Ivy Lost and Found
Ivy Lost and Found
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Candlewick Press
Just the Series: Book Buddies Vol. 1   

Series and Publisher: Book Buddies   

Annotation: "Ivy was Anne the librarian's doll when she was a young girl. But now she has moved to Anne's library to be its newest Book Buddy-a toy that can be checked out just like a book. Ivy isn't sure she wants to be borrowed, though. She'd rather go back to just being Anne's favorite toy. Fern, a child who visits the library with her stepfamily, also wishes things could go back to the way they were, when Fern had her dad all to herself. When Fern takes Ivy home, an unexpected outdoor adventure helps both of them find confidence and belonging in their changing worlds"--Provided by publisher.
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #328428
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Chapter Book Chapter Book
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Copyright Date: 2022
Edition Date: 2022 Release Date: 03/15/22
Pages: 68 p.
ISBN: Publisher: 1-536-22605-X Perma-Bound: 0-8000-3052-4
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-1-536-22605-8 Perma-Bound: 978-0-8000-3052-0
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2021946270
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Starred Review Ivy, a doll, remembers Anne as a little girl who played with her and shared her childhood secrets and dreams. Years later, Anne retrieves her beloved doll from the attic and takes her to the library where she works. Ivy joins Book Buddies, a small, select group of stuffed animals and dolls that children can check out and take home. Though intrigued by tales of the other toys' adventures, Ivy is timid. Fern, a child visiting her divorced dad's new home and family, borrows Ivy, who becomes the girl's confidant as she struggles to adjust to an unfamiliar household. Meanwhile, Ivy begins to understand how exciting and rewarding her new role can be. In the first volume of the Book Buddies series, Lord introduces Ivy's backstory, the series setup, and the names and personalities of the dolls and stuffed animals, while creating an engaging story of insecurity overcome by hope, courage, and love. The doll's adventures are as vivid as a child might imagine them in play. Avoiding undue sentimentality, both the simply written narrative and the pleasing artwork convey heartfelt emotions with honesty and subtlety. Graegin's lively, softly shaded drawings appear on most of the double-page spreads. A beguiling debut for this transitional chapter-book series.

Kirkus Reviews (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

In this series opener, a long-forgotten doll is dismayed to find herself repurposed as a library toy for children to check out.Ivy, a brown-skinned doll with dark bangs and braids, misses Anne, the brown-skinned girl who once played with her, made her clothes, and whispered secrets. Years later, Anne, now a librarian, rediscovers Ivy and makes her a Book Buddy. Ivy, who just wants Anne to play with her again, is hurt to hear Anne call her "my old doll." The stuffed-animal Book Buddies welcome Ivy-but not Lilyanna, a blond, White princess doll and proto-mean girl who snubs Ivy as a "hand-me-down toy." (The polite term, a motherly hen says, is "well loved.") A little girl named Sophie, 6, borrows Lilyanna, pressuring her 8-year-old stepsister, Fern, into checking out Ivy; Sophie's little brother, Ethan, 4, chooses Piper, a flying squirrel. Like Ivy, Fern is distressed. Longing for time alone with her dad during her short visits and less time with her younger stepsiblings, she confides in Ivy, who listens eagerly. A mild adventure in the backyard offers opportunities for the toys to get to know one another and for Fern to work on her place in her dad's new family. Like the story, the charmingly retro illustrations honor the genre's antecedents, from Rumer Godden's sentient dolls to the Toy Story franchise. Fern and her father both have brown skin and dark, tightly curled hair; Sophie, Ethan, and their mom all present White.A beguiling series opener that gently conveys the upside of adapting to unwelcome changes. (Fantasy. 5-8)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri May 27 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Word Count: 5,379
Reading Level: 3.3
Interest Level: 1-4
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 3.3 / points: 1.0 / quiz: 512795 / grade: Lower Grades
Lexile: 570L
Guided Reading Level: M
Fountas & Pinnell: M
CHAPTER ONE
Ivy

Ivy's first memory was the birthday party.
   There was music and bright balloons. A girl's face lit up with joy.
   "A doll!" Anne had cried. She cut the strings and untwisted the ties that held Ivy in her store box. "I'll name you Ivy," Anne whispered into Ivy's dark braids.
   After that, it was always the two of them: Ivy and Anne.
   On warm summer days, Anne played with Ivy outside in the garden. Ivy's tiny blue boots left footprints in the mud.
   On gray, rainy afternoons, Anne made new clothes for Ivy. She stitched soft dresses and pants
from scraps of fabric and lace. She made belts from string and rubber bands. She knit sweaters from leftover bits of yarn. Ivy loved them all.
   On icy winter nights, snow fell outside the windows. Anne tucked Ivy into blankets and read fairy tales to her. Ivy's favorite part was always "happily ever after."
   And every night before she fell asleep, Anne whispered her most secret worries and hopes to Ivy. Ivy always listened.
   She never imagined it could change.
   As Anne grew up, trips to the garden stopped. Ivy's tiny blue boots stayed clean.
   She wore the same white pants and gray sweater for years.
   On icy winter nights, Ivy stayed on the shelf. She watched snow fall outside the window while Anne slept.
  Missing someone hurts, Ivy thought. This is how it feels to be forgotten.
   Then one day Ivy was brought to the attic. She was placed in a box with some old clothes.
   Ivy went to sleep. Memories came and went, like dreams. Over and over, Ivy remembered the birthday party, the trips to the garden, new clothes, and icy nights, tucked in blankets.
   Until one day . . .
   The box opened again.
   Anne's eyes were older now, but they lit up with joy.
   "Ivy!" she cried. "I remember you."
 
CHAPTER TWO
The Library

Ivy peeked out of Anne's tote bag. Everything was very bright after the dark box. There was so much to see!
   There were books on long shelves, in bins, and on bookcases. Shiny posters were on the walls.    There was even a shelf of stuffed animals and toys with a sign: book buddies.
   Ivy had never seen so many children. Some played games. Some did puzzles at little tables. Others sat in beanbags, listening to their parents read.
   "Welcome to the library," Anne called to everyone. "Story time will start in five minutes. Today I'm reading books about bears. Get ready to growl!"
   Anne carried Ivy to the Book Buddies shelf. A little girl with pigtails and overalls was
patting the toy unicorn's tail.
   "Hi, Sophie!" Anne said to the girl. "I have a surprise. I helped my mom clean out her attic yesterday, and look who I found!" She took Ivy from the tote bag. "It's my old doll, Ivy."
 Old doll? Ivy's heart broke.
   "Today she'll join the Book Buddies," Anne said. "Children can borrow her and read stories to her, like I did."
   Ivy didn't want to be borrowed. She wanted to belong to Anne. She wanted to be her favorite
toy again.
   Sophie smiled. "She can meet the other Book Buddies."
   "That's a great idea!" Anne turned Ivy toward a brown bear with a black nose. "Ivy, this is Banjo." Next was a fluffy black-and-white hen with her yellow chick. "Here are Olive and little Roger."
   Banjo and Olive looked sweet. Roger had mischief in his eyes. Ivy liked them all.
   Homer the owl had brown feathers, fierce yellow eyes, and white tufts on his head. Ivy tried to smile bravely.
   "And here's Dazzle!" Sophie pointed to a snow-white unicorn with a sparkly pink tail. "Dazzle is a boy," she told Ivy. "He likes stories with magic."
   Piper was a gray-and-white flying squirrel. Next to him was a tiny mouse wearing a wool vest and an acorn-cap hat. "That's Marco Polo," Anne said. "He likes to explore."
   "And this is Lilyanna. She's my favorite!" Sophie said.
   Lilyanna was another doll. She had a gold crown and long sunshine-colored hair. She wore a glittery purple dress with laces up the front.
   A princess! Just like in the fairy tales.
   "They can be friends," Anne said. "Lilyanna will love having another library doll."
   Ivy thought she heard Lilyanna give a tiny sniff, like that wasn't true.
   Ivy had always loved her own black braids, little garden boots, homemade pants, and gray sweater. But next to Lilyanna, she felt plain and not even a little bit glittery.
   Anne set Ivy gently on the shelf between the hen and the unicorn.
   "Come on, Banjo!" Anne picked up the brown bear. "You're the guest of honor at story time today. Our first book is Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?"
   Anne carried Banjo over her shoulder. He smiled back at the other toys.
   Ivy wished she could hear the stories, too. Maybe if she closed her eyes and listened really hard . . .
   "Are they gone?" a deep voice asked.

Excerpted from Book Buddies: Ivy Lost and Found by Cynthia Lord
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

A lonely doll helps a child adjust to a blended family in the first of a charming series about library toys and the children who borrow them, written by Newbery Honoree Cynthia Lord.

Ivy was Anne the librarian’s doll when she was a young girl. But now she has moved to Anne’s library to be its newest Book Buddy—a toy that can be checked out just like a book. Ivy isn’t sure she wants to be borrowed, though. She’d rather go back to just being Anne’s favorite toy. Fern, a child who visits the library with her stepfamily, also wishes things could go back to the way they were, when Fern had her dad all to herself. When Fern takes Ivy home, an unexpected outdoor adventure helps both of them find confidence and belonging in their changing worlds. This heartwarming story by Cynthia Lord, with a classic feel and gentle illustrations by Stephanie Graegin, is the first in a chapter-book series that pairs friendly toys with child characters who need them.


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