Official Review: Grace's Amazing News by Deborah Faulks
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- Kaitlyn Canedy
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Official Review: Grace's Amazing News by Deborah Faulks
Grace’s Amazing News, written by Deborah Faulks, is a book told from the perspective of a little girl named Grace. She is a positive and humorous child that tells stories about her family members. These family members include her parents, her sister Coco, her brother Chris, and her sister’s pet bird, Sunshine. Grace uses these stories to help describe the powerful love God has for her and everyone in the world.
What I liked most about this book was Grace’s way of telling stories. Children will be able to relate to her because of the innocent way she views the world and her situations. Each chapter has a lesson about God and a lesson about how to treat others and behave appropriately. Even though religious ideas as used throughout the book, they do not feel forced in any way. However, I do believe that parents and children that follow Christianity will enjoy it the most.
The crafts at the end of some of the chapters were unexpected but cute. I especially enjoyed the one that the author suggested involving the acronyms for the word purpose. Using the meaning of each letter in this word, children can make a fun craft. With adult supervision and help, creative children will likely have fun with these crafts.
If there were any dislikes that I wanted to point out, it would be the change in font once the reader gets to chapter ten. The author includes research about animals in her book and includes citations for it. I am not sure if this issue is because I received a PDF version of the book, but I found myself squinting while reading this chapter and subsequent chapters. Although I wear glasses all the time, they did not help with this section at all. Older adults with vision impairments that may want to read this to their children or grandchildren may struggle with reading these chapters.
There are a couple of aspects that I would like to mention. The author chose to use paragraphs to write the story; there are not just a couple or a few sentences per page. Only one illustration is in the entire story, and it only shows up closer to the end. Because of these facts, I would recommend this book to kids aged ten to twelve, with reading assistance from an adult.
There was one grammatical error in the book, but it was only a missing period. The lack of many grammatical errors indicates that the author had this book professionally edited. I wanted to give it the full score, but the font problem was too big to ignore. Unfortunately, this resulted in me awarding Grace’s Amazing News with 3 out of 4 stars.
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Grace's Amazing News
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