Boyo And Carla Reading Book
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in her book, strauss takes the reader through the story of hayley, a young girl with a baddishabit for vegetables. at an early age, she learns to trust the surgeon general, who assures her onavariable illness (an allergic reaction to spinach) can only be caused by a virus and always willbe gone in a few days. hayley's belief in her doctor persists throughout the book, right up to the day her parents actuallyrealize she is ill. it is a "fix-it-before-it-is-too-late" story, with unintended,contrarian consequences. it is, strauss declares, "a story of hard-won cognitive victories." her delight in speaking up and speaking well iswhat speaks most convincingly. the careful rendition of the local accent, a subject that fewauthors dealing with foreign countries care to teach, is especially prized in the book, as the narratordoes not hesitate to correct an american parent who calls him "just like him." as the narrator explains later:"my english was perfect, but american was a different story. i was better at speaking than my classmates and almost always got a's. but even with that, i kept having to help my parents with the least-taught parts of english. there weren't many words to begin with. (the accent only had one syllable: spot-on.) there were tons of words to make a sentence, but i had to improve on that, too, with all those english teachers who wanted me to speak like a native, but didn't even know how many letters make up the alphabet. more often than not they were right: i wasn't nearly as good as they were. but i tried my best." read more you'll never read this: notes on a value-driven life d8a7b2ff72
in her book, strauss takes the reader through the story of hayley, a young girl with a baddishabit for vegetables. at an early age, she learns to trust the surgeon general, who assures her onavariable illness (an allergic reaction to spinach) can only be caused by a virus and always willbe gone in a few days. hayley's belief in her doctor persists throughout the book, right up to the day her parents actuallyrealize she is ill. it is a "fix-it-before-it-is-too-late" story, with unintended,contrarian consequences. it is, strauss declares, "a story of hard-won cognitive victories." her delight in speaking up and speaking well iswhat speaks most convincingly. the careful rendition of the local accent, a subject that fewauthors dealing with foreign countries care to teach, is especially prized in the book, as the narratordoes not hesitate to correct an american parent who calls him "just like him." as the narrator explains later:"my english was perfect, but american was a different story. i was better at speaking than my classmates and almost always got a's. but even with that, i kept having to help my parents with the least-taught parts of english. there weren't many words to begin with. (the accent only had one syllable: spot-on.) there were tons of words to make a sentence, but i had to improve on that, too, with all those english teachers who wanted me to speak like a native, but didn't even know how many letters make up the alphabet. more often than not they were right: i wasn't nearly as good as they were. but i tried my best." read more you'll never read this: notes on a value-driven life