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Paperback Nothing Ever Happens on 90th Street Book

ISBN: 0531071367

ISBN13: 9780531071366

Nothing Ever Happens on 90th Street

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

Eva, a would-be writer, sits on her New York City stoop with her notebook, waiting for something to happen. She has been given a homework assignment to record goings-on in her Manhattan neighborhood. Each neighbor who passes offers her useless writing tips, but it isn't until Eva takes matters into her own hands that exciting things begin to happen in her neighborhood -- enough to make a great story A hilarious sequence of happenings ensues and Eva...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Blase Becomes Passe, or New Tudes for Bored Moods

"Nothing Ever Happens on 90th Street" is really two books in one. Although the book works as a whole, the first half is compelling, memorable and unique; the happy, goofy second half is merely fun. As she introduces her characters' dilemmas, sorrows, and idiosyncracies, Roni Schotter is remarkably poetic and poignant. When these characters collide (both literally and figuratively) in the book's second half, Schotter combines slapstick action, romance, and, above all, a kind of melting pot cockeyed optimism, exemplified by the films of Frank Capra. Throw in the can-do spirit of Andy Hardy, and the improbable resolutions of "I Love Lucy," and you have a spirited slice of American popular culture. The main character is young Eva, a winsome pre-adolescent student assigned to "write about what you know." Eva knows her street best, but she finds nothing worth writing about--until a melange of struggling neighbors offer Eva writing advice that reflects their lives and ways of keeping hope alive. Mr. Sims, the aging, unemployed actor, tells Eva that she's an important part of the scene, and that she need only watch for details. Mr. Morley, whose "mousse was missing something," softly says "Try to find the poetry in your pudding. There's always a new way with old words." Flexible dancer Alexis Leora, "who could hold an extremely long leg up against her ear like a one-legged woman," urges Eva to "stretch" the truth: As Leora herself might do, she says: " Use your imagination. If your story doesn't go the way you want it to, you can always stretch the truth. You can ask `What if?' and make up a better story." The advice fits the characters, and we see Eva-in-process, her scribbled words inspired by the native wisdom of these down-and-out artists and dreamers. The illustrations--collages by Ms. Kyrsten Booker-are phenomenal. The three main comfreres are shown descending the same staircase, and the cut and pasted objects and patterns have a visual and thematic integrity. The background for Mr. Sims hints at footlights, drama, and a proscenium arch. When lonely Alexis is introduced, her long legs are echoed by the vertical grain of the wooden staircase and the climbing vines of the background wallpaper. Like abstract art (although much more comprehensible for its young readers), the compositions use multiple perspectives and the time compression to convey the action that occurs in the second half: Briefly, a baby's dropped ball trips up a pizza delivery man, who finds floating-heart love with the concerned Alexis. The bicycle spill causes a traffic jam, from which emerges a famous soap-opera heroine, who ultimately offers Mr. Sims a job. Sims' scared cat "Olivier" knocks some coffee into Mr. Morley's mousse (inventing a popular new drink-"mocha"), and when Olivier gets stuck in a tree, Morley, the fish merchant, and soup maestro Mrs. Martinez concoct a three-course meal that lures the finicky cat. Eva, using the power of "What if" im

A Great and Useful Book!

This is a wonderfully imaginative book filled with lively characters and surprising events. I've read it to my class and they've asked for it again and again. Even more importantly, it has stimulated and improved their writing skills and inspired them to try their own version of this story. A great help in the classroom, and, a lot of fun!

A Wonderfully Entertaining and Educational Book

A fun romp full of wonderful characters, plus helpful tidbits to improve children's writing. A multicultural and intergenerational story in an urban setting, in which the soap opera star Saundra Saunderson and the fish store owner Mr. Chang come together with many other colorful neighbors to create a community on 90th Street. Eva, the child writer, records and participates in all the action and finally comes up with an extraordinary topic for her school assignment. A funny, great and useful tale to teach and read, whether you live on 90th Street, in the suburbs, or in the country.

Wonderful for elementary writing strategies.

As Eva records in her writer's notebook she believes she has nothing to write about. Her colorful neighbors, however, prove this to be quite far from the truth. Each rich character offers sound writing strategies that Eva applies to her writing. A lonely retired actor encourages her to look for the details all around. The prima ballerina who never smiles invites Eva to stretch her imagination. Mrs. Martinez advises Eva to add spice to her writing as she does to her Mexican soup. Mr. Morley suggests she ask herself, " What if?" All the events add up to a story that Eva has recorded for all to enjoy. An additional benefit is the new business created as a result of hilarious circumstances. Writing teachers will return to this delightful story again and again to encourage children to try the same stratgies in their own writing.

A funny romp that teaches writing along the way!

I loved this book! It was so much fun! A chain of comical events occurs on 90th Street, where "Nothing ever happens." Eva has to write something for school and has no ideas. But then, all of a sudden, things begin to happen. A pizza peddler is hit by a limo, the pizza man and a dancer fall in love, and a cat stuck in a tree. But there's more, some of it real, and some of it maybe imagined by Eva. The neighbors chime in with writing tips, like Mr. Morley, a mousse maker, who says, "Don't forget the poetry in your pudding." The illustrator uses zany collages that are great! It's fun to look closely at them and see all the amazing things she used to make the pictures. I just love this book! It's one of my favorites!
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