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≫ Libro What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books

What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books



Download As PDF : What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books

Download PDF What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books


What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books

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Tags : What Happened on Fox Street [Tricia Springstubb, Heather Ross] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <blockquote> Fox Street was a dead end. In Mo Wren's opinion, this was only one of many wonderful, distinguishing things about it. </blockquote> Mo lives on Fox Street with her dad and little sister,Tricia Springstubb, Heather Ross,What Happened on Fox Street,Balzer + Bray,0061986356,FBA-|306203,Girls & Women,Best friends,Families,Family life - Ohio,Fathers and daughters,Fathers and daughters;Fiction.,Friendship,Neighborhoods,Neighborhoods;Fiction.,Ohio,Real estate development,Real estate development;Fiction.,Children's BooksAges 9-12 Fiction,Children: Grades 4-6,Family & home stories (Children's Teenage),Family - General,Fiction,Juvenile Fiction,Juvenile Fiction Family General (see also headings under Social Themes),Juvenile Fiction Girls & Women,Juvenile Fiction Social Themes Friendship,Juvenile FictionSocial Themes - Friendship,Social Themes - Friendship

What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books Reviews


Please see above for full synopsis Living on Fox Street reminds me of living in an apartment building growing up in New York City. Everyone knows everyone else and watches out for them too. Much happens this summer on Fox Street. Mo is always searching for signs of a fox in the ravine behind the house. The old lady across the street starts paying attention to the girls and dad receives an offer to sell his house. Halfway through the book I thought of "Because of Winn-Dixie," one of my favorite books. "What Happened on Fox Street" has many similarities, widowed dad, wonderful neighbors, a rainstorm and a lot of love. It is an emotional roller coaster ride inside a child's mind but an exhilarating one and a wonderful one. Though Mo and Dottie fight a lot, though the dad seems drowning in missing his wife, while Fox Street seems to be heading in a different direction in the future Tricia Springstubb works magic in making us root for Mo and her family and friends and trust in her that there will be happy (endings) beginnings for all. A great piece of contemporary literature especially for girls in grades 3 and up.
I read the books "What Happened on Fox Street" and "Mo Wren, Lost and Found" by Tricia Springstubb and didn't want to put them down.

These books focus on a girl named Mo Wren facing big changes in her life. She is brave and has to take on huge responsibilities because her mom has died.

I think that the Mo Wren books are mostly for girls that are ages 8 - and at the oldest 13.

I also think that other kids would enjoy these books because you have to figure out things as the books go on. Problems Mo faces are difficult and made me think about how I would deal with the same problems.

I have some favorite parts in each book. In "What Happened on Fox Street," my favorite part was when Mo got to see her friend Mercedes again and spend the summer with her. In "Mo Wren, Lost and Found," my favorite part was when the family that moved into Mo's old house helped Mo and her sister with the grand opening of their restaurant when their dad had hurt his back very badly.

Mo Wren books are sure to make you think. Overall, I really liked these books and had a lot of fun reading them.

Review by Young Mensan Sophie, age 9
Mo Wren was born on the kitchen table in her home on Fox Street. Ten years later Fox Street is still her world. She can't imagine living anywhere else.

With five houses on either side, Fox Street is bordered on one end by Paradise Avenue and on the other by a wooded ravine called the Green Kingdom. The Green Kingdom is one of the best things about Fox Street. Then there are the neighbors. There's a piano player, a teacher, the best burrito makers in the city, a woman who works in a funeral home, and a man who fixes things, just to name a few. Everything you need is right there on Fox Street.

To Mo's dismay, things are changing on Fox Street. Developers are trying to buy up the houses on their little street and her dad is considering taking their offer. He dreams of owning a family bar where people can hang out and get a quick meal from the grill. Mo wants that for him, but she can't imagine that he'd sell their home to make it happen.

Other things are changing, too. Mo's best friend Mercedes visits her grandmother every summer, but this is her last summer. Her grandmother is sick and her daughter and Mercedes' new stepfather want her to move to Cincinnati and live with them.

Mo Wren and Fox Street are sure to find a place is your heart.
You know how agents and editors and writing guides like to say that the setting should be a character in your story? No? Well, gee, this is awkward) But if you have heard that, and I'd guess you have and you wondered what it meant, read What Happened on Fox Street. Fox Street is a character in this novel, I would even say a main character. Not the main character, but a main character.

Mo Wren, an eleven-year-old girl, is the protagonist, but only just barely. I think it's telling that the first line in the novel is about Fox Street and the second is about Mo, and more, it's about her thoughts on Fox Street FOX STREET WAS A DEAD END. In Mo Wren's opinion, this was only one of many wonderful, distinguishing things about it. Oh, and that "dead end" thing totally metaphoric resonance I won't spoil for you.

Speaking of metaphor, here's another great one for you from the opening pages Paradise Avenue bordered one end, and the ravine the other. Mo Wren's house was just in the middle, where a heart would be, had Fox Street been a person. The opening pages continue in this fashion.

We meet Mo's father, her sister, and then we learn The wooden table was inscribed with dark hieroglyphicish slashes and crescents. Mo's mother had been an absentminded person, prone to forgetting things like setting a hot pad beneath a skillet or casserole dish. That might just be the loudest had I ever read.

The truth, Esteemed Reader, is that I don't really want to review this book so much as share with you little bits of the writing I so enjoyed. What Happened on Fox Street is a very sweet book and if you're the type who cries easy, be warned that this one might just quietly wrap itself around your heart and squeeze the tears from you (isn't that a lovely image--I wonder why no one's putting my quotes on their book jackets).

Fox Street is a blue collar street in Cleveland, OH, which is actually really important. I'll explain more in a moment, but first I suppose I should attempt a summary of the book. Mo Wren has stepped in for her dead mother in the raising of her "wild child" sister Dottie. Her best friend Mercedes is living across the street from her once again after an absence, but she isn't staying. Maybe no one is.

There are unique characters to get to know living in every house on Fox Street, but we don't have time for that. As the novel proceeds, we see them as Mo sees them and they add to the character of Fox Street itself. I won't tell all that happened on Fox Street, but a big part of it is that a big business man is offering Mo's father cash for the family house. Could be he's a sneaky shark in a suit trying to bust up the street so it can be turned into something else--an office park, maybe.

Could this be the end of Fox Street? It could be. You'll have to read the novel to find out for sure, and I hope you will. It's a great read and worth your time. Mo is easy to identify with and it's hard not to root for someone fighting to save their childhood neighborhood and way of life. I think people never quite live anywhere as wonderful as where they spent their childhood provided their childhood was not awful.

On its surface, What Happened on Fox Street is a book about nostalgia and the constant changing nature of life, not always for the better. It's also about how connected each of us are to everyone else--and not just in an Avatar-magic-hippie-tree kind of way, but as a practical matter of course. We see not only two children being raised by a village, but the necessity of a that village in the absence of their mother.

For the average reader these two themes are sufficient, they are beautifully carried out, and if the reader looks no closer, he or she still got their money's worth. But for the reader who digs deeper there is a wealth of philosophical discussion at hand. One of Mo's big ponderings, and she is often referred to as "the thinker," is "is there such a thing as necessary evil." I've been puzzling over it since I finished the book, and I must admit I'm lot more wary of that phrase than ever before.

The other story--and I'm sure you think I'm obsessed by now, Esteemed Reader, with my postings of Elizabeth Warren videos and my plugs for Robert Reich novels--is the story of capitalism. But I'm not seeing things, I swear. Capitalism is What Happened On Fox Street, for better or for worse. Wealthier folks desiring greater wealth at the destruction of the poor who acquiesce to it in part and who, when given money, join the party of desiring more wealth.

I won't list all of the instances in the book in which money is discussed; this review is already too long. But the word capitalism appears multiple times throughout the novel, and there's no way that's a coincidence. But I'll leave you with a telling comment from Mercedes, whose mother has just married a wealthy man and been able to leave Fox Street behind

"It's... it's weird, Mo. But I'm afraid he's infecting me... With the snob virus. Monette and I, we always lived in such butt-ugly apartments. The last one, if you sat on a toilet you had to put your feet in the tub. After you checked for roaches. But now we live in this stupid mini-mansion, and I... I don't know." Mercedes kept her eyes on that spot just beyond Mo. "You get used to nice things. Real fast... But Fox Street is nice."

You should of course buy a copy of What Happened on Fox Street.I'll leave you with some of my favorite lines from the book

He (Mo's father--MGN) crooked a finger under her chin. Two lines arched up between his eyes and disappeared into his forehead, forming a tree with no leaves. Mo hated how those lines had dug in deeper every time she looked.

And then he laughed. Not his real laugh, but a laugh like something hard hitting something even harder.

Starchbutt cocked her head, like a robin just before it nails a poor unsuspecting worm.

Mo shrank back like a poked pill bug.

The air was a sponge begging to be wrung out...
I love this book, in fact I read it every summer. A must read and have for any 8-12 year old
Loved this story. It's beautifully written with life lessons and themes for adults woven into the simplicity of a children's story.
Arrived fast and it is exactly as stated.
Ebook PDF What Happened on Fox Street Tricia Springstubb Heather Ross 9780061986352 Books

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