when I accidentally broke his new Nerf gun and hid it in his closet because I was too embarrassed to admit what I’d done.
 
   Have you seen my Nerf gun?
   Me?
   Nope, no way.

   I was so ashamed, I finally had to tell him.
   This seemed a lot bigger.
 
3
Dash was desperate.
   All week, I couldn’t stop thinking about what Dash had said . . . and how he had looked.
   The Dash Spectrum

happy dash sad dash
 
normal dash mad dash
 
desperate dash

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