Monday, April 27, 2009

Gordon Korman

Gordon Korman visited the Chicago area last week and I had the pleasure of hearing him speak about his books. Not only was it inspiring, he was funny! Humor is a common thread through most of Korman's books, and that is what makes them so popular among middle school students.


Mr. Korman shared how he got his start in writing. During his second semester of seventh grade English in a Canadian school, he was told to write whatever he wanted and he had a semester to work on it. This piece turned into his first book titled This Can't Be Happening at MacDonald Hall. Korman had his book published by the time he was a freshman in high school. Since then he has written over 55 books!

No More Dead Dogs has been a popular choice with our middle school students. Wallace Wallace, the main character, expressed his honest opinion about the book he was assigned to read. He writes, "Old Shep, My Pal by Zach Paris is the most boring book I've read in my entire life. I did not have a favorite character. I hated everybody equally..." He goes on to tell his teacher that any book studied in school with a dog in it has the dog dying in the end. This lands Wallace Wallace in detention to rewrite his review. It just so happens that Wallace's detention was held where the school play rehearsals were occurring and the play chosen was Old Shep, My Pal. Wallace can't help himself; he finds himself as the director making drastic changes to the plot.
Korman's latest titles: Schooled, Swindle, The 39 Clues: One False Note
Soon to be released: Zoobreak - a sequel to Swindle
Pop - a young adult novel

No comments: